Referendum to decide fate offormer Student Union activitiesHearst, reporters describetalks with Kremlin leaders“It was an extremely dangerous venture for a fellow of myname,” William Randolph Hearst Jr. said of his recent trip toRussia, where he interviewed top Soviet leaders. Final decision on the structure of the social organization to nolds club.Joining the publisher of America’s largest newspaper chain replace Student Union will be made through a campus referen- Consider plansin the Breasted hall discussion yesterday afternoon were his dum. If possible, the referendum will be at the time of the The subcommittee, it was era-companions on the trip, Hearst newspaper correspondents National Student Association elections the third week of April, phasized, is intended to consoli-Kinesbury Smith and Frank ~ ’ This decision, and another date any duplication which mightr inniff ice chief European correspondent, decision to ask all groups and the spring quarter, at the regular be found. All plans will be con-Lwas s non sored exPlained why he thought the interested individuals to submit 1 pm. English style debate in sidered by the whole committee,h 1 the Center for the Study of Russia"s allowed them to make plans for reorganization and cor- Reynolds club. Two representatives each from\.neriean Foreign Policv whose ,(->nly nine men (the rection of the social activities A three-member subcommittee the old Student Union, dissolvedtnr h a n s J Moreenthau Praesidlum of th® Russian Com- structure at UC, were made in a of SAC, composed of Ruth Kopel last week- and Student Govern-’ ‘ munist party) know the real rea- meeting Wednesday of the ex- of Inter-Club council, Maurey ment> were added to the councilson,” he added. panded Student Activities Council. Mandel, formerly of Student Un- for this meeting. The Maroon hasSmith said he thought the trip Debate social life ion, and Rick Prarie of Burton- two representatives with speaifrwas granted to offset “very vio- Student Forum, at the sugges- Judson council, will sift through inS’ but not voting privileges,lent attacks against the U. S.” tion of the council, will debate a all plans submitted by the first Hold open meetingwhich were necessary to gear the topic concerning the social life week of spring quarter. Plans George Stone, president ofSee‘Hearst,’page 9 on campus the first Thursday of should be addressed SAC, Rey- Inter-Fraternity council, was— — chosen chairman of the SAC.University of Chicago, March 11, 1955 31chaired the meeting.Hearst defended the Americanpolicy of “firmness without provo¬cation.” Soviet rulers, he said,“were really worried” about theU. S. ring of air bases aroundRussia.“I seriously doubt that theywould precipitate an atomic warwith us now." He explained thatthe Communist leaders were nei¬ther mad like Hitler, nor recklesslike Mussolini, but rather “shrewd.. . cool and calculating.” He con¬cluded: “They have vested inter¬ests how and don’t want to losethem in an atomic war . . . butthey want co-existence on theirown terms!”Hearst and the two correspond¬ents conferred with all the Krem¬lin top leaders—except Malenkov,who was ousted while they werein Moscow. “I don’t know howlong he’s going to be seen by any¬body,” Hearst said, “but when afellow is as helpful as that in con¬fessing his faults, there’s no senseshooting him.”Smith, International News serv-Doc Film to showOppenheimer■ r» tOO A locf Richard Ward, an informal invita- students. The UC Student Govern-Sfl wOC. ^Cl» \MmMm plied for American visas last tion was gjven to Russian editors ment had also expressed the hopeThe Documentary Film s“mmer: sa>ins at tbe time 1 at to visit the U. S. that the Soviet students be gram¬me L/ucumeuidi y 1 lllu they wished to reciprocate the .... ori vi«a«:itninn Student editors included La visas.. Arnoriran student editors The Soviet group includes the Ages from 24 to 32>y Am*™*n.' editor of the Moscow University The Soviet editors range in agefinmrtmpnt dpolined Bulletin, several other student from 24 to 32 with the exception• 6 dcac trfthe Soviet editors publications, and youth publics- of the editor of Komsomolskaya~-, . . . , to issue visas to the Soviet editois . d two of the editors of rrav|i* who ic ?q Knmcnmni.The hour-long interview, a half- { that time suggesting that the “on> and two ot the editors othour of which was shown on the reapply when American Komsomolskaya Pravda. Konuoprogram. “See It Now.” on Janu- schools were in session. The sec- niolskaya Pmvda is the publica-ary 4 of this year, will be pre- ond application was made last tlon of the Komsomel or youngsented admission free at 6:45 and November.8 p.m. in Social Sciences 122. During the visit in January 1954The film will also be shown by seven American students, in-the Atomic Scientists of Chicago ciuding Maroon managing editoron Monday at 8 p.m. in Eckhart133. This showing will be followedby a discussion led by Harry Kal-ven, professor in the UC law'school.Dr. Oppenheimer, atomic sci¬entist, and director of the Insti¬tute for Advanced Study at Prince- Soviet editor's group given US visas;expected to visit college campusesYesterday morning the State Department announced that American visas would begranted to eleven Soviet student and youth publication editors.The Soviet editors have been advised by the state department that the best time for thevisit would be during the middle of April. - activities on campi*.The Soviet editors first ap- The suggestions will be discus¬sed at an open meeting of the SACtentatively scheduled for April 5.Council in student handsSpeaking privileges, however,will be limited to members of thecouncil at this meeting.This week’s meeting was con¬vened by Arthur Kiendl, directorof student activities, and MaryAlice Ross Newman, assistantdirector of student activities, whoalmost immediately left the meet¬ing. Said Kiendl, “The council isnow entirely in student hands.”Reject proposalsRejected by the council wereproposals to poll the campus ondesired social affairs, to plug im¬mediately for a Student Unionbuilding, to set up a temporarysubcommittee to plan socialevents durin gthe spring quarter,and to hold an immediate openforum on the question of socialgroup, in a special showing,will bring Ed Murrow’s TVinterview with Dr. J. Robert Op¬penheimer, to the campus thisevening Pravda, who is 39. Komsomol-skaya Pravda, a daily paper, hasa circulation of over 2,000,000throughout the USSR. Happy vacationThere will be no Maroon pub¬lished during the next two weeks.The next issue of the Maroon willbe published Friday, April 1.Students ore reminded thatMonday, March 28, is the firstday of the spring quarter.Happy vacation.communist league in the SovietUnion.The proposed visit of Soviet stu¬dents to the U. S. had createdwidespread interest among Amer¬ican students during the pasyear. Last summer the annualcongress of the National StudentAssociation defeated a proposal tofavor the visit of Soviet studentsFolk singing, yak-yak and re- to this country. The UC delegates,freshments will be the main fea- were divided on the question,ton. gave Murrow this exclusive tures at the Married Student asso- During the autumn the Swarth-interview not long after he was ciation open house^ next Friday more College Student Council ini-publicly declared a “security evening at Ida Noyes, promised tiated a project to have individualrisk.” In his talk, Oppneheimer Walter Mitchell, vice president.The music will be led by memMarried Studentsto sponsor party Trustee Ludgin to give address5 at Winter convocation Fridayt •/UC trustee Earle Ludgin gives the main address at the164th convocation of the University of Chicago next Fridayat 3 p.m. in Rockefeller chapel.. About 160 students will receive their degrees at the cere-discusses his views on the worldsituation and world values in anatomic age.Doc Film has announced thatif the turnout for the two show¬ings warrant it, there will be athird presentation about 9:15.However, this is quite tentative. hers of Folklore society, the stim¬ulating conversation will be fur¬nished by all who attend and thepunch and cookies will be cour¬tesy of the association. Marriedstudents, whether or not mem¬bers. are invited. student councils and studentnewspapers issue invitation to theSoviet students. A total of twentystudent councils and studentnewspapers had endorsed theprojects.The Maroon was among thefirst student papers to join inissuing an invitation to the SovietFraternities found (all wet’ Among the degrees expected to temporary American Art, and asbe awarded at the convocation and a. member of the Orchestral asso-the numbers of graduates receiv- cation.ing them are: BA or BS, 8; MA or f . .MS, 56; MBA, 25; DBV, 3; JB, 11; WUS funds aDDrOachMD, 14, and Ph.D., 42.Ludgin, whose topic is as yet un- $1 000 dnV0 dOalannounced, is the University’snewest trustee. He was appointed With money still coming inonly last November, having serv- ffom the dorms and faculty ap¬ed earlier as chairman of the peal, the World University Serviceboard of Alumni foundation. committee reports that the $1,000He is president of the advertis- goal for the first aspect of theing firm of Earle Ludgin and all-campus drive has been almostCompany, and has served as chair- reached, according to C h a r 1 esThe silly season hit UC, in man of the American Association Mittman, committee chairman,a wet way last Friday after- of Advertising Agencies; as Plans are now being formulatednnnn when IJTers shocked the trustee for the Ravinia Festival for the WUS benefit dance to benoon wne association, the American Federa- held at Ida Noyes, April 23.12:30 C-Shop crowd by shooting tion Qf Arts, and the Art institute:off water pistols in order to pub- as president of the Society of Con- The tag days conducted by In¬ter-Club council netted over $100.photo by BystrynPhi Kappa Pal’s valiant tug-of-war team is slowly dragged intothe icy waters of Botany pond by a superior Phi Gamma Deltateam. licize their next production “TheInspector General” and Phi Gam¬ma Delta and Phi Kappa Psi hada rope pull across Botany Pond.Over fifty people were watch¬ing when the Phi Gams and thePhi Psis, despite the cold anddamp weather, began the compe¬tition with a trial run.The Phi Gams proved to be thestronger team when they draggedhalf of the Phi Psi team throughthe cold and muddy waters ofBotany Pond and thus defeatedtheir challengers. But the Phi Psiswere undaunted and talk of a re¬match was heard as the crowd Polyak dies; famed eyeanatomist here since 1928Dr. Stephen Polyak, professor in the department of anat¬omy, died in his home early Wednesday morning after a pro¬longed heart ailment.Polyak, 65, had been on the UC faculty since 1920. Althoughillness had forced him to give up his teaching duties, he hadcontinued to do research into the anatomy of the eye for thepast several years.Polyak was to have retired Jy next year by the UC press,from the university in June. He had served on the UC facul-Polyak’s monumental work The ty as a professor of neurology,Anatomy of the Eye, a compre- and, since 1928, a professor ofdispersed to the Phi Gam house hensive volume on the vertebrate anatomy. 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The history of philosophy is a step to under¬standing philosophy,” Professor Richard P.TVIcKeon stated last Sunday at Breasted hall dur¬ing his address on ‘‘Gilson and the unity of philosophical experience.”McKeon sponsored by the Calvert club in accordance with its annual tribute to the geniusof Thomas Aquinas, explained much of the theory of Etienne Gilson, named by Newsweekas the ‘‘Greatest living Thomist,” concerning the unity of philosophical experience.McKeon said that Gilson Democratic precinct captains go into voting machines withthe voters in west side wards, having bought out the Repub¬lican judges and clerks the night before, charged Robert E.Merriam, Republican nominee for mayor.Speaking last Friday at an "open house sponsored by the fact- a conspiracy, those respon-states that although there arefundamental differences inphilosophers, there are still cer-i tin unifying similarities that canIh‘ found in the history of philos¬ophy which is a ‘‘vast enquiry inhuman thought.”Gilson stated at Harvard in192<i. McKeon said, that the philos¬opher has a triple role, that of:|H*ing a representative of his age;taking th erole of Carlisle’s “hero.1 thought”; and transcending hisurumstances, using the a prioristate of abstract truth.Use history to explain“The history of philosophy is toi philosopher as a lab is to ascientist” McKeon stated in hisexplanation of Gilson’s theory ofusing the history of philosophy inorder to understand the variousphilosophies of man.He further stated that Gilsonsupported the idea that we shoulduse the ideas of men in the past Young Republicans at the Phi s'b1^ should be prosecuted under_ , , , the laws regarding conspiracy.Gamma Delta house, aldermanMerriam said that many Kennedyand Adamowski followers are Polyak . . .photo by GrossmanFather Joseph D. Connerton, advisor to the Calvert club, shakeshands with Professor Richard P. McKeon in the library of the club. coming into his ranks.In response to a question Mer¬riam stated reform in the policeforce is the most important singleimprovement that he would bringabout as mayor. He added that hewould look for a new commis¬sioner outside the force.Asked about his views on slumclearance, Merriam said that heopposed the clearing and rebuild¬ing of large areas at a time. Heprefers speeding up redevelop¬ment, building and conservation,because he feels it is not desirableto vacate large areas when hous¬ing is scarce.Merriam contended that inTrumbull Park no attempt hasbeen made to find the organizers.He said that since this was, in (from page 1)done with eye anatomy, particu¬larly with that of the retina, andwith the afferent fiber systems ofthe cerebral cortex.Born in 1889 in Croatia (nowpart of Yugoslavia), Polyak re¬ceived his MD from the Univer¬sity of Zagreb. He served for sev¬eral years on the faculty of thatuniversity. During World War Ihe was a health officer in tbeSerbian army.When he came to the UnitedStates, Polyak studied at UC un¬der the noted neurologist, C. Jud-son Herrick.Polyak’s funeral will be heldSaturday at 9:30 a.m. at the Lainand Son Chapel. 2024 E. 75th.Surviving Polyak are his wifeand a son, Stephen, a musician.as a guide in solving the problemsof today.Collect- clothingfor refugeesA campus-wide drive to collectused clothing to be sent to refu- SQ votes support for FEPCf approvesaction on Academic Freedom Weekgees in Europe and Korea has(>een opened by Chapel house. Asimilar drive in December of lastyear yielded 215 pounds of cloth¬ing which was sent abroad.The used clothing is being ac¬cepted at the Chapel house office,5810 Woodlawn. The current drivecloses March 28.Student religious groups withheadquarters in Chapel house areaiding in the drive. Although reaching only about half of its twelve-point agenda before a quorum was called late Tuesday evening, StudentGovernment passed a relatively large number of bills. The government cleared its agenda of a number of items which hadbeen delayed since early in the quarter.In a vote which split the majority party almost in half, SG voted to exclude all money spent on Academic Freedom weekfrom the $150 limit on expens¬es by political parties duringthe time just before the Na¬tional Student association -lec¬tion, the third week of next quar¬ter. Final vote was nine for, sevenFamous ForeignMade Typewritersnow available at- low pricesand easy payment termsOlympia (German) Portable ^94°°Olivetti (Italian) Portable ^94^ask to see them demonstratedat theUniversity ofChicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE against, and three abstentions.Six deputies were authorized toassist the election and rules com¬mittee in poll watching and otherduties on election day.The long-awaited bill to set upa publicity service was finallypassed. The bill only adds thetacking up of posters to the ac¬tual services rendered, but legal¬izes under one name the servicesadded piecemeal through thequarter.A resolution asking the Uni¬versity to support public-ally thedraft of a fair education practicescommission passed by the govern¬ ment, and a bill setting up a com¬mittee of three to lobby for thepassage of the bill in the Illinoislegislature received the necessarymajority. The FEPC bill had beenintroduced originally in January.Student Government effectivelyapproved action to show the Op-penheimer-Morrow interview filmfor academic freedom week, tohave an exhibit in Reynolds clubfor the week, and to sponsor aforum on academic freedom. Alsoeffectively passed was a motion toask all the All-campus Civil Liber¬ties committee to co-ordinate cam¬pus activities for the week. How¬ ever. although the parts of thebill all passed separately, thequorum call prevented the entirebill from being voted upon.Defeated was a bill to amendthe by-laws to eliminate the pub¬licity committee. Bob Kurland(ISL-col), chairman of the pub¬licity committee, presented thebill, stating that he felt the newpublicity service could take overthe committee’s functions.Speakers from both parties op¬posed the move, calling for theplanning of effective publicity,the writing of news releases forthe Maroon, publication of a news¬letter. and similar activity.MYSTERY PHOTOCONTESTc€/iat/e±The winner of last week’s contest was Thomas Bauer, a stu¬dent in the college. He identified the picture as that ofHutchinson Commons as seen from the MAROON Office.The winner each week will teceive a certificate which is goodfor $5 worth of merchandise from Charles Shoe Store. An¬swers must be submitted to Charles Shoe Store at 1133 Bast63rd Street. You may either mail your answer in or elsebring it in. No answers by phone will be accepted. In caseof ties, the earliest correct answer will be the winning one.The winner will be announced in the next issue of theMAROON. hheeJWoodlawn's Must CompleteFamily Shoe Store1133 East 63rd StreetOpen Mon. and Thurs. Evenings^fARLtSS^OJDICKby AL CAPP-(HUcK.LE.rS-FOSDICK.?-SOMEONE’SBEHIND YOU,WITH AGOHfr- BUIICHIEF-l'MBEING HELD UPBY A -STONE HEARTEDKILLER/?’ J YOUR Ir HEAD l_YOURHEADIS MADEOF STONE.? I'M *—J Z9 CENTS? (CUTTING JUST ENOUGHYOUR S TO PURCHASESALARY WILDROOTTO 7.91WEEK? CREAM OIL?-% KEEPS HAIR NEATAND NATURALRELIEVES DRYNESS-REMOVES LOOSEDANDRUFF GETWILDROOTC REAM-OIL.CHARLIE \X I I BUT, YOU 1- SJ ALWAYS L~BUT, YOUA L WAVSCALLED ME'MISSPIMPLETON*?ONtYCfeEAM-OILiCONDITIONS; MAlR THE NATURAL WMT * Fur a Job in Year FieldWhatever your major—from Archaeology toZoology—Katharine Uibba outstanding sec¬retarial training will be an aid in obtaininga ponftion in the field of your interest. WriteCadegc D«an for Girm Gnu-. at Work.Special Coarse fer Betleae WoaienSeeba 16.21 Merikoromk *t New Met 11, 230 Pert Are.16, 1st ArteeA Si MMWelr.N J.urtr.nl**.M..JWI 1 1i■■■ wmmm mmmm mmmNge 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON March 11, 1955EditorialMust follow-up first steps to enddiscriminatory housing listingsThe Student Government special team on Uni¬versity housing policy has had partial success inendeavor where both parties have heretoforemet with complete failure—getting the Adminis¬tration to adopt a letter regarding discriminatorylistings in its housing file.For this the campus owes them a hearty com¬mendation, although this victory is little enoughcompared with what was hoped for. The letter Stro-zier has tentatively accepted tq be sent to all hous¬ing file listers says, in essence, we don’t discrim¬inate in our housing; it would be nice if you did the*ame.The SG team is dissatisfied with this, and theyare continuing to press for something stronger.Still, this is admirable as a first step, so long as theissue isn’t left here. Now is the time to think outWhat our goal in this business is, and to map outbow we’re going to reach it.What do we want? The answer is pretty clear—We want an environment where students of anyrace will be able to live comfortably (in both thephysical and psychological sense). What does thisentail? That students are able to live where theyplease and with whom they please; that they getfacilities worth what they pay and equal to whatIheir fellow students are getting for the same price.Now it seems clear that this requires more thanSimply finding a place for Negro students to live,CM’ simply getting discriminators to stop discrim¬inating. It requires some guarantee of adequateand equal housing for all students.As soon as the question is put it is obvious thatthe University administration is the bnly agencythat can provide this guarantee. A letter suggest¬ing that certain standards be maintained is some¬thing, but it is not enough.There are two methods which can be appliedtoward this goal. One is to cooperate with andgain the confidence of the landlords. The other isto apply actual economic pressure. So far the ad¬ ministration is willing to make use of only thefirst approach.We believe that either approach alone is notenough. Economic pressure alone is likely to buildup resistance and double our job. And “a man con¬vinced against his will is of the same opinion still.”This is not what we want.But a “buddy buddy” approach is likely to becompletely ineffective. Landlords are business¬men. High moral appeals will fall on deaf ears ifthey find discrimination profitable. The adminis¬tration should attempt to make it unprofitable bymaking it clear that unless our standards are met,their card will not be listed. But this must be donein a way to allow them every chance to make good.We would rather have a non-discriminatory listerthan a non-listing discriminator.The administration says it “neither approves nordisapproves” of housing listed in its file. We saythat the mere fact of acceptance of the listing istantamount to a sanction by the listing agency.And it is only natural for that agency to set fortha set of requirements for listers. Indeed this is theUniversity’s duty as responsible for the welfare ofits students.The administration has removed cards from itsfile in the past only in cases of glaring discrimina¬tion like a “w’hites only” sign. It has refused tocommit itself on a criterion for removal of cards,saying each case would have to be judged individ¬ually.What is needed is a positive statement that theadministration will remove a card if there is sub¬stantial evidence of discriminatory tactics; and anotification to all listers—in as non-threatening away as possible—of this policy.Four years ago the University abolished its sep¬arate housing file for Negroes. Now it is adoptingthis letter. Let’s keep working away at this andultimately we may get a University policy that willcontribute maximally to bifilding the kind of neigh¬borhood we want.Letters . . .Karmatz repliesSince you address your criticism to¬ward me in particular, I think X shouldtry and answer some of your state¬ments. It is not the purpose of this let¬ter to attack your critical opinions, butonly to correct some points you mis¬construe:1. Ten of the sixteen contributors inthe Spring issue of the Chicago Revieware students; to my mind that consti-atutes 62.5 per cent of the contributors.2. The Review has, in the past twoyears, printed more student materialthan all the Reviews between 1946 and1953.3. The Review has, in every possibleway, encouraged student writing. Wehave faithfully followed every lead, duginto honor papers and archives, maderequests of teachers and students forany mss. they might have. The sad factis that three-fourths of the studentmss that we receive are hardly literate.The others, excluding book reviews, arelast term’s papers. Only a few are good.4. In 1953 over 65 per cent of the stu¬dent body did not know that a studentmagazine existed. Less than 5 per centof the campus supported the Review. BySpring of 1954 almost 30 per cent of thestudent body on campus supported theReview through sales, and 85 per centof the student body either read or knewof the material in the Review.5. If you ever bothered to go up tothe Harper archives, you would see thatover 100 campus publications have fail¬ed to survive since the turn of the cen¬tury. If the Review had to depend solelyon student support, it would be anotherskeleton in the archives. Again, it is asad fact that students do not want toread the work of other students. Thishas been proved over a hundred times.Students, however, do read materialwritten by well known persons. Nor dostudents object to their mss appearing in the same issue with an establishedwriter.6. The Review must pay its own ex¬penses. If Alumni and others providegreater support than the student body,then they, too, must be considered.7. To my knowledge, the Review isunique in that it is the only studentpublication that has ever successfullybalanced student and professional writ¬ers in a single publication. Proof ofthis is demonstrated by the citationsthe Review has received from the Pub¬lishers Weekly and the Poetry News¬letter, and the fact that by providing anoutlet for student writing, the Reviewhas been instrumental in getting itscontributors publishing contracts.8. As for reappraisal, the Review hasconstantly turned in new directions. Inthe past two years the Review has cov¬ered far more diversified areas thanany other small magazine, fn the nearfuture, the Review plans to add two newfeatures: a developmental science sec¬tion and a section on a series of con¬troversial topics written by students.F. N. KarmatzDefends" SGI feel it my duty to call certain mat¬ters to youj attention. Or rather, a cer¬tain matter.I think you will see my point when Istate that it is your duty as editor tocontrol not only the editorial contentof your copy, but of the advertisementsyou accept as well. I refer particularlyto a gross distortion appearing in yourissue of this date under the byline ofMax Schulman.Mr. Schulman purports to present atypical Student Council, and by infer¬ence the Student Government of theUniversity of Chicago. Well, nothingcould be farther from the truth. Thetrivia mentioned by the columnist em¬phatically do not occupy the energies ofthe UC SG.In order to correct this deplorableimpression, I hope you will permit meto outline a typical evening in the lifeof our own Ruling Body. You will see that the true picture is quite different.The meeting is scheduled for 7:30;there are partly caucuses from 7:20 to7:50 in which the majority (or minor¬ity) leader states the party's positions•on the agenda items. Then the whip andthe assistant whip and the floor leaderand the assistant floor leader all presenttheir positions which are Identical withthe leader's statement of the party'sposition except in several materiallydifferent ways which were arrived at ina previous meeting.Following the statement of policy,the functionaries describe the parlia¬mentary maneuvering necessary to im¬pose the policy on the two members ofthe opposition. Each officer has a dif¬ferent interpretation of this, carefullymade irreconcilable in the same previ¬ous meeting as above.Well, after this background Is firmlyimpressed on the members, the meet¬ing starts.There is a call to order, the roll iscalled and the minutes are read, moved,seconded—and amended to show thatHiram Sigafoos was absent at the lastmeeting only because he was in bedwith hernia caused by a kick lrom ahigh administration official (who shallremain nameless).First item on the agenda: a reportfrom the Committee on Universe Man¬agement recommending that SG take afirm position in a resolution statingthat SG recommends that everybodybe allowed to do anything everywhere.Two amendments are offered for thisreport. Then there is an amendmentto one of the amendments, it is notquite certain which. A substitute mo¬tion is proposed, embodying both or allof the amendments, with suitablechanges. Amendments to the substituteare proposed. For each of the abovethere is unlimited debase.At the end of each debate, beforethe proposal of each new motion, themajority leader, floor leader, assistantfloor leader, party whip, assistant partywhip, and assorted private individualsrise to give their interpretation of thepresent parliamentary status of theSee ‘Letters,’ page 7NO 7-9071Student Rate 50c hyde park theatrestudent rate 50cComing Friday, March 11 lake parkat 53rdJacques TatiYou enjoyed his ''Holidoy” os Mr. Mulot* * *You'll get on even bigger lough out of his Deborah Kerrcurrently making her Chicogo Stage debut .her memorable film stor debut.Big Day (Jour de Fete) Black Narcissus“Jour de Fete” is a grandly comic trifle about thepostman of a village in France, who is inspired toheroic speed and daring when he sees an Americandocumentary film describing the mechanized swift¬ness of the postal service in the United States. Andso, on his trusted bicycle, he tries to emulate "lesyanks,” to the utter astonishment and confusion ofthe placid villagers. . . . Rollicking fun for every¬one.” — Bosley Crowther, New York Times. Outstanding acting by a brilliant supporting cast.Sabu (Robert Flaherty's “Elephant Boy”), DavidFarrar, Flora Robson, Kathleen Byron, and JeanSimmons whose part does not call for her to speaka single word, yet she dominates every sequence onwhich she appears.Coming Friday, March 18, Marlon Brando and Jean Simmons In Anna Marie Selinko*s Desiree, andAnton Walbrook and Dame Edith Evans in Alexander Pushkin’s Queen of Spades.Coming Friday, March 25, Grace Kelly in Alfred Hitchcock’s Dial M for Murder and Ethel Mermanin Cole Porter’s Call Me Mariam. Issued once weekly by the publisher, The Chicago Maroon, at the publica¬tion office, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones'Editorial Office, Midway 3-0800, Eat. 1010; Business ond Advertising OfficesMidway 3-0800, Eat. 1009. Distributed free of chorge, ond subscriptions bymoil, $3 per year. Business Office hours: 1 to 5 p.m., Monday through Fridoy.Allen R. Janger editor-in-chiefRichard E. Ward managing editorWilliam M. Brandon business managerEaecutive news editor Joy BurbochNews editors Diana Epstein, Bob Quinn, David SchlessingerNews feoture editor Lois GardnerFeature editor...; Joe| PichenySports editor Spike PinneyPhotography editor Ronald GrossmonCopy editor Jock BurbochAdvertising manoger Gary MokototfAssistont news editors. Prentiss Choate, Berenice Fisher, Sue ToxProduction manager Mitchell SleirtPersonnel monoger , Jock BurbochCalendar editor Rosemary GolliEditorial staff . . .’ Joe Abotie,Ellen Abernethy, Joon Behrenson, Sam Blazer, Robert Bloch, AliceBloom, Chone Blumefeld, Roger Bowen, Alan Chorlens, Steve Gohen,Chorles Cooper, Mitri Dozoretz, Barbara Fischman, Paul Hoffman,Don Fisher, Kent Flannery, Smokey Garcia, Sam Greenlee, Bill Kaplan,Ken Karlin, Fred Korst, Bruce Larkin, Duchess Laughran, LindaLibera, Gene Rochlin, Gary Schwartz, Fronk Ternenyi, Miriam Garfin.Business Stoff: city advertising manager, Robert Lofts; business secretory,Don Miller; subscription monoger, Norman Lcwok; billing secretory,Tom Kopontois; political advertising monoger, Fred Freed; deliverymonoger, Karl Rodmon; loop delivery monoger, Robert Campbell;sales monoger, Donald De Frotus..liimiiiHiiumiiitmimiiitnDminittiiiiniittvttmittitiiiiitnimiHiinnmifiiiintivininiiiiittintnmimiiiiALEXANDERSRESTAURANT| 1137 E. 63 Street MU 4-5735More than just a good place to eatWe cater to parties and banquetsOpen all night5o million, times a dayat home, at workor while at playThere’snothinglike1. SO BRIGHT in its honest, ever-fresh taste.2. SO BRIGHT in its brisk, frosty sparkle.3. SO BRIGHT in the bit of quick energy it brings you.SOniED UNDER authority of thi coca-coia company »tCoca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc."Colo” It e registered trade-mark. C 1955. THE COCA-COLA COMPANYMarch 11» 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5Professor finds plotto dump MalenkovWings, a play portraying the failure of agriculture underthe Malenkov regime as premier of Russia, was published inNovember to prepare the more sophisticated element of theRussian people for Malenkov’sremoval this winter, UC pro¬fessor George V. Bobrinskoy as¬serted recently.Bobrinskoy, associate professorof linguistics and of Oriental lan¬guages and literature at UC, dis¬covered the play in the Novembercopy of New World, a leadingliterary publication of the SovietUnion. The magazine, printed in Russian, is routinely received byHarper.Publication of the play in No¬vember, Bobrinskoy asserted,would have required a decision tooust Malenkov by last summer,for even a stock drama takes timeto assemble.Wings written by AlexanderKomeychuck, deals in its plotwith such things as livestockdying because the planning hadomitted to provide for planting ofcorn for feed. This charge wasmade by Krushchev against Ma¬lenkov when the latter threeweeks ago publicly admitted hisfailure to improve agriculturalproduction.CHINA, the U.S. and the U.N.Which way out of the present crisis?Hoar . . . EDGAR SNOW"The greatest reporter who ever came out of Asia. , , , "Fortune MagazineChairman of the Meeting: PROFESSOR ROBERT J. HAVIGHURSTMarch 30, 1955 8:15 P.M. K.A.M. Temple Community HouseDonation $1 930 E. 50tli StreetHyde Pnrk Committee fur Peaeeful AlternativesACASA Book StoreUsed Books — Bought and SoldJust received new stock inpsychology and sociologyBY 3-9651 1117 E. 55th StreetARROW BUTTON-DOWN SHIRTS...JUST THE TICKET FOR ANY OCCASION IIt’s the one collar that says: “Right you are,” from morn'ingcoffee to midnight oil.You get variety of style, too, with Arrow button-downs.In round collars, spread collars, collars with a soft roll.They’re precisely tailored to give you the button-down youlike best. See your Arrow dealer. He has button-downs ina variety of colors, just right for you... (and your budget,too). $3.95 up.Afi/lOWSHIRTS & TIESCASUAL WEARUNDERWEARHANDKERCHIEFS Helen Easton queen of PurimPhi Sigma Delta hit the jackpotat the Hillei foundation Purimcarnival last Sunday evening. ThePhi Sig candidate for Queen Es¬ther, Helen Easton, was chosenqueen by voting that took placeat one of the carnival booths.Dick Friedman, a member ofPhi Sigma Delta, won the gianthamantash.Among the carnival booths werethose of a Gypsy fortune teller,a birdcage game, a psychoanalyst,the ballot booth (which was themost successful of the evening),cotton scoop, shave the balloon,hit the schmoo, fish pond, andchoke Haman (with a bagel)."It’s too bad that the violentweather limited the attendance,”said Brina Jaffee, carnival chair¬man. "The enthusiasm of the peo¬ple who were there helped to cre¬ate the carnival spirit.”Net proceeds of the event were$60, which Hillei officials feelcould have been doubled if notfor the cold snow.NSA to survey SG's Helen Easton, Hillers QueenEsther, and her escort at thePurim carnival, Dick Friedman,winner of the giant hamantash.Our Arrow Burrowseen most, liked best on campusCollege men just naturally go for a button-down shirt.It’s a standard because it’s correct, yet comfortable andcasual, too.For the man who likes his variety as well as his comfort,Arrow button-downs are the answer.We have superbly tailored Arrow button-downs in roundand spread styles, as well as the classic Gordon Dover. Seeus for button-downs that are different and decidedly smart.They start at a comfortable $3.95 in broadcloth... $5.00in oxford. Prices that make any budget look bigger./*kieoga - Evanston - Oak Park - Evargraan - Gary - JoJiot - AllanThe U.S. National Student associaion has announced plans to con¬duct a nation-wide survey of student participation in college policy¬making.Supported by a grant of $29,400 from the Ford foundation, the sur¬vey will send questionnaires to deans of students and student leadersat about 800 colleges and universities throughout the United States.Believed to be the most exhaustive study of its kind, the surveywill seek to determine the formal and informal powers accorded stu¬dents, faculty, administration, trustees and alumni in the operationof colleges and universities. Major emphasis will be placed on theposition of student government organization on campus.In addition, intensive study of 10-15 prominent schools will be un¬dertaken by a field representative of the research project.Read This Before It's Too Lafe!WOMEN: Are They Here to Stay?All in the March SHAFT COLLEGE HUMOR!Out today at U of C Bookstore! Redfield givenViking medalRobert Redfield, Robert M.Hutchins distinguished serviceprofessor of anthropology, waspresented the Viking fund medalin general anthropology last Fri¬day.The presentation was made atthe ninth annual dinner of theWenner-Gren foundation for an¬thropological research in NewYork. Redfield, who has been atUC since 1927, was selected to re¬ceive the medal by the AmericanAnthropological association.Redfield’s specialty is the folkculture of Yucatan, south Mexico,and Guatemala. He is also inter¬ested in China, in which he hastraveled and studied the socialsciences.Camera dubholds field tripThe Camera club will hold itsSpring field trip to MichiganDunes park on Saturday, March19th. Everyone is invited. Bringyour camera, be it a box Brownieor a Leica.The group will meet in Reyn¬olds club at 8:30 a.m. Transpor¬tation will be provided.Those who wish to come areasked to register at the ReynoldsClub desk beforehand.RELIANCE CAMERA &PHOTO SUPPLIES1517 East 63rd St.BU 8-6040The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236Jimmy’sSINCE 1940CARMEN'SU»ed Furniture StoreMoving and Light Hauling1127 E. 55 1412 E. 55MU 4-8980 MU 4-9003—P>9< 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON AUrcIi 11# t955Coming Campus EventsFriday, March 11University concert, Vegh string quartetplaying Beethoven, Bartok, and Mo¬zart. Mandel hall, 8:30 p.m.VC Cancer Research foundation concert,Berlin Symphony orchestra. Orches¬tra hall, 8:30 p.m.University Theatre production, “TheWild Duck.’’ Reynolds club theatre,8:30 p.m. $1 admission.Movie, “Edward R. Murrow InterviewsJ. Robert Oppenheimer,” sponsored byDocumentary Film group, Social Sci¬ence 122, 6:45, 8, 9:15 p.m., free.French table, International house din¬ing room, 6 p.m.Saturday, March 12Young Socialist league social, featuringa movie, 5426 S. Maryland, 9 p.m., 35cadmission.University Theatre production, “TheWild Duck.” Reynolds club theatre,8:30 p.m., $1.Sunday, March 13Episcopal communion service, Bondchapel, 8:30 a.m.Lutheran communion service, Hiltonchapel, 10 a.m.University religious service, DeanThompson speaking. Rockefellerchapel, 11 a.m.University Theatre, “The Wild Duck.”Reynolds club theatre, 8:30 p.m., $1.Collegiate Sinfonietta, Mandel hall,4 p.m.Movie, “Voyage Surprise” (French), B-Jlounge, 7 and 9:30 p.m.SRF caucus, Ida Noyes east lounge,7:30 p.m.Italian club meeting. Internationalhouse, room A, 3:30 p.m.Channing club meeting folklore pro¬gram. Fenn house, 6:30 p.m.Young Socialist league meeting and sup¬per. Ida Noyes, 3 and 5:30 p.m. 50cadmission.Monday, March 14Movie, “Carnival Festival” (American),International house, 7 and 9 p.m.Renaissance society exhibition, con¬temporary art. Goodspeed 168, I to5 p.m. on Saturday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.Monday through Friday, throughMarch 24.German table, International house din¬ing room, 6 p.m. Tuesday, March 15Statistics seminar, Herman Kahnspeaking. Eckhart 207, 4 p.m,Wednesday, March 16Lecture, "Why be a socialist today?**Max Schactman speaking. Ida Noyes,4:30 p.m. Sponsored by Young Social¬ist league.Science fiction club meeting, panel dis¬cussion. Ida Noyes library, 7:30 p.m.Thursday, March 17Movie, “Chaplin Festival B” (American),International house, 7 and 9 p.m. Second lecture «( statistics seminar,Eckhart 207, 4 p.m.Friday, March 18Convocation, Rockefeller chapel, 3 p.m.Married students’ association openhouse, Ida Noye6, 8:30-11 p.m.Monday, March 28Registration opens, classes begin.German table, International bouse din¬ing room, 6 p.m.Tuesday, March 29Graduate club of the Germanics depart¬ment meeting, Wieboldt Commons,8 p.m.Le Provencalrestaurant' francaislunch — dinner11 a.m. — 9 p.m.1450 e. 57th street ISO 7-0060£l/ie photographersMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETjyilllllHIHIIIHMIlltlMIHIIIIIIIIIItMIHlWHHHIWIIIIIMHWIlllMWIflllllllllllllllllUIIIWIIIIIIIHIHIWiMllllllllllIjSInternational Hoase Movies| East Lounge Non. A Thers. Eves, st 7:00 A 9:00 P.M. eI March 14 — 35c — Caitaaa Festival (American) || Merck 17 — 35c — Chaptm Festival (American) E^hllNltlll»IIIIIIINUtllllllllllHlllllllltllll«imiHHIHItUHI!lltllUUIItllllllllMi«IIIIIUItlllllllllllllll>lllllllltUltHmiHHT=IA Campus-to-Career Case Historytt This is what I did yesterday”“I like a job that keeps me jumping,**says Bill Jermain, C.E. from Marquette,*52. “And my first management assign¬ment with Wisconsin Telephone Com¬pany does just that. I’m ServiceForemanat Sheboygan,with nine install¬ers, and that means variety of responsi¬bility. But judge for yourself. Here’sa quick run-down of what I did yester¬day, on a typical day—8:10—“Checked day’s work schedule.One of my new men was putting in aburied service wire, and I went over thejob specs with him to be sure he hadthings straight.8:30—“Answered mail while my clerkchecked time sheets from previous day.9:30—“Out to supervise installation ofthe first aluminum Outdoor TelephoneBooth in my exchange. Reviewed theassembly instructions with the installers,then arranged for special tools and boltsto be delivered to the job. 11:30—“Drove across town. Made acomplete ‘quality inspection’ on a tele¬phone we installed last week. Everythingchecked O.K.12:00—“Lunch.1:00—“Picked up film for next day’ssafety meeting. Watched the film, madenotes for discussion.2:00—“Met with moving companymanager to estimate cost of telephonecable lifting for a house moving job.Drove the route he had planned andworked out schedule for constructioncrews.3:30—“Returned to aluminum booth in¬stallation. Went over wiring specs withthe electrician.4:00—“Stopped at Central Office topick up next day’s orders. Met installersat garage as they checked in and assignednext day’s work.”Bill has been in his present job about a year, and islooking forward to new responsibilities as bis expe¬rience increases ... as are the many young collegemen who have chosen telephone careers. If you’d beinterested in a similar opportunity with a Bell tele¬phone company ... or with Bell Telephone Labora¬tories, Western Electric or Sandia Corporation . •. seeyour Placement Officer for full details. BELLTELEPHONESYSTEML. We will pay you cash foryour books or in trade.WILCOX & FOLLETT CO.1247 S. Wabash Ave.HA 7-2840open till 5 Saturday till 4y*i. **> >» rV.v v.v.v.v Advertisement — Advertisement — Advertisement — AdvertisementOn Campos withMaxSfraJman(Author of "Barefoot Boy With Cheek," etc.)SCIENCE MADE SIMPLE: NO. 3Once again the makers of Philip Morris, men who are dedicatedto the betterment of American youth, have consented to let meuse this space, normally intended for levity, to bring you a brieflesson in science.It is no new thing, this concern that the makers of PhilipMorris feel for American youth. Youth was foremost in theirminds when they fashioned their cigarette. They were awarethat the palate of youth is keen and eager, awake to the subtlestnuances of flavor. And so they made a gentle and clement smoke,a suave blending of temperate vintage tobaccos, a summeryamalgam of the most tranquil and emollient leaf that theirbuyers could find in all the world. And then they designed theircigarette in two sizes, king-size and regular, and wrapped themin the convenient Snap-Open pack, and priced them at a figurethat youth could afford, and made them available at everytobacco counter in the land.That’s what they did, the makers of Philip Morris, and I forone am glad.The science that we take up today is called astronomy, from theGreek words astro meaning “sore” and tiomy meaning “back.”Sore backs were the occupational disease of the early Greekastronomers, and no wonder! They used to spend every blessednight lying on the damp ground and looking up at the sky, andif there’s a better way to get a sore back, I’d like to hear about it.Especially in the moist Mediterranean area, where Greece isgenerally considered to be.Lumbago and related disorders kept astronomy from becom¬ing very popular until Galileo, a disbarred flenser of Perth,fashioned a home made telescope in 1924 out of three SocialSecurity cards and an ordinary ice cube. What schoolboy doesnot know that stirring stcry — how Galileo stepped up to histelescope, how he looked heavenward, how his face filled withwonder, how he stepped back and whispered the words heardround the world: “L’etat, e'est moi/”Well sir, you can imagine what happened then! WilliamJennings Bryan snatched Nell Gwynne from the shadow of theguillotine at Oslo; Chancellor Bismarck brought in four gushersin a single afternoon; Hal Newhouser was signed by theHanseatic League; Crete was declared off limits to Wellington’sentire army; and William Faulkner won the Davis Cup for hisimmortal Penrod and Sam.But after a while things calmed down and astronomers beganthe staggering task of naming all the heavenly bodies. Firstman to name a star was Sigafoos of Mt. Wilson, and the namehe chose was Betelgeuse, after his wife Betelgeuse Sigafoos,prom queen at Michigan State College from 1919 to 1931.Not to be outdone, Formfig of Yerkes Observatory named a"whole constellation after his wife, Big Dipper Formfig, thefamed dirt track racer. This started the custom of astronomersnaming constellations after their wives — Capricorn, Cygni,Orion, Ursa Major, Canis Major, and so forth. (The Major girls,Ursa and Canis, both married astronomers, though Canis subse¬quently ran off with a drydock broker named Thwaite Daphnis.)After naming all the heavenly bodies, the astronomers had agood long rest. Then, refreshed and brown as berries, theyundertook the gigantic project of charting the heavens. Space isso vast that it is measured in units called “light-years.” Theseare different from ordinary years in that they weigh a gooddeal less. This, of course, is only relative, since space is curved.As Einstein laughingly said, “E=mc2.”Well, I guess that covers astronomy pretty thoroughly. Butbefore we leave this fascinating topic, let us answer one finalquestion: Is there life on other planets?The answer is a flat, unequivocal no. Recent spectroscopicstudies have proved beyond a doubt that the atmosphere of theother planets is far too harsh to permit the culture of the delicatevintage tobaccos that go into Philip Morris Cigarettes ... Andwho can live without Philip Morris?©Max 8hulman, 1958This heavenly column—like the author's more earthy ones—is broughtto you by the makers of PHILIP MORRIS cigarettes—who feel you'llfind real enjoyment in their product.Merck 11, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAIOON Page 7Letters ...(from page 4)debate. The president gives his tnter-relation. These statements begin, "Assee it," or “our present position is,"bat are alike in no other respect.All the motions on the topic arepostponed until the next meeting tofive the members time to reshuffleRobert's Rules of Older.The next Item Is a committee reportfavorable to a resolution favoring thespread of Hansen's disease In the Inter¬ests of universal understanding and theelimination of individual differences.This resolution includes a proposal forcampus display of a traveling cadaverand various spores and is considered apotential source of Income for SG.The usual process for passing theMU is begun, but when It is announcedthat the cadaver will not survive alengthy delay, discussion Is terminatedand the Issue is ud for vote.The vote is along straight party lines:9.041 to 2. The motion carries.Well, the whole evening Is filled with these Issues and similar ones so you cansee the true picture differs from thefrivolous one you presented. And themeeting lasts eight hours rather thaneight minutes.Please retract.Emmett B. McGeeverCriticizes housing fileIn last weeks’ Maroon, on the articleabout SG and the University’s housingfile, I was quoted as saying that theUC Is “bigger financially than segrega-tors and wlU do everything In Its powerto fight them." In place of the word"will," obviously, the word “should” Iscorrect. I went on In SG to state thatthe University's refusal to weed out thediscriminatory listers on Its own is sup¬posedly due to the fact that, while theUC opposes such policies, It does notfeel that It can dictate to the commu¬nity. As the University Is the biggestIntellectual and financial power in thearea, this claim has the thinness of un¬easy conscience.Lately the separate files have beenabolished, and now a letter that regls-TTVVTfiVTVtTTVTrrVTfTTtrffTffTfTVTVTVVTTtVVTTXREADER’Sthe campus drug store61st fir Ellis Opposite Burton-JudsonVisit our College Room and try ourSunday Student SpecialSirloin Butt SteakFrench Fries — Salad BowlRoll and Butter ters vague disapproval of discriminationand of segregation Is being scat out.Also, a student petition with well over1,000 signatures, requesting that no dis¬criminatory listing be placed In thellle. has been disregarded, and this yearan SG committee was unable to exacta definite promise that complaints willbe followed through. I do congratulatethe business office of the universityon its success, being caught betweenthe dilemmas of a ne'ghborhood, fright¬ened into discrimination, and of a pro¬fessed Ideal that discrimination Is notto be supported, aided, or condoned(passively supported by almost the en¬tire student body). I congratulate thebusiness office for so successfull walk¬ing this moral tightrope, and for show¬ing the students an example of how thebusiness world places expediency, con¬venience, and moderation, above a toorigid adherence to what is privatelyadmitted to be correct.Joel RosenthalSG (SRP-Hum.)Franck honoredJames Franck, professor emeri¬tus of chemistry at UC, wasawarded the Rumford medals andpremium Wednesday by theAmerican Academy of Arts andSciences for his work on photo¬synthesis.Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372 'Spirit of Berlin' to be topic oflecture by West Berlin officialHans E. Hirschfeld, public affairs director for the senateof West Berlin, will speak on “The Spirit of Berlin” on Tues¬day, March 29, at 8 p.m. in Wieboldt 408.Dr. Hirschfeld’s visit is part of a tour of the US sponsoredby the Berlin senate and arranged with cooperation from theUS State department’s office of German affairs, the ForeignPolicy Association, the Amer¬ican Jewish committee andthe American Association ofTeachers of German.His appearance here is spon¬sored by the Graduate club of theGermanics department.Against totalitarianismIn and out of German govern¬ment since 1921, Hirschfeld haswaged a lifelong battle againsttotalitarianism. As information di¬rector of the Ministry of the Inter-GUADALAJARASUMMER SCHOOLThe accredited bilingual schoolsponsored by Hie Universidod Auto-noma de Guadalajara and membersof Stanford University faculty willoffer in Guadalajara, Mexico, July 3-Aug. 13, courses m art, creativewriting, folklore, geography, history,language and literature. $225 coverstuition, board and room. Write Prof.Juan B. Roel, Box K, Stanford Uni¬versity, Calif.What young people are doing at GeneralYoung engineeris responsible fordesign analysisof $3,000,000turbine-generatorsThe average large steam turbine-generatorcosts $3,000,000 and takes two years to build.It is one of the biggest pieces of electricalequipment made. \et its thousands of partsare put together as carefully as a fine watch.Even a small change in design can affect thestresses and vibration of the turbine, andthe way it performs. At General Electric,several men share the responsibility of pre¬dicting those effects before the turbine isbuilt. One of them is 29-year-old E. E.Zwicky, Jr.His job: analytical engineerHere’s what Ted Zwicky does. He takesa proposed mechanical design feature, de¬scribes it mathematically, breaks it downinto digestible bits, modifies it, and feeds itto electronic computers. (It may take twomonths to set up a problem; the computersusually solve it in twenty minutes.) ThenZwicky takes the answers from the com¬puters, translates and interprets them so theycan be followed by design engineers.23,000 college graduates at General ElectricThis is a responsible job. Zwicky was readiedfor it in a careful program of development.Like Zwicky, each of our 23,000 college-graduate employees is given a chance to findthe work he does best add to realize his fullpotential. For General Electric believes this:When young minds are given freedom tomake progress, everybody benefits—the in¬dividual, the company, and the country. ElectricTED ZWICKY, B. S. in EE from the Uni¬versity of New Mexico, Clas6 of 1945,joined General Electric after a yearin the Navy, completed our AdvancedEngineering Program in 1950.Progress Is Our Most Important ProductGENERAL^!) ELECTRIC Hirschfeldior of the state of Prussia in theearly thirties, he was a leader inthe fight against militarism andnationalism which defeated Ger¬many’s first attempt at de¬mocracy.Forced toflee the coun¬try with theGestapo on hisheels, he locat¬ed in France,where he keptcontact witht h e anti-Naziunderground aseditor of"Deutsche Frei-heit” (GermanFreedom), ananti-Nazi newspaper. In 1940 hejoined the French army, escapingafter its defeat to the UnitedStates.Served for USHere he served through the re¬mainder of the war as a consult¬ant to the U. S. Office of StrategicServices, with time out for teach¬ing at Harvard university.‘‘Modem Berlin,” declaresHirschfeld, who is an authority onpolitical philosophy and history,‘‘has much in common with themost challenging chapters inAmerican history. Our city, thriv¬ing 100 miles within the iron cur¬tain, is a 20th century frontierof freedom, and its citizens are,of necessity, hard-working pio¬neers.“I hope my visit here will makeAmericans curious to see Berlinfor themselves, and discover howwe have rebuilt it from a waste¬land of rubble to a cosmopolitancenter of art, fashion, industryand education.”Schactman tospeak twiceon Socialism“The politics of coexistence”and “Why be a socialist today?”will be the topics discussed byMax Schactman, national chair¬man of Independent Socialistleague, next Tuesday and Wednes¬day, respectively.Both lectures are in Ida Noyesat 8 p.m. and 4:30 p.m., respective¬ly.“In choosing the subject of co¬existence Schactman will be deal¬ing with the most acute questionof our time, since it touches notmerely on the political situationon the continent but, by the verynature of the problems involved,Asia and the United States aswell,” said Deborah Meier, spokes¬man for Young Socialist leaguewhich is sponsoring Schactman.COMOPIZZERIA1520 E. 55th St.• Bar-be-cue ribs• Bar-be-cue chickenDelivery AnywhereFA 4-5525Page 8 March 11, 1955plays BartokBartok’s Quartet No. 6 will befeatured in the final Universityconcert of the quarter, to be giventonight at 8:30 in Mandel Hall bythe Vegh string quartet. The Ma-—Toon’s music , reviewer last yearsaw fit to praise the quartet’s per¬formance of Bartok as “an excel¬lent rendition” played “with greatspirit.”The program tonight will alsoinclude Beethoven’s Quartet No.16 in F, opus 135, and Mozart’sQuartet in D, K. 575.The Vegh quartet, whose mem¬bership has remained unchangedsince its debut in 1940, won firstprize at the International Musiccompetition held in Geneva in1946, and received the FrenchGrand Prix de Disques for its in¬terpretation of the major Mozart•quartets in 1952. \SEE YOUR CHEVROLET DEALERIm‘Round Dance’ good as light Concert of premieresfare; artistically unimportantThe current production of Arthur Schnitzler’s “Round Dance” illustrates the dilemmathat faces the Playwrights Theatre club. These North Side professionals have clearly showntheir ability to put a superior production on t he stage and coupled with this have shown adesire to present only the most artistically im portant works. Unfortunately their audiencefor fine art is too small to paythe freight, and despite itselfPlaywrights must occasionallyput on a tired businessman’s showfor financial reasons.As a tired businessman’s show,“Round Danee" is very, verygood. It contains the maximumof permissible licentiousnessand yet is not a vulgar play andits wit is not forced, but the factremains that it is substantiallyindistinguishable from the cur¬rent Broadway smut show.The story, from which the film“La Ronde” was made, is con¬cerned with promiscuity in oldVienna. It consists of a series often scenes, all of them bedroom,in which the lighthearted frivolityof the Viennese is painstakinglyexposed. What the script lacks inlewdness is more than compen¬sated for in gesture, and the dis¬creet blackout characteristic ofsuch works always occurs aboutthirty seconds later than the usualcustom demands.The best of the breed is MissDonna Holabird. whose facial ex¬pressions are sufficient to stealscenes from such a seasonedtrouper as Lee Henry. Unquestion¬ably Miss Holabird would wearthin if l\er appearance were long¬er, but each character appears nomore than a fifth of the total timeof the play, and#unusual intensityon the part of each is much to bedesired. However to mention onecharacter is to do an unintendedinjustice to the rest, and it is suf¬ficient to say that there was nota single weak spot in the show.James Cordes’ pantomimes,which occurred on the side ofthe stage during the blackoutsare most amusing when intelli- A concert, to consist mainly of first performances, will begiven by the Collegiate Sinfonietta at 4 p.m. Sunday in Man-del hall. Admission is free. ,The concert, under the direction of Dieter Kober, will openwith a recently discovered symphony by Christoph WillibaldGluck. Thomas Metzger will be the soloist in what is believedto be the first performance ingible, and David Crane, whoplays the accordion and singsGerman songs between scenes,lends a suitably schmalzy airto the proceedings. The wishedfor total Viennese atmosphere,however, does not materializedespite the efforts of these two.The next production will be“Oedipus Rex” in April. Suchworthy but rarely seen plays arecommon fare at Playwright’s, andit is only if the justly expectedsupport from institutions like theuniversity appears that suchthings can be continued. One can¬not overemphasize the tremen¬dously high standards of this thea¬tre whose very existence in atown like this is a source of won¬der to its patrons.—Roger W. Bowen this country of Carl Stamitz’Concerto for Cello and Or¬chestra.Other works on the program in¬clude the American premiere ofthe Concertino for String Orches¬ tra by Erland von Koch, a contem¬porary Swedish composer; a sym¬phony by Johann Gottlieb Graun—a composition of the pre-classi-cal school; and a Concerto forStrings in D minor by AntonioVivaldi.Art displayed ski ,riP offeredAntony Holland” as “thecount” with Klaine May as “theactress” portray two of the lov¬ers in “Round Dance.” TheSchnitzler comedy Is at Play¬wrights Theatre Club for a lim¬ited engagement. An exhibition of Chinese finger¬painting in the traditional stylewill be presented in ^he Reynold’sClub North Lounge tomorrow.The paintings are the work ofTsai-Yen Wu of Singapore, whowill give demonstrations at theexhibit at 3, 4, and 5 p.tn.Sponsored by the Chinese Stu¬dents Association, the exhibit willbe open only between 10 a.m. and6 p.m. tomorrow.U T tryoutsUniversity Theatre announcesopen tryouts for its forthcomingSpring production, Gogol’s TheInspector General. All studentsand personnel are eligible to readfor the show. Casting dates areMon.-Wed., March 14-16, 3-5 p.m.and 7-9 p.m. in the Reynolds ClubTheatre.It will be necessary for peoplewho are cast in major roles torehearse over Spring vacation,however; all roles and productionwork will be selected this comingweeje.The first of three performancesof “The Inspector General” will beheld in Mandel Hall. April 15 forthe first annual University of Chi¬cago Arts Festival.Vegh quartet The Outing club is offering toall students the chancy of spend¬ing ten days of skiing in Colorado.The exact time is from March 17to 27; $70 includes transportation,food, and lodging.All interested persons shouldcontact Don Wentzel through thestudent activities office in Reyn¬olds club. This should be done atonce, since this will be the lastchance to sign up for this trip.There's even more toChevrolet stylingthan meets the eye!This is beauty with a bonus . . . for Chevroletstyling is designed to add safety and comfortwhile you drive, and to return greater valuewhen you trade.Truly modern lines are shaped by usefulness. Youcan see what we mean in the deep crystal curve ofChevrolet’s Sweep-Sight windshield ... a dramaticstyle note, certainly, but one that stems from the needfor wider, safer vision. Or take high-set taillights—they add to the impressive length of line . . . butthey are up where they can be seen for safety’s sake.The smart louvers across the hood aren’t just dec¬oration . . . they mark the intake for the High-Levelventilation system for cleaner, fresher air. And thewhole shape of the body—its lowness, the dipped beltline—is merely a reflection of a lowered center ofgravity, the added stability.This is truly functional styling that serves youbetter every mile, and preserves its value against thedistant day when you trade. This is Body by Fisher—another Chevrolet exclusive in the low-price field.Come in and let us demonstrate that this new Chev¬rolet is just as exciting to drive as to look at!motoramic CHEVROLET Q Visored headlights Q| Louvered High-Level air intakeQ Sweep-Sight-Sight windshield Distinctive dip in belt line! CHEVROLET /jSTEALING THE THUNDERFROM THE HIGH-PRICED CARS! jj^ Fender-high taillights Q Tasteful two-tone color stylingMarch 11, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 9UT successful in 'Wild Duck'People who are fond of either good education or good entertainment should see the Uni¬versity Theatre’s production of Ibsen’s The Wild Duck. A production such as this onemakes education pleasant and entertainment profitable. Ibsen created forceful characterswho perform some fascinating "actions. The University The¬atre’s actors made those char¬acters believable and thereby cap¬tured the audience’s complete at¬tention.The plot revolves around aself-confessed idealist who is theson of a crooked father. Thefather had seduced his maid andthen married her to the son of aman he had dishonestly sent tojail. The idealist, through a longstanding enmity with his fatherand a desire for independence, hadleft his father’s house and goneto work by himself. The play fo¬cuses on his return and his at¬tempt to make his friend’s con¬venient marriage (the one ar¬ranged by his father) into an hon¬est one. Unfortunately for theidealistic son his integrity andhonesty are not guided by intel¬ligence.He wants everyone to talklike an idealist and no one tobehave like one. He forgets thatthe dishonored maid has becomea self-sacrificing wife for 15years to a selfish windbag. Hetells the’ husband the unpleas¬ant fact of the wife’s seduction.At this point the plot reallybecomes interesting. The plotheads up to what happens to thecharacters when the truth is re¬ vealed. Thus the central char¬acter in the play is the hus¬band, Hjalmar, played by An¬drew Duncan. He is the charac¬ter whose response to the truthdetermines the fate of the othercharacters.The dominating trait in hischaracter is a constant desire tomake things easier for himself bymaking them a little harder foreveryone else.It is this caricature of dishon¬est humanity which is giventruth. The play’s meaning is notthat we should regard drinkand lies as the staff of life.A drunken doctor talks suchphilosophy to the idealistic son,and much of the audience seem¬ed highly impressed by his wis¬dom. Rather it is that the truthcan only free us from the uglyand the sordid if we have thecharacter to understand andapply it.This meaning was apparent inthe production of the play. I mustcertainly comment on the wonder¬ful performance Andrew Duncangave of the husband. His charac¬terization of a demanding andnervous weakling was perfect andhe never overplayed the partAs the idealistic son, HallTaylor was only partially suc¬ cessful in conveying the chang¬ing moods of an unstable per¬sonality. But his acting had adramatic overtone that suitedthis calm, over-confident char¬acter. Dalia Juknevicius wassuperb as the unfortunate wife.She gave her role that elementof simple humanity that wasneeded to make the tragedy ef¬fective. Her appearance and ges¬tures were true to her partwhich was that of a simpledevoted woman.Also successful in lesser roleswere William Zavis as the ideal¬ist’s father, Elizabeth Wijk-man as the woman he intends tomarry in his old age, and OttoSenz as the cheated old man. Con¬nie Millman was generally a verypretty picture as the youngdaughter.The production was superb.The costumes were excellentand the persons who assembledthem used the best possibletaste. The same can be said ofevery other feature in the pro¬duction. Everything contributedto the play’s success. Perhapswhat adds to my enthusiasmis the fact that mo: t of the ac¬tors and crew in the productionare participating for the firsttime in a UT presentation.—Kenneth Karlin Left to right: Dalia Juknevicius, Andrew Duncan ana C onnieMillman in University Theatre’s production of Ibsen’s The WildDuck, which will terminate its five-night run this Sunday. Ticketsare available for the remaining three performances, and may bepurchased at the Student Ticket Exchange or the University The¬atre office, Reynolds Club 309, for $1. Curtain time is 8:30 in theReynolds Club Theatre.WUCB weekly schedule madeavailable by program departmentAny listener in B-J, the C-group,or International house may re¬ceive the mimeographed WeeklyProgram Schedule of WUCB byFaculty Exchange each week, an¬nounces the campus radio station.Anyone who would like to re¬ceive the schedule may write tothe program department, WUCB,Burton-Judson, Faculty Exchange,and he will receive the scheduleSMALL GIRL SKIPPING ROPIOUTSIDE WINDOWPierre Midol-MonnetLehigh University LAST SUNSET SEENBY PIRATE WALKING PLANKErnest GorospeUniversity of Hawaii 'rrk toasted"~fo faste, better JAERIAL VIEW OFCUSTER'S LAST STANORobert L. WrightUniversity of Virginia FAT MAN AND FAT LADYBEHIND BEACH UMBRELLAJudy GendreauMarquette University NO MATTER WHERE YOU ARE, you’ll get more pleasure fromyour cigarette if it’s a Lucky Strike. That’s the point of theDrcodle above, titled: Three deep-sea divers enjoying Luckies.You get deep-down smoking enjoyment from Luckies becausethey taste better. Why do they taste better? That’s easy tofathom. First of all, Lucky Strike means fine tobacco. Then,that tobacco is toasted to taste better. “It's Toasted"—thefamous Lucky Strike process—tones up Luckies’ light, mild,good-tasting tobacco to make it taste even better ... cleaner,fresher, smoother. So, when it’s light-up time, light up thebetter-tasting cigarette . . . Lucky Strike.Bettea taste Luckies... LUCKIES TASTE BETTER ..C&awe/t, Faediea, Si*toofcJie/i! free of charge beginning in thespring quarter.Studio programming for thepresent quarter will end on March12. For the remainder of the in¬terim, the station will rebroadcastmusic from WEFM daily from9:30 a.m. to midnight. Studio pro¬grams will resume at 8 p.m.March 28.CA.T.Co. PRODUCT or AMERICA’S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTES Hearst...(from page 1)Russian people for the changefrom a consumer to an industrialeconomy. However, he added,"they didn’t want to alarm theU. S.” and incite the nation to agreater war effort."If, in the coming months thename of the Hearst newspapersis changed to ‘L’Humanite’ or‘Pravda,’ you’ll know my reasonwas wrong,” he concluded.Conniff, a Hearst columnist,said that “Communist leaders areconcerned over the situation inthe Far East . . . and the riskycourse Communist China is pur¬suing.” He compared the rela¬tionship of Russia and China withthat of the U. S. and Britain —united by a larger purpose butnot always on specifics.He quoted American ambassa¬dor Charles E. Bohlen: "TheKremlin leaders are guided bywhat they think is the real inter¬est of Russia.” Conniff explainedthat the Kremlin would not riskwar with the U. S. “so CommunistChina could grasp a few islandsin the Pacific.”He added that "the era of com¬petitive co-existence is far moredifficult (for us) than a militarystruggle,” but inserted a hopefulnote, saying “the Communist sys¬tem is not geared to the demandsof the 20th century.”Peterson Moving& Storage Co.55th A. Ellis AvenueStoroge facilities for a trunk orcarload of household effectsPacking — ShippingLocal or long distance movingBUtlerfield 8-6711111111Page 10 THE CHICAGO MAROONClassified AdvertisementsFor Sale Ride Wanted .Riders Wanted1939 Chevrolet. Incredibly cheap! Some¬what depressing appearance, but runslustily. Call Ext. 3435 or PA 4-8394.Webcor maestro phonograph. Excellentcondition. Brand new diamond LPneedle. Ken Stapley, MU 4-8741.Buick, 1946, 4-door, radio, heater. 5 goodtires, new brakes, A-l motor. HY 3-6124.17-inch TV, phonograph record cabinet.Ideal for Hi-Fi. Studio couch, baby car¬riage. Phone HY 3-6644 after 5 p.m.Subscriptions to all MAGAZINES. Newand renewal. Bargains Julius' Karpen,Room 411. B-J, MI 3-6000. *Modern sofa bed, blond wood trim. Mustsell to get room for new furniture.Reasonable offer takes. ST 3-2258 after6 p.m.Learn Folk-style guitar. Sooner than youthink, you can accompany your favoritesongs. Group method. Low cost. BernieAsbel, AT 5-6550. Ride wanted for two persons to New Wanted: Riders to points east. Rt. 30 toYork around March 18. Share driving Mansfield. Ohio. Leave 18th. C. Spencer,and expenses. Ken Stapiey. MU 4-8741. gKt 1029.To St. Paul on or about March 18. CallDiane. ED 4-5889 after 7 p.m.spriniterlm. Will share expenses. Call PaulWeiss. MI 3-6p00 (B-J).Ride wanted vicinity Birmingham-Tus-caloosa, Alabama. Either weekend ofspring vacation. Share driving and ex¬penses. Don Fisher, No. 746 B-J.Ride for two to New York, Philadelphia,or vicinity. Leaving March 18-19, eturn-ing about March 26. Will share expenses.Da Rosa, NO 7-7950. *To Memphis, Tennessee, during Interim.Call BUI Krol, PL 2-9874.Two girls desire ride to and from NewNew York spring interim. Share ex¬penses. Contact Ext. 1040, room 43.To Dayton, Ohio, on March 19 for twopersons. Call Frances Feldman, SO 8-5452 (office hours). To New Orleans noon March 18. Over¬night in Champaign, then straightthrough. Roger, PL 2-9477. Leave num¬ber.Riders to Tucson, Arizona. Leavingaround the 18th. Contact Hastings, 827B-J or 445 B-J.Help WantedWaitress, full or part time. Le Provencal.1450 E. 57th. NO 7-9669.Full-time girl for laboratory work onDr. Urey's isotope project. Should havesome chemical background. Call Ext.3735. H. Craig or C. Emillani.Spring schedule set? We need severalmen or women, 21 or over, to drive ourstation wagons for schools. Short hoursavailable, mornings, noons, and after¬noons. *1.25 per hour. BU 8-7900.5-room furnished apartment. 502 facultybuilding, 6019 Ingleside avenue to besublet May 1 to September 30. 1955, tocouple with faculty connection. Call FA4-0111.Persona!Help! Help! Three flunking Nat. Sci. 1students in need of tutor who has rea¬sonable rates. Call “Bob" at CA 7-7164after 6 p.m. B.J., A.Z., R.S.Wanted! Married punch drinkers andsong singers to attend MSA open houseFriday evening. March 18.Wanted: Students to take Nat. Sci. 3here summer quarter File petitions thisweek.WantedBicycle, woman’s or man's. Contactroom 43, Green hall and leave message.Baby-sitter in exchange for free privateroom. 3-4 nights weekly. Cooperativemeal arrangements. Call after 7 p.m.DR 3-6467.Editorial, advertising, and art work as¬sistants for new inter-American month¬ly magazine. Would like some ofProfessor C. Fred Hippy's old studentswho are interested In current Latin-Amertcan political history. Call MI 3-7238 after 6 p.m.Someone going to Washington. D.C., topick up 4 packages there and bringthem back to Chicago. Contact HY 3-3087.Nick Bova — Florist:5239 Harper Ave.Ml 3-4226STUDENT DISCOUNTDELIVERY SERVICE enjoy a new3pair shoewardrobe foronly $23^’A*k forstyltt W-62S No strain on 0m btltfoM now toown tho cor rod stylo shoos foreveryday, dress-up or casual wear.Buy all three stylos at a priceyou'd expect to pay for a single pair!Super comfort in all sizes andwidths! $6.95, J7.95 and $8 95.Ask your dealer for FREE moneyfold!7 m Mm Wnt And So. aAs advsrt/ssd in EsquiraTHE VERY NEWEST NAME IN YOUNG MEN’S SHOES an undergraduate favorite..OUR *346" TROPICAL WORSTEDSin oxford or charcoal greyand other good-looking shadesOur popular ”346” tropical worsteds aremade of attractive 8-oz. worsteds... on ourexclusive single-breasted models...and withspecial lightweight linings that make themunusually comfortable. In solid shades ofnavy blue, brown, oxford or charcoal grey...and in brown or grey Clenurquhart plaids.Coat and trousers.ESTABLISH 10 IBISMens Furnishings, Hats echoesJ46 MADISON AVENUE, COR. 44TH ST., NEW YORK 17, N. Y.BOSTON • CHICAGO • LOS ANCELES • SAN FRANCISCOCOLLEGE TO COLLEGE, COAST TO COAST- WL i. *Ur**^«U T«*b*coo 0* . WMmUm M. Q,WINSTON is really going to town!:•***WINSTON fasfes good —like a cigarette should!WINSTONJ&P &Z$l/-Ck<2witiO(uqan&tte./■ No wonder so many college men and women are getting to¬gether on Winston! It’s the filter cigarette with real flavor —full, rich, tobacco flavor! And Winston also brings you a finerfilter. It works so effectively, yet doesn’t “thin” the taste.Winstons are easy-drawing, too — there’s no effort to puff IMarch 11, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Rage 11Trackmen 2nd at Naperville; 300 join in WAALoomos outstanding runner Basketball playdayFrank Lcx>mos’ twelve points which won him the outstanding individual trophy at theNorth Central college indoor meet Saturday at Naperville were not enough to win Chicagothe team title. Chicago finished second in the meet they had won in ’54.Last year the team title went to Chicago by a scant y2 point. This year they again beatWheaton by y2 point, but Central Michigan slaughtered both teams. Central Michiganscored 50, Chicago 35Vk,Wheaton 35, and Loyola 33.Seven other schools competedin division I (schools with 1200enrollment or over).Loomos scored in the 60 yarddash, the 60 yard high hurdles,the 60 yard low hurdles, and thetwelve lap relay. With many trialsin both hurdles and dash, Frankran at least as far as two-milersRay Sanders and Paul Baptist.Loomos placed third in the dashwith a :06.5 time, third in thehigh hurdles, and first in the lowhurdles with :07. The twelve laprelay team which included AndyThomas, Dan Trifone, and DeweyJones gained fourth place in theirevent.Paul Baptist ran away with thetwo mile for the only other Ma¬roon first. Every lap after themile mark he increased his lead,finishing in 10:12.5, a respectabletime for the difficult track. RaySanders placed fourth behind him.Baptist later came back for thetwenty lap relay, combining withJim Brown, Spike Pinney, and ArtOmohundro to place fifth.Joe Howard and Roger Forsyth,Chicago’s superlative shotputters,placed second and fourth, respec¬tively. Howard’s distance was agood 46' 10 %".Dan Trifone, besides his twelvelap relay effort, garnered fifth inthe high hurdles. Dewey Jones,who also ran in the twelve laprelay, got into a three-way tie forthird in the high jump, with 5'10".Milers Jim Flynn and Art Omo¬hundro added three points to Chi¬cago’s total. Flynn was fourth andOmohundro fifth in the eleven lapgrind. Flynn’s time was 4:43.Omohundro was not far back, al¬though he had raced 800 yard^inthe twenty lap relay about fiftyminutes before. Sports CalendarToday: Track, Midwest conference, 6:30 p.m., fieldhouse.Tomorrow: Track, Central AAU, 7 p.m., fieldhouse.Fridoy, March 18: Track, Bradley and Western Michigan, 7:30 p.m.,fieldhouse.Saturday, March 19: Fencing, Notre Dome and Cincinnati, at NotreDame.Track, Milwaukee Journal games, ot Milwaukee.Fridoy, March 25: Track, K. of C. games, at Cleveland.Fencing, NCAA Championships, ot Michigan State.Saturday, March 26: Track, Daily News Relays, at Chicago stadium.Wednesday, March 30: Track, Elmhurst, 3:30 p.m., fieldhouse.Thursday, March 31 : JV Track, Morton, Mendell, and Leo, 3:45 p.m.,fieldhouse. Over 300 lively young women joined in the Women’s Ath¬letic Association’s 20th annual basketball playday last Sat¬urday.Since both Ida Noyes gym and Sunny gym were needed to provideenough playing space, most of the participating schools split theircontingents into two teams; the Great Lakes school fielded one“scotch” and one “soda” team, while most of the schools used moredignified “I” and “II” designations.The Chicago I team, playing in Ida Noyes, lost its game to EasternIllinois, 24-28. Pat Lucas and Dottie Hess scored 12 and 5 pointsfor the losers, respectively. In their second game they trouncedChicago swimmers secondin intercollegiate meeting“The team made the best showing since 1952” summed upcoach Bill Moyle’s swimmers’ second place performance inthe eighth annual Chicago Intercollegiate swimming anddiving championships held lastFriday and Saturday in Bartlettpool.Paul Sellen set a new pool rec¬ord of 1:03.8 in winning the 100yard backstroke. Mike Mandellwas the only other Chicago win¬ner. He finished first in the 200yard backstroke with a fast 2:27time. Together the two contrib¬uted twelve points from theseevents to the 52 point team total.Loyola won with 65 points. Othercompeting teams were Illinois In¬stitute of Technology, George Wil¬liams College, North Park, Wil¬son, Wright, and the Universityof Illinois at Navy Pier.After the meet Paul Sellen waselected team captain for the 1955season. This was his last seasonof competition for the UC swim¬mers.Outstanding individual of themeet was Loyola’s Norm VanWormer who garnered threefirsts. BasketballThough the 1954-55 Universityof Chicago basketball squad didn'tset the world on fire, it did comeup with an accomplishment or two.The team record of 6 victories and1 3 defeats was unimpressive but ithas an individual record that it canpoint to with pride. Billy Lesterscored 357 points in the last sea¬son to set a new school scoringrecord. He averaged 18.78 pointsper game and made most of themagainst opponents taller than his 5feet 1 1 inches. Lester was electedcaptain for the past year in a postseason election.The best ball for your gamehas the exclusiveDURA-THIN COVERHere** amazing new durability in a high-ccmpressionball. The DURA-THIN* cover provides this great newSpalding DOT® with real scuff resistance ... keeps theDOT uniform and true, even on rugged high-iron shots.The new DOT has a greater compactness for truer, moreuniform flight. It’s actually an economical ball for youto play.And, with all this new durability, new DOTS still offerthe long, long carry every hard-hitter wants.At school, or on your home course, make your nextround a better one with this greatest of all golf balls,Spalding DURA-THIN DOTS.Spalding sets the pacein sports•Trade-mark Gymnasts downNotre Dame awayUniversity of Chicago 54%,Notre Dame 41%, is the way thevarsity gymnasts completed theirseason this year on last Saturday.This victory marks the fifthstraight win for Bud Beyer’s boyswho have been victorious in threemeets against big-ten competi¬tion this season.Herb Taylor led the team inscoring with twenty-five pointsby taking firsts on the side horse,tumbling, and flying rings. BobHerndon took first on trampolineand John Bowman took first onthe parallel bars. photo by EnosWAA basketball player Lang Collins bats the bal while TinyLarsen (partially hidden), Helen Rudoff, Elainie Kostopolos, andDotty Hess watch.Wisconsin, 27-16. Dottie Hess scored 15 and Pat Lucas posted 5 pointsin this game.The Chicago II team, playing once in Ida Noyes, and once in Sunnygym, lost to Northwestern but beat Rockford. The Northwesternscore was 9-29, and the Rockford tally was 32-20. Sandy Ford’s 13points were high in the Rockford game.The steam tables in Ida Noyes Hall cafeteria were used for the firsttime in a long time to feed 300 hungry players during the noon breakin games.Books new & usedAlso Records: Caruso,Galli-Curci, etc.Open from 12 Noon till 9:30 p.m.White Boar Bookshop61 W. Division St. SU 7-3659TERRY’S PIZZAfinest pizzas madeLENTEN SPECIALSLarge Cheese PizzaReg. 1.85, now 1.40 with this adBasket of Shrimp — 99cWe also carry a full line of Italian foodsFREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTS1518 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-4045 UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingTwo barbers workingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietorLouise Barkerphotographer"who capturesyourpersonalityas well asyour person”1457 E. 57th St.BU 8-0876Page 12 THE CHICAGO MAROON Marcli II, 1955ACCLC appoints 7 to lobby;Da,ey upheW' College examsi ■. , i . e j i in SF debateto hold academic freedom week in ar ucudie The quarterly exams in the col.lege will be held during the regv*.Clive Gray and Paul Hoff- lar class and lecture periods. \man turned the weekly Thurs- partial time schedule follows:by Bartan. Ftochman day afternoon Reynolds’ Club Hum. 1: Thursday, March 17, dur-J , .„A11 rnn„Q rivil I iberties Comittee meeting decided to send a delegation of debates into a propaganda ing the regular class and lecture^evendtoeSprfngffeldCto lobby^gainst the Broyles Bills. ACCLC also assumed the role of co- campaign for Richard Daley this periods for that day.ordinator of All Campus Academic Freedom Week (April iol actmties. week; Hum. s. Friday, March 18, duringA few ^s%^°Pted the Steenng COmm'ttee S P caS»mrrr.dth^ Cass peHoU.P0The fi^t ororosal was that a allegation of sewn, expenses paid, should consist of Clark PhDs, Bruce Larkin and JohnKucheman (SG), A1 Fortier a^lc to oppose the bills(SG), Carolyn Eggert (NuPi), Mr Weisberg, lawyer from theaddressing the body at the open¬ing, stated the legal aspects ofthe bills and noted the conse¬quences which might arise fromthe respective provisions of thebills. He said "they touch so close¬ly problems of intellectual free-Barbara Stech (WAA), Bruce American Civil Liberties UnionLarkin (pres. ACCLC), Paul Bres-low (SG), and George Stone (IFCouncil). Originally the steeringcommittee recommended thatB r e s 1 o w and Fortier testifyagainst the bills before a housecommittee. The Lichtensteinamendment, which was accepted,named Larkin as the speaker be¬fore the house committee withBreslow and Fortier as alternates.Others may go to Springfield asnon-official observers at theirown expense.Other lines of action suggestedwere a forum and meeting March31 in Mandel Hall with a paneldiscussing the Bills; that "allmembers of ACCLC are urged towrite letters to the legislature";and finally all campus student or¬ganizations "should have discus¬sions about the Broyles’ Bills."Before the proposals were ad¬opted, a Lichtenstein statement ofpolicy was accepted as was theFitch statement on the ACCLC"position on the Broyles’ Bills."Both statements stress the threatof the Broyles’ Bills to academicfreedom and the purpose ofChoose an ExpertTHOMPSONMOVERSLocal and Long Distance MovingCO 4-7600 dom which thinking people objectto."The steering committee also re¬ported that they had set up boothsin Cobb, Soc, and Mandel, wherecopies of the bills were distrib¬uted. Postcards addressed to Gov¬ernor Stratton were also availableand "students were urged to regis¬ter protests against the bills." Soc. 1: The first half will be givenMonday, March 14, and the see-ond half during the regular lec¬ture period.Apply for assured traveldiscounts of 28% by toniteSpecial travel reductions on long distance train transportationduring the spring interim can be obtained by students and facultymembers wishing to leave Chicago on March 18.Groups totaling 25 may obtain a 28% reduction in price; other re¬duced fares are available for travel by individuals and smaller groups.The large groups will leave together on March 18, returning individ¬ually by April 4.Details on these opportunities may be obtained at the John Stockstravel service in the lobby of the administration building. Personscontacting Stocks after today can not be assured of reductions. Lyons accused Gray and Hoffman of being tools of the Demo¬cratic "machine."Gray replied, "we are againstthe system of ‘PhDism’ and for amayoral candidate who is a manof the people. Daley is such aman, for he worked his waythrough night school."The audience responded with"when did he have time to haveseven kids?”Quoting Plato, Aristotle, andJimmy, Lyons urged all to dis¬regard Gray.Larkin said he would be proudto be called an "egghead” andrigorously defended the topic.Hoffman returned to Daley andsummarized with “who drafted Nat. S®l k Tuesday, March 15, inSoc. 2: March 16, 1:30 p.m., Man-del Hall.Soc. 8: During lecture hour Tues¬day, March 15. Sections aa, ba.bb, ca in Rosenwald 2- Sectionscb, da, fa, in Cobb 110.Math. 1: Wednesday and Thurs¬day, March 16 and 17, duringclass periods.F.iiglinh 1: Thursday, March 17,during class for section ac; Fri¬day, March 18, for other sec¬tions.Stevenson?"Over sixty people attended thethird Student Forum sponsoredThursday debate. The debateswill be resumed the first Thurs¬day of the spring quarter. Kent 106 at 2:30; second partduring class periods on Friday,March 18.French 142 and Spanish 1: Thurs¬day and Friday, March 17 and18, during class periods.TYPEWRITERSCLEANED ORREPAIREDWritten guarantee onall work for one yearInspector and Estimator on dutyfrom 4 p.m. till 10 p.m.If you bring in this ad withyour typewriter, you will re¬ceive free, a beautiful plastictypewriter cover.Discount of 10%for all studentsBOURGEAUS’1202 E. 55th St.HY 3-7912Crammingfor Exams?Fight “Book Fatigue" SafelyYour doctor will tell you — aNoDoz Awakener is safe as anaverage cup of hot, black cof¬fee. 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