Hoodlums raid Rose dance; ,V *Two UC students hospitalizedby Spike Pinneyr ive teenagers vvere identified by UC students as part of the approximately twenty younghoodlums who raided a dance at Delta Upsilon fraternity Friday night, at the 6th districtpolice station, 5333 Lake Park, on Saturday.The eight students identified half of a line up of ten youths picked up Saturday Six ofthe eight — Furb Simons, Gary Stoll, Dicknity. Jim Dunham and Mike Stanley, the otherBronson — are members of the raided frater Wynne, Shawn Devlin, Bob Sbarge and Tedtwo, were present during the ——— —brawl °f ^ou?e’ were hospitalized tempted to call police from theafter a brief fight. Fraternity home of Rockefeller choir directormembers report that a toy base- Richard E. Vikstrom, across theBoys Await TrialThe five accused hoodlums are ball bat. a bicycle rim, and "pickets street, but Vikstrom was" notawaiting continuance of them from the fence bordering the DU home. But then a fraternity mem-trial at boys court, 1121 S. State, walk were used as weapons,under $1,200 bail. Lloyd, a DU member, sufferedPolice rounded up the ten chest injuries and a knife woundthrough names taken in an inci- in the back. Roberts, a member ofdent one hour before the raid. Phi Delta Theta, was injured byA group of eight toughs entered a bottle broken on his head. See ‘Riot,’ page 4 Photo by GrossmanDean Robert Strozier (arrow) talks with a policeman minutesafter fighting at the Delta Upsilon house stopped. Strozier and hiswife had just stepped out of their car on their way to the fraternityhouse for a visit when the fighting broke aut.the fraternity house wearing bluejeans at approximately 10:30 Fri¬day night. They were told the Dancers join brawlA number of the dancers joined Skardon resigns;to write doctoratedance was for students and guests *n t*ie hrawl- One of them, Dickonly, according to Furb Simons Wynne, gained a piece of evidenceof DU, and left the house in anger. when he ripped a shirt bearing theHalf a block north on Wood- laundry mark “Romero-4” off anlawn they met a group of six assailant’s back. Two.members ofcoming to the party. The two phi Kappa Psi, Jim Fencil andgroups fought and three of the George Staab, stopped while driv-boys were knocked down, accord- *n£ by and helped fight theing to Mike Stanley, a member toughs Police did not arrive un-of the student group. Police til all the hoods had fled north oncame and took the names of three Woodlawn.of the eight. Dean of students Robert Stro-One hour later twenty boys ap- zier drove north on the street justpeared on the fraternity’s lawn, as the mob was coming south.One hurled a brick through the What had started as a social callwindow, rousing several of the became an official visit for him200 at the fraternity’s annual rose and Mrs. Strozier. “It was thedance. Tony Lloyd and Jim Rob- most amazing thing,” he saiderts, two of the first to come out later, recalling the mob. He at- 1 Alvin W. Skardon Jr., advisor\ 1? | to foreign students at UC and\ ^ JnKflg activities director of International11 \ » Imtwfe jfflPIlPl house, has resigned effective Juney, ^ ,30, announced dean of studentsi , %■ ^rfJH Robert M. Strozier.• vwj | Skardon came to the University) V as a graduate student in the de-| | flf«| part men t of history in 1016 and* \ WUrj MBassumed In- pieseni position inmv | m rJjl WMm m 19 v'K . l j W MmhUhO^H.J He i-. fe--4 Jr .! doctoral dissertation in the nextPhoto by Grossman year.Spectators at the wreckage of the outdoor decorations of the The Chinese Students associa-Delta Upsilon Rose dance. The gang of boys completely demolished tion presented Skardon with aall of the trellises and rose decorations which were placed canopy- painting recently in appreciationfashion over the front porch of the fraternity house, of his services.Plan football's return to UC;Grid class to begin in fallby Mitri Dozoretz(For earlier story see page 1)Football is coming back to the University of Chicago campus! The uniforms will be ath¬letic department equipment, and the participants will be UC students. Football here will notbe inter-collegiate football, nor will it even be intra-mural football; the game will be aschool-sponsored football class according to information from the UC athletic office.This class, according toKyle Anderson, an athletic di¬rector, will be formed “to satisfySAC nearsfinal voteNext Tuesday will probablybring the final vote on the con¬stitution for the group to replaceStudent Union, a spokesman said.To be given special considera¬tion before the final vote are threeproblems: whether Inter-clubcouncil should replace Interna¬tion house as one of the five elect¬ed seats on the council: whether the needs and desires of certainstudents.” He also stated that itdepends on the number of stu¬dents that come out for the classas to what we will do.Favors football“I am for football, if the Uni¬versity feels that we should haveit, on a basis of meeting institu¬tions of similar enrollment andacademic and athletic standards,”continued Anderson. “As the en¬rollment increases, and there isevery prospect that It will, weshould meet schools of the samesize. . . . The present Universityframework ... is ‘athletics for thestudents who come here, and notthe plan for petitions is to receive to bring students here for athle-final approval; and whether the tics.’”‘Big Ten’ impracticalAnderson further indicated inthe light of the University philos¬ophy regarding its athletic pro¬board should have final authorityover the social calendar. Discus¬sion will also take place on thename for the board.The meeting will be at 2:30 p.m. gram that it would be impracticalin Reynold’s club fishbowl. for the UC to enter a conferenceRed Cross hits mark os groups donateThe recent Red Cross tag day campaign netted over five times lastyear’s total. $202 was collected this year, as compared to $36 collectedlast year.Campus organizations were major contrbuitors in the drive. Inter¬national house ranked first among contributors with $74. Women’sclubs helped the drive, Mortarboards contributing $44.86, Sigmas$34.45, and Quadranglers $10.48.Fraternities and dormitories also pitched into campaign activities.Election of next year’s campus Red Cross chapter was held lastweek. Victor Bahr was re-elected president, Ernece Kelly and JoanBehrensohn were elected secretary and publicity chairman, respec¬tively.. such as the Big Ten.Frank Whiting, president of theOrder of The C, UC’s lettermensociety, commenting on the newfootball class, stated, “I think itis a very significant develop¬ment.” Whiting, who is astaunch football enthusiast, saidhe would welcome the return ofthe grid sport to the UC campus.He believes that it is a welcometrend that the present officialsand undergraduate students seemto want more activities.Draft defermentregistrationschedule givenRegistration begins Monday forstudents seeking draft defermentfor the coming academic year.Selective service registrants mustfile between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. inthe registrar’s office according tothe following alphabetical sched¬ule:Monday, May 9—A, B, and CTuesday, May 10—D, E, F, andGWednesday, May 11—H, I, and JThursday, May 12—K and LFriday, May 13—M and NMonday, May 16—O, P, Q, and RTuesday, May 17—SWednesday, May 18—T, U, V,• W, X, Y, and ZThursday, May 19 — Studentswho for good reason could notfile on the assigned day. Student government passeseducational practices codeStudent government passed the NS A version of a Fair Edu¬cational Practices code Tuesday night in law north with twoamendments.An amendment opposing photographs of entrants prior toadmission was passed, 9-3, with two abstentions. The amend¬ment classed such photographs with pre-admission inquiriesAssociation for the Advancementof Colored People and interestedindividuals toward enforcing theFEP code. The committee was in¬structed to commend the adminis¬tration for areas in compliancewith the code, and to attempt tochange their policy in areas inwhich the code is broken.Other SG action included anenabling act, allowing the execu¬tive council to function duringthe summer.A quorum call forced the end¬ing of Tuesday’s meeting beforeany vote was taken on a motionon the agenda instructing SG’sneighborhood commission to in¬quire into possibilities for better¬ing UC - neighborhood relationsafter Friday’s riot between stu¬dents and a neighborhood gang.The riot occurred during DeltaUpsilon fraternity’s annual Rosedance.Siamese twins are separated;Billings operation successfulPrissana and Napit Polpinyo, 23-month-old twins from Siamwho were successfully separated at the University of Chicagomedical center in an operation March 29, are ready to leavethe home for destitute crippled children, children’s orthopedicunit of the center, for their Thailand home.Joined by a tissue band, they shared a fused common liver.This posed the major problemof the surgery, because of dan¬ger of excessive bleeding whenthe liver was severed. Technicaldevelopments, particularly theavailability of absorbent spongesof gelatin, permitted preventionof hemorrhaging from the manyblood cells of the divided liver.The two children made an un¬eventful recovery, with no com¬plications developing.Because of their junction, thetwins were accustomed to closeproximity, and for a time afterthey were separated each wantedthe other close. Now they are be¬coming accustomed to independ¬ence, and in their play in strollers,wander apart unconcernedly. They understand both Englishand their native language.Registration soonRegistration for the summerquarter in the divisions will beopen from May 31 throughJune 10, and in the collegefrom May 9 to June 3. Advanceregistration in the college fornext year will also begin May 9and end June 3.To register, divisional stu¬dents should make appoint¬ments with (heir dean of stu¬dents and college studentswith their advisers.as to race and religion. Thesecond amendment was direct¬ed at the admissions officehousing file, which lists some dis¬criminatory locations. Thisamendment stated that all stu¬dents have the right to use stu¬dent services. It passed unani¬mously.The civil liberties committee ofSG, under newly elected chair¬man William Seltzer, was direct¬ed to work this summer with thecampus chapter of the NationalHum. 2 listsavailable ThursdayAdvanced reading lists forthe humanities II comprehen¬sive examination will be avail¬able in Lexington 14 on Thurs¬day, May 12, rather than Mon¬day, May 16, as previously an¬nounced.Page 2 TNK CHICAGO MAROON May 6, 1955Early US had 'savage decade'said Smelser in Walgreen series Dutch view of world situationtopic of ambassador’s lectureJan Herman van Roijen, Netherlands ambassador to the US,will lecture on campus next Thursday on “The Dutch view„ . , , ,, . . . , v .• „ of the world situation today." The lecture will be given in sorThe traditional picture of the early American republic as a time of calm and contentment . „ J 6 ,soc-was declared unreal by Marshall Smelser, associate professor of history at Notre Dame, in SCI* " o ou p iI1‘the first of his Walgreen foundation lectures. In a series of six talks on “The politics of fearhe is discussing party politics and factions in America and France from 1789 to 1801.Smelser described the first ten years of the United States as a “savage decade, a time offear and doubt, of slander and unfounded cries of treason.” The first lecture was on the rolerulingof the ruling Federalists orthe “monocrats” during thisperiod. In the second lecturedelivered Wednesday, he spoke ofthe Jeffersonian “mobocrats.”The circle around Jefferson,Madison, and Monroe suspectedthe “monocrats” of plotting to the “chief architect of the pro¬jected American monarchy.” Theyfelt that the Federalists sought todestroy the republic by denyingcivil liberties and consolidatingthe powers of government. TheFederalists felt that the launching measures which were to their owninterest.Smelser’s third lecture of theseries will be on “The Anglomen.”It will be given this afternoon at4:30 in social sciences 122.”establish a “pro-British, tyranni- of the Democratic-Republic clubs, r ii i.cal plutocracy under the gaudy the forerunners of organized par- 54000 tellOWShlp TOcloak of monarchy.” The Federal- ties, was entirely illegal. When .accused the “mobocrats” of these clubs went to some pains |J£ OOCtOT Candidateistsatheism, anarchy and treason; as¬sumed a monopoly on patriotism;and showed a hysterical loosenessof language in attacking theirenemies. Jefferson, Smelser said,was considered the equivalent ofan “immoral egghead.”Speaking of the highly emotion¬al political climate, he said that“the every day language was thelanguage of revolution. Argumentbecame vilification, invective, andabuse. One’s opponents acted onmalice or because of ignorance,stupidity, or even insanity.”Monarchy fearedAccording to Smelser there wasgood reason for the Jeffersonians’fear of the Federalists. The sociallife surrounding Washington him¬self, modeled on that of the smallGerman principalities; the at¬tempts to extend the Presidents’powers; and the creation of theBank of the United States wereconsidered to be “squinted towardmonarchy.”He ascribed the Federalist’shatred of the “mobocrats” to abasic political difference. The Fed¬eralists, with the single exceptionof John Adams, showed no re¬spect for the average citizen. Theyagreed with Senator Cabot ofMassachusetts that “democracy inits natural operation is a govern¬ment of the worst.”Parties thought illegalAlexander Hamilton was heldsuspect by the Jeffersonians as Van Roijen has been ambassador to the US since 1950before which he was ambassador to Canada. After receivinghis law degree from the uni¬versity at Utrecht in theNetherlands, van Roijenserved on Dutch delegations inTokyo and at United Nations con¬ferences from 1945 to 1948. Herepresented the Netherlands insecurity council discussions on theIndonesian dispute and was vice-president of the Dutch delegationat the Hague to settle that dis¬pute.Van Roijen was active in Dutchresistance of the Germans duringWorld War II, and was impris¬oned three times for his activitiesto gain popularity and when they ...... o .... illosolicited votes for their candidates COnQTGSS before he escaped to London. He1 has held high posts in the DutchR. Gene Geisler, PhD candidate cabinet,in political science at UC, has beenawarded a $4000 fellowship for ■ ' • J •study of Congress in Washington. prGS6lltS fCC|tlir6Cl VTIUSICduring elections, they were ac¬cused of revolutionary purposes.Smelser declared that the his¬torian is forced to the conclusionthat the Federalists believed atwo-party system was plainly im¬moral.Hamilton attacked statesHamilton’s attempts to increasethe powers of the President metwith a vigorous Jeffersonian ef¬fort to limit them, particularly thetreaty making power. Hamiltonalso led the attack against thestates hoping to see them abol¬ished as governmental units. OneFederalist congressman calledhalf his constituents “great fools”and Hamilton himself said, “thepeople seldom judge or determineright.” Federalist propagandistsaccused the Democratic-Republi¬can clubs of fomenting the whiskyrebellion in Pennsylvania.Treasury confusion chargedJefferson accused Hamilton ofdeliberately confusing the finan¬cial transactions of the govern¬ment so that no one could under¬stand them. He called the Bank ofthe United States an outright planto corrupt the legislature andpointed out that a third of themembers of the House of Repre¬sentatives were directors or stock¬holders in it. He cited their“shameless corruption” and theirability to cast decisive votes forililil RoijenJust try ...J]euue '± Sun Dial Tavern1601 E. 55th St.Just east of the I.C.69c a tub* Is your hair an asset, ordoes it have that greasy,patent-leather look?This product will keep your hairpleasingly neat and attractive.It’s not greasy, contains noalcohol, no oils, no coloring.THE HOUSE W MEN., IRC.%sKen* &n, HS c~7otltt rii* Geisler, who also teaches at theGary, Indiana, center of the Uni¬versity of Indiana, is one of fivepolitical scientists who receivedthe fellowship. Five newspaper¬men also received grants.Geisler will spend nine monthsin Washington, three in the legis¬lative reference department of theLibrary of Congress, three with alegislative committee, and threeworking with the staff of a con¬gressman.Geisler is 26, and a native of St.Louis. Students of Humanities in theCollege will be able to hear abroadcast of Paul Hindemith’s“Mathis d e r Maler,” Sunday.“Mathis der Maler” is the speciallistening assignment for the hu¬manities 1 comprehensive exam¬ ination.The broadcast will be on theair at 3 p.m. Sunday, over WUCB,the campus radio station, whichbroadcasts on 640 kilocycles toBurton-Judson Courts, the GGroup, and International House.BORDONEMovers and Light Hauling <VI 6-9832 I Send Flowers for Mother's Day ?| !I Mitzie’s Flower Shop |at two convenient stores1225 E. 63rd St. 1301 E. 55th St.HY 3-5353 Ml 3-402010% and 20% student discount«*♦ «*• **• «*• *J**J*«J« «*• ♦*♦«£♦ <Leads ’em allbecause it’sThis is America’s favoritemonth for picnics, parades,and fun outdoors. A warmday .. . good food ... andcold, golden Budweiser. It'sa good part of life—make it part of yours.Somef/my more t/r#r>/rremrum pera/itu... Dudhmer fita/i/y! ^udweise*'lager beerANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC;ST. IOUIS • NEWARK » IOS ANGELESROON Page 3May 6, 1V55 THE CHICAGO MAUC campus to be site ofNSA regional assemblySeventy students from a dozen Illinois schools will meet on campus this weekend at theNational Student association regional assembly. Twenty delegates and alternates elected inthe recent NSA elections will represent UC at the conference.Two regional assemblies are held during the year. This, the last before school ends, ispreparatory to the National Student congress, annual USNSA conclave. At the NationalStudent congress policies of the association are set and officers selected to carry those Moses to lecture on religionDavid Gnanapragasam Moses will give the Haskell lecturestoday and Monday at 8 p.m. in Breasted hall, Oriental institute.The titles of Moses’ lectures are “Some Reconceptions in HinduDoctrine” and “Abiding Contrasts Between Hinduism and Chris¬tianity.”Moses is a graduate of Madras university, and Union Theo¬logical seminary of India, and he received his doctorate degreefrom Columbia University in New York. He is widely knownas professor of philosophy and president of Hislop college,Nagpur, India. He is currently serving as visiting professor atUnion Theological seminary in New York City,Moses will preach Sunday at 11 p m. in Rockefeller chapel.Later in the day he will speak in Burton-Judson courts.policies into action.Problems of the studentcommunity will be discussedduring the regional assembly. Theregion will carry their decisionsto the National Student congress,and introduce resolutions in thename of the region.The assembly will also orientprospective delegates to the Na¬tional Student congress, familiar¬izing these delegates with theforms, procedures and problemsof the congress. Because of therapid turnover of congress per¬sonnel— a minority of delegatesattend more than one congress —it is thought necessary that orien¬tation precede the Congress itself.Three UC students are officersof the Illinois region. Bruce Lar¬kin. president, and Larry Lichten¬stein. vice-president, hold seats onthe association’s national execu¬tive committee. Joel Rosenthal isregional educational affairs vice-president. At this assembly offi¬cers will be elected to replace theincumbents at the close of the Na¬tional Student congress.Registration for the commissionand plenary sessions will begin at9 am Saturday in the law courtroom. Hyde Parkfor evictedThe Hyde Park community hasbeen chosen to pilot a campaignof adopting Korean villages forCARE, Cooperative for AmericanRemittance to Europe,Community organizations willsponsor a series of fund-raisingevents during the next month toraise at least $2511 for the villagerefugee camp of Tap Shim Ni, atTong Dae Mun Ku, Seoul.The first community projectwill be a used book sale sponsoredby the Hyde Park co-operative.The sale will be held on three suc¬cessive Saturdays, May 7, 14, and21. Books from anyone whowishes to contribute are now be¬ing collected at the co-op at 5535Harper.The UC International re¬lations club is sponsoring, aspart of the village plan, thePlaywrights Theatre productionof Sean O’Casey’s Juno and thePaycock, to be performed at Man-del hall on the night of May 18.Tickets for this event are on saleon campus at International house to stage fund-raising drivemembers of Korean villageHAMILTON THEATRE71st and PaxtonStarts Friday, May 13ROMEO and JULIETWinner of the Parents Magazine Awardfor extraordinary achievementGrand Prize Award of Venice Film FestivalDiscount tickets available at theReynolds Club Desk and theChicago Iftaroon OfficeVISIT OUR COLLEGE ROOMTHIS IS IT!NEW STUDENT SPECIALNew Big Size:JUMBO HAMBURGER 46'served 8:30 p.m. - 11:00 p.m. onlyReader's‘the campus drug store'*1001 E. 61st Opp. B.J. Court and at the Student Service centerin the Reynolds club.Hold auctionSeveral other events are atpresent being planned. The 53rdStreet Businessmen’s associationwill hold an auction, probably atthe 57th Street Art Fair which isheld during the first week in June.The Hyde Park Baptist church isplanning a sing, featuring, churchchoral groups, the “Notes,” apopular singing group, and pos¬sibly gospel singer Mahalia Jack-son. A speech by a public figurewill probably be sponsored forthe drive.Bette Wallace, UC student, isheading the planning for a “wind¬up” party, a street fair-dance typeaffair to be held in one of theneighborhood parks. There willbe booths at the party, sponsoredby anyone with a product or agame to sell. The UC women’sclubs will probably run one booth,and Martha David, Chicago direc¬tor of CARE, invites any UC or¬ganizations to run booths. All in¬terested organizations should getin touch with Bette Wallace.Help 80 FamiliesEighty families are living inTap Shim Ni, in shacks and caves.The land on which the camp isnow situated will soon have to bevacated. The land owner has re¬turned since the war and requeststhe return of his property. So the80 families have asked the Seoulcity government to let them havethe land adjoining the presentcamp site. The families have sub¬mitted a plan for their future tothe government in Seoul.The people have estimated theirneeds: twelve head of porkers, 40brooders, 800 chickens, ten sew¬ing machines. 20 cotton packages,four carpenter’s kits and four re¬settler’s kits, one stove for theschool, one set of playgroundequipment, 20 student’s kits, 50pair of children’s underwear, tenhand tools, and five plows. Somegrain may also be needed.The total cost of the estimated needs comes to $2511, which is thefund-raising goal of the HydePark campaign. But also impor¬tant, says Miss David, is the help¬ing of these people to help them¬selves. She says that their needswill probably be fulfilled withina year and by then Hyde Park andother communities following theexample will be able to continueto adopt other villages.'Gifts are usefulGifts like sewing machines en¬able the people to improve theirown clothing and then to makeclothes for sale. A Korean villagewhich CARE adopted in 1954(with only general contributionsfrom all over the US) is now onits way to becoming a self-sup¬porting village, after receivinglivestock, farm tools, and rope-making, weaving, and sewingmachines.Many of the goods needed bythe Koreans will be purchased inJapan or other places near the vil¬lage in order to save shippingcost and trouble. Hyde Park as a communityplans to adopt this child, alongwith the members of 80 familiesnow living in the Korean villageof Tap Shim Ni. Thisvchild losther father in the war and nowlives with her mother in a card¬board-walled hut. Hyde Parkplans to raise $2500 to sendCARE packages to the village.Married Students to holdfirst general electionThe first general election meeting of the Married StudentsAssociation will be held at Social Science 122 next Tuesday at8 p.m., with a report to members and guests on the progressmade by the campus organization during the first six monthssince it was recognized as a student activity.The report of past accomplishments on prefab housing ex¬tensions, social activities, and the —survey of married students’ in- dents to hold office during 1955.comes, interests and problems will r~ . ... , . ., • j u j - ,. 56. Twenty candidates have beenbe accompanied by a description .of work in progress and future nominated for the eight vacancies,plans. Some items to be discussed with additional nominations ex-include family health insurance, pected from the floor. This willhousing discrimination practices,economic cooperatives, and reloca- be the first election the MSApresently directed by representa¬tion of student families. All inter- tives of the former Prefab coun-ested persons may attend.Members only will vote for stu- bership.cil, has opened to the full mem-IDEAS VS.No. 13McCARTHYISMMARX & ENGELS ON MAL-THUS . , . writings of Marx andEngels on the populations and eco¬nomic doctrines of Malthus withan essay and notes by Ronald L.Meek. (Inti. $2.25).Available from Modern Book¬store, 64 W. Randolph; how aboutUC bookstore?Send funds to continue andspread these ads to J. Higgins,c/o Modern Bookstoae. TERRY’S PIZZAfinest pizzas madeFREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSNO 7-9071Student Rate 50c hyde park theatreSTARTING FRIDAY, MAY 6 lake parkat 53rdOne of our brilliant revival combinations!JUDY HOLLIDAYand WILLIAM HOLDENin GARSON KANIN'SSmash Hit Award Winner"BORNYESTERDAY" ALEC GUINNESSand JOHN MILLSin DAVID LEAN'S Productionof CHARLES DICKENS'"GREATEXPECTATIONS ff SMALL I. OO LARGEMEDIUM 1.45 GIANT 1.95 |2.95We also carry a fall line of italian foodsSPECIAL THIS WEEK — Present this coupon and youwill receive 35c credit towards any pizza eatenat our store.1518 E. 63rd St. * Ml 3-4045Page 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 6, 1955CalendarFriday, May 6Walgreen Lecture: “The Anglomen,”Professor Smelser, speaker, social sci¬ence 122, 4:30 p.m.University concert, Davis Shuman,trombone, and Leonid Hambro, piano.Mandel hall, 8:30 p.m.Haskell lecture: “Some Reconceptionsin Hindu Doctrine,” Dr. David Moses,speaker, Breasted hall, 8 p.m.Editor’s election, Maroon office, 3:30p.m.Saturday, May 7*1 Come for to Sing,” Big Bill Broonzy,Larry Lane and other folk singers.Mandel hall, 8:15 p.m. Admission,*1.25.Square dance, sponsored by Circles andSquares, Ida Noyes, 7:30-10 p.m.Sunday, May 8Episcopal communion service, Bondchapel, 8:30 a m.Lutheran communion service, Hiltonchapel, 10 a.m.University religious service, Dr. DavidMoses, Principal, Hislop college, Nag¬pur university, India, speaker. Rocke¬feller chapel, 11 a.m.Movie: “The Devil and Daniel Webster”(American), Judson lounge, 7 and9:30 p.m., admission, 25c.Talk: “The East,” Dr. Moses, Judsonlounge, 1:30 p.m.Humanities 1 program, WUCB, 640 kc.,broadcast of music for the compre¬hensive exam, 3 p.m.Monday, May 9Ricketts Lecture: "Host-cell responses toviral mutants, as exemplified byfowl-pox,” Dr. Ernest Goodpasture,speaker. Pathology 117, 4:30 p.m.Walgreen Lecture: “The Jacobins,” Dr.Smelser, speaker. Social Science 122,4:30 p.m.Haskell Lecture: “Some Abiding Con¬trasts between Hinduism and Chris¬tianity,” Professor Moses, Breastedhall, 8 p.m.Movie: “Eternal Mask,” (Austrian), In¬ternational house, 8 p.m.Tuesday, May 10Lecture: "The Fate of the Soul: an In¬terpretation of some primitive con¬cepts,” Professor Firth, speaker, SocialScience 122, 4:30 p.m.Cbanning lecture: “Economic Freedomsand Modern Man,” Professor Seidman,Breasted hall, 8 p.m.Bake sale for the Veteran’s nnrseryschool, Reynolds club, 11 a.m. to3 p.m.Wednesday, May 11Lecture: "New developments in Africaneducation,” Margaret Read, professorof colonial education, London Univer¬sity. Judd 126, 4 p.m.Science Fiction club meeting, presenta¬tion of a play. Ida Noyes theatre,7:30 p.m., everyone welcome.Walgreen lecture: "Suppression,” Pro¬fessor Smelser, speaker, social science122, 4:30 p.m.The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236UNITEDAIRCOACHYou’re homein hours!You’re moneyohond!United’s low fares, fastflights and frequentschedules help stretchvacation days and dol¬lars. All flights on 4-engine Mainliners.1CT CLASSUnited also offers youluxurious 1st ClassMainliner service withfull-course mealtimeservice. Fares compar¬able to 1st Gass rail withberth.CMcogoi for rcMrvotfoni,coM Financial 6-5700/t on ovthorlxod kovol agsnk Movie: Experimental art films, socialscience 122, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m.Thursday, May 12Seminar: “The water economy of Eu¬rope,” Professor Krul, speaker, Eck-hart 133, 7:30 p.m.Communication club meeting, discus¬sion. Social Science 201, 7:30 p.m.,refreshments.UT production, “The Trial,” by Kafka,Reynolds club theatre, 8:30 p.m. $1admission. Wins scholarship Einstein expert to lecture on'structure of space we liveRiot(from page 1)ber had summoned police and themob had fled.Strozier visits victimsStrozier was at the house whenpolice arrived, and he drove toBillings hospital to see Lloyd andRoberts a short time later.Saturday policemen picked upthe eight witnesses, took them tothe station, and then picked upfive boys in addition to the fivethey already had. Of the ten onehad an airtight alibi (a steel milltime - card punched for Fridaynight), four were released, andfive were identified.One of the five, Ernest von Sim-son, 17, is the son of Otto G. vonSimson, professor in the commit¬tee cm social thought. Of the five,four were 17 and the other 18.All hailed from Hyde Park.According to police, the ganghad become high on wine beforeraiding the dance. “Friday nightis the worst crime night,” saidone officer. “It used to be Satur¬day, but now payday is on Fri¬day.” The English Speaking union an¬nounced the awarding of a $1000scholarship for one year’s studym England to Allen Janger, politi¬cal science student.Janger expects to study Britishpolitics at the London School ofEconomics. inVaclav Hlavaty of Indiana university, Czech expert onmulti-dimensional geometry, will lecture on “The structureof the space we live in” tonight at 8:15 in the home room ofInternational house.Hlavaty became known tothe American public in 1953,Burke to open study seriesThe biosophical institute an¬nounces the inception of a newstudy group that will meet everyFriday at 63 East Adams, room506, 8:00 p.m.Tonight Harry Burke will pre¬sent the topic to be studied en¬titled “Beyond academic instruc¬tion,” which is based on a chaptertaken from the newly publishedbook by Dr. Frederick Kettner,founder-president of the biosophi¬cal institute, entitled Biosophy andSpiritual Democracy: a Basis forWorld Peace (Vantage Press).The public is invited to attend andparticipate in this study group. The purpose of the biosophicalinstitute is to help create a betterworld through the growth and de¬velopment of the spiritual naturein the individual.Bishop to presideThe Bishop of Chicago, RightReverend Gerald Francis Burrill,will preside at a service of recog¬nition for the beginning of theministry of the Reverend WilliamHenry Baar. The service will beheld at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Bondchapel. Rectors from neighboring•parishes will be present. when he succeeded in simplifyingand solving Einstein’s equationson which the theory of the unifiedfield is based. Austrian physicistErwin Schrodinger had warnedthat it would be “next to impos¬sible.”Hlavaty has discovered the im¬plication that gravity is just an¬other aspect of electro-magnetism,like light or radio waves. If hisconclusions can be proved, it willmean an end of quantum mechan¬ics and conclusion of the revolu¬tionary phase in physics startedby Einstein’s theory of relativity.3Ae ttfl/Aiim PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREET ACECYCLE SHOPYour BicycleHeadquartersWe service what we tellRepairs & Parts all makes819 E. 55 MI 3-26729 A.M. - 6 P.M.HEY DR00DLE BUGS! HERE’S ANOTHER BATCH!WHAT’S THIS? For solution see paragraph below.Barbara RotondoU. of BridgeportDonald MillsU. of Alabama YOU GET A GOOD CLOSE-UP ofcollege smokers’ preference forLuckies in the Droodle at right,captioned: Lucky Strike columnin a college cigarette-vending ma¬chine. On campuses all over Amer¬ica, college students automaticallyget Luckies. Why? Simply becauseLuckies taste better. They tastebetter, first of all, because LuckyStrike means tine tobacco. Thenthat tobacco is toasted to taste bet¬ter. “It's Toasted”—the famousLucky Strike process—tones upLuckies’ good-tasting tobaccoto make it taste even better ... cleaner, fresher, smoother. Nexttime it’s light-up time, why don’tyou pull for Luckies?DBOODLES, Copyright)«« by Bogor Frio**rfk 70A&& f■OOTISTICAL TUGBOAT(OR) PANICKY ORAWBRIDG8OPUATORZone ThompsonU. of Maine\v mrCOLLEGE SMOKERSPREFER LUCKIES!Luckies lead all other brands incolleges—and by a wide margin—according to an exhaustive, coast-to-coast college survey. The No.1 reason: Luckies taste better.TWO NEEDLES SEEINGEYE TO EYEC. Eugene NicholsIndiana U. n 71T2eftea taste Luckier... LUCKIES TASTE BETTER ..C2eane/i, fnedi^^M.oodienl•A.T.W. PRODUCT OF <J& J^rWUCGM, AMERICA’S LBADINO MANUFACTURES OP CIGARETTES"Mar «. ”55 THI CHICAGO MAROONFranklin study winshistory prizeGerald Stourzh, author of Benjamin Franklin and American For¬eign Policy, has been awarded the annual $500 prize for the best bookof 1954 in early American history. The prize is given by the Instituteof early American History and Culture at William and Mary college.Stourzh is a PhD candidate in the UC History department. He is aresearch associate at the UC center for the study of American for¬eign policy, under whose auspices the book was published.Stourzh’s book is both a theoretical and a historical inquiry intoFranklin’s conduct as America’s first diplomat as seen against thebackground of his political philosophy. At the same time it providesa study of the origins of American foreign policy.NO ONE EVER GOT “TEED OFF”AT AN ARROW POLO SHIRTHow could they? Arrow polos give unlimited comfort andstyle. What’s more, these fine knitted polos keep their shapealmost forever.For casual wear, and for active sports, you’ll find them cooland absorbent... a pleasure to wear. In solids, stripes and quietpatterns, these luxurious polos are yours at a pauper’s price.Combine them with smartly tailored Arrow sailcloth slackslike those shown abo\e, and you’ll face the heat... calm, cooland correct. Arrow polos, $3.95. Slacks, $5.95.A/momi CASUAL WEARm. SHIRTS A TIESA UNDERWEARHANDKERCHIEFSm Japanese studied by UC groupStudy of the Japanese language has been begun by twelve UC students. Bert Bauer,business school student and ex-serviceman stationed in Japan, sought instruction in theJapanese language on his return to campus from the Far East. Bauer found that theUniversity offers no course in Japanese, and has no plans to offer one.Bauer discussed this problem with George V. Bobrinskoy, professor of linguistics anddean of students of the humanities division. Bobrinskoy noted that Japanese instructionhad been regularly considered, is done between seminar meet- mance language, conversationaly e s af , and regularly ings. Japanese is thought by many toturned down because of budg¬et limitations. Joseph M. Kita-24 hour service ondeveloping of filmBring them in todayand have them hacktomorrowat theUniversityDUIaa dVA DaaIj ofUllibdgU DUUlVdlUIG5802 ELLIS AVENUE Conversation emphasized be as easily learned as conversa-At present work has been con- tional German or Russian,gawa of the federated theological fined to conversational Japanese; There are no distinctions offaculties stated that Bauer was ^ armed forces text employing . , . . , .about the tenth student to inquire a Romaji Europeanization of pro- ® an? plu0raJ ar?.ongof him about instruction in the nounciation guides members of "®genderdjf^^onslanguage. the group in their study. The ar* "“J? “d LBauer and a handful of others text was developed on the basis f d IE -1publicized their interest in form- of studies conducted by the Amer- f Jh*ire are no declensionsing a seminar group A two-inch ican councii Qf learned societies. JaSs indited y .Maroon story produced two dozen Grammar is introduced gradu- T' 6 cas?s are in^lcate<1. by *interested persons. A student or- aiiy> and there is a great deal fewL ^^ary words analogousganization, the Japanese study of reliance upon increasing recog- to Enghsh prepositions,group, was formed. nition and use of day-to-day The group’s adviser, NortonThe group has employed a tu- phrases. Bauer indicates that this Ginsburg of the geography de-tor, experienced in teaching Ja- method permits an easy transi- partment, has suggested that thepanese to Americans and Euro- tion to learning written Japan- group meet with Japanese visi-peans. The tutor meets each Mon- ese Memorization of kanji, writ- tors who come to campus on toursday evening for two hours with ten forms by which ideas are ex- through this country. Ginsburgthe group working on authentic nrp«:«cd in writing and nrint will has himself a reading knowledgepronunciation and explaining sub- begin within two weeks; but con- of Japanese,tleties of grammar. Memorization versational study will always lead Instruction rarely offeredwritten study by a considerablemargin.Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372 Less than ten colleges in thecountry now offer courses in theLanguage forms simple language. Though UC is preparedThough it may take two or to offer a Japanese language ex-three times as long to obtain a animation to candidates for higherreading knowledge of Japanese degrees, no course is offered toequivalent to that of a typical ro- PrePare students for the examina¬tion.NON-ACADEMIC RESEARCHFull time or .part time. Facultywife or former student to do cler¬ical research in new UniversityDown-Town Office. Typing desir¬able.Call ANdover 3-5022UNIVERSITY FOODS1129 E. 55thOpen daily A Sundays: 9 AM. till 9:30 PM.NSA discount on $3.00 purchases Students interested in enteringthis series of sessions must enterno later than at the next Mondaymeeting. The group meets eachMonday at 7:30 in room B of In¬ternational house. No previousarrangements are necessary inorder to attend an introductorysession. Plans for the summerwill depend upon the number ofpersons who indicate interestnow.Warm weather’s a "breeze”• • • in our fine Arrow knits.We won’t have these luxury shirts in long. We neverdo, for they sell by the dozens. Arrow knitted sportshirts are so good for casual occasions, you’ll certainlywant more than one. These shirts are porous, to keepyou cool . . . skillfully tailored to keep you happy.Practical, too, they’ll help save your regular shirts fromconstant trips to the laundry. Fine Arrow knitted sportshirts in solids and patterns are priced at $3.95.Chicago — EvanstonOak Park — EvergreenGary — Joliet — Alton Personnel InterviewerFemaleJoin expanding staff in our officeand receive thorough training inplacing job seekers and selectingpersonnel for employers. Inter¬viewers are among highest paidwomen in Chicago. Contact MissArmstrong atRoland Employment ServiceI 16 S. Michigan FRanklin 2-0320Nick Bova — Florist:5239 Harper Ave.Ml 3-4226STUDENT DISCOUNT► DELIVERY SERVICEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAimtwwwwv***** W V V WW V V wwilAny Insurance Problems? < ■Phone or Write JJoseph H. Aaron, '27 <135 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-1060,Chicago 3, Illinois J !si > •I mmy sSINCE 1940COMOPIZZERIA1520 E. 55th St.• Bar-be-cue ribs• Bar-be-cue chickenDelivery AnywhereFA 4-5525 ■IS»!inLEditorialsOn spirit On footballOver three-hundred people signed a petition, agreeing that "We, at theUniversity of Chicago, are now experiencing the evils of intellectual ex¬tremism.” The conclusion was “ . . . that football is the best means everdevised to supply this need” ... (for a real goal) . . . “in the make-believeworld we have built.”We wonder if the grounds for their generalizations are valid. We wonderwhether they have properly diagnosed the disease and how appropriateis their cure.Last week’s Maroon mirrored administration and student concernover creating “unity” on the UC campus. News stories announced“undergraduate assemblies will be held beginning next fall,” “suggestionsfor the unification and organization of women on campus were discussed,”and “Student Advisory council . . . provisionally agreed cm a plan oforganization.”Singly these proposals would not have caused much excitement; theiroccurrence during a short span of time, however, was more significant.The steps stemmed from a growing concern over the lack of “spirit”on campus — “We need a unifying force,” said Dean McCarn.The issue in the battle for “spirit” has become one of implementationrather than principle; that is, how do we do it, rather than, what shouldwe do and why?Actually, the real problem is not that we need “spirit”; the administrationcreated that problem themselves; and the recent steps are proposed solu¬tions. The real problem is that the University needs money and newstudents. This we think is the singular concern of most of the changessince the beginning of the year.Why was there a sudden need for UC to become “healthy”? Why wasthere a sudden concern with being a typical university? The administrationneeded money and new students; following a proven formula — healthy,happy kids engaging in wholesome activities — seemed safe. But theformula only succeeded in pointing out the lack of “typical spirit” on cam¬pus. The formula fails to recognize that this University isn’t and has neverbeen a “typical” one.The University was always unique; students were excited by this unique¬ness. They described the intellectually stimulating atmosphere as some¬thing vital, an unmatched educational experience. Printed below is the statement issued by the UC Students for Footballcommittee at their booth, complete with banners and pennants, in frontof Cobb hall. The essay’s title was “We Can Have Both!” Can we?WE CAN HAVE BOTH!Many people on campus believe that all colleges and universities can bedivided into two distinct groups: "intellectual” schools and "rah-rah” schools.They believe that each school must choose one of these two alternatives andthat in choosing the extreme intellectual path, we have chosen the correctone. \We do not agree- either that we have made the correct rholce, or indeed,that we must make such a choice at all. Both curricular and extra-curricularactivities are important, and neither should be favored to the exclusion ofthe other. Extremism in either direction is always disastrous. Tragic exam¬ples of intellectual extremism are less well-known and numerous. Examplesof intellectual extremism are less numerous, less well-known, but far moretragic. We. at the University of Chicago, are now experiencing the evils ofintellectual extremism.It was the philisophy of the college that dictated its spirit. The ideaof the recurring intellectual clashes of Western civilzation, of the “GreatConversation” carried on by “Great Books,” was expressed in the spiritof a student body proud of its own intellectual clashes and conversations.Now it is the “spirit” that is dictating the philosophy. Happiness andhealthiness are better advertising than the curriculum. Adjustment hasreplaced education.Maybe we didn’t make what we believed in attractive enough the firsttime. The solution to the problem then is not to eliminate what we believein, but rather to make it more attractive. We have to solve the real prob¬lem. And the solution to the real problem is not to make “spirit,” butto make money and bring new students.It is important now more than ever before that we emphasize the concernwith thinking independently, and under no circumstances can we compro¬mise this concern with the treasurer’s office.We agree that we must publicize and advertise; but our campaign mustbe honest. Spirit per se is not bad, but let us not sacrifice the premise thatUC is different, or that it should be. We can get students on our own merits,with our own kind of spirit. We are uncompromising defenders of academic freedom yet we deny aca¬demic freedom to each other. Over the years, we have built a cu}t of ideas,to which everyone must subscribe in order to receive the barest social ap¬proval. We like to think of ourselves as non-conformists, yet we all rigidlyconform to a set standard of thought and behavior. Only certain ideas areacceptable; only certain actions appropriate. We place a high value on di¬versity, but we have no diversity here. We try very hard to be different,only to find that we have all become different in the same way. We treas¬ure individualism, yet individualism has disappeared “Every man an in¬dividual” has been corrupted into “Every man a queer,” and we have becomea broad, indistinguishable mass of "queers.” Our individualism has becomethe individualism of the insane asylum. .We can no longer live in the make-believe world we have built. It leadsonly to falsity, staleness, and boredom. Our campus needs a real goal withreal fulfillment. The U. of C. Students for Football feel that football is thebest means ever devised to supply this need. Some people fear the return offootball to the UC campus. We feel that most of these fears are groundless,and that where problems exist, intelligent solutions can be found. We can.and we must establish a more healthy balance between the curriculum andthe extra-curriculum. Sign the petition to BRING BACK FOOTBALL.—U of C Students for FootballLetters to the editorDon't meddle with loveWho did not read with dismayof the Administration’s desire to"integrate” the student body? Asif such measures as they woulddesire were not more suited to aplayground than a University. Toconsider the relation of students adefect is the first step towardserecting an enormity of corporatesolicitude. It will corrupt the mindas surely as it will weaken thebody; which, pleasured by theirremedy, no doubt can resist aplague but is helpless before in¬infection.The University should prepareus for the humdrum world: but itcannot do so, if it borrows all theslogans of a mean "science,” andfosters our commonness, insteadof training our discrimination. Ifthe students fear loneliness with¬in the University, let them wallowin vulgarity outside, and congrat¬ulate themselves on their human¬ity. They do not belong here.Truth was never submitted to anuniversal onslaught, but onlyvielded up her secrets to a lonesurvivor. Let the theologians med¬dle with love.S. BenarditeThumbs downThe Circus Maximus should beImmediately instituted on cam¬pus. The advantages to all con¬cerned would be innumerable. Asthe gladiators march out onto thefield the spectators would be lift¬ed to exhilarating heights, andschool spirit would sweep overthem; what better way to create asense of belonging? The com¬batants would have the glory ofdying martyrs for their AlmaMater. And the lions would havetheir fill. The expense would beminimal: a gladiator does not re¬quire much equipment, and•words and nets can be used over and over again. No doubt, thenovelty of such an event wouldattract large crowds. Held once aweek, it would be a pleasant diver¬sion. And in turning thumbs uponce in a while, students wouldhave an opportunity to express inpractice these humanitarianideals and liberal principles whichare the objects of their education.Ed WiseHoward TurnerSaddened by attitudeI am somewhat saddened byreading the article in last week’sMaroon which dealt with presentadministration and student atti¬tudes towards campus life. Thetrend has become ail but the factas progress is made towards es¬tablishing “normalness” amongthe undergraduates. “Normal¬ness,” it seems, is required if weare to have a sense of belonging.I cannot object. In every discus¬sion I have had concerning theills of University life, it was thelack of a sense of belonging whichwas the chief concern.Letters WelcomedThe Maroon welcomes let¬ters from Its readers. Any com¬ments on matters of interest tothe University community areappropriate subject matter.Letters should not exceed250 words. Letters exceedingthis limit will be subject toediting.The Maroon will not con¬sider for publication letterswhich do not bear the author’ssignature. However, the au¬thor’s name will be withheldfrom publication upon request.Letters should be addressedto Editor, Chicago Maroon,5706 University Ave. There is a fear, however, thatby establishing a sense of belong¬ing in the immediate world of thestudent that the larger and morecosmic belonging might be lost.For some of us it was only thecomplete breakdown in structurethat could challenge the consid¬eration of a world in which wewere individuals out of time andspace. The atmosphere demand¬ed the individual fight for intel¬lectual self-respect and that heformulate a philosophy whichwould at least encompass his ownaspirations. We were made to seeourselves as man and men. Ourchief regret must be that we couldnot follow the vision further.My hope is that the Universitywill be able to take a course whichencourages the sense of belongingbut does not insist upon it, eitherin fact or by creating a standardof social conformity. We shouldnot try to root out the memory ofa splendid ideal. The ideal failed,but because it was lacking in vir¬tue, but rather because of ourlimitations in living it. Some willalways sense that ideal, but I fearthat in the immediacy of the newframework people like myselfwon’t have the opportunity.G. W. HumphreyDefends languageI see on the front page of theApril 24 Maroon the headline"Language 1 dropped from collegecourses when the college facultydecided that the course was ‘nolonger useful in the college cur¬riculum’.”No longer useful? Even if thecourse is not useful, which Idoubt, is that fact reason enoughfor dropping the course? In thepast, I have been led to believethat the purpose of the collegecourses was to provide for the in¬ tellectual development of the stu¬dent, regardless of the “useful¬ness” of the cours^.But is not a course in generallanguage valuable from the stand¬point of “usefulness” as well asfrom that of “intellectual develop¬ment”? I think that it is. The abil¬ity to recognize verbal ambigu¬ities, the recognition of the factthat our English language makesno provision for many of the sim¬plest and most fundamental no¬tions of logic, the realization ofthe fact that words and ideas areto a great degree independent ofone another—these are the thingsa course on general languageteaches. Are they not useful?“The number of class meetings,usually ten throughout one quar¬ter, were not sufficient to givethe student a good basis of gen¬eral language,” Streeter furtherstated....” I am sure that the stu¬dents learned a good deal moreabout general language in the tenhours a quarter which they havebeen getting than in the no hoursper quarter which they will begetting.That fact that a surprisingly small number of students placeout of Lang. 1 is an indication thatmost entering students at this uni¬versity know next to nothingabout the anatomy and physiol¬ogy of language. In other words,most entering students are defici¬ent in the subject matter of thiscourse, and would consequentlybenefit themselves by taking )tIf, as Mr. Streeter affirms, theobjectives of this course can notbe adequately fulfilled in tl>esmall number of class meetingsallotted it, it may be that theywould be adequately fulfilled byan increase in the number of classmeetings. Can these objectives befulfilled? The fact that it wa-made a college course at all,'andIhe fact that students have beenknown to get fairly high scoreson the Lang. 1 comprehensive ex¬amination, seem to indicate anaffirmative answer to this ques¬tion, an answer which unfortu¬nately will probably never beborne out completely by the oneobvious method of testing it.James M. CaroleyIssued once weekly by the publisher. The Chicago Maroon, at the publica¬tion offices, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones:Editorial Office, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1010; Business and Advertising Offices,Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1009. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions bymoil, $3 per year. Business Office hours: 1 to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.Allen R. Janger editor-in-chielJoy S. Burbach managing editorWilliam M. Brandon.... business manager1. . .. -> •' < ' - ' -■ :... •May 6, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON F*fa TQlazer concludes Judaism lecturesExecutives talk inCommunicationadub lecture tyr^rr^Thiee top executives in the pub- If Judaism Is to become in America more than a set of religious institutions, supported by a variety of social pressures,"f lf will^ec0[^e so because examples of Jewish lives that in some way are meaningful are created,” said Nathan Glazer ine op to concluding his Walgreen foundation lecture series on “Judaism in America.”Glazer, editor of Anchor Books and former associate editor of Commentary magazine, discussed in his final two lecturesthe sociological and religious elements of “the Jewish revival — 1940 -1955.”He pointed out two major underlying causes of this revival. When the more prosperous Jews from areas of dense Jewishsettlement moved to the sub¬public relations” at the final ses¬sion of the Communication Club’sseries of discussions on job op¬portunities in mass communica¬tion industries.The meeting will be held nextThursday in social science 201 at7:30 p.m.Speakers for the evening in¬clude Lee Scholler, president ofthe Public Relations board; JaneFletcher, Bureau of Advertising;and Leonard Elliot of the ChicagoTribune’s research department.Refreshments and general dis¬cussion will follow the main talks. urbs, they were faced withbecoming either “self-con¬scious Jews” or abandoning thefaith entirely. Secondly, the Jew’svery refusal to become a non-Jewhas led to a flourishing of Jewishreligious institutions.It was in the areas of densestJewish settlement, Glazer said,that paradoxically, "Jews couldlive a complete Jewish life fromAdvertisement — Advertisement — Advertisement — AdvertisementOn Campus withMaxSfraJman(Author of "Barefoot Boy With Cheek,” etc.)SUMER IS ICUMEN INSumer is icumen in;Lhude sing cuccu!Thus, as every schoolboy knows, begins T. S. Eliot’s immortalHiawatha. And no wonder “The Boy Orator of the Platte” (asT. S. Eliot is commonly called) was moved to pen such light¬hearted lines! For summer (or the “vernal equinox” as it isfrequently referred to) is the happiest season of the year, mildand balmy and contented-making.Which brings us, of course, to Philip Morris Cigarettes. They,too, are mild and balmy and contented-making. But that is notall. They are also genial, placid, and amiable. But that is still notall. They are, moreover, smooth, pacific, and lenient. But hold!There is more. They are, in addition, tranquillizing, clement, anddulcet.Indeed the list could go on and on, until every adjective isexhausted that would describe the mildness of Philip Morris,the subtlety of their blending, the delicacy of their flavor. Whatmore perfect companion pould be found to a summer’s day?What more apt complement to a summer’s night?If you have been pleased with Philip Morris through the win¬ter and spring—as who has not who has a taste bud left in hishead?—you will find your pleasure compounded, your enjoymenttrebled, when you smoke Philip Morris in the warm and joyousmonths before you.My own plans for the summer (except that I will smoke PhilipMorris through all my waking hours) are still vague. I have beeninvited to attend a writers conference, but I don’t think I’ll ac¬cept. I’ve been attending writers conferences for years, and Ialways have a perfectly rotten time. The trouble is that Alexan¬dre Dumas and Harriet Beecher Stowe are always there. Notthat I have anything against these two swell kids; it’s just that itbreaks my heart to see them. They’re so in love—so terribly de¬voted and so hopelessly! Dumas will never divorce Jane Eyrewhile she is with Peary at the North Pole, and Miss Stowe haslong since despaired of getting her release from the PittsburghPirates. So hand in hand, brave and forlorn, they go from writersconference to writers conference while Dumas works on his mon¬umental Stover at Yale. ,No, thank you, I'll do without writers conferences this summer.I think instead I’ll try to improve my fishing. As Izaak Waltononce said, “No man is born an artist or an angler.” I often turnto the works of Waltoti (or “The Fordham Flash” as he is fa¬miliarly called) when I am searching for a choice aphorism. Infact, I told him so when we met some years ago at a writersconference. Walton was accompanied, as always, by HenrikIbsen (or “The Pearl of the Pacific” as he is known as). They -Ibsen (“The Pearl of the Pacific”) and Walton (“The FordhamFlash”)—were collaborating on Mister Roberts at the time, butthey fell to quarreling and abandoned the project and the world,as a consequence, was deprived of a truly robust and entertain¬ing comedy.It is not uncommon, I must say, for writers to fall into dispute.They are, after all, a sensitive and high-strung lot. I’ll neverforget what William Makepeace Thackeray (or “The Body ’ as hewas universally called) once said to me. “You show me a goodwriter,” said Thackeray, "and I’ll steal his wife.”Well, as I was saying, I think I’ll give writers conferences amiss this summer, and I recommend that you do the same. Whydon’t you just take it easy ? Swim and fish and sail and smoke andread and sleep and tan your lithe young limbs. I want the bestfor you because—if I may get a little misty in this, my finalcolumn of the year—I think you should know that it’s been realkicks for me, delivering this nonsense to you each week.And in conclusion let me state what Jane Austen (or “Old54-40 or Fight” as she is called the world over) once said tome. “Nothing is so precious as friendship,” she said, “and therichest man in the world is the one with the most money.”£)M«i Bhulman, M>$5Our “On Campus'* campaign has departed in many respects fromconventional advertising methods. We'd like to have your opinionson this type campaign — and on the product, too, if you see fit — as ameans of guiding us in planning our future college advertising efforts.How about dropping us a note? Thanks — Bill Watts, Duke 50,Mgr. Philip Morris College Dept., 100 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y, a sociological point of view—andyet have no connection with anyJewish institution, religious ornon-religious.”When these settlements brokeup under the impact of prosper¬ity, new settlements of lower den¬sity were created on the outskirtsof the metropolitan areas "Andthe second generation un-self-con¬sciousness in religion, on its movefrom the city to the suburbs, hasto become self-conscious, or thefaith must be abandoned.”Question of identificationJews must then ask themselves,"Why am I a Jew?” and it is hardto answer in the middle-class sub¬urb where everyone looks alike;certainly much harder to answerthan it was in the "ghetto” areasof the larger cities. Parents decidethat their children need a relig¬ious school education. The syna¬gogue would usually follow,though often somewhat belatedly.In secular Jews who moved tothe suburbs "It was discovered nate in the suburbs? Glazer point¬ed out that in order for the "cap¬tive audience” principle to oper¬ate, there must be some bondof feeling between all Jews beforesome of them can arouse the guilt custodians of a museum objectThis is a possibility, too.”Glazer then went to to discussthe possibility of this tradition'srevival in the future.The Jewish faith, he argued,of others, and so gain their sup- does not emphasize abstract eleport for some Jewish institution, ments of creeds and beliefs—“ForThis common bond is some feel- the ordinary Jew, piety was ex-ing toward the Jewish religion.“What has not happened is thatthe Jews have not stopped beingJews . . . They chose to be Jews.They do not know what this (Jew¬ish) heritage is, but they do knowthat it may demand something ofthem, and insofar as this demandhas any meaning for them, theywill not cast it off.”Institutions flourish"It is on the basis of this . . .refusal to become non-Jews, thatwe see today a flourishing of Jew¬ish religious institutions. .. .Theseinstitutions do not engage anydeep religious impulses, but theyexist because the American Jewsthat subtly but certainly, Ameri- are prepared to be Jews.’can social life ... in respectablemiddle-class suburbs, moves indenominational lines” Non-Jews(expected) that the Jew wouldhave his own social community.Different in townsIn the small town, the Jewswere the captive audience of oneanother, because of the small sizeof the Jewish community . . . Thesecular Jew was the captive audi¬ence of the religious Jew or atleast the institutional Jew; andin such situations, every Jewishinstitution won.” •Why did the religious Jew domi- In each recent generation, adifferent part of the Jewish pasthas become meaningful, Glazerpointed out; but each generationnevertheless carries the whole ofthat tradition—its important andits unimportant elements—on tothe next generation. Thus ele¬ments dormant today may flameinto life tomorrow.An act of piety?"Or indeed,” he added, “it maynot. Perhaps it is only an act ofpiety to preserve the relatednessto the tradition . . . and all thatremains for Jews is to act as the pressed in actions, in the perform¬ance of hundreds of command¬ments.”The very observant Jew nolonger exists, but the Jewish doc¬trine of piety through the obedi¬ence of commandments is stillalive. In fact, Glazer said, thedistinctly Jewish type of "relig¬ious experience” is only "the im-position on oneself of more of thecommandments.”All branches of Judaism aremoving toward the observance ofmore and more elements of theJewish tradition.Need concrete examples"All that we can know, out ofthe history of Judaism, is that theabstract demand to seek faith, tofind God, will be meaningless forJews; the concrete examples of aJewish life will have to be givenbefore religion can have any im¬pact on the lives of the Jews”"But once again,” Glazer con¬cluded, "honesty requires that onesay, perhaps no example is possi¬ble in his modern world, perhapsthose moments of Jewish historywhen the Jews were really a peo¬ple of priests and a holy nationrequired circumstances that cannever again arise in human his¬tory ... I think that we mustleave the matter there.”Because of technical difficulties theRED DOOR BOOK SHOP’S announce¬ment. originally scheduled for this spacewill not appear until our next issue.Page 8 TNI CHICAGO MAROON May 6f 1955Doc filmsby Sam Blaz*»rThe Doc Film group, wind¬ing up its Wednesday eveningfilm showings, will presentfour experimental art filmsWednesday at 7:15 and 9:15 p.m.The first picture, The PrivateTerkel presentsinternationalfolk musicStuds Terkel — folk musicolo¬gist, actor, and television person¬ality-will head a program of folkmusic with an international flavorat UC tomorrow night.“I Come for to Sing," an in¬formal folk-song fest, will startat 8:15 p.m. in Mandel hall. Ad-misison is $1.25.Featured with Terkel will beBig Bill Broonzy, blues singer;Larry Lane, whose repertoire ofElizabethan ballads was built inhis boyhood in Marceline, Mis¬souri; Ella Jenkins with her Afro-Cuban songs and bongo - drumrhythms; and Fleming Brown,mountain and frontier songsterand banjoist.The •Disc1367 E. 57Record of the ReekMere CourageBerthold Brechtand Paul DessauVangard 7027Important ♦ ♦ .THE CRIME OFGALILEOBy Giorgio de SantillanaGalileo Galilei challenged man'sview of the universe, arousing abitter storm of controversy cli¬maxed by his imprisonment underthe Inquisition. Coming at a timewhen science and scientists areonce again fighting for the rightto unfettered inquiry, The Crimeof Galileo contains a profoundlydisturbing message for moderns."A masterly intellectual whodunit. . . Brilliant, but rarefied, thebook will appeal especially tothose who like to watch a dramaof ideas played out against thebaroque backdrop of 17th centuryItalian intrigue." — TIME$5.75At your bookstoreor fromMitoSW OThe Universityof Chicago Press5750 Ellis Avenue to show experimental art filmsLife of » Cat, is an amazing doc¬umentary of cat life in close-up.Produced by the distinguishedcameraman - director, AlexanderHammil, and with commentary byMaya Deren, it is of special inter¬est to both lovers and haters ofcats. It shows the birth of andthe manner in which their parentsfeed kittens and provide themwith the social amenities.Portray warGoya — The Disasters of War,will be second on the bill. Thisfilm takes its title from the seriesof lithographs which Goya, thegreat Spanish painter, made afterthe Napoleonic wars came toSpain in 1807. These lithographscan still reveal to those who tend todate popular disillusion with warfrom world war I the hardship,the futility and the utter catastro¬ phe of total destruction. The selec¬tive eye of the camera, using de¬tail and panorama, and assistedby a penetrating musical score ofharpsichord and drum, has creat¬ed an unforgettable record of re¬ality’s impact on artistic sensibil¬ity. The film was made by JeanGremillon and Pierre Kast in 1952.As the third motion picture inthe group. Doc Film has chosenThe Adventures of Jimmie, whichdetails the startling experience ofa confused young man in searchof his "destiny.” It is a satire onthe psychoanalytic novels, so pop¬ular today, featuring the neuroticas a hero. There is also a jazzscore by Weldon Kees.Hundreds see "Miracle”The final film on the schedule isPsyche, a cinematic stream-of-consciousness poem, suggested by Pierre Louys’ novel. It is a sensi¬tive portrayal of a young woman’syearning and fulfillment, vividlyphotographed in color and accom¬panied by an unusually beautifulscore.There will be two completeshowings, one at 7:15 and theother at 9:15. Admission will beforty cents.Last Wednesday evening, DocFilm presented, free of charge,the tri-partite film, Ways of Love.This motion picture, banned inChicago because it contains thecontroversial Rossellini effort,The Miracle with Anna Magnani,was shown to standing room onlyat both screenings. 110 wereturned away, but there is a pos¬sibility that Doc Film will showit again in the very near future. Playwrights airO'Casey's 'Junoand the Paycock'Sean O’Casey’s Irish comedy,"Juno and the Paycock,” fourthplay of the Playwrights Theatreclub’s spring season, will openat Fullerton hall in the Art insti¬tute tomorrow night at 8:30 p.m.The play, absent from Chicago’sprofessional stage since the Ab¬bey players presented it in May,1935, at the Blackstone theater,will also be presented at the Artinstitute on May 14. The group’sitinerary of productions of theplay is still incomplete; so fartwo other performances havebeen set for May 21 and 28 at theEleventh Street theater.Los Angeles director, ViolaSpolin traveled to Chicago to di¬rect O’Casey’s play about theIrish revolution.How does your voice sound to others over the telephone? Stepright up and hear for yourself over the Voice Mirror. See the Bell Laboratories' “thinking machine.” Match your witsagainst this electronic brain in a game of “ticktacktoe.”Ever wonder where the wire from your telephone goes? Followthe path it travels on the interesting, instructive Cable Display. switchboard. Watch the “voice with a smile” on the job!Ever Wonder how your telephone calls are handled?BRING YOUR UC FRIENDS AND SEEAT THE HYDE PARK TELEPHONE BUILDING,6045 S. KENWOOD AVE.0VSpecial Open House for University people> Tues.f May 10through Fri., May 13 3:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. dailySEE the modern magic of dialing.SEE the new Speakerphone, for hands-freetelephoning.SEE Amanda, the automatic telephone receptionist.STUDENTS, FACULTY AND FRIENDS INVITEDWe've sent you an invitation folder through themail. This invitation is your ticket of admission.If yours didn't arrive or you've misplaced it, callMiss Chapman on PLaza 2-9960, ext. 645. We'llroll out the red carpet for you — take you behindILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANYthe scenes of your telephone exchange for a mightyinteresting visit!IF YOU PREFER TO COME IN A GROUPIf you'd like to bring a group of ten or more,please telephone for an appointment so we'llbe better able to accommodate you. Call MissChapman on PLaza 2-9960, Extension 645.Thomas S. Devine,District Commercial ManagerMay 6, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROONTwo dramaVanishing Island' to groupspremiere; NU visit U Cplays Kafka;two other Howard plays here ijT in one-aetersThe Chicago premiere of amusical which was given astanding ovation at its recentworld premiere on the WestCoast will be held at Mandel hallnext week. The new show TheVanishing Island, by newsman-author Peter Howard, will be pre¬sented May 11, 12 and 15 at 8:30p.m.Two other productions also bythe pen of Peter Howard will alsobe given on campus next week.They are The Dictator’s Slippers,on May 13, and We Are Tomor¬row, on May 14.The three plays are produc¬tions of Moral Re-Armament, aninternational movement dedicated1o “remaking the world by remak¬ing men to live by absolute moralstandards under the guidance ofGod.”Admission to thft productionswill be free* Seats may be reservedat the Reynolds’ club informa¬tion desk.Feature D’Oyly Carte leadThese productions will featurean international cast of more than60 performers who have volun-teerer their acting services.Reginald Owen, MGM actor andstar of the recent Broadway pro¬duction Affairs of State, will takethe role of the prime minister inThe Vanishing Island.Ivan Menzies, known for hischaracterizations in Gilbert andSullivan operettas with the D’OylyCarte company, will play KingCapricorn, the central figure inthis musical.The Vanishing Island will be di¬rected by Lewis Allen, with chor¬eography by Nico Charisse andchoral direction by Herbert Weis-kopf.Common man conquersThe Vanishing Island attemptsallegorically to resolve the con¬flict between indulgent material¬ism and cold totalitarianism. Themusical takes place in the rivalcountries of Eiluph’mei (pro- "Loy the Orb and Scepter Down" sings British stage star, Ivan Menzies,in the abdication scene from the musical The Vanishing Island, open¬ing Wednesday in Mondel hall.nounced I love me) and Weiheit-’tui (we hate you). When the ma¬terialistic world 'of Weihiet’tiu,represented by Ambassador Odi-oso, threatens the island with hisdemands for a share of the wealth,the Eiluph'meites react in indigna¬tion. Odioso puts a “vanishing”curse on the island.In fear the citizens of Eiluph¬’mei turn to their king for the an¬swer. He tells them of a “newtype of man with a fire in hisheart and a twinkle in his eye; aman who can give a new start tofellows like you and I.”Picture totalitarianismOnly after the king’s abdica¬tion does he come to the realiza¬tion that his power as a commonman is greater than his formerpower as a king.The Dictator’s Slippers, to beshown next Friday, pictures thestruggle for power in a totalitar¬ian country in which the dicta¬tor’s death is imminent.We Are Tomorrow, which will be presented next Saturday, por¬trays graduating students in anEnglish university who attempt todecide upon the roles they willtake and the ideology they willadopt in future life.These Moral Re - Armamentplays are being brought to UC bythe Student - Faculty Committeefor Lighthouse at the Cross-roads.Robert J. Moon, associate profes¬sor of the physics departmentand chairman of the “Lighthouse”committee, stated that it is impor¬tant that UC, one of the birth¬places of the atomic age, be pre- Works of Franz Kafka, Sean O’Casey, Luigi Pirandello, andan original piece by UC student Roger Bowen, will be pre¬sented for four nights in the Reynolds club theatre, May 12-15.Northwestern university will present Kafka’s The Trial forthe first two nights of theatre, Thursday and Friday. RolandRude, a member of the Northwestern oral interpretation staff,commented, “Andre Gide’s adapta¬tion of The Trial for the stage metwith little success apparently be¬cause there was too much Gideand not enough Kafka.” Rude hasadapted The Trial for a "ChamberTheatre” presentation.“Chamber theatre,” originatedand developed by Robert Breen ofNorthwestern some six years ago,assures the viewer of close adher¬ence to the author’s own wordsbecause it presents prose fictionon the stage and retains as muchof the narrative fictional elementsas the playing time permits.The Trial was first presented atNorthwestern early in April. Itsenthusiastic reception at that timeencouraged Marvin Phillips, direc¬tor of University theatre, to sched¬ule it for performance here.Offer student workCurtain is 8:30 each eveningand individual tickets are $1.Tickets may be purchased at theStudent Ticket agency for $1.50,allowing the buyer to see bothThe Trial and the “Tonight at8:30” plays—a trio by Pirandello,O’Casey, and Bowen, each ofwhich will be performed both thefollowing Saturday and Sunday.These second two nights of thea¬ter is under the sponsorship of Roger Bowen, UC student andauthor of Enterprise, a forthcom¬ing University Theater one-oct pro¬duction.presented next Saturday and Sun¬day, is an original work by RogerBowen, graduate student in theEnglish department. Bowen de¬scribes his piece as “a scenario de¬group. Becltime Story, describedby Sean O’Casey as “An Anatoleburlesque in one-act,” is being di¬rected by Andrew Duncan, andfeatures Martha Silverman andNed Gaylin. Chee-Chee by LuigiPirandello will be staged by HallTaylor.Enterprise, which will also be of Playwrights Theatre club, isdirecting Enterprise.The three one-acts will be pre¬sented in the Reynolds Club trea-tre 3rd floor, curtain time 8:30.Admission will be $1, or with thecombination ticket $1.50. For rea¬sons of space limitation, audienceswill be limited to 120 each night.Mother flipped whensite Jaw her Woth 9er Jfrom the Domino!the do«"°MUseum 4-1380 5530 harperGifts • Gourmet's Corner • Stationery sented with the illuminating ideas -UT and is bein* Presented by the signed to be improvised by theof World Re-Armament. newly revived “Tonight at 8:30” actors. David Shepherd, producerInternational filnrto concludeInt. house seriesNine more films remain onthe International house moviescheduled for the spring quarter.The movies will be shown onMonday and Thursday eveningsin the Int. house assembly hall.Films on the Monday serieswill be: May 9, Eternal Mask(Austrian); May 16, Marriage ofFigaro (German) ; May 23, Sadko(Russian); May 30, Titfield Thun¬derbolt (English); June 6, YouCan't Cheat an Honest Man(American).Films on the Thursday serieswill be: May 12, The House ofSeven Gables (American); May19, The Snake Pit (American);May 26, Francis (American);June 2. Chaplin Festival B (Amer¬ican). Admission to the Mondayseries will be 45 cents (exceptthe June 6 showing which will be35 cents). Admission to the Thurs¬day series will be 35 cents. Latest Review on sale soon;national circulation 6,000The summer issue of the Chicago Review will go on sale inthe University area on May 16.Represented in the forthcoming issue are two dozen con¬tributors, both student and non-student. A matter of recentcontroversy, “too many big names” in proportion to the workof unknown writers, may be revived with the new issue. Well-known authors and poets repre-Hear blues, ballads, Afro-Cuban rhythmYesc 1955 editionI COME FORTO SINGstarringStuds TerkelBig Bill BroonsyLorry Lane r ithFlemming Brown,Ello JenkinsSat. Night, May 7, 8:15Mandel HallAdmission $1.25Tickets may be purchased atStudent Service (RenterReynolds Club BasementBenefit for Circle Pines Center**An interracial Coop farm camplocated m Cloverdole, Michigan sented include Mark Van Doren,E. E. Cummings, Babette Deutsch,Alfred Kreymborg, and BrunoBettelheim. Several other contrib¬utors will be appearing in printfor their first time.The forthcoming publicationwill be decorated with sectionheads drawn by Hannah Weber-Sachs, Chicago artist. The coverwill be by Roy Fostey, art historystudent, who also did the springissue’s cover. Fill-ins are by Artinstitute painter, John O’Reilly. Stand sales have been discon¬tinued with this issue, mainly dueto an increase in student subscrib¬ers. Copies of the quarterly maga¬zine may be obtained at the Uni¬versity bookstore, neighborhoodbooksellers, and from staff mem¬bers of the magazine. Increasedorders from distributors on theWest Coast have raised the circu¬lation of the student-operatedmagazine to nearly 6,000 copies.This is as large or larger thanthe cii'culation of any US literaryor cultural quarterly.“Enjoy Our Fine Continental Cuisine ImRelaxed Atmosphere”CONTINENTAL GOURMET RESTAURANTOpen Daily (except Mondays) from 4:30 - 10:00Sundays — 12 Noon - 10 P.M.1508 E. 57th Street Phone PLazn 2-9355PROVENCAL"|'^£OXE d'AZUR. RestaurantFraneais1450 E. 57th Street5 p.m. - 2 a.m.cafe espresso from9 p.m.Closed WednesdoysJIS61*9019&rd *',V~...- —--r33J>I Suiipou s.sjaqx £v]4fVdJlCjftlJLQ yuonjv‘dtuocjjv (vpvSdtuJj uotptiuoi'3M'MIViNOltNI*“OOOOaVOOA»D>ONi3fT*« j'ZffdVob*omgfybyrnmp-km7>n MOXSMIM^p»S •jOA^yamuaqtjieyjoa^sre^am,4uim»l.usoop ^aX‘XpAipajjaosS)jjomJa^iyuo^sujm aAisnpxaayx'JmiyJouybnoXsSuuq osyeuo^sui^‘joAByjauymiMSuOjv ;joAByoooBqoyye0.i}o2s4n'uojsutjw punojXaqyuaqMaipj-eSpjayybuijtoavif. punojsja^ouisaSayoQ;jsbjosspuauj XubuiosSuiuuims.uojsujmJapuoMon■ |P|noi|Ss|49jd6;)do>|>| —p006S9|5D|NOXSJMIAVAN¥rfW03V10J-V303*HlYMIOpw%o,6*ad«| •»u|oSmiiqjoXutduio^lui|uog#|«3-c»3eiy^ asANVAwoanoDyoooamtoAiisoHiavsaannarmos J"yp)spxy3nTO«3}OlJM *JO]A3jso3xpinbjo}iqb *~anhwhshajfjH^lsvjz •qS3JJ-J3A3‘SuiDBjq‘ASoBJ •**axsvijuiordLUHoniHi (iXNIHlnOA oa1VHM mmn&sswsss®* {OunfouisJd||ij04)|)Dqjoad|jsbuuq NOISN1M •%u2r‘. 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Their aggressiveplay caused the Knox pitchers to make three wild pitches,5 walks, and a balk.The Maroons broke a 2-2 tie ond sacrifice, and scored on Ut-. .... ley’s hit to right.Ml the third inning with four Knox scored two runs in theruns. John Mann, Kent Kar- 5th. Catcher Lundgren and pitch¬er Hill singled. Right fielder Hallwalked to load the bases. Center-fielder Krughoff also walked toforce in a run. Hill scored afterMaroon left fielder Don Mazukellimade a diving catch of secondbaseman Craven’s drive to deepleft center.Knox tied the score in the 6thwhen right fielder Treptonsingled to left. First baseman Ed¬wards walked and both advancedwhen third baseman Culbertsonsacrificed. Trepton scored whenKarohl grabbed Lundgren’ssmash behind second base andthrew him out. Hill popped out toMann end the innin£-The Maroons won the game inthe last half of the 6th whenDave Utley walked and stole sec¬ond. Baptist then drove in thewinning run when he dropped aTexas leaguer into short left.First game:KNOXab r h3 0 1444343221 Stormy track contest ends inMaroon victory; Albion team foldsby John SpauldingRecoiling from stinging defeats in the first two events last Saturday, the University ofChicago tracl^ team smashed back at their opponent, Albion college, and clubbed them intooblivion with a 94 1/3 to 36 2/3 victory.Albion arrived in Stagg field under near perfect weather conditions, but immediatelyclouded the atmosphere by winning a fast mile and an even faster 440-yard dash. Thestorm subsided, however, with a Maroon victory in the 100 - yard dash and completelyevaporated under the heat of ;ohl, and Bill Miller singled. GilLevine then doubled. Two stolenbases, a wild pitch, and a Knoxerror aided the rally.Hits by Bruce Colby and A1Binford plus four walks, a wildpitch and an error made up theMaroons four-run fifth inningwhich concluded the scoring inthe first game.Right hander Bill Miller check¬ed Knox with six hits and chip¬ped in offensively with a hit anda walk.Second baseman Johnended the game when he made asprawling stop of Knox short¬stop Bath’s clout and threw himout while lying on his stomach.The second game was a tightpitchers’ duel between Joe Hill ofKnox and Paul Baptist of Chi¬cago. The Maroons collected only Hail,iffive hits but backed up southpawBaptist with brilliant defensiveplay. Baptist responded by driv¬ing in three of the four Chicagoruns.Chicago jumped off to a 2-0lead in the first inning. Short¬stop Kent Karohl opened up witha walk. He went to second oncatcher Walt Walker’s sacrificeand to third on a wild pitch. Aftered out, centerfielder Gil Levinewalked and stole second. Bothrunners scored when Baptistpumped a single to right.The Maroons increased theirlead to 3-0 in the 3rd when KentKarohl singled to center-, ad¬vanced to second on Walker’s sec- Krughoff.cfCulbertson,3bCravens,2bBath,ssTrepton,pEdwards,lbOhnen.cBlackburn,rfStegman.p 0 00 10 21 00 10 11 01 00 030 3 6 CHICAGOab r hKarohl ,ssWalker,cUtley, lbLevine,cfColby,3bMiller,pBinford,rfMazukelli,IfMann,2bKnox 002Chicago 204Second game:KNOXab r h ab r hHall.if 3 0 0 Karohl, ss 3 2 1Krughoff,cf 3 0 0 Walker,c 3 0 0Cravens,2b 4 0 0 Utley,lb 2 1 1Bath.ss 4 0 1 Levine,cf 2 1 0Edwards,lb 2 0 0 Baptist ,p 3 0 2Trepton,rf 2 1 2 Colby,3b 3 0 0Culbertson,3b 3 0 0 Binford.rf 2 0 0Lundgren,c 3 1 I Mazukelli,If 2 0 1Hill.p 3 1 2 Marks,2b 2 0 027 3 6 22 4 5Knox ..000 021 0—3 6 1Chicago .201 001 x—A 5 1Better tennisfor you startsright here . ..The confidence you need tokeep up your game is built rightinto this fine Spalding racket.The Spalding KRO-BAT® de¬livers all the “feel” for better con¬trol and accuracy. It’s built to takepower serves and smashes, andgive you top performance.Buy the KRO-BAT in your ownweight and grip size. Just one setwill tell you ... this is your yea) forbetter tennis.SPALDINGSETS THE PACE IN SPORTS eleven straight Chicago vic¬tories which followed in a re¬lentless procession until the meetwas over.Chicago was led in its victoryparade by captain Joe Howardwho was winning the shot putwith a 46' 9Va" toss while Albionwas stunning all opposition on thetrack. Howard was closely fol¬lowed by Roger Forsyth who gotoff a healthy 43' 6" heave. In thejavelin captain Howard uncorkedanother v.ctory on the strengthof a 159' effort, edging teammateLarry Shaderowski’s second placethrow by just over two feet.Meanwhile, Jim Brown wasblazing around the track in a 49.4-second quarter mile, but still hadto settle for a very close secondwhile Lowell Hawkinson’s 50.8furnished a fast third. In the mileCarl Ramsay was the victim ofanother herculean Albion effortas he ran in 4:30.8 but had to takesecond place behind Albion’s SamChapman. Art Omohundro fur¬ nished a respectable third in4:34.8.Frank Loomos then plummetedacross the scene in winning a :10.2hundred-yard dash and continuedin high gear while winning the220-yard low hurdles in :25.4 andtaking a speedy second in the 220-yard dash. Jim Brown copped thelatter event as he let fly with asizzling :22.1 effort.In the 220 low hurdles Loomoswas being chased to the tape byDan Trifone who came in secondin :25.8. Trifone in his turn skim¬med through the 120-yard highhurdles in a very nice :15.3 fol¬lowed by Mitch Watkins in sec¬ond. But Watkins also had hisround in winning the broad jumpwith a sufficient 20' 1” leap.In the high jump Trifone wason hand again long enough tosoar to a 6' victory. Bob Masonand two Albion contestants carvedup the remaining points in a dead¬lock at 5'8". All the rest of the field eventswent to Chicago colors except thepole vault which Paul Baptist hadto share with Albion’s Jerry Rus¬sell at 10' 6". Roger Forsythwheeled his discus out 128' 2%*to earn first in that event whileClive Gray garnered a third.In the remaining running eventsSam Greenlee and Jim Flynn ledthe way. Greenlee ran off withthe 880 in 1:57.7 with recuperatingTed Fishman turning in a good1:59.9 third.Sports CalendarFriday, May 6 — Golf. NorthernIII. LW. 1 :30.Sal., May 7—Baseball. North Cen¬tral. Stagg. 2:00.Junior VarsityFriday, May 6—Tennis. HarvordVarsity courts. 3:30.Sat., May 7 — Baseball. LutherNorth. North Field. 10:30.Sat., May 7 — Track. WheatonAcademy. Stagg. 1 1 :00.27 10 8100 9— 3 C 2040 x—10 8 3CHICAGO Pro-football petition circulated;Chicago papers print stories butUC students mock petitionersUC Students for Football met with opposition Monday and Tuesday as a rash of peti¬tions mocking the Students for Football petition-to-bring-back-football appeared on campus.First came a petition for athletic scholarships for intercollegiate women’s softball. Next apetition for intercollegiate king-of-the-mountain appeared. Finally a petition for intercolle¬giate post-office was circulated by a “New Undergraduate Department of Newly IntegratedCollege Kids,” (NUDNICKS). “The training is not too rigorous.”Last year another attempt ■ 'to bring back the game failedwhen less than 100 studentswere willing to sign a statementthat they would play.The students started strong onSaturday. Every Chicago dailycovered their effort, beginningwith the Tribune, which called theMaroon about it. UC’c publicityoffice then released similar infor¬mation to the other papers, pre-Booklovers!The Biggest, Widest,CarefullySelected Collection ofNew, Low-Priced,Paper-Bound Reprintsto be found in anybookstoreHas been introducedat theSTUART BREHTBook & Record Shop670 N. MichiganWe invite you to come in andbrowse among the thousandsof books availableDE 7-6357 sumably with the approval ofChancellor Kimpton’s office, sinceall previous news of the footballsituation has passed that office.Alumnus Frank Whiting, presi¬dent of the Order of the “C,” stat¬ed: “I am glad to see this interestdisplayed by the student body. Weolder alumni have waited yearsfor a situation to develop thatto collegestudents16 pages — fully illustrated.Covers atomic energy fromsubs and aircraft to pluto¬nium production and atomicpower plants for electricity.For your free booklet, write:General Electric Co., Dept.2-119N, Schenectady, N. Y.UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingTwo barbers workingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor would enable the school to bringback many traditional undergrad¬uate activities, including football.”Of the three “counter-petitions”that have been circulated .since thereturn-of-football campaign be¬gan, the longest included the fol¬lowing:“We the undersigned, in orderto ordain and establish a moreperfectly integrated, red-blooded,all-American campus, do herebyaffix our signatures to a petitionfavoring the following red-blood¬ed all-American typically integrat¬ed proposal.“1) Some method must be de¬vised to stop the invidious surgeof creeping individualism whichhas resisted for too long the ef¬forts of right - thinking grouptherapists. We realize that thesolution for the ills of the worldin general, and Billings psycho¬ward in particular, lies in the ro¬bust organizing and joining oi"Things.”CARMEN'SUsed Furniture StoreMoving and Light Hauling1127 E. 55 1412 E. 55MU 4-8980 MU 4-9003Quetico-SuperiorCANOE TRIPSOnly $5.50 per person per day tercomplete camping equipment, Grum¬man aluminum canoes and eboleafood supplies. For free Informationwrite:CANOE COUNTRY OUTFITTER#Bill Rom, Mgr. Box 717C. Ely, Minn.For an Important FIRST JobSuccessful career women recommend Gibi:ecretarial training as the door-opener bihat important “first” job, and the all-roun>reparalion for advancement to the top•Vrite College Dean for Gibbs Gikls at WoriSpecial Course for College WomenKATHARINE PTDDCSECRETARIAL U 1 JLJ JJ Jlostoe 16, 21 Mai thorough St Nov York 17, 230 Perk Avt.’rov Ideate 6.155 Angell St Montclolr, N. J., 33 Plymouth SI ACASA Book StoreUsed Books — Bought and SoldGood background materialReliable typewriter serviceBY 3-9651 1117 EL 55th StreetiwTNI CHICAGO MAROONFa*« TZ «, 1955;V "I've got UM... andUM's got everything!ftvX'mil£» ««World disarmament Astronomer Chandrasekhar z’ 1 1 •find new radiois goal of Flanders elected to science academy isotope in rainUnder the theme of “The reality of disarmament," Senator ^ Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, of UC's Yerkes observa-Ralph E. Flanders, Bruno Bettleheim, Maynard Krueger, and l?as been elected to membeiship in the National AcademyArthur H. Rosenfeld addressed a student audience in Mandel Sciences, announced Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimptonhall Saturday. - Monday.“I will call this the ‘Grand Project,’ and its first task to Chandrasekhar, Morton D.undertake is world disarmament,” said Flanders in opening UIT ^his portion of the first annual in UC’s astronomy departmentand in its Institute for NuclearStudies, thus becomes the 21stWorld Affairs conferenceFlanders went on to speak ofAmerican responsibility for worldpeace.Flanders outlined three means—moral encirclement, moral pene¬tration, and atomic penalties—forlessening tension between the USand the USSR. He also proposedan informal big-power conferenceas a means for disarmament.Earlier in the day MaynardKrueger, assistant professor inthe social sciences, spoke on “Dis¬armament and our search for agoal.” Security, Krueger felt, isa cause of disarmament, and notthe other way around. A systemof effective international law isneeded to guarantee this security.Following Krueger, Arthur Ro¬senfeld, chairman of the Chicago destroy mankind and create crea- B. Kurland, professor of law; for his application of modernphysical theories to the study ofthe internal structure of the starsand to the universe.Born in India, he has been a UCpresently active member of the faculty member since 1937. TheUniversity's faculty to hold mem- au|hor f ,hree books h hasbership m the Academy, the high- , ,est American scientific honor. cently been engaged in the studyChandrasekhar is world famous °f magnetism throughout the uni¬verse.He has also received the RoyalAstronomical Society medal, con¬sidered the equivalent of theNobel prize in astronomy, whichhas been awarded three times toUC astronomers.Faculty membersget QuggenheimsSix UC faculty members havebeen awarded John Simon Gug¬genheim memorial fellowships.Recipients of the award are: CorrectionHerbert L. Anderson, professorof physics; Clyde A. Hutchison, Last week's Maroon, and thatof the week before, carried con-Council of the Atomic Scientists,gave a factual analysis of recentarmament developments. He stat¬ed that further development waswasteful since there are alreadyweapons to sufficiently destroymankind.Peace and disarmament areonly possible by transmission ofpower to a higher, more central¬ized. authority was Bruno Bettle-heim’s viewpoint. Bettleheim isdirector of the Orthogenic schoolhere. He reacted to Rosenfeld’sstory of powerful weapons by say-Cap and Qown“three ring circusCap and Gown, UC year¬book scheduled to appear May15, is a ‘‘three ring circus”according to sales campaignmanager Michael Stanley.Theme of the ‘‘circus” is thechanges wrought by theKimoton administration.This theme runs throughthe book, which will contain ar¬ticles on the administration, hous¬ing and activities, among othersubjects. “The campus has notyet acquired that striped-tie, Ox¬ford grey look of the Ivy league,toward which it is so rapidly mov¬ing,” says the yearbook.Ray Nelson, whose caricatureof the “Inspector General” ap¬peared all around campus to pub¬licize University Theatre’s pro¬duction of the play, will do similarwork for Cap and Gown.Cap and Gown is reviving Echo,the traditional pre-war supple¬ment to the yearbook, this year.The major feature of Echo is theselection of a “Man of the Year,”the student who has contributedmost to student activities the pastterm.Echo’s last “Man of the Year”was chosen in 19.39, the choice be¬ing William Hardy MacNeill,then Maroon editor and “personalvoice of Hutchins.”1955’s “Man of the Year” willbe revealed when the yearbookarrives. At present the book is onthe press. Pre-publication price is$4, after publication, $4.50.TYPEWRITERSCLEANED ORREPAIREDWritten guarantee onall work for one yearInspector and Estimator on dutyfrom 4 p.m. till 10 p.m.Discount of 15%for all studentsBring your typewriter in forrepair before your final examsbegin.BOURGEAUS'1202 E. 55th St.HI 3-7012 Senator Ralph E. Flandersing that he had the feeling that acouple of atomic mutations will Jr-- professor of chemistry; Philip tradictory rates for three shotpolio vaccination. Rates giveneach time were incorrect. Thevaccination is $5 per shot for stu¬dents, bringing the total cost to$15. For faculty members andhospital employees the total costwill be $9.tures which may well be an im¬provement.The conference was sponsoredby Students for Democratic Ac¬tion and the Student Representa¬tive party. Cyril Stanley Smith, professor ofmetallurgy and director of theInstitute for the Study of Metals;Henry Taube, professor of chem¬istry; and Nicholas Nicolaides, re¬search associate in medicine. A new naturally-occurring r*.dioactive isotope, beryllium seven,has been identified by two UCprofessors. Be-7 promises to h«useful in studying problems asso.ciated with the weather.James R. Arnold, UC assistantprofessor of chemistry, and H AhSalih, Institute for Nuclear Stud,ies. detected the radioisotope inrain water collected in Chicagoand in Lafyette, India. This wasdone in a special scintillationcounter developed by Arnold.This is the third naturally,occurring radioisotope discoveredby UC scientists since the end ofWorld War II. Willard F. Libby,now on leave serving on theAtomic Energy commission, dis-covered radioactive carbon 14 andtritium.Although Be 7 is extremely rareit is estimated that each squareinch of the Chicago area is dustedby some four million atoms ofradioactive beryllium a year.The existence of Be-7 was pre¬dicted on the basis of a theoryconcerning the end products ofcosmic ray collisions with theelements in the upper atmos¬phere.CAMPUS “STAND-OUTS’ BMOCStands Out from All the Rest! l*m wins its letters forflavor... Light and Mild. And the pure, white Miracle Tip drawseasy, so you enjoy all the taste. No wonder L&M sales are soaringon campus after campus. It's America’s best filter cigarette*O UttiTT A MVIM TOMCCO Co.