475 new students enter UCUniversity Collegeopens new locations Enrollment climbs againF our hundred and seventy-five new students were welcomed to the collegeby the Student Orientation board Sunday. This was an increase of 16.7 percent, fulfilling anticipations of a substantial boost in enrollment.Including transfer students, the total entering undergraduate body numbered ap¬proximately six hundred. They represent forty states, Hawaii, Canada, Mexico,The University college is inaugurating its basic program M^ayt’ Sweden< and the Netherlands.„f liberal education for adults in two new locations, on the hi^LT Cen‘ ™ en'rantS Wh° haVe n°‘ comp,e‘edcampus and in Skokie, in line with its theory that “The chief The increase in transfer students—approximately three times as many enteredproblem facing an adult is not how to earn a living but how ■his y-ear as did a year ag°—was attributed to the curriculum change which permitsto improve the quality of his life."University college, the downtown center of the University a low of under 1,200 students in 1953-54.transfer students to complete degree requirements in the normal time.This is the second year that undergraduate enrollment has increased after hittingof Chicago at 19 S. La Salle _ ... .• {f_. „„„ Institute of Chicago, SherwoodIS spreading its_ Pr<> Music school, the Union Officersto other areas. Dead-street,grams oiuc* aic-aa. i-'cau- progranl the program of execu-line for registration is October 1. tive development for federal per-For those on the south side, par- sonnel, the program of graduateticularly in the Woodlawn-Hyde study in management, the execu-park-Kenwood area, the Basic tive program for a master of busi-Piogram of Liberal Education for ness administration, programs ofAdults is offered on Tuesday leadership training, and informalnights, beginning October 4, from courses.6:30 to 9:45 p.m. in Cobb hall 101, Among the many courses givenEllis avenue at 58th street. at the downtown center is one in Chancellor and Mrs. Lawrence A. Kimpton will meet the new students formallyat a reception one week from tomorrow, Saturday, October 8. Classes in the collegeThursday, October 6, will end orientation for the new students. photo by ZygmundCarolyn Klbllngerof Flint, Michiganopens the door ofher room In Greenhall.Must be 21The course is open to everyoneover 21. Information on registra¬tion and late registration can beobtained by phoning the center.The basic program is designed forall who wish to speak more effec- group management and growthoffered jointly by the Universityand the training center in com¬munity human relations, an ex¬perience in group dynamics foranyone interested in organizingcommunity organizations. Anoth¬er course in connection with theIllinois Congress of Parents andlively, to think more clearly, and Teachers is training for lay lead-to solve the problem of the goodlife. In class, the students discussthe readings I which take aboutfour hours of study a week) andlearn to make a close textualanalysis.In Skokie, University College isalso giving the basic programand two courses; “The humanfactor in the productivity ques¬tion” and “statistics.” The SkokieValley Industrial association,composed of a hundred corpora¬tions, asked the University to starta plan of adult education for allemployes of the corporations. Thisjoint project of the University Col¬lege and the Skokie Valley Indus¬trial association has been expand¬ed to include anyone in the com¬munity.Tell programsPrograms available at Univer¬sity College are: the basic pro¬gram of liberal education foradults, an introduction to the arts,community programs in W’orldpolitics, the Great Books in themodern world series, opportuni¬ties for graduate study, and sixof the college courses, identical tothose offered on campus.There are also programs in con¬nection with the school of the Art ership to help PTA officials leaddiscussion groups.Give historyThe University of Chicago hasalways been interested in adulteducation. The first president,William Rainey Harper, becameknown by his work in the homestudy plan of furthering the edu¬cation of adults.University College was createdby Harper in 1893 for teachersand any others who wished to pur¬sue college studies but whose oc¬cupations made regular attend¬ance on campus impossible. ~ ’ - -•University of Chicago, September 30, 1955Daily News report 'false/ misleadingclaim irate UC students, board member" Under the headline “A worm’s-eye view of the U. of C. for Frosh” Tuesday’s Daily Newscarried a by-lined article by John Justin Smith describing one student tour of the Univer¬sity. Smith’s article, sub-headlined “Upper class guides accentuate the negative on the Mid¬way,” described the tour led by Janice Porter, Orientation board member, by giving, inquotations, statements about the sites Miss Porter’s group visited.According to Miss Porter, “the quotes which were accurate which Mr. Smith saw fit to use,and which conveyed a nega¬tive’ attitude, constituted nomore than one-twentieth ofmy statements.”“There was absolutely no re¬ action from my ‘brood’ when Ipointed out Hitchcock and Snell,”said Miss Porter. (From the arti¬cle: "Several girls in her broodsquealed.”) “When talking of theStudents assure employersof responsible performanceStudents seeking employment at the University personnel office are now asked to signan agreement affirming certain responsibilities to their employers. The agreement is in¬tended to better relationships between employers and student employees, and to increase theamount of jobs available by insuring the reliability of student workers. It includes a state¬ment of intention “to give prompt, regular, cooperative and effective performance in anyjob you take.” Administration building, I saidfirst that it was probably the mostimportant building on campus. Ispoke of the offices there.” (Fromthe article: “‘Some people don’tthink so much of this building,’Miss Porter said. ‘It isn’t in keep¬ing with the Gothic architec¬ture.’ ”)When reached for comment,Smith stated; “I told the com¬plete truth.”“There are at least ten studentspresent on the tour who told DeanRuth O. McCarn that the impres¬sion conveyed by the article wasfallacious — they are willing tobe quoted,” Miss Porter said.This plan is modeled afterthe Harvard university em¬ployment statement, withmodifications for the Chicago sit¬uation. According to Mrs. Paul¬son, of the personnel office, thisis “designed to help students findmore jobs.” Some departments ofthe University have been reluc¬tant to hire students because ofsuch lapses in responsibility asdisappearing at vacation times orThis program, new to UC but before examinations, Mrs, Paul-Work partof grantsScholarship aid to approximate¬ly 30 students in the fall enteringfiass includes grants plus thea ssurance of a job on campus.already used with considerablesuccess at Harvard and other in¬stitutions, is designed to be able10 aid more students by stretch¬ing existing funds, according toWilliam E. Scott, registrar andchairman of the sub committee oncollege scholarships.Work records for these students(hen is considered with scholasticachievement in consideration of son explained, and too many stu¬dents take large work programswithout sufficiently working outtheir academic programs in ad¬vance. Some departments havebeen refusing to hire students be¬cause of the consequent lack ofdependability. The mimeographed pledge be¬gins with the explanation that:“Since a great many studentsnow, and in the future, must de¬pend for a part of their financeson the good will of employersinside‘and outside the University,it is very important for you andfor the University that you under¬stand clearly what your responsi¬bilities axe if you take a jobthrough this office.Also the scholarship commit¬tee, in considering applicationsfor scholarships, loans, or other year is working with our dis¬tinguished board of trustees toChancellor Kimptonwelcomes entrantsI send my greetings to the new and returning studentsthrough the pages of the Maroon. You have chosen tc attendone of the great universities of the world, anji I congratulateyou upon your wisdom. It is our purpose— yours'and mine —to keep it in the first rank. You can do it by nurturing theintellectual rigor and abrasiveness that has always markedour student body, and my par¬ticular contribution for thisaids, takes into account the stu¬dent’s employment performancesalong with the rest of the record.”The list includes the students’responsibility to remain at theirjobs during vacation periods un¬less other arrangements have“Several departments have; al- bepn made upon hiring. At leastready favorably received this planand as a result are willing to givescholarship renewal.The plan is expected by Scott to students a second try,” Mrs. Paulcreate more jobs on campus by SOn said.encouraging departments to break Many campus jobs are expecteddown full-time jobs into two or to become available next week,hree part-time student jobs, and she continued. In order to get aby establishing a record of more -ob through the personnel serv-rohable student aid in University ice a stU(jent must apply or phone with job work. “It is your responoffices. - for’ an appointment at Ingleside sibility to plan your academicIt thus is not expected to de- hall, 956 E. 58th st. There is a work intelligently so you will notCorase the number of jobs avail- waiting period of about two to feel the need to neglect your jobable to those students not under three weeks before appointments in order t:o “cram” for exams,the scholarship-work program. for interviews can be filled but However, if your program Js sen-two weeks notice must be givenif it is necessary to leave a job,and failure to give such noticewill endanger future job oppor¬tunities.Students are told that examina¬tion periods must not interfere raise some $32,000 to increasethe salaries of our professors andprovide needed residences for you.If in pursuit of this end I do notsee as much of you this year asI should like, I hope you willunderstand.The undergraduate and gradu¬ate years should be happy ones,and it is our intention that youshould enjoy your university. Ihope that the balance betweenthe curricular and the extra-cur¬ricular that we have planned willcontribute to this enjoyment.I wish you a pleasant and prof¬itable year. pboto by Bachrachapplyunder scholaship aid. the office all the time. perform your work.’iSeptember 30, 1955• cUve|Gi;:ji>moram^V CMudeiittfic^QlffliPMfmysIdvhtlk;Ivice-presidentlpf^he^USf^ational^Stuch i ij^i<onationaI|studetft^Dr^*es^mislsumn^^i^naN^a^C)n^Pbl^l<3li?:^^^t^^^^^l'i■,r; yei^ityiatiUSr^^^|jTth^annual|ga^ing^^S|J{l;4j2^£|ii®SSJS’'Thena (ional^st tideht^bQngriessV/is^SlS’-SA^^^iafeMS^Sgianfflp^^I m schdQisi\vereM’epres^tedibvll356Wdelerga^^^^^^^^^^^'^^^^@^^:S guestsv|Sever'#pdricSmaknii^i^^,^g^^i^^TO^^^^^^^plenari!eslwdreil#gl^MMll^^TOpl^piP^B^M^^^S^^^P'■AtM '4-« ^«-^j~*:''^'^£^ii>«^i^r^4fe^i56s*w«hn'-ran!est.n.m1ii*:elr*1au'se«mWsti:rarah^nrajwwtt»ki3ra^^s^kool'y loi'Kl:“l^~~, ■ Noil 0^01’s'lod.-I'ollcl'i-• ;V=fw .i~/,;?-»r• | •■• A{"n;i.tt^.4> >i?mH-tiiwfiff:: j$C? |||1|| 'j^‘^l^^^6uri^l»f.-^w!>3(atoil|. z# v,z;Jmmm?* .*--M *rfcm0E-:?•. -vs,ift?iiS#s*.mt:M te&KSSL tern Ihjpltr^wit tm «tti* iteagite « «» «#*&»& ,ir«fe,^gietf.paK:I|o,Kll,.; «v'!l ,,.,V $^ fur the r-iith-t to U|6?A,-M£ Vcrnaiv'^ ¥:^tfu.«lp ypj# na-mp, art^sa, cMlegg ^noj ■■;pm ;•'$;■• c,.:"^ZZZ- v' -vItoe fpi Igkt upb&c^se ^i*ii4 idr\T o.r'iVi ^wjrllfpl1' ^MspSPlr;; m #p§iiStttaMApftaw.'-%$?#TYPEWRITERS sold - rented - repairedPOSTAL STATION RENTAL LIBRARY1311 EAST 37th STREET2 BLOCKS EAST OF MANDEL HALLEVENINGS—Monday, Wednesday, Friday to 9:00 P.M,STORE HOURS: DAILY 8 A.M. to 6:00 P.MSeptember 30, 1955Hutchins reversesstand on patienceIf it were possible to return to 1929 and again becomechancellor, he would reorganize the University along the linesof Oxford and Cambridge, Robert M. Hutchins stated lastweek. Hutchins, chancellor of the University from 1929 to1951, presented the results of 10 years reconsideration sincehe gave a lecture here on the university administrator.In a speech before the 1 ^ 1American College of HospitalAdministration, he withdrewIiis previous statement that pa¬tience is an unnecessary attributeof administrators of which mosthave too much. “I now think.” hesaid, “that my lack of patiencewas one of my principle disqual¬ifications as an administrator.”He feels that if he had been morepatient, he would have accom¬plished less, but that his accom¬plishments would have been morepermanent.Hutchins feels that to make anychanges which will last, an admin¬istrator would need a super hu remedy for it, federalization,would also remedy that mutualdeafness which specialization hasmade the characteristic disease ofthe higher learning in America.” Rhodes dateCompleted applications forRhodes scholarships must bereturned to the office of Dr.Robert E. Ebert, institutionalrepresentative by Oct. 19.Scholarship winners will beentitled to two years of finan¬cial assistance towards studyat Oxford university with thepossibility of renewal for anaddtional year. The assistancewill be at the rate of 600pounds (approximately $1,680at the current rate of ex¬change i yearly.List of qualifications andfurther information may be ob¬tained at Dr. Ebert’s office,Billings hospital, room W617. Maroon welcomesnew staff memberInaugurate health test;plan classes on nutritionFaster, more efficient handling of student health problems,especially the physical examination of entering students, isthe goal of Dr. Henrietta Herbolsheimer, director of StudentHealth service.First step in the new system is a recently devised form ofmedical self-evaluation, filled out by entering students. Theseforms, checked overnight bythe health service, serve as the vis.ual screening for height,amount of patience and an basis for establishing a prior- we'ght, etc., urinalysis, blood pres-ity list in the handling of later 5,uJe measurement, skin tests forimpossible amount of time. “Con¬siderations such as these,” he said,“lead me to think that if I had itto do over again I might haveliegun at Chicago in 1929 with aproposal for the reorganization ofthe University more basic thanany I ever advanced. . . .”The University should havebeen reconstituted into a federa¬tion of colleges. Such colleges,with 250 students and 25 facultymembers, would be of manage¬able size.“The main point is that admin¬istration by persuasion and agree¬ment, which is the only kind thatbrings lasting results, cannot beconducted in the vast chaos of theAmerican university, and that the physicals.Carrying the voluntary evalua¬tion a step further, the healthservice has inaugurated a seriesof classes on health problemssuch as weight control and nutri¬tion. Students whose medical rec¬ord indicates the desirability oftheir attendance at these classeswill be invited to attend and allother interested students are wel¬come to sit in on the lectures.Students whose health recordsindicate a serious or a varietyof physical or emotional problemsare given preference in slatingtheir physical examination.Following this, students gothrough a process of chest X ray, TB and mumps, and vaccinationfor smallpox.Information and results of allthese tests become part of thestudent’s permanent health rec¬ord and are used in diagnosiswhen the student uses such healthservice facilities as free immuni¬zation. dispensary service, andclasses on nutrition and weightcontrol.Student health service hoursare 9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., Mondaythrough Saturday; 1:30 p.m. to4:30 p.m., Monday through Fri¬day. If there is sufficient inter¬est in having service availableduring the noon hour—11:30 to1:30—consideration will be givento having staff available then. Maroon staff will welcome more new members next Friday at the3:30 p.m. meeting in the Reynolds club.Form new medical programsin radiological health, physicsResponding to the need created by the increased use ofradiation sources, including reactors, and materials such a&radio-isotopes, the medical center’s department of radiologyhas instituted unique courses in health physics and radio¬logical physics.These courses, under the direction of Lester S. Skaggsassociate professor of medical ments and measures the inteitphysics, are both two-year sity and type of emissions fromprograms leading to the mas- radioactive isotopes used in ra¬ter’s deeree search Proiects-g ’ A pioneer in the field of nuclea#The first field, health physics, energy and radioactivity, UC hanprepares the student to determine unique facilities for training inthe standards of allowable expo- the two fields, including radiationsure to radiation and directs the creating machines ranging fromprotective measures necessary. a 450-million volt synchrocyclo-The radiological physicist cal- tron to linear accelerators, beta*culates the dosages from radia- trons and other specialized d«*tion sources used in cancer treat- vices.■as;:'rv, mt: * l ‘M >' x > X ' ' , ; *' s\v V*'' •->' f k V i:. $ ■ •. .WOODWORTH’BOOKSTOREReady To Serve Your Every NeedNEW TEXT BOOKS USEDCLASS ROOM SUPPLIESFOUNTAIN PENS - NOTE BOOKS - STATIONERY - LAUNDRY CASESLEATHER CASES - SPORTING GOODS355492THE CHICAGO MAROON September 30, 1955by space requitr Our: reflecti'Mi .•; . ,m tUNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP For the do ring U. of C. student' willing to defy convention bywebring a handsome necktie —- we have collected some of the mostbcautifui ties this far side of the ugh! Ivy League: 2.50 each.Handkerchiefs:, Hand-blocked linens designed by Tommis Keefe.1.00 each.Silk end cotton scarves. 27x27" in exciting Oriental patterns.1 .00 riot h.Cummerbunds for men ond women. 5.00 ond upBelts. Plaid, madras, leather. 2.50 ond up. The new Burlap SlingBelt with Coin Buckle. 3.25.1453 £. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircutting VFI C. ArnoldProprietor^)iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij=| Inf tonal lltnse Mioviei| Ass«“i»ilil> h.-tll. 'Ion. A lluirv. evening at 8 p.m.|| Monday, Oct. 3 — 45c — Genevieve English, m color) =H Thursday, Oct ( Mo^r.fic 'if Obsession Am • ani II111»1111111111111 m 11111 ill 11 III 111 > m 11111II111111 m 1111111111 mimmmuiii» REFERENCETEMPLE ISAIAH ISRAEL CHORAL SOCIETYAndrew Fold!, director■NEW MEMBERS WELCOME USEDFirst meeting: Thursday,; October 6 ot~:8:30 p.m..Second meeting: Thursday, October 13 ot 8:30 p.m.5039 S. Greenwood Ave., Temple Isaiah IsraelCome to FAULKNER'S for yout required texts as well os for thereference books you need for oil of your college courses. Youare welcome to choose among the thousands of books on all■ • • - , . .. • . •subjects.VA/ I . • . J ., . . . . , ,We pay cash or accept in trade the books which no longer havevalue to you.-V-V *22: EStebrook 9-1200Suburbs - Enterprise 6363Hl l kl Y HIM VI <1! WU.1S.Shoots 81.’ 20o l*illouoasos... 9«* Hath fouils !)<•Itisli louols UShoots—72" . 20o Tablecloths . 18c Face Towels 4eH asheloths . .’li-ROOM LINEN SERVICE NOWAVAILABLE OFF CAMPUSive yourself theof buying and alwareplacing linen by using this won¬derful service . . . Linens-of-the-Week. Linens are FURNISHED;?LAUNDERED, and DELIVEREDfor one low price. Rates comparevery favorably with laundromatand laundry prices. Economical;convenient. Ask for the studentbundle.For futher information railPage 4EditorialKimpton ignores one problemIn his speeches last year Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton emphasized three main prob¬lems confronting the University: the problem of enrollment; the problem of the budget; andthe problem of the neighborhood. During the year Kimpton centered his administrative pro¬gram on the three problems, and made a good start toward their solution.The importance of the three problems is undeniable. Total enrollment in 1953-54 was atits lowest in 20 years, and undergraduate enrollment was less than half what it had beenimmediately after the war. cady brilliant and administrative- stop the pendulum swing, heought to consider the fourth prob¬lem very soon. The inaugurationof a four-year degree for the sakeof having the approval of otherinstitutions with more mechanicalUnder Kimpton’s program ly soundthere have been significant Qn basis of the problemsincreases in enrollment for the wbich Kimpton has chosen topast two years. solve, however, the pendulum stillIn 1953-54 the University budget appears to be swinging. Enroll-was balanced for the first time mentt budget, and neighborhood requirements is not an academicsince 1938, omitting several war are administrative, financial move. More thought and carefuly**ars. problems. They have only an in- planning have gone into theAnd in the past year the Univer- djrect relation to the fourth prob- undergraduate program at Chi-sity, through the Southeast Chi- ierri( the problem of education cago than at any other school,cago commission and with the More students mean more minds It is probably the best in the coun-Hyde Park-Kenwood Community edUCate, more money means try. But evaluation and adjust-conference, the Land Clearance greater opportunities for expand- ment of the curriculum ought tocommission, and federal agen- jng education, and a better neigh-' be considered a major Universitycies, made real progress in re- borhood means more students problem, just as the problems ofdeveloping the University neigh- ’and, in the long run, more money, financing and administrating theborhood. Relocation of lower-in- none of these necessarily University are. All four problemsmeans better education. are important. The pendulumIf Kimpton truly intends to , ought to be stopped.Responsibility dividedcome families and discriminatoryhousing in the redevelopmentarea complicated the work, butthere was progress.A fourth problem confronts theUniversity, however, which Kimp-ton’s administration has not givenadequate emphasis. This problememerged from a speech given byGeorge H. Watkins, chairman of . . . , , , . . - „the development office, last With some misgivings but a great deal of energy, the Maroonspring "before the Owl and Ser- begins its first year since 1949 of twice-weekly publication-pent honorary society. Watkins The Maroon is responsible to the campus for impartial ac-compared the history of the Uni- curate news coverage and informed opinion; equally , is theversity to the swinging of a pen- campus responsible to the Ma¬ri ulum: Harper, first president, roon for active interest andbuilt up a brilliant academic participation A We can’t print all -t h vit . ontrisuperstructure; Judson, the sec- _ £ but neither do we mean ,community can be a vital contri-ond added the financial adminis- Tiews, b tji it rd bution only if the entire campusona aaaeu me iniancicu, dunums tQ represent but a select few or- „;i11 QCcief tv:cc(afftrative foundation necessary t0 „an;7^tinns ;ind oninions will assist tic staff with \ital insupport it. There was a similar Sanlzatlons and °Pin,ons- f terest and cuutiihutamswing, according to Watkins, be- Organizations that feel they are vtween presidents Burton and doing something of interest areMason. And again, ex-chancellor urged to send us their releasesHutchins built up a brilliant aca- . to be written, to be considered,demic superstructure. But when and. a good portion of the time,Kimpton assumed the Chancellor- to be printed. Students .with: com-,.ship, he stopped the pendulum ments, criticism, and ideas*- forswing, according to Watkins. His:special articles are invited,.to tellprogram presumably moves for--us about them. The letters to theWard above and below, academi- editors column is censored-only 'iiiiilisifflmiim,. .Issued every Tuesday and Friday throughout the school year and inter- .mittently during the summer quarter by the publisher, the Chicago Moroon,,-ot the publication offices, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37,Illinois. Telephones: Editorial aftice, Midway 3-0800, ext. 1010; Businessond advertising office, Mldwoy 3-0800, ext. r 1009. Distributed free of \ ‘charge, and subscriptions by moil, $3 per yetfr. Business office hours: 2 p.m. 'to 5 p.m. Monday through Soturdoy.Co-editorsJOY S. BURBACH PALMER W. PINNEYManaging editor • Business managerRobert P. Quinn Gary Mokotoff *Executive news editor Lois GardnerFeature editor Robert MoodyNews editors. . . . . Davis Bobrow, Tue Tax ,Jim Birmingham, William BrandonSports editor Mitri DozoretzPhoto editor . . George ZygmundPersonnel manager .. Jack BurbochCalendar editor.. ...Earl HerrickProduction manager. .............. Jean KwonAdvertising manager. . . . . ... . . .Laurence Kessler. TEditorial staff: Sam Blazer, Borbara Fischman, Ronold Grossman, JeonneHargitt, Bruce Larkin, Linda Libera, Judy Podore, Gene Rochlin, KorlRodmon, Glen Swogger“Enjoy Our Fine: Continental Cuisine InRelaxed Air Conditioned Atmosphere”CONTINENTAL GOURMET RESTAURANTOpen Daily (except Mondays) from ’:30 - 10:00Sundays — 12 Noon - 10 P.M.1508 E. 57fh Street Phone PI n/n 2-0355September 30, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5photo by ZygmundMore than dirt was unearthed when workmen laid a new steam linebetween Bartlet gymnasium and the Field house. Carl Renquist of Ren-quist Bros. Construction co., holds the rusty remains of a gas lamp usedto light Chicago city streets around the turn of the century. Also re*vealed during the excavation was the old Lake Michigan shore line.The month-long construction is nearing completion.On Campos withMax Sirojman(Author of *•Barefoot Boy with Cheek," etc.)\ suit 6r3PPl£ W(lh~~tuck knotty flueitioniJZiONCE MORE UNTO THE BREACHToday I begin my second year of writing this column forPhilip Morris Cigarettes. Once every week during the comingschool year I will take up, without fear or favor, issues thatinflame the minds and quicken the hearts of college studentseverywhere. I will grapple with such knotty questions as: “Iscompulsory attendance the reflection of an insecure faculty?”and “Is the unmarried student obsolete?” and “Are room-matessanitary?”While each week I make a bold assault upon these burningissues, I will also attempt to beguile you into smoking PhilipMorris Cigarettes. Into each column I will craftily weave somewords in praise of PhilipMorris. I will extol, ob¬liquely, the benign mild¬ness of Philip Morris’swell-born tobacco, itssoothing fragrance, itstonic freshness, its dociletemperateness, its oh-so-welcome gentleness in thisspiky and abrasive worldof ours.For saying these kindthings about their ciga¬rettes, the Philip MorrisCompany will pay memoney. This is .the Ameri¬can Way. This is De¬mocracy. This is Enlight¬ened Self Interest. Thisis the System that MadeOur Country Great, and anybody who doesn’t like it isMALADJUSTED.Perhaps it would be well in this first column of the year totell you a little about myself. I am 36 years of age, but stillremarkably active. I am squat, moon-faced, have all my teeth,and am fond of folk dancing and Lotto. My hobby is collectingmucilage.I first took up writing because I was too short to steal. Bare¬foot Boy With Check was my maiden effort, and today, fourteenyears later, I continue towrite about college students.This is called “arrested de- >velopment.”But I can’t help it.Though I am now in thewinter of my life, the prob¬lems of undergraduates stillseem to me as pressing asever. How to pursue a blaz¬ing romance with examscoming up next Friday inphysics, history and French;how to convince your stingyfather that life is a bittermockery without a yellowconvertible; how to subsist n —- , *on dormitory food — these •—remain the topics that roilmy sluggish blood.And in this column from now until next June you will readof such things: of dating and pinning, of fraternities and sorori¬ties and independents, of cutting and cramming, of athletes andaverage-raisers, of extra-and intra-curriculum, of textbooks andthose who write them and those who sell them and those whoread them and those who don’t.And, slyly woven into this stirring tapestry, the story ofPhilip Morris, America’s gentle cigarette, in the handy Snap-Open pack, in king-size or regular, at prices all can afford.OUu 8hulm(ii. 1953The makers of Philip Morris are happy to be back with you foranother year of good reading and good smoking — with gentlePhilip Morris, of course, Review Hyde Park history\on Hi ne rcdevelopmen l jAc > iby Davis RobrowHyde Park and the University of Chicago, growing and changing together, will see inthe next five years community changes for which the University and Chancellor LawrenceA. Kimpton are partially responsible. As the structures in the blocks west of the IllinoifCentral tracks to Dorchester begin to come down, the character of the University communitywill be affected by the new setting.The new development, known as the Hyde Park Redevelopment project, is but the startof a community renewal effortthat will encompass the area began to be replaced by three and as an all-white community. A re-four story apartment buildings, strictive covenant was drawn upArt colony develops an(t signed by the property own-By 1920 a large artists’ and ers °f the land bounded by 51stwriters’ colony occupied the area and 55th streets, Woodlawn andaround 57th and Lake Park. The Cottage Grove,one-story frame studios and Conversions madebounded by Cottage Grove,the Illinois ,Central tracks, theMidway and 47th street.Review historyThis article will review the his- stores were occupied by some of Conversions as existing livingto future stories which will dis¬cuss the redevelopment and re¬tory of Hyde Park as a prelude the leaders in Chicago s brief but unitg were divided into smallergaudy literary Golden Age. While and smal|er accommodations.ThisAnderson. Allgren and company activit centered in the studentand Frederick Stocks young first Hvinfrarpa around the TTniversitvnewal projects, and some of the chairs from the Chicago Sym- and ft 53rd and Lake in aproblems that arise in their execu- - phony thought and attempted to district largely occupied by looption. create, other parts of Hyde Park workers B 1939 ten Pent £When the University of Chicago HS the liivng units in the commaestablished itself along the Mid¬way Plaisance in 1893, Hyde Park ethnic immigrations experiencedin every large melting pot city.By 1930, the Irish were nowas just calming down from the longer the neighborhood’s pri- jng a bjgb rate of transient occu-excitement of the Chicago mary national group. They had pancy.World’s Fair of 1890. The Fair been . replaced by Germans and nity were conversions. The per¬centage of furnished rental unitshad risen to 37 per cent, indicat-streets. The large private homes attempted to maintain Hyde ParkAt the Red Door you now pay only 10cfor THE NEW STATESMAN AND NATIONRed Door Book Shop1328 East 57 Street^-— _ . . , .. t ■ u The high industrial wages ofnot only left such landmarks as theuWorld War 11 Period resultedthe Museum of Science and Indus- blocks around Hyde Park Boule- both^whit^and^negrSs^WhHetry and the Wooded island in vard and the large new hotels and the whites could find accommoda-Jackson park, but was largely re- apartment buildings east of the IC tjons jn many sections, the negrosponsible for the building of ho- tra<:ks' , , population was confined to thetels and rooming houses along Ma^y of these newcomers south side; as population pres-tels and rooming houses along moved from Grand boulevard as g increased thev be-an to ocLake Park between 53rd and 55th negroes moved into it, and they cupy adj<yining areas one ot thesewas Hyde Park. Between 1940and 1950 negroes moved south¬eastward across Cottage Groveand Hyde Park boulevard. Whilethe greatest density of negro pop¬ulation is in the area west of Ellis,negroes reside in many areas ofthe community. Some landlordstook advantage of the populationpressures, lifting rentals and ac¬celerating conversions while al¬lowing their properties to deteri¬orate.Rapidly deterioratedProperty deterioration, over¬crowding, racial tensions com¬bined to indicate that Hyde Parkcommunity of the ’40’s as an areain a rapid state of deterioration.Citizens who were not yet readyto give up on Hyde Park formedthe inter racial Hyde Park-Ken-wood Community conference, andthrough many activities are at¬tempting to stabilize the commu¬nity.Although the activities of theHyde Park - Kenwood conferencefall mainly in the human relationsand personal activity area.a groupknown as the South East Chicagocommission is principally con¬cerning itself with the many phy¬sical problems of the area. TheSECC is largely responsible forsecuring the money enabling therenewal and redevelopment proj¬ects. Leadership in the SFCC islargely provided by the Univer¬sity of Chicago.U of C Studentstake their laundry (y /-UNIVERSITYQuick Laundry1376 E. 55PL 2-9097 ^-TTTTTTTTTTTTTTT-----1; RETIREMENT INSURANCE; ALL LINES OF INSURANCE► Phone or Write► Joseph H. Aaron, '27 <1► 135 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-1060< jinTnnnmiTiiinrniminniimnnnminnmnTiTTminTmTTTinTrmTnTrr —cii/Portraits of the studentby an artistcjCoui5e 'erphotographer1467-9 E. 57th St. BU 8-0876Call Today for an AppointmentTHE CHICAGO MAROON September 30, 1955I MM M>WELCOME TO CHICAGOBest wishes for a successfulcollege careerCampus ChapterNational Association for the Advancementof Colored PeopleDAVEBRUBECK The IRON MASK SOCIETY wishes you asuccessful academic and enjoyableextra-cirricular life on campusShortest Week of the YearOctober 5 thru October 16You'll be Weormg-* GEORGESHEARING PROVENCALALL MEDICAL BOOKSstandard medical text’ within 24 hoursat attractive prices AVIGWON RestaurantFrancois1450 E. 57th Street5 p.m. —* T a.m.1 Sat. •— 2 a.m.cafe espresso from9 p.m.Closed Wednesdaysand bis superb quintetYOUR BEST MUSICAL BUYNOrmal 7-6111SUNDAY'S MATINEE5 to 7 P.M.dOtZU R.One good look, and you’llNew* * *a comfortable collaryou cannot outgrowS*« Kim Nov»k In“PICNIC” The new Arrow Lido shirt has notop button at the collar; yournecktie alone doses the collar neatly.And even if your neck size grows,the “expandable” collar stayscomfortable. Get yours today—wearit with a tie tonight—open at theneck tomorrow. Priced from $5.00.A ODLUMfltA etWCMAtCOPSptcfoht in rtCMMicoio*Good shoe grooming is simple as ABC I1It's apparent, aval) to • man who has to cramfor Phi** let, that thla City Club shot i« tharight chotca for tha Sunday data, faculty tads,and othsr “clothaa maka tha man'' occasion*.And thaS1I.N prlc# tag maans that this Itn’ia "cloth** break tha man" occasion.FREE pin-up of Kim Novak I Ask your $ttyElub Dealer, or writs Dept. CNB, R*tare,ivieion of International ihoa Company, St.Louie I. Mo. —vfirst in fashion•e *dv*r»l**o InWhen your courses are setAnd a dream-girl you’ve met...Have a real cigarette-have a CAMEL!It's a psychological fact:Pleasure helps your disposition.If you're a smoker, remember— more people get morepure pleasure from Camelsthan from any other cigarette!No other cigarette is sorich-tasting, yet so mild!rmm.•bA ■**»«'*» Tabi*!*. Wia.kiB.MMi. N. C.September 30, 1955 TH! CHICAGO MAROON Rage TMaroon explains UC' to new studentsUniversity of Chicago, September 30, 1955 ^>31Many new, varied groupsformed each year at UCThe UC campus has every year more than 100 student organizations.* Some of these are permanent and semi-official, like the Chicago Maroon and the religiousgroups. Some, such as the Documentary Film group, are expressions of long-standing stu¬dent interest which has created groups of considerable national prominence in their ownfields.Others are organized by a particular group of students for encouraging a common inter¬est, but last for only a fewveal's. Several groups eachyear are formed for tempo¬rary purposes, such as supportinga political candidate.Students can take their choiceof either joining the most perma¬nent campus organizations, whichhave their purposes and traditionsalready developed, or of organiz¬ing groups which fit their inter¬est more closely.To create a recognized studentorganization, its organizers need(l»a purpose. Before the group isrecognized, it will also need (2) aname, (3) ten members who areregistered students of the Univer¬sity, f4) a president, (5) a treas¬urer. and (6) a faculty adviser.The organizers can hold an organ¬izational meeting to acquire someor all of these.The organization may or maynot have (7) other officers, (8*dues, and (9) other members.Some student organizations(usually the more permanentA copsule historyEarly UC built on Rockefeller's money, Harper's ideaphoto by ZygmundDiscussing the program for the coming year of the Student Activitiesoffice are Robert Strozier (right), director of student activities and deanof students; Mary Alice Ross Newman (left), associate director of studentactivities, ond Pltyllis Berger, secretory to the Student Activities office.ones) have long constitutions;many of them need none.To become recognized, an offi¬cer of the organization must fillout a blank provided by the Stu¬dent Activities office, Reynoldsclub 202. Recognition gives an or¬ganization certain privileges, suchas the right to publicize theiractivities, on University bulletinboards, and to use University rooms and other facilities. Recog¬nized student organizations musthave their finances audited by theDean of Students’ office.Regulation of recognized stu¬dent organizations is based on theStudent Code, which is enacted bythe Dean of Students and StudentGovernment. Copies of the Codecan be see in the Student Activ¬ities or Student Government of¬fices. Gives index to supplement;14 pages on UC activitiesOn this page and on the following 12 pages, the Maroonpresents its special 1955 Orientation week supplement. Thequestion we asked ourselves in preparing this supplementwas: “What do both green and graying UC students want toknow about the University that the stacks of official bulletinsdo not include?” These pages have been calculated to answertheir questions both entertainingly and informatively, ^page Neighborhood churches 1#Housing groups 8 Religious student groups 15Social Ufe 9 '"t.erest £r?“Ps„ , .. . . This year in sports ITHow to avoid the Army 10 Student publications 18Politics on campus .11 Departmental, nationalityCulture in Chicago ; 12-13 clubs * 19Is closs attendance necessary?Compulsory attendancestudied by College facultybjr Hoik KeHenberg“Is going to class necessary?” is a perennial question both¬ering UC college students.At present the college faculty is attempting to answer thisquestion for itself by studying the relationship between stu¬dents’ regularity of class participation and their academicperformance as measured by their comprehensive grades.Studies of this nature are *conducted by the college fac- Foreign language, mathematics,ulty every four or five years. English, and laboratory coursesWhen the present report is com- require more consistent attend-pleted it will be reported back to ance than reading courses, hethe faculty for deliberation and noted.recommendation. “Systematic attention through-Several faculty members and out the year to the work in theadministrators concerned with the courses and intelligent participa-report have expressed the belief tion in class discussions are obvl-that attendance in certain College ously primary ways in which stu-classes is vital; none of these dents meet the objectives of theseemed to feel that compulsory college and prepare for compre-attendance regulations are neces- hensive examinations,” statedsary. Robert Streeter, dean of the col-John R. Davey, assistant dean lege,of the college, noted that those Maurice Cramer, chairman ofwho attend class get, as a rule, the college humanities depart-higher grades than non-attenders. ment, stated that he feels the com-He felt that attendance by first- pulsion to attend class shouldyear students was particularly im- come from the interest of the sti*-portant, hut that more experi- dent in what he is doing. He point-enced students could usually use ed out that there is no reason totheir own judgment as when to pay tuition if you don’t attendattend and when not to attend, class.The University of Chicagohad a genesis unlike that ofmany other universities. UCbypassed the traditional meta¬morphosis from small-collegeto big-college to big-univer¬sity. When it first opened its doorson October 1, 1892 it was a full-fledged university with a large,highly-paid faculty, several de¬partments, a college, and a largeinitial student body.Urge RockefellerTwo other educational institu¬tions were important in the crea¬tion of UC. The Old University ofChicago, located also on Chicago’ssouth side, was created by endow¬ments from prominent ChicagoBaptists in 1858 but closed in 1886,financially crippled by buildingexpenses. For many years SenatorStephen A. Douglas was chairmanof this Old University, a stonefrom which is now mounted in theClassics-Wieboldt corridor.The Theological seminary,heartily endowed by John D.Rockefeller, the wealthiest ofAmerican Baptists, opened in theOld University’s building in 1867and moved to Morgan park in1877. The secretary of the semi¬ nary was Thomas W. Goodspeed;the Hebrew chairman wes Wil¬liam Rainey Harper.With the imminent collapse ofthe Old University, Goodspeed, aprominent champion of Chicagoeducational institutions, frantical¬ly tried to get Rockefeller to fur¬ther endow an institution of high¬er learning in Chicago. Rockefel¬ler, however, was being wooed atthe same time by groups wishingto create a Baptist university inNew York and postponed Good-speed’s requests.Harper favoriteThe insistence of Gates andGoodspeed finally succeeded inpersuading Rockefeller to give600 thousand dollars on the condi¬tion that the University raisewithin a year an additional 400thousand dollars. With this andother endowments (two million,400 thousand dollars’ worth)gained, a further problem re¬mained. Who should take chargeof the new University, appoint itsfaculty and formlate its educa¬tional plan? No one would evenconsider anyone but Harper, whohad left the seminary and haabeen lost, as Goodspeed put it, “toYale and the Congregationalists.” by Robert QuinnHarper finally succumbed toGoodspeed’s cordial bludgeoningand agreed to assume the UCpresidency.Plans revolutionaryHarper’s educational plan atthat time combined all the morerevolutionary aspects of contem¬porary education: a four-quartersystem with graduation possibleat the end of any quarter (de¬signed to weaken ties of “classspirit” and substitute an academic“University spirit”); a system ofmajors and minors (to dispose ofthe haphazard way in which stu¬dents at that time chose classes);and a full-scale system of opera¬tions apart from the Universityproper (the University extension,press, libraries, laboratories, andmuseums).The University opened its doorsOctober 1, 1892, with the carpen¬ters still hammering in Cobb hall,the only University class building.Women's dorms were not yet com¬pleted, and boardwalks coveredthe marsh upon which the Univer¬sity was built. The first year sawa full roster of student activitiesand publications. Although therewere no political parties, a rnocknational election was held on cam¬pus; the Prohibitionists scored asubstantial victory. Jud.son followsWith Harper’s death in 1906.most university construction, ex¬cept the most recent, had beencompleted.During the administration ofHenry Pratt Judson, who followedHarper to the presidency, Judsonmaintained Harper’s educationalpolicies. Harold A. Swift, a UCbenefactor, said of Judson’s ad¬ministration that the first half ofit “put firm foundations underour brilliant superstructure andin the second half of his incum¬bency the University deterioratedfor a considerable time.”Reorganize collegeWhen Judson was retired, Er¬nest de Witt Burton took a twoyear presidential term before hisdeath, never living to see Billingshospital and Rockefeller chapel,begun under his administration,completed.After the brief administrationof Max Mason, Robert MaynardHutchins took over the Chancel¬lor’s seat. During 1930, the collegewas reorganized according to aplan submitted to Hutchins byChauncey S. Boucher. This plan,which had begun under Mason’sadministration was designed todo away with the confusion andthe inadequacies of the previousUC college.Give no BAUnder the new college plan, stu¬ dents were required to take fouryear-long survey courses (human¬ities and the biological, physical,and social sciences), and then spe¬cialized courses under the remain¬der of the University depart¬ments. After completion of thesurvey courses, a certificate wasawarded. No Bachelor’s degreewas awarded on the general workalone.The ’40s are the most commonlytalked about years at UC: theCollege BA, the increase of Col¬lege faculty and its separationfrom the rest of the University,the stopping of football, the drop¬ping from the Big Ten athleticmeets.In the late ’40s with the greatinflux of veterans taking courses,the social picture changed also.The militant, typically-collegiatesocial life of the UC ’20s and '30swas replaced by an upsurge of ac¬tivity in which the social andacademic were never divorcedfrom each other.Kfanpton takes overIn the 1950-51 period the Chan¬cellor's chair changed occupant#again. Hutchins left the Univer¬sity to be replaced by Lawreno#A. Kimplon.Under Kimpton and a m i d s fheated controversy, petitions andsit-down strikes, the current BACollege program was initiated.The rest is news.frag* 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON September 30, 1955Dames club and Student All college men,T„ in B-J houses■ I'IVCS serve UC women are representedTwo groups on campus, the Dames club and the Law Stu¬dent Wives association, serve the social and cultural needsof the wives of University students.The Dames club, an organiza-antion of wives of students in theUniversity, mothers of studentsWho have no permanent homeConnection in Chicago, and mar¬ried women registered in the Uni¬versity. is one of the oldest exist¬ing student activities. Founded in1900 by the wife of a UC zoologyprofessor, the UC chapter ofDames club was the first ratifiedCommuter club willintegrate commuterFor the first time, commutingStudents this fall have an organi¬sation designed to meet their spe¬cial needs, especially in meeting©ther students.The Commuter’s association,only months old but already reach¬ing the proportions of a majorUC group, is meant to give com¬muting students a better oppor¬tunity to become integrated intoUC life, according to its founders.Plans are still indefinite for ac¬tivities beyond the first few weeksOf the quarter. These early ac¬tivities include teas, social hours,and business meetings. A dinnerfor entering commuters will beheld Tuesday evening at 5:30 inthe C-Shop under the sponsorshipof the council.Projects under consideration byttie council are many and varied,ranging from setting up car poolsand mail boxes on campus to theSponsoring of record dances anddiscussion groups.Temporary co - chairmen arePeter Greene and Irene Samoraj-ski. member of the National Associa¬tion of University Dames.The Dames club meets monthlyfor short business meetings, asocial or cultural program, andrefreshments in Ida Noyes. Be¬sides the regular Dames clubmeetings, the members meet forbridge twice a month, and have aregular weekly sewing group.This year the Dames club’splans include such activities as anopen house October 13, a pot-lucksupper, a country fair, a styleshow, a dinner dance, a children’sChristmas party, and a children’sdancing class.Former active members of theDames club whose husbands areno longer registered students ofthe University, and wives of fac¬ulty members are eligible for as¬sociate membership in the Damesclub.The Law Student Wives asso¬ciation provides a means for thewives of law students in the Uni¬versity to meet other wives withsimilar interests. The group spon¬sors guest speakers, parties, pic¬nics and pot-luck suppers, andbridge parties.According to Joan Everett,president, the association “givesthe wife a night out and showsher that her husband isn’t theonly one with not enough familytime. It provides food, fun, andfellowship.” The Burton-Judson council rep¬resents the residents and associ¬ate members of Burton-Judsoncourts. The council sends repre¬sentatives to various outside stu¬dent organizations, the adminis¬tration, Student Activities Coun¬cil, Student Government, etc. Italso organizes and runs leaguesfor intramural activities at B-J.Another important activity is or¬ganizing events which the individ¬ual houses at B-J are too small ortoo poor to sponsor: movies,snack bar. etc.The B-J Council consists of twoelected representatives from eachof the eight houses. Any residentor associate member of a B-Jhouse is eligible to be a represent¬ative from his house. The councilmeets in the Judson library oncea week. Officers for the comingyear are: President. Steve Oppen-heimer; vice - president. QuentinLudgin; secretary. A1 Harrod.Allen Austill, Director of StudentHousing is the faculty sponsor.James Newman, Senior residenthead of B-J is special consultant.Plans for the coming year con¬sist of: snack bar. social and cul¬tural program, better cohesionbetween houses, and better inte¬gration of programs between thehouses and the council, in thespheres of cultural, athletic andsocial activities. Plans are beingmade for the program of moviesto be shown in the coming year.The next one to be shown willbe “Long Voyage Home” on Mon¬day, October 3. The council alsohopes to get more dance recordsfor the B-J library. Group of married students dealswith family housing, social lifeMarried Students association (MSA) is a group organizedto assist in the solution of the problems of housing for marriedstudents, to provide social and cultural activities particularlyfor student families, and to help to the person w'ho feels that itis temporary or insignificant."MSA provides its members withthe opportunity to meet othersfirst year, had i2 members as of wjth similar interests and prob-July 1. Membership is open to ]erns. The association representsall students, junior faculty mem- them in the community re-devel-bers, hospital ftW«?nts, interns, opment programs of which it isfellows, and research assistants or a part. it also helps to solve farmassociates, who are married and jjv problems such as baby sitting,whose families are living in this health care, and the exchange ofvicinity. goods and services.According to Sam Venturella. This year the group plans anthe president. MSA attracts "the increase in the frequency of theirkind of person who feels that activities. It hopes tq obtain frommarried students in large num- the administration “special tui-bers on campus is a significant tion considerations for spoirsesand permanent trend as opposed of students.form patterns of community liv¬ing.The organization, still in itsSfne PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREET NICKY'SPIZZERIA & RESTAURANT1235 E. 55th StreetNO 7-9063Free delivery to l’. of C. studentsOn any orderQuick Courteous Service — 6 Days a WeekClosed MondaysTable Service11 A.M. to 2 A.M. Delivery Service11 A.M. to 2 A.M.Open till .'I A. ft. »n Friday anil Saturdayl _$$ Save Up to 50% on Used Books $$TEXT BOOKS—REFERENCE—OUTLINES—SETS -TRANSLATIONSWe Buy Books the Year ’RoundCOME IN AND BROWSE-OPEN STACKS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCEOur New Phone Number HA 7-2614-5GET YOUR COPY OF OUR GENERAL CATALOG. FREE!WltCOX-FOUETT CO.1255 S. Wabash Avenue Chicago"Convenient to the Elevated, Illinois Central & Meter Parking ff5ep*em^er 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROONSocial planning now centralizedfraternities serious aspect SAC to coordinate and encourage social events-emphasized at Chicago‘‘Fraternities at Chicago have been able to concentrate onthe primary purpose — academic — of a university,” saidLarry Sherman, president of Inter-fraternity council. “Any¬body who comes to the University of Chicago expecting tofind a fraternity where the chapter comes first and Univer¬sity responsibility second will be sadly disappointed,” saidGeorge Stone, ex-president of —the council. October foe divisional students,The 10 fraternities on cam- and two weeks in the winter quar-pus participate in activities rang- ter for undregraduates. Any manjn" from aiding the university’s w^° w*h he 17 before the end ofcancer fund to helping Univer- the winter quarter is eligible,sity Theatre in giving Christ- There is no racial or religiousmas parties for underprivi- discrimination in Chicago frater-leged children at the University nities due to the Michigan planSettlement house. The big activi- which says that no university or-ties of the year are the IF ball ganization can discriminate onThanksgiving eve and the IF sing these bases,in June. The fraternities also plan This year the fraternities willparties and provide an atmos- try to make their chapters strong-phere of close friendship, matur- er and increase their* numbersity, traditionalism and independ- from the present 250.ence- All the chapters have housesThe Inter-fraternity council reg- near campus accommodatingulates the functions among the from 12 to 30 persons, exceptfraternities and outside bodies. Kappa Alpha Esi, which has anOne member from each fraternity alumni headquarters at 47lh andattends its weekly meetings. The Ellis.fraternities also have weekly Many fraternities have “sittingmeetings. members”—who do live in theThe council plans yearly rush- houses though participating inJng activities — one week in late group activities.GET ORIENTEDAT UT Charles Mittman, chairman ofthe Student Activities Council(SAC).University TapUniversity at 55th50 milliontimes a dayat homey at workor on the wayThere’s nothing like a1. PURE ANDWHOLESOME...Nature’s own flavors.2. BRIGHT, EVER-FRESHSPARKLE...distinctive taste.3. REFRESHESSO QUICKLY...with as few caloriesas halt an average,juicy grapefruit.BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BYThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.O IMS, THE COCA-COLA COMPA NT'•Celts" Is a ragittarad trads-mork. One big dance a quarter, a fraternity open house a month, and several Other dancesproperly spaced throughout the year, are in the offing, under the co-ordinating leadershipof the newly-formed Social Activities council.“There is finally a meeting ground for the living groups and fof students from the wholecampus, which will aid communications,” Charles Mittman, council chairman commented.The council, composed of representatives f rom the living groups on campus and membersfrom the campus at large, wasformed last March following tume affair held for the first timethe dissolution of StudentUnion, a group originally formed Wash prom wi„ be held underto promote social, recreational, the direct sponsorship of SAC,and cultural activities on campus, since Student Union had previous-“Over the years, there has sponsored the dance. “Washgrown up a type of parallelism in "asf Put °,n ,as‘y“r..by a. . . , . handful of people, and that s nostudent organizations, former Di- way to put on a dance” Mittmanrector of Student Activities Ar- noted.thur Kiendl stated in March when The SAC constitution providesStudent Union was abolished. This that, by petition of 20 per cent ofduplication, and even competition the students, the constitution goesin social events, can be eliminated to an all-campus referendum. Byby coordination under SAC, its petition of 10 per cent of the stu-chairman hopes. “If we see a void dents, a new board may be electedin the calendar, we will attempt before its term expires in March,to fill it by contacting various These provisions, intended togroups and asking them to have make the board directly respon-social affairs," Mittman comment- sible to the campus, constitute aed. This would be in addition to major change from the Studentassisting in gaining proper spac- Union constitution, which provid- courage, not execute, social func*ing of fraternity open houses and ed for self-regulation and only in- turns.” SAC maintains a mail boxother regular events. direct campus responsibility. *n Reynolds club for the use ofWashington promenade, a year- In the handbill presently being studfnt volunteers, and foi sug-ly formal held near Washington’s distributed, SAC notes, “We would £cstions.birthday, Interfraternity ball, tra- like to emphasize that SAC is notditionally held near Thanksgiving, an all-encompassing organization. JT__ Igyw* f* Jwm Ikand the Beaux Arts ball, a cos- Its purpose is to regulate and en- l/vl'Uf "C/fMl/plans yearThe Inter-club council isthe co-ordinating body for thefour women’s clubs on campus:Esoteric, Mortar Board, Quad-ranglers, and Sigma.In these clubs, stated Brina Jaf-fee, Inter-Club president, “a truesisterhood is created, and a well-rounded program of social andwelfare activities is planned."The council will hold its rushingtea on October 19 at Ida Noyeslibrary. Rushing will last fromOctober 24 to November 4.“We have recently rewritten therushing codes,” said Miss Jaffee,“to avoid misunderstanding."Membership is open to universitywomen 16 years or older, and isnon-discriminatory, she added.The council will aid in co-spon¬soring the orientation week C-dance to be held tomorrow eve¬ning in Ida Noyes. Throughoutthe year the clubs hold teas, apreferential dinner, aid with cam¬pus-wide tag days, benefit theaterparties, concerts, and carnivals,and plan the Inter-Club Ball, thebig social event on the club cal¬endar.FREE .... Billiards & Pool .... FREEThis coupon entitles bearer to1 hour FREE Billiards or Pool(Value $0.55)REYNOLDS CLUB-2nd FloorSeptember 30 thru October 7BRITISH BOOKS atBRITISH PRICESAny in-print title supplied at 14c per shilling within30 days. Send check with order. Books shipped directto you from our London associate. No extra chargesof any kind. Address inquiries and orders to:*SCHNEEMANNS1328 East 57th StreetChicago 37IT’SPIZZA TIME*Cheeses and spice, and everything niceThat's what our pizzas are made of!PhonesMU 4-1014MU 4-1015MU 4-9022 "WE DELIVER5 p.m. to 3 a.m.Quick, courteousservice7 days o weekITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIA1427 East 67th St. IT’S SO EASYSHORTHANDIN A WEEKSukMnOutf**'120 WORDS PER MINUTEFamous ABC system. Now taught inover 400 cities. New day & Eveningclasses start each Monday. Attendfirst class as GUEST. Special SummerClasses for College Students. ALSOthorough, intensive SPEEDTYPINGcourse. Use coupon to send for 16-page brochure.SPEEDWRITING SCHOOL37 S. Wabash Financial 6-5471j Speedwriting School37 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago 3, III. II Please send me without obligation II your 16-page brochure on Speed- •• writing. ;Name.Address.City Zone-Phone.Page 10 THE CHICACO MAROON September 30, 1955Learn to 'evade' the draft Coming events onto compSete a UC degreeMost male students entering a university are concerned about their chances of “evading”the draft long enough to receive the degree for which they are working.How, then, can one legally “evade” the draft? .Each student must register with his local selective service board immediately after his18th birthday. If a student is quadranglesalready registered at someother locale, it is unnecessary toswitch registration to a Chicagoboard, unless the student intendsto become a permanent residentof the city. Most local boards pre¬fer that a student not txansfer hisregistration because this entailsmuch “red tape” and frequentlycauses loss of part of the stu¬dent’s record.Each student should take theselective service college qualifica¬tion examination as soon afterhis eighteenth birthday as the testis given. The test is given twice ayear, and the student must regis¬ter for it at least six weeks priorto the date of the examination.Written notification of both thedate of the test and the deadlinefor registration will be posted onbulletin boards throughout thecampus as soon as the registrar’soffice receives notification.Student must fileAny grade of 70 or above on theCollege qualification exam shouldguarantee a single academic yeardeferment for anv new studentwho applies. Subsequent defer¬ment depends upon the student’spercentile ranking in his class.The academic years are num¬bered from the years of full-timeregistration since the student re¬ceived his high school diploma orits equivalent, UC’s twelfth gradecertificate. At the completion ofeach academic year the studentmust file a written request for aSSS form 109 to be sent to hislocal board. The dates for suchrequests are posted well in ad¬vance on the bulletin boards. Inorder to receive a continuation ofhis deferment, a student should bein the upper one-half of his classfor the first academic year; theupper two-thirds for the secondyear; the upper three-fourths forthe third year; and the upper one-fourth for the fourth academicMALATTBARBER SHOPacross from B-Jserving UCcommunity since 1921WEEKDAYS9 o.m. - 7 p.m.SATURDAY9 o.m. - 6 p.m.„ WEDNESDAYclosed all day1011 E. 61st 5treetDIXIE LANDJAZZThe South Water Street 5plus 2Friday and Saturdayat 9 p.m.Sunday at 2 p.m.DRAKES LOUNGE& RESTAURANT2015 East 71 StreetBU 8-2500 year.These rankings do not dependupon the individual student’s pro¬gression in the University. Thus,a student who receives his AB de¬gree after the completion of twoor three academic years past thehigh school diploma must stillmaintain his class ranking regard¬less of the fact that he may be tak¬ing graduate courses. The onlyexception is that any studentmust be in the upper one-fourthof his class and have scored agrade of 80 or better on the col¬lege qualification examination inorder to be deferred for gradu¬ate study.If you are undergoing graduatework and have completed fouracademic years past the highschool level, no further specifiedclass ranking is required. For con¬tinued deferment a student mustbe in good academic standing withhis department or school. Suchnotification to the draft boardcomes from the dean of studentsof the particular department orschool. Medical school studentsmust maintain a class ranking ofupper one-half.Give I SCAlthough these requirementsare more or less standard theirenforcement rests with the indi¬vidual local boards. Most boards,particularly those in Illinois and most neighboring states, take intoconsideration the student’s prog¬ress at UC plus the type of com¬petition with which UC studentsare faced, and also the gradeachieved on the college qualifica¬tion exam. Statutory (one yearprobational deferments) such as1-SC may be given in particularcases as well as the usual 2S clas¬sification. Other classificationsare given under different situa¬tions, such as divinity students,students who are enrolled in areserve training program, andothers.In order to be classified as aconscientious. objector to war astudent must so state his objec¬tion at the time of his initial reg¬istration with his local board. Theclassification as conscientious ob¬jector is completely at the discre¬tion of the local board, and is gen¬erally not given unless the indi¬vidual has had an extensive affili¬ation with one of the religiousgroups which holds this as one ofits tenets of faith. Generally theclassification is not granted to in¬dividuals who are merely philo¬sophically opposed to war. Nostudent may become a conscienti¬ous objector merely by joiningsuch a religious organization afterenrollment in a university.The initiative for all activityall such matters. A copy of ail FRIDAY, SEPT. 30ACTIVITIES NIGHT, Ida Noyes hall,7:30 to 11 p.m. Displays of the activi¬ties of various student organizations.New students have opportunity to getinformation about and join campusactivities.SATURDAY, OCT. 1REGISTRATION FOR THE AUTUMNQUARTER (except entering under¬graduates.)COMMUTERS’ ASSOCIATION coffeehour, Ida Noyes hall east lounge,4-6 p.m.C-DANCE, “GETTING TO KNOW YOU,”strictly informal stag-or-drag dancein the Ida Noyes cloisters from 8 p.m.to 7. The Psl U can-can line will befeatured entertainment.SUNDAY, OCT. 2UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE.Rockefeller chapel, 11 a.m. sermon:“The voyage to Ithaca,” by John B.Thompson, dean of the chapel."NEW WORLD” radio broadcast, 10:35a m. Topic: “Who should go to col¬lege?”YOUNG SOCIALIST LEAGUE, businessmeeting, 3 p.m., at Ida Noyes, anddiscussion on "The Intellectual andthe careerist on the campus today,”following at 4 o’clock.SUPPER FOR all entering college stu¬dents, Hutchinson common, 6 p.m.Students will be guests of the chapel,and the supper will be followed by apanel discussion by chaplains of cam¬pus religious'groups on “Religion andthe spirit of revolt.”OPEN HOUSES for religious groups,8:30-11 pm.; Protestant groups atChapel House, 5810 Woodlawn; Calvertclub at DeSales house, 5735 University;Hillel foundation at 5715 Woodlawn;Channing club at First Unitarianchurch, 1174 E. 57th; Canterbury clubat Brent house, 5540 Woodlawn.MONDAY, OCT. 3REGISTRATION for all students.INTERNATIONAL HOUSE MOVIE, “Genevieve” (English, in color), As¬sembly hall, 8 p.m., admission 45cents.TUESDAY, OCT. 4REGISTRATION for entering under-CLASSES meet in the divisions and pro¬fessional schools for the first time.CHILDREN'S SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA,preliminary parent’s meeting, 8 p.m.,5445 Hyde Park blvd.WEDNESDAY, OCT. 5REGISTRATION for entering under¬graduates.MEMORIAL SERVICE for Prof. JoachimWach in Bond chapel at 11:30 a.m. bydepartment of history of religions.Eulogies of Prof. Wach will be givenby Dean Brauer and Dean Loomer.LAW SCHOOL LECTURE. Mandel hall.8 p.m., "Chief Justice John Marshall,”by Crosskey.THURSDAY, OCT. 6CLASSES MEET in the college for thefirst time.LECTURE, by Dr.S. Chandrasekhar.Uni¬versity of Baroda (India), and directorof Indian institute of populationstudies, speaking on “Populationgrowth and levels of living in India ”UNIVERSITY THEATRE, first meeting,Reynolds club theatre, 7:30 p.m.;plans for the year will be discussed.INTERNATIONAL HOUSE MOVIE.“Magnificent Obsession,” (American)Assembly Hall. 8 p.m., 35 cents.FRIDAY, UCT. 7COLLOQUIUM, “Investigations of solid-state transformations by high tem¬perature Geiger - counter spectrom¬etry,” Research institutes 480, 4:15p.m.MAROON TRAINING session. 3:30 p.m.Reynolds club north lounge. All pros¬pective staff members are expected tobe present.STUDENT FORUM, informal meetingfor discussion of plans for the year.3:30 p.m. in the Reynolds club theatre.After the movies —After studying —After dinner —After 10 p.m. — hove « lorge cup of Cafe Espresso of Le Provencal.With it hove le bon patisserie francaise — Profiterolee Croquem-bouche, Bisquit Route ou Chocolot, Linxer Torte, etc.Till t a.m. 2 a.m. SaturdayLe, Provencal1450 E. 57th Street Playwrights presentsHAMLETMANDEL HALLOctober 21, 22, 23Anew TEXT BOOKS usedEE Note Hooks= Pencilsfr~ PaperE PoliticalEE Philosophy== PsychologyEE Religion STDDENT SUPPLIES Fountain PensKrief CasesFiling EquipmentGENERAL BOOKS MagazinesNewspaper*SubscriptionsArt PrintsNewKccontlitioiictl TYPEWRITERS RentedRepairedGreeting CardsInfants’ RearWomen's Wear GIFTS and NOVELTIES Cosmetics.Social StationeryCostume JewelrvSandwichesSoft DrinksRot CoffeeCamerasAccessories SNACK BAR CigarettesTobaccoPipesPHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES Fast and ExpertDeveloping ServiceVentilatedSou utl-proofListening Rooths PHONOGRAPH RECORDS 33-1/3 SpeedFong PlayAll LabelsUoiG BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUESeptember 30, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROONPolitical parties begin aimingfor student government electionsby Jim BirminghamSG, ISL, SRP, “wire-cage government,” and many other initials, campaign slogans andfiery charges will soon be combining in an attempt to confuse or clarify campus issues andthereby win the vote of the new UC student, as well as the veteran party supporter and in¬dependent campus voter.SG, or Student Government as it is called by the uninitiated, will be a primary topic ofdiscussion throughout the month of October.On the 27th and 28th of themonth heated exchanges willreach a climax as the studentbody votes in a new SG assembly, stated.Despite all the talk about athird party which emitted fromdisgruntled students last year, tional Students association, etc., Bauer and NSA winner Bruceto exercise a really principle role,” Larkin.Paul Breslow,- an SRP leader However, the strongest singlepower within ISL at presentISL’s keynote was sounded seems to be Janice Metros, partywhen Jan Metros, ISL president, president and a leading vote-get-replied that the significant dif- ter for ISL in the NSA elections,the race once again promises to ference between the two parties Party power seems to be moreshape up as a contest between the was that ‘‘ISL 'thinks of the stu- diffused in SRP. Here the leadingdents as students, while SRP figure seems to be Jan Porter,thinks of them as citizens.” party vice-president and SRP’sThus ISL, the incumbent party, or,iy winner on the NSA nationalseems to be planning once more delegate ticket,to campaign on a platform of Other potent forces within the“Student Government for student Parly are Joel Rosenthal, Larryneeds.”However, even if the platformremains the same, those adminis¬tering it will be almost completely1 independent Students leaguei ISL) and the Student Represent¬ative party (SRP).“Wire-cage government,’’ aterm invented by SRP to describethe accumulation by the ISL-ledSG of a multitude of student serv-ices within the confines of thecage-like office of the studentservice center in the basement of aLichtenstein and Paul Breslow. NAACP tomake impact byfuH reportThe Programs committee ofthe campus chapter of theNational Association of Col¬ored People (NAACP) has devel¬oped an extensive program for thecoming year in meeting duringthe summer.Roy Wilkins, executive secre¬tary of the NAACP, and Thur-good Marshal, chief legal counselfor the organization are amongthose the organization hopes topresent to the campus.A series of concerts with artistssuch as Mahalia Jackson, Big BillBroonzy, Harry Belafonte andCount Basie are in the earlystages of planning.The first event planned for Oc¬tober will be a discussion centeredaround the question of racial dis¬crimination in Chicago hospitals.“We intend to make ourselvesfelt on the campus this year,” saidFred Hubbard, last year’s presi¬dent of the chapter.(he Reynolds club, will probably Ranged.once again be an important Albert Fortier (ISL), last year sweapon in SRP’s ridicule of ISL SG President, is no longer a UCphilosophy. student, having received his de-• \ Tferr SRP critieisn? of IS,L gAnton DePorte, Roger Wood-is that ISL is concerned mainly worth and Clive G reportedly",th Perpetuating itself m power th<? .. t triumverate” withinby running popular candidatesand offering “popular” services.“SRP’s role is one of commit¬ment to principle rather thanamassing of a coalition of cam¬pus groups. SRP thus permits stu¬dent government, All - CampusCivil Liberties committee, Na- Student politicians activein local, national groupsPolitical participation by UC students is high, both on a campus and a city level. Cam-ISL for the past half-decade, have pus elections elicit loud campaigning and often harsh feeling. City elections — mayoral, al-the^summerar*^ 3nd campus over Germanic, and Congressional — bring out UC students as poll watchers, trouble shooters,Peter Greene <ISL), summer anc* Precinct captains for both sides. But there is evidence that student political participa-president of SG, has lately risen tion, although loud and vigorous, is limited to a small segment of the student body.Only about one-third of the student body voted in last year’s Student Government (SG)elections. This despite con-to party prominence. Two moreISLers who figure strongly inparty plans are newcomer Bertthe perfectcomplement foryour fall ensembles —handmade pendants* instriking original designby Rosemary Zivickindividuallywith matchingearrings 1.50 to 3.50.4.00 to 6.00atUniversity Book Store5802 Ellis Avenue stant campaigning for weeksbefore the election and pollingplaces' available to every sectionof the campus. In the NationalStudent Association (NSA) in thespring, only about 37 per cent ofthe students voted.Another indication of studentPROGRESSIVE PAINT & HARDWARE1158 £. 55 - NSA Discounts HY 3-3840SPECIAL OFFER SeptemberOnly40-piece Ballerina service for eightOnly $799.. yOU save $11*61Graceful, glamorous Ballerinanow at big reductions fromopen stock prices. Sale in¬cludes new Ballerina colors:Turquoise, Antique White,Charcoal, Pink; also ForestGreen, Burgundy, Chartreuse,Dove Gray. All first qualityBallerina, guaranteed oven¬proof. Order now whilelimited supply lasts. 40-piece set:8 dinner plates8 bread & butter8 cream soups8 cups8 saucerswith 5-piececompleter set:vegetable dishutility traycreamersugar with cover— 45 pieces at$12.89MUseum 4-1100 CONNORHARDWARE1304 East 55th Street in both elections that were split dents are Young Republicans,between the two major campus Young Democrats, Students lorparties: The Student Representa- Democratic Action, the Socialisttive Party (SRP) and the Inde- club, the Young Socialist League,pendent Student League (ISL). the UC Peace Center, Social Dem-This is evidence of a vote on per- ocratic forum, and the Campussonalties rather than on issues. Committee for Crusade for Free-Besides SRP and ISL, voluntary dom. Not included in this confus-indifference is the many ballots political organizations open to stu- ing variety is the National Asso¬ciation for the Advancement ofColored People, a non-partisangroup working primarily throughcivil rights legislation (see arti¬cle to the right above).The UC Peace Center provideschannels for those who wish towork for peace. It is a heteroge¬neous group with no formal“membership” according to Mar¬garet Morton, summer co-ordina¬tor for the group. The organiza¬tion is relatively new. It wasformed last spring, and meetsregularly twice a month or more.Anyone who generally agreeswith the program of the YoungSocialist league — democratic so-,cialism—may join the organiza¬tion. The league sees itself asadding a strong dissident voice tothe “usual political line heard onthis campus” according to Deb¬bie Meier, secretary-treasurer. De¬bates, symposiums, and the pub¬lication of several pamphlets writ¬ten by members are on this year’sagenda.The Socialist club, according toChairman Don * nderson, worksprimarily through discussions,speakers, and direct participationin political and trade union ac¬tivities. Sidney Lens, Be>rt Coch¬ran, and Milton Mayer wereamong the speakers the groupbrought to campus last year.The club is not connected withthe national Young SocialistLeague, nor with Norman Thomasin any wav.UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK“A Strong Bank”354 East 55th Street MUseum 4-12004Member of Federal Deposit Insurance CorporationA(ECYCLE SUCH*Your BicycleHeadquartersWe service what we sellRepairs Cr Parts all makes819 E. 55 Iff I 3-2672• 9 A M. - 6 P.M.Page 12 THE CHICAGO MAROON September 30, 1955Visual arts vital at UCIn the realm of original theatre and unusual visual arts, the UC campus ranks amongthe best in the country and the city is not far behind.University Theatre, one of the largest extra-curricular dramatic groups in the nation, isnow planning a full season of play production. University Theatre, which has been an activecampus force since 1895, has always operated under fhe policy of producing only the bestof classic, modern, and original drama. Membership is open to all, and each production iscast by open tryouts. There "business meetings on Wednesdayevenings in the basement of Good-speed hall at 8 Membership isopen to all who are interested infilms. Documentary Film grouphas been noted for bringing tocampus many films not seen incommercial theaters, and present¬ing several a year free. The filmsare selected by the members, andmembers are admitted to allshowings free of charge. DocFilm chairman is Roy Turner.Dance groupsStudents who enjoy dancingwill be interested in the ModernDance club, the Country Dancers,and Circles and Squares. Thesethree organizations, all of whichmeet in Ida Noyes hall, offer mod¬ern dancing, English countrydancing, and folk dancing, respec¬tively.The modern dance group, underare many openings for allphases of theater work, asthere is a need for technicians,artists, dancers, musicians, direc¬tors, etc., in addition to many ac¬tors. The theatre is under thedirection of Marvin Phillips.This fall the theatre will pro¬duce two one-act plays for tour¬ing, Box and Cox by John M. Nor¬ton, and Fumed Oak by Noel Cow¬ard ; sponsor Playwright Theatre’sproduction of Hamlet and cast thefirst major production of the sea¬son—Arthur Miller’s The Cruci¬ble. The latter should open onNovember 17, 19, and 20 in Man-del Hall. There is no limit to thenumber of students who may par¬ticipate. Last year the member¬ship numbered 160. Plans for theseason will be discussed at thefirst meeting of the gorup to beheld Thursday, October 6, at 7:30p.m. in the Reynolds Club Thea¬tre. This meeting is open to allstudents interested in dramatics.Tryouts will be held Otcober 7, inthe Reynolds Club Theatre at 7p.m. The first production will be non-professional organization which aims to make theatrethe direction of Miss Manning,has met in the past at Ida Noyes,one evening weekly. Plans at thistime for the coming year are notyet complete, but inquiries canbe made at Ida Noyes about saidplans.The country dancers meetweekly on Wednesday at theCloister Club at 8 p.m. The organ¬ization is open to students and in¬terested members of the Univer¬ity community. The group special¬izes in English and traditionalfolk dancing, and regular mem¬bers are'assessed 50 cents.The Circles and Squares alsofeature folk dancing, but withthe emphasis on American ratherthan English folk dances. Plansfor this group are also not yetcompleted for the coming year,but information can be obtainedat Ida Noyes as plans progress. Chicago offersgreat exhibitsFrom ancient Assyrian art to the most modern, Chicagooffers vast opportunities for UC students.The Oriental institute presents a continuous exhibit of ob¬jects of cultural and artistic importance from ancient Egypt,Mesopotamia, Persia, Palestine, and Syria. It is open dailyexcept Monday.The Renaissance society is Chicago Exhibitions’ calendar, ob-open daily except Sundays, ta,Fnaarbl"he‘stSdem “ted inand presents a series of exhib- doing his own creative work op-its. The first of the Autumn quar- portunities to do everything fromter is “Eleven American Pioneers sculpture to sketching from lifeof the 20th Century,” and will run are open to all UC students atfrom Oct. 13 to Nov. 8. the art studio in Lexington hallIn the city itself, the Art Insti- free of charge. Directed by Free-tute of Chicago, Michigan boule- man Schoolcraft, the studio is avard at Adams, offers a superb spacious, well-lighted workshop,opportunity to students to see containing facilities for painting,some of the world’s great art sketching, sculpture, etching, andthrough its standard collections print-making,and special exhibits. To UC stu- The only studio activity fordents there is always free admis- which there is a charge is thesion. In addition to the Art In- Monday evening sketch class withstitute, there are many smaller models. The classes are held fromgalleries located about the city 7:30 to 10 with a charge of 50which have more specialized ex- cents per class. No registration ishibitions. These are listed in the necessary.Compass cabaret bringsnew idea to ChicagoThe Compass, located at 1152 E. 55th, is a cabaret-style,October 15, William Zavis direct¬ing.Doc filmThe Documentary Film groupis an organization devoted to theshowing of films selected eitherfor their artistic value or their is employed:importance in film history. Thegroup holds two film showings aweek, on Tuesday and Friday eve¬nings in Social Sciences 122; andPlaywrights First, the performers haveno set lines. They improvisearound the story line.Second, story and plot materialis supplied freely by the peopleassociated with Compass and bythe audience.Third, instead of trying for com-open season edy, drama, or satire, emphasis is" placed on making the ordinary orcommonplace interesting and sig¬nificant in itself.The Compass serves drinks andlight refreshments from its ad¬joining bar. There is a fifty centsminimum per person, applicabletowards purchase of food and bev¬erage. ... A general subscriptionof one dollar per person is chargedon Friday, Saturday, Sunday andMonday evenings. This subscrip¬tion entitles one to a dollar’smore popular in America. It has introduced improvisationalacting to the midwest by adapting the successful techniqueof 16th century Italian commedia dell’ arte to modem setting.A three-fold technique by which any community can haveits own dramatic expressionworth of Compass chips which areexchangeable in lieu of the fullminimum (50 cents) at Compassactivities. These include:The open workshop — Tuesdayevenings (impromptu dra¬matic improvisation, audienceparticipation),Improvised plays — from Com¬pass’s Community Workshop.Every evening except Mon¬day. Late shows Wednesday,Friday and Saturday,Folk music on Monday night,Concert hour Sunday afternoonSpecial credit for the Compasssuccess should go to David Shepherd, producer; Paul Sills, director, and Rpger Bowen, coordinator.Story tellers, actors, singers,musicians, poets, and debaters andother persons who are interestedin entertainment and want to help,should come and speak to the ap¬propriate personnel at the Com¬pass. Hyde park theatrelake park at 53rd NO 7-9071Student rate 50c all performances uponpresenting I.D. cards at box officeWelcomeWe wish you a happy, stimulating school term. To the new studentswe should like to point out (with pride) that we work to moke ourfilm programs important collateral “culture'* to your academic work... os well as first rate movie entertainment. Thank you for yourappreciative and loyal patronage.Sincerely,Rose DunnManaging DirectorStarting Friday, September 30Two Great Films With Burning Social Conscience!The Current —BLACKBOARD JUNGLE"A film with social conscience, honest anger, vital kindli¬ness. ... It seizes a burning issue and lets the sparksfall where they may!" — Time MagazineThe Classic — John Ford'sTHE INFORMERThe film which great director John Ford will be remem¬bered for. One of the .great films of all time.Starting Friday, October 7The sparkling bright British comedy!Cocktails in the Kitchenwith CECIL PARKER and DIRK BOCARDE— and —A stirring, tender English-made drama!Stronger on the Prowlstarring PAUL MUNI in his latest film roleRolf ForsbergPlaywrights Theatre club,one of Chicago’s well-knowntheater groups, will open itsfall season with a productionof Hamlet.The repertory company,which at present performs atvarious theaters throughout Chi¬cago, is particularly noted for itsproduction of less widely knownplays in addition to some of themore standard theater produc¬tions.Playwrights’ production ofHam-let, under the direction ofRolf Forsberg, who has alreadyscored several successes in Chi¬cago theater, will also featureForsberg in the title role. SomeUC students will also be in thecastThe play will open at theEleventh Street theatre, and playthere for the evenings of October12, 13, 15, and 16. It will thenbe presented at Mandel hall onthe UC campus on October 21,22, and 23. For these perform¬ances there will be a special stu¬dent rate. A NEW FIRST FOR THE U. C.improvised plays Wed. - Sun.in the 17th Century Commedia Dell’Arte StyleTHE COMPASS1152 EAST 55 STREETAlso at the CompassMonday nites:Folk MusicTuesday nites:Open Housefeaturing poetryroulette and improvisa¬tions by the audienceSunday afternoons:Chamber music MUseum 4-3757Open every niteNo admission chargeDrinks served at 8:30Entertainment at 9:15Late shows at 11:15Wednesday, Friday andSaturdayWomen, 18 • , .Men, 21 . . . Pleaseepteiwber 30, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 13usical activitiesIConcert music offered,in nature underwayvanied The carillon chimes of Rockefeller chapel tolling tunes from Wagner’s Parsifal is one ofThe most evident signs that Chicago, both on and off the UC campus, affords many oppor¬tunities for the enjoyment of UC students in listening and in participation, in the world ofmusic. Not only does the city have its own symphony orchestra and opera company, but thecampus itself has many organizations devoted to the performance of various types of music,u.hnco tact« run tr, Snot*.,,™ ♦ j .. some of them unique among college organizations in the country. No matter what the stu-arc organizations which furnish both small andTarge scl'le den:*s lnterest in music' ,here is some organization in which he will find his interest satisfied.participation.Opportunities to play and to listen to serious music areoffered to the University ofChicago community by theMusical society and the CollegiumMusicum. These two organiza¬tions give regular concertsthroughout the year, featuring, ||ic talent of student as well asnon-student members.The Musical society was startedthree years ago in order to givemusicians and singers in the Uni¬versity and the community achance to perform chamber musicand solo pieces, at the same timeproviding enjoyable concerts forother music-lovers. The societypresents about four chamber mu-| sic concerts each quarter in IdaNoyes hall, free of charge. Thisyear’s concerts, the first of whichwill be given in the beginning ofthe quarter, will include the Chi- Vocal Musicoccupies amajor placeFor the student who is in-Treitler, president of the Musicalsociety, at the Music building.The Collegium Musicum, whichis the only orchestral group onthe campus, bis a membership ofover 30 musicians, and is directedby Richard Vikstrom. In additionto its regular concerts the Collegi¬um occasionally accompanies the terested in participating in orUniversity of Chicago choir and listening to vocal music, boththe Bond chapel choir. in serious or light vein, theAuditions for the Collegium will University and city as a wholehe held during the first two weeks offer many opportunities,of the quarter. Appointments canhe made by telephoning MIdwav3-0800. Ext. 1082.In the lighter vein of instru¬mental music is the UC ConcertBand which was organized to pro¬vide band music for the enjoy- ers- a groups devoted to the studyment of the band members and and presentation, in the original UC Concert bond rehearses.From the most esoteric to themost folksy, there are groups mission to these concerts is by formal song-fests are held onPerhaps one of the mostesoteric is the UC Bach Sing-hago premiere of a concerto for community,'nine instruments by Webern, con¬temporary German composer, andthree songs by Stravinsky withaccompaniment by flute, viola,and clarinet.Students interested in perform¬ing at the chamber music concertsor in helping to organize and pub¬licize them should contact Leo the members of the UniversityThe 30-member band is com¬posed almost entirely of UC stu¬dents, the requirements for mem¬bership being reasonable skill ona band instrument. The band,which holds twice-weekly rehears¬als. is under the direction of aprofessional director. Louis La-son. languages, of organic programsof chorales, rounds, madrigals,selected folk songs, motets,canons, and chants. Its principalfocus is on the baroque period,and -in that, upon Bach.The group, which plans fivepublic performances for the corn- ticket only, which can be obtainedat the office of the Divinityschool.Anyone interested in audition¬ing for either choir can telephonefor an audition at Midway 3-0800,Ext. 1082. Auditions will be heldduring the first two weeks of thequarter.Glee clubIn a more secular vein is theglee club, a University supported,and professionally directed group,which attempts to present a vari- Sunday from 4 to 5:30 in IdaNoyes East lounge.Folklore societyAll, however, is not classical onthe campus music scene.While a string quartet can drawa large audience through Mandelhall’s portals (and, more impor¬tant, by its box office), folk mu¬sic has a large and devoted follow¬ing on the Midway.The center of UC’s folk musicactivity is the Folklore society.mg year, welcomes any member efy of secular choral works, feel- Its membership, over 100, makesof the University community vvho ing that the university has a num- >t one of the largest organizationsis willing and able to sing The ber of fine organizations already in the UC extracurriculum. Thegroup generally numbers about devoting themselves almost ex- activities include several “Wing-twelve members. Usually’ about J"™™* to ™acr£f mS The di"gs” (informal songfests) each£<**.■* ■-> ■ ■ r-» three or four local performances glee club is open to all students, quarter, with occasional square-rO| IjB. M ■ I 1 M1 ■■ are given yeaily. without audition, and combines dances and parties. In addition,■m H meets in the East lounge of socja| activities with its singing, members of the society performIda Noyes hall every Saturdayfrom 1:30 to 5:30, and is underWhile some organizations offer enjoyment to both studentlisteners and players, there are a few musical events it which the direction of Frederic L. Pera,students serve only as listeners. bu 8-4024.The Mandel hall concert series for this year will open onFriday, November 4, with aby the Vegh will contain at least one work byMozart. The winter concerts willperformancetring quartet The succeeding Mature the Trio di Bolzano, theconcerts will be held on alternateFriday evenings throughout the Budapest quartet, and the Par-renin quartet. Pianist Ania Dorf-autumn winter and spring quar- mann Andrew Foldi famous bass»cis Series tickets to all ten con-c< i ts may he purchased for $10,v )iii< tickets to individual con-'Tis are $1.50 each. Students pre¬senting their identification cards UC choirFor students more interested inspiritual music, two organizationsof special interest exist. Theseare the University of Chicagochoir, and the Bond Chapel choir.The University of Chicagoand UC graduate, and violinist ohoir- Erected by Richard VikRoman Totenberg will all per¬form in the spring concerts ofthe series. The director is Denis Cowan. Full a* such diverse activities as therehearsals are on Wednesday eve- Compas theatre folk-music nightsings from 7:15 to 9:30 in Rosen- a"d Mandel Hall concerts,wald 2 starting October 5, and in- See ‘Vocal Music/ page 19Give carillon concertsWhile a somewhat different instrument than is ordinarilythought of, the University’s 72-bell carillon is one of the larg¬est in the world.In the tower of Rockefeller chapel are the 72 bells of theLaura Spelman Rockefellerc yv obtain individual tickets fork each, and a larger discount hasocn arranged for those studentstaking humanities I in the col¬lege. All tickets are available atthe University concert office, 5802S. Woodlawn. Collegiate Sinfonictta. a strom, is a highly selected groupof about 40 to 50 singers whichprovides the music for the carillon, sounding Wagner’sreligious services at Rockefeller Parsifal chime every quarter-chamber"orchestra making chaPel eveiT Sunday, in addition hour during the day. The bells.m*K.ng to concerts of single works of re. arranged in three stories of theligious music. Members of the tower, range in weight from 10’ichoir include students in the Uni- to 36,926 pounds. The largest one.versify and faculty members and the Great Bourdon has a dia- Mondays through Fridays at 12:15residents in the community, most meter of nearly 10 feet. Carillon n m ai ri m qThenewits professional debut in Chicagothis year consists of thirteenstring instruments, with wood¬winds added when necessary. Itw'ill give about six programs of largest bell weighs approximately2.400 pounds. The chime is oneof eight in the United Stateswhich may be pealed in the Eng¬lish manner, called “change-ring¬ing.” During the autumn quarterthe chime will be played regularlychamber music in the* Chicago of whom are former students. concerts are given at 4:30 p.m.Tn the autumn quarter, conceits area this vear including works Five concerts of single works every Sunday and Wednesday by- __ ..... ’ o „ f 1 : ... ] £ 4 /in 1 zm i r> Tomnc Rharpsi- bv Handel Vivaldi Telemann and of sacred music are planned for the Chapei earilloneur, James R.Music mntpmnnra rv comnosprs The this year, including the "St. John” Lawson.by Fernando Valenti,cliordist, and by the New Music contemporary composers. The - , . , ,quartet will follow the appear- sinfonietta was organized about and the “st- Matthew” Passions Lawson is also in charge ofance of the Vegh quartet. three years ago in this commu- b>’ Bach- and Handel’s “Messiah.” the Soeietas Campananrum,The first concert of the winter nity as a group of student, ama- Bond Chapel choir, a small the group of studen s who ring K1_ UVCI UICquarter will be an all-Mozart pro- teur, and a few professional musi- £,ouP whose members are diawn the c imes in i c fellor Chapel carillon at 4:30 p.m.,gram played by the Chicago Sym- .cians. While there are some UC main,y from the,uc choir sin^ dents interested m joining this Sunday October 2. The programphony orchestra, in honor of the students in the Sinfonietta, it every Wednesday morning at unusual organization can inquire wj], inc]ude <The Universitv ofL . . * _ _ . . . . ..... 1 1 • QA of tho ml inriAiic corvinoc in at i hP ( hii HP I OlIlCP. IVI IQ VY ci V z^i • p. . , _ _p.m., at 6 p.m. and a “curfew’sounding of the Alma Mater at10 p.m.The first carillon concert of theautumn quarter will be playedspecially to welcome new studentsto the University. James R. Law-son will preside over the Rocke-2'tilth anniversary ofith, and each concert thereafter University.The Mozart's now has no connection with the 11:3n the religious services in at:the_ChapelBond chapel. It also gives con- 3-0800, Ext 1082.certs of sacred music in Bond Made in EnglandChapel on the second Sunday ofeach month, sometimes assisted cast in 1907 by the Whitechapel fe)]er ch ,bv the Collegium Musicum. Ad- Foundry in London, England. The ., ‘Chicago Suite”* composed last,year by Kamiel Lefevre, to com-_. , . memorate the 25th anniversaryThe Mitchell tower chime was nf fh . .. , ‘ r ,iyo, 1007 K\t th. whito.htzr.zzi of the dedieation of the Rocke-1367 E. 57thHY 3-5151DiscRECORD SALEReductions on ALL LabelsFOLK MUSIC — JAZZCLASSICALThe widest selection of Ipsin the neighborhoodListening BoothsOpen Weekdays 10 till 10' Saturdays 10 fill 5 Hold off-campusmusic concerts Holds two organsThis carillon concert will pre¬cede an organ recital in the Rock¬efeller memorial c-hapel by Hein¬rich Fleischer, chapel organist.At 5:45 p.m., October 2, justbefore the dinner for new stu¬dents in the Hutchinson Corn-Further removed from the campus are the weekly concerts m<>ns the bells of Mitchell towerW7 ! I I rinrr Ik» AW 'U'rtrvlrtv. . * , , ^ zat Orchestra hall.In addition to the regular concerts of the Chicago Sym¬phony, to which students are, on certain days given a discount,there are from time to timeconcerts of various naturesponsored at Orchestra Hall bysuch groups as Allied Arts. Thesegroups present a series of con¬certs, with tickets available forthe entire seiies. Orchestra hall isat 220 S. Michigan Ave. The firstconcert of the Chicago Symphonywill be held on Thursday eve¬ning October 6, and will be re¬peated on Friday afternoon. Itfeatures works by Respighi, Rich¬ard Strauss, and Beethoven. Stu¬dents arc given a discount to theFriday afternoon concert. Conductor Reiner will ring. Thomas Vogler, studentin the College and member of theUniversity Soeietas Campanari-orum will play a concert of folkmusic from England.Also in Rockefeller chapel isone of the finest organs to hefound in the midwestern area.Pfograms of organ (nusic canbe heard throughout the year atRockefeller chapel. There are twoorgans in the chapel—the mainconsole in the chancel and asmaller one in the choir gallery—which can he played as one instru¬ment. The smaller organ is usedregularly to accompany the choirduring the religious services,while the organ in the chancel isthe instrument used for organconcerts. Most of the chapel organconcerts during the year are givenby the chapel, organist, Dr. Hein¬rich Fleischer.Page 14 THK CHICAGO MAROON September 30, 195JEntering and Former StudentsHouses of Worship Welcome VouROMAN CATHOLICSAINT THOMAS THE APOSTLE5472 South Kimbark Avenue FA 4-2626Father Edward S. KrakowskiSunday Masses—6, 7, 8, 9, 10:15, 11:15 a m.,12:15 p.m.Weekday Masses—6:30, 7, 7:30, S a m.Masses on Holy Days— 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 a m.,12 noonConfessions—Saturdays and Thursdays before firstFridays and evenings of Holy Days of Obliga¬tion: 4-6 p.m. and 7:30-9 p.m.Young Peoples Club meets monthly on Sundaysafter communion for worship and social hour.For further information call church officeFA 4-2626.JEWISHCONGREGATION RODFEI ZEDEK(Jewish Conservative >5200 Hyde Park BoulevardRabbi Ralph Simon, preachingCantor Maurice Goldberg, officiatingLate Friday evening services 8:30 p m.Sabbath morning services 9:00 amFor information regarding cultural and social ac¬tivities for college age students call PL 2-2244.K.A.M. TEMPLE(Reformed!930 East 50th Street KE 8-3300Jacob J. Weinstein, RabbiMilton Matz, assistant RabbiFriday evening services 8:15pm.CHICAGO SINAI CONGREGATION(Reformed)5350 South Shore DriveDr. Louis L. Mann, RabbiS. A. Singer, assistant RabbiTEMPLE ISAIAH ISRAEL(Reformed I1100 Hyde Park Boulevard WA 4-1234Morton M. Berman, D D., RabbiFriday evening services 8:15 pm.Saturday evening services 11 :00 a m.All students are cordially .invited to join in ourworship services.GREEK ORTHODOXSAINT CONSTANTINE'SGREEK ORTHODOX7351 South Stoney Island MU 4-4201Reverend Meletios Tripodakis, rectorReverend Basil S. Gregory, assistant rectorSunday services ..... 10:30 a.m. - 12 noonAdult Class in Religious Education second andfourth Wednesday of each month at 8:30 p.m,,taught by Father Gregory.Senior Youth Organization for 1 8 - 35 year olds,social hour every first and third Wednesday eve¬nings. PROTESTANTFIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH1174 East 57th Street FA 4-4100Leslie T. Pennington, ministerSunday services 11 :00 a.m.Church school 9:00 a.m.For information on Channing Club call church of¬fice at FA 4-4100.FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF CHICAGO935 East 50th Street KE 6-3430Dr, Jitsuo Morikawa, pastorSunday:Morning breakfast, college age. . . 9:00 a.m.Church school 9:45 a.m.Worship 11 :00 a m.Coffee hour 6:00 p.m.Chapel service 7:00 p mWednesday:Potluck supper 6:30 p.mDevotional • 7:30 p.m.WOOOLAWN BAPTIST CHURCH6207 South University Ml 3-0123Sunday worship services. . 1 1 a m. and 7 p m.Baptist Youth Fellowship meets at 6 p m. Sundays.The church youth program includes sports and ath¬letic activities. For further information, call thechurch office, Ml 3-0123.AUGUSTANA LUTHERAN CHURCHRudolph W. Jonson, pastor54th Street and Kimbark Avenue HY 3-1412Sunday Church School and BibleClasses 9:30 a.m.Sunday morning worship services. . 10:45 a.m.Choir rehearsal at 8 p.m. ThursdaysWOODLAWN IMMANUEL LUTHERANCHURCHKenwood Avenue at 64th Street Ml 3-4803“The church where you ore m strongeronly once*9Robert M. Herhold, pastorClarence E Paulus, pastor emeritusYoung adults class — 9:45 a m. Sundays in thepastor's study.Sunday worship services — 1 1 .00 a.m.Holy Communion services first Sunday of eachmonth.HYDE PARK METHODIST CHURCH54th Street and Blackstone AvenueReverend Paul Lambourne Higgins, ministerSunday morning worship 11 :00 a.m. •Church School Sunday morning .. 9:45 a.m.Young adults group is holding an open meetingSunday, October 2, from 3 - 5 p.m,THE UNITED CHURCH OF HYDE PARK(Congregational and Presbyterian)Blackstone Avenue at 53rd Street DO 3-1620Dr. Mitchell T. Ancker, ministerSunday morning worship 11 :00 a.m.Church school, Sunday 9:40 a.m.Infants' and pre-school, Sunday. . 1 1 ;00 a.m. SAINT PAUL'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH4945 Dorchester Avenue OA 4-3185Reverend William D. McLean Jr., rectorReverend Russel R. Ellis, curateSunday services:8:00a.m.—Holy Communion (chapel)9:00 a.m.—Family Eucharist, followed bybreakfast in the parish house11:00 a.m.—Holy Communion (first Sundays)and sermon11:00 a.m.—Morning prayer (except first Sun-days) and sermonWeekday services:7;00 a.m.—Holy Communion (Tuesday, Thurs¬day and Friday)10:30 a.m.—Holy Communion (Monday,Wednesday and Saturday)5:30 p.m.—Evening prayerCHURCH OF THE REDEEMER(Episcopol)1420 laat 56th Street fat Blackstone Avenue)Reverend F. W. Lickfield, rector •Sunday services 8 - 9 - 11 a m.Breakfast after the 9 a m. service for 35 centsDaily Weekday services, 7 a.m. and 5:30 p mThe Rector is available by appointment for consul¬tation or instruction. " iFIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCHKimbark Avenue at 64th Street DO 3-0505Harold Leonard Bowman, D.D , ministerEdward W. Warner, assistant ministerSunday morning service 11 .00 a m.57th STREET MEETING RELIGIOUSSOCIETY OF FRIENDS5615 Woodlawn AvenueSecretary, Mary Cadbury — BU 8-3066Worship 1 1 a.m. SundayWorship 7:45 p.m. Thursday jYoung peoples group Sunday evenings at 7 pm.starting October 9th.Couples group meets bi-weekly.Call BU 8-3066 for more information.THE KENWOOD NEW CHURCH(Swedenborgion)5710 Woodlawn Avenue DO 3-7141Reverend Immanuel Tafel, pastorChapel services held each Sunday at 11 a.m. at theSwedenborg Philosophical Center, 5710 WoodlawnAvenue.UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF.THEDISCIPLES OF CHRIST5655 University Avenue DO 3-8142Reverend J. J. Van Boskirk, interim ministerCommunion Service 10:30 a.m. SundayWorship service 11 :00 a.m. SundayWranglers club 7:00 p.m. Sunday10th CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST;5640 Blackstone AvenueSunday services — 10:45 a.m. and 7:45 p.m.Wednesday evening meetings — 8:00 p.m,Sunday school — 10:45 a.m. Sunday JThe reading room of 10th Church of Christ, Scien*tist is located at 1448-East 57th Street. Hours:9 a.m. - 9 p.m.; Wednesday, 9 a.m. - 7:45 p.m.;Sunday, 12:15 - 7:15 p.m.; holidays, 9 a.m. - 9p m.ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL(Non-Denominational)59th and WoodlawnJohn B. Thomson, Dean of the Chape! ,Worship service 11 :00 a.m. SundayThere are three houses on the quadrangles designed jto meet the religious needs of all faiths:Chapel House, 5810 Woodlawn, sponsored by the jUniversity and co-operating Protestant groups. 'Hillel Foundation, 5715 Woodlawn, serving Jewishstudents. ICalvert Club, 5735 University, an organization ofRoman Catholic students.j^ptembe*' 30, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 15Hillel provides vitalprogram for campusThe Hillel foundation has as its stated aims "To further theknowledge and appreciation of Jewish religion and culture;to provide Jewish students with facilities for the expressionof their common interests; to establish an all-inclusive com-munity framework for Jewish students of varying interests,opinions, and beliefs.” “On the basis of this general ends with friendly discussion overstatement of its purposes, tea an^ cake!, , . . , Each quarter the cultural com-Hillel has constructed a pro- rnittee plans seminars for the in-gram of varied events which are tensive study of particular sub-©f great interest not only to Jew- jects confronting Judaism today,ish students, but also to the entire The library committee sponsorscampus. several coffee hours with discus-The Hillel program is roughly s.*on °* some book in the Hillelseparated into religious, cultural, library.and social parts through student The social committee providescommittees which plan the activi- the social setting for Hillel activi¬ties. The fireside committee plans ties, and plans those programsthe most well known part of Hil- which are of a largely social na-lel’s program, the weekly Friday ture. Among these is a facultyevening fireside. A religious serv- symposium during the autumnice begins the evening; then a quarter on the monumental issue:speaker, usually a member of the The Latke vs. the Hamantash;University faculty, presents an in- this symposium produces a dis-formal talk on a theme appro- play of wit and repartee rarelypriate to the occasion, Sabbath seen among the august visages 6fsongs are sung, and the evening Chicago professors.JEWELRY CLASSTuesday, 7:30 Jo 10 P.M. — Oct 11th to Dec. 13thPrice $20 for course of 10 lessonsInstructor Nello Fermi PLosa 2-6651At Hyde Park Art Center 1506 E. 57th St. Protestant groups hold activitiesat Chapel house, elsewhereChapel House, which is located north of Rockefeller chapel on Woodlawn avenue, is spon¬sored by the University administration in cooperation with the Protestant religious groupson campus. Chapel house itself sponsors some activities, such as the orientation open houseand the committee on religion and the arts, and serves as an available center for the ac¬tivities of all groups, includingthose which have facilities of the University community by di- holds regular meetings everySfph ‘T ^amPus* viding for most of their activities Tuesday evening in Thorndiketh€ ei£ht Protestant or- into smaner groUps according to Hilton chapel. During the schoolLllw Tf8 connected with Chapel age> studies, and marital status, year, the group will sponsor twohouse offers to its members a Fi other Protestant religious Public lectures on Christian Sci-similar program which includes *^^*^™"*&™* ence. The Inter-Varsity ChristianSunday meetings, sometimes for g P, '3 eenters near the cam- j?en0ws|1|D;s a proUDbreakfast and wnrshin mnrP fro Pus- The Baptist student fellow- ? ^ • gJ 5 studentsoreaKiast ana worship more ire- . . ff- and mePtinf»s who believe in fundamental in-quently in the evening for supper . P j „anP rneonngs temretation of the Christian re-and a nrnoram Mooting ,n the Hyde Park Baptist church, 1pretanon oi ine cnnstian rethe studv ^rouns and Ss 56th & Woodlawn. The Wranglers Thfir Program includescushions,'retreats, and social pro- f!u!> is fTVt SudynTueSayPnIS’n‘iunches andgrants complete the schedule of ““ft* ty -S’ act^tie's Students oi the="S'„ , Canterbury ^lub oMhe^Episcopai Ea®*ern Orthodox churches haveThree groups, the Lutherans, church holds its meetings and no organization on campus atMethodists, and Congregational- services at Brent house, at 5540 Present-ists and Presbyterians, have their Woodlawn. Channing club, whichoffices in Chapel house itself. The meets at the First UnitarianLutheran group at UC is a com- church, 57th and Woodlawn, pro¬bination of the Lutheran student vides a campus center for liberalassociation, and Gamma Delta of religion, and this year has dividedthe Missouri synod, although the into two groups intended for col- . • •two groups retain their separate iege and graduate students. The 3Cl IVIl ICS CCITlCTnational affiliation. Both the Meth- Young Friends Fellowship centersodist student union, and Porter its activities at Quaker house, Calvert Club, the Roman Catho-fellowship, which combines Pres- 5615 Woodlawn. He student group on the UC cam-byterian, Congregational, and Certain other religious groups Pus’ is housed in DeSales houseEvangelical and Reformed stu- have no offices, but hold regular I?!1 ^J111veFS1^ a^,enue across ^roimdents, have adopted their activ- meetings on campus. The UC ^f^de* hall. It cares for theities to the diversified nature of Christian Science organization sP“"ua ’ intellectual, and sociallilAlforn /\f ite wi aw* +L vioi i /vVi aDeSales houseRoman CatholicREADER'S"THE CAMPUS DRUG STORE"61 st b EllisOpposite Burton - JudsonWELCOMES YOUVISIT OUR COLLEGE ROOM — SERVINC GOOD FOODREGISTERED PHARMACISTS READY TO SERVE YOUIN OUR COMPLETE DRUG DEPARTMENT SWEDENBORG PHILOSOPHICAL CENTRE5710 Woodlawn Ave. DOrchester 3-7141"Tke object of this organisation tt to establish a better understandingof tke philosophy of Emanuel Swedenborg . . , “Discussion GroupsFree Lectures Public Reference LibraryPersonal ConsultationOPEN—Mondays-Wednesdays-Fridays-Sundays —Other times by appointment 1:30 - 5:50 P.M. welfare of its members through adiversified program of activities.Mass is said daily by the residentchaplains, and a weekend retreatis held each quarter. A large pro¬gram of lectures, discussions, sup¬pers, and social activities com¬pletes the schedule of events.The ColiegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236Get the Border habit early!Glance at this listing. See how many things YOU need NOW and select them at oneof Horder’s eight convenient loop stores — where Chicago fathers and grandfathershave bought for their offices since 1901. There is a Horder store convenient to everydowntown school* location. See map at lower left.Cigarette Cases,Lighters, SuppliesClip BoardsColoring PencilsColumnar FormsComposition Books"Copy” PaperCorona TypewritersCrayonsCrow Quill PensCurves, DrawingDesks and AccessoriesDiariesDictionariesDividersDrawing Boards,Stands, SuppliesDuplicators andSuppliesEasels, Artist’sElectric FansEngagement Books,PadsEngineer's Charts,Rulers, etc.EnvelopesErasersExpense Books Eye ShadesFans, CoversFiles and SuppliesFountain PensFrench CurvesGillott’s Pens,Drawing or SketchingGlasses, Magnifying,Reducing, ReadingGuides, FileHiggins InksHunt Speedball PensIndexing SuppliesInksInterest Books, TablesJournal FormsLabelsLampsLead PencilsLeather GoodsLedgersLetter FilesLogarithmic ChartsLoose Leaf Booksand SuppliesMagnifying GlassesMannheim Slide RulesMaps, Globes, Atlases Mechanical DrawingInstrumentsMemo BooksMimeograph SuppliesMusic TabletsNote PaperNotebooks and SuppliesOnion Skin PaperParker Fountain PensPastes, Rubber Cement,MucilagePencilsPensPerforatorsPhotograph AlbumsPicture HangersPin-up BoardsPinsPortable TypewritersPortfolios, Brief Bags,Zipper CasesPost’s Drafting SuppliesProtractorsPunchesQuadrille Ruled SheetsQuill PensRadio and ElectronicsStencils Reading GlassesReducing GlassesRibbons, TypewriterRing Binders and FillersRoberts Rules of OrderRubber BandsRubber StampsRulersRuling PensScissors, ShearsScotch Tape,DispensersScrap BooksScratch Pads, TabletsSealing MachinesSecond Sheets,TypewriterSheaffer Fountain PensShow Card SuppliesSlide RulesSmith-Corona PortableTypewritersSmoking StandsSpeedball Ink, PensSquaresStaplers, Staples,Removers Stencilsrage Cabinetserne and Note BooksThumb TacksTissue Paper •Tracing and Blue PrintSuppliesTravel Expense BooksTrial Balance BooksTrianglesTrig Slide RulesTrimmers, PaperT-SquaresTwines, CuttersTypewriter SuppliesTypewriters, PortableVacuum JugsWallets, LeatherWardrobesWaste BasketsWater JugsWrapping PaperWriting TabletsZip Key CasesZipper Ring Binders,CasesZippo Lighters J»Ifl1. Generol office ond warehouse★ 2. Dearborn, South of Jockson★ 3. Adams, West of Michigan★4. Washington at Clark★5. Adams, West of Clark .*6. Wabash at Loke★7. Ohio, East of Michigon8. Merchandise Mart HAII Telephones FR. 2-6760 morder’s Inc.Stores all over the loopMail address •*- 231 S. Jefferson St., Chicago 6 7•A.hlUL •miIGreat Features back up Chevrolet Performance: Anti-Dive Braking—Ball-Race Steering-Out¬rigger Rear Springs —Body by Fisher — 12-Volt Electrical System —Nine Engine-Drive Choices.When you need a quick sprint forsafer passing, this VS delivers!It's pure dynamite, and you have togc way, way up the price ladderbefore you ever find its equal. Drive with care . . . EVERYWHERE!The proof was burned into the sands ofDaytona Beach at the NASCAR* trialsearlier this year. In acceleration tests,Chevrolet walked away from everythingelse in its field. Plus all the high-pricedcars except one!It’s the big reason Chevrolet’s been tak¬ing all comers in short track stock carevents this season. Sizzling accelerationalong with handling ease and corneringability—things that mean safer, happierhighway driving. Come on in and let anew Chevrolet show you what we mean.•Notionol Associolion for Sfoclt Car Aofo RacingNOW’S THE TIME TO BUY! LOW PRICES-BIG DEALS! ENJOY A NEW CHEVROLET7 CHEVROLET/jfrom your bookseller, or fromTHE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO PRESS See Your Chevrolet Dealer5750Chicago 37 Ellis AvenueIllinoisActivities of the Astronomicalsociety consist of small informalgroups working on special proj¬ects. Facilities of the club includet^ionpopes, cameras and other in- NOTHING IN ITS FIELD CAN MATCHCHEVROLET FOR ACCELERATION!Some Fall Booksfrom ChicagoVICTORIAN PEOPLEby Asa BriggsVictoria's reign at high noon,presented with penetration andwit through a study of represen¬tative men. Published today.Illustrated. $5.00BIBLICAL RELIGION AND THESEARCH FOR ULTIMATEREALITYby Paul TillichThe great theologian in an elo¬quent plea for the essentiol func¬tion of philosophy in religiousthought. Just published. $2.25GREEK LYRICS—Newly translatedby Richmond LattimoreA garland of vivid and affectingpoetry—amorous, political, sa¬tiric — in accurate and lively.ranslation. November. Cloth,$2.25; Paper, $1.25CHILDHOOD IN CONTEMPO¬RARY CULTURES —Edited byMargaret Mead and MarthaWolfensteinA richly diverse array of studieson the many ways of bringingup children. Just published. Il¬lustrated. $7.50BILLY SUNDAY WAS HISREAL NAMEby William G. McLoughlin, Jr.The first thorough and impartiallife of the great revivalist.October. Illustrated. $5.50SPECULATIVE INSTRUMENTSby I. A. RichardsA series of highly individual es¬says, all concerned with ques¬tions of language, by one of thecentury's most influential think¬ers. . November. $4.50PURITANISM IN OLD AND NEWENGLAND—by Alan SimpsonA fresh interpretation of 17thcentury Puritanism.November. $3.00MARTIN BUBER: THE LIFEOF DIALOGUEby Maurice S. FriedmanThe first comprehensive studyof the great Jewish theologian'swork. November. $6.00Page 16 September 30, 1955Multitude of UC organizationsshow varied student interestsThe multitude of interests in the undergraduate and graduate body at the University ofChicago is reflected in a range of interest groups which cater to specific tastes and varyfrom the Astronomical society to Science Fiction club, to Rocket club, to Nexial society.It takes 10 students, a faculty sponsor, and approximately five minutes to register withthe director of students activi-ties (this vear Dean Robert struments which are located in selves “inexperienced” as well asStrozier re ol a cine Arthur R>'erson laboratory. Sufficient those actively engaged in some^irozier, replacing Armur interest to participate in the th.Kiendl); and a club is formed. group’s activities is the prime req- phase of s.tu(*y ^ a ed the_ , , ... . , gfoup duivuith ib uie yuiue ieq groups projects. They discussThe C amera club, with dark- uisite of membership. Most of problems o£ rocket flight and de.room facilities in Reynolds club tfie members plan to enter some sign and bui]d rocket motors andand a studio in North Stands, is of Physical sciences, testing equipment., ,, this however is not a requirement. “ , „open to any member of the UC , The Encampment of Citizenshipcommunity, with membership of program^fumf r^sing^camraigns A,umni Assocation of lhe Umver-piogram, iuna raising campaigns rhioiurn ic n crrmin of thn^pabout 20 to 30 people. Its exhibits are conducted by the campus unit W,J0 have atfended past encamp-of photography and facilities for of the Red Cross. Working closely t f FFF th„ Pirmha«icdeveloping and printing pictures with International house, the Red flf wJic£ is on th’e probleL ofgive members a chance to meet Pr°gram °* activities will democracy> citizenship, civil liberother photographers and improve Ml .wXsIud’ems from 4ven col- *'«• *orld atIairs and in,erraclaltheir photography, as well as ex- lege areas invited to spend the . ,,dav on the UC campus. . Other organizations on campus_. , , include the Chess club, OutingDiscuss roc e s chib (sponsring low-cost interimSociety for Rocket Research, trips), Mountaineering club,“doing original work which is of a World University Service (con-fundamental character and prob- duction of campaigns for fundsably not duplicated elsewhere” for universities throughout theFiction club has a mailing list of stresses that membership is open world), Undergraduate Educationabout 75, with active membership to persons who consider them- board, and YAKS,at 35. In its discussions, talks,plays, and occasional movies;hibiting its own pictures.Discuss outer spaceWith members drawn from thecommunity and city as well asfrom the University, the Science-members meet authors, editorsand publishers at meetings heldevery other Wednesday in IdaNoyes hall.Nexial society, claiming that itis an entirely serious group, “per¬forms an invaluable service to theUniversity by not contributing toliving there.” It is open to every¬one with an interest and devotionto Nexialism; most members,however are unaware of the oth¬ers, and the society has never met. ACASA Book StoreScholarly Used Books — Bought and SoldImported Greeting CardsReliable Typewriter ServiceH\ 3-0651 1323 E. 55th Si. Forum to debatein English styleStudent forum opens its year of speech activities Wednes¬day with an English-style debate at 7 p.m. in Social Sciences122. The informal debates, inaugurated last year, coveredsuch topics as “Resolved, that big-time football should bereturned to UC,” and . .that Groucho has done more tock’ director of debate in thefor mankind than Karl.” forum.The forum, official speech or- Some 600 hundred people lastganization on campus, empha- fall atteiiueu tne debate betweensizes its role as a debating society the University of London, and thein intercollegiate debates, work- UC team. This year, UC debatersshops, practice debates and semi- will meet Cambridge University,weekly informal debates, last year with the English team scheduledheld in the Reynold’s club and to appear on November 13.Burton-Judson lounges. Regular debating this seasonThe forum, open to all students, will center around the new debatewith or without previous speech topic, “Resolved; That the non¬experience, has two trained direc- agricultural industries of thetors—Marvin Phillips, director of United States should guaranteeStudent forum, and Don McClin- their employees an annual wage.”BE PREPARED FOR WINTER DRIVINGFALL SPECIALTUNE UP $4.98For Most Cars, Plus PartsPermo Anti FreezeInstalledcheck heater, thermostatcheck radiator, hosesbattery, etc.★★★★★SPECIAL ! ! $1095Heavy Duty Battery ILHARPER SINCLAIR SERVICEUPIYqw!5556 Harper Ave. PL 2-9654jepfember 30, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 17JV scene appears dimby Mitri DozoretzThe outlook for junior varsity sports is mighty dim according to T. Nelson Metcalf UCdirector of athletics. The reason for this feeling by the athletic department stems directlyfrom the drop in the number of early entrants in the University. These early entrantsalong with some students from University high, comprised the JV teams. This loss of stu¬dents to draw on for the athletic teams may f acilitate the droppage of the JV fencing, soc¬cer, swimming, and wrestling teams. . . . An d while on the subject of wrestling, the athleticdepartment is just aboutready to announce the signingof Allan C. Bates as the newwrestling coach and part timephys ed instructor. A1 who is re¬turning unexpectedly to UC towork on his PhD degree will fillthe vacancy which he createdwhen he left Chicago earlier this Women organizetheir own athletics r Firm)It/i ,<• i iMI1 L ' eSMlly m i pA swimming marathon andmeet and an inter-collegiate hock¬ey game are also planned for thefall quarter.Four UC clubsoffer sportsOf the many clubs 7&uj 'kFootball may returnsmall practice startsAt UC the women themselves parison with the other competingyear. He had formerly acted as plan and organize women’s com- schools.the student-coach of the grapplers petitive sports events. The Worn- In addition to inter-dormitory,for two years. His slogan “Every en’s Athletic association and its and inter - collegiate volley - ballman a tiger” was one of the 20-member student board arrange competition, the WAA has sched-watchwords of the Quadrangles for all in ter-dormitory, inter-club, uled a coeducational game be-last year Classes in the college and inter-scholastic women’s ath- tween college houses.began Thursday and the varsity letic events.cross-country arid soccer teams be- “The best way to get intogin competition next Saturday, women’s athletics at UC, com-First opponents for the Cross- mented Dorothy Hess, WAACountry speedsters will be for- board member, “is to participatemidable Notre Dame, while the in the physical education classesSoccer team meets Wheaton Col- offered by the University.”lege. Both contests are on home Interscholastic team membersground. What a surprise if there are chosen by the course instruc-were lots of spectators at these, tors from the ranks of those tak-.. . All other varsity squads with ing physical education courses.the exception of baseball and bas- Enrollment in inter-dormitory groups on campus, four, rifle,ketball will begin practice next athletics is carried on through track, sailing, and badmintonweekend. All those interested in WAA’s dormitory representatives, are distinguished by their particu-winning themselves glory on one Notice of forthcoming WAA lar athletic aims,of UC’s twelve varsity teams events is always posted well in The Rifle club promotes abso-should inquire at Bartlett gym. advance of the games on the dor- control and coordination with. . . To all who have noticed the mitory bulletin boards, together gjna]i arms; and the Track clubmen on Stagg field running with the names of the WAA rep- furthers participation in crossthrough football plays, don’t be resentatives. country, track, and field events,alarmed; the University hasn’t An intercollegiate bowling tour- The Track club is a recent addi-hired a professional football team, nament by telegraph is scheduled tjon to 0ffjciaj campus groups, was formed “to satisfy the needsthey are only the Chicago Cardi- as the first big fall quarter WAA Existing informally since 1950, it and desires of certain students.”nals who use our field annuall to competition. Several college teams became an officially organized These certain students he referspractice on until Comiskey Park will bowl at their homes schools, stucjent activity in 1953. to are the 301 that signed the peti-can be remade from a baseball each wiirng their top ten scores -phe reason for an organization tion circulated by the UC Studentsand Sounds of hard rubber cleats striking concrete, and thesound of jubilant voices after a hard football scrimmage willonce again this year echo through the locker-room of Bartlettgym. For the first time in eight years UC students will donregulation grid uniforms and take the field to practice therudiments of football, in what may be the beginning of Chi¬cago’s return to grid competi¬tion — Friday a class in foot¬ball will begin.This class, according to KyleAnderson, assistant athletic direc¬tor and the new football “coach,” All UC studentscan be stars inintramural sportsfield into a grid field. to a central headquarters for com- The comprehensive Univer¬sity-sponsored intramuralsports program provides anSocial Security3 secondsueect|CKDEODORANTQuickest, cleanest deodorantyou’ve ever used! Simply glide stickunder arms—it melts in instantly.ContainsTHIOBIPHENE*,the mosteffective anti-bacteria agent. It’sthe New Kind of Social Security— gives you absolute assurance.4 to 5 months' supply, JOO•JmdemoHc plus taxno more• runny liquid• sticky cream• messy fingersAt leading department and drug stores.SHULTONNew York Toronto beyond the varsity track and For Football, a newly formed stu-cross-country teams lies in the dent group advocating the return opportunity for every student togreat number of graduate stu- of the grid sport to Chicago. The participate in both individual anddents at the University. Many of petition stated that “the under- team sports the year ’round,these have exhausted their college signed will support the return of seven-man touch football high-eligibility, but continue to run for intercollegiate football to the UC & ^ ftutumn terthe sheer joy of doing so. There- campus. . .. ,The class will meet daily Mon- gram in the three regular leagues:fore, the Track club gives themsponsorship. Members of the var- day to Friday from October 7 to college, independent, and frater-sity and JV teams also competeunder this sponsorship.The Badminton club is more so¬cial than the rifle or track groups.The club plays intra-squad games,as well as playing against otherlocal clubs. After the games, theco-ed group usually holds infor¬mal get togethers.Downtown at Columbia Yachtclub the sailing club shares a fleetof boats with the clubs of North¬western, and Illinois Tech.These facilities are open to all November 12 at 3:30 p.m. oneither Stagg field or North field.There for an hour and a half,dressed in the regulation uni- , A. .forms remaining from the 1947 in- fied blocking regulations in thenity. The standard football rulesprevail in these games, exceptingtackling in all leagues, and modi-tramural season, the members of college league.the class will go through regularpractice sessions and eventuallywork up to a big public intersquadgame to wind up the season No¬vember 12.It is expected that the interestaroused by the class will be thebasis of a faculty committee’s de¬club members every weekend, as cision on whether or not Chicagowell as on several weekdays will return to the intercollegiatethrough November. grid ranks.■■■ '. v ••••••• ./Exclusive South Shore ShowingWinner Grand Prize Cannes Festival Tennis and table tennis tourna¬ments and house swim meetsround out the fall intramural pro¬gram. The annual all-Universitypre-season basketball tourney isscheduled to close the autumnevent series.Basketball is the major sportof the winter quarter, togetherwith the track met held in theField house each year. Competi¬tion on an all-University basis isalso held in squash, handball, andbadminton.The main spring sports activityis softball; golf and horseshoeLouis DeRocheinont’s Qreat AdventureA moving and magnificently photographed filmStarts today for one week pitching have recently been addedto the roster of third-quartersports.HAMILTON THEATRE71st and Paxton CARMEN'SUsed Furniture StoreMoving and Light Hauling1365 E. 55th MU 4-9003USED BOOKSLarge stock of general used booksnow at our new locationOpen every evening and some afternoonsMICHNER'SBOOK SHOP1117 E. 55 HY 3-6872 Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372BETZ JEWELRYUnusual Jewelry Our SpecialtyExpert Jewelry and Watch RepairN.S.A. Discount to Students1523 E. 53rd PL 2-3038Pa9* 18 THE CHICAGO MAROON September 30, 1955Student press dynamic at UCCorrespondents report on Maroon plight Review, Cap and Gown start workIDA NOYES ACTIVITIES NIGHT — TONIGHT — (UC) — A girl with red hair washanding out little cards to a long line of people. On each was printed, “What can you do?”On top of the booth, surrounded by maroon crepe paper streamers, was a sign reading,'‘WANTED: the Maroon needs typists, reporters, layout men, photographer's, copy readers.”Questions were being asked, such as, What is the Chicago Maroon? Who can join? Andthe answers were, UC’s student newspaper — which anyone can join.More questions: What does who always feels very deeply onsmall questions. a weak voice. It was Sue Tax,news editor. She explained, “LastLois Gardner, executive news year I ended up writing all theeditor, explained the staff train- stories myself, having been as-the Maroon cover? What canI do on it? And answers: theMaroon covers all faculty, admin¬istration, and student news, as jng program. “We will have an signed them by myself. This yearwell as including sports and fea- 0pen meeting on October 7 at 3:30 we have four news editors, butlure material. You can do any- p.m. for all prospective members, there aren’t four good typewritersthing even remotely journalistic After this introductory session, in the office, so we need someon it. See sign,. new members will be able to join reporters who have them at home.The red-haired girl picked up training groups to learn the intri- It will brace our spirits consider-a megaphone and screamed, cacjes 0f Maroon production.” ably.”“Wanted!’f “You forgot to mention the Jim Birmingham and DavisShe turned to her audience. ‘ It s business staff,” put in Gary Mo- Bobrow, other news editors, werenice to have a megaphone.Usually jmtoff, business manager. “We absent at activities night. Theyneed people to work on ads and are still at the printers preparingsales. It pays, too.” late copy for this issue, which“Wanted, news reporters,” said appeared this morning.I scream without one and it’smuch harder and not as loud.”The girl with red hair is Joy Bur-bach, co - editor - in - chief of theMaroon. “Spike” Pinney is theother editor-in-chief.Q. “Does everybody on theMaroon scream?”A. “No,” said Spike. “I don’t.”Q. “Is everybody on theMaroon a Communist?”A. “No,” said Robert Quinn,managing editor, “Some of us areRepublicans, but mostly we’renon-partisan. The Maroon has apolitically non-partisan policy andmost of us LIVE by Maroon pol¬icy. That’s because we all get tomake it. We have democraticstaff meetings—even the Repub¬licans come—and we can vote theeditors down any time we want. . . almost.“The Maroon has an open staffmeeting every Tuesday at 3:30in its Reynolds club office. Atthese meetings we discuss edito¬rials which are submitted by anystaff member and printed whenthe rest of the staff members voteto do so. We also propose amend¬ments to the Maroon constitutionat these meetings — sometimesthey take months to pass becausewe all feel so deeply, even onsmall questions/’ continuedQuinn, glancing' at Mrs. Burbach, Maroon has competitionThe coming year will see three newspapers circulating inthe University housing and dormitory areas. Two of themhave been in existence for some time, and the other is a newpublication this year.Comment, the new inter-dormitory paper, will co\ er newsof particular interest to residents and College students.The paper succeeds the now-defunct College House News,and will appear for the firsttime October 3. Lou Lipsitz, Col¬lege student and dormitory resi¬dent, is the editor-in-chief.Compass is the humor - fillednewspaper of International house,carrying news and features con¬cerning the house and its resi¬dents. The executive committeeof the house council is expectedto select a new editor some timewithin the first two weeks of the. rvTTyyyrrTVTi BORDONE ij ► <> Mover* and Light Hauling*I :]► VI 6-9832 ;I >aAAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA. Jimmy's Place is operated primarily as a con¬vivial meeting place for students and friendsof the University of Chicago. The generalair of friendliness and informality make Jim¬my's first choice for those seeking relaxationor camaraderie in the most auspicious sur¬roundings. A hearty welcome to all.LEIGH'S(irtscery and MarketQUALITY FOODS1327 E. 57th HY 3-9100 JIMMY’S55th and WoodlawnChicago, BU 8-9282linoisA RED DOOR EXCLUSIVEBernard SHAW. Complete Plays.$6.00. ($5.40 to students and faculty). 1404 pages.This is one of many books and paper-backs you can findonly at the Red Door at this price. We are constantly on thealert for opportunities to supply you with truly worthwhilebooks at the lowest possible price,A visit to the Red Door will always be a rewarding experiencefor the budget-minded and for the conscientiously curiousbibliophile.RED DOOR BOOK SHOP1328 East 57th StreetHOURS: 10 to 10. Closed Friday Evenings.Open Sunday from 6 to 10. nationwide and international dis¬tribution.The special fall issue of the Chicago Review now on salebegins another year’s presentation of student, faculty, andprofessional writing.The Review is UC’s student-operated cultural quarterly offiction, articles, poetry, drama, and book reviews. It also in.eludes student art work.Review circulation is wide- —— :—“—spread - the 20,000 copies of * ™“rsdays ,n lhe It9>'"0ldsthe special fall issue now have The lhcme of the 1955 Ca|, H11(|Gown, UC yearbook, will centeraround the goals and aspirationsAll UC students and faculty 0f the University’s multi-millionmembers are invited to join the dollar fpnd drive, announcedReview staff. Magazine experi- Mary Joan Spiegel, Gap andence, although desired, is not re- Gown editor-in-chief, this week,quired, according to co-editors She emphasized that all collegeLachlan McDonald, and Samuel and divisional students are in.Blazer. All members are offered vited to work on the yearbooksthe opportunity to read manu- production, and that no previousscripts, learn editorial and busi- yearbook experience is necessary,ness procedures, and qualify The yearbook, with offices locatedthemselves to participate in mag- in the Reynolds Club basement of-azine policy-making, production, fers opportunity for work in copy,and distribution. photography, sales, art, publicity'The Review staff meets at and advertising.quarter.Pre-Fab Newsletter is publishedby the UC housing office for resi¬dents of University student hous¬ing. The Married Students asso¬ciation provides a good deal ofhelp in its publication. The paperis devoted to announcements ofUC policy affecting students andhousing, general news concern¬ing University housed students,and want-ad and trade advertise¬ments. NOW SHOWING Program Number TwoGolden Age of Cinemau Eisenstein FestivalPOTEMKIN"The most powerful and inspired work the films have yetproduced" — Moussinac.Extro-ordinary — superb — finest ever put on screen.”— Not'l Bd. of Review"One of ten best of forty years” — N.Y. Times— PLUS —Eisenstein's lyrical semi-documentary on Mexicotil rr»TIME IN THE SUNCINEMA ANNEX3210 W. Madison near KedzieStudent rate 50c free parking tel: KEdzie 3-1135The Max Brook Co,Fine Dry Cleaning and Laundrycampus institution since 1HI7We offer a complete alteration and repair serviceAlso 5-hour servicepickups daily on campus1013-15-17 East t» I si St. Midway 3-7447Everything InART SUPPLIESFor EverybodyArtists, “pro" and student,make us headquarters forall supplies.Complete Stocks ofWindsorp Newton Talens-RembrandtShiva Oils Caseins StrathmoreDUNCAN STATIONERS1313 East 55th Next to Hie Post OffktLargest Selection !« Hyde ParkNSA DiscountsSeptember 30, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 19Departmental clubs: varied as the UniversityDepartmental clubs are asnumerous and as varied as arethe many departments of theUniversity of Chicago. Theseorganizations help students tosupplement their knowledge ofthe fields that interest them.Largest of these groups is theDivinity School association whichlimits its membership to those en¬rolled in the Divinity School. Prac¬tically all students in the depart¬ment are members of the associa¬tion which tries to foster and pro¬mote fellowship and a sense ofcommunity among those in theDivinity School.The Business club, which isopen to students in the Businessschool and those in related fields,holds weekly coffee hours in Has¬kell commons on Friday after¬noons. At such times speakersfrom major areas of local busi¬ness activity lecture. The talksare generally informal and arefollowed by a question and an¬swer period.Also open to all students Is theCommunication club which at¬ tempts to keep members up todate on the latest techniques andachievements in all fields of com¬munication. It helps to preparemembers for careers in public re¬lations, advertising, communica¬tions research, journalism, andallied fields. An orientation meet¬ing will be held Oet. 6.Reveal research dataThe Society for Social Researchis open to divisional students inthe Social Sciences and to facultymembers. The group arranges fornoteworthy out-of-town sociolo¬gists to meet members when visit¬ing Chicago. Available dataemerging from current researchprojects may be used by members.There are also informal inter¬changes of social-scientific infor¬mation.Students in the department ofeconomics are eligible to join thePolitical K<“onoiny club. Offeredare educational and social activ¬ities for members; the formerwith special reference to econom¬ics. Meetings are held three orfour times each month jointlyuiiiiimiimiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiimiiiimiiiiii:(REYNOLDS CLUB| BARBER SHOP jI Hours: 8 - 5, Monday - Friday *8-1, Saturday =Shoe Shine Service || 6 Registered Barbers §Only Barber Shop on Campus §Basement, Reynolds ClubEXCELLENT APARTMENTS AVAILABLEIN KENWOOD“Suburb in the City”4800 - 5100 South Near 1C, LakeLive among large homes, quiet streetsRoom to play . . . Room to parkVariety of sizes and rentalsSome Co-ops for saleCall Mrs. Hudson DR 3-36059-12 noonSponsored by non-profit KenwoodRedevelopment Corp.For DiscountSave This TicketATHyde Park Self-Service Laundry912 East 55th StreetQUALITY CLEANING2-DAY SHIRT SERVICE2-HOUR LAUNDRY SERVICE4-HOUR SERVICE ON RUGS,SPREADS, SLIPCOVERS ANDDRAPES WEIGH INC UP TO 40 POUNDSWASHED AND DRIEDThis coupon good forfree wash (35c) ordiscount on rugs with Faculty Seminars.Antinomies, which organizesand sponsors discussions of philo¬sophic interest on a variety of sub¬jects, is open to all interested stu¬dents. Meetings are held monthlyat International House. Additionalinformation may be secured fromthe departmental secretary inSwift 206.All academic staff members andgraduate students of the depart¬ment comprise the Psychologyclub. Each quarter eight speak¬ers, mainly psychologists fromother Universities, will lecture tothe club. Members have accessto the departmental referencelibrary. Perform excavationsThe Campus Archaeological so¬ciety has performed actual smallscale excavations on Indian sitesin the neighborhood. Any studentmay belong and those without ex¬perience in archaeology will re¬ceive instruction. A trip to Wis¬consin, in order to excavate Indianmounds, is being planned.For those interested in the prac¬tice of law, there is the CollegeLaw society. Past events have in¬cluded talks on the workings ofthe Oxford an<L Cambridge sys¬tems of law by students fromthere, the practice of law by U. S.Supreme Court justices, and adiscussion of law schools by law school professors.The graduate library school clubis open to all students. The clubgives members the opportunity tomeet others who are interested inthe field of librarianship.Hold pre-med meetingsThe Pre-med club provides ameans for students in biologicalsciences and pre-med to meet oth¬er students with similar interests,acquaint pre-meds with their pros¬pective fields by offering movies,speakers, and tours of hospitals.Similar organizations such asthe graduate history club and theart club serve those implied intheir names.Presentation of varied culturesaim of LPC nationality clubsDrawn from all corners of the earth, UC students from abroad have created on campusseveral organizations to present the culture of and meet the people from their native lands.The Chinese Student club, Japanese Student association, India association, Mazyrk club,and Pakistani and Israeli groups, have made organizational plans for the forthcoming year.Most of the students in theseorganizations have foreignbackgrounds, but membership inthese groups is open to all.All these groups have represen¬tatives living in Internationalhouse.The Chinese Student club pro¬vides “solely for the social needsof its members and for the cultur¬al enrichment of University life(politics and religion are neverdiscussed).1' Through its quarter¬ly teas or dances it provides amember with fellowship withthose whom he might otherwisenot meet on campus. Wu-tsuanWong, International house, is thepresent president of this 40 mem¬ber organization.In addition to offering its mem¬ bers opportunities to get acquaint¬ed with each other and acquaint¬ing the UC campus with the in¬tricacies of Japanese culture, theJapanese Student association df-fers various forms of aid to itsmembers. To date, the group hashelped its members by gettingscholarships, raising a part of theexpenses for them to return toJapan, finding a way to take careof those in ill-health, and findingadequate quarters for new-com¬ers. Information about this 50-member group may be obtainedfrom Koji Okada, MU 4-9137.With a nucleus of 50-70, the In¬dia association draws its member¬ship from the ranks of the Indianstudents in several Chicagolanduniversities as well as Indian stu¬ dents at UC. The India associationkeeps its members in contact withIndian culture through lectures,dancing and musical programs,films from the Indian embassy,and discussion groups. FhyamMajhi, a spokesman for the asso¬ciation stated that this informa¬tional program about India isvital in that much of the Informa¬tion about India released by theBritish before Indian independ¬ence gave an innacurate descrip¬tion of the country.Dues are $2 a year and arrange¬ments for membership may bemade through the association’ssecretary, Surindar Trehan, In¬ternational house.Vocal music . ..'it's time he talked things overwith a Sun Life man i%... time to have a Sun Lila man safeguard the littlelady with a Sun Lila of Canada life insurance policy.The Sun Life man in your community isRALPH J. WOOD, Jr., ’48I NORTH LA SALLE STREET. CHICAGO 2, ILLINOISFR 2-2390 O GA 2-5273 (from page 13)Moving off the campus, thereis found the Chicago Civic Operahouse, at Madison street andWacker drive, which is the sceneof a variety of programs through¬out the year, ranging from per¬formances by the Lyric theater tothose of various ballet companies.This season opens with a per¬formance by Carmel Quinn, «anIrish singer, tomorrow evening.On Sunday the program will beJazz at“the Philharmonic underthe direction of Norman Granz,with two evening performances,one at 7 p m. and the other at 10p.m. Completing the October pro¬gram is a series of three per¬formances by Ballet Espagnol onOctober 21, 22, and 23.Finally, for those who wish tokeep up their music, there are alimited number of practice roomsavailable on campus for studentswho play musical instruments.Ida Noyes hall has severalrooms with pianos, which can besigned up for by the hour or re¬served for three hours weeklyduring the quarter. Most of thepianos are available only at 8:30,9:30, and 10:30 a.m. Reservationsare made on a first come, firstserved basis.Pianos are also available inmost of the dormitories. Some ofthe dormitories also have practicerooms which may be used forother instruments.OUT OF PRINT AND HARD TO OET USED BOOKSFree search serviceNo obligation to buy until you decide the price is rightAny book locatedWe have been able to locate 90% of all wantsat satisfactory .pricesSCHNEEMANN'S1328 East 57th Street Chicago 37, III.Page 20 THE CHICAGO MAROON September 30, I955O-board leads orientation; WUCB, W9YWQ servediscusses UCs objectives (JC students' radio needsThe 16 tagged students busy around campus this week,leading tours, explaining regulations, pointing out directions,are Orientation board members; responsible for planning andco-ordinating the Orientation program. Their activity centersaround orientation week, bothin the fall and at mid-year, butthe board’s activities continuethroughout the entire year.In its attempt to increase un¬dergraduate student understand¬ing of the University’s education¬al objective and procedures, O-board has arranged for a seriesof six discussion meetings, withfaculty members discussing therole of liberal education in the major intellectual areas. The firstin the series will consider liberaleducation in the social scienceson October 13 in soc sci 122.Membership on the board, pres¬ently 16, is limited by the costof providing living accommoda¬tions in the dormitories duringorientation periods paid by thecollege dean of students office.Application for membership maybe made during November.Classified AdFor sale3 Yz Rooms of new furniture. Or maysublease apartment and take over fur¬niture. Very reasonable. Apt. rent $75per month, private bath and shower.Any evening after 5:30. Must sell orsublease immediately or within twoweeks. 6333 Blackstone, Apt. 101.Vacuum cleaner. Westinghouse upright.No attachments. Good condition. Cheap.MI 3-1033.Zeiss Contessa. F2 8 Tessar, light meter,range finder, filter, case. Lists $160.Like new $90. No. 503 InternationalHouse.16-inch RCA Victor TV set. Channel 11.Phono-Jack plug. Console size. $45. SO$-2771. Three 2-room apartments. Rooms $7 perweek. Cooking. Near campus. BU 8-9424,Greenfield.Room with half-bath to boy or girl. Willtake cash or baby sitting, housework,DO 3-0787, evenings,Light room. Semi-private bath. Kitchenprivileges. PL 2-0566.Sleeping room availbale for one or twoboys or couple. Phone SA 1-9316.Large front room. Private home. Fur¬nished. MU 4-6925.PersonalsLMS—October looks crowded, but thereIs that steak dinner. I'll see. WUCB, the campus radio station, and W9YWQ, the broadcasting station of the UC ama-teur radio club, provide the student body with the opportunity to study and participate inradio broadcasting. The two groups collectively form Radio Midway, with studios locatedin the basement of Burton-Judson courts.WUCB broadcasts its own studio-produced shows from 8-11 p.m., and rebroadcasts FMprograms from 9:30 a.m. till 8 p.m. and after regular program broadcasts to 1 a.m. WUCBmay be heaid in all University ested jn ra(jj,0 Work the opportun- voice, and provides facilities forhouses and International ity to learn the more specializedhouse at 640 on the AM radio aspects of radio broadcastingd*aL such as directing, engineering,Once each year WUCB runs a and technical work, as well asmarathon broadcast for charities writing and library work. The sta¬in which both student productions tion has official meetings everyand various public personalities other week in its offices.are presented.WUCB offers any student inter- radio transmitter both code and students to learn radio code andthe electronics necessary to ob-tain an amateur license.When located in its former stu¬dios in Ryerson annex, the sta¬tion was then able to contactother stations all over the world,W9YWQ operates an amateur including some in Hawaii, France.Finland, Germany, Ecuadorand Czechoslovakia.yertisementsServices Help WantedYou can rent an electric refrigerator,$4.50 and up per month. We also repairrefrigerators. CO 4-9231.Need help moving? Don’t Impose on re¬sentful friends. Let “Prime Movers”handle lt7 Special student rate. CallPL 2-6412 or HY 3-1356.LostGlasses, brown case. Washington, D C.optician. Lost vicinity of 58th, Dor¬chester, Labor Day weekend. PL 2-0153. Pianist, part time, days, salary andhours will be arranged. Call CharlesJacobs. The Compass, 1152 E. 55th St.MU 4-3757 or MI 3-0800, Ext. 3784.Men or women. Must be over 21. Todrive station wagons for schools. Morn¬ings, noons, or afternoons. $1.25 perhour. BU 8-7900.Ideal sales opportunity for studentswith leading national firm. Earn $30-$S0weekly depending »on your free hours.No samples to purchase. No canvassing.Car essential. Call WX 9-6359 or apply12th floor. 330 S. Wells. This year the club hopes to beable to increase their broadcastpower to a full Idlowatt.W9YWQ meets at least onceeach quarter, and its facilities areavailable to licensed members atalmost any time, according toGeorge F. Hawk, station man¬ager.Attractive Girlsfor part time modeling workApply after 1 p.m.6 East MonroeRoom 1304Singer portable sewing machines, $25and up. DO 3-1937.Remington portable typewriter for sale.10 years old. In very good condition.Price is reasonable. Evenings: FA 4-6291.Daytime: MI 3-0800, Ext 3182.Kindling wood and coal free—Just comeand take It away. 5325 Ellis. BU 8-7656.For rentMale graduate student wanted to share4-room furnished apartment. Call FA4-0890.Free, room and board for young lady.Exchange for baby sitting, light duties.A. J. Wolf. BO 8-2562.Free room In exchange for baby sitting3 nights weekly. No work Involved. Fe¬male only. DR 3-6467.STUDENTWIVESWORK ON CAMPUSThe Personnel Office has awide variety of full-timeclerica' and technical posi¬tions that are open. We aresure there is one that willinterest you.WE NEEDSecretariesStenographersTypistsBookkeepersClerksClinical TechniciansResearch Technicians(including)Medical ChemistsHematologistsHistologistsBacteriologistsBENEFITS INCLUDE3 weeks' paid vacation2 weeks' sick leaveTuition remissionLibrary and recreationalprivilegesapply NOWPersonnel Office956 E. 58th St. i *Smoke Tomorrow'sbetter cigarette*,Today-Enjoyneverr put a >.SMILE IN VO UR£53 SMOKING! .fe Itq&ft k Mnu To»xoco Co.