Election petitions available;deadline set for TuesdayPetitions for the forthcoming Student Government elections are now available in the SGoffice and the student service center, both in Reynolds club. •Petitions must be filed with the election and rules committee of SG in the SG officeby noon Tuesday. To be considered valid, each petition must contain the signatures of 25registered students.The all-campust SG elections, based on petitions received and validated by the deadline,will be held October 27 and 28. *The fact that the registrar’s shoqt period allowed for filing the SG floor with the Student Repre¬list of enrollment by schools petitions. sentative party moving to extendand divisions was not available Last year this same occurrence the final deadline on petitions foruntil Monday is blamed for the caused much controversy on theEnrollment increasedUniversity enrollment on the quadrangles for the fall quar¬ter has increased 7.5 per cent over last year’s figures, accord¬ing to William E. Scott, University registrar.The increase brings the totalenrollment of students on the undergraduate enrollment are not town college are not eligible,quadrangles and at University yet available, the college total is There is one representative forunendorsed candidates. The movefailed when the Independent Stu¬dents league, voting against themove, argued that SRP wantedthe time to find additional candi¬dates to be run under an independ¬ent label.Representatives are electedfrom each division, professionalschool, and the college. Studentswith courses solely in the down-Plans are proceeding without difficulty to move the stu¬dent activities office and the offices of several importanttudent organization from Reynolds club to Ida Noyesshown above), it was rumored this week. The move is sup-►oscdly planned for November or December. College to 6942, which includes 1565—1077 men and 488 women,363 special-interest registrants on an increase of 318 over last year’sthe downtown campus. 4848 stu- sutn Df 1283.dents —3638 men and 1210 women—are presently attending classes The ratio of male to female stu-tudent health <Dreaming in class hazardous9wamped by . > . > . , .conclusion of psych lectureick students * * •/Too great a number of stu¬dents are turning up at stu¬dent health when the serviceopens in the morning. HenriettaHerbolsheimqr, student health di¬rector, stated.This overly large number ofstudents necessitates individualstudents’ waiting an overly longtime to see a doctor in the early-morning hours, “If we had 30 doc¬tors on duty during those hours,the crowd still couldn’t be treatedquickly,” she stated.Miss Herbolsheimer requestedthat students call student healthbefore coming to the office andto try to wait until later in theday to be treated. A distinction was made betweenovert and covert participation—a student may be thinking aboutthe problems involved in the dis¬cussion although he does notspeak in class. each 100 students in the division.The number of representativesper division is as follows: college,16; social sciences, 10; humanities,4; law, 3; medical school, 3; fed-on the south side campus. dents in the college, remains ap- ®?ateA theological seminaries, 3;. , ** '• r biological sciences, 2; social serv-Ahhough the figures for new proximately two to one. ices administration, 2; businessschool, 2; graduate libraryschool, 1; physical science, 4.All invited togirls' rushing“Whether or not you receive aninvitation in the mail this weekfor the Inter-Club rush tea onWednesday at Ida Noyes library,from 3:30 to 5 p.m., the membersof the four women’s clubs inviteyou to attend,” stated MarilynV o n d r a k, Inter-Club rushingchairman.Rushing period begins with thetea this Wednesday and continuesfor the ensuing two-week period,October 24 to November 4. Duringthis period each club will give oneparty per week and arrange forluncheon and coke dates in theC-shop which every eligiblewoman will be invited to attend.The last day for submittingnames to the rush list is October21. Names should be submitted toMarilyn Vondrak, at Green hall,or Mrs. Berger, at the student ac¬tivities office, Reynolds club 202.by Glenn SwoggerDaydreaming in class may be fun, but it is slightly hazardous, concluded Benjamin S.Bloom, university examiner, in a lecture before the Psychology club last Tuesday.The topic was “Thought processes of students in group - learning situations.” Over aperiod of several years’, discussions in about 30 college classes have been tape-recorded andplayed back to students in class, who were then asked what they were thinking at thetime. It was found that 50 per cent of the students’ thoughts were irrelevant to the topicdiscussed, and that grades *on comprehensive examina- ences between students’ thoughts spend more tirfiE solving prob-tions were correlated with the in discussions and lectures. Stu lems.amount of relevant thinking they dents in lectures spend twice as Other research along the samedid. much time musing about events lines was mentioned as showingoutside the classroom; in discus- that personality characteristics,sions, more time is spent thinking such as anxiety or rigidity mayabout other students and about affect a student’s performance onthe student’s ability to participate examinations. Some personalityas well as others in the discussion, types are better able to retainComprehending what is being said facts, while others may be morealso occupies the lecture student’s adept at analytical or originalBloom also mentioned differ- time. Students in discussions thinking.Arrangements made for reduced rates on commons for promArrangements have been completed whereby the commonswill be available for the February 25 Wash prom at not more<ban $250. This compares with the $875 charged by the de¬partment of buildings and grounds for Bartlett gym two yearsa’’o for the prom and $300 paid by Student Union for theKnickerbocker hotel for last year’s prom.Chancellor Kimpton, talk- 71Jing informally with the inter- a l°w-*>udget prom. “Possibly thefraternity council last April, committee will be able to reduce»e WOUM do every, ft »* —'imng he could to reduce rates on .... „ .i.. Petitions are still available mme use of University facilities for the student activities office for' <nces. $750 had been charged for positions on the prom committee." Commons for the Beaux Arts “We want to have as many peti-tah last April. tioners as possible to select from.1 Chuck Mittman. chairman of We hope to use all the people who«»,> 1 a -j petition in one capacity or an-- Activities council, said even if they aren’t selected'he low price on the com as members of the committee,”$Uons would help make possible Mitman said. photo by Lewdly*$500 has been cut from the asking price of Hutchinson Commons since this picture ofthe commons was taken at the Beaux Arts ball. Arrangements have been made to rent thecommons for the Washington Promenade for under $250.Change-of-addresseesshould notify registrarStudents who have moved since they registered, or whodid not then indicate a local residence, are asked to file achange-of-address card in the Registrar’s office before Octo¬ber 20, in order that their correct address and telephonenumber may appear in the Student Directory, which will bepublished towards the end of November.Page 2 THE CHICACO MAROON October 14, 1955Tonight UC presents new TVprogram: The humanities' Toothpaste costs moreunder 'free trade'Orr to speakon Spanish revoltCharles Orr, a professor of eco¬nomies at Roosevelt college, willspeak on the topic, “Inside theSpanish revolution,” Tuesday eve¬ning at 8 in Ida Noyes hall, underthe sponsorship of the Young So¬cialist league.Orr was in Spain during theSpanish revolution, in 1936-37. Therevolution began five or six weeksprior to his arrival and had be¬come a general civil war by mid-1937.From 1950-54 Orr was in Europewith the International Confedera¬tion of Free Trade Unions, andhas also worked with the UnitedNations Educational, Scientificand Cultural Organization.Orr, who has taught in both theUnited States and Britain, is espe¬cially interested in economics andinternational trade.IT’S so EASYSHORTHANDIN 6 WEEKSFamous 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.SPEEDWRITIHG SCHOOL37 S. Wabash Financial 6-5471r~ jSpeedwriting School37 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago 3, III. IPlease send me without obligation |your 16-page brochure on Speed- Jwriting.Name |Address )ettty Zone IPhone lukM 12° uyym'120 WORDS PER MINUTE“The humanities,” a new UC sponsored television program will be presented tonight at Toothpaste is priced 4 per cent higher in states which allow9:30 on WTTW, Channel 11. fair trade agreements, reports Ward S. Bowman, Jr., associateThis broadcast, which will attempt to reflect some of the content and emphasis of the professor at the law school, in the current issue of the UCcollege humanities I course, is a “pilot” program for a thirteen week series to begin in Law Review.early December. Bowman analyzed toothpaste prices in both fair trade andFaculty member participating in this evening’s broadcast are Joshua C. Taylor, assistant non-fair trade states over a recent two-year period. He foundprofessor in the art department and the college; Gros- as a whole- the Programs willVenor W. Cooper, chairman of eventually be kinescoped for na-the department of music; HomerGoldberg, assistant professor ofEnglish in the college; and Ed- tionwide distribution through theEducational Television and RadioCenter at Ann Arbor.Ward W. Rosenheim, assistantprofessor of humanities in the col¬lege. .“The Humanities” will be aimedat viewers without specializedknowledge, and will seek to affordgreater appreciation of visual,musical and literary arts throughincreased understanding.In discussing the programs, Mr.Rosenheim said: “We feel that aseries of this sort is almost per¬fectly calculated for- educationaltelevision. Like most of our intro¬ductory courses in the college itassumes an audience who have noparticular expert knowledge ofthe arts but are anxious to acquireinformation and habits which willincrease their understanding and . , ,pleasure in the great works of the cessive Thursdays will cover the been made yesterday.human mind. We do not consider, biological sciences, humanities, The University choir was founded by William Rainey Harper, theO-board sponsorsliberal educationdiscussioniLiberal education in the biolog¬ical sciences will be the subjectof the second in a series of sixfaculty discussions sponsored byOrientation board on Thursdayafternoons. The discussion will beheld in social sciences 122 at 3:30p.m.Yesterday’s discussion centeredon liberal education in the socialsciences. Later discussions on sue- IUC Choir expresses religious •theme Thursdays on WBBMThe University will present a weekly fifteen minute program ofreligious choral music on WBBM, beginning Thursday, November3, at 9:15 p.m. according to Norbert J. Hruby, supervisor of televisionand radio of the University of Chicago. The program, to beknown as the “Sacred Note,” will have as its basic musical organiza¬tion the University choir under the direction of Richard E. Vikstrom.They will be accompanied by the University organist, HeinrichFleischer. In addition selected choirs of churches and temples in theChicago area will make occasional guest appearances.Each program will center upon a particular religious idea, commonto Potestant, Catholic, Jewish, and Eastern creeds. The idea will beexpressed in the choral music characteristic of each of the majorfaiths. In order to integrate the choral selections, the program willbe narrated by Prof. Edward W. Rosenheim, Jr.In addition to WBBM the program will be carried by sixteen otherstations in Illinois and Wisconsin. This necessitates recording theprogram on tape for delayed broadcast, the first recording havingthis series a ‘course in any sig¬nificant sense of the word but wedo hope that what our partici¬pants have to say will be sugges¬tive and even exciting.”The Humanities series as an ac¬tivity of the University radio of¬fice and is UC’s first program onWTTW. It is hope that on thebasis of this first broadcast andof proposals governing the series physical sciences, professionalschools, and the tutorial program. first president of the University, over sixty years ago. The choir hasbeen on the air previously, although not for the last several years. that when the Supreme court inthe Schwegmann ease in 1951 out¬lawed the enforcement of fairtrade prices on non-signers of fairr a d e agreements,. toothpasteprices promptly came down. Theyfailed to go up again, however,when the McGuire Act in 1952restored the right to enforce fairtrade prices on non-signers.The Study also showed thatmanufacturers’ established mini¬mum prices were widely disre¬garded in both fair trade and non¬fair trade states, by drug storesas well as food and other retailoutlets.An economist as well as a mem¬ber of the law faculty, Bowmanbased his research on data fromthe Market Research Corporationof America, which collects marketinformation on consumer pur¬chases from a national consumerpanel.Toothpaste was chosen as a typ¬ical consumer product, which isbought fairly frequently in smallquantities at a price under a dol¬lar.LUCKIES TASTE BETTER-Cleaner, fresher. Smoother!i/otfaeec-Cvnyitt'rtp America’s leading manufacturer or cigare-Ttm !' v.'©A. T Co. PRODUCT OF^m"%i ITOUPEE FOR MONKJean DrumV, of Californio WHAT’STHIS?For solution,paragraph below.DEATH OF ACHILLESJohanna Hanson RossRadcliffeFAIRY GODMOTHERS'CONVENTIONKenneth BishopDuke A FLIGHT OF IMAGINATION prompted the Droodleabove—it’s titled: Flying saucer with Lucky-smokingcrew. But it’s a down-to-earth fact that Luckies tastebetter than any other cigarettes—and for down-to-earth reasons. First of all, Lucky Strike means finetobacco. Then, that light, mild tobacco is toasted totaste even better . . . cleaner, fresher, smoother. So,“Glurg shrdlu!” (In saucer language, that means,“For taste that’s out of this world, light up a Lucky!”)DROODLES, Copyright 1953 by Roger Prica"itsI -ICOLLEGEj SMOKERSj PREFERj LUCKIES!| Luckies lead allj other brands, regu-I lar or king size,j among 36,075J college studentsquestioned coast tocoast. The number-one reason: Luckiestaste better.THE CHICAGO MAROON P«9» Il(^ober 14, 1H5'Brauer shows changes in divinity programKimpton reiterates importance of FTFby Ed BercknutnExtension of the requirements for the degree of bachelorof divinity from three to four years and establishment ofjoint professorships with other departments of the Universitywere steps outlined by Jerald C. Brauer, new dean of the Fed¬erated Theological faculty, in a new program intended to con¬tribute to closing the gap between religion and American life.The fourth D.B. year would bespent in actual parish work under speech at the installation cere-th<> supervision of the faculty. mony, stated that the creation ofBrauer’s proposals were made the office of dean of the Feder¬al his inaugural banquet at the ated faculty and the new relation-Quadrangle club Monday night, ship to the University which itIn an earlier speech at his installa- represents “marks a new era intion ceremony, Brauer accused our university.” He reiterated theProtestantism of failing to relate importance of religion as one ofitself to the forms of modem in- the major disciplines in the uni¬dust rial technological life. versity but pointed out special“It appears to have little to say characteristics expected of a theo-to responsible men of affairs as logical faculty,they engage in their daily tasks “It must be equal in scholarshipand has even less to say to labor- and ability to any other faculty iners.” he stated. “It has not been the university,” but unless it hasable to offer relevant guidance to convictions of its own, “it canmiddle and upper class people.” offer nothing new to scholarship.”Brauer went on to trace the Kimpton added,origins of this failure to the na- He continued, “This theologicalture of Protestantism, denomina- faculty must be willing to listen,tional seminaries which suffer -to participate in the common dis-from constant church pressure cussion and search for truth. Fi-for more "practical" courses at nally, it must be representativethe expense of basic theory, and of the richness and variety thatto university schools of theology exists in the spiritual life of ourwhich may be inclined to train civilization.”“scholars” rather than “minis- More than 250 persons, includ-ters.” To realize the newly pro- ing delegates from over 150 insti-posed program, “a substantial tutions, marched in the academicamount of money” must be raised, procession for the inauguration inBrauer said. Rockefeller chapel, and 300 guestsChancellor Kimpton, in his attended the banquet.photo by ZygmundWhitney foundation offers largefellowships to graduate students Edward L. Ryerson, Gerald C. Brauer, and Chancellor LawrenceA. Kimpton after the inauguration of Brauer as dean of the Feder¬ated Theological faculty on Monday.John Hay Whitney foundation is now offering Opportunityfellowships with financial grants to range from $1,000 to$3,000. Fellowships are open to citizens of the United Stateswho have given evidence of special ability and who have nothad full opportunity to develop their talents because of arbi¬trary barriers, such as racial or cultural background or re¬gions of residence. musical composition will be askedto audition before a special jury.Applicants in musical composi¬tions, creative writing, painting,sculpture, etc., will be asked tosubmit representative samples oftheir work. Apprenticeship appli¬cants in such areas as argricul-ture, industry, and labor are wel¬comed.Awards are made annually by aspecial committee on the basis offormal, written applications onforms provided by the JHWF. Ap¬plications must be filed not laterthan November 30. Awards areannounced in April or May.Communications should be ad¬dressed to 630 Fifth ave., NewYork 20.Fellowships are open foracademic graduate study orany kind of training or experi¬ence (journalism, industry, labor,the arts, etc.) which may be mostuseful in developing varied tal¬ents and forms of leadership.Awards are for a full year ofserious work, not for incidentalor temporary projects.Candidates are expected to havecompleted their general educationand be between the ages of 22 and35. In unusual cases the commit¬tee of award will use its discretionconcerning age and qualificationstipulations.Music candidates for other thanMODERNCHAIRSTABLES FIBRE RUGSLAMPSHERMANS 935 E. 55th"Big enough to serve you . . .Small enough to want to"Faculty - Personnel • Student Discounts Law fraternityreturns to UCAfter a 12-year period of inac¬tivity, the John Marshall chapterof Phi Alpha Delta law fraternityhas been reactivated at UC. Theinitiation of 17 members lastThursday preceded a dinner atthe Quadrangle club attended by120 alumni of the national legalfraternity.The 1955 rebirth of the chapteris due largely to the efforts of agroup of law students headed byRichard Hansen, according toJames M. Ratciffe, recently elect¬ed vice-justice of the group. Han¬sen has been chosen justice of thefraternity, and will work withRichard Berryman, secretary;Pete Swaslian. treasurer; andJack Alex, marshal.JO BANKScreative photography1420 E. 55th MU 4-7988NSA DiscountEye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaum Rhodes filing date |Last opportunity for studentsto file applications for Rhodesscholarships for next academicyear will be next Wednesday, Oct.19. Those who wish to apply andhave not done so should contactDr. Robert H. Ebert, in Billingshospital W 617, or at ext. 2455,Strozier denieschange in codeNo change in the student coderegarding the scheduling of meet¬ings and events sponsored by stu¬dent organizations has been made.A letter sent out by the studentactivities office stating “All meet¬ings, parties, and events are sched¬uled through this office ...” wasnot meant to be a change in policy,Dean of Students Robert M. Stro¬zier stated. “We have no intentionof having students come to theactivities office to schedule everymeeting,” Strozier added.The code provides that socialevents must be registered oneweek in advance in the activitiesoffice if they are held off campusand involve mixed groups.IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENTTo all lovers ofCLASSIC FILMSNow showing for Hie first time in the United States, a NEW RE-ISSUE, COMPLETE AND UNCUT, of the greet classic movie by SergeiEisenstein,"ALEXANDER NEVSKY"U you have never seen this movie before, you have • tremendousexperience ahead of you; if you hove seen it before, you will be inter¬ested especially in the NEW sound track, and approximately 20 min¬utes additional footage which hos up to now been left out of allprevious versions.ALSO on the some program"LIFE OF RIMSKY-KORSAKOV"In color, with excerpts from his operasCINEMA ANNEX , 3210 ADDISONStudent Rate 50c Tel. KE 3-1135 optometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372 The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236READER’S"THE CAMPUS DRUG STORE"The U. of C.'s Favorite Meeting PlaceFor 28 YearsQUALITY DRUGSFAMOUS TOILETRIESCOOD FOODWatch for this week's “Dinner For Two" winner — thewinner's name will be posted in our store Sunday ot noon61st St. and Ellis Opposite B-J Calvert clubgives lectures“Modem and medieval art:contrasts in spirituality” is thetitle of Otto von Simson’s lec¬ture and the first of a series oflecture-discussions to be givenby the Calvert club, the Catholicorganization on campus, everySunday at 4:30 in De Sale house,5735 University.Von Simson, a member of theart department and the commit¬tee on social thought, is an experton Byzantine and medieval art.He has written two books, SacredFortress and The Gothic Cathe¬dral.Von Simson will deal exclusive¬ly with paintings, choosing Ce¬zanne, Matisse, and Rouault asrepresentatives of contemporaryart, and effecting the contrastwith medieval art via slides. Bothlecture and discussion are design¬ed to examine the thesis thatmedieval and modem art are re¬volts from classic and 19th cen¬tury naturalism, respectively, butare nonetheless strikingly differ¬ent in the spirituality that under¬lies each achievement.Von Simson first came to thiscountry from Germany in 1939,joining the UC faculty in 1945.A 75-cent supper will followthe lecture.MSA holdsopen meetingMarried students associationwill hold its next open meetingWednesday at 8 p.m. in socialsciences 122. On the agenda fordiscussion at that time are a sur¬vey of economic resources of mar¬ried students at the University,with emphasis on the housingproblem; special tuition consid¬eration for spouses of full-timestudents; and research on familyhealth problems of married stu¬dents.All married students, residents,internes, fellows, and research as¬sistants are invited to attend MSAmeetings and present for discus¬sion any topic of interest to thegroup.Students to takesociological tourof city SaturdayThe Social Service Administra¬tion Club will sponsor a “sociolog¬ical” tour of Chicago Saturday,October 29, at 9 ajn.For the first time students hiother departments of the Univer¬sity will be allowed to participatein the annual event, which will beconducted by a PhD candidate insociology. A registration fee of$2.50 must be paid in advance toMrs. Smith in Cobb 203.Alpha Delt dance“Fall color” will be the themeof a free admission all-campusdance tomorrow evening at theAlpha Delt “castle,” 5747 Univer¬sity, from 9 to 12.Dancing to the music of DickGerwin’s combo will be providedupstairs in the main room of thefraternity house, w'hile free re¬freshments will be served amidautumn cornstalk settings in thebasement.Peterson Movingfir Storage Co.55th A Ellis AvenueStorage facilities for a trunk orcarload of household effectsPacking — ShippingLocal or long distance movingBUtterfield 8-C7IIPage 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 14, 1955EditorialFootball’s return to UC campusneed not bring harmful excessesOpposition to the return of football was im¬mediate last spring when a Committee toBring Back Football circulated petitions.Mocking counter-petitions calling for inter¬collegiate king-of-the mountain or intercolle¬giate post office were distributed. Argumentswere made for and against the compatibilityof “intellectual extremism” and “rah-rah-ism.” The Maroon reprinted a footballcommittee statement entitled “We can haveboth” with the editorial comment, “Can we?”The point overlooked in these argumentslast spring is that all football is not big timefootball. The gridiron sport has never beena necessary or even a very beneficial adjunctto American universities, but opposition to itsreturn to the University of Chicago has us¬ually been aimed at football as a large, wellpublicized spectator sport.As such, football certainly is to be opposed.The time and money involved in maintaininga top flight team distort the values of a uni¬versity. The idea of a mass of students,yelling every Saturday afternoon for eleven other students who probably practice toomuch and study too little, is frightening. Ina school in which the primary measure ofsuccess is intellectual performance, it isthreatening. But football does not necessarilyinvolve a great amount of time or money. Asa game played by eleven or more interestedstudents, without ballyhoo or athletic schol¬arships, it is not frightening or threatening.The answer to the question: “Can we haveboth?” is yes — if football is played on a smallscale as it is at Harvard, Massachusetts In¬stitute of Technology, and other prominentschools. Chicago alumni have not made bas¬ketball or baseball into big sports. There issmall danger they will be able to push inter¬collegiate football into a big time sport, ifthat is their wish, since they have not beenable to resurrect it since its death in Decem¬ber, 1939. Football, if it returns, can be playedon a small scale. It need not grow largeenough to distort University values. Argu¬ments against its return should not assumethat it will. MUMmlUMUUUiiCo-ed itors-in-cKiefJoy S. Burboch Palmer W. Pinney■Managing editor Business managerWilliam M. Brandon Gary MokotoffExecutive news eultor Sue TuCultural editors Judy Podore, Robert MoodySports editor Mitrt Dozoret*Photo editor George ZygmtindNews editor Dave BobrovCopy editor Norman LewakCalendar editor Earl Kerric*Production managers Robert Quinn, Jean KwonSupplement editor Robert QuinnPersonnel manager Jack BurbachAdvertising manager Lawrence KesslerAccountanl-in-charge Tom KapuritanEditorial staff: James Birmingham, Sam Blazer, Barbara Flschman, RowmarvGalli, Lois Gardner, Ronald Grossman, Jeanne Hargitt, Bruce Larkin, LindaLibera, Gene Rochlin, Karl Rodman, Glen Swogger, Fred Karst.ACASA Book StoreScholarly Used Books — Bought and SoldImported Greeting CardsReliable Typewriter ServiceHY 3-9G51 1322 E. 55th St.LettersSC defendedIn Tuesday’s editorial aboutdivisional orientation there isa serious omission w hich leadsto an unbalanced picture of thesituation as it affects students.Conceding an insufficiency ofcommunication with members ofthe Divisional Orientation com¬mission, an all too common hu¬man failing at times when peopleare moving or leaving, I wish topoint out, as the Maroon did not,that plans for a continued sum¬mer orientation program werecarried out with unprecedentedsuccess.Student Government conducteda full and w'ell publicized orienta¬tion program at the beginning ofthe summer quarter, includingguided tours of the campus, bustrips about the city, movies, andchartered buses to the concertsat Ravinia. In addition, the Gov¬ernment demonstrated its desireto be helpful along these linesthroughout the whole summer by aiding and publicizing a weeklyopen house at Ida Noyes, and thehard work of a handful of gov¬ernment members led to the greatsuccess of this program.Before this quarter began, Stu¬dent Government planned itsOrientation Week program, andarranged to have Governmentmembers living in the dorms andhelping out in numerous waysthroughout the week. Again, itsactivities and tours provided amost useful addition to O-Weekfor both college and divisions.Now the Maroon has sufferedfrom the human failing of forget¬ting what happened during thesummer orientation program, andof being unaware that its Divi¬sional Night representatives nevershowed up, so that Governmentmembers have to set up the Ma¬ roon exhibit and provide a Maroonrecruiting list. It therefore seemsunfortunate that the Maroonshould mention only our ineffi¬cient communication with eachother, and not take the trouble tobe reminded that the orientationprogram did not suffer, but rath¬er benefited UC students morethan ever before.Peter GreeneEditors' notesThe Maroon appreciates thekindness of SG in setting up theMaroon exhibit divisional night,but would remind SG that ha<j webeen notified sooner, this mightnot have been necessary.* * *In reference to Tuesday’s let¬ter, Dean Robert M. Stroziermaintains open office hours in theadministration building daily, be¬sides his two afternoons in theReynolds club. PHOTOSTATSMode While-You-WoitENID T. V. INC.NOTARY PUBLIC1144 East 55th Street PLaxa 2-0700£//ie f /Sum PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETCARMEN'SUsed Furniture StoreMoving and Light Hauling1365 E. 55th MU 4-9003 LMiiiiiiimiiimiiitiiiiiiiiiitiiuiiiiiiitiiiiiiitiuiiiiitiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimttim’:I Check These Features1 V PROMPT SERVICE| / DEPENDABILITY= V ECONOMY. . . and then remember , . .— The Students Favorite —| University Quick Laundry f| ' 1376 East 55th StreetE PLaxa 2-9097 =numiunmuumuiumiumiimmiimimNimuMmumiimiimmmmmm7;Too soon? Not for a Sun LifeForPersonalityandCustomizedHaircutTRY ...LOUIE’SBarber Shop1110 E. 55 th StreetTWO BARBERS TERRY’S PIZZA“The World's Best'9SPECIALINTRODUCTORY OFFER25C Discount on any Pizzaeaten here...or deliveredSmoM .1.00Medium .1.45Large .1.95Giant .2.95We Carry a Full Line of FoodsFREE DELIVERY FORU. of C. STUDENTS1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045; It's never too soon to have a SUN LIFE OF CANADAman discuss your life insurance problems with you.You will find him qualified and competent in alllife insurance matters.The SUN LIFE representative in your community isRALPH J. MOOD, Jr., ’481 NORTH LA SALLE STREET, CHICAGO, 2, ILLINOISfR 2-2390 • GA 2-5273“ ' V-V ’. v w • . * • . .• '. _ . .. i 3 I _Page 5flctober 14, 1955Over two teams report to football classIf intercollegiate football returns to campus in the next few years, it will be because of the footballclass practicing on North field. Over two full teams report to coach Kyle Anderson every day, puffingthrough calisthenics and running through practice drills.Few of the players look like future all-Americans; most are of moderate height and weight; somehave been out for track, basketball, and other sportsrequiring less brawn in past years; none appears closeto an athletic scholarship for football.But every afternoon they troop out onto North field to bedrilled and instructed by coach Anderson. As yet, they havebeen issued only sweatclothes and sneakers. They will not re¬ceive hip pads, shoulder pads, helmets and cleats until theyare conditioned to take hard body contact. Blocking drillsand passing exercises are their routine now.If they do achieve good condition and enough of them re¬main, later in the quarter, they will stage one or two intra¬mural games. Chicago dropped intramural tackle ball duringthe war. Touch ball, with no blocking allowed, has been aregular part of Kooman Boycheff’s intramural program atthe University. Fraternity, college house, and independentteams met each other without tackling or equipment each fallon the North field and on fields marked out on the Midway.No tackle ball of any kind has been played since the war.It is unlikely that intercollegiate football will develop outof the football class sooner than 1957, if at all. Chicagodropped intercollegiate football in December, 1939. It droppedout of the western conference, the “Big Ten,” in 1946. Smallschools like Beloit and St. Olaf’s probably will make up theChicago schedule, should football be resumed as an intercol¬legiate sport. Right now a number of players report to KyleAnderson every day on North field.Blocking, handing-off, and ab¬sorbing knowledge, football classmembers practiced Tuesday. KyleAnderson (below) coaches them.The photo on the right was takenby George Zygmund. The othersare by John Brystryn.Dr. Sigmund would have hadfun psychoanalyzing footballBRITISH BOOKS atBRITISH PRICESCatalogues will be issuedshortlyIfl ah e sure you are onour mailing listSCHNEEMANNS1328 East 57th Street^FARLtSS^OSDICK (Editor’* note: This article first appeared on September 10 in an Issue of the Rocky MountainRerald, a weekly humor magazine published in Denver. The author of the article, poet ThomasHornsby Ferril, is on the board of editors of the paper. Ferril granted permission for use of thearticle to a UC faculty member.)As I look back over the intellectual caprices of the past quarter century, I am amazedthat neither the Marxists nor the Freudians ever took out after football. There’s not asingle book on the subject. It is now too late. In Olympian celebration, Marx and Freud areobsolete; the atom has taken over, the football, for the moment, seems reasonably safefrom encroachment, although we may still see a few flurries; cobalt tracers, perhaps, forthe study of the parabolas of flat passes, but it won’t amount to much because the atom iscut out for graver duties.If the Marxists had been were notoriously selfish fellows; at the autumn equinox and cul-more alert, they could have they wanted everything whole- minate on the first day of the Newmade something out of football as hoSl they were always extremely Year with great festivals identi-brutal capitalistic exploitation of jeal°us of anthropologists, and, as fied with bowls of plenty; thethe working class. They might You look bat‘k on their dilemma as festivals are associated with flow-have noted a few strikes for high- far as football was concerned, ers such as roses, fruits, such aser pay and a court decision en- their dog-in-the-manger attitude oranges, farm crops such as cot-titling a college football player to was Pei‘haps justified, for no self- ton, and even sun-worship andworkman’s compensation benefits respecting Freudian could ever appeasement of great reptilesfollowing injury. have done a full-dress job on foot- such as alligators.But it was the Freudians who bal1 without cutting some detest- In these rites the egg of life ismade the colossal blunder. You ed anthropologist in on the gravy, symbolized by what is called “thecould argue that they overlooked But had the Freudians been less oval,” an inflated bladder coveredfootball on the grounds that it self-centered and had they wel- hog skin. The convention ofwas just too big to be noticed on corned a bit of anthropological “the oval” is repeated in the archi-those Saturday afternoons w'hen assistance, just think of the mon- tectural oval-shaped design of thethe college library was free for umental treatises by which the vast outdoor churches in whichtheir invasions of faction, drama, scientific literature of the period the services are held every Sab-poetry, painting, sculpture, music might have been enriched, great bath in every town and city, alsoand economics. books wedding the wisdom of every Sunday in the greaterYet why, when the whole town Gesammelte Schriften with the centers of population w'here anwas roaring over their heads, did profundity of The Golden Bough, advanced priesthoood performs,they pay no attention to the emo- * * * These enormous roofless churchestional frenzy? Frankly. I think Let me set down, in nostalgic dominate every college campus;they must have, but the Freudians summary, some of the findings no other edifice compares in sizethat might have been made, had with them, and they bear witnesspw the Freudians not been sulking in to the spiritual developmenttheir tents. of the culture that produced them.Obviously, football is a syn- * * *drome of religious rites symboliz- Literally millions of worshipersing the struggle to preserve the attend the Sabbath services inegg of life through the rigors of these enormous open-air churches,impending winter. The rites begin Subconsciously, these hordes of_ worshipers are seeking an outletfrom sex-frustration in anticipa¬tion of violent masochism andsadism about to be enacted by aSee ‘Football,’ page €Louise BarkerphotographerPortraitsof thestudentby anartist1457 E. 57th St.BU 8-0876 pr ww ▼ wwww smrvv wwyrw sr•FIRE aid THEFT INSURANCE; ALL LINES OF INSURANCEPhone or Write J\ Joseph H. Aaron, '27 |•135 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-1060'by AL CAPP OUCH.?- MV SHREWD LEGALSENSE TELLS ME THIS FIGHTIS-o^l^-NOT ENTIRELY f~FAIR//'— BUT— •NEAT HAIR,1(WJTH W/LDROOT |CR£AMO/L)GIVES MEOONFIDCHCEffIF VOUSE CAN LICKOUR-c^oCk^/- NEW 'MEMBER,TH' WHOLE GANGWILL SURRENDER,FOSDlCKl/—z <—C«|m6A.C- CONTAINS NATURE'SLANOLIN!/-RELIEVESDRVN ESS"-REMOVESLOOSEDANDRUFF//-GET WILDROOTCREAM-OILCHARLIE!/ BUT, DATWOULD BEILLEGAL-MV NAME.ISARTHUR!/ Jimmy \sSINCE 1940ACECYCLE SHOPYour BicycleHeadquartersWe service what we sellRepairs & Parts all makes819 E. 55 MI 3-26729 A.M. - 6 P.M.Page 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 14, 1955Christian Scientistshold talk, receptionA lecture with a religious theme and a Sunday afternoon re¬ception are on this month’s Christian Science agenda in addi¬tion to the regular testimonial meetings.“Christian Science: magnifying God in prayer” is thesubject of the free lecture to be given at 8 p.m. Tuesday inBreasted hall of the Oriental institute by Earl Simms, C.S.,member of the board of lec-tureship of the mother church, with Key to Scriptures, hymns,the First Church of Christ, and an informal discussion con-geientist, Boston. Massachusetts, earning Christian Science.At this phase of his present na- Those interested in obtainingtionwide tour, Simms plans to . the Christian Science Monitortalk on the spiritual understand- may contact Eddie Simmons, cir-jng of the Lord’s prayer. Simms culation representative on cam-was a prominent businessman in pus, through the group’s box inhis home town, Austin, Texas, be- the Reynolds club,lore becoming a full-time practi¬tioner of Christian Science heal- _ - “ -ing in 1935. Since he became a lec- dlClpCl SCYYtlOYlturer in 1946, he has toured this *country and points abroad. (q COYnmeYtlOYCLteThis semi-annual free lecture is _ .sponsored by the Christian Scien- rtlCLYtyVCd bisflOt)tist organization on campus. The ~ *purpose of this event is to explain Services at Rockefeller chapelthe religion to the public. this Sunday will be an observanceOn Sunday, October 30, the of the 400th anniversary'of thegroup plans a reception, for per- martyrdom of Hugh Latimer,sons particularly interested in T ,. ........Christian Science, at 3:30 in Ida La"mer was an Angllcan blshoPNoyes hall. Edward Froderman, who was executed by Oliver Crom-C.S., a member of Christian Sci- well,ence committee on publication forthe state of Illinois, will speak.Weekly Tuesday evening testi¬monial meetings, also open to the the histo‘ry cf Christianity at Colpublic, are held in Thorndike Hil¬ton chapel, at 1150 58th street,Irom 7-8 p.m. The program, con¬ducted by a group-elected leader, the subject,usually consists of readings from require of a Christian man?”the Bible and the Christian Scien¬tist textbook, Science and Health Plan UC chapterof national groupon civil libertiesA planning meeting for a UCchapter of a national civil libertiesorganization will be held Mondaynight at 7:30 in Ida Noyes.The meeting is being held by agroup of University students asa response to the suggestion thatthere should be a chapter of eitherthe American Civil Libertiesunion or the Workers Defenseleague at the University of Chi¬cago.The services will be builtaround the idea of the martyrdom.Winthrop F. Hudson, professor ofgate-Rochester Divinity school,Rochester, N. Y., will preach onWhat does ChristDames holdopen-house* The University of Chicago Domesclub will hold its annual openhouse for old ond new membersond their husbonds tomorrow at8 p.m. in Ido Noyes.The Dames club offers wives ofUniversity students the opportunityto meet socially both in the largegroup ond in smaller groups forsewing, bridge, or sports activities.ClassifiedWantedItalian language records. To buy, rent,borrow, beg or steal. Edward Kaufmann.Ext 1267 or MI 3-7416.Persons to do volunteer work in com¬munity centers. Living in and co-opera¬tive cooking arrangements available.Contact Jim Carpenter, Halsted St.Community Center, 1935 S. Halsted,CA 6-2559.Help WantedBaby-sitter—permanent, five afternoons,Monday-Friday. 1:30 or 2 to 4 p.m. $10week. Mrs. Sandke, Ext. 3151.Part-time employment Until Xmas.Earn $2.25 or more per hour. DO 3-1838.Ideal sales opportunity for students withleading national firm. Earn $30-$50weekly depending on your free hours.No samples to purchase. No canvassing.Car essential. Call WE 9-6359 or apply12th floor, 330 S. Wells.Beceptionist-assistant for approximately25 hours, Tuesday through Saturday.Apply In person. Jo Banks studio ofcreative photography. 1420 E. 55th, 1-7p.m., Wednesday, October 19.Services For Rent Football...(from page 5)highly trained priesthood ofyoung men. Football obviouslyarises out of the Oedipus complex.Love of mother dominates theentire ritual. The churches, with¬out exception, are dedicated toAlma Mater, Dear Mother.The rites are performed on arectangular area of green grass,oriented to the four directions.The grass, symbolizing summer,is striped with ominous whitelines representing t h e knifingsnows of winter. The white stripesare repeated in the ceremonialcostumes of the four whistlingmonitors who control the servicesthrough a time period divided intofour quarters, symbolizing thefour seasons.The ceremony begins with col¬orful processions of musiciansand semi-nude virgins who niQvein and out of ritualized patterns.This excites the thousands offrenzied worshippers to rise fromtheir seats, shout frenzied poetryin unison, and chant ecstatic an¬thems through which runs theOedipus theme oft willingness todie for love of Mother.The actual rites, performed by22 young priests of perfect phy¬sique, might appear to the un¬initiated as a chaotic conflict con¬cerning only with hurting theoval by kicking it, then endeavor¬ing to rescue and protect the egg.However, the procedure is high¬ly stylized. On each side there areeleven young men wearing color-—French tutoring to fit individual needs.Moderate rates. Phone DO 3-6101.Dressmaking. Alterations. Quick service.RA 4-7647, mornings or evenings.Reed help moving? Don’t impose onresentful friends. Let “Prime Movers"handle it. Special student rate. CallPL 2-6412 or HY 3-1356. PersonalFor SaleGood baby carriage. Makes car bed, too.3 by 5 Persian style rug. like new. Rea-sonable. BU 8-7430.; BORDONE► * MODEL CAMERA SHOP132?) E. 55lh St. HY 3-!)259J Movers and Light Haulingj Hyde Pork's Most CompleteVI 6-9832 ! Comero ShopAISA Discount ful and protective costumes. Thegroup in so-called "possession” ofthe oval first arrange themselvesin an egg-shaped “huddle,” as it iscalled, for a moment of prayer¬ful meditation and whispering ofsecret numbers to each other.Then they rearrange themselveswith relation to the position ofthe egg. In a typical “formation”there are seven priests “on theline,” seven being a mystical num¬ber associated not, as Jung puristsmight contend, with the “sevenlast words” but actually, with sub¬limation of the “seven deadlysins” into “the seven cardinalprinciples of education.”The central priest crouches overthe egg, protecting it with hishands while over his back quar¬ters hovers the “quarter-back.”The transposition of “back quar¬ters” to “quarter-back" is easilyexplained by the Adler school. Tothe layman, the curious postureassumed by the “quarter-back,” ashe hovers over the central priest,immediately,suggests the Cretanorigins of Mycenaean animal art,but this popular view is untenable.Actually, of course, the “quarter¬back” symbolizes the libido, com-,bining two instincts, namely (a)Eros, which strives for even clos¬er union, and (b) the instinct fordestruction of anything which liesin the path of• Eros. Moreover,the “pleasure-pain” excitement ofthe hysterical worshipers focusesentirely on the actions of the lib¬ ido-quarter back. Behind him amthree priests representing themale triad.At a given signal, the egg ispassed by sleight-of-hand to «,neof the members of the triad whoendeavors to move it by bodilyforce across the lines of winter.At the end of the second quar¬ter, implying the summer solstice,the prdeessions of musicians andsemi-nude virgins are resumed.After forming themselves intopictograms, representing alpha¬betical and animal fetishes, thevirgins perform a most curiousrite, requiring far more dexteiMythan the earlier phallic MaypoleTituals from which it seems to v*derived. Each of the virgins ear-ries a wand of shining metalwhich she spins on her fingertips,tosses playfully into the air andwith which she interweaves herbody in most intricate gyrations.The virgins perform anotherimportant function throughoutthe entire service. This concernsthe mystical rite of “conversion"following success of one of theyoung priests in carrying theoval across the last white line ofwinter. As the moment of “con¬version” approaches, the virginskneel at the edge of the glass,bury their faces in the earth, thenraise their arms to heaven in sup.plication, praying that “the up-rights will be split.” “Convension”is indeed a dedicated ceremony.—Must sell by Monday! Twin bed set.Double bed frame. Arm chair. Carpetsweeper. Wringer washer. Cheap. HY3-4998.Metal wardrobe cabinet. White porce¬lain top kitchen cabinet table. Child'stable and chair. Toy chest. Doll bed.Metal radiator covers. Window shades.Curtain rod. Two pair green drapes.Naxon washer. Hollywood broiler. Waf¬fle Iron. Schwinn 28-inch racer bike.5 by 8 Kelsey printing press with largeassortment type in trays and cabinet.Saxophone. Call FA 4-7583.Table. Rises on hind legs. $50. Originallyover $100. Mrs. Manste. CO 1-0607.Larousse Universal, 2 vol., $10. BedierHazard, literature francaise, 2 vol. 1941ed. 75 cents. Call GR 7-5480, eveningsor weekend, days, morning.1955 Austiri-Heally 100, red with blacktop, like new, 4,900 miles. Best offerover $2,650. Call J. Strasser at PL 2-9835after 4 p.m.Free KittensPlease, please, please, please, please,please, please, please, please, doesn’tsomeone want a kitten? PL 2-2069.Kitchenette: Clean, convenient to Uni¬versity, transportation. 6055 S. Dor¬chester, MI 3-9372. Mr. Nitta. Apply 12noon-3:30 p.m., 6:30-10 p.m. Attention:Jack Shonfleld.Pete Seeger folk-song concert, Friday,Nov. 11, 8:15 p.m. Kenwood-Ellis com¬munity church. Admission $1.Bunny’: What DO you do. anyway? TheBobbsey twins are planning a leafy sur¬prise. Kitzichka.L.M.F.: congratulations on Nat. Scl. 2.Hope Sam gets car. Pulitzer. A Campus-to-Career Case History“I represent 30,000 people'"That’s the population of the MasonCity, Iowa, area where Jack MacA1 lister(Iowa U., ’50) is Manager for North¬western Bell Telephone Company. Howwould you like this kind of job?• • •44 As Telephone Manager I representMason City to my company, and vice-versa. Among my customers are bank¬ers, farmers, housew ives, merchants ...each with different questions and prob¬lems about telephone service. Throughpublic information and good business office service, my people and I do ourbe9t to furnish the answers. »44 My assignment calls for varied activi¬ties—sales, public relations, office super¬vision. One minute I'm describing anew construction program to a group ofbusinessmen ... the next explaining anew service to a rural customer.44 It’s a job with lots of variety and re¬sponsibility, and I enjoy every day of itMy supervisor is 75 miles away,*9 saysJack, “and that puts me pretty much-onmy own—which U the way I like it,9eJack MacAUister graduated with a B.S. in Com¬merce and started with Northwestern Bell aboutfive years ago. As Telephone Manager at the ageof 28, he is typical of the many young men who arebuilding careers in telephone work. Similar op¬portunities exist today with other Bell telephonecompanies . . . also with Bell Telephone Labora¬tories, Western Electric and Sandia Corporation.Your Placement Officer has all the details. BELLTELEPHONESYSTEM* P. S. Since this case history was prepared, Jack has been promoted.Now a manager at Des Moines, Iowa, he has increased responsibilities.kw-. -JOctober 14f 1955 fHE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Four great UC towersfeature chimes, carillonsAround four great towers revolves the life of the University. Mitchell tower, the towersof the Chicago Theological seminary, the First Unitarian church and the Rockefeller Me¬morial chapel combine to make this a university of notable towers. All are in Gothic har¬mony with one another. Though three were built almost simultaneously, each standsindependent with its own distinct beauty. AH contribute toward making this, architectural¬ly, one of the most impressive universities in the world.Oldest of the four, Mitchell .tower, rises above Hutchinsoncommons and the Reynoldsclub. It was built in 1903 andnamed after John J. Mitchell,benefactor of the U n i r s i t y.Every autumn for the past fiftyyears its bells have sounded awelcoming peal to new students.During this Orientation weekmembers of the University Socie-las Campanariorum (society ofbell-ringers), presented specialconcerts of English folk music.This will not only serve as a greet¬ing but a reminder of the uniquelink with England representedby this tower.Modeled after Oxford■Mitchell tower was modeledafter Magdalen tower at Oxford.Magdalen tower is somewhathigher than Mitchell (127 feet and3 inches) but except for differingcorner pinnacles the copy >6 al¬most perfect. Magdalen tower has This story of Mitchell tower is port of o "Towers of the University**series written by Jomes R. Lawson, carillonneur of Rockefeller Memorialchapel and director of the Societas Campanariorium (Society of bell¬ringers) o student organization which rings the Mitchell tower chimes.Membership of the Societas is open to all students through calling Lawsonon extension 1085 ond 1082.ten bells and Mitchell tower hasexactly ten bells.The ten bells came from theWhitechapel foundry in Londonwhere “Big Ben” and some of the proximately a dozen outside Eng¬land which can be rung by ropesand wheels in the traditional Eng¬lish manner known as "change-ringing.” At the moment, authen-largest bells in the world were tic change-ringing in Chicagocast. The "tenor” or largest bell must wait until another benefac-in Mitchell tower has a weight of tor presents the ringers with new2,443 lbs. and is inscribed: "A ropes to replace those rottinggracious woman retaining honor.” after years of disuse.The "gracious woman” was Alice Before the first World War,Freeman Palmer, dean of women English change-ringing was actu-when the University was young, ally practiced in Mitchell tower.Directly opposite the entrance to On November 21, 1908, historyHutchinson commons is a plaque was made with the achievementdesighed by Daniel Chester of the first successful peal. 720French which indicates that the changes of "Plain Bob Minor”ten bells ring as a memorial to were rung in 26 minutes by a bandof eight trained ringers speciallyimported from England by theMrs. Palmer.One of a dozenThe Palmer chime is one of apStudent editorvisiting MidwayUC publication organizations are host this week to Man-goensapoetro Soelistio, director of the Gadjah Mada StudentPublishing Foundation of Indonesia. Soelistio will attendMaroon, Chicago Review, and UC press functions.The visit to UC is 3 part ofan international tour of the university and secondary levelPhilippines, Japan, and the United textbooks. The profits are appliedStates to study methods and tech- to expand student publishing andniques of student publishing activ- finance other student activities.Ities, the relationship between stu¬dent and university presses andthe role of these methods of com¬munication as part of the demo¬cratic w'ay of life, stated Soelistio.Soelistio’s foundation is a stu¬dent-owned and operated, self-supporting publishing house. Itsobject is to aid in the promotionof Indonesian culture. The foun¬dation publishes a monthly stu¬dent magazine and also publishesAttractive Girlsfor part time conventionworkApply after 1 p.m.6 East MonroeRoom 1304 Soelistio’s career in Indonesianjournalism began in 1945 when hebecame correspondent, and soonafter editor of the Voice of theY’outh, a student weekly. In 1948he was information officer for themilitary governor’s staff in cen¬tral Java. During the Dutch occu¬pation in f949 he edited the under¬ground papers called Fire and17 August.In 1951 he became chief editorof the Gadjah Mada magazine. In1953 he stepped into the director¬ship of the publishing foundation.Soelistio is chiefly interested inthe editing and distribution ofUC publications. He leaves Octo¬ber 16 for the University of Illi¬nois.The Compass1152 East 55th MU 4-3757Opening Oct. 19"THE FIFTHAMENDMENT"Also at the CompassMonday nites:Folk MusicTuesday nites:Open House,improvisations by theaudience Open Every NiteNo admission chargeEntertainment at 9:15For Your ConvenienceTHE COMPASSIS MOVINGNovember 4th tolarger quartersatTHE DECK5473 S. Lake Park University. One of the originalringers, Frances J. Rumens, fromLeeds, is still living in Chicagoand is an honored friend of theSocietas Campanariorum.Today the bells are soundedby a method known in Englandas "clocking.” New students areinvited to climb to the fourthfloor ringing chamber and watchthe ringers at their "clocking.”Also in the ringing chamber theSocietas Campanariorum holdsweekly practice sessions withEnglish hand bells loaned to theringers by another Englishchange-ringer, Ernest Weatherhy.The "clocking” is performed eachBaptist groupholds open-housefor UC studentsThe Baptist graduate studentcenter is holding an open housefor all Baptist graduate ^tudentsSunday at 4 p.m. at the center,4901 Ellis.Reverend Harry H. Kruener,dean of the chapel at Denison uni¬versity will lead a discussion on“Religion and the crisis of theuniversity.” After the discussionan explanation of the program ofthe center will be given by its di¬rector Reverend Walter Sillen.Refreshments will be served.The Baptist graduate studentcenter offers a resident fellowshipfor Baptist students in the divi¬sions and professional schools andyear-round seminar programs forall Baptist graduate students. Mitchell tower photo by ColemanMonday through Friday at 12:15,6, and 10:05 p.m.Ring grace periodEach night at 10 Bruce Cushnawalks across University avenuefrom his Alpha Delt fraternityhouse to play at 10:05 the AlmaMater. This is done in cheerfulcompliance with a request madeby Coach Amos Alonzo Stagg,who wanted his football playerson their way home to bed by adecent hour. The five-minutegrace period was granted so that they might have time for a fare¬well kiss with their girl friends.Now Bruce rings the Alma Malerand an evening hymn not as a cur¬few for amorous football playersbut as a bell benediction on theday.A special gala ringing of theMitchell tower chime wasgiven at noon on October 7 byDouglas Maurer. Through its bellsthe University wished Chancel¬lor Kimptort many happy returnson his birthday.'Souvenir' bail-point penstaken by health examineesThe new “screening” method used by the UC student healthservice in giving physical examinations to students at the be¬ginning of last quarter was discovered to have a hole. Approx¬imately 70 per cent of the bail-point pens given students tofill out the new health self-evaluation questionnaires Pi/tn YP+i<suPslipped through this hole and A 111,1 ' ^"rten,ly tak™ home includes scenesHenrietta Herbolsheimer, direc- TTCtor of student health, stated that '•'Civ KJshe wished all those w’ho acci- a new and complete re-issue ofdently took pens home would re- the Eisenstein film classic, Alex-turn them as soon as possible a„der Nevsky, will have its Ameri-since the pen supply at student can premiere tonight at the Cine-health has been considerably de- ma Annex theatre, 3210 W. Madi-pleted. Several have already re- SOn. The re-issue includes aboutturned pens,-she noted. 20 minutes of scenes never beforeOtherwise, the new multiple seen in the United States, as wellscreening process was "very ac- as an improved sound track whichceptable” according to Dr. Her- brings out the beauty of the Pro-bolsheimer. Over 1500 students kofieff score written for thewere examined, and those who movie.need further examinations havealready had them scheduled.“Enjoy Our Fino Continental Cuisine inRelaxed Air Conditioned Atmosphere”G0NTINENTAL GOURMET RESTAURANTOpen Doily (except Mondeys) from 4:30 - 10:00Sundays — 12 Noon - 10 P.M.1508 E. 57th Street Phone PLnzn 3-0355 On the same program, as thesecond feature, is the color-musi¬cal Rimsky-Korsakov, with nu¬merous scenes from the compos¬er’s great operas. Nicolai Cherkas-sov, considered the Soviet Union’sgreatest living actor, plays theleading role in both films.The program runs for one weekonly, ending Thursday, October20. Student tickets are 50 cents.SHIRTS -TTTT-. 11c- Th* PiicrBeautifully Washed and Ironed LJISCwhen included with ourWASH and DRY service 1367 E. 57th St.•8 lbs. - 89c RECORDKWIK-WAY OF THE WEEKHaydn"Lord Nelson Mass"CASH AND CARRY LAUNDRY1214 E. 61 sf Street conducted byBetween Wood Sewn ond Kimbork Mario Rossi‘ Woinff Student Laundry for 45 Years” Each Guild 4704.98 list price 3.99 sole pricePage 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 14, 1955Coming events on quadranglesFriday, October 14LECTURE by Hon. Frank Lucas,formerly justice of SupremeCourt of Union of South Africa,on “South Africa and the racequestion,” 3:30 pm. in socialsciences 122.MICROBIOLOGY CLUB lecture.Ricketts N 1, 4:30 p.m., “Anti¬body s>rnthesis,” Prof. W. T.Taliaferro.HILLEL FOUNDATION Sabbathservice at 7:45 p.m., followed at8:30 by fireside discussion. Prof.James Franck, speaking “Inmemory of Albert Einstein.”DOCFILM, The Battleship Potem¬kin (Russian), social science122. 7:15 and 9:15 p.m.. first ina study series, admission byseries ticket only.FRIDAY FROLIC, Internationalhouse. 8 p.m.Saturday, October 15VARSITY CROSS COUNTRYMEET. Washington park, 11a m., UC vs. Butler university.VARSITY SOCCER GAME. Staggfield. 2 p.rn., UC vs. Illinois-Navy Pier.BACII SINGERS, Ida Noyes hall.1:30 p.m.SOCIALIST CLUB PARTY, sing¬ing. politics, and beer on tap.6106 Ellis, 7:30 p.m.PORTER FOUNDATIONCOUPLES, organization and so¬cial meeting, chapel house,8 p.m.UC DAMES CLUB, annual openhouse for all UC students’ wivesand their husbands, Ida Noyeshall, 8 p.m.AUTUMN OPEN HOUSE of Al¬pha Delta Phi, with dancing andrefreshments. At the chapterhouse, 9-12 p.m. Admission freeto the entire campus.Sunday, October 16EPISQOPAL communion service,Bond chapel, 8:30 a m.LUTHERAN communion service,■ Hilton chapel, 10 a.m.RADIO BROADCAST, WMAQand NBC, 10:35 a.m., “Educationfor religion,” with Dean Brauerof FTF, and three FTS students.See the striking newsculpturedpendontsbyRosemaryZwickinoriginalhand-madedesigns1.50 to 3.50with matchingearrings4.00 and 6.00University Bookstore5802 Ellis AvenueCOMOPIZZERIA1520 E. 55th St.• Bar-be-cue ribs• Bar-be-cue chickenDelivery AnywhereFA 4-5525 UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUSSERVICE, Rockefeller chapel,11 a.m. Sermon: “What doesChrist pequire of a Christianman?” by Prof. Winthrop S.Hudson, Colgate-Rochester Di¬vinity School.GREEN HALL OPEN HOUSE,1:30-5 p.m.CALVERT CLUB lecture, “Mod¬ern and medieval art: contrastsin spirituality,” DeSales house,4 p.m.GLEE CLUB meeting, Ida Noyeshall, 4 p.m.BAPTIST GRADUATE STU¬DENT open house, 4901 Ellis,4 p.m.photo by H. BeckerFriedrich Heiler, visiting pro¬fessor with the FTF, who willgive this quarter’s Haskell lee-lures, beginning Monday.YOUNG SOCIALIST LEAGUE,discussion, “Heroes and history,the role of the individual,” IdaNoyes hall, 4 p.m.CANTERBURY CLUB openhouse, 3-5 p.m., 5540 Wood lawn.MAROON editorial meeting. 4:30p.m., Reynolds club 201.BADMINTON, Ida Noyes gym,3:30-6 p.m. _PORTER FELLOWSHIP, Swiftcommon room, 6 p.m., supperand discussion on “Christianfaith and university life” withPerry LeFevre of FTF. YOUNG FRIENDS, panel discus¬sion “What is there in Quaker¬ism that speaks to my condi¬tion?” 5615 Woodlawn,7:30 p.m.INDEPENDENT STUDENTLEAGUE caucus, 7:30 p.m.,Judsori library, Burton-Judson.STUDENT REPRESENTATIVEPARTY caucus, 7:3fi) p.m., IdaNoyes hall.CHANNING CLUB, 8 p.m., parlorof First Unitarian church, dis¬cussion with Richard Ward,former editor of the Maroon,concerning his visit in 1953 tothe USSR.CHAMBER RECITAL. UC Musi¬cal society, Ida Noyes library,8 p.m., w’orks by Hindemith,Bartok, Corelli. Ravel, and Han¬del.Monday, October 17HEBREW SPEAKING group,12:30 p.m., 5715 Woodlawn.HILLEL FOLK DANCING group,3:30 p.m., 5715 Woodlawn.WALGREEN LECTURE. Breas¬ted hall, 4:30 p m., “PraisingGod in English.” Allen Sapp,asst. prof, of music, Harvarduniversity.HASKELL LECTURE. “Womanin primtive and ancient magicalreligion (I),” Friedrich Heiler,visiting professor, FTF. socialscience 122. 4:30 p.m.SWIMMING for women only, IdaNoyes pool. 4:30 6 p.m.CIVIL LIBERTIES COMMITTEE,organizational meeting, IdaNoyes hall, 7:30 p.m.INTERNATIONAL HOUSEMOVIE, Panic (French 1, assem¬bly hall, 8 p.m., 45 cents.NEW TESTAMENT CLUB, Swiftcommon room, 8 p.m.Tuesday, October 18STUDENT ASSEMBLY PETI¬TION deadline, 12 noon. Stu¬dent Government office.INTERVARSITY CHRISTIANFELLOWSHIP, luncheon, IdaNoyes hall, 12:30 p.m.MAROON staff meeting, 3:30pm., Reynolds club 201.PROGRESSIVE PAINT & HARDWARE1158 E. 55 NSA Discounts HY 3-3840lejAVIGNON PROVENCALP5=- RestuurantFrancais1450 E. 57th Street5 p.m. — 1 a.m.. $ -dO\Z\fR Sat. — 2 a.mcafe espresso from9 p.m.Closed Tuesdaysllillillil -v '%'<$'>- , ^ <don»»n°SS30 harper< »■M. The Japanese Happi coat innarrow tanzen stripes.Sturdy washable cotton inassorted colors with blackobi. 3/4 length, full sleeves.Smart and sensible — acasual coat for many moods.$yV>5 ELEMENTARY HEBREW class,Hillel, 5715 Woodlawn, 3:30 p.m.PSYCHOLOGY CLUB lecture,“Must psychology endure a re¬gressive logic of science?” so¬cial science 122, 4 p.m.COLLOQIUM, research institutes211, 4:15 p.m., “Gaseous deto¬nations.”SWIMMING for women only, IdaNoyes pool, 4:30-6 p.m.LECTURE, “Cardiovascular radi¬ology,” Prof. Carl Wegelius,University of Finland, pathol¬ogy 117, 5 p.m.SWIMMING LESSONS by Ameri¬can Red Cross, Ida Noyes pool,6:45 p.m.MOUNTAINEERING CLUB meet¬ing, Rosenwald 26, 7:30 p.m.,electing a nil talk.FTS WIVES CLASS, lecture,“How to make Christian ethicsrelevant,” by Prof. J. L. Adams,Woodlawn house, 8 p.m.CHRISTIAN SCIENCE organiza¬tion lecture, Breasted hall, 8p.m., “Christian Science: mag¬nifying God in prayer.”YOUNG SOCIALIST LEAGUElecture “Inside the Spanish re¬volution,” Ida Noyes hall, 8 p.m.CANTERBURY CLUB, lectureand discussion, “Theology asthe queen of the sciences," 5540W'oodlaw n. 8 p.m.BRIDGE LESSONS,^ first in aseries of eight lessons, chargefor students $1. for activitiescard holders, $6.50. Ida Noyeshall.ORGAN RECITAL by MichaelSchneider, Rockefeller chapel,8:30 p.m., works by Bach, Re¬ger, Franck, and David. Wednesday, October 19DEADLINE to submit Rhodesscholarship applications to Dr.Ebert, Billings W617, or ext2455.VARSITY SOCCER GAME. Staggfield, 3:30 p.m. UC vs. MortonJr. college.Thursday, October 20LECTURE, “Future of Britishparty politics,” Prof. Denis W.Brogan of Cambridge univer¬sity, Breasted hall, 3:30 p.m.Friday, October 21andSaturday, October 22PLAYWRIGHTS THEATRE pre¬sents The Tragedy of Hamlet,Prince of Denmark, by WilliamShakespeare, in Mandel hall at8:30 p.m.Great books groupto meet weeklyFor the second year, a GreatBooks discussion group will meetat International house, 1414 E.59th. Meeting every otherWednesday at 8 p.m. in room A.the group will consider suchbooks as The Odyssey, The Con¬fessions of St. Augustine, Pascal’sPensees, and Huckleberry Finn.Membership in the group is freeto all adults “interested in an ex¬change of ideas centering aroundsome of the significant writingsof our Western tradition,” accord¬ing to Natalie Wells, Chicago co¬ordinator of the program. Fur¬ther information may be obtainedfrom Miss Wells at DEarborn 2-5870.ptMiiMiiiiiwmuiiiimmwiiiiiiimiiiiminmiiiiiiitiiitiiiiiiHmtitHMiiiimiwmiiiiiiiiiiiimitiimiimiiiiiHiitHInternational House ll«vie«| Assembly hall, Mon. & Thin4*. evening at 8 p.m. |Monday, Oct. 17 — 45c — Panic (French) . =Thursday, Oct. 20 — 35c — Hellzapoppin' (American)riiihiiuiiiiiihiihuiiiiuhihiiihihihuhihiuiuhihiiiiuiiuiihuihiiihhhiu^50 milliontimes a dayat home, at workor on the way iThere’s nothing like a'■ • y.v m : BRIGHT, EVER-FRESHSPARKLE...distinctive taste.REFRESHESSO QUICKLY...with as few calorie*as half an average,juicy grapefruit.BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY Of THE COCA COLA COMPANY BYThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc."Coke" it a r»git*er»d trademark. • © 1953, THE- COCA-COLA COMPANYOctober 14, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 9Football workouts begun;fifty men may turn outby Mitri DozoretzComplaints of weight lossage rang through the air of the locker room at the field house,Monday, October 10. These complainants were the members of UC’s football class, whichhas just been through its first heavy workout. According to Kyle Anderson, who was cladin grey baseball pants, T-shirt, green hat, bright maroon and white wool socks and theever prominent whistle, to the all grey sweatsuit-clad students, they (the students) "wentat it with lots of enthusiasm.”After an hour workout con- — : : —r—r—:—:. .. ( „lie 128. However, as the saying goes, treme, one of the heaviest men onsis ting 01 running ana cans- “You gotta have heart” and heart the squad is 235-pound Jim Greenthemes, the forty grid schol- js what Bill seems to have, for this who is also a transfer student. Hears who weigh anywhere from128 to 240 pounds, and who rangein age from 15 to 24 years, wentthrough an explanation of basicoffenses and defenses.As it seems now the class willwork on a tight T formation of¬fense and later branch out intosplit T and possibly single wingoffenses, using one or two basicdefensive formations.Poach Anderson feels that con¬ditioning is first and foremost forboth the enjoyment of the gameby the participant and for hispersonal safety as well. This iswhy the class will dwell so longon conditioning and a minimumof body contact for a week or so.Then regulation uniforms will beIssued and a tackling dummywill be hung between the goalposts.From all indications the classwill swell to over fifty studentsbefore the registration is closed,thus giving Anderson four or pos¬sibly five complete teams fromwhich to possibly form a nucleus,of an intercollegiate grid team ifand when UC returns football tothe ranks of baseball, tennis,track, fencing, swimming andmany more.The lightest man on the squadis Bill Frank Eger, a transferstudent from Texas Tech whotips the scales at an unimpressive hails from Dartmouth where hewas on their grid squad for threeyears.20 year-old Texan was on theTexas Tech grid squad in the lefthalfback slot. At the other ex-Reactionsnew order changethDear Father:This school has gone to the dogs, that picture in the paperwas the last straw! Imagine football on the campus. The nexttljing you know this place will be like any other school withhugp pea-brains walking around in T-shirts showing theirvulgar muscles.Yes, the good old days aregone and I have decided toleave. Jerry and I are gettingmarried and he has decided to getout of nuclear physics and becomean artist so we are going to NewYork and get an apartment in theVillage so you will have to raisemy allowance.I hate to leave but I could neverstay and see this school becomelike all the other inferior schoolsthat have football teams. You cansee the signs all over; I hear a stu¬dent organization is going to spon¬sor an artist in a concert whodoesn’t sing folk songs, I hear hedoesn’t even own a guitar!Love, MyraP. S. Please send twenty dollarsFREE GIFT-WRAPPING AND MAILINGwhen you buy thot originalbook present at SCHNEEMANN'SAnother Unique Red DoorService1328 E. 57th Street because Bonwit-Teller is having asale on their custom made bluejean, sweat shirt sets.Dear Dad:I have decided to transfer tothe University of Chicago. I guessyou saw the picture in the paperabout football there. From thesize of those guys I can make firststring easy and I will never getoff the scrubs here. Half of thescrubs are talking about transfer-ing and the coach is really wor¬ried about who he will have toscrimmage the varsity.I don’t think it will be too bad.You remember the story in thepaper about how things havechanged there, I hear the womenare letting their hair grow andeven wear skirts instead of bluejeans all the time, at least that iswhat the paper said.I know you will be happy tosee me in a football game even ifI cannot make All-American likeyou almost did.by Sam GreenleeYour son, Joe«the dark clork otmodison presents its19.1.1 fall film festival30 greot films in 15 days, sun., oct. 16 thru oct. 30at our regular prices — or save with a series ticketxnntfay: 6champion%mow. 17—"big heat""pick-up on south street"tue. 18—"carrie""the turning point"wed. 19—"reor window" '"odventures of robinsoncrusoe"thur. 20—"sabrino""follow the fleet"fri. 21—"sands of iwo jimo""woman in the window"sat. 22—"lili""knock on wood"sun. 23—"camille""wuthering heights" ‘home of the bra ve9mon. 24—"asphalt jungle""city across the river"tue. 25—"fallen idol""people will folk"wed. 26—"big street""ongel and the bodman"thur. 27—"5 fingers""viva zapata I"fri. 28—"the stronger""i remember mama"sot. 29—"too many girls""anchors aweigh"sun. 30—"detective""caeser and cleopatra" Football versusqueer kidism""Resolved: that the return offootball is a University plot tostamp out "Queer Kidism.” Stu¬dent Forum will get into the foot¬ball act on Thursday, Oct. 20 at1 p.m., when Chicago style debat¬ing returns to the Reynolds ClubSouth Lounge. Free coffee andpanegyrics will highlight theafternoon, and all are invited toattend and express themselveswhen and in any way they see fit. Press BoxSports scene viewed;intramurals begin> In a practice game Wednesday, the varsity soccer team toyed withLake Forest academy, beating them 2-1. The closeness of the scoredoes not show the balance of the game; UC kept the ball in LakeForest territory over three-quarters of the time, and led, 2 0, untilmidway through the last half. Lake Forest’s goal spurred them to aharder attack, but they were unable to tie the score. Next game istomorrow, against the University of Illinois at Chicago, on Stagg field.The date of the Intra-mural football tourney kickoff has beenchanged from Oct. 12 to Monday October 17. The reason given forthis change is that the late start of classes this year didn’t givegroups time enough to get teams together. The games which willbe played on the Midway begin promptly at 4 p.m. The fields andrules differ from regular football as we are acquainted with it in asmuch as the field is only 90 yards long. It is divided into three 30 yardzones. For a team to make a first down it must go through one ofthese zones in four plays or less. Other major rule differences are:In the college-house league every man is an eligible pass receiverand an eligible passer for the ball may be forward passed as manytimes as desired from either in front orlbehind scrimmage during oneplay and there is no blocking. In the fraternity-division league thereis blocking and only one forward pass from behind the line of scrim¬mage per play. ... I-M director Boycheff is on the lookout for peopleto act as officials during the touch-football tourney. The only pre¬requisite is a good knowledge of the rules of the game. It pays $1an hour. Anyone interested see Mr. Boycheff at Bartlett gym. . . .Saturday marks the second start for the UC cross-country team. Theymeet Butler and Western Michigan at Washington Park at 11:00 a m.The Fighting Irish from Notre Dame ruined the UC opener by a per¬fect score of 15 to 48. One may ask how it is done? UC scored morepoints. Well the scoring is based on a system of one point for a first,two for a second, three for a third and so on. At the end the pointsare added up and the team with the lowest total wins. Simple eh? .. .The Soccer team also meets a formidable opponent Saturday. Theyplay the University of Illinois-Navy Pier division at Stagg Field. Solet’s make a day of it ... cross-country, Washington park, 11:00 a m.and soccer, Stagg Field, 2:00 p.m. ... For the last sgven years theathletic department has been awarding a trophy to the house thathas supplied the greatest number of athletes and for the last sevenyears Psi U fraternitu has received the award. . . . The first varsitytennis match (starting early this year) will be played on VarsityCourts against Navy Pier branch of the U. of Ill. Monday at 3:30....While some dormitories are still in the process of electing athletierepresentatives to the WAA Board, the latter has decided on theInterdormitory tennis and swimming tournaments. The tennis tour¬nament will take place Tuesdays from October 18 until October 27,3:30 until 5:30. The swimming meet Will be held at Ida Noyes, fromOctober 18 until November 7. The pool is available for the tourna¬ment on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday from 4:30 until 6:00; andalso on Wednesday and Friday nights from 7:30 until 9:00. The eve¬ning sessions are co-ed, and swimmers are permitted to wear theirown suits. . . . The Illinois Athletic Federation of College Womenheld its annual convention in Jacksonville, Ill., during the week-endof October 17. The WAA delegates from U. of C. are Dotty Hess,Betty Shay, Sandra Ford and Mary Ann Platt.Faculty defeats studentsIn a boisterous contest of athletic skill and witty reparteelast Saturday, members of the college faculty held off an en¬thusiastic group of new students in a 34 to 21 softball conquestin back of Burton-Judson.Coached by Athan TheQharis, 14-odd new men from Coul¬ter, Mathews, and Linn faced nine members of the collegestaff fielded by Mark Ashin.Umpiring was rendered by head, and Andrew Thomas, assist-Jim Newman, Salisbury house ant >n Coulter.Outstandingstudents sights for olderwere Dean Robert M.Transference Easily Arranged, atWc corry a com¬plete line of wines,liquors ond imports 55th Gr UniversityMl 3 0524 Streeter’s inside-the-park homerun and Associate Professor Don¬ald Meiklejohn’s hook slides.The student team never caughtthe two-run lead held by the fac¬ulty after the first inning. Lowscoring during the early inningswas broken during the 6th, 7thand 8th innings when the facultyrolled up 22 runs and the studentsbrought in 16.1 2 3 4 5 fi 7 8Faculty ... 4 1 1 1 Z 4 12 6Students ..Z 1 1 1TYPEWRITERSFOR SALE ★ NEW AND RECONDITIONED — GUARANTEEDREPAIRS ★ CHEMICAL WASHING — COMPLETE OVERHAULSPECIAL TYPE INSTALLATIONS ★ LANGUAGE—MATHEMATICS, ETC.RENTALS ★ ALL FIRST CLASS MACHINES. Highly Skilled, Conscientious Mechanicsat your serviceUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE NICKY’SPIZZERIA & RESTAURANT1235 E. 55th StreetNO 7-9063Free delivery to U. of €• studentsOn any orderQuick Courteous Service — 6 Days a WeekClosed MondaysTable Service Delivery Service11 A.M, to 2 A.M. . 11 A M. to 2 A.MOpen Hit 3 A.if. Friday and Saturday^■■■■MMMMBBHNBHr f f' i U1 Page 10 THE CHICACO MAROON October 14, 1955Sapp will give Walgreenlectures during this month“The search for language in American music” will be themain theme discussed by Allen Sapp in a series of Walgreenlectures to be presented during October. Sapp, an assistantprofessor of music at Harvard university, will make six differ¬ent appearances in Breastedhall, Oriental institute at 4:30p.m. on the 17,19, 21, 24, 26 and 28.,Sapp graduated from Harvardin 1942 after receiving a full four-year tuition scholarship. The sameyear he received second prize inthe New York Philharmonic na¬tional contest for young compos¬ers. From 1948-1950 he was ateaching fellow in music at Har¬vard, receiving his AM in 1949.He then became an instructor inmusic and a tutor in the depart¬ment of music at Harvard.During World War II, Sappspent two years as a translatorand cryptanalytic technician withthe government. After the war hecontinued for two more years aschief cryptanalyst for the civilcensorship division of the UnitedStates forces in Europe.In 1951, Sapp prepared a seriesISL presents-BennetDyerRichard Dyer-Bennet, the inter¬nationally-known English folksinger, will appear at Mandel hallon Friday, Oct. 28 in a concertsponsored by the Independent Stu¬dents league.Dyer-Bennet accompanies him¬self on the guitar, in English bal¬lads and folk songs from othercountries, which he sings in theiroriginal languages. His concert inMandel hall last April was a sell¬out.Tickets for his forthcoming con¬cert are now on sale at the studentservice center in the Reynoldsclub basement. Reserved seats are$1.35, and unreserved seats are $1.STUDENTWIVESWORK ON CAMPUSThe Personnel Office has awide variety of full-timecterica' and technical posi¬tions that are open. We aresure there is one that willinterest you.WE NEEDSecretariesStenographersTypistsBookkeepers- ClerksClinical TechniciansResearch Technicians(including)Medical ChemistsHematologistsHistologistsBacteriologistsBENEFITS INCLUDE3 weeks' paid vacation2 weeks' sick leaveTuition remissionLibrary and recreationalprivilegesapply NOWPersonnel Office • •956 E. 58th St. . of fifty hour-long radio programsfor the Lowell institute co-opera¬tive broadcasting council, on “Mu¬sic of the Baroque,” which wassubsequently taken up for nation¬al network distribution by theNational Association of Educa¬tional Broadcasters.Titles of the individual lecturesin their respective order are“Praising God in English,” “Sym¬phonies and operas in Germanand Italian,” “New England cy¬nicism,” “A French accent,"“American idioms: crisis in vocab¬ulary and diction,” and “Americanmusic: the lingua Franca.”Children formorchestraAn orchestra has been formedin the University community espe¬cially for children from the agesof 9 to 16. Rehearsals will be heldevery Tuesday evening at 7 p.m.in the Co-op Nursery school build¬ing at 5445 Hyde Park boulevard.Interested parents or childrenshould call Mrs. K. Ollendorf atKEnwood 6-2155 in the afternoon,or Mrs. Adah Maurer at PLaza2-5078 in the evening. Ballet Espanol arrivesfor four performancesBallet Espanol with Teresa and Luisillo, called “a feast ofdance, song, drama and music,” will come to the Chicago CivicOpera house for four performances on Friday, Saturday, andSunday afternoon and evening, October 21, 22, and 23. Teresaand Luisillo and their troupe of 50 dancers, singers, and musi¬cians received very enthusiastic reviews on their first U. S.tour last season. They haveFritz Reiner been widely acclaimed by crit-German soprano singstoday at Orchestra hallElisabeth Schwarzkopf, well-known German soprano, willbe the soloist with Fritz Reiner and the Chicago SymphonyOrchestra this afternoon Sit 2 p.m. in Orchestra hall. The pro¬gram, the same as last night's, will feature the overture toSmetana’s “The Bartered Bride,” a recitative and aria fromMozart’s “Don Giovanni,” a Bartok concerto, and works byRichard Strauss, Liszt, and zr~-—. . „ n 77 T I 77’ ’ Freischutz, Beethoven s fourthsymphony, and compositions byBerlioz, deFalla. and Barber. *Arne Oldherg’s t‘St. Francis ofAssisi” will he played next Thurs¬day, October 20, at 8:15 p.m., andFriday, October 21, at 2 p.m. inOrchestra hall. The orchestra willalso play Beethoven’s overture.“The Consecration of the House,”Schumann’s “Symphony No. 2 inC major,” and Stravinsky’s “Fire-Bird Suite.”Wolf. Students pay only 65cents for gallery seats at allFriday afternoon Orchestra hallconcerts.Tibor Kozma, associate conduc¬tor of the Metropolitan Opera as¬sociation, will be the guest con¬ductor at the second of the Satur¬day evening concerts by the Chi¬cago Symphony orchestra at 8:15p.m. tomorrow. The orchestra willplay Weber’s overture to “Der ics and theatregoers in SouthAmerica and abroad. The Ameri-can press praised their vitality,dramatic intensity, and excitingdancing, guitar playing, and fla-menco singing.According to the Opera house,this year’s Ballet Espagnol pro¬gram is almost entirely new. Out¬standing members of the troupewill include comedienne, dancer,and singer Maria Vivo; El Mino deAlmaden, Flamenco singer; gui¬tarists Jose Romero and AntonioZori; pianists Julian Hannell andMaria Andrea Ahrosio; and, ofcourse, Teresa and Luisillo. Wer¬ner Tokanowsky will conduct afull orchestra. Theatre, comedyand drama, folk-dances, and Span¬ish music will all be featured onthe program.Tickets to Ballet Espagnol areon sale at the Civic Opera housebox office at Madison and Wackerfor $1.65 up to $4.40. Tickets mayalso be obtained by mail.CEKT h° KECO+- An Historic Announcement to Music-Lovers from theDirectors of the World-Famous Cj)ncert j~(a(lSocietyINTRODUCE YOU EXCITING MUSICAL EXPERIENCE. YOU'RE ACCEPTALL-TIMEGREATSTRINGS ATTACHED INO OBLIGATION IEven if you novor buy onolher record from ui —nowor later—you can now obtain all the advantage*of a Trial Membership in The Jaxztone SocietyFEATURING THISWHO’S WHO" IN JAZZ:COLEMAN HAWKINSKINO Of TMf TKNOt SAXArt TatumOf NIVI Of THI Kir AO AMEDDIE CONDON“TMf WRIT Of PfRIflANO* AMO HIS OIMTAftSIDNEY BECHETNfW OtllANS OtIATIST SOPIAMO SAJCErr oil GarnerWORLD'S MOST POPULAR JAZZ PlANfSTDIZZY GILLESPIEOAZZUMO ••OP* TRUMPS?TEDDY WILSONOf AN Of 1WIMO* PIANISTSPEE WEE RUSSELLTHE OARINST IN CMtCAOO STViSJACK TEAGARDENMAN WHO PLATS TNI BiUC TROMAONSCharlie ParkerTHf FAIUIOUS -llte- ON Alio SAXAND INCLUDING: Rex Stewart. Red Norvo.Albert Nicholas, Flip Phillip*, Billy Taylor.Milt Hinton, Sonny Berman, Bill Harris. SergeChalolT. Ralph Burns. 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I may try any of these—free of charge—without paying a penny In advance. I may reject anyrecording, before or after I receive It. And I may cancelmy Trial Membership at any tlma.In the future, for each selection I decide to keep — I willpsy the special low Member’s price of just (2.76 plus fewcents shipping and excise tax fee ... • saving ot overtO'U off their usual retail price/October 14, 1955Renaissance society opens Qoc fj|m shows 'Potemkin,' firstshowing of Americans of Russian study series hereThe Renaissance society will open its 1955-1956 seasonvuth an exhibtion of modern painting, Eleven American “The Battleship Potemkin,” an Eisenstein-produced film story of a 1905 sailors’ mutinypioneer’s of the -Otn century, i he exhibition rs open to the on the Russian battleship Potemkin, will open the Documentary Film groups’ autumn quar-public October 14-November 8 in the Renaissance society ter film series of Russian films ‘‘From Czar to Lenin,” this evening.room, Goodspeed hall. The hours are Monday-Friday, 9-5,Saturday, 1-5. The exhibit will be closed on SundaysThe painters whose worksare being shown were activeduring the early 20th centuryand are important for their newstyles of expression in modernart. Though these artists wereprecursors of modem art in Amer¬ica today, their paintings havenot been exhibited to a great ex¬tent in this area. The showing in¬cludes works of Baylinson, Davies,darkens, Hartley, Henri, Kuhn,Luks, Maurer, Meyers, Prender-gast, and Sloan.During the ’20s these artistswere outspoken in their breakwith traditional American paint¬ing. Kuhn and Davies instigated the Armory show of 1913 whichintroduced modern art to Amer¬ica. Kuhn is also noted for hispaintings of circus and show busi¬ness people. Several of these ar¬tists belonged to the Ash Canschool.The various schools of paintingin Europe influenced these artistsin their experiments and efforts.Maurer, Hartley, and Baylinson The film will be shown in Soc. Sci. 122 at 7:15 and 9:15 p.m. Admission to this and thefour other films in the series is by series ticket only. Series tickets at $1.50 will be availablefrom Doc Film members and on sale at the door this evening.As the opening film of the. ... ., ... hand, recommended it to Germansenes which attempts to trace studios as a perfect example o(the development of Soviet d--what the propaganda film shouldema, “The Battleship Potemkin”Eisenstein himself came intothe film industry from the the¬ater during the ’20s and assumedthe leadership of Soviet movie di-made in 1925, was celebrated forits experimental use of crowdscenes and subtle use of the cam¬era to achieve continuity._ ^ heart of the film is the rectors. He is probably best knownwere interested* in the work of Odessa steps sequence, depicting to contemporary audiences for histhe Cubist painters; while Pren- the Cossack’s massacre of Odessa Alexander Nevsky and Ivan thecitizens on the harbor steps. By Terrible.manipulating the rhythms of the The series “From Czar tofilm, Eisenstein makes this scene Lenin,” presents a group of filmsthe movie’s climax. which are all, in one wajftor an-During depression years, sev- other, concerned with the contrasteral western governments wouldnot allow the film to be shown, onthe grounds that it would provoketrouble. Nazi leaders, on the otherdergast was the first Americanartist to evaluate Cezane. picture of the underground revo¬lutionary movement in the yearsimmediately preceding the firstworld war and deals specificallywith the fashioning of a youngproletarian into a seasoned Bol¬shevik.We from Kronstadt, October 21,emphasizes the solidarity of work¬ers and military forces behind therevolutionaries; like Potemkin ituses a group of sailors as heroes.Playwright'sto give "Hamlet’Rolf Forsberg Playwrights Theatre club ispresenting Hamlet, its first pro¬duction of the season at the Elev¬enth Street theatre. The run start¬ed Wednesday, and will continuewith performances tonight andSaturday. It will conclude on Sun¬day. Curtain time is 8:30.The theatre group will bringHamlet to the University for per¬formances at Mandel hall the eve¬nings of October 21, 22, and 23.Tickets are $3.00, $2.50, and $1.50,with a special student rate of$1.00.The second production of Play¬wrights fall season Will be G. B.Shaw’s Candida. Mark Gordonhas been brought from New Yorkto direct it. Schneider playschapel concertMichael Schneider, professor atWest-Deutsche Musik Akademie,Detmold, Germany, will give anorgan recital next Tuesday, Octo¬ber 18, in Rockefeller chapel at8:30 p.m.His program will be the “Phan¬tasy and Fugue in G minor” byBach, “Introduction and Passacag-li” in F minor by Max Reger,“Chorale in A minor” by CesarFranck, and “Chanconne in A mi¬nor,” by Johann Nepomuk David.Campus favorites ,..from every angle • • *No guesswork here, Arrow’s newbutton-down shirt cops the style lead oncampus with its soft roll collar, full-length back pleat, back-collarbutton—details you’d expect fromcustom shirtmakers! Nowavailable in authentic plaids andtattersall checks, $6.95 up.Combine it with Arrow’s taperedslacks in chino, $5.95—for the new casual look.'ARROWCASUAL WEAR-first in fashionNew collar forARROW GabanaroThey couldn’t improve the fit of the Gabanarosport shirt (it comes in your exact neck size andsleeve length). So, Arrow gave it a newmedium-spread collar, with saddle stitchingaround edge; matching pearl-luster buttons, andbutton-through pockets. Choose yours nowin your favorite color! New low price, $5,95,Chicago — EvanstonOak Park — EvergreenGary — Joliet — Alton between the old and the new inRussia. All the films bear on theBolshevik seizure of power.Portray undergroundMother, Pudovkin’s film adopt¬ed from the Gorki novel, to be pre¬sented October 28, deals with theorganization of factory workersduring the “dress rehearsal revo¬lution” of 1905. The Youth ofMaxim, November 4, presents a Doc film shows'Kings Men'All the Kings Men, the sec¬ond film in Documentary Filmgroup’s fall series of single ad¬mission showings will be pre¬sented Tuesday evening at 7:15and 9:15 in Social Science 122.Admisison to the film is 40cents.UT to begin run oftwo one-acts tomorrowThe first presentation of two one-act plays, Box and Cox,by John M. Morton, and Fumed Oak, by Noel Coward, willbe given tomorrow by University Theatre. The plays are di¬rected by William Zavis with a cast of students from the Uni¬versity.The cast is a touring company which will be sponsoredprimarily by off-campus or¬ganizations. Contracts forlater performances have notas yet been settled; however, thecompany is planning on appear¬ing at various clubs and organiza¬tions in Chicago, and if possibleat other universities. This experi¬mental group would also like toappear at service men’s hospitalsand veterans’ groups. Any cam¬pus organizations desiring tomake contracts with the groupshould contact the UT office.Since the group is a touring Hjndemlthscompany, the plays chosen to bepresented are short, lively come¬dies with small casts and fewprops. Instead of detailed, realis¬tic scenery, the sets are to be orig¬inal in simplicity and imagination.This quarter the membershipin UT has been greatly increased.The cast of these two plays willinclude some new students. InBox and Cox the cast is CarolHorning, John Meyer, and BarrySherman. To appear in FumedOak are Hall Taylor, NatalieCrohn, Paula Sansone, and LaurieRichardson. Musical societyin first concertThis Sunday, October 16, the UCMusical society will present itsfirst concert of the year in IdaNoyes library with works forviolin, harpsichord, cello, and bas¬soon and piano.Scheduled for performance areSonata for bassoonand piano,” Corelli’s “Sonata No.3 for violin and continuo,” worksfor piano by Bartok and Ravel,and a group of arias for tenor andstrings by Handel.Performers include WilliamKaplan, bassoon; Robert Howatt,piano; Leo Treitler, piano andharpsichord; Robert Bloch andPaul Revitt, violins, and TomMetzger, cello.The concert begins at 8 p.m.;admission free.Hyde park theatrelake park at 53rd NO 7-9071Student rate 50c all performances uponpresenting I.D. cards at box officeStarting Friday, October 14BETTE DAVIS os Queen ElizabethRICHARD TODD as Sir Walter Raleighand JOAN (“Sadie") COLLINSDAN (“Robinson Crusoe") O'HERLIHY"THE VIRGIN QUEEN"— and —SHIRLEY BOOTH in her memorable award winning role"COME BACK LITTLE SHEBA"Starting Friday, October 21 —. MOIRA SHEARER"THE RED SHOES"— and —ERNEST BORGINE"MARTY," GRAND PRIX CANNES FILM FESTIVALStarting Friday, October 28 —"THE DIVIDED HEARTStarting Friday, November 4 —"THE SHRIKE>• M Page 12 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 14, 1955: [Ian-!mIjiff iIi I ■If 1956 issue of Cap and Gown to havefund raising campaign as central themeThis year’s Cap and Gown willuse as a central theme UC’s cur¬rent $32,000,000 fund-raising cam¬paign, according to Mary JoanSpiegel, editor-in-chief. The 1956issue will serve as a prelude tothe issue of 1957 which will cele¬brate the 50th year of Cap andGown and the 100th year of theUniversity.Miss Spiegel stated that this49th volume of the yearbook willact to preserve the spirit of thepast by keeping its outline in thetraditional vein. After the intro¬duction there will be sections onthe administration, curriculum,and various activities. A specialmagazine supplement. Echo, willfeature a caricature series underthe supervision of art editor JoanRaphael.1,200 copies contractedSales manager Mike Birnbaumhas already contracted for 1.200copies. The rest of the staff in¬cludes Tony Lloyd, executive edi¬tor: Maury Mandel. business man¬ager; Pete Langrock, advertisingmanager; Eliza Houston, literaryeditor; and Tom Pennington, pho¬tographic editor.YSL sponsorsOrr lecture onSpanish revoltCharles Orr, professor of eco¬nomics at Roosevelt college, willspeak to the Young SocialistLeague on his experiences “Insidethe Spanish revolution,” nextTuesday at 8 p.m. at Ida Noyesball.Mr. Orr is a specialist in laboreconomics, and has worked withthe International Confederationof Free Trade Unions andUNESCO.Screen producershold film contestLook magazine’s publishers andthe Screen Producers guild haveunited to form the first jointlysponsored inter collegiate awardsfor the best student-producedfilms made on U. S. campuses,stated Samuel G. Engel, SPG pres¬ident, and Daniel D. Mich, Lookeditorial director. The announce¬ment w’as made last week.To compete for the 1955 inter¬collegiate awards, student-pro¬duced films must be submitted toSPG prior to December 31, 1955.The inter-collegiate awards willbe included in the 15th Annuallook Motion Picture Achievementawards in a February, 1956, issue.Those students associated withthe three best productions chosenby a committee of top Hollywoodfilm producers will receive Look-SPG award medallions on a net¬work television show coincidingw ith the look awards issue. Parties caucus before electionby Dave CarterWith the all-important student government elections justaround the corner (two weeks hence, October 27-28), bothcampus political parties have squared off to compete for thefavor, and votes, of UC students.Major party-caucuses, called weekly, were staged Sundayto spark their respective drives for dominance in the 50-mem¬ber student assembly, and to dis- ~ "7~"T ! !■ tion (SRP); and the so-cakedcuss pending business on the T, , . • .. .F kucheman plan, mentioned atagendas of each. least at both party meetings.Committees of both the incum- whose avowed purpose whenbent Independent Students’league brought into existence by ISLer(ISL) and the opposition Student Clark Kucheman last spring, andRepresentative party (SRP) have later introduced and adopted atbeen set in motion to draft plat- last summer’s National Studentform planks and map general association congress, was to grantover-all strategy aimed at winning scholarship funds for Americana parliametnarv working major- university study to student es-ity (at least 26 seats) in the com- capees from behind the Iron Clu¬ing election. , - tain.Placed in command for ISL, by Other items of debate at theacclaimation, was Jim Handler. SRP caucus; a proposed link-upAssisting him will be Pete Lang- with ia civic committee which isrock (assistant committee chair- working to end racial discrimina-man), Sylvia Boyd. Peter Carmel, tion at Chicago hospitals; and al-Emil Johnson, Jan Metros, Don leged discrimination at a restau-Miller and Penny Rich appointed rant in the University area,by the chair.^ Tentatively agreeing to spon-Directing the campaign for SRP sor both dancer Paul Draper andwill be John Gilmore and Lou folk-singer Martha Schlaum in aJones, with an additional staff of joint program this winter, SRPthree, including a chairman, yet discussion went on to center aboutto be designated. the merits of providing an enter-Considered were possible can- tainment outlet, on civil-libertiesdidates to represent each in the grounds, for performers whosecampus referendum. Candidate political views may or may notphoto by BystronStaff members of Cap and Gown start work on the 1955 issue.Mary Joan Spiegel says the yearbook will treat the University’s32 million dollar fund-raising campaign as its central theme.Mexican sludy grant deadlineannounced for November 1One month remains in which to apply for fellowships forstudy in Mexico during the academic year beginning March 1,1956. November 1, 1955, is the closing date for applicationfor the fellowships, offered toAmerican students bv the Mexi- unship, knowledge of Spanish, acan government. ~ good academic record, a validEligibility requirements for the Pro.ieet or purpose, and goodawards include United States citi- health. Preference will be givento graduate students, but under¬graduates (juniors and seniors)are also eligible.Architecture, Indian and physi¬cal anthropology, ethnology, ar-One of the first BJ social chaeology, museography, art, bio¬events was held last Friday eve- logical sciences, and Mexican his-ning when Coulter house present- t°r>' are the fields of study espe-• • , „ „ . . . cially recommended for graduateed its fall picmc-dance in Burton ... ,1 candidates. Those with an MD de¬lounge. gree may receive special trainingOver thirty Coulter men and an at the National Institute of Car-,equal number of w'omen from etiology and the Institute of Tropi-Green and Kelly halls attended ca^ Medicine, Mexico City.the affair, which was deemed “a Applicants may write for infor-, . „ . , mation to the U. S. student depart-smashing success by social co- ment of the Institute of interna-chairmen Dave Weitzman and tional Education, 1 East 67th, NewLou Stryer. “I see a great year for York.Coulter, socially, athletically, and,of course, academically,” addedStryer.Present at the picnic-dance wereCoulter's new househead, JohnAnderson, its recently electedpresident, Stephen Cohen, and sec¬retary, Leonard Lyons. slating, W'hich is subject to mem¬ber approval, will resume at thenext general meeting of the partyfaithful (Oet. 16» and completedtickets will tie subsequently an¬nounced. have inspired • trade discrimina¬tion.Dispute over the Kuchemanplan, a major ISL campaignplank, has to do with its scope.SRP contends that its applicationMajor topics of discussion at is too narrow, that the seholar-the two caucuses included such ship funds should be placed on acontroversies as; whether or not two-way exchange basis and in¬to sponsor entertainers w’hose elude students from Russian satel-politics have been put up to ques- lite countries other than escapees.Party at B-JDUNCANSTATIONERS1313 Fa.st 3,ilh St.(Xext to Hie Poxt Office)Now carrying themost complete lineof Artist's Materialsin Hyde Park. 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