e. e. cummings here;to read at Mandelo. e. cummings, one of Ameiica.s foremost poets will read his own poetry tomorrow atp m. in Mandel hall, under the sponsorship of the Chicago Review. Tickets ter cum-niiiig’s appearance, $1 for students and $1.50 for non-students, are available in advance atReynolds club desk.cummings was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the son of a Harvard university instruc¬tor. Speaking of bis early life, cummings says: “As it was my miraculous fortune to have atrue father and a true mother, — :and a home which the truth and violent world welcoming who is obsessed by making.’ photo by ZygmundJanice Metros (ISL), Bruce D. Larkin (ISL), Don McCiintoek(moderator, at podium), Myron Blume (SRP), and Paul Breslotv(SRP)—speakers at the Thursday Reynolds club debate on ISLpolicies in SG.c their love made joyous,iv/»w v. vwo every challenge; a world worth “I can express my technique in ^ JL M f |F“ ‘““T" hating and adoring and fighting fifteen words, by quoting the eter- JUl M ^"1in reaching outward from ^ forgiving: in brief . . .a nal question and immortal answer MwmCCHlS llOV wIlCISof burlesquethis love and this joy I was world which was a world.marvelously lucky to touch andseize a rising and striving world;a reckless world filled with the er‘Would you hitAbout his individual style and a woman with a child? . . . No,technique cummings once wrote: I’d hit her with a brick.’ Like the‘If a poet is anybody,: he is burlesque comedian, I am abnor-_ ... . ... . ., somebody to whom things made mally fond of that precision whichcuriosity of life herself; a vivid matter very little . . . somebody creates movement.” new partyUniversity of Chicago, Tuesday, October 25, 1955 >31Orr gives Young Socialists his viewson varied aspects of Spanish revolutionAny small, well-organized group with a clear understanding of the situation could havesaved the Spanish revolution in the spring of 1937 and a Leninist from Chicago almost didit single-handed, Charles Orr, professor of economics at Roosevelt university, told the Young wasSocialist league Tuesday night.Few people could realize then that the Communists were working against the Revolution(they had changed to an anti-Hitler, people’s front policy), but Hugo Oehler, a left-wingChicago Referendum versus negotiation was the major point of con¬tention in the first political debate of the season, a changefrom the controversies on ends typical of previous years.Attacking the record of the Indpendent Students leaguenot on the basis of what it did, but of the basis of what it didnot do, a Student Representative party speaker Friday evenadmitted that he didn’t knowmuch about Student Govern¬ment. This he contended wrasbecause ISL had not publicizedthe work of the government.Bringing student opinion tobear in solving a problem figuredstrongly in SRP’s plan of gettingresults, while ISLers spoke forthe negotiation which character¬ized their last year in the govern¬ment. Leaning heavily on thegains of the previous year of ISLgovernment, ISL speakers triedto show that their governmentindeed “commendable” bypointing out a large number of SG supplementwith complete up-to-date lists ofcandidates, resume of party plat¬forms, statements of party leaders,and voting procedures appears onpages 5 and 6.political leader, ar¬rived in «?nain full nf insight tion. politically, socially and eco- Spain, including For Whom thenvta in spam iuii oi msigm nomicaUy Qrr said Be„ XoliSf were created by per¬sons who got there after the acand enthusiasm and with onecomrade who could speak Span¬ish. He founded a group of hisown and infiltrated others, butit was too late—the counter-revo¬lution had set it.This observation was one ofmany included in Orr’s account ofhis years in turbulent pre-WorldWar Europe as a roving corre¬spondent for the Social Call. Itwas a period when one couldlearn learn more in three weeksthan in a normal three years be¬cause of the fluidity of the situa- Traveling through an armedGermany and aroused France justafter the outbreak of fighting inSain, he felt that the social revo¬lution could have been spread towestern Europe. His own pacifistviews changed to the extent thathe wrote an article stating thatthe Western powers should starthe war before Germany inevit¬ably would.Hemingway came lateMost of the literary and artis¬tic productions coming out of'Tory and Labor policiesore becoming more alike’Great Britain’s two major political parties are becomingmore and more alike, both ideologically and structurally. Thiswas the main theme of a lecture last Thursday by Dennis W.Hi ogan, professor of political science at Cambridge university,sponsored by the division of social sciences.On paper, the ideological difference between the two parties eneies, with no actual threat ofis great enough. But in real-itv, Brogan pointed out, both bers nowadays get elected almost tual revolution was over, Orr said.These writers were inspired bythe dying embers of the conflict.Orr commended the works ofJohn Dos Passos and George Or¬well.He traced the war from the1934 anarchist revolt through thefight against Fascism to the briefperiod when the people ruled overa large part of Spain, supposedlywithout a government. Peasant“officials” produced more rubberstamps overnight than the oldbureaucrats ever had, Orr said.He told of humiliating mocktrials of rich people but said thatthere was surprisingly little vio¬lence. “The Spanish people aretoo human to be brutal for anylength of time.” After the war,Franco’s variety of the reign ofterror continued until 1948, Orrstated, so that this generation isinhibited from revolutionary tend-punishment necessary. SG loans nowavailable fororganiza tionsLoans to student organi¬zations are now availablethrough Student Govern¬ment’s student activities develop¬ment fund. Student organizationsmay obtain loans of up to $60 forperiods of less than one month. Atleast five members of the organ¬ization must accept personal re¬sponsibility for the loan.Applications for loans are madeto the activities coordination com¬mittee, and are approved by thestudent activities office. Process¬ing of requests will take from twoto three weeks. Grants of money,or loans of larger amounts or forlonger periods of time must be ap¬proved by the SG assembly.Legislation was passed by SGlast spring setting up the fund.If the fund proves to fulfill a realneed, SG will start to obtain moremoney for this fund. projects now in the negotiationstages. SRP countered with thesuggestion that action might havebeen more effective if the studentbody could have united to exertpressure.Political heckling, with theusual embarrassing questions,and the more usual clever come¬backs, centered around ISL’s ac¬tions, since the nature of the topic“Resolved, that ISL’s record inStudent Government is commend¬able” left SRP immune to chargesof like inefficiency, graft, insin¬cerity, and politicking. The audi¬ence, however, heckled anyway.Delta SigmareorganizesA final decision on the fate ofDelta Sigma women’s club, whichdisbanded last spring, has beenreached. The student activitiesoffice and Inter-club council metwith Delta Sigma actives andalumni and decided that the clubwould spend the fall quarter re¬organizing and rebuilding. DeltaSigma’s inability to find a conve¬nient meeting time for the gradu¬ate students, along with a separa¬tion of actives and alumni, causedthe present trouble. The club, withnew members they hope to attractthis fall, may be able to return toInter-club council on a regularclub basis by spring. The club willstill be included in Interclub func¬tions.parties are committed to so¬cialism, only the Laborites wouldcarry it a bit further than theirrivals.The Labor party has becomemore practical - minded than itC'Cd to be; the Conservative par¬ty. more Idealistic. Brogan saidthat most Labo*rites no longerspeak with crusading zeal of the solely because of their party labelsand regardless of their personalviews or qualifications, Broganstated. Party discipline in Parlia¬ment, therefore, is extremelyrigid. No longer is there room forthe backbencher who only had aworthwhile idea once every threeyears, but who stubbornly stuckto his question when the frontJabor movement, while the Tories benches of both parties conspiredhave long since abandoned the in amiably telling an untruth. Thephilosophy that “nothing should backbencher today is nothingever be done for the first time.” more than a cipher and cannot getLeadership in both parties has an audience inside or outside ofgravitated towards younger party Parliament,members who are intelligent, Though the difference betweenhighly educated, public-spirited, the two parties is small, it is nev-and who have a strong bias to¬wards equality which is new inEngland. This egalitarianism isgenuine, Brogan said. “It perme- along income or class lines inTes the Conservative party and is their party preferences, ratherl!ie raison d’etre of the Labor than voting according to local loy-■’ " ty•” The Labor intellectuals alties or tradition as they used to.'■ <ve come to the fore because the Brogan thought that the split1 trade union veterans who within the Labor party will prob-know all about public housing, ably be repaired, for otherwise thesocial security, etc., know nothing party cannot hope to return toi out World politics and hence power. Given this unity, “it is like-have become obsolete. ly that the Labor party will winI he intellectuals have firm con- the next election,” Brogan pre- New group investigates supposedadministration disclosu res on securityInquiry into whether or not UC administration and faculty members have been givinginformation about students to government security investigators is one of the projects thatwas planned by the newly-formed League for Civil Liberties at its first meeting Mondayevening, October 17.The decision to engage in the project came after the group had heard a report that draf¬tees have been given dishonorable discharges by the army on the basis of what they hadsaid in college classes andertheless there, Brogan main¬tained. The voters show theirawareness of this by dividingtrol over each party. Party mem- dieted. inwritten in academic papersprior to induction. A question¬naire, to be distributed to facultymembers, is now being preparedon the subject.A second major activity plan¬ned by the LCL involves mobiliz¬ing campus support for Mrs. Shir¬ley Lens, a teacher in the Chicagopublic school system whose payis being withheld by the city be¬cause of her refusal to sign theBroyles loyalty oath and who ischallenging the city’s action inthe courts. The group will spon¬ sor a campus meeting soon atwhich Mrs. Lens will speak.One of its primarily functions,the LCL membership decided,will be to serve as the centralagency at the University for han¬dling civil liberties violations—taking direct action itself whenpossible, otherwise referring thecase to another agency which can.Other proposals considered atthe meeting included making upand distributing a brochure onstudent rights in respect to gov¬ernment security investigationsand the draft; investigating al¬leged racial discrimination in the admissions policy of the UC medi¬cal school; sponsoring a debateon whether Communists shouldbe allowed to teach in colleges;and cooperating with other cam¬pus groups to eliminate allegeddiscriminatory listings in the UChousing bureau.Not only students, but facultymembers and University employ¬ees also are invited to join LCL,according to Mrs. Debbie Meier,who presided at Monday’s meet¬ing. Malcolm P. Sharp, professorof law, is faculty sponsor of LCL.The group has not yet electedpermanent officers but will doso within a few weeks.WINSTONtit wAij'dnawiMq^SiSA. dqcuMtl■ King-size Winston is the filter brand that’s making cigarette history.College to college, coast to coast, the chorus is the same: “Winston tastes good —like a cigarette should!” The rich flavor really comes through to you becauseWinston’s exclusive filter works so effectively. Try Winston — you’ll see!R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO.. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.Page 2 tT^^ThCAG^M AROON October 25, 1955Coming events on quadranglesTuesday, October 25INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOW¬SHIP, luncheon, Ida Noyes, 12:30 p.m.HILLEL CHOIR REHEARSAL, H i 11 e 1foundation, 5715 Woodlawn, 1:30 p.m.MAROON STAFF MEETING, 3:30 p.m.,Reynolds club 201.PSYCHOLOGY CLUB LECTURE, “Theeffects of light and dark adaptationupon the vitreous humor of the mam¬malian eye,” Soc. Sci. 122, 4 p.m.TENNIS TOURNAMENT for dormitorywomen, Ida Noyes, 3:30 p.m.COLLOQUIUM, Research institutes 211,4:15 p.m., “The anomalous skin effectas a tool for the study of metals.”STUDENTS FOR DEMOCRATIC AC¬TION, organiaational meeting, Rosen-wald 2, 4:30 p.m.SENIOR MATHEMATICS CLUB, ‘'Clas¬sification of fiber bundles in terms ofloop space of base," Eckhart 206,4:30 p.m.CHRISTIAN SCIENCE organization,meeting, Hilton chapel, 7 p.m.DOCFILM, Symphonie Pastorale, Soc.Sci. 122, 7:15 and 9:15, 40 cents.CHICAGO REVIEW STAFF MEETING,5 p.m., Reynolds club 301-4.PI LAMBDA THETA business meeting 7p.m. in women’s common room Juddhall. Frances Beck will speak. RobertMcCawl speaks at 7:30 professionalmeeting.IT'S WIVES CLASS. “Theory of associa¬tions,” Fredrick Carney, Conferencehouse, 58th and Woodlawn, 8 p.m.YOUNG SOCIALIST LEAGUE lecture,“History of the American Communistparty,” Ida Noyes, 8 p.m.Wednesday,October 26MOVING TO IDA? Heads of such or¬ganizations meeting to plan house¬warming, at Ida at 2 p.m.Doc Film showingGide adaptationSymphonic Pastorale, a filmadaptation of Andre Gide’s novel,will be presented this evening at7:15 and 9:15 in Social Sciences122 by the Documentary Filmgroup. Admission 40 cents.Starring Michele Morgan andPierre Blanchar, the film was ac¬claimed as the best French filmof 1947 at the Cannes Film festi¬val. The story illustrates Gide’sphilosophy that there is no inten¬tional evil in life, yet any of usmay unwittingly play an evil part.According to the New Yorker"In transforming the Gide novelinto one of the most intelligentscripts since the war, Jean Delan-noy and Jean Aurenche have dem¬onstrated that in the right handsthe work of an outstanding artistcan sometimes be truly reflectedon the screen.” CHEMISTRY DEPT. SEMINAR, “Newreactions of aliphatic diazo and azocompounds,” Rolf Huisgen, U. ofMunich, Kent 102, 2 p.m.TALMUD CLASS, Hillel, 5715 Woodlawn,3:30 p.m.METHODIST THEOLOG RETREAT, 10a.m., Wednesday to 4 p.m. Thursday.Contact Dorothy Dailey, MU 4-0654or ext 1086.WALGREEN LECTURE, “Americanidioms: crisis in vocabulary and dic¬tion,” by Allen Sapp, Asst. prof, ofmusic, Breasted hall, 4:30 p m.CARILLON RECITAL, Rockefellerchapel, 4:30 p.m.IDA NOYES HALL, bowling, 7-9 p.m.,roller skating 7-9, swimming for bothmen and women, 7:45-9:15.MErHODIST STUDENT FELLOWSHIP,supper at 6 p.m., discussion of Ham¬let at 7, Chapel house.MODERN DANCE CLUB meeting, IdaNoyes hall, 7:30 p.m.SWIMMING TOURNAMENT for dor¬mitory women, run by WAA, IdaNoyes pool, 7:30-9 p.m.JAPANESE STUDY GROUP, meeting,Social Science 108, 7:30 p.m.CAMERA CLUB, organizational meet¬ing, Eckhart 206, 7:30 p.m. INTER VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOW¬SHIP, meeting for Bible study, IdaNoyes hall, 7:30 p.m.COUNTRY DANCERS, Ida Noyes cloisterclub, 8 p.m., please wear tennis shoes.e.e. cummings will give readings fromhis own works, in mandel hall at 8:30p.m., presented by the Chicago review.Thursday, October 27FACULTY DISCUSSION, “Liberal edu¬cation and the humanities," Soc. Sci.122, 3:30 p.m.VARSITY SOCCER GAME, UC vs. LakeForest academy, Stagg field, 3:45 p.m.VARSITY CROSS COUNTRY MEET, UCvs. Wright JC, Washington park,4 p.m.YOUNG REPUBLICANS, open meetingand lecture, Ida Noyes hall, 4 p.m.CAP AND GOWN LITERARY STAFFmeeting, open meeting for all inter-eseted, 4:30 p.m , Reynolds club base¬ment.MICROBIOLOGY CLUB, “The chemicalcontrol of mutation rate in bacteria,”Assoc, prof. Aaron Novick, Ricketts N1, 4:30 p.m.SWIMMING for women only, Ida Noyespool, 4:30-6 p.m. PICNIC AND SQUARE DANCE, by Pre-med club, everyone welcome, meet atIda Noyes, go to 55th St. point, 50cents.PORTER FORUM, meeting at 6 p.m.at Chapel house.ECONOMICS DEPT. SEMINAR, “Eco¬nomic study of stock market beha¬vior,” by Prof. Paul A. Samuelson ofM.I.T., Law South, 7:45 p.m.SCANDINAVIAN CLUB meeting and tea,Ida Noyes hall, 7:45 p.m.INTERNATIONAL HOUSE MOVIE, TheGlenn Miller story, (American, incolor), Assembly hall, 8 p.m., 45 cents.Friday, October 28WALGREEN LECTURE, “American mu¬sic, the lingua franca,” by Mr. Sapp,Breasted hall, 4:30 p.m.MATHEMATICAL BIOLOGY SEMINAR,“The point bases of the primordialand of the transformed graphs InRashevsky’s approach to topologicalbiology,” 4:30 p.m., 5741 Drexel.PEACE CENTER, lecture and discussion,on “Disarmament: action prospectsand possibilities,” Soc. Sci. 201, 7 p.m. IDA NOYES HALL, bowling 7-?> „ mand swimming for both men inswomen, 7:45-9:15 p.m. anaDOCFILM, study series Mother (Ru¬slan), Soc. Sci. 122, 7:15 and 9 s'Admission by $1.50 series ticket onhCALVERT CLUB, Halloween party &Sales house, 8 p.m., admission atcents, dancing.RICHARD DYER-BENNET concert offolk songs, sponsored by ISL. Mandelhall, 8:30 p.m., admission $i 95 reserved, $1 general.HILLEL FIRESIDE, Walter Johnsonspeaking on “The role of the immi¬grant in American history,” Hillelfoundation, 5715 Woodlawn, 8.30 nmSabbath service at 7:45 p.m.Saturday, October 29JAZZ CONCERT, with Kid Orev andStuds Turkel, sponsored by srpMandel hall, 8 p.m. Admission $150!Sunday, October 30UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICERockefeller chapel, 11 am Rev’Friedrich Heller, visiting professor'FTF, preaching.CongratulationsTo Noonday!The nine Fail titles of MERIDIAN BOOKS are the best yet and by farthe best "quality — paper-backs" of the season.You will find them all at THE RED DOORWe are proud to stock themAllen Tate: THE MAN OF LETTERS IN THE MODERNWORLD; SELECTED ESSAYS, 1928-1955 $1.35Van Wyck Brooks: THE ORDEAL OFMARK TWAIN $1.25Bronislaw Malinowski: SEX AND REPRESSIONIN SAVAGE SOCIETY $1.25William James: PRACMATISM $1.25Benedetto Croce: HISTORY AS THE STORYOF LIBERTY $1.35NEW DIRECTIONS 15 $1.35Lionel Trilling: MATTHEW ARNOLD $1.35A. C. Bradley: SHAKESPEAREAN TRAGEDY $1.35Jane Harrison: PROLEGOMENA TO THESTUDY OF GREEK RELIGION $1.95SCHNEEMANN’S1328 East 57th StreetOpen 10 to 10 daily Closed Friday evenings Sunday 6 to 10 ^iiihihiiitiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiimiHiiimuiiiiiimmimimiiiimimmmiiiiiiiimimmiiimiiiiiiiiiiiedelightful!ATMOSPHERE 1POPULARPRICESlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllHlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllimilllHIHIIIIIIUUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|illll||l|||^1§>1TERRY’S PIZZA“The World's Rest"LAST WEEK!SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER25c Discount on any Pizzaeaten here...or deliveredSmall 1.00 Large 1.95Medium 1.45 Giant 2.95H> \Iso Carry a Full Line of Fttod*FREE DELIVERY FOR U. of C. STUDENTS1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045WINSTON«* fbl book ou. jJkwcrrLOctober 25, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Pafle iUndergraduates reinstated Young Republicans meetFor the first time since Cap and Gown’s return to the campus in 1953, undergraduates The YounS Republicans will hold an organization? 1 meet-will be pictured individually in the yearbook. ^ ing at 4:00 Thursday afternoon in the east lounge of IdaTom Pennington, Cap and Gown’s photographer, will try new and different lightings Noyes. Officers will be elected and plans for the year dis¬and poses with the idea of making a more original yearbook. Pennington said that a special cussed. Old and new members are invited to attend,plan would be offered to students whereby they could purchase a set of pictures and getthe yearbook picture in free of charge. Prices have not yet been decided though, Pennington! said.Why do more collegemen and women smoke„ \ .Viceroys, than any otherfilter cigarette?Because only Viceroygives you 20,000 filter trapsin every filter tip, madefrom a pure natural substance— cellulose—found in deliciousfruits and other edibles!2.3.4. Yes, only Viceroy has this filter composed of 20,000 tinyfilter traps. You cannot obtain the same filtering actionin any other cigarette.The Viceroy filler wasn’t just whipped up and rushed tomarket to meet the new and skyrocketing demand for fil¬tered cigarettes. Viceroy pioneered. Started research morethan 20 years ago to create the pure and perfect filter.Smokers en masse report that filtered Viceroys have afiner flavor even than cigarettes without filters. Rich,satisfying, yet pleasantly mild.Viceroy draws so easily that you wouldn’t know, withoutlooking, that it even had a filter tip . . . and Viceroys costonly a penny or two more than cigarettes without filters!That’s why more college men and women smoke VICEROYS thanany other filter cigarette . . . that’s why VICEROY is the largest-selling filter cigarette in the world!20,000Tiny Filter Traps .’71'plus that Real Tobacco Taste Photographing will beginThursday and run throughthe winter quarter. The photosare being taken earlier this yearin order to insure a better organ¬ized yearbook. All students inter¬ested are asked to come to theCap and Gown’s Reynolds clubdesk for an appointment beforeOctober 30. Socialists sponsor lectureThe “History of the American Communist party” is to bethe topic of a YSL sponsored lecture this evening. LecturerVictor Howard, who has spoken for YSL on previous occa¬sions, is a socialist who has edited The Works of Rosa Lux¬emburg. Howard has written various socialist pamphletsand is currently writing a weekly news column in thqIndiana Worker.The Towers of the UniversityCTS brick tower most gracefulby James R. Lawson(Part I of this series by Mr. Lawson, who is the carillonneur of the Rockefeller memorial chapel ap-peared in the Maroon for October 14 and concerned Mitchell tower with its Alice Freeman Palmermemorial chime.)In the late 19SK)’s there rose at the University a trilogy of towers that are by all stand¬ards among the most distinguished in America. What an exciting place the Univo/sity ofChicago must have been for a student of architecture at that time! New buildings wererising on almost every vacant lot and the three towers of the Chicago Theological sem¬inary, the First Unitarian church and the Rockefeller memorial chapel competed with oneanother stone for stone. Every day the University skyline became more beautiful.Most graceful of the trio, *dedicated in 1928, is the openred-brick tower of the ChicagoTheological seminary. The semin¬ary planned its handsome homein consistency with the Gothicstyle of the University yet wishedto proclaim a certain independ¬ence and so built with red-brickrather than Indiana lime-stone.This recalled in a general wayCambridge, England, from whichcame the early leaders of Amer¬ican Congregational churches.The seminary architects, Her¬bert H. and Lewis W. Riddle,acknowledge no specific precedentfor their tower yet it recalls (also,in a general way) the Boston their-re-lighting awaits a benefac- Chicago Theological seminarytor to repair the wiring. Older have erected this tower in honormembers of the community re¬member the beautiful effect creat¬ed when the tower glowed fromwithin.The mullions of the long per¬pendicular windows of the towerend in four corbels, two on thewest and two on the south face.At the north on the west space asculptured head represents Faith.At the south the face of a soldierin helmet with conventionalized of Victor Fremont Lawson, 1850-1925, editor and publisher ofnewspapers, founder of the Asso¬ciated Press, creator of interna¬tional understanding and goodwill.”Those who have visited the BokSinging tower at Lake Wales, Flo¬rida, may be interested to knowthat Samuel Yellin who designedthe great golden door at the Boktower also designed the iron gates“Stump” in Lincolnshire.The first five floors of the tower Quotahon.“The entran>ewings at either side represents at the entrance to the ClarenceCourage; on the south front at the Sidney Funk cloisters of the Chi-west, Truth; on the south front cago Theological seminary,east, Patience.An open air pulpit is reachedfrom the President’s office in thefirst floor of the tower. Below thepulpit on a square tablet is theof Thy wordsare closed and occupied by admin- . , ... „istrative and faculty rooms. Over ^lve h 11 ethem rises an open tower in per- The tower was named for Vic-pendicular style to a height of 162 tor Fremont Lawson (no relation,feet. At the top is a Gothic corona, alas). On another tablet at theIt and the four corner bastions base of the tower is this inscrip-were lighted m>iil the black-outs tion:of the Second World War. Now “The board of directors of theESPECIALLY FOR YOUA full year’s subscription to anyone of these three great weeklymagazines at these reduced prices... for college students only. TakeTime, The Weekly Newsmagazine,for less than 6<[ a week ... or Life,America’s favorite pictorial, for lessthan 8i a copy ... or Sports Illus¬trated, the first national sportsweekly, for less than 8/ an issue.The purchase of one magazine doesnot require the purchase of another;your special student prices are goodfor all or any of these three weeklies.Sign up today at the campus book-store or with your college agent. EXPERT REPAIRST.V.s - Radios - Phonos - IronsToasters - Vacuums - LampsWe know HOW! We've proved itfor over 30 years. That's why ourguarantee means something. We'reas near as your phone. Pick up anddelivery. J. A. Tishler, '33HERMANS935 E. 55th Midway 3-6700Letters Hither and yonWants 'real' JV by Miriam GarfinAttractive Girisfor part timeconvention work—eveningsApply after 1 p.m.6 East MonroeRoom 1304Boosing and moosingand lots of cut loosing.Have a boll at oldPsi U’singJ.A.B.Saturday, Oct. 299:00 P.M.5639 University Ave.Louise BarkerphotographerPortraitsof thestudentby anartist1457 E. 57th St.BU 8-0876 Shaving at its best! Old Spice Smooth Shave in the pres*surized container... gives a rich, velvety lather ... remainsfirm and moist throughout your shave. And a unique, lubri¬cating formula soothes your skin. For top performance andspeed—make your next shave Old Spice Smooth Shave.I00SHULTON New York • TorontoOctober 18, 1955Now that the Junior varsity teams aredying off from lack of students underthe college level, athletically, isn’t itabout time to switch back to a realjunior varsity, or varsity ”B” team, pro¬gram at the college level for studentswho either haven’t the talent or timefor much regular practice needed butwho would like to participate in intra¬mural athletics?Such teams would encourage a widerinterest in the sports program andmight also be a feeder for varsity teamsas well as a program in its own right.Such a program, especially with week¬end games only, might be of particularinterest to upper class and graduatestudents, perhaps starting this yearwith the baseball season. Anybody elseinterested?Arnold SchecterLetters welcomeMaroon welcomes letters from itsreaders. Any comments of interest tothe University community are ap¬propriate subject matter.Letters should not exceed 250words. Letters exceeding this limitwill be subject to shortening at theeditor’s discretion.Maroon will not consider for pub¬lication letters which do not bearthe author’s signature. However, theauthor’s name will be withheld uponrequest.Letters should be addressed Editor,Chicago Maroon, 5706 University Ave.UCYF plansyouth serviceOrchestra hall will be the sceneof the annual youth service onSunday evening, November 6 at7:15 p.m. Planned and producedby the United Christian YouthFellowship of Greater Chicago(UCYF), the service is part of theChicago Sunday Evening club pro¬gram, and admission is free.Theme for the service is “Chris¬tian youth questions its place inworld citizenship.’’ Noted evange¬list Dr. Charles B. Templeton willbe the principal speaker. Also fea¬tured will be a dramatic skit anda worship service conducted byUCYF members.“Juvenile delinquency is too fre¬quently in the news these days,”said UCYF president Stephen Jan-ick, “but we are positive the ma¬jority of American youth havedeep spiritual ties. The annualyouth service at Orchestra hallwill afford young people the op¬portunity to make a great dem¬onstration for Christ!” Segregation upheldThe Florida Supreme courthanded down a 5-2 decision delay¬ing desegregation at the Univer¬sity of Florida. The court saidsegregation will continue until itis determined that Negroes can beadmitted without creating “publicmischief.” The Florida jurists heldthat it is the province of the state’scourt to permit integration onlyafter it can be shown that no“harm” to the public will result.A court commissioner was ap¬pointed to take testimony to de¬termine whether “public mis¬chief” would result from the ad¬mission of Negroes to the hithertoall-white school.Suggest invitationAn invitation for Russian stu¬dents to visit this country wassuggested in an editorial by theNew York City college paper, Ob¬servation Post. Considering all thedifferent groups of people thathave traveled to and from theSoviet Union this past summer,the editorial felt that “the routesbetween such far-apart place asKiev, USSR and Waterloo, Iowa,have become well-trodden path¬ways.”“We sincerely hope that thisnewfound amiability will not turnout to be a short-lived summer ro¬mance. One way this spirit could be continued would be to allowRussian student groups to enterthe United States without askingthem to be fingerprinted. Lastspring the State Department re¬fused to allow a student groupwhich was headed for the US en¬trance permission unless they ful¬filled this requirement. The Krem¬lin not to be outdone, indignantlyreplied that their students wouldnot enter with smudged fingers,and so the trip was off.“When summer came, Wash¬ington discovered that the rulingcould be waived . . . with a pre¬cedent now established, the StateDepartment would find it veryembarrassing indeed to continuedemanding that the students com¬ply with the ruling.”The editorial concluded by say¬ing that an invitation to the Rus¬sian students “could start the ballrolling on a long-overdue studentexchange program between thetwo nations.”Women in ROTCGeorge Washington universitywill now permit coeds to registerfor air force ROTC courses. Thereasons given for this new pro¬gram were that basic air sciencecourses are useful for both sexesand that by organizing a coeds’AFROTC detachment, a women’sunit will be ready not only tomarch, but to serve as hostessesand ushers on special occasions.READERSThe Campus Drug Store61st ond Ellis Opposite B-JThe winner in our“Dinner for Two” Contestthis week isF. M. KARMATZ Issued every Tuesday and Friday throughout the school year and intermit tcnti.during the summer quarter by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, at the pub¬lication offices, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telepluui,„-Editorial office, Midway 3-0800, ext. 1010: Business and advertising office, Midw,,.3-0800, ext. 1009. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions by mail, $3 per ,, ,rBusiness office hours: 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday.Co-editors-in-chiefJoy S. Burbach Palmer W. PinneyManaging editor Business managerWilliam M. Brandon Gory MokotoffExecutive news editorSupplement editor, Student Government electionCultural editorsSports editorPhoto editorNews editorCopy editorCalendar editorProduction managersPersonnel managerAdvertising managerCirculation managerFiling manager .Sue 3 .ixRobert QuinnJudy Podore, Robert MoodyMltri Dozoreta..George ZygmundDave BobrowNorman LewakEarl Herrick..Robert Quinn, Jean Kw.nJack BurbachLawrence KesslerBob BergmanSally KollenbergEditorial staff: James Birmingham, Sam Blazer. Barbara Fischman, Fred Freed,Rosemary GalU. Lois Gardner. Ronald Grossman, Jeanne Hargltt, BruceLarkin, Linda Libera, Gene Rochlln Karl Rodman, Glen Swogger, Fred Karst.On Campus MaxShukianj(Author of ”Barefoot Boy with Cheek," etc.)ADVENTURES IN SOCIAL SCIENCE: NO. 1“The proper study of mankind is man,” said Geoffrey Chaucerin his immortal Casey at the Fat, and I couldn’t agree more.In these tangled times it is particularly proper to study man —how he lives, how he functions, how he works. Accordingly, thiscolumn, normally devoted to slapdash waggery, will from timeto time turn a serious eye on the social sciences.In making these occasional departures, I have the hearty ap¬proval of the makers of Philip Morris Cigarettes, whose interestis not only in promoting the pleasure of young Americans byproviding them with a gentle cigarette, matchlessly blended <>fvintage tobaccos, grown with loving care and harvested withtender mercy, then cured with compassionate patience and rolledinto firm, tasty cylinders and brought to you in king size orregular, wrapped in fetching packages of lively crimson andpristine white, at prices that wreak no havoc on the moststringent of budgets; but who are equally concerned withbroadening the minds and extending the intellectual vistas ofevery college man and every college woman.I, for one, am not unmoved by this great-heartedness in themakers of Philip Morris, and though 1 know it is consideredchic these days to disparage one’s employer, 1 shall not. Indeed,I shall cry “Huzzah!” for the makers of Philip Morris. I shallcry “Huzzah!” and “Bon appetit!” and “Stout Fellows!”But i digress. For our first lesson in social science, let us turnto the study of economics, often called the queen of the socialsciences. (Sociology is the king of the social sciences. Advertis¬ing is the jack.) Economics breaks down into two broad generalclassifications: 1) coins; 2) folding money. But before takingup these technical aspects, let us survey briefly the history ofeconomics.Economics was discovered by the Englishman, Adam Smith.He published his theories in 1778, but everybody giggled so hardthat Smith, blushing hotly, gave up the whole thing and wentinto the cough drop business with his brother.For long years after that, economics lay neglected while theworld busied itself with other things, like the birth of VictorHugo, the last days of Pompeii, and the Bunny Hug.Then one day while flying a kite during a thunderstorm, theAmerican Henry George (also called Thorstein Veblen) dis¬covered the law of diminishing returns, and then, boy, the fatwas in the fire! Before you could say "knife,” the IndustrialRevolution was on! Mechanization and steam power resulted inprodigies of production. For example, a Welsh artisan namedDylan Sigafoos before the Industrial Revolution used to makehorseshoes by hand at the rate of four a day. After the Indus¬trial Revolution, with the aid of a steam engine, Sigafoos wasable to make entire horses.*And so it went—factories rising from the plains, cities bur¬geoning around the factories, transport and commerce keepingpace—until today, thanks to economics, we have smog, depres¬sions, and economics textbooks at $5.50. ©m»x shuim»n. 1955The makers of Philip Morris, who bring you this column, are noeconomists, but they do understand supply and demand. You de¬mand gentle smoking pleasure; toe supply the cigarette that has it—Philip Morris, of corrisl.HI CHICAGO MAROONSC election campaign underwayAnnounce eligible SG Jcandidates;19droppedIndependent candidatescollegePeter ClarkeDouglas MaurerhumanitiesGerald Zisookbusiness schoolCharles BaumbachIndependent Studentsleague studentscollegeMargaret BeaudetSylvia BoydPete CarmelLynn ChadwellRosemary GalliSee ‘Candidates,’ page 6The candidates list for the Student government election hasundergone several changes since last Friday.Marc Galanter, candidate from the law school has with¬drawn from the election. He had previously been listed as anSRP candidate, but claimedthat he had never acceptedthe SRP endorsement.Malone’s disqualification leavesSKP with no candidates in thebusiness school and automaticallygives one business seat to ISL.Other uncontested seats are onein the graduate library school,with Sabina Wagner (ISL) theonly candidate, and two in theseliol of Social Service administra¬tion. with only two ISL candi¬dates running.Nineteen candidates have al¬ready been dropped from the race.Arnold Knepfer was incorrectlylisted in last week’s Maroon asan SRP candidate from the medi¬cal school. He is actually an ISLcandidate from the medicalschool.The number of seats to be filledin the various divisions is as fol¬lows: college, 16: social sciences,10; humanities, 4; biological sci¬ences, 2; physical sciences, 4; lawschool, 3; medical school, 3; fed¬erated theological schools, 3;business school, 2; social servicesadministration, 2; and graduatelibrary school, 1.The list of candidates for theseseats as of last night reads as fol¬lows: .... •iif-iii .. r «, photo by ZygmundWho will fill the majority of seats in this chamber? Above is shown Law north, themeeting room for Student Government. Two political parties, Independent Students league(ISL) and the Student Representative party (SRP) are vieing for the fourth straight yearfor the votes of the student body politic. This year the two political parties are opposedby the voices of four independent candidates. As election time rolls around the proponentsfor each party and the independents hurl invectives and challenges at each other, andmake many and various promises and claims. To try to make sense out of this campaign,to try to present the issues in this SG election in a clear orderly and objective manner is thepurpose of this election supplement.ISL, SRP release their platforms'referendum vs. representation'by Robert QuinnWhat is the relationship between Student Government and the student body politic ot the University ofChicago?, o question of long-standing difference between the opposing parties of the Independent Studentsleague and the Student Representative party, found written expression this week with the release of theparties' platforms for the upcoming Student Government election.A basic claim of SRP duringthe election has been that theISL SG has been “out of touch”with the students at UC. SRP’splatform opens with a poem:"Mysterious proceedings lastingtill midnight50 million times aat homeyat 'work orwhile at playThere’snothinglike day1. FOR TASTE...bright, bracingever-fresh sparkle.2. FOR REFRESHMENT..*• welcome bitof quick energy thatbrings you back refreshed.BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OE THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BYThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.j) * registered trade-mark. O IMS, THE-COCA-COLA COMPANY Eerie rustling of voluminousnotesMuffled treads of campus DonQuixotesCreaky maneuvers of parlia¬mentary acrobatics.”This is the SRP conception ofhow decisions have been madeunder the ISL administration.Appeal to publicAntithetically, SRP states thatif elected to SG they will useevery means to “maintain the con¬tact between representatives andrepresented: individual contact,public hearings, referenda, discus¬sion and debate programs, pub¬licity through campus organs, andconsultation with all campus or¬ganizations. This will make SG anauthoritative voice for the UC stu¬dent body in their effort to dealwith their problems.” It is uponthis premise that SRP bases theirentire platform. The ISL platform contains thefollowing plank: “As the govern¬ment grows, there is an increas¬ing danger that its work will be¬come removed from the studentsthemselves. Through the programof associate committee member¬ship, SG is extending its base, byencouraging interested studentswho are not members of the gov¬ernment to work as members ofits committees. ISL will make in¬creased participation in the gov¬ernment and communication withthe students a primary aim. Com¬munication with the student bodyis an important problem.” ISLproposes to have weekly govern¬ment reports on WUCB, Studentforum debates, and personal re¬ports to interested organizations.ISL answers SRPThis is the ISL answer to theSRP charge. SRP puts constantSG-student communication as theimportant factor in the operation of SG — the entire platform isbased on the assumption that thiscommunication will exist, fn theISL platform, it is important, butnot basic.The difference between the twoparties is evident in their state¬ments about civil liberties. TheISL platform states that “thisyear the ISL-SG will continue topress for public endorsement ofthe model educational practicesstandard by the University andfor statewide legislative action.The SRP platform, on the otherhand, states “we call for the con¬vening of an all-campus civil lib¬erties committee to immediatelypndertake action to make Univer¬sity policies consistent with themodel educational practices stand¬ards adopted by NSA.” The dis¬tinction here is along the old linesof government by representationversus government by referen-See ‘ISL, SRP,’ page 6ISlate four ballot boxes for16 spots; none in JuddFour ballot boxes will move to 16 voting locations Thursday and Friday during the SGelection.No ballot box will be in Judd hall, the education department division, this year. Instead,one will be placed in the Classics-Wieboldt archway.Only six people voted in Judd hall in last October’s election, twelve in the spring NationalStudent association election, according to Joli Lasker, chairman of the election anc* rulescommittee. No ballot box was in Classics-Wieboldt last year, and there was no one placein which humanities students could vote.One candidate who cam-Four independents listed;party system challengedFour candidates have challenged the Student Governmentparty system with the announcement of their candidacy forStudent Government as independents.Peter Clarke and Douglas Maurer, college, Gerald Zisook,humanities, and Charles Baumbach, business, are the firstcandidates in recent years to run for SG as independents with¬out endorsement by either po- — r~r ~r~T~T—;—~n~Tlitinnl nnrfv tion: 1S possible to be elected toy*, SG without a party label, and“Student government by should a representative of the stu-paigned in Judd last fall esti¬mated that one - fifth of thesocial sciences vote was cast inJudd, however.The schedule of voting at parl¬ous locations on campus is asfollows:Thursday9:30- 4:00 Cobb (outside or inside, de¬pending on the weather)5:00- 7:00 Judson court (outside din¬ing room)Burton court (outside din¬ing room)Social Sciences (lobby)Social Sciences (lobby)Mandel corridorLaw (first floor)Chicago Theological sem¬inary4:30- 7:30 International house lobbyFridayCobbHitchcock loungeHaskell (second floor)Classics-Wieboldt archwayMedical school loungeMandel corridorSwift (first floor)Kelly loungeHarper west (first floor)Beecher (first floor lounge)9:30- 4:309:30- 4:309:30- 6:309:30- 1 001:30- 3:309:30- 4:004:30- 6:309:30-11:4512:15- 3:354:45- 6:309:30- 6:309:30-11:3511:45- 2:002:30- 4:354:45- 6:30 parties is government by cliques,stated Clarke. “A representativeshould think for himself and votefor himself, instead of having hisvote dictated by a clique.”Clarke stated that his candidacyis designed to answer the ques- dent body be responsible to thestudent body or to a party?If he is elected, Clarke feels,"other qualified persons not onthe inside so far as parties areconcerned will also run for elee*tion”Page 6 October 25, I955IW >C\Tv'uC.’ri5nppnnrWill^ r 7CL Kt Are students citizens or students?,SL'SRPThe parties view the perfect SGIn news stories dealing with elections it is a cardinal rule that at least one story be in¬cluded about the organization to which the candidates are seeking to be elected — e g. whatis the presidency, what will the city council do with yourmoney, etc. etc.In o Student Government election ot the Universityof Chicago, however, this is impossible, because oneof the major issues in the campaign is what is SG,what are its goals and what it should and should not do, and what would a perfect student government belike. The answers to these questions divide candidatesstraight down ISL - SRP party iines.These questions were asked Janice Metros, presidentof ISL and Joel Rosenthal, president of SRP. Theseare their answers.“Frankly, I’ve alwaysconsidered myself autono¬mous.”Candidates . . .(from page 5)Richard E. JohnsonJerald JordanMarvin A. KaplanHarold LevyJanice MetrosPenny RichJohn RollterDiane (Squiffer) StoddardAthan TheoharisNorman WhalandHerbert Zipperiansocial sciencesDon P. CassMary HirakawaEmil R. JohnsonBruce D. LarkinJohn LyonBruce MacLachlanD. V. RamanaLouis C. SchawJohn SmothersDavid UtleyhumanitiesRichard BrodJacob MichaelsonJoan NaglestadMarjorie Trugman The SRP view:SRP conceives of Student Government as having three functions: it should work in thearea of student needs, it should seek to articulate opinions of the student body, and it shouldwork in the community to further “a free university in a free society.”We reject the ISL concept ofthe government’s handling onlymatters which affects students as sounding board of campus opinion not an all-campus body, and dur-before the SG commits the stu- ing the term of office of the 1954-students as an absurdly parochial de?.ts on matters o£ ott campus 55 assembly there was never anypolicy. attempt to bring popular supportThe major emphasis of SG behind any measures under con-should be on representation of the sideration. Until this is done, SGstudents. We feel that this has will be nothing but a small voice,been grieviously lacking in past speaking only for the majorityview. Students are also citizens,and any attempt to separate theseroles is an attempt to only par¬tially represent us. Of course.SRP feels that there must be some assemblies. The SG at present is party.The ISL View:ISL believes that Student Government should fulfill two functions. It should representthe students to the administration, other student groups, and state and federal govern¬ments on questions concerning student affairs and academic life. Student Government shouldshould also serve the studentsthrough facilities which it can pretend to represent the campus eting and rioting,” but ratherbest pi’ovide, e.g. book exchanges, on matters which do not concern employ intelligent negotiam.hiirMtv cptWcc Pic , tion to solve the problems affect-publicity services, etc. the students as students. SG ing the student.See ‘IS1,’ page 7the students as students. SG ing the student.Student Government should not should not endorse “strikes, pick- (frbm page 5)dum — whether Student government will act as a continuous renresentative body or as a channeland organizer of independent andspontaneous student action.There is substantial agreementbetween the two platforms aboutwhat is needed: cheaper text-books; low-eost, non-discrimina¬tory housing; an active exchanceprogram; federal aid to education-a program of student services; ac¬tive participation in the NationalStudent association; and a pro.graip to promote academic free,dom.The SRP platform takes a standagainst the “I promise to workhard” oath and its use by thescholarship committee in consid¬eration of applicants. ISL doesnot.Lower book pricesISL proposes that the loweringof text book rates be done throughthe existent student service centerwhich would handle the booksSRP favors the setting up of rbook “co-operative.” ISL also cmphasizes that it will encourage theUniversity to improve some of itsfacilities, citing the night book dopository in Harper and the lengthening of the Social Sciences rending room hours as its past accomplishments.Both parties pledge to attackdiscrimination. SRP pledging tofight the University requirementthat all candidates for admissionto the medical school submit aphotograph prior to admission.law schoolJim HandlerBarbara StechBarbara Vogelfangermedical schoolFrancis BarhamArnold KnepferNorman Sherfederated theological schoolsRobert GermanyRudolph Rex ReederHarold R. Rudolphbusiness schoolBertrand N. BauerW. R. Niblaksocial service administrationKasumi ShimookaKathryn Fitchgraduate library schoolSabina WagnerStudent Representativeparty candidatesbiological sciencesHerbert FriedmanStuart Zimmermanphysical sciencesRonald BlumMartin LeibowitzTrent TiedemanPeter O. Vandervoort WHAT’S THIS? For solution, seeparagraph below.collegeSusan DaskaisCarolyn EggertJoyce EverettSteve FitchMiriam GarfinSaul GreenbergPhilip HoffmanA. Roy HuddlesonLouis JonesTom KapantaisPaul MandellRick, NeffJanice PorterLaurence Shad crow f skyDon VillarejoEdward M. Wisesocial sciencesDon R. AndersonMary Ann ChacarestosDavid FarquharJim FlynnJohn GilmoreJoel HendersonMilton KotlerSam VenturellaJames W ViceJoyce WhitleyhumanitiesHugh (Woody) AtkinsonR. E. C. CharlesYahya KahnJoel Rosenthalbiological sciencesLawrence LichtensteinMike Blumephysical sciencesDavid EhrlichRichard SommerfieldRobert Steinlaw schoolHerbert KutchinsPeter D. LedererMary Popkinmedical schoolWilliam LloydColeman SesklndDavid Termanfederated theological schoolsTerry BradleyJames Walch Cut Students!EARN$25“!yourself in on the LuckyDroodle gold mine. We pay $25for all we use—and for a wholeraft we don’t use! Send yourDroodles with descriptive titles.Include your name, address, col¬lege and class and the name andaddress of the dealer in your col¬lege town from whom you buycigarettes most often. Address:Lucky Droodle, Box 67A,Mount Vernon, N.Y. CONFUSION REIGNS in the Droodle above, titled: Switchboard operated byabsent-minded Lucky smoker. Poor girl’s been swamped by too many phone calls.But she isn’t confused about better taste—she smokes Luckies. Luckies taste better,first of ail, because Lucky Strike means fine tobacco. Then "It's Toasted” to tasteeven better . . . cleaner, fresher, smoother. Switch to Lucky Strike yourself. You’llsay it’s the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked—and you won’t have yourwires crossed, either. DROODLES, Copyright 1953 by Roger PriceMAN STEPPINGON GUMJerry BaeikKent State TEETHPICKTakashi ShidaLos Angeles City College SALE—50% OffJimmy N. BrewerHenderson State T.C. FLYING SAUCERCHASING ROCKET SHIPLeslie PoindexterSarah LawrenceLUCKIES TASTE BETTER - Cleaner. Fresher, Smoother!©AT. Co. PRODUCT OF AMERICA’S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTESOctober 25, 1955 THE CHldJUJ' NBishop Burrill Rev. Burrill topreach at Bondchapel TuesdayEpiscopal bishop of Chi¬cago, the Rt. Reverend GeraldFrancis Burrill, will preach atBond chapel on all saints day, nextTuesday at 8 p.m.>h The bishop’s subject will be“The unity of God in Christ.”Evensong will be sung by the con¬gregation and the choir of Christchurch.The occasion of this service inBurrill’s annual visitation on the§ work of the Episcopal churchcouncil, a committee of facultyEpiscopalians who assist the Epis¬copal chaplain in this work in theUniversity.After the service there will be areception for Burrill at Brenthouse, the new Episcopal univer¬sity center at 5540 Woodlawn.SRP PRESENTSKid Ory and hisDixie LandJazz BandPlusStuds TurkelSaturday, October 293=3° p.m. $1 EHMandel hall Confer onprejudicePersonal example and tact¬ful education are the most ef¬fective means of combatingracial and religious prejudices,fifty college students and staff ex¬perts concluded at a recent Na¬tional Conference of Christiansand Jews conference.Penny Rich and Richard John¬son were UC delegates at this fifthannual conference on human rela¬tions at Lake Geneva, Wisconsin.The problems of racial and re¬ligious prejudices were consideredin a variety of ways, including lec¬tures, group discussions, and role-playing demonstrations. Late bullsessions inevitably centeredaround the theme of discrimina¬tion, the UC delegates reported.The keynote address was deliv¬ered by Leonard Z. Breen, UC as¬sistant professor. Suggesting thatpeople in Illinois are selectingplaces to live more and more onthe basis of occupation, interests,and income, Breen remarked,“These are more appropriatestandards in our kind of demo¬cratic society.” Classified AdsLost & Found For SaleLost: Silver brooch. Plain, shaped likemany-pointed star. Call Mrs. EverettHughes, PL 2-5656.Would whoever picked up a gray over¬coat with a Des Moines label and leftone with a Butte, Mont, label, in Gor¬don’s Saturday night, call Gortler, B-J.Personal Rummage sale. Bargains galore!Save money on clothing, bedding, andmiscellaneous household items. Comenow! This sale lasts this week only: 1116E. 55. Sponsored by Rest He .en conva¬lescent home. A non-sectarian institu¬tion.m _1946 Dodge. Good condition, radio andheater. $100. HU 3-1372.1946 Pontiac “8” two-door, extras. $55.Call Gerken, ext. 1201 at Int. house.Bunny: Give up on opera tickets. Didthis one come special delivery? Kit-zichka.Don't dilly dally! Do it now! Yearbookportrait appointments are being takenat Reynolds club desk.Subject wanted for problem solving ex¬periment. 1-3 hrs. $1.50 per hr. Callext. 1559 between 1 and 5 p.m.Dragon: Have a good time in California.J. B.Apartments WantedCouple wants 2-room apartment begin¬ning Jan. 1. Joe Geiser, BU 8-1171. ServicesInstruction in the violin. Robert BICch,NO 7-0143 or at Music building.Frencr. Tutoring, coaching and trans¬lations. Native teacher. Reasonable.NO 7-2722.Dressmaking, alterations. Quick serv¬ice. FA 4-764S. Mornings or evenings.ISL(from page 6)For RentLarge, fine, furnished apartment toshare with another couple or with oneor two ladies. Ann <fc Art Butler, 1463E. 56th. MU 4-0067. Call before 1 p.m.or after 6 p.m.THE CHICAGO REVIEW PRESENTSe. e. cummingsREADINC FROM HIS WORKWEDNESDAY, OCT. 268:30 P.M. MANDEL HALLStudents 1.00 Non-students 1.50Tickets on sole at Reynolds Club desk or at door M A perfect student governmentshould be able to admirably serveas a voice for the student body onrelevant pressing issues, such asreductions on education and in¬fringement of academic freedom.It should function as a laison ofgreat strength for the student tothe administration. It should beable to intelligently work with theadministration in order to exp^-lite the realization of its projectsyet should not be afraid to diffe#with the administration in striv¬ing for its goals. SG should be at¬tentive to the students’ wishes forfacilities and services which willmake life at the university moreefficient, meaningful, and enjoy¬able.In other words, the student gov¬ernment should be a tool of thestudents, a voice for the students,and a service to the students.BROOKS BROTHERSSPORT AND CASUAL CLOTHESin interesting new selectionsStarting with exclusive new combinations ofblack with olive green or browns in ourtweed sport jackets, our exclusive new suitsof lightweight Dacron and cotton corduroy,and attractive all wool jersey knit jackets...to reversible short outercoats in our newshawl collar model... our sport and casualclothes are colorful, correct, attractive.KSTABLISHCD 1«1t4©THIjSoTMens Furnishings, fiats echoesJ46 MADISON AVENUE, COR. 44TH ST., NEW YORK 17, N. Y.Boston • Chicago • los anceles • san francisco V J V. ,'•k ^ Ahead of the game ...Arrow fields a smart squad of Sweaters,with man-for-man superiority downthe line. They’re warm and soft, styledwith exceptional taste—in Orion orlambswool, or a blend of Orion andwool. It’s a smart college man whocollects several colored sweaters.Sleeveless from $5.00 or long-sleevedfrom $7.95. They’re perfect, wornwith dress and sport shirts—•like this Arrow plaid. Get a few of each!ARROW-CASUAL 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 — Evanslon ‘‘Oak Park — EvergreenGary — Joliet — AltonPage 8 THE CHICAGO MAROORhines and Baker added MarOOn SOCCer teamV Smoke Tomorrow'sbetter cigarette1"Today -r put A ^SMILE IN YOURSMOKING!to biological science facultyAppointment of Ruth Rhines,anatomist, and William K. Baker,geneticist, to the faculty of thedivision of biological sciences wasannounced Friday by Lowell T.Coggeshall, dean of the division.Dr. Rhines, a neuroanatomistVcilpo tops L/Cin cross-country;Omohundro winsLast Friday afternoon the var¬sity cross-country team lost 23-36to a strong, well-balanced teamfrom Valparaiso. Leading scorerfor UC was Art Omohundro whowon his second straight, runningthe three mile Washington parkcourse in 15:50.1.Valporaiso, however, finishedalmost to a man behind Omo-hunlro. Isaac Hey ns and HoseaMartin came in fourth and ninth,respectively, for Chicago whileBill Krol showed improvement ashe finished tenth on Martin’sheels. Dan Trifone in twelfth placerounded out UC’s efforts.As Varsity men rested Satur¬day, the Chicago Track club cross¬country runners sneaked by theUniversity of Illinois at Cham-paigne 25-30. Phil Coleman, of UC,won the 3% mile race in 14:13.9.The Track club balance, with Kel¬ly in second, Almaguer, sixth,Deike, seventh, and Barnes, ninth,was too much for Illinois.The varsity’s next meets areWright Jr, college at Washingtonpark Thursday and WisconsinState teachers college at Milwau¬kee, Saturday.The Chicago Track club meetsNotre Dame and the Quantico Ma¬rines (currently being led by milerWes Santee), at South Bend, Sat¬urday.STUDENTWIVESWORK ON CAMPUSThe Personnel Office has awide variety of full-timeclerical and technical posi¬tions that are open. We aresure there is one that willinterest you.WE NEEDSecretariesStenographersTypistsBookkeepersClerksClinical TechniciansResearch Technicians(including)Medical ChemistsHematologistsHistologistsBacteriologistsBENEFITS INCLUDE3 weeks' paid vacation2 weeks' sick leaveTuition remissionLibrary and recreationalprivilegesapply NOWPersonnel Office956 E. 58th St. specializing in the study of the de¬velopment of the nervous system,becomes associate professor of an¬atomy. Baker, whose field is re¬search in the effect of radiationupon heredity, becomes associateprofessor of zoology.Dr. Rhines received her B.S. de¬gree (19381, her MA (1940), PhD(1942) and MD (1949) from North¬western university. She wras previ¬ously assistant superintendent ofthe Chicago Municipal Contagioushospital.Before coming to UC Baker wassenior biologist with the OakRidge National Laboratory in OakRidge Tennessee (1951-1955). Hewas previously assistant professorof zoology at the University ofTexas. downed by Wheaton, 3-1by Ralph HirscliThe Wheaton college Crusaders beat the Maroon soccer team, 3-1, in a fiercely contestedconference game Saturday. Wheaton, playing on its home grounds, was cheered on by asizeable group of spectators. The game leaves Chicago with a season record of two wins, twolosses, and a tie.The Crusaders started at their usual whirlwind pace and kept the ball in UC territoryduring the first quarter. Early in the second quarter they broke through the stubbornChicago defense and scored ona well-executed header by Pi- again and again. With eight min- The Maroons were handicappederre Biscaye. Minutes later, utes of playing time left, Whea- from the start by the absence otthe Chicago offense suffered a ton’s outside-left and team cap- two regular half-backs and thecrippling blow when center-for- tain, Dave Arnold, bounced a shot outside-left. Having lost Sutton,ward Ron Sutton, the team’s lead- off the Chicago crossbar and as well, they were never able toing scorerer, was injured and had scored from the ensuing melee develop a potent offensive gameto leave the game. at the goal mouth. He added the and had to content themselvesChicago tied the score early third Wheaton goal shortly after with throwing back Wheaton’sin the third quarter when Ron on an unstoppable shot from eight thrusts and exploiting occasionalCrutchfield converted a penalty yards out. openings,with a well-placed shot into thetop left-hand corner. Wheaton at¬tacked relentlessly throughoutthe second half, but was repulsedAnnouncement. . .As a convenience, business hours will be from 7 a m. to1 1 p m., beginning October 24. The shop will be openMonday through Saturday. mEllen Coughlin Beauty SalonMl 3-2060 5105 Lake Park Ave. PETE SEEGER Singsat 7th Annual Festival of Nationalitieswith colorful folk-dance groupsSal-., Nov. 12 — 8:15 p.m.Milda Theatre — 3140 S. Halsted St.Advance adm.: $1.00Ausp.: Midwest Comm, for Protection of Fore^n Bornfor information coll WEbster 9-3552Enjoy a Cool Mildnessnever possible before!Chesterfield* Made witht> Ik/utt & Miiu Tokaooo Co