Club snack barin two weeksCloister club in Ida Noyes will be opened as a snack barwith hamburgers, hot dogs, grilled cheese sandwiches, coffee,tea, and complete soda fountain service in two weeks.Tuesday, representatives of the student organizations in¬volved in the move to Ida -—ESsIda NoyesIda Noyes entrance. Studentsentering Noyes In two weeks'will find food in the renovated€loister club snack bar. Noyes will meet to make finalplans for moving, and to arrangefor the November 18 open house.Social representatives and chair¬men will meet in Ida Noyes eastlounge at 3:30 p.m.Mary Alice Newman, associatedirector of student activities, saidthat the snack bar hours were notfinally determined but that itprobably would open about 11:30a.m. and close at 5:30 or 6.Vending machine service, in¬cluding coffee, hot chocolate, pas¬try, sweet rolls, pies, cake, soups,broths, sandwiches and otherservices will be installed as earlierplanned and will be open probablyas long as the building is open,as well as during snack shophours.The social sciences celebrationof the 25th anniversary of thededication of the Social Sciencesbuilding may cause some changein the moving plans, since manyof the rooms in Ida Noyes will beused for meetings during the con¬ference Thursday through Satur¬day. However, present plans call for the move to be finished by theNovember 18 open house.To be discussed at the Tuesdaymeeting are such details as ar¬rangement for moving, and instal¬lation of telephones. The exten¬sion telephone numbers of mostoffices probably will remain thesame. Committeeplans promFull responsibility for theWashington Promenade willrest with the eleven membersof the prom committee, thesocial activities council de¬cided Wednesday, rejecting aplan to retain veto power. SACmembers will sit ex-officio onthe committee in an advisorycapacity, however.The committee will meetWednesday at 4 p.m. in Rey¬nolds club fishbowl.University of Chicago, Tuesday, November 4, 1955Notarized statementtells Larkin's innocence“I cast only one ballot; I committed no fraud during theelection,” a notarized statement by Bruce Larkin reads. Lar¬kin’s name, probably written by a law student who wanteda joke at Larkin’s expense, was found signed in the ballotbooks for the law school.Larkin himself is a student in the social sciences. His notar¬ized statement declares, “I cast my only ballot of the election,signing my name ‘Bruce D. Larkin.’ ” The other signatureomitted the initial *‘D.” 6Crucible9 tickets reducedReduced rates to Arthur Miller’s controversial drama, The Crucible, are being offered forthe Sunday, November 20, Mandel hall production by all Maroon staff members. Ticketsregularly $1.50 for the University Theatre performance are $1; $1 tickets are being offeredfor 75 cents.University Theatre is now in its final two weeks of rehearsals for the drama of witch-trials. The drama will be staged in five scenes with emphasis on lighting to convey the vari¬ous scene shifts from Salem,Massachusetts, homes to aforest and jail cell. PerditaNelson is designing authenticPuritan costumes and Pat Hag¬gard is creating early Americanfurniture and properties. The play will open in Mandelhall November 17, 19, and 20 fora three-day run. Tickets at reg¬ular rates for the earlier perform¬ances are on sale in the Reynoldsclub. ■ \ Arthur Miller is author of“Death of a Salesman,”, awardwinning play which found itsway into reading lists for Univer¬sity courses. Marvin Phillips, Uni¬versity Theatre director, is pro¬ducing the play.Farquhar elected government presidentby Jeanne HargittDavid Farquhar became president of Student Government at the first meeting of the 1955-56 assembly Tuesday. At this organiza¬tional meeting all officers and committee chairmanships went to the majority, Student Representative party.The meeting's only election disputes occurred on the student needs committee chairmanship and on the membership of the com¬mittees on recognized student organizations and election and rules.Farquhar, SRP member elected from social sciences, was president of Frankfort university’s student government while an exchange student there, buthas never before been a government member at UC. Farquhar attended the UC college in 1949 and is now a student in economics.Maintains majorityOf the two elected commit¬tees, recognized student or¬ganizations (CORSO) and elec¬tions and rules (E&R), SRP wassuccessful in electing its membersto three of the four positions onCORSO, while the four electedscats on E&R were split equallybetween the parties. SRP,' how¬ever, maintains majorities on bothcommittees, since the chairmenalso vote. SRP presented three ofits members as candidates for theE&R committee, as well as threefor CORSO. rDuring the CORSO election, re¬ counts on two candidates, roll-calls on two candidates, a motionto suspend the rules and omit aroll-call, a motion to recess, andrulings by the chair on what con¬stitutes a majority vote and whatconstitutes an announcement ofa vote took place.Susan Daskais (SRP-col.) andDon Villarejo (SRP-col.) wereelected to the E&R committee, aswere Rosemary Galli (ISL-col.)and Jim Handler (ISL-law), fol¬lowing a roll call election in whichTom Kapantais (SRP-col.) re¬ceived the least number of yea votes and was therefore dropped,all of the candidates having re¬ceived a majority of the votescast. Villarejo was nominatedafter John Gilmore (SRP-soc sci.)withdrew when he received thelowest number of votes by a showof hands. Gilmore had been ear¬lier elected student needs chair¬man, Kapantais activities coordi¬nation chairman, and Villarejopublicity chairman.Postponement defeatedDuring the election of commit¬tee chairmen, Don Anderson(SRP-soc. sci), majority leader,moved to defer election of a stu¬New Student Government officers, Miriam Garfin, secretary, Janice Porter, vice president, andl>avid Farquhar, president, leading the first meeting of the 1955-56 Assembly. dent needs chairman to the nextSG meeting. Following a rulingby the chair that a two-thirds votewas needed to postpone, whichvote was not received, Gilmorewas elected chairman of studentneeds. Later in the course of themeeting, during a roll-call vote,Lawrence Lichtenstein (SRP-bi.sci.) appealed the ruling of thechair. “It is simply impossible totable a motion which has takenplace,” Bert Bauer (ISL-bus.)minority leader argued. Debatecontinued until Anderson rc?.dfrom Robert's Rules of Order andsatisfied the body that Lichten¬stein’s motion was out of order.Bunch votesA ruling of the chair, after elec¬tion of E&R members, before elec¬tion of CORSO members, statedthat a member would not be elect¬ed if he received more nay votesthan yea votes, even if he receivedmore yea votes than the othercandidates. The ruling furtherstated that each SG membermight vote yea or nay a total offour times,* but must abstain thefifth, in voting fofc the four outof five nominated to CORSO.Both ISL and SRP bunched theirabstentions allowing one of theother party’s candidates to beautomatically elected. Thus JanPorter (SRP-col) received 22 yeasand 18 abstentions, while PeteCarmel (ISL-col.) received 22yeas and 13 abstentions, by showof hands.By roll call vote, the assemblyelected Joyce Everett (SRP-col)and Jim Vice (SRP-soc. sci.). by 23-22 and 23-21-1 majorities. Bar¬bara Stech (ISL-law) lost, receiv¬ing on a show of hands vote 22-22.However, an earlier hand vote onEverett had been 21-17 for, andon Vice 22-22. A recount on ViceSeats vacant...Petitions for the StudentGovernment seat from the so¬cial sciences, vacated by DavidFarquiiar when iie assumedthe SG presidency, are avail¬able in the SG offices, Reyn¬olds club, third floor. Petitionsfor the Southeast Chicago com¬mission committee and for thecommittee on the Universityneighborhood also are avail¬able.showed 23-21-1, until one ISL’erchanged his aye vote to a nayvote. Gilmore, however, left theroom before the roll call vote.Before a 23rd SRP’er appeared,the votes on Everett and Stechhad been deadlocked 22-22.• Attempts AdjournmentBauer (ISL-bus), moved to ad¬journ to November 15; an SRPproposed amendment was carried23-21 to change to November 8.The first motion to adjourn failed,by a show of hands, with ISLvoting in favor of adjournment,following a voice vote in whichISL had voted against adjourn¬ment, and SRP voted in favor.As has been done in previousyears, a motion was unanimouslycarried to buy a gavel for AlbertFortier, last year’s SG presidentPage 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 4, 1955Int house celebrates “France must not ruleiwith exotic program in past” says GrandvilleTomorrow is International day at International house. Aprogram of speakers, folk dancing, and other entertainmentwill be featured in the annual event, beginning at 11 a.m. andlasting until 3 p.m. “Students both foreign and American areoffered a unique opportunity to meet people from nine areacolleges in Chicago including Barat, Rosary, Lyons, andNorthwestern,” 3ack Ker-ridge, director of foreign stu- Students from foreign countriesdents at International house, wil1 wear their authentic nativeclothing and various countrieswill exhibit folk dancing. Also onthe program is a panel discussionby International house studentsfrom Germany, England, India,Japan, and two other nations.Students throughout Chicagocolleges are invited to attend theevent. “We at International houseare very proud and pleased thatagain this year the Chicago chap¬ter of the American Red Crosscollege activities has chosen theUniversity of Chicago for its an¬nual International day/' Kerridgesaid.International house cafeteriacafeteria will be open for lunch—the Red Cross literature says, “Allyou can eat on your own budget.” “France has made mistakes in its policies towards North Africa, but what is past cannotbe remedied,” said Jean de la Grandville, counsellor of the French embassy in Washington,in a lecture Monday sponsored by the International Relations club.The French diplomat said that the problem of independence for Tunisia, Morocco, orAlgeria must be viewed in terms of what is possible under present conditions, rather thanin terms of what might have been possible if French rule in the past had been more enlight¬ened. Grandville admitted that ■———-France has failed to train “We want something new poll- and industry of the area by hardenough native leaders for as- tically,” Grandville stated. “Wesuming political responsibility, (jon>f want to stand still; we knowcommented.Everyone is welcome to attendthe Red Cross-sponsored Interna¬tional day, according to chairmanVictor Bahr of UC, but reserva¬tions should be made today, eitherat the student activities office,Reynolds club, or by calling Mrs.Lee McCue at WA 2-7850.“Last year 130 students of vari¬ous foreign countries attendedthe event. We hope this year’sattendance will be twice as large,”Bahr commented.'Mademoiselle'plans contestAn informal tea for undergrad¬uate women interested in theMademoiselle magazine collegeboard contest will be given onWednesday from 3:30 to 5 p.m. inthe Ida Noyes north receptionroom. UC student Helen Wollack,a guest editor for Mademoisellelast summer, will speak to thegroup.The contest is open to collegewomen who are interested inwriting, art, fashion and merchan¬dising, or advertising and layout.College board members are select¬ed on the basis of an assignmentIn connection with one of thesefields. From this board twentygirls are chosen to go to NewYork in June as the guests ofMademoiselle to write, edit andillustrate the August college is¬sue.Rothfels andM orgenthauto speak MondayGermany’s unification will bediscussed Monday by Hans Roth¬fels, professor of history, andHans J. Morgenthau, professor ofpolitical science, at 8 p.m. in thehomeroom of International house.Rothfels is an authority on Bis-marckian foreign policy and au¬thor of The German Opposition toHitler, and other books. Morgen¬thau is an expert on internationalpower politics, and is author andeditor of several books, includingGermany and the Future of Eu¬rope.The discussion is sponsored bythe International Relations cluband the UC peace center. but the fact is, he said, that Tuni¬sians, for example, would be un¬able to run their government ifTunisia were given independenceovernight. If Morocco became in¬dependent there would be openconflict between its five million-Arabs and four million Berbertribesmen, he said.There is a new spirit in Francewhich acknowledges that the eraof colonialism is gone, Grandvillestated. He said that the FrenchNational assembly is predomi¬nantly liberal in outlook, as wit¬ness the large majorities by whichthe treaties providing for Tuni¬sia’s gradual independence wereratified, under the premiership ofPierre Mendes-France. that repression will not solve theproblem of native nationalism.The only question is with whatgroups are we going to negotiateand at what time and under whatsafeguards for the two millionFrench settlers in North Africa.”Grandville maintained that itis these settlers who cause theNorth African problem to be in adifferent category from those ofIndochina or Syria. For in the lat¬ter countries there were noFrench settlers whose interestshad to be protected, whereas inNorth Africa the two millionFrench are people with deep rootsin the land, often dating back sev¬eral generations. It is they whohave developed the agricultureColombian scholarships available;set deadline for DecemberU.S. college graduates are offered, by the University of Caldas in Manizales, Colombia,two teaching assistantships for the 1956 academic year — January 3 to October 5, 1956.December 1, 1955 is the deadline for application for the Colombian awards.Other eligibility requirements are: U.S. citizenship; a bachelor’s degree by date of depar- Saturday night, Nov,ture; proficiency in Spanish; work, he said, and they have aright to enjoy the fruits of theirlabor.Grandville put heavy stress onthe fact that international com¬munism is exploiting the national¬ist agitation in North Africa andis the chief beneficiary thereof.Women's clubscontinue rushing,says l-C prexy“Esoteric, Mortarboards, Quad-ranglers, and Sigma have official¬ly been holding rushing functionsduring the last two weeks,” statedBrina Jaffee, president of Inter¬club council.In addition to the rushing activ¬ities held by the four clubs, DeltaSigma, a recognized member ofInterclub council, has been grant¬ed permission to rush unofficiallyby contacting friends and the per¬sonal contacts of the active mem¬bership in order to reorganize inpreparation for official winterrushing.All five of the dubs will par¬ticipate at, preferential dance5.the maturity, articulatenessand initiative necessary for teach¬ing; good moral character, per¬sonality and adaptability; andgood health. Both men and womenare eligible for the awards.The assistantships include amonthly stipend of 275 Colombianpesos (roughly $100), room, tui¬tion in any faculty of the univer¬sity and return transportation byair from Miami to Manizales. Menassistants are housed in a dormi¬tory, women in a high school con¬nected with the university.Address applications to: Insti¬tute of International Education,1 E. 67th st., New York. N. Y.Successful candidates will as¬sist in teaching English in theuniversity’s department of lang-AttorneyStevensto give talk onJustice RutledgeJohn P. Stevens, Chicago attor¬ney, will give a free public lectureon United States Supreme CourtJustice Wiley Rutledge at 8:30p.m. Monday, Nov. 7. His lecture,to be held at the Oriental insti¬tute, is the last in a series of threesponsored by the UC law schoolon justices of the United StatesSupreme CourtStevens, an alumnus of the Uni¬versity law school, is a former lawclerk to Justice Rutledge. guages. Preference will be givento applicants who plan careers asSpanish instructors.This is the first year in whichthe assistantships have been of¬fered by the Colombian univer¬sity. PETE SEEGER Singsaf 7th Annual Festival of Nationalities. . • also Afro-Cuban and Greek dancersSot1., Nov. 12 — 8:15 p.m.Milda Theatre — 3140 S. Halsted St.Advance adm.: $1.00Tickets os soleAusp.: Midwest Comm, fa •t Reynolds Clubf Protection of Foreign Bomdon’t waitwe’re hiring for CHRISTMAS Jobs. . . RIGHT IVOWtCOMO PIZZERIA1520 E. 55 FA 1-5525FREE DELIVERYON ALL PIZZASMALLCHEESE ..l.iffSAUSAGE ..1.40ANCHOVY ..1.40PEPPER and ONION ..1.30SHRIMP ..1.60COMBINATION ..1.50SPECIAL!V2 Fried Chicken ....1.00Potatoes and Bread FAIRCome in now!Whether you’re experienced or not.we hove a full time or part time jobfor you ... in selling ornon-selling deportments.enjoy all these benefits:• good earnings# Immediate discounte pay while traininge and ...an opportunity that mightresult in a permanent career for you!We ore hiring our Christmas help newemployment officeNinth Floor... State at AdamsPage 3) November 4, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROONSEECIALHCHRISTMASOFFER u.kMlW"#3™'2 —8x 10photographsselection of 8 proofs 120 WORDS PER MINUTELet Louise Barker capture yourinnermost dreams and portray themfor Christmas givingLouise Barker... photogre1457-59 E. 57th BU SHORTHANDStudent government voteturnout declines againby Robert QuinnThe percentage of the student body on the quadrangles voting in Student Governmentelections continues to decline, figures from this year’s election disclose.This year 1,455 students, or 30 per cent of the students on the quadrangles cast ballots.This is 2 per cent less than those voting last year, and 7 per cent less than the record voteof 1952.Forty-five per cent of those enrolled in the college voted, in contrast with a vote of 20 percent in the social sciences divi- many votes as the lowest elected building, only 1.5 per cent of thesion (which fills the second candidate last year. Gerald Zisook, education students voted, exclud-largest number of seats in who ran first in humanities lastjsGt, and 23 per cent of the stu- year on the Independent Studentsleague (ISL) ticket, ran last thisyear as an independent.The candidate who received thehighest vote in the physical sci-dents in the remainder of the divi¬sions.Consistent with the smallerturnout is the fact that it tookconsiderably fewer votes to electa candidate this year than it did ences division this year receivedlast year, in spite of the increased 20 votes less than the lowest can-enrollment. didate elected last year and onlyFor example, 282 votes was 8 votes more than the lowest can-enough to elect a candidate in the didate last year,college this year; 333 votes were Aggregate votes changeneeded last year to elect.'At- . , , „ , * ,though this.year the top college nse a™* fa ISL andcandidate received 472 votes as SRP aggregate votes m two divi- ing those who live in Internation¬al house. Thus, although consti¬tuting 19 per cent of the .socialsciences division, the educationstudents cast less than six percent of the social sciences vote. Name SG officersThe officers of the 1955 - 56 Assembly of StudentGovernment were elected at the first meeting of the 10thAssembly, Tuesday. 'President David FarquharVice president Janice PorterSecretary Miriam CarfinTreasurer . Steve FitchCommittee Cha rmenElections and rules Don R. AndersonRecognized student organizations. Phil HoffmanSudent needs . .7T7 John GilmoreFinance Milt KotlerCivil liberties Jim FlynnAcademic freedom Saul GreenbergNational student association . . . Mary Ann ChacarestosPublicity . . . . Don VillarejoStudent-faculty relations Joel RosenthalActivities coordination Vlachos KapantaisCommittee at large Janice MetrosISL, SRP issue statementsclarifying party positionscontrasted with 444 last year, thetop five college candidates lastyear all received more votes thanthis year’s second highest candi¬date.In the Federated Theologicalschools the highest winning can¬didate in this year’s election re¬ceived 19 votes less than the low¬est losing candidate in last year’selection.In the biological sciences divi- creased by 2265sion, the lowest candidate electedthis year received three votes lessthan the lowest candidate who ranlast year.Five candidates in social sci¬ences last year had more votesthan the top candidate this year.Of last year’s 19 candidates in thesocial sciences, 17 received as sions presents a paradoxical pic- Both SRP and ISL have issued statements on the SG elections. The SRP statement claimsthe results of the election to be a clear mandate from the student body to proceed with theture fn the social"scrences divi- program promised in its platform during the campaign. It points to the considerably largersion an aggregate of 1006 votes popular vote received by SRP and the absence of SRP candidates for several seats. Thewas cast for SRP candidates, 661 statement calls for the cooperation of ISL and promises to work with the administration,for ISL candidates, giving all The statement concludes by requesting the initiative of the student body and promisesseats in this division to SRP. The maintain contact with the takes into consideration the popu¬lar vote, compensating (as is thenormal procedure) for the factvote declined by 793 from last tions Dublic hearings individual that the SRP d,d no(contest seats neither In personal power nor end-year, while the SRP vote in- 1 ’ public hearines< individual in three professional schools and iess investigations, but in tryingISL aggregate vote decreased by , , , ,428 from last year while the SRP students by means of consul-vote increased by only 77. By way tation with campus organiza-of contrast, in the college, the ISL tions, publicity of Government ac- ings. individual contact and refer¬enda.“The SRP will carry out itspledge that: 'Our interest,isneither in personal power nor end-More students voted, percent¬agewise, in the graduate^ libraryschool, in which there was no con¬test,‘than in the education de¬partment, a part of the social sci¬ences division. Less than 6 percent of the education studentsvoted, although 50 percent of the18 education students living in In¬ contact and referenda.The ISL statement says thatISL will not assume offices andcommittee chairmanships sinceSRP is responsible for the admin¬istration of its program, whichISL cannot support. It concludesby saying that (ISL) will intro¬duce legislation, work on commit¬tees, and be a loyal and construe-many votes or more than the low- temational house, where there is t‘v.e lufi 1"est candidate elected this year. a ballot box, voted there. In Judd,No candidate in the humanities where there was no ballot box, -tdivision this year received as but which is the central education 6 •this way it will best be able toserve the students and the Uni-50 milliontimes a dayat home,at work oron the wayThere’snothinglike a SRP gives statementThe complete text of the SRPstatement follows:‘The Student Representativeparty considers the Student Gov¬ernment election results as a clearmandate from the student bodyto proceed with the programpromised in its platform duringthe campaign. Despite the factthat the division of Governmentseats is close (26 for SRP and24 for ISL), the mandate to SRPis particularly clear when oneBUSINESS INSURANCE 1; ALL LINES OF INSURANCE :► Phone or Write *► Joseph H. Aaron, '27 ;► 135 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-1060; left “holes” in their slate in thephysical sciences division and theFederated Theological schools.“In accordance with our plat¬form. SRP will make the StudentGovernment an authoritativevoice for the student body. Inorder to accomplish this end, SRPhopes for the cooperation of theopposition party in the affairs ofthe Government. SRP pledgesthat it will work with the admin¬istration of the U of C to achievesolutions to the problems facingthe University and the studentbody.Ask participation“We wish to thank the studentbody for their support, but wealso plan to call upon them toparticipate in solving the prob¬lems, before us. We believe thatcontact must be maintained be- to solve the real issues beforeus.’ ”ISL states positionThe ISL statement is as fol¬lows:“By its ballots last Thursdayand Friday, the campus has madethe Student Representative partythe instrument of its will. It hasentrusted to them the administra¬tion of the Student Governmentand its services. Because the Stu¬dent Representative party hasthis responsibility, ISL will as¬sume no offices and no commit¬tee chairmanships, because ISLmembers cannot faithfully admin¬ister a program which they donot accept. The Student Repre¬sentative party also has the re¬sponsibility for choosing its ad¬ministrators. and therefore ISLwill abstain in their election.“But ISL will not shirk its legis-tween the representatives and the lative responsibility. When therepresented throughout the year.“The SRP invites initiativefrom the student body, their par¬ticipation in the various commit¬tees of the Government, and theirattendance at alt the affairs ofGovernment. The SRP promisesthat in return we will maintaincontact with the students bymeans of consultation with cam¬pus organizations, publicity ofGovernment actions, public hear- majority is right we shall supportthem, when they are wrong weshall criticize them, in the hopethat both they and the campuswill be persuaded to make thebetter decision. We shall intro¬duce legislation, we shall workon committees, we shall be a loyaland constructive opposition. Inthis way we shall best be ableto serve the students and the Lfni-versity.”1. FOR TASTE...bright,bracing, ever-fresh sparkle.2. FOR REFRESHMENT...quick energy, withas few calories as halfaa average, juicy grapefruit.Borneo UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA COLA COMPANY BYThe Coca-Cole Bottling Company of Chicago, Ine.“Cofc#" b a ropittarorf trade-mark. O tVJS. THE COCA-COLA COMPANY IT’S SO EASYFamous ABC system. Now taught inover 400 cities. New day & Eveningclasses start each Monday. Attendfirst class as GUEST. Special SummerClasses for College Students. ALSOthorough, intensive SPEEDTYPINGcourse. Use coupon to send for 16-page brochure.SPEEDWRITING SCHOOL37 S. Wabosh Financial 6-5471I Speedwriting Schooli 37 S. Wabosh Ave., Chicago 3, III. II Please send me without obligation I| your 16-page brochure on Speed- »I writing.Name.Address.CityPhone—Page 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 4, 1955Letters to the editorsDoubts statistics; corrects errors; sees SchwartzDoubts hospital'race' statisticsThe editorial (Maroon, Oct.28) on discrimination in hos¬pitals states that Billings W4and W5 “are, with the fewest ex¬ceptions, for whites only.” ThisI take to be an assertion that Bil¬lings discriminates on the basis of“race” in its policy for admissionsto W4-5. The editorial then goeson to adduce what I take to beIntended as statistical evidencefor this assertion. These figuresare an excellent example of thefallacious use of statistics andpoor design of statistical research—I commend this example to allStudents of Soc. 200A and Bus.320.To test the assertion of discrim¬ination a proper experimental hy¬pothesis is on the order of: theratio of Negroes admitted (toBillings W4-5) to Negroes mak¬ing application for admission (toBillings W4-5) is significantly lessthan the ratift of Whites admittedto Whites making application.Even if all the necessary datacould be obtained, I suspect, with¬out going further into it, that itwould be very difficult to provesignificance, and the investigatorwould have to admit that therewas no statistical ground for theassertion of discrimination on thepart of _ Billings. This is not todeny that the writer of the edi¬torial may have other groundsfor such an assertion.What the Maroon has shown isthat there is a marked differencebetween the proportion of Ne¬groes in Billings W4-5 and the pro¬portion of Negroes in the hospitalas a whole. This fact could be“explained” in a number of dif¬ferent ways including (1) thestaff makes racial discriminationsin admissions or (2) fewer Ne¬groes apply for private or semi¬private rooms. Now this secondproposition could be because Ne¬groes expect to be refused, if theydo make application. And this,in turn, could be because the hos¬pital does discriminate and hasdone so in the past. If the Maroonwishes to believe these specula¬tions, it is free to do so; but theMaroon’s statistics afford no evi¬dence for this belief.Ironically, perhaps, this veryeditorial has perpetrated a rathersubtle, but indisputable, piece ofracial discrimination: “Negi’o” isconsistently capitalized, “white”is not capitalized. This might beinterpreted as condescension toNegroes or insult to Whites. Ipresume this orthography was un¬deliberate, unconscious; but so ismuch other discrimination. Thefact remains: the Maroon is awee bit “sick”!Bruce MacLachlanSaw Schwartzsr SeattleI saw Bessie Schwartz’ pa¬thetic query after her brother,Aristotle, in the Maroon lastFriday and it immediatelybrought to mind a dreamy fellowI met in a lumber yard in Seattle last summer. His first name wasAristotle, and once I heard theforeman snarl at him, “Iley,Schwartz, you stupid bget to work,” so I’m sure it mustbe he. They had put him to workstuffing plastic wood into emptyknotholes, and you will be proudto hear, Bessie, that he was do¬ing quite well, even though thestrain is beginning to show onhim. It was the only job that hisprevious training had qualifiedhim for, although I felt he han¬dled the plastic wood with a fi¬nesse not usually found in thecommon herd. He enjoyed quite awidespread popularity at first,Bessie, when the yardmen heardthat he was branded a “queerkid,” but the cads left him whenthey found that “queer” can alsocarry the meaning “odd.” He wasstill quite a hit at parties, wherehe could always be seen fondlinghis guitar and strumming outfolk music lo the more cultivatedlumberjacks and waitresses atThe Clock, an exclusive Seattlehangout. I often felt that he be¬trayed the true liberal spirit bycarrying Scotch instead of beerin his guitar case, but then. Bes¬sie, I have never really under¬stood the true, card carrying, in¬tellectual.But Bessie, I don’t think hewants to eoipe back. One after¬noon I came across him sittingon Fisherman’s Wharf looking ata buxom Swedish girl guttingsalmon. He kept murmuring “TheU. of C. was never like this,” andas I left him I could hear himshyly picking out the Universityof Washington fight song on hisguitar. He’s found a home, Bessie.Aristotle wasn’t really the lastqueer kid to leave the campus; hewas one of the first. Join him.Maybe you can find a muscularyoung football player to help youlose the neuroses you have builtup behind these gray stone walls.A new day is coming.Bruce Masson Doubts SRPcompetenceLast week SRP won the SGelection largely because theypromised the campus a bookco-op. This co-op must be createdand administered by SG’s studentneeds committee. But the attitudewith which SRP treated this com¬mittee in Tuesday’s SG meetingmakes it appear doubtful thatSRP members have either thecompetence or responsibility toput such a program into effect.When time came to nominatethe chairman of this most impor¬tant committee, SRP asked to de¬fer his election for a week. YetSRP realized that there are manymajor functions of this commit¬tee which cannot wait, such aspublication of the Student Direc¬tory and maintenance of the Stu¬dent Service Center — much lessestablishment of a book co-op,which, surely, 1s no overnightproposition. Never in the historyof SG has the election of a com¬mittee chairman been postponed.SRP’s excuse was that they couldfind no one able to fill the posi¬tion.But the Assembly demandedthat the post be filled that night,so that committee w^>rk couldstart immediately. SRP then nom¬inated and elected a man wholacked the full support of bothparty and assembly. Only 15 mem¬bers of SRP expressed confidencein their own candidate, and laterin the meeting attempted to re¬consider the election of their ownchairman. Can such a chairmanand such a party have the fullfaith of the campus in an enter¬prise so difficult as the creationand management of a book co-op?Jim HandlerCorrects errorson CommunismPlease permit me to correctsome errors in the story ofmy lecture before the YSL onAmerican Communism, as it ap¬peared in your issue of October 28.The Communist Party beganin a split from the Socialist Partyin 1919, and not in a faction datingfrom 1890. The Socialist Partydid not exist until 1901. It is nottrue that “the leader” of theAmerican C. P. was expelled forTrotskyism. The highest rankingmember expelled as a Trotsky ad¬herent was James P. Cannon, in1928, who was a member of theNational Committee. The leaderof the party, Jay Lovestone, whowas expelled a year later him¬self, was the one who carried outthe expulsion of the TrotskyistsHe was regarded as an adherentof Bukharin in the Soviet Union,and was expelled as a "right de- viationist.” The C. P. did not thenbecome a labor .party. In fact,from 1928 to 1935 the C. P. wasviolently opposed to any laborpdrty. They advocated the forma¬tion of such a party at times inthe twenties, and again from1935-7, as an electoral instrumentbut not as a substitute for theCommunist Party, which was re¬garded as the general staff of theworking class,The Communist Party did not,after 1935, back all anti-fascistlabor groups. They backed anygroup, regardless of class, whichwould swallow their “collectivesecurity” line, and violently at¬tacked anti-fascist socialist andlabor groups which chose to fightfascism in their own way. I didnot say the C. P. has been sub¬jected to government persecutionduring its entire history. A ship¬load (singular) of 249 personswere shipped to Russia on theBuford in 1919, but most of themwere not Communists. Among thegroup was Emma Goldman, ananarchist. After the Palmer per¬secution died down in the earlytwenties, the C. P. met no morelegal persecution, aside fromharassment of legislative and con¬gressional investigations, untilthe Smith Act prosecutions of1949. The Smith Act was passedin 1940, but I pointed out thatthe first victims of the act wereeighteen members of the SocialistTheDisc1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the weekDylan Thomas"Under Milk Wood"2 12-inch RecordsSWN — 18018/9Price 5.98 Four performances only!A New-Old Play . . . TRILOGY G* THE BLINDby SophoclesAn Acting Version by Robert A. Johnston (1955 A.D.)Act I: Oedipus the King (425 B.C.)Act II: Oedipus at Colonus (404 B.C.)Act III: Antigone (441 B.C.)November 16, 17, 18 and 19(Wednesday through Saturday) 8:30 p.m.Wright College Theater3400 Nortb AustinPrices: $1.20, $1.00, 80cMail orders now acceptedRfPRfSfN TA TIYES / Of THCLABORATORYWILL CONDUCTON CAMPUSPIRSONNSL INTfRVlfWSNOVEMBER 4and NOVEMBER 8CONTACT YOUR PLACtMCNT Office•alamosscientific laboratoryIt $NI*l(il<f Ot CAIIfOINM <r•MMAMOMOWMIMC* Workers Party and MinneapolisTeamsters local No. 544, whoseconviction was warmly approvedby the Communist Party. The sec¬ond gfl-oup tried under-the act con¬sisted of thirty home-grown fas¬cists who were acquitted in 1941.Then came the trial of the 13C. P. leaders in 1949, and othertrials since, plus the SubversiveActivities Control Bill, the Sub¬versive list, and so on. Browder,it is true, was sent to prison fora passport violation during theperiod of the Stalin-Hitler pact,but was later released when theRussians became allies of theU. S. Bridges has been annoyed,but there was no general legalpersecution except in the timesmentioned. It is worth noting thatthe L W. W. had more memberstried under the World War I sedi¬tion law and the state criminalsyndicalism laws than the C. P.has had tried in its entire history.During 1937-39 and 1941-45 theC. P. supported the governmentso warmly that it was covertlycourted for its New York votingstrength.There were also two errors inthe previous issue, announcingmy talk. I have not edited “TheWorks” of Luxemburg, but onlya brief selection from her worksin pamphlet form. I do not writefor any paper called “The IndianaWorker.”Victor HowardIssued every Tuesday and Friday throughout the school year and intermittentlyduring the summer quarter by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, at the pub¬lication offices, 5706 Soutli University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones:Editorial office, Midway 3-0800, ext. 1010: Business and advertising office. Midway3-0800, ext. 1009. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions by mail, $3 per year.Business office hours: 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday.NICKY’SPIZZERIA & RESTAURANT1235 E. 55th StreetNO 7-9063Free delivery to V. of C. student*On uny orderQuick Courteous Service — 6 Days a WeekClosed MondaysTable Service Delivery Service11 A.M. to 2 A.M. 11 A.M. to 2 A.M.Open till 3 ,1.11. on Fritlay and SaturdayCOMPASSNow atTHE DOCK5473 S. Lake Park FA 4-2800OpeningTonight 9:15November 4, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5$32 million: How UC runs its campaignby Bruce LarkinThe University of Chicago campaign has so far raised 7.5 million dollars of its 32.7 mil¬lion dollar goal. It is only now initiating a concerted program of seeking corporation funds.The campaign headquarters and associated on-campus officers are making an effort “tokeep the University and its positive side before the public,” in the words of one publicrelations consultant employed by UC.“The University has enough prestige to get a good story. If it is a good story, the news¬papers will run it.” Last sum¬mer’s series on the Orientalinstitute and the coming play-up of the social science anniver¬sary features are typical of the“stress” promotion of eventswhich otherwise might slip bywith little or no publif notice. Inconjunction with such ■events, thedepartments may bring moreprominent speakers to campus orexplain to the public technicalaspects of research usually leftin the laboratories.But the campaign is not mostdirectly responsible for represent¬ing the University to its public.The campaign is concerned pri¬marily with those persons andcorporations which have shown a corporations to discuss . . . out¬right gifts of threat properties>f •• • •Summarize needsA smaller pamphlet, “A pro¬gram for the University of Chi¬cago,” has been sent to all pros¬pects. “Over the last fgur years a in expressing their interest in thenew administration under Chan- University as it is today.”cellor Kimpton has analyzed the An„rMrh allsituation, determined what needs _ „to be done, devised a plan and The general public campaign”initiated it. Here is a summary of —an effort to approach seven towhat the University needs and eight thousand persons interestedporations, students and founda¬tions. The new regime is tryingto do certain things of adjust¬ment, especially in curriculum,budget and public relations, andit is important that the friends ofthe University become articulate To Buy Pencils and Betatrons •Money, unrestricted a to its use, is essential to tire continued progress of TheUniversity of Chicago. These funds nurture the University at its very roots andplay a pivotal part in every phase of its operations.But at Chicago the yearly inflow of unrestricted funds, so often vital tosuccessful management of tire University, has dwindled to about 3 per cent ofall gifts and bequests.Portion of a new brochure in the University's $32 millionfund campaign, called To Meet an Obligation.how it hopes to obtain it."Alumni, too, have received spe¬cial letters and pamphlets. TheAlumni goal has been set at in the University — is headed byEdwin A. Locke, Jr., president ofUnion Tank Car co. Mr. Locke isan alumnus not of Chicago, but ofgood prospective interest in the $3*000,000, t° he gathered by June, Harvard. Many of those to beUniversity or in higher educationgenerally.Shows cityOne booklet sent to a largenumber of persons concerned withUC's future role is Saving OurCities, a thirty page picture-filledbooklet which traces the develop¬ment of urban Chicago and thecommunity in which the Univer¬sity is located. The booklet ends:“It shall be an urban, not a sub¬ alumni, faculty and administra¬tion members meets every twoweeks to discuss the campaign’sprogress and guide its orientation.Faculty participation—especial¬ly in the form of explanations tointerested groups—is coordinatedby Professor John Wilson.Gifts delayedSome gifts received are directlyapplicable to a particular cam¬paign project. Others are given inconnection with the campaign, but and research: $19,979,000, (2)neighborhood improvement andstudent housing; $10,800,000, and(3) financial aid to students;$2,000,000.Of the estimated 7.5 million sofar received, 4 million is the in¬itial kick-off gift of the board oftrustees and $750,000 is a corpora¬tion gift announced two weeksago, the gift of seven firms.Expect usual sumIt is not expected that gifts toapproached will not be ChicagoDrive intensive alumni, but must be reached onThe over-all campaign is set to the level of "civic responsibility”run on an intensive level for an and a desire to advance higherestimated three years. The goal, education. A special corporations- for different purposes. But even the campaign* will cut the usual*among those sought in intensive committee is led by Clarence Ran- when the intensive fund raising sum of gifts received annually bycampaigns, is the largest sought dall, chairman of the board of In- has been completed it may be dif- the University. Usually only aboutby any university. Other univer- land Steel. In cases in which pros- ficult to estimate the total results 5 percent of such gifts are unre-sities have proclaimed large fund pective donors desire information of the campaign; the general pub- stricted, the rest being designatedgoals — Columbia, a goal of 150 regarding 'a particular aspect of heity and contact may result in for particular projects in suchmillion some years ago,, North- the University, special reports gifts at a later time and, perhaps, areas as -medicine and physicalwestern, recently a goal of 137 will be prepared for them. in bequests. sciences.million — but in each case the George H. Watkins, vice-presi- The use to which funds will be Campaign personnel hope thaturban university To insure drives for these funds have been dent of the University in charge put still stands as it was tentative- by next June UC will have re-its future in the location chosen spread over many years. J—1 —*■1 ’ * - ~ — - -This is the University’s thirdby its early planners, the Univer- - v o- r — ~ KJJ HUAI UUIIC UL win IldVCof development, is the direct head ly set last June. Plans then called alized “the most productive yearof the campaign project, but a for spending the funds in three of gifts and bequests” in its his-sity is calling on all its resources major campaign since 1920. Mr. steering committee of trustees, ways: (1) strengthening teaching tory.and is marshaling the forces oflocal, state and federal govern¬ments and all thoughtful citizensof the community. . . . This, then,is a direct appeal for continuedfinancial support and public par¬ticipation in the solution of theUniversity’s problems.Members of the board will beglad to meet with individuals and Alumni aim for own goal“Etijotj Our Fine Continental Cuisine inHelaxed Air Conditioned ,Atmosphere”CONTINENTAL GOURMET RESTAURANTOpen Doily (except Mondays! from 4:30 - 10:00Sundoys — 12 Noon - 10 P.M.1508 E. 57th Street Phone PLaza 2-9355Robert F. Duncan, a former Har¬vard Crimson editor and directorof UC’s 1924 campaign, is chiefconsultant to the current quest.“The campaign,” says Duncan, “islargely a psychological matter,S™”.fwetra“ paying11 special . 'c°ntributi0"10 the UC campaign has been set atTgoal of $3,-attention to UC’s relationship to 000*000. It is hoped that that sum can be raised prior to June, 1956. While the UC campaignits public — alumni, parents, cor- is a three-year campaign, the alumni portion of it is scheduled only for this school year.The University has graduated 52,000 persons. About 36,000 of the alumni reside in townsin which 10 or more alumni live. There are 460 such towns. The alumni are endeavoring toorganize committees in each of these towns to bring to alumni word of the University’s ac¬tivity and an appeal for funds.More than 27,000 alumni arealready “covered” by localcommittees.PETE SEEGEllFriday, Nov. 11 8:15 P.M.Kenwood-Ellis Community Church SINGSAdmission $1.0046th and GreenwoodTickets available: Reynolds Club; Hyde Park Co-Op, 5535 HarperSALE 69c to >7” SALEHUNDREDS OF NEW TITLESat Publishers' Remainder PricesOnly One and Two Copies of Most TitlesBOOKS ON ART, MEDICINE, TECHNICAL BOOKS,LITERATURE, BIOGRAPHY, REFERENCEMany Never Before Available at This PriceSALE FOR ONE WEEK ONLY STARTING NOVEMBER 7thCome Early for the Best Selection! <UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue Send Ludgin LettersAlumni are receiving publica¬tions which describe the Univer¬sity’s program and its reasons forseeking funds. Notable amongsuch mailings are the new seriesof Ludgin Letters, sent jointly byalumni drive co-chairmen EarlLudgin and John J. McDonough.The latest letter, after stating“We’re looking for a man with amiflion dollars” concluded: “P.S.Be sure to write your name plain¬ly, so we’ll spell it right on yourbuilding.”Encourage alumniOther aspects of alumni func¬tion are generally related to thecampaign. Efforts are currentlybeing made to encourage alumniEye Examinations. Visual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372 to send their children to the Uni¬versity. A recent mailing of 3,000roto-typed letters, addressed indi¬vidually to children of alumni andsigned by Chancellor Kimpton,has produced to date 300 requestsfor further information on theundergraduate program. Commit¬tees are being established in somemajor cities to concentrate alum¬ni activities in the field of stu¬dent promotion.Subsidy highThe current cost of a student tothe University — above his pay¬ments—is approximately $1500 ayear. Much of this is attributableto basic administrative and main¬tenance charges. It is estimatedthat a doubling of enrollmentwould decrease the per.capita sub¬sidy provided by the Universityto about $360. Thus enrollmentincrease and fund raising are con¬sidered very closely related mat¬ters.BETZ JEWELRY. Unusual Jewelry Our SpecialtyExpert Jewelry and Watch RepairN.S.A. Discount to Students1523 E. 53rd PL 2-3038HEMEANS HE,NO DOUBTABOUT IT!? LUCKILY WILOROOTCREAM-OIK.GIVES MEI'LL- SAVEHER FROM VTHE , V~fiend.7 non-! ALGOtiOLK CONTAINS LANOLINAMD CHOLESTEtaOL-THE NATURALINGREDIENT FOUNDIN EVERY HEALTHYHEAD CFHAIRGerwiiCRE AM-OIL,CHARLIE/?' BUT 1THAT MWOULD BEILLEGAL!!MVNAME IS1MOGENEL1h’::.. . -11 JO BANKScreative photographi/MU 4-7988NSA Discount1420 E. 55thWILDBOCTT CREAM-OIL. KEEPS HAIRMEAT BUT KJE.VEC-r)GREA5V; Peterson Moving£r Storage Co.55th A Ellis AvenueStorage facilities for a trunk orcarload of household effectsPocking — ShippingLocal or long distance movingBEttcrficld 8-(*71IPage 6 .THE CHICAGO MAROON November 4, 1955■Beauty contest Kimpton reports progressBold commitments to preserve the leadership and freedom of the University of Chicagowere made in the academic year 1954-55,.Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton said Tuesdayin his annual address on “the state of the University.” Kimpton spoke in Mandel hall, ful-Int house has dance planA beauty contest will highlight International house’s semi-formal dance, Ebb tide, to be held Saturday, November 19.All graduate women students, foreign or American, areeligible to enter the contest. The nominee must be a Univer- filling the statutory requirement of the University for an annual report to the faculty.sity student. A panel of judges (not yet chosen) will vote forone beauty to represent each of the following continents;namely: North America, LatinYouth hostel councilsponsors activities selves and the world that weco.uld put our house in orderand preserve the quality andmorale of our university.“But great institutions are notbuilt or even preserved by goodAmerica, Europe, Asia andAfrica. One who is a native ofa continent not mentioned will beconsidered among those of aneighboring continent. . 1Nomination blanks can be ob- at open-l-housetained in the main corridor of In- . . . . _ - -ternational house. The committee Folk-Singing, description of housekeeping alone. There comesfor the beauty contest (chairman, the winter ski program, and a hme, after retrenchments andMary Hirakawa) urge all those roiorof> elides of a canoe trio consolidation, ™,he? mst,tutl°"seligible to sign up before the dead- colored slldes or " C, P either move boldly forward or dieline midnight Wednesday Novem- in the North woods will be shown of apathy and rot. And our timeber 9. Each national club, as Chi- *>V the Chicago Council of Amer- had come.nese Student league and Japanese ^an Youth Hostels on Wednes- “With confidence in ourselvesStudent association, are being daY These events will be included and in our destiny, with faith inasked to sponsor a candidate. & on the program of an open house our country and our city, we haveThe crowning ceremony and sponsored by AYH at Interna- begun the gamble of the nextthe awarding of prizes will take tional house at 7:30 p.m.place at the dance. Also featured Gerry Armstrong, whose folkon the program are Lucio Garcia songs have been featured in sev-and his orchestra who will favor eral recent concerts, will presentthe guests with various dance songs of England, Scotland,numbers. Students with or with- France, and Spain. The evening’s Pointing out that systematic reductions over three years had brought the budget intobalance in 1953-54, Kimpton said:“We had proved to our-three to five years on men, onmoney, on students, on buildings,and our neighborhood.”Make appointmentsMany appointments, of both es- Chancellor Kimpton“The University is made ofmen, and men mean money,” hesaid in noting that the University, spring our campaign for $32,700 -000,” he said. “We need to spendmore money if we are to main¬tain the quality of our staff, jn.crease our student body, and pre¬serve our community. It is moneywe do not have. The only answeris to go out and get it.”“The history of our Universityover sixty-three years has beena series of brilliant, speculative,forward movements; followed byperiods of retrenchment and con¬solidation,” he said in summariz¬ing the report.Build foundation“Each has suited its own time,and together they have conspiredto make the University of Chicagoone of the great universities ofthe world. We have movedthrough our needed program ofbuilding sound foundations be¬neath our impressive superstruc-tablished scholars and scientists,out dates are welcome. Tickets program has been designed espe- and of younger men, were made after achieving a balanced budget, ture of men and the materials forfor the dance are available at the daily to acquaint foreign students during the last year to maintain last year reversed the process teaching and research.International house and the Rey- with the wide range of activities the quality of the University,nolds club ticket center. sponsored by AYH. Kimpton told the faculty.Classified AdsFor Sale Lost Services and committed itself to an under¬writing that amounted to $388,000over income. The current budget,he added, contemplates an evenlarger underwriting, to be cov¬ered by contributions to the cam¬paign.“It is against this backgroundof need that we announced this The time had come in 1954-55,with a cautious but speculativeeye upon our destiny, to begin thegreat gamble in men, money, stu¬dents and community. Our qual¬ity, our leadership, and our free¬dom are at stake. As we havealways won before, so shall wewin again.”Lambretta motor scooter, extras. Ex¬cellent running condition. 1955, 6 h.p.,$325. Ideal for student. Call BRiargate4-6855 or HOllycourt 5-1743.Man’s English bicycle. Three speeds,carrier, excellent condition. Cost $70.Asking $35. Sid Zwick, WA 2-6667, after¬noons. Mortgage book, Chatam bank. PhoneBA 1-3440. No questions asked. Reward.Boxer, male, fawn-white chest, “Ike,”GI tag. REWARD. PL 2-9835, 5405 Wood-lawn, Strasser, anytime. Need help moving? Don’t impose on re¬sentful friends. Let “Prime Movers”handle it. Special student rate. Callevenings, PL 2-6412 or HY 3-1356.For RentPersonalMicroscope, German make, small, com- L.M.F.: . . . and we have a magnificentpact model, three objectives including display of blazers, too. Dior.oil immersion. $115 or best offer. PL . Furnished lt^-room apt. $75 a month.See Mr. Bentley, 5006 S. Blackstone.Kitchenette. Clean and convenient toU of C and all transportation. 6055 S.Dorchester. Nitta.2-9250, leave message.Help Wanted 5t.h Ward Young Democrats organiza- ~ 7 ~ “ T “ , . ,tional meeting. Old. new members in- Jaw student has 4-room, completelyvlted. Julian Kahn, 5329 S. Harper. Sun- furnished apartment to share with 1 orday, 6:30 p.m. 2 students immediately. HY 3-3015. ACASA Book StoreScholarly Used Books — Bought and SoldImported Greeting CardsReliable Typewriter ServiceHY 3-9651 1322 E. 55th St.1 or 2 medical students to be on callevenings at nursing home.. Room andboard free, plus monthly salary. CallDR 3-2245.Go-getter, industrial contact work, es¬tablished territory, car necessary, $1.50to $2 per hour, 8c per mile, 15 to 20hours per week, daytime. See Mrs. Paul¬son, Student Employment office.Temporary interviewing jobs open withNational Opinion Research Center. Allwork in or near Hyde Park during six-week period starting early December.Flexible hours, but 40-hour week desir¬able. Call Mrs. Calloway, FA 4-7354.Sell ads for SG Student Directory. $1minimum commission each ad sold.-Contact Jeanne Hargitt, Maroon, Box201 or PL 2-2069. Irene: Best of luck. We start Thursday.Kurt nearly died. Rog.Beta Post Halloween Open (Spook)House. Fly, creep or crawl to 5737 Uni¬versity, Friday at 8:30 for an evening ofskullduggery. Come ghostly in costumeor as you are. Prance to the wails ofthe band and be braced for extra-sorcorial delights.Bunny: You-know-who already has adate, or-as she put it: "Ukrainski kava-'eri Ja uzhe maju Kwitok na ‘KavalerijRusticana.’ ” I may try to get tickets,if I have the ambition. Love, Kitzichka.Bunny: The Bobbsey twins are costingthe Maroon money by taking up spacethat could be devoted to purchased ad¬vertising. Couldn’t you find anotherway of communicating with him?Moneybags.PROGRESSIVE PAINT & HARDWARE1158 E. 55 NSA Discounts HY 3-3840tuiimiimiimmimiiimiiimmiiiimiiiiiiimiiiiiiMmimiimimmimiimiiq:= Check These Features |1 V PROMPT SERVICE 1= / DEPENDABILITY =E V ECONOMY EE ... and then remember ... EE — The Students Favorite — E1 University Quick Laundry \E 1376 East 55th Street E| PLaza 2-9097 |niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimmiiimiiiiiiiimii7HEY, PAISANIWe've got ’em good, tec deliver ’em hotPizza Pie for your bull-session or get-togetherGive us a Ring and We'll DeliverPhonesMU 4-IQI4MU 4-1015MU 4-9022 FREEDELIVERY5 p.m. to 3 G.m.7 days a weekITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIA1427 East 67th St. When people just couldn t believe their ears,Budweiser led all beers in sales. And...4Ustill leads the world’s beers in sales<md quality because.. .because it’s BudweiserSomet/v'/y more t/mpmmm yi/aity... 3/dmser at/af/fgfANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC.ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELESBe sure to see the “DAMON RUNYON THEATRE” on TV*. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winstou-Salem, N. O*When the Big Game is doneAnd your home-team has won...To have the most fun —have a CAMEL!—MoMwtfe.tme fjfcaSMElIt's a psychological fact:Pleasure helps your disposition/If you're a smoker, remember— more people get morepure pleasure-from Camelsthan from any other cigarette!No other cigarette is sorich-tasting, yet so mild!November 4, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON RageHither and YonBroyles bill protested Sunday chapel topic“Gospel and main st. ”T,ie American Civil Liberties union announced the filing of two new suits testing the con- “The Gospel and Main Street” will be the sermon topic ofstitutionality ot the Broyles test oath. The suits were brought by Paul Gardescu, Mrs. Sara Reverend Harland E. Hogue at the Rockefeller Chapel wor-Pickus, and Albert Soglin. Mrs. Pickus and Soglin are employees of the Chicago Board of ship servi.ce Sunday at 11 a.m.Education and Gaidescu has been employed by the Chicago Land Clearance commission.Soglin and Mrs. Pickus are Chicago teachers who have refused to sign the test oath ongrounds of conscience and have continued to teach but have no.t been paid. The suit in theirbehalf asks that the court de¬clare that the teachers are not, harassing legislation, designed to there are two who will rise to Dern!by law, required to sign theoath, and, further, that it is un¬constitutional. The suit also asksfora declaration that the teachershave a right to be paid for thework that they haye already donewithout compensation.Tn commenting on the newsuits, Kenneth Douty, ExecutiveDirector of the Illinois ACLUsaid:“We cannot emphasize toostrongly fhat we feel the affirma¬tive oath, to uphold and supportthe constitutions of the U. S. andof Illinois, is fitting and proper.Affirmative oaths of this Sort arealready taken by teachers in ourstate. The negative test oath isrepugnant to American traditionand constitutional principles. Itimplies guilt unless the oath istaken. It is unnecessary and create a climate of fear and mis¬trust.”Security hitsschool teachersThe board of control at FloridaState university recommendedthat the political philosophy back¬ground of college professors bestudied closely before they arehired.An editorial in the college pa¬per, The Florida Flambeau, pro¬tested this type of policy by stat¬ing: “For every witch hung inSalem, the interest in witchcraftdoubled. For every man McCarthyindicted, two innocent personswere suspected and forced to suf¬fer the guilt attached to the guiltyparty. For every man who fightsthe discdssion of certain ideas, spread the whispqred points incontroversy.“Board Chairman Fred Kentshould qualify his statement as tothe exact number of instructorsin business administration sup¬posedly “teaching the childrenthat the government owes them aliving,” and the effect it is havingupon the students. Does he for¬get the student’s right to chal¬lenge such a statement? Or doeshe conclude that the theory is sopopular in its extent as to makecontradiction unlikely?”Set up criteriafor chaperones Hogue is Carl Patton professor of homiletics at the PacificSchool of Religion in Berkeley, California, and is author ofChristian Faith and the Campus Mind as well as other books.He has been a Religious Em¬phasis Week speaker at manyof the Pacific Coast’s largestuniversities.Completed PhDThough a native of Illinois andgraduate of Monmouth College,Hogue went to San Francisco The¬ological Seminary for his B.D. de¬gree and served pastorates atPresbyterian churches in San Di¬ego and Pomona, California. Hehas completed his thesis- in Amer¬ican church history for a Ph.D.from Columbia University andUnion Theological Seminary.Travels in EuropeHogue traveled and studied inPalestine and Europe in 1936. Heparticipated in Adolph Keller’sTheological Seminar at Geneva Representatives visiting UCfrom thirteen companies willbe here during November tointerview students, with thetotal for the year reachingabout 75. A past issue of theMaroon incorrectly stated thatthe year’s total would be 13.Students should register withthe office of guidance andplacement for appointmentswith these representatives.HELD OVER SECONDWEEK"Simply Staggering!" — N.Y. Times"RUSSIAN HOLIDAY"A Feature Length Documentary Sovcolor FilmPhotographed by M. Oshirov and 30 cameramenof the U.S.S.R.Part IYOUTH ON PARADEPart IIARTISTS IN THE U.S.S.R.INDIANEXTRA ! ISee and HearEMILGILELSTop U.S.S.R.Pianist on theScreen! CINEMAANNEX3210 MadisonSTUDENT Frl.Open Mon. thruat 5:30 p.m.Sat. & Sun. at 1 p.mFREE PARKINGRATE 50c A recent ordinance at Williamand Mary college was institutedbecause of reputed immorality.The ordinance requires that chap¬erones be present at all fraternityfunctions involving both sexes.Tacked to this innocent provisionare qualifications about whatconstitutes a chaperone: she must will be Samuel C. Kincheloe, pro¬be a woman, over 30, and accom- fessor of social ethics of the Fed-panied by another chaperone. erated Theological Faculty.DUNCAN STATIONERS1313 E. 55th St. Sorbonne honorssociologist Nefwith doctorateJohn U. Nef, University of Chi¬cago professor of economics andand in the World Student Chris- history and chairman of the Uni-tian Federation Conference at versky s committee on socialLes Avants Switzerland thought, yesterday was awardedues Avants, bwuzeriand. , the honorary degree of Doctor ofSpeaker for the Rockefeller Letters by the University of Paris,chapel service on November 13 The degree was conferred at theSorbonne during the convocationheld at the start of the Universityof Paris’ academic year.Nef was awarded the degreein I’ecognition of his work aschairman of the committee on so¬cial thought, which studies the re¬lationships between the humani¬ties and the social sciences in anattempt to integrate knowledge inthe fields.Next to the Post OfficeTHIS WEEK ONLY:A $25 trode-in allowance on ANY typewritertoward the purchase of a new Remingtonportable 'Quiet-Writer'.Art Material — Office Supplies — Printing MODEL CAMERA SHOP1329 E. 55th St. IIY 3-9259Hyde Park's Most CompleteCamera ShopNSA DiscountPage 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 4, 1955»15 . r l Coming events on quadranglesFriday, November 4I*; Cercle Francais, tea and film,4 p.m., Ida Noyes library.Lutheran student association andGamma Delta, supper at 6 p.m.with program following at 7,Chapel house.Baptist divinity fellowship, pot-luck supper with Alvin Pitcherspeaking, Swift commons, 6:30p.m.Docfilm; Youth of Maxim, in thestudy series on the Russianfilms, Social Sciences 122, 7:15and 9:15, admission by seriesticket only.Hillel Sabbath service, 7:45 p.m.,with fireside program at 8:30—Asst. Prof. Elihu Katz speak¬ing on "American acculturationand religious groups.”University concert, Vegh stringquartet in a program of threequartets by Beethoven, Mandelhall, 8:30 p.m. Saturday, November 5Porter foundation retreat Satur¬day and Sunday, to register callShirley Crockett, ext. 1084.Conference on British historicalstudies, 10 a.m.: “Capitalismand the historians,” 2:15 p.m.:“Materials and methods of re¬search,” Social Sciences 122.Beta Ttfeta Pi open house in apost-Hallowe’en fashion, at thechapter house, 5737 University,9 p.m. et seq.Sunday, November 6Episcopal communion service,Bond chapel, 8:30 p.m.Roman Catholic masses, DeSaleshouse, 8:30, 10, 11 a.m.Lutheran communion service, Hil¬ton chapel, 10 a.m.Clinics religious service, Billings0-4, 10 a.m., Chaplain Westberg.Conference panel, “The trainingof historians,” Social Sciences122, 10 a.m.Cap and Gown plansmustache contestIn answer to frustrated students who desire a morecollegiate atmosphere on the UC campus, the Cap and Gownsales staff has decided to sponsor an Old Fashioned MustacheRace. At a meeting last Monday, the staff decided to conductthe contest in conjunction with the Reynolds club barber shop.Anyone capable of growing a mustache is urged to enterthe contest, according to MikeBarenbaum, Cap and Gownsales manager. Those inter¬ested in competing must sign upat the Reynolds club desk beforeTuesday evening, November 8.The contest is scheduled to runfrom the day after the Inter-club yet been chosen, the three prizeshave been determined upon, Bar¬enbaum said. To the winner willgo a trophy, a complimentaryissue of the 1956 Cap and Gownand a free haircut or shave at theReynolds club barber shop. Thesecond place winner will receivepreferential dinner and dance un- a complimentary issue of Cap andtil the day before the Inter-frater- Gown and a trophy. A trophy willnity ball. be awarded for the mustacheAlthough the judges have not which places third. Radio broadcast, “Clinical pathol¬ogists, medical detectives atwork,” WMAQ and NBC, 10:35a.m.University religious service, Rock¬efeller chapel, 11 a.m.; Prof.Rev. Harland E. Hogue, Pacificschool of religion, preaching.Varsity soccer game, UC vs. Illi-nois-Navy Pier, Stagg Field, 2p.m.Carillon r e <?! t a 1, Rockefellerchapel, 3:30 p.m.Bach singers concert of 16th &18th century German music, In¬ternational house, 4 p.m., ad¬mission charged.Young Socialist league discussion,"Women in modem society,”Ida Noyes hall, 4 p.m.Intervarsity Christian fellowshipworship service, Ida Noyes hall,4:15 p.m.MAROON editorial meeting, Rey¬nolds club 201, 4:30 p.m.Glee club rehearsal, Ida Noyeshall, 4:30 p.m.Wesley club, supper at 6 p.m.,speaker at 7 on “Protestantismand psychology.”Baptist student fellowship, supperat 6 p.m., Assoc. Prof. CharlesHardin speaking on “Religionand politics,” Hyde Park Bap¬tist church.Sunday evening at Hillel, supperat 6 p.m. with program fpllow-ing, 5715 Woodlawn.Burton-Judson movie: Tight lit¬tle island, Judson lounge, 7 and9:15 p.m., 25 cents.Student Representative party cau¬cus, Ida Noyes hall, 7:30 p.m.Piano recital by Jeanne Bamber¬ger of the college humanities faculty, playing Haydn’s C ma¬jor sonata, Schubert’s I>reiKlavierstueeke, and Leon Kirch-ner’s Sonata. First of threequarterly recitals by Bamber¬ger, sponsored by the UC Musi¬cal society. Mandel hall, 8:30p.m., student admission 75cents.Monday, November 7Civil service opportunities discus¬sion by visiting government of¬ficials, sponsored by placementoffice, Social Sciences 302, 3:30p.m.Haskell lecture on "Woman inearly Christianity,” by Fried¬rich Heiler, visiting professorin the FTF, Social Sciences 122,4:30 p.m.Botany club meeting, Botany 106,4:30 p.m., “A nutrition-inhibi¬tion hypothesis of pathogenic-ityVInternational house movie: Pai-san (Italian) Assembly hall, 8p.m., 45 cents.Peace center and internationalrelations club, panel discussion,International house, 8 p.m.Law school lecture, “Mr. Justice Wiley Rutledge,” by John P.Stevens, attorney, Law South*8:30 p.m.Tuesday, November 8MAROON ’ staff meeting, Rey-nolds club 201, 3:30 p.m.Psychology club lecture, “The sig¬nificance of age changes inspeed of simple reactions,” So¬cial Science 122, 4 p.m.Colloquium, Research Institutes211, 4:15 p.m., “Spin resonanceof V-centers.”Canterbury club, 5540 Woodlawn,Canon B. I.-Bell speaking on"The role of religion in highereducation.”Christian Science organizationmeeting, Hilton chapel, 7 p.m.Student Government assemblymeeting, Law North, 7:30 p.m,Italian club, Emilio Ottolenghlspeaking on “University life inItaly,” International house, 7:30p.m., 25 cents.FTS wives class, “The Germanchurch since World War II,” 8p.m., 5757 Woodlawn.Oriental Institute lecture, “Thebeginnings of village life in theNear East,” by Prof. Robert J.Braidwood, Breasted hall, 8:30pjn.CARMEN'SUsed Furniture StoreMoving and Light Hauling1365 E. 55th MU 4-S003careeran Army Officer!Earn $270 a month withquarters furnished while training!If you are a college senior, you can now apply for a topadministrative career—one that offers every opportunity forexecutive development plus many other advantages, such astravel, stimulating companionship and specialized training.Serve as an officer in the WOMEN’S ARMY CORPS!As an Army officer you contribute to your nation’s strengthin a position of vital responsibility. You work side by sidewith male officers in important staff and administrativeassignments, developing your executive capacities for high-leveljobs both in military and civilian life. Here are some of thefields in which you may train:PERSONNEL AND ADMINISTRATION CIVIL AFFAIRSINTELLIGENCE AND MILITARY GOVERNMENT NCOMPTROLLER INFORMATION AND EDUCATIONPUBLIC INFORMATION LEGAL AND LEGISLATIVESee your nearest army recruiter today!JUNIORS —serve a trial training periodthis summer! The Women’s Army Corpsoffers you a six-week probational appointment,prior to your senior year in college. This trialperiod is designed to let you know more about theWAC and whether you want to apply for a com¬mission during your senior year. If interested, getfurther information from your Army recruiter now!November 4, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 9“It sounded good to me I will beat any new or used car dealyou can get by $50See Jim GreeneAlpha Dela.Phi House ^ PLaza 2-9718History of footballunofficially revisedby Bob llalaszThere are three theories as to the origin of football. The first and most commonly ac¬cepted is that it is a derivative of English rugby. A few suspicious people reject this idea andmaintain that football was invented so that Robert M. Hutchins would have something toargue about on quiet days. Still a third theory held by supporters of the late Col. McCor¬mick is that football was invented by some true blue American like Abner Doubleday, orfailing that, .that it came from Ireland, not England, anyway.• °xLlh a opjf^tvlpr^pv" known as !he hying wedge. The shape. The Bears soon had th«irWiiteiS \vas a sell-styled ex- idea of this was for all eleven opponents hollering “uncle,” andpert by the name Ot Walter offensive players to aim for one soon most teams had adopted it.Camp. Mr. Camp invented All- hapless defensive player and run After the war, unlimited sub-American teams, which weren’t over. him. After the victim was stitution came into being, andall -American. Walter had a habit off the field, the play was soon college as well as profes-of selecting his entire all-star repeated. This play was outlawed gjonal teams were playing twoteams from players from Yale, a h?w years later by officials who teams—one on offense and one onHarvard, and Princeton, with an couldn t stand the sight of blood, defense. This created specializa-oceasional “foreigner” from Rut- The next change in football tion to the degree that the offen¬ders thrown in. One day, Camp came about in 1913, when a couple sive water boy wouldn’t talk toreceived a map from one of his of players from Notre Dame, the defensive water boy.' Somemany admirers, and found there natch, popularized the forward people were unkind enough toWAS land west of Pennsylvania, pass. The officials encouraged suggest that what football neededEventually he picked a player to this trend and made the ball small was four platoons — one for of-his team from a far western ouF- enough so that an average sized fense, one for defense, one to gopost named the University of Chi- human being could put it in his to classes, and one to pray,cago. A few years later, he went hand and throw it. Thus football Eventually, unlimited substitu¬ent to investigate a rumor that became a combination of bloody tion was repealed, and now atland existed west of the Rockies, mayhem and bean bag. least, all the football players knowand lie picked a player from Cali- The last refinement before each other even if the studentsfornia U. to his all American World War II came in 1939, when don’t see them in classes. So re¬team. a coach named Clark Shaugh- member, when you watch Stani-Around 1910, a clever young nessy teamed up with George slowiczsyski go off tackle for fivephysics student applied the prin- Halas, coach of the Chicago Bears yards against P. U., it may not beeiples of the inclined plane to (again), to invent the “T” forma- education, but it’s better than anfootball, and came up with a play tion, so-called because of it’s afternoon class. “He’s a good student, too. Got all ‘A’s’ in physical ed.”Basketball practice beginsTwenty-two men reported for the basketball team on Tues¬day, November 1. Coach Norgren, beginning his 33rd year atChicago, has four lettermen returning to form the nucleusfor this year. Bill Lester, last year’s captain and high scorerwill be back, along with lettermen Rowland, Watkins, andChisholm. ~New NCAA ruling start of last season. Coach Nor-_ ... gren is hopeful of improving theIn the past, Maroon basket- Maroon’s below .500 record lastA Campus-to-Career Case History ball teams have started offi¬cial practice earlier. However,the NCAA, of which the univer¬sity is a member, alarmed at signsof an increasing emphasis on day afternoon,big time basketball, passed a rulewhich prohibits official practicebefore November 1. According tothe same ruling, teams are pro¬hibited from officially openingtheir schedules until December 1.The Maroons will have a sched¬ule of sixteen games. The list of year. Meanwhile, he watches hishopefuls down at the field housefrom 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. every week-Wrestling starts;JV hooters loseThe wrestling team will have apractice meet as soon as Novem¬ber 22—but Coach Allen Bates isopponents is much tke sa™e as ^ still looking for help. A seriouswas last year. Chicago will openon December 1st against the 5thArmy Headquarters team, and shortage has developed in theheavyweight division—177 lbs. orover. Coach Bates urges any andthen will play Elmhurst. George prospec(ive Man MountainWilliams anri TUinms Tech ritir- ^ * v . .Deans to join his matmen. LastWilliams, and Illinois Tech during the winter quarter. In addi¬tion, the Maroons are entered inthe Navy Pier tournament De¬cember 15-17.This year’s team has no reallybig men, by basketball standards,but the squad has more experi¬enced hands than it did at theThe CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 year’s team had an even recordwith four wins, four losses, anda tie—this year they hope to windup on the winning side.Coach Ilermanson’s JV booterstook a 6-0 beating from the LaneTech soccer team out on Staggfield. The Tech team, state highschool champs in 1953, were toobig and experienced for the juniorvarsity squad. However, the JVgave it all they had and neverquit hustling throughout thegame. The game concluded theJV soccer season. It was the sec¬ond loss suffered in two appear¬ances. -Charles Poole, B.S. in Business Ad¬ministration, Boston University, '52, isworking for New Jersey Bell TelephoneCompany as a Traffic Superintendent.For a young man he has a lot of respon¬sibility. And responsibility is what helikes. He has three New Jersey ex¬changes under his supervision —Dover,Madison and Washington—which totalnearly 16,000 customers, and he man¬ages a force of some 160 operators, in¬cluding nine chief operators and fifteenservice assistants.I“It’s the type of Job,” says Charlie,happily, “where you can never sayyou’re caught up. There's always some¬ thing to do.” Each day brings Charlie <new problems, new experiences. And |with every passing day his grasp of the {telephone business is getting stronger, jhis value to the company is growing. j■- -»» I <That spells the kind of future that JCharlie wants: the opportunity to take jan ever-increasing part in an ever-ex- •panding business. *'* ... ‘ -V*- |“It sounded good to me,” Charlie says, jremembering what he thought when the 1telephone interviewer had finished tell- jing him about the company and its fu- ■ture. And, as you might expect, it still !sounds good to him. \k Charlie Poole is typical of the many young menwho are building careers in telephone work. Sim¬ilar opportunities exist today with other telephonecompanies, and also with Bell Telephone Labora¬tories, Western Electric and Sandia Corporation.Xour placement officer has the details. BELLTELEPHONESYSTEM Just Published! ... THE ORESTEIAby AeschylusA New Acting Version by Robert A. JohnstonPreface by Helen Karan ikas’ The Orestela emerges as A capital dramatic and social document, Aeschy¬lus having solved in a humanistic and hopeful way a complex problem.The viewer does not leave the theater, as he so often does today, impressedby the hopelessness of man’s efforts in an almost purposeless universe.”“A version written for current theatrical production must attempt tobridge the gap between modern audiences and those of ancient Athens,and, at the same time, reproduce the artistry of Aeschylus.”—two excerpts from the Preface12.59 niustratedAt your local bookstore, or write directly to:THE CHRISTOPHER HOUSE1140 Columbus Avenue Boston 20, MassachusettsAfter the movies ——After studying ——After dinner —After 10 p.m. — hove a lorge cup of Cafe Espresso ot Le Provencal.With it have le bon patisserie froncoise — Profiterolee Croquem-bouche, Bisquit Route ou Chocolat, Linxer Torte, etc.Till 1 a.m. 2 a.m. Soturday- le Provencal1450 E. 57th Street NO 7-9669Page 10 THE CHICAGO MAROON .-.w.vmuer t,Sinfonietta gives concertCollegiate Sinfonietta, conducted by Dieter Kober, will give its first chamber concert ofthe season tomorrow, Saturday, Nov. 5, at 4 p.m., in the Art Institute (Adams and Michi¬gan) in Fullerton hall. Student tickets at 75 cents, regular admission at $2 and $1.50, andseason tickets'for $8 and $10 are available at the Student Service Center in the Reynoldsclub.Dave MishloveBarbara Harris being interviewed at Compass on a recent pro¬gram of NBC’s “People.”Compass cabaret movesCompass, Chicago’s only cabaret theater, has changed itslocation from 1152 E. 55th to the Dock, a night club at 5473S. Lake Park, and now has professional status.The Dock, according to the theater group, js “the mostbeautiful club in Hyde Park.” It has two large cocktail loungesand a restaurant which has been converted to a cabaret thea¬ter’ w ith space for 140 persons.Entertainment will be of¬fered by the Compass everyevening Tuesday through Sunday.The schedule is as follow's:Cocktail hour (piano music) —Daily, 5 to 9 p.m.Folk music — Tuesday at 9:15p.m.Audienoe workshop (creationand dramatization of storiesby Compass patrons with thehelp of director Dave Shep¬herd > — Saturday at 3 p.m.Improvised plays (improvisa¬tions based on stories submit¬ted to the company, and re¬hearsed before performance)— Wednesday and Thursdayat 9:15 p.m. fFriday and Saturday at9:15 and 11:15 p.m.Sunday at 8:15 p.m.Spontaneous improvisation —rvvvt rw vvtvvTV ▼▼ »BOR DON EI Movers and Light Hauling <<<VI 6-9832STU DYIMOWIN EUROPE4 Vi months in Europe, round tripon boot, travel, oil tuition, roomand board ...$1090Live in Vienna, Austria, while tak¬ing a wide variety of English taughtcourses at the University.A full semester of accredited studyat the University of Vienna.Travel program includes extendedtours through England, Belgium,France, Germany, Italy, Yugoslavia,Switzerland and Austria.SAILING DATE: February 2, 1956on the Cunard Line, ss Ascania,from New York.APPLICATION DEADLINE: De¬cember 30, 1955.Fill out the coupon and mail it tous for free, colorful brochure andapplication forms.THE INSTITUTE OFEUROPEAN STUDIESA non-profit corporation7325 South Maryland AvenueChicago 19, Illinoisnameaddress'city zonestateschool each night after the last per¬formance until closing.There will be no admissioncharge to the cabaret, but therewill be a minimum of $1.50 Fri¬day and Saturday applicable todrinks. Kober, an instructor of mu¬sic at W'ilson junior college, haschosen the following program:Oi'erture in CJohann Ludwig BachSinfonietta for StringsLeon SteinConcerto in D Minorfor Piano and StringsJohann Sebastian BachSinfonia No. S....Karl Phillip Emanuel BachConcerto itt D Minor forBassoon and StringsAntonio VivaldiFeatured soloists are LeonardSharrow, first bassqon of the Chi¬cago Symphony orchestra, andGayle Hufford, pianist.Three UC students, RobertBloch, Thomas Metzger, and Rich¬ard O’Neil, will solo during theyear. The season promises someof the finest soloists in Chicago,including Ernst and Wallfissch,famous viola-piano team, and Ray Still, principal oboist of the Chi- are on Sundays: December iTcago Symphony. January 29. February 26. April i;»The other concerts in the series and May 20.Bach Singers to opennew season SundayThe Bach Singers of the University of Chicago will oi>enits fifth season on the campus with a recital at Internationalhouse this coming Sunday, November 6. The program will Vheld in the Assembly hall at 4 p.m. Admission will be 50 cents,payable at the door“Love as a creative force, inits spiritual and secular mani¬festations” will be the theme ofthe all-German anthology of 16thand 18th century works to be pre¬sented at the recital.Some of the beautiful 16th-cen¬tury German love songs will bepresented as examples of worksof art motivated by secular love. Bach’s only secular love song.Bist du bel mir, will be sung by-Mrs. Helen Yoos.Spiritual love songs $chedul*v|include the Bach chorales; Dir.dir Jehovah will leh singen andJesu, meine Freude. Other workswhich will be featured are HansLeo Hassler’s Mein Gemut and theSchubert lieder Du holde Kunstand Der du von dem Himmel bist.Have YouTried1137 E. 63rdALEXANDER’S Yet?MU 4-5735Sunday, .November 6Alexander’s Special Complete Sunday Dinner Menu Includes:Cream of Chicken ala Rhine or Beef Broth SpaghettineAlexander's Special Chopped Salad Bowl or Lettuce and Sliced Tomatowith Choice of French, Thousand Island, or Garlic DressingBaked, Boiled, French Fried, Mashed, LyonnaiseCorn on the Cob or FreshSquashCoffee, Tea, Milk, Pepsi-Cola; or Coco-ColoSoup:Salad:Potato:Vegetable:Beverages:• iENTREES:** Roost Prime Rib of Native Beef, ou Jus *.... 1.75Roast Leg of Spring Lamb with Mint Jelly, ou Jus 1.55Roost Spring Chicken with Sage Dressing and Apple Sauce ,1.50Chicken a la King with Fresh Mushrooms en Casserole .1.60Chicken Liver Omelet Pan Fried in Butter t. .1.15Breaded Pork Tenderloin with Country Gravy 1.25Baked Hamburger with Mushroom Sauce .r.T.M . .95Pan Fried Young Steer Liver with Onions or Bacon .1.25Calf's Sweet Breads Saute with Fresh Mushrooms en Casserole .. .1.40FROM OUR BROILERS:•led Filet Mignon with Fried Mushroom Tops 2.75led U. S. Prime Rib Steak, Natural Sauce 1.85led Top Sirloin Butt Steak with Fried Tomato ; 2.15led Center Cut Pork Chops, Apple Sauce 1.75led Lean Lamb Chops, Ryser Bacon 1.95led or Grilled French Cur Fork Tenderloin, Crabapple „ . 1.70led Large Juicy Lamb Steak, Mint Jelly ; . 1.65Half Spring Chicken Individually Pan Fried or Broiled ' .1.75Grilled Chopped Round Steak with Fried Onions ,.1.40(**S<*H,<»d om Special Thermo Platters)FROM THE LAKES AND SEAS: ' . 'French Fried Jumbo Shrimps with Cocktail Sauce 1.60Broiled Shrimps De Joghne, en Casserole . ....... 1.75Fried New York Count Oysters, Cocktail Sauce . .... 1.60Broiled Center Cut Lake Superior Trout with Lemon Butter . ....... .1.35Fried Center Cut Halibut Steak with Tartar Sauce ..... . 1.20Steamed Finnen Haddie with Melted Butter 1.20THE SWEET ENDING:Home-Made Pumpkin Pie with Whip Cream, Fresh Peach Sundae with PureWhipped Cream, Chocolate Ripple Ice Cream, Rice Pudding with Cream, ChocolateSundae, Tapioca Pudding, Layer Cake, Jello, Fruit Cocktail, Stewed Prunes, Figs,Half Peach, Assorted Cookies, or Sawyers, Cinnamon Crisp, Hot Mince Piewith Brandy Sauce.(Complete Diviners Served from 12 Noon to 10 P.M.)* *Bro**Bro* *Bro* *Bro* * Bro**Bro* * Bro* *November 4/ 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Rage 11Jazz club formed on campus;will present informal programA new highlight on campus is the recently formed Jazz club. The purpose of the club asorganized two weeks ago by Frank Broude and a group of his friends is to further interestand understanding of jazz. The club hopes to present concerts and jazz symposiums for thepublic at large and to sponsor jam and record sessions for its own members. It intends tostudy all schools of jazz.Vegh string quartetwill play tonight ‘The Vegh String Quartet will present the first UniversityMembership in the Jazz clubIs now open to all who wish tojoin. The second meeting of theclub was held Tuesday night at8:00 p.m. on Ida Noyes’ thirdfloor. The club plans to hold meet¬ings at this time and place eachweek. Officers of the club are the of Chicago concert of the 1955-56 season at 8:30 p.m. Friday, Haydn,'Th^Piano pfeces'Q82«Jeanne Bambergerto play piano sonatasThe University of Chicago Musical Society will presentJeanne Bamberger, pianist, in the first of a series of sonatarecitals this Sunday, November 6, at 8:30 in Mandel hall.Mrs. Bamberger, who has recently joined the faculty of theCollege after extensive per¬formances in this country andin Europe, studied with ArturSchnabel from 1943-1947 and hasalso been a pupil of Roger Ses¬sions.Sunday’s program will consistfollowing: president, FrankBroude; vice president, Kahil Rah-mon; secretary, Lynford Russell.Prominent Chicago disc jockeyshave expressed interest in theJazz Club. Daddy-o Daylie andMike Rapchak are willing to givethe club their support. Max Roachand Clifford Brown, nationallyknown jazz musicians currentlyappearing at the Bee Hive, arealso enthusiastic, according toclub members.The Jazz club is now complet¬ing plans to present an informal November 4. in Leon Mandel hall. by Schubert, and the first Chi-Sandor Vegh, violin; Sandor Zoldy, violin; Georges Janzer, ° or™ance of the Sonata’ (1948) by the young Americancomposer Leon Kirchner, who hasRobert Frostviola, and Paul Szabo, cello,will play three quartets byBeethoven: F minor, opus 95, Csharp minor, opus 131, and Dmajor, opus 18, No. 3.The Vegh Quartet, whose mem-bers have not changed since thequartet was formed in 1940, wasawarded the first prize for quar¬tets in the 1946 International Mu¬sic Competition, and in 1952 wonprogram of Jazz in the middle of *be French Grand Prix de Disquesthe month. The program will be for its interpretation of the majoropen to all those interested in Mozart quartets,joining the club. For additional Single admission to the concertinformation Frank Broude or is $1.50. Season tickets for theAaron Meyers may be contacted, ten-concert series are $10.Why Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr.,reads The Reader’s Digest to appear atBlackstone soonRobert Frost, noted poet, willappear in Chicago Sunday, Nov.13, at the Blackstone theater. Mod¬ern Poetry association, affiliatedwith Poetry Magazine, will spon¬sor Frost.The program at the Blackstonewill begin at 2 p.m. Tickets are $2for the main floor, $1.50 for thebalcony, and $1 for the gallery.There are no student rates.Frost, a resident of New Eng¬land, has made New Englandcountryside the locale of many ofhis poems. received the New York MusicCritics’ Award and a GuggenheimFellowship.The Musical Society, whoseusual chamber music concertswill be continued throughout theyear, has arranged this series ofrecitals in response to the enthu¬siastic reception given Mrs. Bam¬berger’s first campus appearancethis summer. The Maroon review¬er wrote of that concert: "It isto be hoped that Mrs. Bambergerwill be heard again on campus—and soon. Such playing is a de¬light and a rarity.”Each of the programs In thisseries will include a Haydn So¬nata, a Schubert Sonata, and thework of one contemporary com¬poser.General admission for the No-I PROVENCAL*RestaurantFrancais1450 E. 57th StreetNO 7-96695 p.m. — 1 a.m.Sat. — 2 a.m.cafe espresso from9 p.m.Closed TuesdaysOkAMH. OTTAWA"/ am told that the Digest is note published in 12 languages,and bought each month by more than 18 million people. Bystrengthening understanding among individuals, the Digesthelps people of many different nations to share their ex¬periences and ideals. That is why I, for one, read the Digest—and why 1 believe it helps create the conditions of worldpeace which we all seek”— From a statement in NovemberReader's Digest by the U.S. Representative to the United Nations.In November Reader’sDigest don’t miss:26-PAGE CONDENSATION FROM $3.50 BEST-SELLER:"CAPTAIN DREYFUS." “The Dreyfus Affair,” inwhich France branded an innocent man a traitor,is perhaps the most celebrated miscarriage of jus¬tice in modern times. Here — in all its relentlessdrama—is the story of the hysteria-ridden casethat placed a man, a nation and the very conceptof justice itself on trial.TNE MAKING OF A WEST POINTER. A visit to theUnited States Military Academy, where “theygive you a million-dollar education free—and jamit dqpra your throat nickel by nickel."WHY WOMEN ACT THAT WAY. They are clumsy atpitching and running (their bones aren’t builtlike men’s). But they stand cold better than men;hear better, too—and change their minds just halfas often! Scientific facts behind female behavior.SEVEN WONDERS OF ENGINEERING. Dazzling lookat America’s seven greatest man-made triumphs.Get November Reader’s Digestat your newsstand today—only 25i38 articles of lasting interest, including the best from leadingmagazines and current books, condensed to save your time. Hove you ever seen a Motion Picture?You haven't really unless you've seen just about the twomost wonderful motion pictures ever made ...“Red Shoes”— and —“Marty"Starting Friday, Nov. 4 — For One Week Only!Hyde park theatrelake park at 53rd NO 7-9071Student rate 50c all performances| International House Movies i| Assembly hall, Mon. A Thurs. evening at 8 p.m. |25H Monday, Nov. 7 — 45c — Poison (Italian)j| Thursday, Nov. 10—35c—The Treasure of Sierra Madre (American) =iiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiimmiiiiiiimmiNiiiimimiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiii^TERRY’S PIZZA<(The World9* Be*e9FREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSSMALL 1.00 LARGE 1.95MEDIUM 1.45 GIANT 2.95We also carry a full line of Italian foods Jeanne Bambergervember 6 recital is $1; studenttickets are 75 cents. Tickets maybe purchased at the Concert Of¬fice or at the door on Sunday.Seeger returnsto near campusPete Seeger will appear in aConcert of Folk Songs and Bal¬lads tonight at 8:15 p.m. in theKenwood-Ellis Church, 46th andGreenwood. He will sing folksongs from many lands, accom¬panying himself on his 5-stringbanjo.Seeger, one of America’s best-known folk-singers, is Well knownto UC students; he has given verysuccessful concerts here at Man-del hall. This is his first Chicagoperformance in several months.Tickets to tonight’s perform¬ance, at $1 each, are available inthe Student Service Center, Reyn¬olds club basement. Proceeds willgo to the Kenwood-Ellis NurserySchool.Attractive Girlsfor part timeconvention work—eveningsApply after 1 p.m.6 East MonroeRoom 1304Jimmy’sSINCE 1940ACECYCLE SHOPYaw BieyelcHeadquartersWo service what we sellRepairs & Parts all makes819 E. 55 HI 3-26729 A.M. - 6 P.M.COMP QUESTION1. (a) Gilmore(b) Anderson(c) Lichtenstein(d) Farquhar(e) none of the aboveis our leader; we2. (a) shall not he moved(b) shall be moved(c) abstain—-’ •>■... ■ --Page 12 --THE CHICACO MAROON . - |3MPgatMPHL JKSHB.!r HINovember 4, 1955Over forty see Chicagoin the sociologist’s wayby Ed BerckmanMore than 40 UC students got a sociologist’s-eye view of Chicago Saturday, from the* “400” ’s Gold Coast to the sprawling wilds of the industrial jungle.Hans O. Mauksch, staff sociologist of St. Luke’s hospital, conducted a bus tour thatcovered most of the south side, skid row, the stockyards sans smell, Halsted street withits various national communities, the near north shore, well - known centers of vice, andareas of redevelopment.Focus of interest was on thechanging character of thecity. As more prosperous res¬idents move outward from thecenter, vacated homes becomecrowded slums or industrial areasand second generation immi¬grants take on the middle classanonymity of homo urbanicus.Mauksch pointed out the re¬stricting boundaries of river andrailroad that make the Loop aneven more congested and expen¬sive location than Manhattan.Property in Chicago’s businesssection sells for over 100 times therate of residential real estate.The touring students saw the hobo haven of West Madisonstreet, North Clark’s exploitativeentertainment, A1 Capone’s for¬mer brewery, and one of the res¬taurants where underworld and“overworld” leaders are reputedto meet. “Organized crime,”said Mauksch, “could never existwithout the collusion and toler¬ance of respectable people.”The tour also included a lookat several of the public housingprojects and the new expresshighways. The group had lunchin a Chinatown restaurant.This sociological tour has beenconducted periodically for overten years and was originally laidout by Joe Lohman, UC lecturer in social science, now sheriff ofCook county.Information given by Maukschincluded these facts: taverns onceserved as banks for immigrantStockyard workers at a timewhen three tenants to the bed wasthe rule back of the yards; someupper and middle class men spendoccasional “vacations” of two tothree months in the “freedom” ofSkid Row; there are still manypublic baths in the city; some peo¬ple live 40 years in Chicago with¬out going to the loop.The students were treated to anunscheduled glimpse of GovernorStratton crossing an upper lowerclass area in his Cadillac.Educators discuss discriminationin higher education in IllinoisMore than 200 educators from colleges and universities throughout Illinois will meet in_ Chicago on November 18 and 19 for a statewide conference on discrimination in highereducation.College presidents, deans, admissions and placement officers, trustees, and faculty mem¬bers will come from all colleges, universities, and professional schools in Illinois. The con¬ference will be held at the Conrad Hilton hotel.The purpose of the confer- Ience will be to explore means necessary. Recommendation of be considered.Of expanding equality of op- model policies in the fields of ad- The entire conference will beportunity in all phases of campus missions, housing, job placement, headed by Charles E. Howell, pro¬life, and to enlist the support of student organizations, and the fessor of social sciences at North-trustees and students for inten- contest of human relations cours- ern Illinois State college, DeKalb,sive remedial programs where es offered by Illinois schools will Illinois, who will serve as chair¬man at all major sessions. 'Hamlet plays to twoIn a St. Charles, Illinois, audi¬torium with a seating capacity ofapproximately 400, last Wednes¬day, Oct. 26, Playwrights theaterclub presented its current produc¬tion of Hamlet to a total audienceof two paid admissions.Publicity was set up for the pro¬duction a week before the per¬formance date. 50 posters wereput up, 1.000 fliers were printed,a paid advertisement was takenin the Geneva newspaper, and be¬tween 20-30 complimentary tick¬ets were given out. But only fourpersons showed up—two of theseon complimentary passes, a Meth¬odist minister and his wife.“I was exceedingly embar¬rassed,” stated Michael Stanley,former director of special promo¬tion, Playwrights theater. “I ex¬pect that the play was boy-scoutedand church-socialed out of busi¬ness.”Playwrights will, within thenext week, try their luck withHamlet in Lake Forest, Highland Park, Evanston, and Gary, Ind.Their next production will heG. B. Shaw’s “The Devil’s Disci-pie,” scheduled to open in Mandelhall in mid-November.SSA support of officersrecognized at luncheonUC’s School of Social Service Administration’s support of the proba¬tion officer’s training center of the US district court was recognizedin an honorary luncheon Wednesday at the Union League club Guestswere Helen R. Wright, dean of. SSA, Frank T. Flynn Jr., professorof SSA, and Lawrence A. Kimpton, chancellor of UC.Accomplishments of the five year old training.center, establishedto orient newly-appointed federal probation officers, were discussedClasses have been conducted by UC, SSA, law and sociology facultiesin classrooms made available to the training center by SSA.Chief of the division of probation of the United States courts, Wash¬ington, D. C., Louis J. Sharp, and the northern district of Illinois isUS probation officer Bon S. Meeker, were guests at the luncheon.rTAe PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55H* STREETSpooks at Beta tonight;all ghouls who groan invitedTonight at 8:30 p.m. the Beta “Open spook-house” will be inaugur¬ated at the Beta house, 5737 University. It will be punctuated by thescreams, moans and groans of the elf, hobgoblin and troll fraternity,with appropriate shrills of the witch sorority.Try to come looking ghoulish, but if that is not feasible, by allmeans, come as you are.There will be a band provided for your serious sorcery shenanigans,along with special entertainment.Announcement. . .As a convenience, business hours are from 7 a m. - to1 1 p.m. The shop will be open Monday through Saturday.Ellen Coughlin Beauty SalonMl 3-2060 5105 Lake Park Ave.Used Book Seasonat theRED DOORWe have been purchasing widely, deeply and judiciouslyTHOUSANDS OF FINE USED BOOKSThey are now being added to our usedbook room shelves at a great paceOut of print books and "as new" copies of in-print booksare usually 60% to 75% of the list price. Others arenever priced at more than 50% of list.And if you do not find that hard-to-get-at-a-good-priceitem, use our free book search service.SCHNEEMANN’S1328 E. 57th Street Underwearwithcomfort plus ...It’s more than mere underwear. Wornalone or under an Arrow sweater orshirt, this Arrow Two-Purpose Tee Shirtis a campus favorite. Wear it withcomfortable Arrow shorts—they featureexclusive contour seat that can’t bind!Boxer shorts in novelty patterns, $1.50.Tee, from $1.25.kARROIV-— first in fashionSHIRTS • TIESHANDKERCHIEFS • UNDERWEARNew 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