photo by BystrynSunlight falling on the modern glass above the door to the recently re-named Enrico Fermi In¬stitute for Nuclear Studies reflects West Stands across the street, where under Fermi's directionthe first controlled chain reaction took place Decoember Z, 1942. Fermi died November 28, 1954. 6Quiz BowV teammeets GeorgetownTomorrow night_at 7:30 four UC students will match intel¬lects with four students from Georgetown university in NBC’snetwork show, “College Quiz Bowl.” They will compete fromthe little theater on the third floor of Ida Noyes hall, meetingGeorgetown through NBC’s central station in NYC. Specta¬tors must be present by 6:45 p.m.The show will not be broad¬cast from Chicago. It can beheard on Milwaukee stationWTMJ. 620 on the dial.Team captain Leonard Fried¬man (pre-med), speaking for him¬self and his six teammates: Quen¬tin Ludgin (poli sci), DavidSchlessinger (chem), David Frei-felder (col), and alternates Sam¬uel Jaffe (psych), Roger Downey(soc sci) and William Harmon(Eng), predicted: “There will bea lot of team spirit and a lot ofteam coordination which makesfor team unity. Last time wedidn’t have it.”According to ex-quiz kid Frei- felder, “We have a good chanceof winning. We have a specialistfor every field they ask questionson. Last time everyone knew alot about the same things.” Lasttime UC lost to Washington andLee University.Philosophy, literature, history,music, and especially opera, cur¬rent events, theater, and sportswill be the quiz topics. ContestantLudgin is a specialist in Ameri¬can and European history andmythology; Freifelder in music,literature, and science; Friedmanin current events and history;and Schlessinger in poetry, music,and literature.Open holiday seasonWassail, tinsel, balls, and Carols will abound in Ida Noyes this after¬noon for the annual Wassail Party. Tree-trimming will begin at 3p.m., with the hot cider drink known as Wassail to be served until6 p.m.Mrs. Kimpton will throw the switch at about 5 p.m. spotlightingtne 16-foot tree. Informal caroling by the glee club and a live SantaClaus will be attractions at the all-campus affair.Traditionally opening the Christmas season on campus, the partyis this year sponsored by the newly-formed Ida Noyes council.“The fraternity seems to have lost a pledge to the settlementleague” revealed Mike Rogers, spokesman for Phi Gamma Delta.“When \he kids arrived there were 41,” he explained, “but when 42left, I knew something was fishy.” This event occured at the annualparty for the underprivileged children of the Settlement league,which was co-sponsored by Phi Gamma Delta, the Mortarboards, andthe Quadranglers. Joe Abatie, president of Phi Gamma Delta, hinteddarkly, when interviewed behind a large bowl of spaghetti: “I suspectthere has been foul play by another fraternity.When Robert Smith, vice-president of Zeta Beta Tau, was confront¬ed with this statement he replied: "We were considering filing acharge of “dirty rushing” against Phi Gamma Delta, specifically,rushing fraternity material even before it has enrolled at the Uni¬versity, but under the circumstances we shall drop our charge.” Rep¬resentatives of both the Mortarboards and the Quadranglers statedconfidentially that they knew nothing of the matter. The Settlementleague could not be reached for comment.27) children from the UC Settlement House will be treated to a tur¬key dinner, games and gifts Saturday at a Christmas party to begiven jointly by Sigma Women’s Club and Zeta Beta Tau fraternity.Dean Robert Strozier will be on hand as Santa Claus to hand outpresents to the eight and nine-year-olds. Much of the food will bedonated by neighborhood merchants.Carl Frankel, president of ZBT, and Brina Jaffee, Sigma president,are supervising the party. This will be the second annual Christmasparty given by the two groups. Prevents car theftBernard Fried, a law student, avoided being thevictim of a car theft early Thursday morning ashe apprehended a strange person in the processof taking his car, which he had left unlocked. Thekeys, however, had not been left in the car.Walking to his auto from his residence at thePhi Kappa Psi fraternity house, Fried noticed hiscar moving slowly down 56th street on the starter.Fried chased the thief down Wood lawn on foot andcaught him near 57th streetAfter a brief scuffle, Fried was able to subduethe person and take him back to the fraternityhouse where the police were summoned. Throughquestioning it was discovered that the would-bethief is an entering UC student-at-large.In criminal court Friday morning, state’s attor¬ney suggested that the fellow be found guilty ascharged and attorney for defendent agreed thatthe facts were as presented in information given.Fried then suggested that perhaps the fellowneeded psychiatric help. The judge’s decision wasto withhold sentence until psychiatric examination had been performed. The man is still in custodyof the police.In a telephone conversation with Fried, it waslearned that the fellow carried an unopened bottleof whiskey in his pocket and in the souffle at 57thstreet attempted to hit Fried with it. When theman dropped the bottle, Fried seized it, wielding itas a weapon to “coerce” the fellow back to thehouse.While waiting for the police, the fellow had tobe further “coerced” to remain in the fraternityhouse, Fried said.He was taken to the Hyde Park police stationand on Thursday Fried filed a complaint of tam¬pering with an automobile at the state’s attorneyoffice at criminal court building.Tampering with an automobile is a misdemeanorin Illinois and is punishable by a maximum of oneyear in prison.Although the fellow had been drinking beforethe theft occurred, detectives decided that he wasnot intoxicated although the drinking might havetriggered him to attempt the theft.WUCBLast Saturday, WUCB complet¬ed ten year of service to the cam¬pus. The student - staffed radiostation marked the occasion witha special fifty-five minute broad¬cast, which was followed by theSaturday evening concert, a fa¬vorite of WUCB listeners for adecade.Included in the special birthdayobservance was a historical .sketchof the stations activities duringthe past ten years; a selection ofmusic which reflected the varietyand quality of music broadcastover WUCB; and the re-creationof both a news broadcast as itmight have sounded on the sta¬tion’s first night, and of the bul¬letin board, as it probably waspresented on December 3, 1945.WUCB was founded ten yearsago as WGUS (“World’s GreatestUniversity Station”) by a groupof students, many of whom werearmy signal corps veterans whowanted to “keep their hands inelectronics.” Lucien Chimene, ofNew York, was one of the earlydirectors of the station, which,though it had originally hoped tobroadcast to all buildings on thequadrangle, found that it was lim¬ited in its coverage to BJ.By 1950, even though the sta¬tion had expanded to include theB J Courts, the C group, and In¬ternational house, WUCB wasPlagued by technical difficulties.Operating from the small studiosln the basement of Burton Court,which it still occupies, the stationviolated the wiring code and ex- celebrates tenthceeded the limit of signal strength Sheldon Danielson, in the fall ofwhich was permitted. 1954.Close station Revive stationWith a simultaneous blow, the Within the past two years, thestation was closed in 1950 by UC organization of Radio MidwayB&G, the Student Activities Of- was revived and transformed intofice, and the Federal Communica- a student activity which includedtions Commission. Gone forever both WUCB and the student ama-was the perilous but colorful stu- teur (“Ham”) station, W9YWQ.dio atmosphere — in which the Though W9YWQ has moved toreams of wiring festooned around the Reynolds Club, WUCB retainsthe room resembled a Christmas its headquarters in the basementtree ... in brown. of BJ.The organization of Radio Mid- The WUCB studio, known toway, which operated WGUS, in the staff as the cracker box, is not1951 satisfied B&G requirements yet all that could be wished. Asand obtained permission from John Lyon, President of the RadioFCC to recommence with a new Midway says, “Far from beingset of call letters: WUCB. Pro- sound proof, the cracker box per-gramming was resumed on a high mits us to hear perfectly thecultural level; WUCB became the sounds made by ping pong tables,first station in Chicago to broad- juke boxes, washing machines,cast LP records. and BJ residents.”In the Winter Quarter of 1951, In its tenth year, WUCB, withthe first annual 24-hour marathon a staff of 35, rebroadcasts stationstook to the air waves. Each year WEFM and WFMT from 9:30 tosince then, a few hardy WUCB 7:00 daily and schedules a varietystaff members, and probably a of programs between 7 and 12,few equally strong WUCB listen- Monday through Saturday eve-ers, stay up all night and all day nings. The station also broadcastsas the station remains on the air Sunday afternoon between 2 andwithout a break for a twenty four 3:30.hour period. The goal was not the Plan futurqdetermination of the individual Future plans for Radio Mid-who can best withstand fatigue, way’s activities with WUCB in-but rather, the raising of money elude tests to determine the feas-for charities. ibility of an educational FM trans-The International house trans- mitter which would cover most ofmitter, which had been removed the South Side; expansion to eith-by the FCC in 1950, as one of the er Gates dormitory or Snell andmain causes of their crack-down Hitchcock; a possible move toon the station, was rebuilt and re- new and better studio facilities oninstalled by Technical Director the other side of the Midway, and anniversarycloser integration with other stu- cial events coverage,dent organizations. The special tenth anniversaryAmong the program possibili- broadcast over WUCB was pro¬ties mentioned by the staff in this duced by Bill Dunning, businessconnection are more foreign lan- manager, in cooperation withguage feature broadcasts, in addi- news director Barry Rappaport,tion to the German, Spanish, and station manager, and President ofFrench now carried, many varied Radio Midway John Lyon, the of-musical productions with campus fice of Student Activities, and thegroups; and wider news and spe- Maroon.photo by BystrynWUBC announcer Sheldon Danielson broadcasts the 8:00 news.The WUBC news programs provide the only daily coverage ofevents on the UC campus*Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON December 6, 1955Coming events on quadranglesTuesday, December 6Wassail party at Ida Noyes; hot was¬sail, caroling, and decorating UC’sChristmas tree, 3-6 p.m.Maroon staff meeting, 3:30. Ida Noyes.Senior mathematics club, "The theoremof Riemann-Roch and some applica¬tions,” F. Hirzezbruch, Princeton U.,4 p.m.. Eckhart 209/*REVIEW staff meeting, 5 p.m., .Rey¬nolds club 301-304.FTS wives Christmas party and talentshow. 8 p.m., Graham Taylor chapel(CTS.) . „Lecture. "Hindu - Buddhist influenceamong the Mayas and in Mexico,”by Robert von Heine-Geldern, U. oxVienna, 8 p.m., Breasted hall.Wednesday, December 7Humboldt club meeting, 3 p.m., IdaNoyes.Pre-med club meeting, 4 p.m., Abbott133Humboldt club holds a St. Nicholas’ daycelebration. 4 p.m. Ida Noyes library.Young Republicans meeting, 4:30 p.m.,Cobb 101.Walgreen lecture, “Science in America:security and heresy,” by Gerard Plel,publisher, Scientific American, 4:30p.m.. Social Science 122.Quiz bowl, 7 p.m., Ida Noyes theatre.Glee club rehearsal, Rosenwald 2,7:15 p.m.Law Wives meeting, 7:30 p.m., IdaNoyes.Intervarsity Christian fellowship, 7:30p.m., Ida Noyes.Modern dance club, 7:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.League for civil liberties discussion,"Reasons for decline of civil libertiesin America today,” 8 p.m., Ida Noyes.Country dancers, 8 p.m., Ida Noyes.Lecture, "Early Islamic chateaux in Sy¬ria and Trans-Jordan,” by Oleg Gra-bar, U. of Michigan, 8:30 p.m., Breas¬ted hall.Thursday, December 8Woman employees’ Christmas tea, 4-6p.m., Ida Noyes.Hanukkah party, with faculty sympo¬sium, "The latke vs. the hamantash,their metaphysical, political, histori¬cal, sociological, and anthropologicalimplications, 7:30 p.m., 5715 Wood-lawn, 50 cents for non-members.Dames club meeting, 8 p.m., Ida Noyes.International house movie: Miracle on34th Street (American), 8 p.m., 35cents. Room C. 7 and 9 p.m.Lecture, “Romantic revolution in poli¬tical and moral philosophy: modernIrrationalism,” by Isaiah Berlin ofOxford U., 8:30 p.m., Social Science122.Books Bought• Any Subject• Any Language• Any QuantityClark & ClarkHYde Park 3-03211204 E. 55th St.Louise BarkerphotographerPortraitsof thestudentby anartist1457 E. 57th St.BU 8-0876Crammingfor ExamsFight “Book Fatigue” SafelyYour doctor will tell you—aNoDoz Awakener is safe as anaverage cup of hot, black cof¬fee. Take a NoDoz Awakenerwhen you cram for that exam...or when mid-afternoonbrings on those “3 o’clock cob¬webs.” You’ll find NoDoz givesyou a lift without a letdown...nelps you snap back to normaland fight fatigue safely!IS tobl*1» — 35 C large economy til* |)A,(for Crook Row and JJjl1Dorms) 60 tablets —i NOQOZAWAKE NERS•AM AS COMli r photo by H. BeckerIsaiah Berlin Friday, December 9French club meeting, 3 p.m., Ida Noyes.Walgreen lecture, “Science in America:manifest destiny in the age of sci¬ence,” by Gerard Piel, 4:30 p.m., So¬cial Science 122.Mathematical biology, “Theoretical con¬siderations on the interaction ofnerve Impulses in the central nerv¬ous system,” 4:30 p.m., 5741 Drexel.Scandinavian club meeting, 7:45 p.m.,Ida Noyes.Varsity basketball game, UC vs. St,Procopius college. 8 p.m.. Field house.University Theatre: Santa Claus, anopera by Leland Smith based on amorality toy e. e. cummlngs, withdramatic recital of Return Journey,by Dyan Thomas, 8:30 p.m., Mandelhall.Calling All Overseas Guiders and RangersPast and PresentWould you like to join on International Patrol of Girl Guides andScouts, meeting once a month, far Fun ond Fellowship? •Please Contact: Marianne Schnetxer1210 Astor St., Apt. 4N * SU 7-8530 Debate: latke vs. hamantashA panel of distinguished guests will present its views on “The latkeversus the hamantash: their metaphysical, political, historical, soci-ological, and anthropological implications” at Hillel foundation’s an¬nual all-campus Hanukah party Thursday evening at 7:30 p.m. Ad¬mission for non-members is 50 cents, members free.The lineup includes: Ralph Marcus, professor of Hellenistic cul¬ture; Louis Gottschalk, professor of modern history; Meyer Isenber^assistant professor of the humanities; Elihu Katz, assistant professorof sociology; and Herbert Lamm, associate professor of philosophy.Gerhard Meyer, associate professor of economics; Rabbi MauricePekarsky, director of the campus Hillel organization; Leo Straussprofessor of political science; Hayyim Tadmor, from the Hebrew uni¬versity in Jerusalem; and Sol Tax, professor of anthropology, willalso participate.Following the discussion, speakers and listeners alike will be pro¬vided with an opportunity to test empirically the efficacy of theirtheories on the subjects of their conversation.LIONELatHERMAN’S 935 E. 55‘Big enough to serve youSmall enough to want to• • •99Faculty • Personnel - Student DiscountsMY GAME! LUCKY DROODLES!WHAT’STHIS?For solution, seeparagraph at right. THERE’S NO GETTING AROUND IT—Luckies tastebetter. And there’s no getting around that thing inthe Droodle at left, either—the Droodle’s titled:Lucky smoker with bum seat at football game. Poorguy is really up against it. But he’s got a swell pointof view on smoking—he smokes Luckies for bettertaste. Luckies taste better because they’re madeof fine tobacco that’s TOASTED to taste better.Chances are our friend in Section 28 is thinking,“This is the best-tasting cigarette I ever smoked!”DROODLES, Copyright 1953 by Roger Price77S TOASTED"to taste. Setter/Students! EARN *25”!Cut yourself in on the LuckyDroodle gold mine. We pay $25for all we use—and for a wholeraft we don’t use! Send yourDroodles with descriptive titles.Include your name, address, col¬lege and class and the name andaddress of the dealer in your col¬lege town from whom you buycigarettes most often. Address:Lucky Droodle, Box 67A,Mount Vernon, N. Y.HI-FIClarence JonesUniv. of Florida ONE BELOW ZEROBentie Sorrel*Texas Tech UNION CARD FORJACK-OF-ALL-TRADESLeonard FeigenbaumC.C.N.Y.LUCKIES TASTE BETTER - Cleaner,IMUICA'l LB AD IMQ 1C AMU FACTORS! 09 CIOAMBTYMB©at. C«. product orDecember 6t 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Pag® 34Review9 editors reaffirmpolicy; tell \great growth9“The magazine which demands that the campus writers do better than they thought theycould, realizes a distinctly serious achievement” As the Chicago Review begins its tenth yearof publication, its editors have reaffirmed this statement from the foreword of the maga¬zine’s first issue as the basis of their present policy.From its original 44 page effort in the fall of 1946 with a story by James T. Farrell asthe outstanding feature, through various changes such as appearance in newspaper form,the Review has grown to be, in — Pastry, but no soupTwo or three months' delay in the installation of the soupmachine in Ida Noyes C»oiser club was predicted by the vendingmachine company Friday. Approval from the city health de¬partment is lacking for its installation.Pastry, but no cake or pie, were available in Ida by yester¬day afternoon.Blue-law observation by the sandwich machine ended thisweek, however, as the machine, ending a two-week SundaySabbath observation, gave forth sandwiches Sunday on receiptof quarters.its present size and format, arecognized “little” magazinewith world-wide circulation and aquarterly distribution of 10,000copies.Throughout this period theReview has published the currentwork of well-known writers suchas Conrad Aiken, e. e. cummings,Mark Van Doren, Russell Kirkand Elder Olson, along with thewritings of talented newcomers.Explain successIt is this policy, the present edi¬tors have said in a statement forthe Maroon, which “has kept Chi¬cago Review alive and gained it a They pointed out that since ac¬quiring a more professional ap¬pearance and a larger circulation,the Review has been listed inmajor periodical guides, writer’smarkets, and surveys of “little”magazines.Competition highThey now receive about 200manuscripts per month, or 600per issue, mostly from off-campus writers. In addition tothese unsolicited contributions, anumbei of items are prepared onassignment.Thus, the editors state, “thewriter’s chances of appearing in nomlc reconversion. The Chicago Re¬view believes that there are youngwriters who can both respond to andmeet these problems. To them andespecially to the alive campus writerall over the country we extend ourInvitation.“By maintaining a rigid quality wefeel that we can best serve the inter¬est of the young, the growing writer.The campus periodical which func¬tions merely as an organ of self-adultatlon for Its own staff, offersnothing beyond a personal and mo¬mentary elation.”This was the statement of theoriginal co-editors, Carolyn Dil¬lard and J. Radcliffe Squires.Since then, they and other editorshave graduated to teaching andeditorial positions elsewhere, andwriters first published in the Hither & YonNSA resolves to furtherworld understandingby Miriam GarfinIn several be sic resolutions on international student cooper¬ation the United States National Student association(USNSA) expressed its will to work to the best of its abilityfor improving and furthering mutual understanding amongstudent bodies from all over , X7T 7the world. LYL appeals actposition of note in a field where the Review depend on the quality have h thelr work pubscores of magazines have failed of his material in competition 1ish„, honk f„rm „R,„and are failing each year. As a with many writers, some ofgeneral intellectual publication, whom haVe professional experi-ralher than a narrow literary ef- ence and training. Student workfort, we continue to welcome new is never pushed aside by profes-writers from everywhere.” sional work, if the quality isThis clarification is being made, high.”co-editors Lachlan MacDonald Endorses policyand Samuel Blizer explain, be- They endorse as their current lished in book form and otherperiodicals. Henry Birnbaum, apoet included in the current issue,was first published in the Reviewand has since been published inPoetry and other leading maga¬zines.Give advisorsDuring its nine years of pub-cause recent expressions of inter- policy these paragraphs from the licati the Chicag0 Review has.. nrvv\n»*tnwtttflp AM initial •OCHA AT t A A manr07in0* 0est in literary opportunities oncampus suggest to them that theReview’s policy is not alwaysunderstood.There’s a photo orhobby gift foreveryone on yourChristmas list at . . •MODEL CAMERA1329 E. 55 HY 3-9259Up to 40% discounton Lionel train sets initial issue of the magazine:“The Chicago Review chooses topresent a contemporary standard ofgood writing. The emphasis In Amer¬ican universities has rested too heav¬ily on the history and analysis ofliterature—too lightly on Its creation.World War II Imposed an exaggeratedutilitarianism on the college, and to¬day we are confronted by the prob¬lems of a cultural as well as an eco- hnd a succession of faculty advi¬sors who “have been distin¬guished, appreciative and gener¬ous without fringing on the rightsof students to publish their ownmagazine,” in the words of Mac¬Donald and Blazer. The presentadviser is Professor Gwin Kolb,of the English department.**— Positions on the staff are opento all students, college and divi-( sional. Weekly meetings are heldTuesdays at 5 p.m. in room 302,Reynolds club. Currently thepoetry editor is Michael Fixler,book review editor George Jack-son. Daisy Yee is the office man¬ager.BERNIEASBELLTonight 9:15In a Folk Music Concert atCOMPASS5473 S. Lake PorkII No minimum, admission orcoverPopular bor prices on allS Tuesdays and Wednesdays The spring issue of the ChicagoReview will contain work by stu¬dents but will also feature AmosTutuola, Evan Brandon, KurtTucholsky, and other previouslypublished writers. According to the opinions ofUSNSA, the best method for thisis to support the InternationalStudent conference which is thelargest and most representativeorganization for students through¬out the world.The USNSA intends to expandits international exchange pro¬gram with students from all overthe world in the future and favorsan improvement in the McCarran-Walter Immigration act in orderto overcome all possible hinder-ances to this student exchangeprogram.Seek Frat. ban“The South Carolina Baptistconvention adopted a resolutionasking the Furman universityboard of trustees to abolish Greekletter social fraternities on thecampus.” This action was report¬ed by the Furman Hornet of Fur¬man university, Greeneville, S. C.Critics based their demand forabolishment on “swearing anddancing” within the groups andsay that a “little drinking andswearing on a Christian campuscannot be accepted if somethingcan be done about it.” A group of University of Wis¬consin student leaders preparedan amicus curiae brief in the La¬bor Youth league’s (LYL) appealof the Communist - front provi¬sions of the McCarran InternalSecurity act of 1950 to the courtof appeals in Washington, p. C.The group challenges the Inter¬nal Security act’s constitutional¬ity, according to an introductorystatement, from “another view¬point; its impact on the vast ma¬jority of American youth who arenot members of the Labor Youthleague who may disagree with itspolicies or who may never evenhave heard of the LYL.”Only 2 IndiansOnly two American Indians ar®known to be enrolled at the Uni¬versity of Minnesota, out of atotal Minnesota Indian populationof about 18,000.The main reason is the moneyproblem, according to the Minne¬sota Daily. Most Indians are ex¬tremely poor compared to thewhite man. To help alleviate thissituation the last stat® legislaturepreviously passed a bill providingscholarships with grants up to$800 a year for Indian*.When you’ve earned a "holiday”And you take off to play...Have fun the best way—have a CAMEL!It's o 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-tastingf yet so mildiCamelPage 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON December 6, 1955EditorialUndergrad assemblies need aimPlans for future undergraduate assembly topicsand speakers will be made this afternoon by agroup of faculty members, administration officials,and students picked by Assistant Dean of StudentsRuth McCarn. This group will presumably pickup where the similar group meeting April 26, alsoat the invitation of Mrs. McCarn, left off. At thattime opinions were split as to the best sort ofassemblies to have, even among those w’ho favoredassemblies.Ken Lewalski, who left UC this summer, pre¬sented to the meeting in April seven suggestionsfor assembly topics dealing with the field of “stu¬dent problems.” Such topics as “Moral choicesinherent in professional life,” and “Self-disciplineas an alternative to coercion,” were among theseven.Student and faculty members were not agreedon such topics, however. Terry Lunsford, law stu¬dent on the residence halls staff, said of the seventopics at the spring meeting, "Too liberal a doseof them would make a kind of a secular chapel.”Bruce MacLachlan, social sciences student and amember of the student group which assists at allconvocations, said at the meeting, that from hisown feelings and his observations of students’ re¬actions to convocation topics, he felt such topics(as the seven) were to be avoided.Maynard Krueger, asscociate professor of eco¬nomics, said at the April meeting that as little ashas to be done by the assembly method should bedone by that method, calling assemblies “syn¬thetic.”None of these people, however, have been invitedto the meeting this afternoon. Perhaps because the question has already been decided, perhapssimply through an oversight, those who evidencedany disagreement with the plan were omitted fromthe list.Those who have been invited to the meeting —presidents and heads of such organizations asOrientation Board, Student Government, WUBC,Nu Pi Sigma, and college administration officials— bear a responsibility to think not only of speak¬ers and subjects (as the memo announcing themeeting suggests) but also of the purposes whichmight be served by such meetings.Assemblies must not be an undergraduate substi¬tute for the Walgreen lectures, or a short orderversion of the entire college plan. They cannot bea real source of undergraduate spirit in one houra week. Their proper purpose is instead to evalu¬ate undergraduate experience, and particularly theundergraduate curriculum. College course chair¬men can lecture about the curriculum as well aswithin the curriculum. Undergraduates deserve avoice on the effectiveness of the courses they take.In roundtables and informal discussion followingassembly lectures they can have this voice.Professors will dlways have a better knowledgeof courses than their students have. But evaluatoryassemblies could give students a greater apprecia¬tion of the curriculum, and professors a guide toits improvement.If undergraduate assemblies are to serve a use¬ful purpose they must have a purpose. It is thispurpose, and the way it can best be achieved, thatthe group meeting in the administration confer¬ence room this afternoon must decide. Otherwise,the assembly plan will become just another itemin the calendar of coming events.LettersMay I reply briefly to the main pointmade by Mr. Salustiano del Campo ina letter printed in the Maroon issue ofNovember 29, in which he criticized myMaroon article on the Spanish dictator¬ship.No doubt the Spanish governmentconsists of “a system of pressuregroups.” The same coalition of army,church, nobility, and Falangists whichoverthrew the republican governmentstill holds together, and is reflected inthe composition of the Cabinet, theCortes, the Council of the Realm, andin the affiliations of the existing news¬ papers. There are indeed pressuregroups, because they are perpetuallyjockeying for power with the coalition.The trouble is that these groups com¬prise all the reactionary forces in Span¬ish society, to the exclusion of any ele¬ments which believe in democratic elec¬tions, parliamentary government, free¬dom of speech, press, assembly, and insocial justice.Similar coalitions of reactionaryforces are nothing new — they haveformed the backbone of almost everytyrannical government in human his¬ tory. To call them pressure grovips isperfectly all right. But to characterizethe Spanish government as a system ofpressure groups to an American audi¬ence, as did Professor Conde in hislecture, without pointing out that there1s a world of difference between theSpanish and the American system(which is largely based on the idea ofcompeting pressure groups from all so¬cial strata and walks of life), is to at¬tempt to establish ‘‘virtue by associa¬tion,” as it were, and smacks of intel¬lectual dishonesty. 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No giff canbring more lastingjoy than the Biblewritten in the livinglanguage of today.Select from theseRSV editions forChristmas giving.Family size editionsBlack genuine leather.$10.00Maroon buckram. 6.00India paper editionsBlack genuine leather $ 9.00Genuine Sealskin, leather-lined. .$15.00Smaller editions — illustratedBlack Sturdite..$ 3.50Blue cloth 3.25New Testament —large sizeBlue cloth •««••♦...♦...$ 2.50We'll be happy to fill your order by mail.Woodworth's Bookstore1311 E. 57 0 Olte QJLyPresents for ChristmasLIMITEDEDITIONPRINTSSigned by the ArtistAn extremely rare collection of French printsmagnificent beyond belief. By:Picasso LegerDesnoyer ChagaiiVillon RouaultDufy DerainVlaminck BaumeisterMarquet KleeAnd Many Others . . . Priced from $16 to $100Oils, Prints, Watercolors, FramingArtist SuppliesZslie Cjallery.1168 East 55th St.MUseum 4-3388 ~Y\\ c^cc^°11 laroonIssued every Tuesday and Friday throughout the school year and Intermittent!*during the summer quarter by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, at 1212 Kait59th Street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Editorial offices, Midway 3-0800 eVr1003 and 3266; Business and advertising office, Midway 3-0800, ext. 3265 Distrihuted to the University of Chicago campus through activities funds subscriptions*and subscriptions by mail, $3 per year. Business office hours: 2 p.m, to 5 n m ’Monday through Saturday. pin‘*atnihihtiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiitHiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiifiiiiiiiintiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiis[ trowtal mDELIGHTFUL 1ATMOSPHERE |POPULARPRICESiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiliiiliiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiilOn Campus withMaxStoJman(Author of "Barefoot Boy )Yith Cheek,” etc.)THE GIFT HORSEToday's column is about Christmas gift suggestions, and Isuppose you think I’ll begin by suggesting Philip Morris. Well,the joke’s on you. I’ll do no such thing. Why should I? Anyonewith two brains to knock together knows that Philip Morrismakes an absolutely smashing Christmas gift. Only a poorafflicted soul with atrophied taste buds needs to be told about thenew Philip Morris; its bracing flavor; its freshness, lightness,pleasantness, gentleness; its truth, its beauty, its brotherlinessin this discordant world of ours. So why should I waste timetelling you what you already know?%rter! "FT ,Let us, instead, turn to less obvious gift suggestions. Here’sone I bet you never thought of:Christmas is the best time of year, but it is also the beginningof winter. How about a gift that reminds one that though winterhas come, spring is not far behind? I refer, of course, to Easterchicks. (Similarly, on Easter one can give Christmas chicks.)Next, we take up the problem, common to all undergraduates,of trying to buy gifts when you have no money. To this dilemmaI say—Faugh! It is not the price of the gift that counts; it is thesentiment behind it.Take, for example, the case of Outerbridge Sigafoos. Outer-bridge, a sophomore, finding himself without funds last Christ¬mas, gave his girl a bottle of good clear water and a nice smoothrock, attaching this touching message to the gift:Here's some water,And here’s a rock,I love you, daughter,Around the clock.mAnd the whole delightful gift cost Outerbridge less than apenny!I am compelled to report, however, that Outerbridge’s girl didnot receive these offerings in the spirit in which they weretendered. In fact, she flew into a fit of pique, smashed the bottleon the rock and stabbed Outerbridge with the jagged edge. Butthe experience was not without value for Outerbridge. First, hediscovered that the girl was not his type at all. Second, he learnedhow to make a tourniquet.But I digress. Let’s examine now a common complaint ofChristmas shoppers: “What do you get for someone wrho haseverything?”To this I reply, “Does he?” Does he, for instance, have aunicycle? A sled dog? A serf? A burnoose? A hairball? A bungstarter? (The bung starter, incidentally, was invented by twoenormously talented men, Fred Bung and Otho Starter. Theirpartnership thrived from the very start, and there is no tellingto what heights they might have risen had they not split upover a silly argument. It seems that Bung was a firm believer inreincarnation; Starter was just as firm a disbeliever. Bung in¬sisted so violently on the truth of reincarnation and Starterscoffed so positively that they finally decided to go their separateways. Singly, alas, the two fared badly. Starter gave up businessaltogether, joined the army, and was killed at San Juan Hill in1898. He is today buried in Arlington National Cemetery. Bungdrifted from job to job until he died of breakbone fever inElizabeth, N. J., in 1902. He is today a llama in Uruguay.)©Max Shulman. 19j5The makers of Philip Morris, sponsors of this column, beg leave toadd one more gift suggestion — MAX SHULMAN'S GUIDED TOLUOF CAMPUS HUMOR, a collection of the funniest stuff ever writtenon or about campus —note on sale at your bookstore.December 6, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5Campus bell towers carrythree-way conversationOn week-days the bell towers at the University carry on a three-way conversation. At five-thirty the single bell of the First Unitarian church calls: “Come, pray; come, pray.” Adescending peal on the Mitchell tower bells introduces a hymn tune, perhaps “Abide withme.” And every fifteen minutes to a strain from Wagner’s “Parsifal” the Rockefeller chapelcarihon sings: “Be thou with me.”On Sunday morning, however, the three satellite towers north of the chapel bow to theirmaster. Great cascades of bellThis feature article . . .... on Rockefeller chapel tower is the concluding part of a '“Towersof the University" series written by James R. LawSbn, carillonneur ofthe chapel. Part I of this series appeared in the MAROON for October 14and concerned Mitchell tower. Part II on the Victor Fremont Lawson towerof the Chicago Theological seminary appeared October 25; part III on thetower of the First Unitarian church, October 28.vibrations roar out of thechapel tower, pass throughthe hollow tower of the ChicagoTheological seminary and re¬bound against Mitchell and theFirst Unitarian church. For fiveminutes at 10:45 a.m. one of themost magnificent bell sounds inthe world, a “swinging peal’’ on five of the largest bells in the Chapel carillon (including the GreatBourdon weighing ISY2 tons) calls the University to worship.The carillon within the Rockefeller chapel tower is one of two carillons which are the largest inexistence. It is a “sister" to the carillon of the Riverside church in New York City. Both contain 72bells. Both were cast by the Gillett and Johnson foundry in Croydon, England. Both were given byJohn D. Rockefeller, Jr., in memory of his mother, Laura Spellman Rockefeller. Both carillons aremasterpieces of bell art.Truly worthy of its great voiceis the chapel and its tower (207feet) designed by Bertram Gros-venor Gooodhue. The achieve¬ments of this famous architectdot the land—St. Bartholomew’schurch in New York, the Nebras¬ka state capitol, the chapel atWest Point, to name only a few.Within the tower door at thesouth is a portrait head of Good-hue holding in his hands a modelof the Rockefeller chapel whichmany consider his finest work.Goodhue was a belated roman¬ticist and eclectic who sought tocreate a classicism of calm, or¬dered masses and spaces within aGothic framework. The Rocke¬feller chapel is Goodhue at hisbest. Piers and arches, not mould¬ings, dominate the structure. Hefelt that architectural expressionreached its height in finely pro¬portioned solids and surfaces, de¬void of detail except that of noblesculpture.The chapel, built of Bedfordlimestone, is big, powerful, andbold in mass with the boldness setoff by concentrated ornament ofgreat richness and delicacy. Themain building marches alongWoodlawn avenue with giantstrides and then abruptly thetower soars upward. The verticalrush of line in buttress and win¬dow gives the tower the appear¬ance of tugging at its foundations. Rockefeller Memorial chapelThis is not reposeful Gothic ofthe traditional type, a Gothic ofsoulful contemplation and pro¬found cogitations, but rather analert Gothic suited to a young andvigorous university in America’smost energetic city. The Rockefel¬ler memorial chapel is religiousarchitecture bereft of mysticism.Goodhue admired the centraltower of the cathedral of Rouenbut he used no model for the tow¬er of the Rockefeller chapel. Theentire eastern transept of thechapel opens out into the lowerstories of the tower. When oneremembers the height to whichthe tower climbs above the open¬ing, imposing enormous weight ofmasonry on the arch and piers, itwould not be unreasonable to ex¬pect a strengthening of the piersand arch in true Gothic fashion—but nothing occurs to remind usof the pressure of the tower aljove—nothing except the closing in ofthe window in the east side froma three light to a single light open¬ing and the plainness of the walltreatment on the north and southsides.The chapel was completed in1928, three years and two monthsDunmn sirtiohers1313 E. 55 Next to the Post OfficeIt’s a pleasure to get to know Old Spice After ShaveLotion. Each time you shave you can look forward to some¬thing special: the Old Spice scent — brisk, crisp, fresh asall outdoors ... the tang of that vigorous astringent — ban¬ishes shave-soap film, heals tiny razor nicks. Splash onOld Spice—and start the day refreshed!Add Spice to Your Life... Old Spice For MenSHULTON Now York • Toronto Open Every Night - Sun. 10 to 3UNTIL CHRISTMASHyde Park's most complete line of . . .ARTISTS’ MATERIALOFFICE SUPPLIES — PRINTINGQIFTS FOR ALLXMAS CARDS - PAPER ■ RIBBONS$fARLW$$0!DlCKby AL CAPP B-BUT I'M WAITIN'FER ME.OLD MUDDER.? -BUT IT KILLSME TO SEEMESSY HAIR-ANDLOOSEDANDRUFFS' SMART MOTHERSGROOM HAIR ANDREMOVE LOOSEDANDRUFF WITHWILDROOT CREAM-OIL, CHARLIE.T- BUTTHAT'DBEILLEGAL-HIS NAME'SSHERWIN" after the ground breaking cere¬mony, August 28, 1925. The firstUniversity tower, Mitchell, islinked to this, the last, through asculptured design in the spandrelsabove the arch of the tower door.Here are shown Athens, the an¬cient city of learning, and a mod*ern city of learning, the Univer¬sity of Chicago, with its Mitchelltower clearly defined.It was on Thanksgiving Day,1932, that the carillon within thetower spoke for the first time.Kamiel Lefevre, greatest of theAmerican earillonneurs, camefrom the Riverside church in NewYork City to play the dedicationrecital. His opening selection wasthe hymn tune “Now thank weall our God.”For the first twenty years ofthe carillon’s history it was playedby Frederick L. Marriott, whogave the chapel not only devotedservice as carillonneur but as or¬ganist. Now it is played each Wed¬nesday and Sunday afternoon bythe present carillonneur who washis apprentice.Tours of the chapel tower aregiven following each Sundaymorning University ReligiousService. Students specially inter¬ested in seeing the carillon playedmay make arrangements by tele¬phoning, in advance, Extension1085 or 1082.James Weber Linn, beloved pro¬fessor of English, joined the hun¬dred thousand people gathered onthe Midway that grey Novemberday in 1932 for the dedication ofthe carillon. Later he wrote in theUniversity Record:“The music was magnificent in thelow notes, pure silver in the high—like low thunder, like spring rain—harmonious in all. Some of vis wholistened had heard the first ringingof the Alice Freeman Palmer chimesin Mitchell tower, a long generationbefore. What an accomplishment wehad witnessed through the years be¬tween! The University was still in es¬sence what those who had builtMitchell tower and hung the Palmerchimes had thought it was, and be¬lieved it might remain.’’OVLY CREAM-OIL GROOMS ANDCONDITIONS HAIR THE NATURAL WAY in ’56kound Trio viaSteamship .qmFREQUENT SAILINGS * J | uTourist Round Trip AirM2085 $46080 »’Choice of Over 100STUDENT CLASS TOURS $£ MTRAVEL STUDY TOURSCONDUCTED TOURS U pUniversity Travel Co., officialbonded agents for all lines, hasrendered jfficienl travel serviceon a business basis since 1926.See your iocal travel agent f<»folders and details or write us.UNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq., Cambridge, Mass,Page 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON December 6, 1955Christmas CultureGive opera 'Santa Claus'The premiere performance of Leland Smith’s opera Santa Clans,based on a morality play by American poet e. e. cummings, is sched¬uled to open Friday and Saturday at Mandel hall, with a cast includ¬ing Denis Cowan, Henri Noel, Patricia Peterson, and Lois Karbel,with members of the University choir.The opera will be preceded by a reading by Dylan Thomas’ ReturnJourney, staged by University Theatre.Tickets at $1.50, $2, and $2.50 are available at the department ofmusic, and in the Reynolds club.Perform Handel's 'The Messiah’The University choir, directed by Richard Vikstrom, will presentits annual performance of Handel’s oratorio "The Messiah" Sundayat 3 in Rockefeller memorial chapel. General admission is $2, studenttickets are $1 until Friday.Soloists include Cowan and Miss Peterson. They will be accompa¬nied by members of the Chicago symphony orchestra and chapelorganist Heinrich Fleischer.Present College SinfoniettaSunday will also see the third annual Christmas presentation of theCollegiate Sinfonietta, conducted by former UC’er Dieter Kober, at8 p.m. in Fullerton hall of the Art Institute of Chicago. Student tick¬ets are $2 ,$1.50, and 75 cents, available at the student service centerin the Reynolds club basement.Music department student Robert Bloch, concertmaster of thegroup, Ray Still, first oboist of the Chicago symphony orchestra, andJulia Rahaman, soprano-, are to be the soloists in a program includingworks by Handel, Bach, Purcell, Manredini, and others. Winter ‘Review9 topsThe winter issue of the Chicago Review, which went on sale last Saturday, seemed of dis¬tinctly better quality than usual. Although the balance of the publication was perhaps im¬paired by allotting a bit too much space to essays (54 pages out of 140), the general qualityof the material was quite good. Also excellent were the illustrations.Beginning with a rather unimpressive essay on James Jones’ literary mentor, the essaysection redeemed itself with an excellent personified sketch of a nationality by Kurt Tuch-olsky, and an informative arti- Qn cover, as far as one can composite of justifiable pride overtell, is a composite portrait of the the quality of the issue and ap-editors-in-chief, Sam Blazer and prehension that the next mightLachlan McDonald. We feel that not be so good,the expression on their face is a by John Herzogcle on machine translation oflanguages by John R. Kirk.Also included in this section wasa pleasant essay by Peter Viereck.In a generally superior issuethe poetry section was disappoint¬ing because it was only of aver¬age quality. However, there weretwo very nice poems by Paul B.Newrman and George P. Elliot."The Opening,” a short storyby Walter Ballenger, was delight¬ful if lightweight, and "Hardinand the Ugly Doge", by BruceOlsen was the high point of thewhole issue. The story of a pain¬fully serious and fiercely strug¬gling young poet, it was intenselyand absorbingly written. The dra¬matic sketch "The Strange Rid¬er,” by Michael Ghelderode, wasquite good and the reviews werefair. THE TREASURE CHESTRE-SALE SHOPLadies' Apparel of Superior Quality1536 E. 57thIn the Art ColonyUNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingTh ree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor | Holiday Qreetings f£ from ®I JO BANKS STUDIO1420 East 55 MU 4-7988^ Christmas special for studentsthis weekend only! Dec. 10, 113 — 8 x 10 portraits$10.00 — reg. $20.00 value TERRY’S PIZZA« The World’s Be*e’FREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSSMALL 1.00 LARGE 1.95MEDIUM 1.45 GIANT 2.95We also carry a full lino of Italian foods1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045Jiarlemag (lock, stock, and firkin) when he sallied forth to layabout him with mace and broadsword. This explainshow a conquered count happened to be sampling abucket of the royal suds one day and said, “Charlie,this is great... just great!” And this also explainswhy Charlemagne, to this very day, is called Charlesthe Great.Call I^Ie OlxeirlieOnce there was a muscle that walked like a man. Hewas called Charlemagne and he was King of the Franks.(No, his daddy didn’t own a slaughter-house in Chicago.His business was sticking Saxons—not pigs.) It is saidthat His Majesty stuck his sword into 4,500 Saxons inone day, and that he is the real originator of Shishkebab, although we prefer to keep an open mind aboutthis. Now when Old Charlie wasn’t cutting it up on abattlefield Tie liked to live it up in a castle, his favoritechow being a haunch of venison washed down with afirkin of good hearty Mew. And right here is where theold boy gets his name in lights as far as we’re concerned.He introduced his beer to all the barbarians luckyenough to be alive when the donnybrook was over. Infact, history has it that he took his brewery with him ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELESDecember 6# 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7photo by H. BeckerDick Rosenthal of Fifth Army Headquarters scores in the fashionhe often repeated at the expense of the Maroons.Why the editorof a great newspaperreads The Reader’s Digestl "The Reader’s Digest publishes controversial and impor¬tant articles, regardless of the pressures that may prevail.This is a valid reason for the respect with which TheReader’s Digest is read by millions like myself, not onlyin the United States but throughout the free worldv~\ Ogden Reid, President and Editor, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.In December Reader'sDigest don’t miss:CONDENSATION FROM THE $4.50 BOOK: “THEMIRACLE OF LOURDES/’ The cures at thisCatholic shrine—cures of the hopelessly sick andcrippled—have stirred controversy for years. Nowa Protestant (who lived in this French town, ques¬tioned doctors, nurses and patients) verifies factsabout Lourdes and its miracles.NOW TO WRITE FASTER. Want to double your writingspeed in a short time? Here’s an easy system ofword abbreviation that can help you make full, leg¬ible notes in classrooms, at lectures; take messagesover the phone—may even help you land a job.MYSTERY OF EASTER ISLAND. On a remote Pacificisle stand giant, stone-age statues—some weighing30 tons. Who carved them? How did they get there?Story of one of the world’s most baffling mysteries.REDISCOVERING AMERICA. Aieal supermarket, Negromajor-league ball players, luxury motels, “do-it-yourself” servantless homes—Paul Gallico tells theamazing revolution that greets an American return- *ing to his country after 15 years abroad.Get December Reader’s Digestat your newsstand today—only 2Si»38 articles of lasting interest, including the best from leadingmagazines and current books, condensed to save your time. Hoopsters lose openerto army team, 78-65by Bob HalazBefore a small but enthusiastic crowd at the fieldhouse, the University of Chicago basket¬ball team lost its opener to the Fifth Army headquarters squad, 78-65. The game, playedlast Thursday, indicated that the Maroons will be improved over last year, for in FifthArmy, they played what in all probability is the best team they wall play all this season. Theopponents had many former college players on their team, including two pro players, DickRosenthal, of Fort Wayne, a former All-American from Notre Dame, and Boris Nachakimof Rochester, high scorer for .NYU two years ago.Both teams demonstratedfine scoring attacks, Chicago onexcellent outside shooting, and jFifth Army on sharp pass playsinto their big men, Rosenthal andLance.Fifth Army jumped aheadearly, 5-0, with the fast breakstyle of ball they employed quitefrequently during the game. Niceoutside shooting by the Maroons,particularly by Dick Rowland, jtied the opponents at 11-11, butthe Fifth Army team scored sixstraight points and were neverseriously threatened again. Atone point Fifth Army led by25-13, as they were scoring onpasses into their pivot man,Rosenthal, who kept potting themin. At the half, the Maroonstrailed 41-30..Opponent ejectedRosenthal continued to score jthrough the third quarter, until“basket by Rosenthal” had amonotonous tone to it. At the endof three quarters, the army teamled by their greatest amount, 60-41. At this point, the Maroonssurged closer with nice shootingby Mitch Watkins and CaptainBill Lester. Boris Nachamkin ofthe army team aided events byverbally abusing one of the ref¬erees after a foul was calledagainst him. For this, a technicalfoul was called against FifthArmy, and Nachamkin wasthrown out of the game. Afterthis debacle, the opponents leadwas cut down to 68-56, but onceagain Fifth Army rallied, andwith two minutes left to play,Coach Norgren took out most of photo by H. BeckerDick Rowland takes rebound, hands to Bill Lester, as the Ma¬roons start a fast break.the first team. The final scorewas Fifth Army headquarters 78,Chicago 65, in a game which theMaroons didn’t have to apologizefor.Rosenthal was high man forthe game with 34 points, Lesterand Rowland had 18 each to leadthe Maroons.A carryover from last year’sgames was the appearance of agroup of cheerleaders, clad inblack skirts and white sweaters.Maroons play TuesdayNext game for the Maroonswill be against Elmhurst at Elm¬hurst, Tuesday, December 6. The next home game will be at theField house, Friday, December 9,at 8, against SL Procopius.The box score:Chicago (65) Fifth Army (78)G F P G F pRowland 8 2 1 Rosenthal 16 2 4Chisholm 4 1 0 Plesker 0 0 1Henderson 0 0 2 Lance 6 3 4Watkins 6 1 3 Freitag 0 2 0Rowitsky 0 0 0 Nachamkin 2 3 2Lester 6 6 1 Ludlum 0 2 0Hart 1 4 3 Welsner 3 0 1Greer 0 1 2 Fink 2 0 5Grissinger 0 0 0Zacher 2 0 0Toth 2 0 0Speiner 0 0 025 15 12 33 12 17Score by quarters:Chicago . 11 30 41 655th Army Hq 41 SO 78» Two new campus Styles arrive, via Arrow.This button-down shirt, with softroll collar, marks a great advance—a newfull-length back pleat for ncver-before comfort. As a fittingcompanion, Arrow offers a new chinoslack with tapered legs, pleatlessfront and adjustable back stiap.Chino slacks in black, tan and giey»$5.95. Oxford shirt, *5.00, instripes and solid colors.HARROW-— first in fashionSHIRTS ♦ TIES • SLACKSThe big newsbreezes in...See how ARROW’Snew collar works IA completely new idea in shirts—a completelynew standard of comfort—the Lido by Arrow.Your tie alone closes the collar—no button! Andas long as you own it, the collar fits, becauseit expands when you do. 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