University of Chicago, Friday, December 9, 1955 In this issueWorld premiere of opera on eamp—- , - 12Holiday celebrations and swviwa , , , pag« 5Survey of UC religion .SportsGift suggestionsHistory of student facultyFaculty commiwants football backIntercollegiate football on a non-conference “free lance” basis has received the unanimousapproval of a faculty committee appointed last May by Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton.The report went yesterday to the 51-man Council of the University Senate for discussionat its meeting Tuesday. The council cannot act on the report until January. If the councilapproves, the proposal would go to the trustees.If approved, intercollegiate football would be unlikely before fall 1957, because of ad¬vance scheduling by possible •—— *(Left to right) Dean Robert Streeter and Earl Medlinsky, presi¬dent of O-Board. college opponents.Members of the facultycomittee are: Kermit Eby, profes¬sor of social science: Edward M.Haydon, track coach; Earl A.photo by Burbach Long (chairman), of the Insti¬tute for the Study of Metals;Clayton G. Loosli, professor ofmedicine; Charles W. Wegener, assistant professor of humani¬ties; and Warner A. Wick, asso¬ciate professor of philosophy.“We believe that the Universityof Chicago should be able to playfootball on a truly amateur basis,without overemphasis and its at¬tendant problems,” the facultycommittee reported.Choose next assembly. topic: testingsystem to be discussed by facultyby Joy BurbachTwo or more faculty members speaking on the testing system, followed by opportunity for questions andopinions from the audience will constitute a January undergraduate assembly. The students and adminis¬trators meeting with Assistant Dean of Students Ruth O. McCarn, Tuesday picked this topic after agreeingthat the assemblies should attempt to explore matters of common concern to all undergraduates.Andrew Thomas, studentmember of the group, com¬mented, “There is a prevailingair on this campus that ’the ad¬ministrative officials are sittingup in a tower somewhere legisla¬ting policy. . . . This tends towiden the gap present betweenthe administration and students.... I can conceive of this thing(the proposed assembly) as bridg¬ing the gap.”Dean of the College RobertStreet noted, “It should be use¬ ful to get out into the open topicssuch as the one mentioned.” Sucha meeting would be more effi¬cient, Streeter commented, thanthe present practice of hearingonly students who make appoint¬ments with the deans.The problem of the purposeof undergraduate assemblies oc¬casioned much discussion of themeeting'. Earl Medlinsky, Orien¬tation Board president, said,“We should make some clearstatement (of purpose). ... Iagree with Mrs. Newman, AndyUC 'Quiz Bowl' teamdowns GeorgetownTlie UC “Quiz Bowl” team defeated Georgetown universityWednesday evening by a score of 200 to 120. The team of DaveFreifelder, Leonard Friedman, Quentin Ludgin and DaveSchlessinger gained a sizeable lead early in the show by cal¬culating the number of guests invited to a party if they wereKing Lear’s daughters, Longfellow’s daughters and the LittleWomen. They then namedfour men in D. C. who might said, “I’m proud of the team—be considered a “4-H” club. there was unity — everybodyAfter grabbing a musical toss- ” Tbe winner’s prize wasup. they succeeded in naming the to go to bG.sailor who led the mutiny in Mu- The team depended for its sue-tinv on the Bounty, and which of cess’ according to its membersColumbus’ three ships mutinied. on sPeed> luck and a stock ofAlthough the UC team had 100 non-essential information.”points before Georgetown finally £ was explained, account-scored, Georgetown muffed a ed for the answering of two ques-chance to close the gap when they befofe ^ were completed,were unable to recite the Pre- An important event of last Mbn-amble to the Constitution, ?.a/-wblcb was to haXf ***" ’<!en,;tified by the song "Friendship,The UC’ers counterattacked was guessed because the CIO-quickly, picking up 50 more AFL merger was “the only thingpoints on questions that included that happened last Monday.”completing Scott’s famous line: Luck was exemplified by theBreathes there a man with soul answer “Pinta” to the question,so dead . . .,” and identifying the “Which ship of Columbus mu-four explorers who perished in tined?” Team members agreedjhe Antarctic in 1912. “I don’t afterward that it was the mostknow what this may indicate probable answer, but "we alwaysabout Chicago ...,” said announc- had a one-third chance.”or Allen Ludden after the team Non-essential information wasWas unable to claim a bonus by used throughout, including thenaming two current pop hits, number of Longfellow’s daugh-U'orgetown answered one right ters, and the number of men inbid two wrong enabling UC to the good ship Nod.P ‘Q up 40 more points before GU Wednesday, December 14, thefinally made a late rally. " team will go on the air againFriedman, the team captain, from Ida Noyes against Syracusevoiced everyone’s thoughts as he University. (Thomas), anJ the Maroon thatwe should set up a purpose orgoal.”(Tuesday’s Maroon urged thatassemblies have a purpose, andsuggested that they evaluate un¬dergraduate experience, particu¬larly in the curriculum area.)Changes in the examiners of¬fice made last April occasioned atthat time much discussion on thetesting system, since the changeallowed the college to drop thesystem of tests administered bythe examiners’ office if it wished.Streeer, commenting before thechange was passed, said that re¬liance on the objective test hasgone down considerably since theessay had been introduced oncomps five or six years ago. Thecomprehensive system is not un¬ desirable, he said, until it becomesapparent that students leave allof their studying for the springquarter.At the time the changes in theexaminer’s office were made,some faculty members predictedthat required class attendanceand accrediting of quarterly ex¬ams would arise from thechanges.Rejected as a possible topic forthe January assembly was one ofthe original seven suggestionsmade by Ken Lewalski last April,“Self-discipline as an alternativeto coercion.” Reintroduced byThomas, for a panel discussionby students, the suggestion drewsuch comments as Medlinsky’s,“First it would not draw, and sec¬ond it would be unsuccessful.” “Football, like all other ath¬letic activities at the University,should be supported from educa¬tional funds, and its continuanceshould not be dependent on gatereceipts or spectator interest. Theemphasis should be on enjoymentof the game by players.”The report, though recommend¬ing non-conference competition,suggests: “It is not inconceivablethat at some time in the future asuitable conference might eitherdevelop informally from this free¬lancing procedure or be foundamong those already existing.”The Chicago program of inter¬collegiate competition, the reportsays, means “the absence of sub¬sidization of athletes as such, sothat athletic teams are genuinelyrepresentative of the studefft bodyrather than artificial creations ofthe athletic staff.“The flexibility of competitionwhich is inherent in our presentpolicies would therefore be incon¬sistent with entry into an estab¬lished conference with a distinctcharacter and level of competi¬tion,” the report said.A football class was held thisfall with an enrollment of 50 andan average participation of 35.Chicago dropped intercollegiatefootball after the 1939 season, andwithdrew from the “Big Ten” in1946. Michigan State has since re¬placed Chicago in the conference.In May a petition was circulatedby the UC students for Footballasking the reinstatement of thesport. At that time alumnusFrank Whiting, president of theOrder of the “C,” stated: “I amglad to see this interest displayedby the student body. We olderSee ‘Football/ rHappy over winning in the “Quiz Bowl” aregin, Dave Freifelder, and Leonard Friedman. photo by Burbaca(left to right) Dave Schlessinger, Quentin Lud-Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON December 9, 1955Hither* and YonInvestigate 24Ask anti-lyncL laws *4-* ‘ "^ 1on Commie tiesApproximately 500 Columbia students have signed a peti¬tion requesting federal anti-lynch legislation, according to theColumbia Spectator.The aim of the petition, circulated by the Columbia chapter of theNational Association for the Advancement of Colored People, “is tomake clear to Congress that it can no longer evade the issue of civilrights,” stated the vice-president of NAACP.Signers of the petition request the passage of S 900, a bill sponsoredby Senator Herbert Lehman (Dem., N. Y.). This bill would makelynching a federal crime and enable the national government to prose¬cute such a case in a federal court.Griffin asks segregationGovernor Marvin Griffin of Atlanta, Georgia, requestedthat Georgia Tech be barred from playing against Pittsburgh’steam, which includes Negro fullback, in the Sugar Bowl.The request by Griffin, a champion of segregation, touched offangry protests by Tech students who burned the governor in effigyat least six times. After flooding the state capitol early Saturday,they demonstrated in front of the governor’s mansion.Propose honor code planAn honor code was proposed by the Arts and Sciences Stu¬dent Council at the University of Louisville. According to theLouisville Cardinal, the plan calls for students to promise notto cheat during examinations and for each student to pledgeto report any classmates who Twenty-four faculty mem¬bers of the four municipalcolleges are under investiga¬tion for possible communist ties,the New York City Board of High¬er Education announced Decem¬ber 1.The Board stated that the in¬vestigations were being under¬taken by a special committee ofseven members to decide whetherany of the teachers under investi¬gation are holding their positionsin violation of the Feinberg law,which bars members of subver¬sive organizations from teachingin New York city schools.What constitutes a “subversiveorganization” is determined bythe New York Board of Regents.The only organization specifiedas “subversive” thus far is theCommunist party itself, member¬ship in which therefore consti¬tutes the only possible ground fordismissal of a teacher under theFeinberg law.do crib.“An honor council, six studentselected from the A & S studentbody, would be the judge andjury for classmates accused ofcheating. The faculty would havenothing to do with the judgmentsof the honor council and wouldknow nothing of students’ con¬victions.” Announcement. . .As a convenience, business hours are from 7 a m. to11 p.m. The shop will be open Monday through Saturday.Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon5105 Lake Park Ave. Ml 3-2060The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 le-HHjp r oven cal~—Restaurant1450 E. 57th Street~~ 1 ^|-"goTrrdotzvr }at- — 2 a tP— g cafe espresso from* 9 p.m.Closed Tuesdays: BORDONE \► <’ Movers and Light Hauling <; VI 6-9832 \theLelortgLookis news IYour great and good friends theColognes and Dusting Powders ofLUCIEN LELONG will henceforthcome to You in these dramaticnew giveable-keepable wrappings.liquid Colognat 1.75—7.50Solid Colognos 1.25 — 2.00Dusting Powdors 1.50 — 3.00Combination Package (shown)Dusting Powdar and Cologne 3.25all prices plus taxBalalaika ♦ Tailspin • Opening Night • IndiscretREADERS“The Campus Drug Store9961st & Ellis i FA 4-4800 Louisiana State’s Daily Reveille recently Included a warn-fiing in an editorial describing the two worlds of college stu-dertts:“There is quite a tendency among college students, especially afterthey’ve been in college for two or three years, to forget that thereis another world beyond the halls of learning.“Oh, it occurs to them at odd moments, and they even becomeaware of it, briefly, during vacation periods, but for the most partcollege is life as far as they are concerned.‘To a certain point, this is good enough. It would be a terriblething to spend four years in an institution of higher learning, allthe while bemoaning the fact that the real world is way out yondersomewhere. But there is a definite lack of perspective among moststudents. The world outside, no matter how far away it may seem atthe moment, is real. What’s more, it is the world that we are goingto have to deal with for the rest of our lives."... with some exceptions, the college student reads the dailypaper with a “so what” attitude. The Supreme Court and the Genevaconference ara Congress do seem a little remote when the mainthings cluttering up the mind have to do with tests and ball gamesand maybe even a philosophy of life.“But these things don’t seem quite so remote when one realizes"that the Supreme Court has seemingly sounded the death knell forracial segregation in all places, including places of recreation, wherepublic funds are used.“The Geneva conference seems a little closer to home when youconsider that, for all the apparent cooperativeness, there is still that,feeling of sitting on a time bomb.”Ciot fri cTd c jfei <3Co^icc.Any of you cats notmade the Domino yet?Lots of loot for little goldFall by soon for a cool Yuleand a real gone “1 vyHours: Mon. thru Sat., 10-10Sunday, December 18th, 12-6 p.m.doff'n° MmDecember 9/ 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page ISC discussesSoviet exchangeThree weeks ago the National Student association commit¬tee of Student Government sent two letters to the US Statedepartment: one informing them of the committee’s plans tocarry on a student exchange program with the USSR, and theother to be sent to the Soviet embassy, requesting their ap¬proval and cooperation for the exchange program.Tuesday’s meeting of theNS A. committee, chaired by committee would enhance theMary Ann Chacarestos (SRP- Iff'f °f0fG- She also believes■ -y that the NS A committee, which issoc. sci.), was primarily con- now handling the Frankfurt andcorned with plans for organizing Israeli exchanges is capable ofthe Soviet exchange. Dick Ward the job.(UC student who toured Russia Paul Breslow (SRP) believesin 1953-54) stated that he believed NSA committee shoulda special committee of twenty or wait for a reply to the letter tomore members including repre- ^,e Soviets before going aheadsentatives of all major campus whh plans for a special commit-organizations should be formed tee He feels that until it is knownfor the purpose of organizing the definitely whether the SovietsSoviet exchange. He believes that wai?t the exchange and on whatthe advantages of a special com- basis, plans for the programmittee are: more direct say for s^ould be handled by NSA, asthe student body as a whole, the they ha\e been up to this point,opportunity for interested stu- Otto Feinstein (SRP-col.) stat-dents to help to plan the ex- ed his belief in a need for a spe-change, and the ability of a spe- cial committee for the exchangerial committee to devote more to get around obstacles which willtime and care to the program. be created by the McCarhan actOpposed to having a special and P°ssibly by the opposition ofcommittee to plan the Soviet Ex- P^P1® in the community, and tochange was Janice Metros (ISL- stimulate student interest,col.). Chairman Chacarestos raisedMiss Metros believes that han- *be problem of raising enoughdling of the exchange by the NSA money for the program. Ward ex¬pressed the feeling that possiblyDames meet;hold partyThis month’s Dames club meet- Conservatism, liberalism undergoingreform in U.S., says Russell Kirkby Fred KarstBoth conservatism and liberalism are currently undergoing reform in the United States,according to Russell Kirk, speaking in Breasted hall last Sunday under the sponsorship ofCalvert club.A noted author and lecturer Kirk has written several books including The ConservativeMind, A Program for Conservatives, and Academic Freedom. -Kirk defined a conservative as one who retains old ways of doing things as opposed to aliberal who would replacethem with others. A liberal according to Kirk. Liberalism has five of Austria, sees in the Unitedholds in his mind the goal of a long ago departed from British States and Great Britain the chiefutopia or at least the idea that liberalism from which it grew hope of saving civilization, bo-mankind is continually improv- and has become almost incoher- cause they are ieast of all court¬ing. ent. It would have crushed con- tries indoctrinated by the ideol-The terms of liberal and con- servatism if it had not been held ogy of liberalism or what he callsservative were not in use in the back by its “ritualistic weakness.” Gnosticism. According to Kirk,present sense until the French Conservatism has not been a Voegelin, who describes himselfrevolution. Kirk asserted that continuously strong force -either, as a pre-Reformation Christian,both liberalism and communism although there has always been a recognizes the natural limitationshold the utopian view of life and "conservative impulse” in Amer- of human nature. He believesmight be considered as heresies ^ca» Kirk continued. He said, that human longing will never befrom Christianity, some branches "Conservatives have largely sat- satisfied upon this earth,of which look for gi millenium or isfied John Stuart Mill’s reproach The repudiation of the idea ofa utopia upon this earth. that the conservatives are the utopia, which is the essence ofAccording to Kirk political stuP*d Party. and they are still conservatism, is also the tend-theory flourishes in times of pr]ftty„ much the stupid party ency Gf modern liberalism. Ac-trouble, when men are forced by today. cording to Kirk, Voegelin wouldSteps toward reform classify Riesman as an “extremeKirk said that the reform of right-wing Gnostic.” Kirk calledAmerican conservatism and lib- Riesman a “very affable and mod-eralism is represented by Dr. erate liberal.” But he said that ifErich Voegelin, who delivered the Riesman were asked what theWalgreen lectures several years end of life is, he would have dif-tion” political theory is beginning a£°- and Professor David Ries- ficulty in replying, although heto be reformed, Kirk said. man, respectively. Voegelin, a na- might answer, diversion.circumstances to think in termsof first principles. Up to now verylittle has recently bden accom¬plished in this respect. But as areaction to a “great political ca-tastrophy, the Russian revolu-for everyone through the proposal to the cam¬pus of the special committee NSAwould have more opportunity forraising the money.Letters are being written toother schools which have initiatedSoviet exchange programs and tothe NSA organization for infor¬ing will be Saturday, December mation about the procedures oth-10, in Ida Noyes. Mrs. Yolanda ers have followed in their SovietFederici from the Woodlawn li- exchange programs,brary will speak on children’s NSA is opposed to the McCar-books. ran act. A panel discussion of theThe Dames annual Christmas McCarran act will be sponsoredparty for children complete with by tfte SG committee of NSA oneSanta and gifts will be Saturday, evening during the week of Janu-December 17, at Ida Noyes third ary 16. The committee hopes tofloor auditorium. A dance class include on the panel a lawyer, aof Dames children will put on a social scientist, and someone whoplay and recital. Their teacher knows a good deal about immi-is Dolores Wharton. gration acts.t^£:^c0=,c:0:,c0:1I;0=,c03t:0=,':03'^:,t:0:,|4closet accessories fbaby things Qrain wear nhousehold items {3HOME tjPLASTICS A1303 East 55 jf- Vjj'|vcicic(c<c«c'«tc«(icictctc;ii(i(ic«e;tcac(c«ctctct(tc«i(tc«c«ctcicic««Ktcic<ciKtc<ceete«iCiCte| Rest Ye MerryLet Schneemann do itFREE GIFT WRAPPINGFREE MAILING ANYWHERE IN U.S.A.DISCOUNTS TO STUDENTS AND FACULTYFREE DELIVERY ANYWHERE IN CHICAGOMORE SHOPPING HOURS THAN ANYBOOK SHOP IN CHICAGOUNUSUAL GIFT BOOKS A SPECIALTYTELEPHONE ORDERS FILLED •SCHNEEMANN’S1328 E. 57th St.\ Open 10 • 10 daily — 6 p.m. to lOjs.m. Sundayclosed Friday eveningsWe hare the Sunday NEW YORK TIMES on Sunday Describes political groupsKirk saw three principal bodiesof political thought in the UnitedStates, conservatism, liberalism,and radicalism. He said that ofthese only conservatism and lib¬eralism remain important, sinceradicalism has been largely en¬gulfed and discredited by com¬munism.Both conservatism and liberal¬ism are in a very bad condition274 graduateTwo hundred and seventy-four students will receive de¬grees at the autumn quarterconvocation in Rockefellerchapel, December 16.David D. Henry, recently ap¬pointed president of the Uni¬versity of Illinois, will give theconvocation address.Twenty student aides willalso be announced by Chancel¬lor Kimpton. Those chosen thisyear are Mary Anday, PollyBartholomew, Davis Bobrow,Peter Carmel, Jacqueln Gur-skis, Dorothy Hess, JaniceHubka, Joseph Jarabak, KentKarohl, Ruth Kopel, Paul Ma-chotka, Bette Sotonoff, EarlMedlinsky, Jan Narveson, JohnNuveen, Terry Sandalow, PhilStone III, Helen Wollack, Nor¬ton Wasserman- and DonatWentzel. What is SEA court?—Cite history and cases• Last Friday’s Maroon reported theelection of four studentjudges to serve on the Student Faculty Administration court(SFAC). What is this court, how does it work, why and whenwas it organized?Interviews with Dean Strozier and Peter Greene, ChiefJustice of the Court, have led to some answers.SFAC was organized in 1950 *for the purposes of ruling onviolations of the Student code,Constitution and Bill of Rights,and to judge the constitutionalityof SG decisions, serving the func¬tion of an independent check ina manner similar to that of theU. S. Supreme court.The court does not initiate ac¬tion itself. The Government,through CORSO (committee onrecognized student organiza¬tions), brings up cases of ruleinfractions, while * questions ofconstitutionality may be present¬ed by any individual or group.Many of the cases tried by thecourt in its five-year history haveconcerned seemingly trivial mat¬ters such as posting of notices onunauthorized bulletin boards.However, there were a number ofimportant and quite controversialdecisions.The Robeson case in 1954 wasone which established the powerof the court. In the face of theSHIRTS Hc EachBeautifully Washed and Ironedwhen included with ourWASH and DRY service8 Lbs. - 89*KWIK-WAYCASH AND CARRY LAUNDRY1214 E. 61st Street ' Between Woodlawn and Kimbark“Doing Student Laundry for 45 Years*' objection of the director of socialactivities, SFAC ruled that SRPhad a right to sponsor whateveractivities it wished, in this in¬stance a concert by Paul Robe¬son.A more recent well-known casewas that of Fred Solomon, whosename was written in on eightmedical school ballots in the SGelection of October, 1954. Thesewere declared invalidated by therule against “writing on ballots”and SFAC later upheld this inter¬pretation decision against a de¬fense plea that the decision pre¬vented a “democratic choice bythe electors.”Present composition of thecourt includes, besides Chief Jus¬tice Green, faculty members Don¬ald G. Meiklejohn, philosophy,and Harry Kalvin, law school;representing the administrationStephen Wood, assistant dean ofstudents of the college; and thefour students whose names werelisted last week: Jerome Grossand peorge Stone of ISL, JosephKronenberg and Peter Lederar,SRP.SG members automatically re¬sign their seats in the Assemblyupon election to the court.JO BANKScreative photography1420 E. 55th MU 4-7988NSA DiscountTERRY’S PIZZA“The World’s Best”\FREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSSMALL 1.00 LARGE 1.95MEDIUM 1.45 GIANT 2.95We also carry a fall line of Italian foods pgJewelry - China - CardsImports - DomesticsOpen Daily 9-9Sunday 12-6KOGA GIFT SHOP1203 E. 55 MU 4-6856 cFat* 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON December 9, 1955Greetings From the MaroonThe MAROON joins IdaNoyes carefaker WalterJeschke in wishing all a hap¬py holiday season. With thisissue the MAROON, wish¬ing itself and others a suc¬cessful test week, suspendspublication until January 6.Deadline for that issue willbe Tuesday, January 3.Letters to the editors —typed, double spaced, andsigned, classified and dis¬play advertising material,and calendar announcementsmay be left in the MAROONoffices (third floor of IdaNoyes) throughout the va¬cation.Happy holidays!photo by RurbarhLettersDirectory latefor good reasonsI am answering the questionasked by a letter in Friday 2 De¬cember Maroon by "MannyKahn." The 1955-56 Student DirectoryWill be out Monday, December 12, 1955.Mrs. Kate Turabian, editor of officialpublications, through whom all ar¬rangements for the publication of thedirectory are made, stated "Schoolopened a week later this year. The pub¬lications office can't get the cards totype for the directory from this paidregistration until the third week of thequarter. It is coming out.”Mrs. Turabian also said "It Is justnot true that last year and the year be¬fore it came out the last week In No¬vember. It came out on December 8 in1953 and December 9, 1954.”The history of the directory is: theadministration published the Directoryfrom 1939 until it decided not to in1952-53. When Student Government(1952-53 was an SRP SG) learned this.It published the first SG student direc¬tory.Jeanne Forry KarginEditor of the 1955-56Student directoryAsks protestto LYL orderfrom SACBOn April 23, 1953, AttorneyGeneral Brownell petitioned theSubversive Activities Controlboard for an order declaring the LaborYouth league a communist-front. Thisorder if it is upheld in the courts willmean the outlawing of our organisa¬tion. The order would require our offi¬cers to register. If they do register, theyare liable to prosecution under theSmith act, and if they don't register,they are liable to five years in jail and$10,000 fine for each day they fail tocomply. We would also be labeled assubversive, traitorous and foreign domi¬nated.The criterion for determining whetheran organization is a communist-frontIs the extent of non-deviation of itspolicies from those of the Communistparty. The charges against LYL areeleven issues that we supported (which the Communist party also advocated).These are:1. Opposition to armed Interventionin Korea and Formosa.2. Supporting a cease fire in Korea.3. Supporting an exchange of warprisoners.4. Supporting negotiations to endthe Korean War.5. Supporting peaceful negotiationsbetween the U. S. and the USSR.6. Opposing arrests under the SmithAct. *7. Opposing enactment of the Mc-Carran act and UMT.8 Favoring amnesty for the grow¬ing number of political prisonersin our country.9. Opposing Imprisonment of Lt.Leon Gilbert.10. Asking that Paul Robeson begiven a passport.11. Opposing the arrest of RooseveltWard, Jr., one of our officers whowas later freed by the U. S. Su¬preme Court.Most organizations on campus agreewith vis in support of several of theseisues. They can also be accvised of beingcommunist-fronts because they agreewith the Communist party. An editorialin the Wisconsin Dally Cardinal gives aspecific case, “The Inter-fraternitycouncil. Men’s halls association, YoungDemocrats, Young Republicans, andothers are sponsoring the Anti-Biaspetition. In the adjoining column Is aletter, speaking for the membership ofthe Labor Youth Leagvie, also support¬ing the petition. It is theoretically pos¬sible that these organizations couldbe required to register under the Mc-Carran act as Communist-front orCommunist-infiltrated organizations be¬cause they 'paralleled' (perhaps even sympathetically associated with) theLabor Youth league.” Clearly a lawwhich opposes such democratic actionis a violation of the Bill of Rights anda danger to our civil liberties.Nationally the federal government hassought to outlaw the Labor Youthleague by compelling its officers to reg¬ister and thus subject themselves toprosecution under the Smith act. Onovir own campus the provision In theStudent code requiring an organizationto submit ten names just as effectivelyoutlaws the LYL from the campus. Theexistence of an LYL on campus wouldstimulate discussion In all academicareas and on current problems andwould create the possibility for studentsto learn about Marxism. Its presencewould help create the type of atmos¬phere that Our school has been famousfor.We believe that opposition to theMcCarran act Is a crucial part of thefight to maintain civil liberties in thiscountry, and we hope that all studentsat the U of C will express their oppo¬sition to the act. We look forward to theday when the forces attempting to sup¬press the leagvie and all other demo¬cratic organizations, throvigh the Attor¬ney General's list and repressive legis¬lation svich as the McCarran act, willbe overcome by the persistent aspira¬tion of Americans to discuss and par¬ticipate freely and openly. With thatday we can and will take our rightfulplace next to all democratic organiza¬tions and participate vigorously withthem for the betterment of-all studentsand youth., Harold Raronfor the Labor Youth leagvie mem¬bers attending the University ofChicago.COMO PIZZERIA1520 E. 55 - FA 1-5525FREE DELIVERYON ALL PIZZASMALLCHEESE 1.15SAUSAGE . 1.45ANCHOVY 1.45PEPPER and ONION..- 1.30SHRIMP 1.70COMBINATION 1.75SPECIAL!Vz Fried Chicken 1.00Potatoes and BreadCARMEN'SUsed Furniture StoreMoving and Light Hauling1365 E. 55th MU 4-9003Distinctive Gifts For EveryoneIn All Price RangesTERMS AVAILABLEJ. H. WATSONJEWELERS1200 E. 55th St. HY 3-0773 Issued every Tuesday and Friday throughout the school year and intermittent!*during the summer quarter by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, at 121-* i.a,I59Ui Street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Editorial offices, Midway 3-o«(M)1003 and 3266; Rusiness and advertising office, Midway 3-0800, ext. 3265. nistributed to the University of Chicago campus through activities funds subsrrinti<inrand subscriptions by mail, $3 per year. Business office hours; 2 p.m. to 5 nMonday through Saturday. 1 "*Coeditorsin-chiefJoy S. Burboch Palmer W. PinneyManaging editor Business managerWilliam M. Brandon Gary MokotoffCopy departmentCopy editor, Norman Lewak; News feature editor, Sue Tax; Sports editorRobert Halasz; Cultural editor, Judy Podore; Student organization newseditor, Diane Pollock; Student news editors, Jeanne Hargitt, Ronald Cro6sman*Academic news editor, David Sohlesstnger; Community news editor. Davis Bob!row; Calendar editor, Earl Herrick; Hither and Yon editor, Miilam Garfin.Business departmentAdvertising manager, Larry Kessler; Secretary, Alice Bronsteln.Production departmentNews coordination, Robert Quinn, Jean Kwon; Layout, Barbara FisohmanPhoto departmentPhoto editor, George Zygmvind.Reference manager Sally KollenbcrgPersonnel manager jack BurbachStaffsPhoto, John Bystryn, Joan Kruegar, Herb Becker.Reporting, Ed Eerckman, Robert Bergman, Sam Blazer. Robert Bloch, SteveCohen. Walt Defke, Virginia Daves, Mltrl Dozoretz, Joyce Ellin, Fred Freed. Rose¬mary Gaill, Lois Gardner, Ralph Hirsch, Fred Karst, Adrienne Kincaid, Pm*Hoffman, Brvice Larkin, Oliver Lee, Robert Moody, Barbara Quinn, Terry SmithDon Wilson, Glenn Swogger.THE TREASURE CHESTRE-SALE SHOPLadies' Apparel of Superior Quality1536 E. 57thIn fl»e Art Colonyhyde park theatrelake park at 53rd NO 7-9071We Wish YouA Very Happy Holiday • /.... we shall look forward to your return in the winter term . . . ondpromise you a brilliont winter film program including "The Sheep HasFive Legs," "Wages of Fear," "I Am A Camero," ond "Othello"among current releases . . . ond our usual coreful selection of re¬showings of Hollywood's Best and Foreign Favorites. For those of youwho remain in residence during the vocation . . . this is whot we'veplanned for your entertainment:Starting Friday, December 9J. ARTHUR RANK'S New-in-Color Production ofMAUGHAM'S THE BEACHCOMBER"Starring ROBERT NEWTON, GLYNIS JOHNS, DONALD SINDENSomerset Maugham's olwoys satisfying story-telling delights ogoin inthis new version of his fomous, favorite South Seo Comedy-Adventure!— and —W. C. FIELDS ond MAE WEST"MY.. LITTLE CHICKADEE"W. C. FIELDS' owoys hilarious, magnificent brand of humor . . . ondMAE WEST'S always captivating lusty brand of sex make "Chickadee"fresh, sparkling enterloinment whether you're seeing it for the first,third, or tenth time!Starting Friday, December 16KATHERINE HEPBURN ROSSANO BRAZZIin DAVID LEE'S"SUMMERTIME"-— ond —GRACE KELLY CARY GRANTin ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S"TO CATCH A THIEF"Starting Friday, December 23 . . . for Christmos WeekLUISE RAINERin JULIAN DUVIVIER'S"THE GREAT WALTZ"— ond —"LILI"Starting Friday, December 30 . . . for New Year's WeekMOIRA SHEARER ROLAND* CULVER Iin TERENCE RATLIGAN'S"THE MAN WHO LOVED REDHEADS""A pleasure! Sparkling . . . Bright comedy ... A charming lark!'— New York Times— and — . „LOUIS DE ROCHEMONT'S PRIZE-WINNING"THE GREAT ADVENTURE"December 9, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Rage 5Hold German XmasUndergraduate German students of the Humboldt club cele-heated a Deutsch Weihnachten (German Christmas) at a partyheld in Ida Noyes hall on Wednesday, December 7.Highlighting the program were Christmas songs directed inGerman and a film about Germany. St. Nikolas, dressed in hisGerman attire of a bishop’s garb, visited the holiday group.This celebration was the second Humboldt Club meeting thisquarter (three are held each quarter). Talks on German geog¬raphy, history, art, and culture are some of the features ofIfiimboUlt Club. Richard Brod, president, conducts the meetingsin simple German which is easily understood by the members. Santa wassailsat Ida partyChanukah observancesto be held on campusChanukah, the festival of lights, will be celebrated on cam¬pus with a program including dancing and entertainment,under the sponsorship of the Israel student organization. Tobe held in International house Saturday, December 17, thecelebration begins at 8:30 p.m. There will be a 25-cent dona¬tion requested. - a .Hillel foundation will cele¬brate Chanukah with lightingof candles every evening at4. beginning tonight, until De¬cember 17.Chanuka commemorates thesuccessful uprising of the Jewishpeople under Judas Maccabaeusand the gaining of national free¬ dom from the Seluceid empire.The holiday is celebrated foreight days representing the eightdays that the one day supply ofoil lasted in the temple, accordingto the Apocrypha. The candlessymbolize the burning oil, and arelit at sunset, about 4 p.m.Hold Xmas party#Christmas will be celebrated by the Scandanavian club to¬night in the Little theatre at Ida Noyes, beginning at 7:45.Swedish folk dances will be represented in the program byMrs. Mette Ashkeim, who will photo by BurbachI.ois LeVine, leaving the Wassail and the caroling for a time atTuesday’s Wassail party, tells Santa Barney Berlin just what shewants for Christmas.sing Scandinavian songs. In keep¬ing with the holiday theme of theevening, there will be a Christmastree, and the traditional SanctaLucia ceremony will take place.There will be allsang (Christmascaroling), after which “kaffe medlussekattor” will be served. Ad¬mission will be 50 cents.The Scandinavian club is a de¬partmental organization, for peo¬ple in the department of Ger¬manic languages and literature,and their Christmas celebrationis representative of the organi¬zation’s activities. Theological school wives meet;hold Christmas party, showThe Federated Theological Schools Wives’ Classes’ Christmas party and talent show washeld Tuesday in the lounge of the Chicago Theological seminary.As narrator Mrs. Sandra Glessner used the Mary Poppins theme in introducing the fol¬lowing program:The Years Make You Dearer—Mrs. Jean Hanson, pianistThe Lord’s Prayer—Mrs. Patsy A. L. Lers, modern dancerOrphanLittlestChrist Child — and theMrs. ShirleyREADER’SThe C'ampus Drug Store**61st Cr Ellis FA 4-4800£ Toilet Water Concentratewith the lureof a legend} TWEED, MIRACLEor RED LILAC 2.25ADAM’S RIB orDARK BRILLIANCE 2.75(XICII pi VI IanRomantic as the legend¬ary Maid of the Mist...the girl who wearsLentheric’s alluring MistToilet Water Concentrate.Five famous fragrancesIn beautiful spray topbottles. Chaney, dramatic reader.Medley of folk Christmas tunesof other lands—ensemble: Mrs.Fran Colston, Mrs. Beth Begg,Mrs. Fran Deiteker. Mrs. Pat Gus-taveson, Mrs, Bonnie Niswander,*Mrs. Jean Hanson, Mrs. PeggyHenzlik, Mrs. Helen Martin. Mrs.Sue Milner: Mrs. Damaris Peters,director: Mrs. Dagmar Soneson,accompanist.Immediately following theshow, coffee and cookies wereserved in the Cloisters of the Chi¬cago Theological Seminary.The group consists of wives rtfstudents of the four schools—Chi¬ cago Theological seminary, Divin¬ity school, Meadville Theologicalschool, and Disciples Divinityhouse. Its function is to sponsora series of lectures each term giv¬en by a member of the faculty. Inaddition to its social purpose, thegroup exists in order to providean opportunity for wives of stu¬dents to participate in their hus¬bands’ education and in SDS com¬munity.The winter series of lectureswill be given by Dr. Sidney Meadin the Conference House at 58thand Woodlawn. The. first one willbe Tuesday, January 10, at 8 p.m.LIONELatHERMAN’S 935 E. 55“Big enough to serve you . . .Small enough to want to'9Faculty - Personnel - Student Discounts photo by BurbaclMistletoe^ proved the excusefor Santa to kiss UC’s charming:first lady, Mrs. Lawrence Iiimp-ton after she threw the switchspotlighting the 16-foot Christ¬mas tree decorated by guests atthe Ida Noyes council Wassailparty. Hot cider was served toa large crowd in the Ida Noyeslibrary, where informal carol¬ing lasted for several hours.Chapel to holdChristmas servicefor UC ers hereA candle-light ChristmasEve service will be held atRockefeller chapel, 4:30 p.m.,December 24 for all Universitystudents, faculty and staff mem¬bers who may remain fo^- the holi¬days. Families are especially in¬vited to bring children of all agesto this service which will includetableaux of traditional Christmaspageantry. The worship will beconducted by the ministers of thechapel, Dean John B. Thompson,President Wallace W. Robbins,and Chaplain Granger West berg.Richard Vikstrom, director ofchapel music, will lead the choirand the people in the sinking ofChristmas carols and other tradi¬tional Christmas music. Membersof the tableaux will be children offaculty members and Universitystudents will serve as acolytes.A carillon recital of Christmascarols will be played at 4 o’clockpreceding the service. Gifts oftoys, food, and money for the Uni¬versity Settlement will be pre¬sented before the manger scene.Keep festivalChanukkah will be celebratedduring the week of December 10-17 at the Orthodox Jewish center,5426 South Greenwood. Weekdayservices will begin at 6:30 p.m.Times of Sabbath services are:Friday night at sunset, Saturdaymorning at 9 a.m. and Saturdayevening after sunset.The synagogue, ’ which is at¬tended by many UC students andfaculty members, is under the di¬rection of Rabbi C. Peritz.Classes in Talmud are alsoavailable for students at nocharge.£ You are invited to ** “Explorations in ** Music” i* American - Cuban - Africant featuring* Gene Esposito's HI-LIFERS? at Grand Terrace* 317 E. 35th St.1.00 tax inc. nono* session every Mon. night£ beginning Dec. 12, 1955£ from 8:30 p.m. onminimumcoverPLUS 40 COLUMBIA Hi-Fi PhonographsFOR THE SO COLLEGE STUDENTS WHOWRITE THE BEST NAMES FORVICEROY’S PURE, WHITE, NATURAL FILTER!10 Winners! 10 Thunderbirds! win a rutty - 40 Winners! 40 Columbia Hi-Fi Sets!equipped new ’56 Thunderbird! In your choice of Own America’s most exciting Hi-Fidelitycolors! Automatic transmission, two tops, power Phonograph — the Columbia "36Q’’K—insteering, radio, white side walls. Act now and win t . beautiful Mahogany 1Plus 10 RCA Vidor Color TV Sets to the college organizations designated by the 10 Thunderbird winnerslHINTS TO HELP YOU WIN!You’ll think of dozens of names when you readthese facts: The Viceroy Filter is the most modernin the world today! Perfected through 20 yearsof research IIt contains no cotton, no paper, no charcoal, noasbestos, no foreign substance of any kindtInstead, it is made from pure cellulose—a soft,snow-white, natural material found in manygood foods you eat.Only the Viceroy Filter has 20,000 filter traps—twice as many filter traps as the next two largest-selling filter brands! No wonder Viceroy givesyou that Real Tobacco Taste 1Name this amazing filter and win! It’s easyt NO OTHER FILTER LIKE VICEROY!No cotton! No paper! No asbestos!No charcoal! No foreign substanceof any kind! Made from Pure Cellulose-Soft ... Snow-white... Natural!It’s easy to name this ama2ang Viceroy Filter whenyou know what it’s made of... why it’s superior...why Viceroys give you that real tobacco taste youmiss in every other filter brand!Remember, the ViceroyFilter is made from 100%pure cellulose—a soft,natural material found inmany good foods you eat!There are no impurities inthe Viceroy Filter. So nat¬urally it lets the. real to¬bacco taste come through!Name the Viceroy Filter!Enter this $50,000 con¬test, today!JUST FOLLOW THESE EASY RULES IOn any plain paper, write the name you think most suitable forthe pure, white Viceroy Filter described on this page. It’s easy!You can think of dozens of names like “Super-Pure,” “Filtron,”(“Naturale,” “Flavor Flow,” ‘'Cellutrate,” “Twice-The-Traps.”You can use one, two or three words. Any name may win! ‘ .Mail your entry to Viceroy Thunderbird Contest, P. O. Box 6A,Mount Vernon 10, New York. Write plainly or print your name,the name of your college and your mailing address at college!Submit as many entries as you wish—but with each entry includethe picture of the Viceroy Filter Tip torn or cut from the backstpftwo (2) Viceroy packages^ Contest open to all students attending colleges and universities'in the USA. 0Contest closek midnight, January 31, 1956. Entries judged by TheReuben H. Donnelley Corporation on the basis of aptness ofthought, originality and interest.Prizes listed elsewhere in this ad. Winners of the ten Thunderbirdswill also be permitted to designate the school organizations towhich Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corporation will awardRCA Victor Color TV Sets! Write the name of the organizationyou want to receive this award on your entry. Viceroyfilter 17ipCIGARETTESKING-SIZEpjfeiflbw 9, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Advise against takinginfluenza shots nowStudent health service does not at this time recommend'mass inoculation against influenza, since the threat of anepidemic in the midwest is no problem at the present time.Since protection lasts only a few weeks, immunization mustbe timed in accordance with world-wide and nation-wide epi-dcmicological intelligence.A network of influenza typ- it The common cold, upper respi-ing-centers exists throughout ratory infections, sinusitis,the world with one center be- measles, fevers of various originsjng located at Billings hospital and muscle aches and pains mayunder the direction of Dr. Clay- be mistaken for influenza. Defi-ton Loosli. Immunizing agents for nite diagnosis can be establishedinfluenza have been available for only by laboratory procedures,about 15 years but have not met Influenza vaccine is available atwith the success characteristic of student health service at cost,other vaccines. This is due to the which is one dollar. There is nodevelopment of new strains of charge for the injection of thethe virus. vaccine. Anyone wishing the im-The complexity of the influenza munization may obtain it (on ap-problem is increased by the fact pointment) at student healththat many illnesses may simulate service.Football(from page 1)alumni have waited years for asituation to develop that wouldenable the school to bring backmany traditional undergraduateactivities, including football."The year before, another at¬tempt to bring back the gamefailed when less than 100 studentswere willing to sign a statementthat they would play.Kimpton, speaking before theOrder of the C in June said offootball, “(Recently) a presidentof a large mid-western public uni¬versity told me ... we must benuts to think of re-entering thegame. But, nuts or not, we aregiving it thoughtful considerationat the present time. I can tell yourather quickly and easily whereI stand. It is a good game and Ilike it. I would like to play com¬parable institutions, such as Har¬vard, Yale and Cornell, but I seelittle or no chance of being in¬cluded in the Ivy league."I do not want to play in theBig Ten, first because we cannotcomplete, and because if we triedto we would have to do some • • •things that I don’t care to do.Whether this leaves us any rea¬sonable alternative, I do not know.“I can only tell you that ourdecision will be dictated by whatwe believe to be best for the greatUniversity of which we are all apart. I will even add that I hopeit will be a decision with whichthe ‘old man’ (Stagg) wouldagree.”J. Nelson Metcalf, when inter¬viewed a year ago commented,•*. . . football is an excellentgame and . . . playing it can bea valuable experience for boysphysically qualified to play it,provided it is conducted on aproper basis. It should be usedas part of the educational pro¬gram, and not as a side show forpublic entertainment or financialreturn.”Arthur Kiendl, former directorof student activities, was sent inMay on trips to Carlton and St.Olafs colleges to gather generalinformation pertaining to “foot¬ball as it applies to the total aca¬demic and extracurricular pictureat institutions of good scholasticreputation.” »(ADVERTISEMENT)Sheets and PillowCases Supplied Free!Here is a laundry service that furnishes you the linen. You don'tbuy anything. Linens-of-the-Week supplies you with sheets, pillowcases, towels, wash cloths, etc. All you pay are the weekly rentalcharges.Look what you get! Fresh linen each week—top quality, beauti¬fully laundered. You pay only one charge—the rental charge. Thisincludes the cost of supplying and laundering the linen.And this rental charge is 30% less thon laundry rates. So youcan't lose. You get the linen and the cost is less than if you sentyour own to the laundry.With Linens-of-the-Week supplying the linen, here are some sam¬ple prices: Sheets, 81", 20c; Pillow Cases, 9c; Bath Towels, 9c; DishTowels, 4c. Order only what you need.Call EStebrook 9-1200 and find out how you can try this servicefor one week without obligation. What to give for Christmas?Try live goldfish, straw kangaroosby Mary Margaret MaroonWith the partridge in a pear tree concept done to death, amajor problem confronts individuals this season — what togive as Christmas gifts. We could, of course, assume a MaxSchulman attitude about this problem and recommend allour advertisers. This, though eminently fair to all concerned,gives only some idea of where to shop, not what to give.A good gift should be bothuseful and original. Gifts household miscellanea (includingwhich combine both qualities, ‘he ever-popular copper Jeilohowever, are rare indeed. molds) try Conners hardware.The secret is to give two gilts, Th?‘e innumerable art shopsone gilt a runofthemillJet’s- m th®.uc ?rea Just e111^ w‘<hgiveit-to-aunt-Sarah-type and an- novelties. Just remember.thisother unique trinkettype gilt. ye»r it s straw and brass. ThoseFor a trinkettype gilt one might whodike little living things willgive a personalized sealing-wax be pleased with a small plant, trykit (try Carson Pirie), a small Mitzies or Nick Bova's potted m astulled animal (oozing in lemale unique planter-or.it all else tails,appeal-try the UC bookstore), try a rubber plant For a planterminiature china animal ligurines use something not normally used(Koga has them), a precocious as a planter—e^g., an old teapot orchild's toy (often surprisingly in- su«ar bowl W1,h a Phasing shape,triguing lor adults), lacy chorus- What to get lor the children?girl garters, gaudy men’s under- Sehneemans and the UC book-shorts, or a six-loot diameter store, and Carsons' and Field’splastic ball (newspapers Irequent- downtown, have excellent chil-ly carry ads for them). dreiVs books. Live turtles or gold-There are some gifts which one fish are always inexpensive andcan give members of either sex. delight children no end. HomeThese include cheap books with Plastics carries a food dish inthe original expensive price tags bottom of which hot water isstill on them, the kind you can poured to keep the food warm;get for a nickel a pound at Acasa plastic fish and turtles bumpor Clark and Clark. They might &bout in the transparent waternot be of much use to an3‘one, but receptacle. Remember in buyingwill certainly look impressive oh pames and dress-up outfits thatany bookshelf. Records, of course, Davy Crockett has finally passedare almost always welcome, and out °f vogue; now its Mickeywith the repeated price wars that Mouse. Oh well,go on, relatively inexpensive—try For women only there is a pie-Lowes or the Disc. Schneeman’s thora of material which one cancarries many exotic books, inelud- palm off. Jewelry and cuff linksing a prodiguous $17 French cook- are welcome, but should be of thebook, gives a student discounts, heavy metallic type — the lacy,and wraps and mails free of fine jewelry has gone by thecharge. For those who like orig- board. Rosemary Zwick is usinginal sources rather than interpre- gold on her ceramics this year,tations by Spinoza or Cecil B. Gaudy, unprecious stones are alsoDeMille, Woodworths is featuring good. Try to avoid giving com-the new revised edition of the pacts unless you’re sure the re-Bible this season. cipient uses them; most womenFor people with a home, or a don’t these days. Jeweled lipstickreasonable facsimile thereof, containers are good, though. Beltsprints are always nice (try the are always exciting, the wider andUC bookstore, the Gallery, or the more bizarre, the better. GaudyArt Institute) ... as are ashtrays, colored tapered umbrellas are al-particularly the beanbag variety ways unexpected, appreciated,that can be set down anywhere, and cost no more than seven dol-The Malihini gift shop has viva- lars. Try Reader’s for perfumescious placemats with real butter- and colognes. Although heavyflies and flowers impressed in scents are being replaced by light,them. Domino is showing straw flowery scents in popularity,rats, kangaroos, baskets — straw you’re always safe with Arpegeanythings (straw is replacing or Chanel. Japanese bedroom slip-wrought iron as the thing to pers are always comfortable. Betzhave), metal sea horses for wall Jewelers are good for both cos-decorations, and a useless glass tume and for-real baubles,bottle three feet high. Mobiles are Ceramics are things of the pastdefinitely out, since they can be in men’s accessories, as are themade at home easily; cardboard horizontal tie clasps. Instead givePogo-mobiles (at the UC book- tie-pins or cuff-links of metal, trystore) provide a diverting dollar- Malahini, or unprecious stone-range gift. For reasonably priced as large as possible. George’sNEW!CA/v-ve*-^ SPRAY COLOGNESTHREE FULL OUNCES'OF FINE COLOGNE -♦3 plus toiTPBU dtnSudk20 COROTSPLATO EM IKREADER’S“The Campus Drug Stare**61 si1 & Ellis FA 4-4800 Can you honestly say to yourself:"I have enough life insuranceto look after my wife, my children,my future?"RALPH J. WOOD, JR., #481 N. LaSalle Chicago 2, IllinoisFR 2-2390 • GA 2-5273RepresentativeSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAmerryCHRISTMAS ... if all else falls, try a rub¬ber plant.Men’s ware features both thestandard and the unique in men’sapparel.For the slob: a Swing-bin orHaz-bin (bought at Andrews Tech¬nical Supply company on thenorth side), little tiered transpar¬ent drawers for containing almosteverything. For the narcissist: JoBanks is offering 20 dollar por¬trait photographic sittings thisweek to UC students for 10 dol¬lars. For the addict: cartons offavorite cigarettes. For the letterwriter: the UC bookstore andReader’s feature a variety of UCstationery. For the hobbyist:New¬ark enterprises is having a specialon geiger-counters.Woodworth’s is carrying a se¬lection of Christmas cards withUC oriented verses this year;Acasa has foreign cards.And if you REALLY want tobe remembered, give a LincolnContinental Mark II, a LilyDache jeweled sweater or life-size jeweled stuffed lion, a sub¬scription to the Maroon (forfriends or relatives who like tokeep in touch), a few AT & Tstocks, Grace Kelly, or a tuitionvoucher.Juke box recordgone from Ida;pressure hintedWhy has “Rock around Ste¬phen Foster,” by Stan Fre-burg been taken off the juke boxin Ida Noyes? It seems that aftera few music-loving studentsplayed this tune a few times twonoons in a row, which for somereason seemed to annoy a fewSRP members of Student Govern¬ment who said, “Don’t carry yourcivil liberties too far,” the recordwas mysteriously removed andhas not been seen since (theMaroon does not wish to suggestthat there is any connection be¬tween these happenings. But.. .)'Fortunately for the benefit ofthe large number of music loverson the campus the Maroon hasonce more shown its spirit of pub¬lic service; this record may nowbe heard in its offices on the thirdfloor of Ida Noyes, and when thewind is right occasionally on thefirst and second floors.Open EveningsUntil XmasBetz Jewelry1523 E. 53rd NSA DiscountPL 2-3038Page 8 y THE CHICAGO MAROON December 9, 1955Religion surrey shows no strong trendby Ed BerckmanWhile there seems to be a much greater concern for religion on the UC campus than 20years ago, there is no strong evidence here of a “widespread and deep interest ir. religion”and in “searching for answers” in the area of faith, which was reported of today’s Americanundergraduates by the New York Times and Time magazine recently. But among a grow¬ing minority of students, mostly graduate, there appears to be what one religious advisercalls “an increased serious recognition that religion has relevance to many more aspectsof life and to deepest personal "concerns, coupled with a ques¬tion whether any organizedforms can meet the needs.”These conclusions are drawnfrom a survey of religious groupson campus and from interviewswith faculty, administration andstudent personnel, some of whomhave no connection with religiousorganizations.It is unwise, this reporter feels,to make any definite statementson the basis of personal opinionsand scattered reports, but indica¬tions of certain trends andchanges may be reported, as wellas a comparison with the religi¬ous situation of 20 years ago,which itself partly explains manyof the changes.Contrast to nationReligious groups now sponsora much wider range of activities.Student participation has not no¬ticeably increased in recent years,but there are indications in somegroups of more interest in “spirit¬ual life” and in “ultimate ques¬tions.” Emphasis has changedfrom the social to the intellectual.Among undergraduates who donot attend church (a majority)religious concern may be mani¬fested, if at all, in more phil¬osophical considerations. courses in religion. At the U. ofIllinois a wave of church-going isreported.Much GrowthWhen Rockefeller Chapel wasdedicated in 1928, there were,aside from Dean of the ChapelCharles Gilkey, no full-time de¬nominational advisers. The stu¬dent program was largely social( a big bam dance for new stu¬dents was a main feature), andthere were a few small interde¬nominational group discussionson such topics as comparative re¬ligion. It is generally agreed thatthe prevailing attitude toward re¬ligion was skeptical if not cynical.Today 13 denominationalgroups, most with full-time ad-viserg, hold activities in threecampus religious centers and innearby churches. The Chapelstaff of six, under Dean John B.Thompson, includes three highly-trained musicians.Over 75 per cent of the studentbody claim religious affiliation.About one-third of Jewish stu¬dents are active in Hillen Founda¬tion, according to adviser OscarKenig. A higher proportion ofCatholic students, Rev. J. D. Con-nerton of De Sales House felt, at¬tend masses and to a lesser extentother activities of Calvert Club.Attendance of Protestants atcampus groups is probably lower.What is “religious”?These statistics do not neces¬ sarily reflect the amount of re¬ligious concern on campus, asNicholas Cardell, Unitarian stu¬dent adviser, pointed out. “Topicsof religious discussion havechanged and enlarged,” he said.Programs of various gi’oups havecovered such areas as existen¬tialism, phychoanalysis, the writ¬ings of Kafka. Last year theChapel sponsored an exhibit ofcontemporary religious art(which attracted 5000 visitorsduring one week).Religious groups today spon¬sor fewer parties and socials andparticipation in voluntary socialservice has decreased, most ad¬visers agreed. But at all threestudent centers there are oftenmany students who are just“around” informally.^Search for meaningA feeling of emptiness and lackof direction is resulting in more“questions which need religiousanswers,” according to WilliamN. Lovell, Porter Foundation ad¬viser, “but students are not surethey like the religious answerthey’ve seen. There is more con¬cern to know what one believes,to look for the meaning of life,and also a willingness to recog¬nize this concern as religious.”This feeling was shared byDean Thompson, who believedthat there are many who arealienated from the church butwho have “ultimate concern.” UC religious affiliations:BaptistChristian ScienceCongregationalDisciplesEpiscopalEvangelical and Reformed.Jewish .' 200252715426956992LutheranMethodist *' * 284Orthodox (Eastern) ~61Presbyterian 307Roman CatholicSociety of Friends * * * * * 63Unitarian 212Miscellaneous "" 173Non« 1,325Canon Bernard I. Bell, who re¬tired last year as Episcopal Chap¬lain, explained that “science does¬n’t answer the question ‘why?’”and that the more intelligent stu¬dents are becoming disillusionedabout “this world.” But religiousthought at UC, he said, is “muchmore mature and humble than atmost universities.”Among the recent addition toreligious programs are a counsel¬ing service by university chap¬lains (with outside assistance);instruction for married couples inreligious training of children;two informal groups of graduatestudents in science and law, who,on their own initiative, are meet¬ing with professors to discuss therelation of religious to their owndisciplines.Although there is a weekly Sun¬ day Seminar at Burton-Judson onreligious topics, its chairman,Peter Clark, felt there was nosignificant trend of interest aboutreligious questions there.Peale’s booksThere is a growing sale of re¬ligious books at the UniversityBookstore but these are mostly“serious” and not “devotional”type, it was learned from Mrs.Beatrice Vedel, manager of thetrade book department. “Thismay be because of more interestor possibly because there are bet¬ter books in this field now,” shesaid.There is a large sale of NormanVincent Peal’s The Power of l‘osi-live Thinking, she stated, butthese are sold not so much to stu¬dents for themselves as for par¬ents or hospital patients.ll||lllllllllllilllll!llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll£| Check These Features |I V PROMPT SERVICE iE V DEPENDABILITY §| V ECONOMY =E . . . and then remember ... EMuch of this is in contrast toreports of the national scene. Asurvey of 7000 students at 12 col¬leges by Cornell sociologistsshowed that 8 of 10 felt a need forreligious faith. In the East, under¬graduates are flocking to elective“A delicious French comedy—Fer-nandel is a joy throughout"N.Y. HERALD YR IB.FER1SANDELtm t Jrli(kifnl "l»nr Jr fairr'"TUB SHEEPhas 5 Leasct-rrOfARBORN AT DIVISIONApartment Too Small?Potter of little feet in the li¬brary?Yes professor, there is a SantaClaus.Living room, dining room, kitch¬en, powder room and study; fivebedrooms and two baths. All ontwo floors.An income of $900 per yearfrom a delightful coach houseapartment.About $5000 cash required.PARKER K0LSMANHY 3-2527Gala Cabaret Setting\ Holiday\ Doings\ drama!\ drinks!\ music!dancing!At the JoyousCOMPASSAt the Dock5473 S. Lake ParkFA 4-2800A Cocktails 5 to 9Drama 9:15(Wed. thru Sun.)3 A Folk Music 9:15on Tuesday “Enjog Our Fine Continental Cuisine inRelaxed Air Conditioned Atmosphere**CONTINENTAL GOURMET RESTAURANTOpen Doily (except Mondays) from 4:30 - 10:00Sundays —• 12 Noon - 10 P.M.1508 E. 57th Street Phone PLazn 2-9355 E — The Students Favorite — =| University Quick Laundry 1E 1376 East 55th Street| PLaxa 2-9097 |ri 11111 ■ 1111111111111111111111111111111111111 m 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 fcChristmas SuggestionsBOOKS FOR ADULTS - BOOKS FOR CHILDREN - ART BOOKS - BOOKS WITHFINE BINDINGS - ART PRINTS - MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONSLONG PLAYING PHONOGRAPH RECORDS — 33 1/3 & 45PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS - CAMERAS AND PHOTOGRAPHIC EQUIPMENTTAPE RECORDER AND RADIO COMBINATIONFOUNTAIN PENS - MECHANICAL PENCILS - SOCIAL STATIONERYLEATHER BRIEF CASES ~ STUDENT LAMPS - DESK PADSTENNIS RACQUETS - TENNIS BALLS - GOLF BALLSNAME BRAND NECKTIES AND HOSE FOR MENNAME BRAND LINGERIE AND HOSE FOR WOMENBLOUSES - SKIRTS - HANDBAGS - TOILETRIES FOR WOMENCOSTUME JEWELRY AND U. OF C. RINGS FOR MEN AND WOMENINFANTS' WEAR - TOYS - STEIFF STUFFED ANIMALS FOR CHILDRENCOCKTAIL GLASSES - GENSE STAINLESS STEEL FLATWARE & HOLLOWAREBOOK ENDS - UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO WEDGEWOOD PLATESIMPORTED SWEDISH, HOLLAND AND ITALIAN GIFT WARETHE ORIGINAL MRS. SNYDER'S CANDIESFree Gift WrappingFree Wrapping for MailingPost Office Located in the Building» $The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUEDecember 9, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 9Tells of philosophical revolt• / ^ by ,Ian NarvesonIn the third °f his lecture series The Romantic Revolution in Philosophy/' Isaiah Berlin spoke on the subject of "The RomanticRevolt. Having previously described the philosophy of Kant as "a sublime form of the doctrine of sour grapes," he went on in Thu\s-day's lecture to on exposition of the philosophy of Fichte, an early nineteenth century German philosopher who had studied under Kant.Fichte started out innocently enough, said Mr. Berlin, with an apparently harmless analysis of the feelinq of "selfhood " Concedinnwith Hume, that, on the cog- — —— —— Tnitive level, the‘self was no , y cai\ ®° things. Such men are Mozart would have been rather comes, to constitute the Organic conclusions of philosophy, whichfree, and have a kind of power. shocked to hear that they were Unity of all men; the People have includes statements contradictingSacrifice for end prophets, and bearers of the torch the. right (and duty) to impress this probably contain some fal-But martyrdom also becomes a of the Ideal against the odds of their wills upon other People lacy or other. Certain of theseGood Thing. Martyrs are no long- humanity. They usually thought (people-sub-one being the Ger- fallacies were perpetrated byer admired merely for their cour- of themselves as craftsmen, who manic people, of course). Fichte to excess, Berlin sug-age and in spite of their ideals were paid for producing beautiful What happened, said Mr. Ber- gested.(with which men rarely agree); music — the more beautiful, the lin at this point, to the freedom of Finally, Berlin concuded, itthe mere act of martyrdom, of more rewarded. individual people to do what they is basic to this kind of philosophydying for an ideal — whatever Forward to politics marched want, simply because they want that the whole is more than themore than one among manyphenomena, he went on toshow that, in activity, a new feel¬ing of selfhood occurred. “In theimpingement of external objects,which takes place in activity, Ibecame aware of myself as an T,’as a kind of reality more signifi¬cant than that attributable tomere phenomena.”Freeman self-createdThe result of this is that hu¬mans are to be conceived in termsof will, not of reason. Anotherconsequence is that the moral lifemust consist in doing something.The free individual is self-created,and feels himself absolutely freeof causal laws, in the exercise ofhis will. Therefore, reasonedFichte, no' man has the right toleave his powers unused, for tobe a man is to act, to pursue (self-created) ends. “I accept not be¬cause I must, but because I will.”The man who impresses him¬self upon things, who struggles,who, therefore, acts alone, is insome sense unique; the hero be¬comes the lonely thinker, actingfreely in a heteronomous world(a world controlled, that is, byenvironment or circumstances).This, Mr. Berlin pointed out, isactive transcendentalism, in thenon-Kantian sense.Fichte carried his principle ofwill much farther. The most im¬portant thing in the world is, hewould claim, integrity, dedication.The sage, therefore, is worthy ofhighest respect; the prophet, theseer, the scientist, the expert, thephilosopher (Fichte, for example,as Berlin continually added) —these men are looked up to, for Andy eats; Reader’s paysthe ideal — becomes a supremely Fichte in the analysis. Nature, it? This, he asserts, is the start- sum of its parts; that somehow,heroic and morally worthy act. the environment, comes to include ing point of English-American the world is more real than theSelf-betrayal, on the other hand, the ordinary man as well as inert thinking on the subject. And any things of which it is composed,is the supreme vice. matter; and it becomes the dutySuch ideas hardly coincide with of the hero to enforce his will,what we would think of as the his Ideas, upon nature. Self-pro¬way to make the world under- jection becomes the great moralstandable. The eighteenth century duty. Hence men like Napoleonideal, in which rational discussion ar)d Bismarck come to be admiredwas sure to lead, eventually, tothe one correct answer to anyquestion (and thus differences ofopinion can and should be ration¬ally overcome), is replaced by theideal of sticking to your ownideal—however weird and ridicu¬lous—to the end, and, preferably,sacrificing yourself to it in theend.At this point in Berlin’s anal¬ysis, he modulated to the Fichteanview of the artist. The artist is asupreme example of pure freewill; artists are prophets, seers,priests of an Ideal, and are rarelyunderstood by the inert mass ofcommon humanity. Thus the art¬ist is conceived as a lonely, proud,defiant figure who, preferably,sacrifices all mundanities to thedevelopment of his inner creativ¬ity. Beethoven, apparently, is thechief example in Fichte’s mind —although one could certainlywonder at the aptness of the as visionary heroes, enforcingtheir inner visions upon an un-creative environment. CommonMan becomes mere putty to beworked and molded by the Great.Development obviousIn moving to this wider socialcontext, the new individualshrinks several sizes from itsoriginal place in Fichtean philos¬ophy. Man is nothing if not insociety; the group becomes all-important; the individual literallyvanishes. The Self becomes Soci¬ety, Mankind, Spirit. Each indi¬vidual man is only a thought ofthe Divine Being; and Great Menare important because they arethe potential agents of the Divin¬ity, the Real Self. Race — Nation— Mankind — the sequence is thephilosophical expression of suc¬cessive levels of greater Reality.The Nationalistic, m o b b i s htendencies of this -developmentare obvious to us. The Right toanalysis, as Beethoven decidedly compel others to do what is Righthad his mundane tendencies. And (e. g., to adopt the Right form ofas Berlin pointed out, Haydn and government) being a sacred dutyto Great Men, the use of force andcunning to attain these ends isjustified, of course. Mankinduerlain ASHAUMAR Perfume $8, $14, $21, $42Cologne $4.50, $7.50Bath Oil $5, Talc $2 (pricesfins uufREADER’S“The CnmpuM Drug Store”61st & Ellis FA 4-4800 photo by MokotoftAndrew L. Thomas (left), receiving a $25 savings bond, the grandprize of the Reader’s “dinner for two” contest from Kenneth Hen¬ning, Reader’s manager. Thomas was picked from a group ofeight weekly winners, each of whom were given a free steak dinnerat Reader’s every Sunday night.3iiiiiiiHimimiimiiiiiimiiimiiimimmiiiiimiiiiiiiiHiiiiiimiiHiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiHimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiU|| International House Movies jRoom CDE, Mon. & Thurs. evening at 7 & 9 p.m. || Monday, Dec. 12—45c—Lady Paname (French)I Thursday, Dec. 1 5—45c—David and BathshebaI (American) §1 Monday, Dec. 19—45c—They Were Five (French) |1 Thursday, Dec. 22—35c—In Old Chicago (American) |1 Monday, Dec. 26—45c—Ma Pomme (French)| Thursday, Dec. 29—45c—The Eddie Cantor StoryH (American) §iimiiiiimiiiimiimiiimiiimiimiiiimimimmiiiiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiwiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirc RELIANCE CAMERAANDPHOTO SUPPLIES1517 E. 63 St.BU 8-6040BOOKSFOR EVERY COURSEUSED AND NEWSAVE UP TO 60%You are welcome to visit our storeand browse through thousands of bookson every subjectWe pay cash foryour old and discarded textsn er JCHICAGO 1, ILL.65 E. LAKE ST. Louise BarkerphotographerPortraitsof thestudentby anartist1457 E. 57th St.BU 8-0876MARCH OF DIMESAFIGHTINFANTILEPARALYSISJANUARY 3-31Page 10 THE CHICAGO MAROON December 9, 1955Peterson Movingfir Storage Co.55th A Ellis AvenueStorage facilities for a trunk orcarload of household effectsPacking — ShippingLocal or long distance movingBIJtterfield 8-6711SEEstory of Speedwriting shorthandDecemberREADER’S DIGESTSHORTHANDIN £ WEEKSFamous ABC system. Now tought inover 400 cities. New day & Eveningclasses start each Monday. Attendfirst class as GUEST. Special SummerClasses for College Students. ALSOthorough, intensive SPEEDTYPINGcourse Use coupon to send for 16-page brochure.SPEEDWRITING SCHOOL37 S. Wabash Financial 6-5471f -- j■ Speedwriting School ,! 37 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago 3, III. I| Please send me without obligation II your 16-page brochure on Speed- ■I writing. s♦AND LOOK at the extrapresents we bought withthe money we saved—withlow fares like these! FREE. . Advance copiesof Reader’s Digest articles!HERE'S HOW TO GET THEM: To ac¬quaint you with the interesting arti¬cles in The Reader’s Digest, we makethis special offer:From the descriptions below ofsome of the articles to appear in theJanuary issue of The Reader’s Di¬gest, pick the three articles you would most like to read. Circle with pencilthe numbers of these three articles onthe coupon below. Then mail couponto us with your name and address.We’ll send you free copies of the threearticles you choose.This offer is good for only a fewdays, so send us the coupon TODAY.1 Answered prayer?—A case history.Told it would cost $25,000 to start aradio Bible hour, Billy Graham said hedidn’t have the money. Then he kneltin prayer: “Lord, if You wish me tobroadcast Your gospels, won’t Youplease help me find the funds?” Dra¬matic story of how the Lord answered.2 Los Angeles and its smog. Hemmedin by mountains ... her valley a giantfunnel into which booming industries(and 1700 new cars each week!) belchfumes ... home-owners forced to burntheir own rubbish—L. A. has outgrownits air supply. A dire warning that othercities may soon face the same problem.3 A union that gives more to the boss.Workers knock themselves out to dis¬covertime-saving ideas... fire memberswho loaf. For their part, employers offerthe world’s top hourly earnings, withsuch benefits as scholarships toworkers’kids. How one union learned that to getmore you must give more.4 World war against narcotics. In Bei¬rut a drug peddler was selling heroinwhen police jumped from a doorwayand grabbed him. One hour later inDetroit, narcotics agents seized his ac¬complice—a grocer. Exciting stories ofhow international police cooperationis cracking the vicious drug racket.5 Condensation from the $3.50 book:“A Night to Remember.” Heralded as“unsinkable” the Titanicproudly sailed,carrying the world’s rich and famous.Five dpys later — her hull ripped by aniceberg —she sank with 1500 souls.Here, rich with facts never before pub¬lished, is a gripping account of thatmost appalling of sea disasters.£ Glamour of the Florida Everglades. Inthis sprawling land of fantastic con¬trasts, Indians live in primitive hutsjust a few miles from luxury hotels;panthers stal k thei r prey in the swamps;cowboys in jeeps lasso cattle, and out¬laws live in quiet anonymity. Visit toa strange land of marsh and mystery.y Igor Gorin’s Song of America. Whenthe Sister of Mercy heard the tubercu¬lar lad sing she exclaimed: “Stop talk¬ing about dying ... your voice belongsto the world!” True story of the boywhose dream of America and musiconce seemed hopeless, but who is nowa great artist and a great American.3 It pays to increase your word power.Does “composure” mean an assumedattitude, a literary or musical work,restlessness, or tranquillity? Addingnew words to your vocabulary increasesyour self-confidence, prestige—evenyour earning power. Here’s a word quizthat’s fun, and may pay you dividends. 11 Go Southwest, young man! “If I wereyoung again I’d hie me out to Texas—the boomingest, most vital, expandingand exciting state in the Union.” PaulGallico’s dazzling impressions of thestate where living is livelier, where—face it, podner—men are taller, womenare prettier and everyone’s richer.12 Why doctors face so many lawsuits.Despite the increasing efficiency anddedication of doctors, malpracticeclaims have mounted. Here are typicalcases in which physicians have beenhaled into court—and what you cando if you feel that your case really ha*been mishandled by the doctor.13 Every picture a masterpiece. He roseto stardom like a rocket. One week hewas an unknown Spanish youth with¬out wealth or favor; the next he wascommissioned by the king to paint hisportrait. Story of Diego Velazquez,whose genius with the brush made hisportraits so lifelike they all but speak.14 Unless you deny yourself. The pre¬vailing idea of millions is: “How can Ienjoy myself?” Famed author A. J.Cronin shows that character cannot bebuilt nor anything of real value accom¬plished without self-discipline; andwhy the surest path to success and hap¬piness is in learning to do without.15 The Red Nichols Story. When poliocrippled his little girl, the famed bandleader smashed his cornet in bitterness,turned his back on music. True storyof how his daughter’s recovery slowlyrekindled Red’s love of music, and hasnow carried him to the threshold of atriumphant comeback.16 “» date with Graybeard. “As a hoyin Africa I dreamed of the day I’d beold enough to hunt Graybeard—the^ wily bushbuck that had eludedgreat hunters for years.” Story of aboy’s first hunt—and how,when Gray¬beard suddenly leaped from the thicketbefore him, he found he couldn’t shoot!17 Why not music like this in all hospitals?For weeks the patient had lain in acoma. Medical skill could not revivehim. Then a piano was wheeled in, songswere softly played—and miraculouslythe dying man began to sing. Here’show a group of volunteer women usemusic to help the seriously ill.18 Thelap prison guard. “Whenheseizedthe sneering verses I’d secretly writtenin prison I cringed, fearing my doom.Then his cruel face softened and hesaid: ‘Is velly beautiful . . . you poet,too? You like lead my poetly? Youshake hand?’” General Broughertellshis most amazing wartime experience. 21 Are European children smarter thanours? In Europe, pupils learn more,work harder, play less than in America— and fewer get to high school and col¬lege. Which system is best? Revealinglook at the European school systemwith examples of how much more ex¬acting their standards are than ours.22 Courage is not a sometime thing.When he bailed out at 777 mph, the airripped his nose from his lip; bloodspurted from his ears; his eyeballsbulged from their sockets. Awesome' experience of pilot George Smith—thefirst man to bail out at supersonicspeed and live to tell about it.2 3 Why shouldn’t teen-agers work? Caseafter case of delinquency, says JudgeWm. Long, stems from idleness—toooften the fault of outdated laws deny¬ing jobs to those under 18. From longexperience on the bench he offers a planto keep teen-agers out of trouble by al¬lowing them to work at suitable jobs.24 What Peron cost Argentina. He calledhimself the “people’s friend.” Yet helined his pockets with their money;stifled political liberty; dissipated hiscountry’s wealth; created a vicious classof political parasites and labor racket¬eers. Unhappy story of the most mon¬strous fraud in Latin American history.25 Idle at Idlewild. You’re rushed to theairport through a dense fog—then toldthe plane can’t take off. So you lookfor a seat. (All occupied.) Maybe in aphone booth? (All in use.) Ah ha, therestaurant! (Closed.) Famed humoristCornelia Otis Skinner discovers thatthe trouble with flying is on the ground.26 Best advice I ever had. Angry at myrelatives, I decided to leave India with¬out saying good-bye. Then MahatmaGandhi said, “If there is bitterness inyour heart, how can you find happinessoutside? . . . No one can harm you butyourself.” Vijaya L. Pandit tells howGandhi’s wise words changed her life.27 The Japanese among us. Living herepeacefully when World War II broke,72,000 U.S.-born citizens were tossedinto detention camps in our “worst war¬time mistake.” Inspiring story of howthe sons of Japanese immigrants foughtfor a chance to fight, then won trium¬phant vindication for all their people.«D23 Fearsome, atomic submarine.lt canw hurl a missile at a city from 500 milesat sea. It is so fast it can outrace de¬stroyers. Here are the capabilities ofNautilus, as revealed in typical battlemaneuvers—and why atomic submar¬ines will outmode the defense setupsof all nations, including our own.(Buy a round-trip ticket and tavmcm extra 10% each way!)On* * RoundWay TripCINCINNATI . . $ 6.70 $12.10CLEVELAND . . 7.60 13.70DAVENPORT . . 3.85 6.95DES MOINES . . 7.3S 13.25DETROIT .... 6.50 11.70GRAND RAPIDS,MICH 4. SO S.10INDIANAPOLIS . 4.20 7.60LOUISVILLE, KY. 6.70 12.10MADISON, WIS. 2.4S 3.95*MILWAUKEE . . 1.70 3.10MINNEAPOUS-ST. PAUL, MINN. 7.30 10.90*OMAHA, NEB. . 10.40 18.75PITTSBURGH, PA. 10.25 15.45ST. LOUIS, MO. . 4.95 8.95SOUTH BEND, IND. 2.10 3.80•30 DAY RETURN LIMIT (flu* U . S.Tax)font tubfutf to thoogo wlthoot motif.JOHN STOCKS TRAVEL BUREAUAdministration Boil ding5801 S. Kills Avo.Rhone Midway 3-0800GREYH0UN 9 Red double-cross in Korea. The Ko-rean truce provided that neither sidewould increase its strength. While UNforces scrupulously obey the pact, Redshave moved in trainloads of new weap¬ons, hundreds of MIG jets. How Redmockery of the armistice agreementhas imperiled our position in Korea. 19 Why do courts protect criminals? Acriminal gang got off because theywere arrested without a warrant. Threepunks raped a worn an .went f ree becausethey were wrongfully tried for attemptedrape. A law expert suggests a way tostop the legal hair-splitting that mocksjustice and lets the guilty go free. 20 Miracle of muscle. When your baby' toddles across the floor, or you scratchyour nose, a chain of muscular con¬tractions is set off, so complicated itbaffles scientists. Why we are what ourmuscles make us—sick or well, peppyor droopy, and things you can do tokeep your muscles functioning better.10 TV’* amazing Ed Sullivan. In his firstshow Ed was so petrified folks thoughthe had facial paralysis—critics said“horrible, get off the air.” Inside storyof TV’s beloved emcee who has sur¬vived the challenge of all rivals for 7years, and has just been given a con¬tract guaranteeing him $176,000 ayear. 20 ■* * forest working for your town?Years ago, Pembroke, Mass, took overa tract of land “good only to hold weedsin place,“and planted trees.Today thattimber yields a harvest of thousands ofdollars a year. How 3300 communitieshave planted “forests” that help withtaxes, recreation and conservation. 30 lvan looks at Iowa. When they saw thew 160 lush acres farmed by Dick Allemanand his father alone, the Russiansgasped, “But where are all the laborers?Who’s in charge of livestock in Amer¬ica? Who tells you how to run yourfarm?” How American farms made thevisiting Soviet delegation pop-eyed.CIRCLE NUMBERS OF3 ARTICLES YOU WANT*Cut out coupon and mail today!•Note: only on* tat to a family To: Dept. E," Reader's Digest Association, Pleasantville, New YorkGentlemen: Please send me FREE the 3 articles I have drded below by number.1 2 3 4 5 * ~ «A 7 O o 1 A NameD V 1U11 12 13 14 15Address16 17 18 19 2021 22 23 24 25 Citv State26 27 28 29 30 (January)December 9, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 11Kismet arrivesKismet, the musical extravaganza which played for seven¬teen months to capacity audiences in New York, opened atthe Great Northern theatre on Tuesday, December 6. Therewill be matinees on Wednesdays and Saturdays, in addition tothe evening performances. sinah, and Donald Clarke in therole of the Caliph. George Liptonis featured as the Wazir of Police.Renaissancesociety showscontemporariesAn exhibition of “Contempo¬rary Art for Young Collectors,”also adapted by Robert Wright presented by the Renaissance so-Kismet, a musicalized ver¬sion of the melodrama by EdwardK noblock, has been acclaimed forits beautiful color and dancing.The musical features a number ofsongs which have become verypopular, such as “Stranger inParadise,” “Baubles, Bangles, andBeads,” and “This Is My Beloved.”There are several other songsand George Forrest from the mu¬sic of Alexander Borodin. ciety, is now being held at Good-speed hall, 1010 E. 59th street. TheIn this year’s production of exhibition includes original paint-Kismet, presented by Manuel ings, prints, drawings, and sculp-Davis, the company will include ture, priced from $5 to $50. ItEarle MacVeigh as the artful will be open to the public Mon-Ilajj, Marthe Errolle as the fas- day through Friday from 9 to 5,cinating Lalume, Margot Moser Saturdays from 1 to 5, until De-as the youthful singing star Mar- cember 23.Kenton at*opera houseStan Kenton, well-known andpopular band leader, will appearin concert with his orchestra anda company of 25 musicians andentertains at tlje Civic Operahouse Monday, December 12, at8:30 p.m.Kenton, who has won DownBeat magazine's popularity pollas leader of the nation’s numberone orchestra for five consecu¬tive years, is billed as “ModernAmerica’s man of music.” ForMonday night’s program, die hassigned Roy Hamilton, singer andpopular recording star.Educational TV to begin MondayWTTW, the Chicago area’s new educational television station onChannel 11, will begin its five-day-a week schedule of telecasting onMonday, December 12, from studios in the east wing of the Museumof Science and Industry.The station will telecast from 4 to 10 p.m., Mondays throughFridays. 'Explorations in Music' given weekly;band features Cuban and African idiomsA program of “Explorationsin Music” featuring GeneEsposito’s Highlifers, with GuyWarren, will be given every Mon¬day night starting December 12from 8:30 on at the Grand Ter¬race, 317 E. 35th Street.The Highlifers* organized inMay of this year, have appearedon radio, on Studs Terkel’s televi-%sion program, and in a numberof clubs in Chicago. Members ofthe band include Gene Esposito,leader; Ronald Kolber, alto andbaritone saxophone; John LaMonica, pianist and arranger;Ernest Norcom, bass fiddle; andGUy Warren, percussionist, inter¬pretive dancer, and arranger. Theband will play music in American,Cuban, and African idioms.Admission to the program is $1.There is no cover charge or mini¬mum.Bloch to play with SinfoniettaRobert Bloch, UC student (music dept.), will play a Bach violin concerto with the Collegi¬ate Sinfonietta Sunday, December 11, at 8 p.m. in the Fullerton hall of the Art institute, Mich¬igan and Adams. Other soloists are Ray Still, principal oboeist of the Chicago SymphonyOrchestra, and Julia Rahaman, soprano. The Sinfonietta’s conductor is Dieter Kober, UCalumnus, now instructor of music at Wilson junior college.Student discount tickets can be purchased at the Student Service center, Reynolds club’basement, for 75 cents each—regularly they are $2 and et*a has given many concerts on an orchestra downtown.”50. and off campus. During the 1954- ComingProgram 55 season its expanding activities The other soloists of the sea-Tnrirlpntai MikiV frnm necessitated the presentation of son are: Ernest Ulmer of NewIncidental Music from its final concert (May 22) in the York (piano) and Thomas Metz-Fairy Queen Purcell Art institute. ger (’cello), January 2, 1956;Concerto for violin and “University of Chicago students Ernst and Lory Wallfisch, return-orchestra No. 1 in have the opportunity to perform ing from P r a de s and EuropeA Minor J S Bach wbh excellent musicians of other (viola and piano) and RichardThrpp Rarnniip ChrUtmn* colleges and communities, and O’Neil (double bass), Februaryinree uaroque Christmas a]so tQ accompany outstanding 26; Joseph Fischer (violin) andArias Tunder, Herbst and soloists of Chicago and elsewhere, the Northwestern universityWeckmann Also students, such as Robert chamber singers, April 15; LemConcerto for oboe and Bloch, Thomas Metzger and Rich- pold Teraspulsky (‘cello) and0 OLPresents for ChristmasLIMITEDEDITIONPRINTSSigned by the ArtistAn extremely rare collection of French printsmagnificent beyond belief. By: strings No. 1 in BbMajor ;HandelChamber Sonata CaldaraChristmasConcerto Manfredini ard O’Neil, may give solos with Jack Hansen (piano), May 20.Angulo talks: VelazquezPicassoDesnoyerVillonDufyVlaminck•Marquet LegerChagallRouaultDerainBaumeisterKleeAnd Many Others . . . Priced from $16 to $100Oils, Prints, Watercolors, FramingARTIST SUPPLIESOke GJLent1168 East 55th St.MUseum 4-3388 The Sinfonietta’s history in the Diego Angulo, professor of history of modern art, University ofwords of its conductor, Dieter Madrid, and director of the Instituto de Diego Velazquez in Madrid,Kober: “Since 1852 the Sinfoni- speaks today on “Three Velazquez Masterpieces” at 8:30 p.m., inSoc Sci 122.Editor of the Archivo Espanolde Arte and an authority on Spamish and Latin-American art, Dr.Angulo is the author of Historicdel Arte Hispano Americano,Plans and Monuments in the Ar¬chives of the Indies, and Sculp¬ture in Sevilla.He is currently visiting majorart collections and art study cen¬ters in the United States underthe sponsorship of the SpanishInstitute of New York.ACASA Book StoreChristmas Cards — Traditional — ModernImported and Foreign LanguageFeaturing one of the best 5c collectionsin the city *1332 E. 55th St. HY 3-9651CAP & GOWNGift Subscriptionsv MOWAt Yearbook Office3rd FLOOR, IDA NOYES HALL ; FIRE AND THEFT INSURANCE;> ALL LINES OF INSURANCE :► Phone or Write J| Joseph H. Aaron, '27 \>135 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-1060;i Iaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa.furniture and accessoriesdomestic and imports chinaporcelain crystal pewtercutlery stainless steelflatware hoi Iowa re jewelrybaskets, toys, lamps, cardsGIFTS OF ELEGANCE TOGIVE OR RECEIVETHE MALIHINI 5481-83 S. LAKE PARK AVE.NO 7-4915 open monday thru Saturday till 9:00, friday till 6:00f»qe 12 THE CHICAGO MAROON December 9, 1955uc choir sings ‘Messiah’ <Santa Claus9 here tonightFollowing; a tradition started six years ago, the University of Chi- ,c“u”(1,01 »• w«n present its baroque performance of Handel's Messiah Santa Claus, a new opera by Leland Smith of the University of Chicago music departmentat 3 p.ni., Sunday (December 11), in Rockefeller Memorial chapel. . * 1 . , ,, . , , „ l,l,culiMemiiers of the Chicago Symphony orchestra will play the original will have its world premiere tonight at 8:30 in Mandel hall. Tickets are $1.50, $2.00, andHandel accompaniment with the University choir of 53 voices. Rich- $2.50. It will be the first UC performance of an opera in over five years. The program, to beLeland Smith, instructor in the music department and well-known American composer,has been working on the opera^dnk'th^choiV.Ki^ >v!iu^ritrifpe’tr«,nl^prano:yMar|l repeated tomorrow night, will also include a reading by University Theatre of the Dylanetta Sedlock, contralto; Denis Cowan, tenor; Henri Noel, bass; and Thomas dramatic prose poem, Return Journey.Heinrich Fleisher, organist.The baroque performance uses Handel’s original Messiah scoreas first played in Dublin 213 years ago. The original, designed for asmall choir, was seldom given after the 19th century re-orchestrationsof the work by Hiller. Mozart and Prout for larger choral groups.Admission to the oratorio is $2. Students who present their IDcards may buy tickets at $1 each; today is the last day for this dis¬count. Tickets are available at the Chapel office, at the StudentService center in Reynolds club, and at Woodworth’s bookstore.Plan festival of artsPlans are under way for the second annual Festival of theArts, to be held on campus in late April, 1956. The steeringcommittee for the Festival will have Penny Rich and DeanJohn P. Netherton as co-chairnien. Faculty and administra¬tion members of the commit-*tee are Harold Hay don, Mrs. handled by the Student ActivitiesAlice Ross Newman, \\ illiam C an- COmmittee. Students interested innon, Cirosvenor Cooper, and AllanAustin. Student members areChuck Mittnian, Maury Mandel,John Herzog, Molly Uunsford, anda representative from StudentGovernment.Art exhibits, concerts, alhleticevents, dances, and the BeauxArts ball are all scheduled for theFestival. Campus group* such asthe Glee club. University Theatre,and the University of Chicagochoir will participate in the Festi¬val, and special affairs are plan¬ned by both the art departmentand the music department.The Beaux Arts ball will beRadio show looksinto ChaucerWhy Chaucer’s CanterburyTales have remained popular foralmost six hundred years will beexamined by two Chaucerian ex¬perts over the UC New Worldradio program at 10:35 a.m., Sun¬day, December 11, on NBC’s net¬work show “Monitor.”5-Pc. AluminumCanister Set1.49Steak KnifeSets2.59 to 11.95r7TT7JOrnToysHousewaresSporting GoodsClocksAppliancesGiftwaresToolsLightsOrnamentsCONNOR’S1304 E. 55 MU 4-1100FREE DELIVERY helping to plan the ball shouldcontact Chuck Mittnian in theSAC office. for over a year. Its unusualorchestra consists of a sextetof stringed instruments, a sex¬tet of double-reed instruments, aglockenspiel, and a xylophone.The orchestra for the opera willbe composed of members of the cj10jrChicago Symphony orchestra andthe Lyric Theatre orchestra.The libretto of the opera wastaken unchanged from the moral¬ity play Santa Claus, by poet e. e.cummings. Santa Claus, the heroof the story, represents love andunderstanding, and all thingsgood: while Death is the arch¬fiend who leads him astray. Thetime and place of the action areindefinite; it simply exists in thepresent. Copies of cummings’libretto will be sold before each performance of the opera.The cast for the opera includesDenis Cowan in the title role,Henri Noel as Death, PatriciaPeterson as Woman, Lois Karbelas Child, and a chorus of mem¬bers of the University of ChicagoReturn Journey, the play whichwill be presented by Universitytheatre, tells of Dylan Thomas’ up. He talks to the townspeoplehe used to know, including aschoolmaster, a barmaid, and areporter with whom he worked;and they, not recognizing him,give him their impressions of himas a youth.Gary Harris will be the narra¬tor in Return Journey. Stage di¬rection will be by Marvin Phil¬lips. sets by modem artist Edithreturn to the seacoast tow*n of M. Smith, and lighting by MeyerSwansea in Wales w here he grew Braiterman.am UNIVERSITY BARBER SHOP1453 E. 57WISHES ALL STUDENTSMerry Christmas and a Happy New YearBarbersFLOYD C. ARNOLD, Proprietor MERRY CHRISTMASAS ONLY YOU CAN SAY ITYour Portrait★ ★GRADUATESCap and Gowns Available at All Timesfor Your Conveniencec/Ae1171 EAST 55Hi STREET PHOTOGRAPHERSChevrolet'ss»taught dynamitegood manners !With its frisky “Turbo-Fire V8,**this Chevrolet is pure dynamite.But it’s beautifully mannered,too—quiet, instantly obedient toyour slightest signal!Nudge the accelerator and you’reaware of the split-second chain re¬action of your toe to the “Turbo-Fire”! There’s your dynamite—withhorsepower ranging up to a high of205. The car is built for its power,too—with a low, low center ofgravity, well distributed weight andwide-apart rear springs. There’syour stability, and safer handling!AH doors have safety latches—andinstrument panel padding and seatbelts are available at extra cost.Directional signals are standard.Come'in and try a new Chevrolet!THE HOT ONES EVEN HOTTERSee Your Chevrolet DealerDecember 9, 1955 THE CHICAGO MAROON P»9«M3photo by BurbachA student tries out the new pastry niaehine which makes it pos¬sible to get a complete machine breakfast oil campus. Bolls andcoffee are available in Ida Noyes Cloister club, while fruit juice andcoffee are available in the Bookstore only three blocks away. Or,one can substitute orange soda for orange juice and remain in Ida.Poster deadline set4The deadline for entries to the Washington Promenadeposter contest is January 9, announced Marty Gendell, com¬mittee chairman, recently. The posters will be displayed oncampus until the judging January 11 by Dean Strozier andMrs. Mary Alice Newman in the Student Activities office.Prize for the winning poster is a free bid to the dance. Incase of a tie both winners will be awarded a bid.Two glittering crystal fiaconsVs oz. and V4 oz. size for the pursein gold and silver boxes.Two famous Colognes with newstunning atomizers... gold covered,of course — producing aninfinitely fine mist.Fabulously Simple—Simply FabulousREADER’S“The Campus Drug Store9961st and Ellis Opposite Burton-Judson CourtDO YOUR XMAS SHOPPING EARLY SDA announces availabletours of Soviet UnionConducted tours of Soviet Union cities are now available for as little as 50 dollars. A com¬plete list of Russian tour itineraries sponsored by the Cosmos Travel bureau, was presentedto Friday’s meeting of the Students for Democratic action.Tour prices do not include transportation costs to the Soviet Union or transportationcosts from the Soviet border to the starting point of the particular tour. Tour prices includecosts of intra-tour transportation, room, and board. Five classes of tours are available, ex¬tent of services depending uponprice of tour.A five-day Moscow tour may bearranged for as little as $50; aten-day Leningrad-Moscow tour,$100; a seven-day Minsk-Moscowtour, $70; and an extensive pan-Russian tour for as little as $405.These tours were initiated lessthan a month ago when the direc¬tor of the Cosmos Travel bureaumet Communist party leaderNikita Khruskchev at an F. N. R.Jugoslavia cocktail party. TheCosmos representative expresseda desire to see such tours initiatedand shortly thereafter flew tothe Soviet Intourist bureau tocomplete negotiations.Complete details of the toursmay be obtained by writing Cos¬mos Travel bureau, 45 W. 45thstreet, New York 36, New York. Int house plans eventsInternational House will have a Club International tonightat 9 p.m. in the assembly hall. A left bank cabaret atmospheredancing and a stage show will cost only a little more than theusual 25-cent Friday night fee. Guests should wear old clothes.Tomorrow during the afternoon in the assembly hall stu¬dents can make ornaments and decorate the InternationalHouse tree. 'Warning...Students congregating in IdaNoyes hall are warned not toturn on too many lights. MissEdith Ballweber, director ofIda Noyes, said that the build¬ing does not have enoughcables to take the load of thenew lights which have been re¬cently installed. Plans are inprogress to obtain more cables.The overloading of cables andfuse boxes occurred since themove from Reynolds club toIda Noyes of several studentorganizations. The Int. House Wassailparty will be at 4 p.m. in theassembly hall this Sunday. Therewill be carol singing, folk-dancingcookies, hot wassail, also SantaClaus will be there for the chil¬dren. If students wish to donatecookies phone Marie William atDO 3-1262.The graduation dinner will beThursday, December 15, at 7 p.m.There will be a turkey dinner for$1.75, a speaker and discussion bythe students about their countriesand their plans. Afterwards there will be a social at Margaret Wal¬ters’ house at 5732 Harper. Re^ervations must be made at Int.House.Int house will be in charge ofthe Holiday Center at the YWCA,59 E. Monroe, on MondayvJleeem-ber 26, from 30 a.m. to 7 pm.Hosts, hostesses and cookies willbe needed. If students can helpphone Helen Wheeler at HY 3-0995.Int House wall have a NewYear’s Eve Ball in the assemblyHall from 9-1 p.m. There will bea moderate admission fee.SEASON’S QREETINQSfromPROGRESSIVE PAINT & HARDWARE1158 E. 55 NSA Discounts HY 3-3840Commuters comfortable,need only a waste basket“The purpose of the Commuters’ club is slow and undr&-matic comfort,” said Peter Greene, co-chairman of the club.“Big affairs on this campus have spirit and fun only whenthey are first thought up spontaneously, rather than beinghanded down from the top. But why can’t they hand us a sim¬ple waste basket at Ida Noyes?” he added. “We’re graduallygetting the things we need tobe comfortable, though, and through our winter quarterpublicity, we hope to bring To¬gether the students who have in¬dividually expressed interest inour activities.”Opera House, Mon., Dec. 12,8:30 p.m.3% Perni "i‘MODERN AMERICA’S IRAN OF MUSICTicketson sale atOpera Housenow! And America's Favorite SingerROY HAMILTONI ' . AI TheDisc Open Weekdoys 10-10Soturdoys 10-61367 E. 57th St.MOZART C MINOR MASSTeresa Stich-Randall, Hilde Roessl-Mojdan2 Records Epic 6009DYLAN THOMAS READS, VOL. 3Cordman TC 1043LOTTE LENYA, SONGS OF KURT WEILL The Commuters’ club maintainsa lounge on the second floor ofIda Noyes hall for the use of allstudents. Besides the promisedwaste basket, the facilities of thelounge include comfortable chairs,a desk, paper, pencils, and ink,and assorted conveniences likephonograph records. For the ben¬efit of commuters, the loungehouses the car-pool file, which hasfound ready use among a numberof students.The club has held open housesand a square dance to acquaintcommuters with each other andstudents living on campus. It isplanning more of these for thewinter, and is arranging to ex¬pand its facilities by providinglockers, an iron and ironing board,and a place for commuting wom¬en to change their clothes beforeevening affairs.According to Greene, the Com¬muters’ club is starting a lowpressure campaign to familiarizemore students with the comfortsof the lounge as a place for re¬laxing or studying for exams.Columbia ML 5056MOZART MARRIAGE OF FIGAROSiepi, Gueden, Della Casa, Danco,Poell — Kleiber Cord.A Records London XLLA-35CHRISTMAS SALESave on These and Many Others There*s a photo orhobby gift forereryone on yourChristmus list at . . •MODEL CAMERA1329 E. 55 HI 3-9259• • • •Up to 40% discounton Lionel train setsFage 14 THE CHICAGO MAROON December 9, 1955Classified advertisementsApartments to share Help for part-time income tax work-simple returns. Contact J. P. Kasner,CE 3-4053 evenings.Two male grad students have comfort¬able and roomy 4-room apartment. Onestudent leaving next March. Desire oneperson to share in January or one ortwo in March. Rent $73. Call between6-7 p.m. Rosenbaum and Seim. 5434Ellis. PL 2-3426. French tutor wanted for 12-year-oldboy. Far South Side. WA 8-4726.For saleLady student to share apartment. $8.50per week. Meals included, $16 per week.AB 4-2515. Microscope with quadruple nosepiece,vertical illuminator, five short and twostandard objectives, graduated mechan¬ical stage. BU 8-1566.For rent 1946 Ford “6” for sale. $100. Call BenWright, BU 8-1762.Two-room furnished apartment with Tuxedo, size 42. Call HY 3-7441.private bath. Good location, availableimmediately. For more information callMrs. Fitch, days at MI 3-0800, ext. 2925; Bookcase with built-in 12" speaker en¬closure, four shelves. Call BU 8-1566.evenings BU 8-8565.1955-56 SG Student Directories on saleMon., Dec. 12, at service center, dorms,bookstores. Buy for Xmas lists and gifts.35 cents.Pleasant room furnished as study, pri¬vate tiled bathroom and sunporch inprivate home. Available for womanJanuary 1. $10 per month. FA 4-0741.New Motorola portable radio with direc¬tional antenna, batteries, and metalcase. An Ideal Christmas present. $30.James Hamilton. 5837 S. Cottage Grove.ServicesNeed help moving? Call “Prime Movers.”Special student rates. Call evenings.PL 2-6412 or HY 3-1356. 1954 Smith-Corona Sterling portabletypewriter. Exc. cond. Cost $120 new.Price $50. Call Arthur Mldelka, PL 2-9628eve. Owner needs money immediately.Lessons in modern piano. Jazz-popular.Chords and improvisations. Call EddieJohnson, WA 4-1350. Evenings. 35mm Camera, NIKON t 1.4. Brand newwith guarantee card; Lens, NIKKORf 1.4, lens,changeable; Shutter, T.B.I.-1/500; Synchronized; Range-finder; withcase and guide. $230 or best offer. MasaSugi, 5423 S. Ridgewood court.French tutoring, coaching .and trans¬lations. Native teacher. Reasonable. NO7-2722. Coming events bn quadranglesRidesOberlin or Cleveland, Ohio. Dec. 18.Will share expenses. Phil Shen. Brenthouse, MU 4-9137.Riders wantedNorthwest. Riders to Oregon, Washing¬ton. Idaho, Utah, after December 20.Call Bill, KE 6-1996. $30 down will put you In a facultyowned 1950 Ford. New tires, battery,exhaust system and seat covers. Push¬button radio, heater. Six cylinders. Mr.Golden, days at ext. 2530. Or nights atHU 6-0583.$20 dowrn will get you a 1948 ChryslerRoyal. Four-door. Six cylinders. Tip¬top condition. New battery, good tires,radio, heater, etc. Call Mr. Golden, ext.2530 or HU 6-0583.Solar diffusion type enlarger, 2>ix2*i,new. $40. BU 8-4755, evenings. Friday, December 9Christmas party, Romance languagesdepartment, tea 3-3:45 p.m., programat 4, Ida Noyes, non-members, 25cents.CAP AND GOWN general staff meeting,3:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.Lighting of Hanukkah candles, Hillelfoundation, 5715 Woodlawn, 4 p.m.Will be continued every day until endof quarter.Walgreen lecture, ’‘Science In America:manifest destiny in the age of sci¬ence,” by Gerard Piel, publisher. Sci¬entific American, 4:30 p.m.. SocialScience 122.Mathematical biology club, ‘‘Theoreticalconsiderations on the interaction ofnerve impulses in the central nerv¬ous system,” 4:30 p.m., 5741 Drexel.Scandinavian club party, 7:45 p.m., IdaNoyes.Christmas party, chemistry department,8 p.m., Kent 106.Varsity basketball game, UC vs. St.Procopius college, 8 p.m.. Field house.University theatre: Santa Claus, anopera by Leland Smith based on amorality play by e.e. cummings, withdramatic recital of Return journey,by Dylan Thomas, 8:30 p.m., Mandelhall.Saturday, December 10Dames club, 2:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.Christmas party, SSA, 7:30 p.m., IdaNoyes, 30 cents.University theatre: Santa Claus, andReturn Journey, 8:30 p.m., Mandelhall.Sunday, December 11Radio broadcast, ‘‘The sacred note.”with music by Rockefeller chapelchoir, 7:30 a.m., WBBM.Episcopal communion service, 8:30 a.m.,„ Bond chapel.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10, 11a.m., De Sales house.Lutheran, communion service, 10 a.m,,Hilton chapel.Clinics religious service, 10 a.m., Bill¬ings 0-4.Radio broadcast, ‘‘Chaucer for the mod¬erns,” 10:35 a.m., WMAQ.University religious service, convoca¬tion Sunday, Dean Thompson preach¬ing “The poetry and truth of Xmas.”11 a.m.. Rockefeller chapel.PersonalMister Magoo; Shame on you for think¬ing I would do such a thing for you.Moneybags.Bunny: Thanks. Mother’s seen It, butI haven’t yet. I now own one-fifth ofa concertina. Rat has learned to cry.Am having income tax trouble. Write.Love, a Bobbsey twin.Katherine: Are you there? You-know-whoms.Help wantedTrumpet player with dance band ex¬perience for dance band work. ContactGeorge Baumrucker, Hitchcock hall. Oratorio: Messiah, by G. F. Handel, Ina baroque performance by chapelchoir and accompanists of Chicagosymphony, 3 p.m.. Rockefeller chapel,student admission $1.Young socialist league meeting, 4 p.m.,Ida Noyes.Wesley club discussion, 6 p.m., 6131KimbarkDisciples student fellowship supper andprogram, 6:30 p.m.; Disciples church,57th and University.Porter fellowship, Christmas party,7 p.m., Chapel house.SRP caucus, 7:30 p.m., Ida Noyes. Glee club rehearsal, 7:15 p.m., Rosenwald 2.Science fiction club meeting, 7:30 pmIda Noyes.Church world fellowship, “Christianmissions: are they outmoded?” Ber¬nard Loomer, FTF, 7:30 p.m., 5144Dorchester.Law wives meeting, 8 p.m., Ida NoyesCountry dancers, 8 p.m., Ida Noyes.Thursday, December 15International house movie: David andBathsheba (American), 8 p.m., 45cents.Monday, December 12 Friday, December 16Lecture (FTF), “Christian initiation inthe contemporary family,” 4:30 p.m.,Social Science 122.International house movie: LadyPaname (French) 8 p.m., 45 cents.New Testament club, “New Testament,the kerygma of the church,” JohannesKnudsen, Chicago Lutheran seminary,8 p.m., Swift commons.Tuesday, December 13Intervarsity Christian fellowship, 12:30,Ida Noyes.REVIEW staff meeting, 5 p.m., Reynoldsclub 301.Lecture, "Asia, Polynesia, and Amer¬ica,” by Robert von Heine-Geldem,U. of Vienna, 8 p.m.. Breasted hall.Varsity basketball game, UC vs. GeorgeWilliams college, 8 p.m., Field house,Wednesday, December 14Zoology club, “Biological reflections onthe atomic energy conference atGeneva,” Austin M. Brues, directorof biological research, Argonne lab¬oratory.Women’s athletic association meeting,4:30 p.m., Ida Noyes. 268th Convocation of the University,awarding of degrees. Pres. David D.Henry of U. of Illinois, speaking’3 p.m., Rockefeller chapel.Saturday, December 17THE AUTUMN QUARTER ENDS.Dames club Christmas party, 2:30 p.m.,Ida Noyes.Ilanukkah celebration by Israeli stu¬dents with dancing and program, 8:30p.m., International house, 25 cents.During the interim,the program of events at Interna¬tional house will be continued.Saturday, December 24Christmas eve candlelight service withcarols, carillon music, and tableauxcollection of goods for UC settlement,4:30 p.m., Rockefeller chapel.Tuesday and Wednesday,January 3 and 4, 1956Registration and first meetings ofclasses in the College, divisions, andprofessional schools.% Merry Christmas from jMitzie’s Flower Shop jat two convenient stores1225 E. 63rd St. 1301 E. 55th St.HY 3-5353 " Ml 3-4020 looking for a trulydistinctive holiday gift?— then give —ROSEMARYZWICKhand-made jewelry!— for HERpendants scatter pinsearrings cuff linksbrooches collar pins— for HIMtie bars cuff linksindividually and in matched setsatUniversity Bookstore Bordelon's5802 Ellis Are. 1424 E. 55th$$ Save Up to 50% on Used Books $$TEXT BOOKS—REFERENCE—OUTLINES—SETS—TRANSLATIONSWe Buy Books the Year ’RoundCOME IN AND BROWSE-OPEN STACKS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCEOur New Phone Number HA 7-2614-5* \GET YOUR COPY OF OUR GENERAL CATALOG, FREE!WILCOX-F0LLETT CO.1255 S. Wabash Avenue Chicago"Convenient to the Elevated, Illinois Central & Meter Parking"December 9, 1955 ▼Page 15 ■THE CHICAGO MAROONSays Arab disillusionmentcorroding American prestigeby Oliver LeeArab confidence and trust in the United States has been shattered, with the result thatthe position of the Middle East in the cold war has become a fluid one, warned Fayez Sayegh,charge d’affaire of the Arab states Relegation in New York, in a lecture Wednesday spon¬sored by the International Relations club.The Middle East has no sympathy with Marxism, and no essential community of interestwith the Soviet camp, yet Arab disillusionment with American foreign policy is such that theArab nations may feel com¬pelled to turn to Russia toachieve their political objec¬tives, Sayegh stated.A great legacy of good will hadbeen left in the Arab world forthe West in general and theUnited States in particular, hepointed out, as the primary in¬spiration of the Arab nationalistmovement in the 19th centuryhad been Western, and the Arabrevolt in 1916 against the Otto¬man Empire was supported bythe West. A century of Americanmissionary activities had also lefta deep imprint.This initial good will was some¬what shaken when after WorldWar One the Arab countries weremade League of Nations man¬dates rather than given independ¬ence, but it was not shatteredcompletely until after the SecondWorld War, Sayegh said.Criticizes U.S.Since then, the Arab diplomatmaintained, two basic develop¬ments have taken place in Amer¬ica’s Near Eastern policy: (1) TheUnited States, being allied with“ certain European powers ”against which the underdeveloped SutlettJM'areas of Asia and Africa are ris¬ing, finds it expedient to withholdits support from the principle ofnational self-determination. Thusarises the paradox that the UnitedStates, which on the global scaleis fighting for freedom againsttyranny, is opposing the strugglefor freedom in the colonial areas.(2) The United States has viewed stated Sayegh, himself an Arabrefugee from Palestine.Sayegh pointed out that theArab refugees themselves haverepeatedly refused resettlementin the surrounding Arab coun¬tries and insist on repatriation toPalestine. He did not indicate towhat extent this attitude mayhave been.. ,, , T , . , . encouraged by thethe problem of Israel in terms of Arab states, whose avowed policyHnmooti/i nnlifme Tfe* nnlimr tbnm ia • . , .. ^ ^it is to- make all possible contri-domestic politics. Its policy therehas been shaped not in accord¬ance with its national interest orthe intrinsic merits of the case,but by the pressures of factionalinterests.Condemns PartitionWhen the U. N. General Assem¬bly in 1947 voted for the partitionof Palestine, strong United Statespressure was focused on certainweak nations to push the resolu¬tion through, Sayegh asserted. Asa result of this resolution. “Israelhas been enabled to expel withimpunity one million Arabs fromtheir homes and their lands; tomake of the 170,000 remainingPalestinian Arabs a suppressedminority; and to occupy 35 percent more territory than was al¬lotted to it in the partition plan,” butions towards an eventual an¬nihilation of the Jewish state. All right, who’s the wise guy?”Swimmers lose opener to Wright JCIn their opening meet of the1955-56 season, Bill Moyle’s swim¬ming team lost to Wright juniorcollege in the latter’s pool. Themeet was held last Friday.In the eight individual events, the Maroons won only two firstplaces. In four other events, Chi¬cago’s swimmers took second andthird pwlace, but this was nulli¬fied by Wright’s first places inthese races. Maroon winners were Annan in the hundred yard free¬style and Mandell in the 200-yardbackstroke. The Maroons lostboth relay races to Wright.Chicago’s high scorer was An¬nan with eight points, on a firstand second place.After the movies —After studying —After dinner —After 10 p.m. — have a large cup of Cafe Espresso at Le Provencal.With it have I# bon patisserie froncaise — Profiterolee Croquem-bouche, Bisquif Route au Chocolat, Linxer Torte, etc.Till 1 a.m. 2 a.m. Saturdayle Provencal1450 E. 57th Street NO 7-9669 Gagers blow lead, lose 80-74The Maroon varsity basketball team blew a substantial lead at halftime, and lost to Elm¬hurst 80-74, in a game played on the opponent’s floor Tuesday. It was a disappointing gamefor the Maroons, who saw their lead disintegrate due to sloppy ball handling in the latemoments.The first half saw Chicago build up a big lead. Both teams were taking plenty of shots,but the Maroons were making them while Elmhurst was missing them. Dick Rowland andMitch Watkins were particu¬larly effective from outside.At halftime, Chicago led bythe margin of 43 to 33. In the third quarter, Elmhursthacked away at the Maroon lead.Joe Lira, playing center for theopponents, was particularly effec-DYNELadds luxurious new qualities toFor an ideal gift in solid color gabardineor random-flecked crepe weave in all the new shades ^f©®3GEORGE S MEN SHOP1035 E. 55th St.COR. GREENWOOD OPEN EVENINGS TILL XMAS TV • RADIO • PHONOSELECTRICAL APPLIANCESMODERN HOME FURNISHINGSHERMANS 935 E. 55th"Big enough to serve you . . .Small enough to want to"Faculty - Personnel - Student DiscountsCollegiate Favoritesonly 9.95 and upAlso feoturing a complete lineof slippers, hosiery, wallets,and other gift items for menand women.SIMONS SHOESFLORSHEIM RED CROSSOpen Evenings Until Christmas1458 E. 55 ’ BU 8-9454NSA STUDENT DISCOUNT tive getting rebounds. Midway inthe period, Elmhurst led 48-47,but good shooting by Bill Lesterand Watkins sparked a resurg¬ence by the Maroons, as they tooka 66-58 lead in the early part ofthe fourth quarter. Once again inthis topsy-turvy game, however,the opponents fought back.Cheered on by an enthusiasticcrowd, the opponents scoredeleven quick points to take a 69-66lead. The Maroons never caughtup again, as Elmhurst had con¬trol of both backboards in the latepart of the game. To aggravatetheir troubles, Chicago had theball stolen from them a few timesby Elmhurst in the last few min¬utes, when .control of the ballwas desperately needed. The finalscore was Elmhurst 80, Chicago74.Joe Lira for the opponents andBill Lester for Chicago eachscored 27 points. Lester was notat peak form, however, despitehis high scoring performance. Al¬though he made many field goals,he also missed a good deal of hisshots.i m* idkAt ChristmasTHE PERFECT GIFTEasier to read andunderstand, the Re-vised Standard Ver¬sion Bible is ideal forencouraging a deeplove of our spiritualheritage. No gift canbring more lastingjoy than the Biblewritten in the livinglanguage of today.Wa^T Select from theseyjr RSV editions forr Christmas giving.- Family size editionsBlack genuine leather.,,, $10.00Maroon buckram $ 6.00India paper editionsBlack genuine leather $ 9.00.Genuine Sealskin, leather-lined. .$15.00Smaller editions — illustratedBlack Sturdite. 3.50Blue cloth $ 3.35New Testament —large sizeBlue cloth S 2.50We'll be happy to fill your order by mall.Woodworth's Bookstore1311 E. 57Page 16 THE CHICACO MAROON December 9, 1955nGive sports calendar Track prospects brightuntil next publication f suecessful yearSince this is the last issue of the Maroon this quarter, we " mare compiling a list of sports events spanning from today toFriday, January 8, when the Maroon again appears.DateFriday, Dec. 9Tuesday, Dec. 13Sunday, Dec. 18Wednesday. Dec. 28Friday, Dec. 30Friday, Jan. 6Friday, Jan. 6 TeamVarsity basketballVarsity basketballVarsity basketballVarsity basketballVarsity trackJV basketballVarsity gymnastics OpponentSt. ProcopiusGeorge WilliamsNavy PierAlumni ,Holiday openChicago ChristianIndiana, Iowa PlaceField House, 8:00Field House, 8:00Field House, 8:00Field House, 3:30Field House, 2:00Bartlett gym, 3:30Bartlett gym, 7:00 Chicago’s 1956 varsity track team is now intensively preparing for the Indoor track sea-son. While it is too early to predict the team’s strength, available material seems to indicatea basis for a good season. Thirteen major *‘C” winners are back, although participation ofsome may be doubtful. In some cases participation may be limited due to heavy academic orwork schedules. —; ~Starting in January, also, will be Allen Bates’ wrestling team,which begins January 9. An indoor baseball class will also be heldduring the winter quarter for prospective baseball team candidates.During the winter quarter virtually all varsity will be in action orundergoing practice.Two students winsoccer league honorsTwo Maroon soccer players, Spike Pinney and Syed Husain,were chosen on the Midwestern Collegiate Soccer conference’sall-star team. Pinney, a previous major letter winner, playedoutstanding ball for Chicago at center-half. Husain, a studentfrom East Pakistan, impressed teammates and opponentsalike, although he was a newcomer on the squad. In addition,the following won awards: —Soccer AwardsMajor BlocksCapt. Bruce Colby, RichardHansen. Ralph Hirsch, A1 Knight,Spike Pinney, Ron Sutton.Old English CRon Crutchfield, Neil Falken-berg, Syed Husain, Geoffrey Pitt,Richard Staveley.Small Old English CNelson Hyman, Paul Lindauer,Larry Nauman.Cross-Country AwardsMajor Block CCapt. Art Omohundro, TinkyHevns.Old English CHosea Martin, Maurice Bush,Ned Price, Bill Krol. Small Old English CA1 Gordon, Steve Bantelich,Dewey Jones.1955 NumeralsBill Gram, Norm Smith. 13 lettermen hackReturning lettermen include in¬door co-captains Chuck Rhyne(440, 880, mile relay), and JimBrown (sprints, 440, relay). Oth¬ers are Paul Baptist (pole vaultand distance runs), Sam Green¬lee (440, 880, relays), TinkieHeyns (880, mile, two mile), JoeHoward (shot put). Dewey Jones(hurdles, high jump), FrankLoomos (sprints, hurdles), BobMason (high jump), Art Omo¬hundro (880, mile, two mile, re¬lay), Larry Shaderowsky (shotput), Dan Trifone (hurdles, highjump, broad jump, relay), andMitch Watkins (broad jump, highjump, hurdles). Watkins will jointhe team after the basketball sea¬son.Other veteran award winnersare John Spaulding (440, 880),Andy Thomas (440, relay), KimValentine (mile and two mile),JV dismembered, 63-21Joe Stampf’s JV basketballers took a real drubbing fromFenger High school at Bartlett gym last Thursday, 63 to 21.Fenger once again proved the superiority of public highschools in Chicago athletics over private ones.The last time the junior var¬sity was in the game was whenFenger led, 5-4. At this point theopponents scored eight straightpoints, and at the half they led,27-9. Fenger displayed a fineWard, Chacarestosoutline past exchangeMeans of implementing a student exchange program be¬tween the US and Soviet Union were discussed at the meetingof Students for Democratic Action (SDA) last Friday.Mary Ann Chacarestos andRichard E. Ward outlined ter the US because of restrictionswhat steps had been taken to. imposed by the McCarran Inter- first half, Fenger slowly forgedimplement a US-Soviet student nal Security act. out in front, and won 34-25.exchange program during the lastfew years. It was noted that noSoviet student may presently en-Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372Books Bought• Any Subject-• Any LanguageV• Any QuantityClark & ClarkHYde Park 3-03211204 E. 55th St. BE PREPARED FOR WINTER DRIVINGFALL SPECIALTUNE UP $4.98For Most Cars, Plus PartsPernio Anti FreezeInstalledcheck heater, thermostatcheck radiator, hosesbattery, etc.•ictrkirkSPECIAL ! !Heavy Duty Battery $129=HARPER SINCLAIR SERVICE5556 Harper Ave. PL 2-9654Season’sQreetingsfromAce Cycle Shop819 E. 55 Ml 3-2672VotirBieycle Headquarter* ounenn sinnonERS1313 E. 55 Next to the Post OfficeOpen Every Night — Sun. 10 fro 3UNTIL CHRISTMASPERSONALIZED XMAS CARDSPrinted on PremisesHyde Parkis most complete line of . . .ARTISTS’ MATERIALOFFICE SUPPLIES — PRINTINGQIFTS- FOR ALLXMAS CARDS - PAPER - RIBBONS Pete Clarke (hurdles, 440, relay),and A1 Gordon (distance runs).Additional men who will bolsterthe squad are Sherry Gray, for¬mer PSL hurdles champ, just re¬turned from a year of studyabroad. Bill Anderson (440, 880)former Pitt runner, A1 Wade (440,relay), and Larrv O’Mara (440,880).Prospects for the future arebrightened by the presence of anexceptionally fine group of prom¬ising first year men. Bill Gram,Joe Hill, Jerry Jordan, Bill Krol,George Karcazes. Hosea Martin,Phil McLain, Wilbert “Nick”Nichols. Steve Pantelich, NedPrice, Don Richards, Low Robert¬son, Norm Smith, Larry Staver,Dave Houk, Dick Cousins, andMaurice Bush are practicing reg¬ularly and show real ability.Schedule listedOn Friday, December 30, theU. of C. Track club will sponsorits third annual Holiday Trackmeet which will draw an all-starcast of the Midwest’s top collegeand AAU athletes.The Chicagoland Open Meet on January 14 will attract primarilyChicago area schools and AAUathletes. The varsity meet seasonwill open on January 28 againstCentral Michigan. Wayne, West-ern Michigan, Wilson jr. college.Elmhurst, St. Joseph, Carleton!Cornell (Iowa>, Lawrence, Grin¬ned, R i p o n , Monmouth, Coo.Bradley, and Milwaukee StateTeachers will all visit the Fieldhouse in February and March.In addition, there will be theU. of C. Track club invitationalmeet on February 25, the CentralAAU Indoor Championships onMarch 17, the Milwaukee Jour¬nal Games on March 10, the Chi¬cago Daily News Relays on March24, and the U. of C. Track clubmeets at the Michigan AAU andat the University of Illinois, all inwhich the top varsity men willcompete.Coach Ted Hayden invites allothers interested in track to jointhe squad and promises to sched¬ule additional meets if necessaryto assure enough opportunitiesfor competition at all levels forall squad members.shooting game, as their boys hitfrom both inside and outside. Thejunior varsity didn’t move aroundenough on offense, and their playpatterns showed no coherence.John Davey did almost all of Uni¬versity’s scoring, as he racked up17 points.The university high schoolopens its private school leagueschedule on Tuesday, December13, against Parker high school atParker.“B” team losesA “B” team composed of thesame players except for Daveyand Goldblatt played Fenger’sfrosh-soph team. After playingon even terms for most of the LU LELONG'SlavishChristmasgesture5 French Perfumes,worth $24.00—nowPlace Vendome ... holding five Lucien LeLong perfumes... superb grand gesture present—or —four individualgifts (since it is cleverly packed with four perfumesalready packed in individual lift-out boxes!) •pkll to*The Perfumes t Indiscret . , , 10.00 sizeBalalaika ... 3.50 size Sirocco . . , 3.50 sizeTailspia . . 3.50 size Opening Night 3.50 sizeLimited Supply! Limited TimetREADER’S“Tfie Campus Drug Store”61st Cr Ellis FA 4-4800i