Order mass evictionUniversity of Chicago, Friday, January 20, 1956Students promisedaffordable new rentsby Diane PollockDean MeCarn assured an angry and perplexedgroup oT married students on Monday evening thatshe would “make it my business” to “find youhousing you can afford.”Seventy members of the Married Students asso¬ciation, meeting in Judd hall, were informed byCharles Gibson, community real estate manager,that they would face a 35-64 per cent rent increasewhen evicted from prefab housing in Dudley field,slated for demolition by June 15. The angry reac¬tion was countered by Mrs. McCarn’s agreementthat they “just cannot afford the increase,” as wellas by the suggestion by Maynard Krueger, UCprofessor, that low cost housing is the only answerto the problem.The married students, now paying $55 a monthin the prefab barracks, are to be relocated in sevenUniversity apartment buildings in the neighbor¬hood. Gibson told the group that over 100 resi¬dents have been served eviction notices in order tore house the soon to be displaced students. It wason learning from him that the apartment, rangingin price from $65 (3 room) to $90 (5 room) willprobably average $85 a month, that several stu¬dents commented, "We can’t pay it. We’ll justhave to leave.’*Maynard Krueger, addressing the group, saidthat UC is one of the few universities in the coun¬try which has not yet used government funds tohouse married students. Because of exceedinglylow interest rates, no university can afford to useits own funds for such purposes, he said. He con¬ tended that in the context of an educational sys¬tem which operates at a deficit, student housingis as worthy of subsidy as are tuition costs.Krueger expressed concern that the businessoffice is handling the situation rather than theDean of Students office, which is the regular chan¬nel for student housing. Gibson and Krueger bothadvocated that the jurisdiction of apartment build¬ings completely occupied by students might betransferred to the residence hall set-up. Arrange¬ments such as a cooperative janitor service mightthen be made by the students, as a means of low¬ering costs.Gibson, in an interview earlier Monday with theMaroon explained that it is necessary that thebuildings not operate on a subsidized basis becauseof “complicated financial arrangements.” Thefunds with which many of these units were boughtwas not University money. It is therefore neces¬sary that the buildings support themselves, he said.Gibson, discussing the “break even policy” underwhich he said the apartments will be operated,admitted that the real estate companies would bepaid for the managing of the property. Severalstudents objected that this element of profit wasnot compatable with a “break even” project.Dudley residents commented ruefully that theywill be scattered throughout the neighborhood,in the process of the relocation. “This will changeour community type of living and the many bene¬fits (such as co-op baby-sitting services) whichhave resulted from it,” one student remarked.See ‘Dudley,’ page 2 photo by CooperDudley field, pictured obove, will be cleored of pre-fabricoted housingthis summer in preparation for the building of new undergraduate women'sdorms. The buildings are temporary structures built after the war to Ho^seveteran married students.UC needs roomfor its prefabersby Diane PollockHeadlines in the Hyde Park Herald blared the news that“UC orders mass tenant eviction,” and a letter has been hastilydispatched to some 300 tenants in an attempt to recant a bad“faux pas” on the part of UC administrators.The letter, drafted by Charles Gibson, community and realestate office, tells the evicted tenants that “We sincerely re-gret that the notice had to be <jent jn charge of business affairs,served. It was necessary be¬cause your building wasneeded for the housing of marriedstudents. We know this actionmeans a problem for you and wewant to offer you as much helpas possible.”Gibson’s letter is an explana¬tion of the notice sent to 300 HydeParkers living in seven buildingsnear the campus. According toWilliam Harrell, UC vice presi-Council votes down football:disapproves committee reportBy Spike PinneyIntercollegiate football willnot return to UC in the imme¬diate future. By a vote of24-14, the Council of the Univer¬sity Senate turned down therecommendation of a special com¬mittee that the University playfootball on a non-conference basis.The Council, a 51 member bodyelected by the University Senate,took this action Tuesday at 3:30p.m. in Law South.Block returnHad the Council approved foot¬ball, their action would probablyhave been sent to the trustees byChancellor Lawrence A. Kimptonfor final decision. Although thetrustees could rescind their 1939M % decision against football withoutfaculty approval, Tuesday’s voteis considered an effective block toreturn of the game.The six-member Committeewhich recommended football wasappointed last May by Kimpton.Called the “Committee on StudentRecreational Activities.” its rec¬ommendation stated, “We believethat the University of Chicagoshould be able to play football ona truly amateur basis, withoutoveremphasis and its attendantproblems.” Return of football wasthe Committee’s only recommen¬dation.Haydon commentsSaid Committee member Ed¬ward M. Haydon, “This (the council vote) is not a negativeaction in any sense. It just meansthat the council did not, at thistime, agree with the Committeeproposal.” Haydon, who is trackcoach, was the sole athletic de¬partment representative on theCommittee. Its other members:Kermit Eby, professor of socialscience; Chairman Earl A. Long,of the Institute for the Study ofMetals; Clayton G. Loosli, profes¬sor of medicine; Charles W.Wegener, assistant professor ofhumanities; and Warner A. Wick,associate professor of philosophy.Student opinion on footballranged from football class mem¬ber Wally Nicaise’s comment, “Ihad fun playing this fall, and I.. *■iimm- • by World Wide Photos“Chicago-CornelE game filed under Sports-Obsolete.” Thus reads the back of this photo from the press rela¬tions files. And there it seems destined to stay. Sahlin, Maroon back, evaded tackles on September, 1931, makingthe first touchdown in the obsolete game pictured above. hope to have fun playing nextfall” to biological sciences studentRoger Kelley’s statement, “Afterall these years at UC, I no longergive a damn.” In between wasmedical student Steven Armen-trout’s view, “It is a good idea ifplayed on as high a level as pos¬sible while still maintaining thepresent academic status at UC.”(For two faculty opinions onfootball, see page 4.)Intramural ball?The Council’s decision does noteliminate football classes or thepossibility of intramural ball.Football classes held this falldrew a registration of 50 and asteady attendance of between 25and 35. One injury, a dislocatedkneecap suffered by Lionel Pich-eny, did not seem to dampen theenthusiasm of the remaining classmembers. Kyle Anderson, Chica¬go halfback in 1925, ’26 and ’27,coached the class.Possibility of the return of in¬tercollegiate ball has been in theair since “UC Students for Foot¬ball” circulated petitions last May.At the 52nd annual banquet of theOrder of the C, (a lettermen’s or¬ganization) last June, Kimptonsaid, “I can only tell you that ourdecision (concerning football) willbe dictated by what we believe tobe best for the University ofwhich we are ail a part.”Chicago has not played inter¬collegiate football since Decem¬ber, 1939. Intramural ball con¬tinued a few years, and then diedduring the wartime. the buildings were purchased bythe University in order to providereplacements for the prefabhouses and rebuilt barracks whichhave been used since 1945 tohouse married veterans and A’hichare to be razed in June.Kimpton didn’t knowThe action, of which ChancellorLawrence Kimpton claims he wasnot informed, met with chargeswhich accused the University of“callous disregard and lack ofconcern for the people of thiscommunity,” and "the stupidest,most asinine behavior any adultever indulged in.”Although a petition signed bytenan r asked Kimpton to modifythe “blanket eviction order,"” theChancellor was quoted as tellingthe tenants that “the Universityis rethinking the matter, but can*not promise general relief.”‘Warrants inconvenience’Gibson, in justifying the Uni¬versity action stated that thehousing needs of UC married stu¬dents “warrants some inconveni¬ence on the part of these peoplewho are not University associ¬ated.” He also remarked that it isnot crucial that these people livenear the University. They can rentapartments, he said, which are alittle farther from the campus.The University is hiring a full-time person to help in the coordi¬nation of relocation plans, Gibsonsaid. “People are unhappy, but Ithink the concern results primar¬ily from an insufficient appraisalof what’s going to be done forthem,” he added.The University, Gibson ex¬plained, has enlisted the coopera¬tion of the real estate firms ofthe area in the relocating of ten¬ants. The help of .community or¬ganizations is also being re¬quested.A statement released to thecommunity by Harrell assuredSee ‘Community,’ page 8In this issue...Married housing ..Page 2Ford gives millionEx-UC President dies. . ..Page 3Football statements .. . ..Page 4Calendar of events ..Page 8UT ReviewUC wins at basketball. . .Page 11Streetlights Page 12Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON January 20, 1956No funds yet formarried housingFour and two-tenths‘million dollars wa^ requested for mar¬ried students housing as part of the $32.7 million fund cam¬paign, to provide 70C units. No funds have as yet been receivedfor this purpose, Dean of Students Robert M. Strozier com¬mented Wednesday.In the fall, 1954, a survey showed that between 15 and 20per cent of the student bodywas married. At this time itwas found that the marriedStudent, either childless orWith a family, supported himselfby his and wife’s earning iq mostcases. Assistant Dean of StudentsRuth McCarn estimated Wednes¬day that there are now about 1000married students, with less thanhalf now living in Universityhousing for married students.Mrs. Margaret Ziller of the Uni¬versity housing bureau estimatedthat besides those now in the pre¬fabs, 100 other families ace on theWaiting list for University hous-Give low costEurope toursMusical festivals, “HoboTours,” visits to major cities andspots of scenic grandeur areamong the features of tours toEurope at minimum cost forAmerican college students spon¬sored by the US National Studentassociation.The NSA is the federation ofStudent self-governments of over300 colleges and universities. Stu¬dents who may be interested inits tours should contact BrankaJohn, travel, director at PL 2-1942.For the musically-minded, thereis a festival tour taking in theBregenz festival with its “Spielam See” performed on a raftStage on the water of Lake Con¬stance; the Vienna Festival fea¬turing the ensemble of the Vien¬na State opera; the Salzburg festi¬val, Europe’s major summer mu¬sical event, and others.The “Hobo Tour” costs only$650, which covers trans-Atlantictravel, all land transportation,food, lodgings, tickets, programexpenses, and incidentals. Thetour covers Holland, Germany,Austria, Belgium, Italy, Switzer¬land and France. Close contactWith local residents is established,while museums, theaters, land¬marks are not overlooked.Most tours last about 72 daysWith a prescribed amount of timein each major city and “free” timeat the end to be used at the stu¬dent’s discretion. ing, plus 31 waiting for divinityschool housing.About 22 more are waiting forprefabs for the coming quarter.Some of^those waiting for hous¬ing have been waiting ninemonths or longer, she said.These figures are contrastedwith the 252 families not in Uni¬versity housing waiting for suchhousing on November 12, 1954,when it was first announced theprefabs would have to be vacatedin June of 1954. Later the citygave a temporary extension.In October, 1954, it was discov¬ered that incomes of prefab ten¬ants ranged from “nothing” to$6,000 annually with an averageof $2700.Community . ..(from page 1)them that “every effort will bemade to minimize the difficultiesof tenants. Tenants with leaseson a month to month basis will begiven a minimum period of 45days. Those who have year toyear leases in most cases willhave considerably longer periodsin which to find new apartments.Reactions to the evictions bycommunity leaders have beensharply critical. Fifth Ward Al¬derman Leon Despres darkly pre¬dicts, “Despite future apologiesand changes in procedure, this actshows more than they can denythat the strategy of the Univer¬sity is to move in its own interestwith disregard for the people inthis community.Julia Abrahamson, Ex. Direc¬tor, Hyde Park Kenwood Com¬munity Conference has been quot¬ed: “We have tried for years toget the University to accept theirresponsibilities in the community.An action like this sets back whathas been accomplished in thearea.”The comment, in fact, is soviolent, that the statement byJulian Levi, executive director ofthe SEEC seems almost an under¬statement. “This was a faux pas,”said Levi.MODEL CAMERA SHOP1329 E. 55th St. HV 3-9259Hyde Park's Most Completex Camera ShopNSA Discount61st & Ellis READERSTHE CAMPUS DRUG STOREOpposite B-JVisit OurCOLLEGE ROOMGOOD FOOD AND SNACKSTry our SUNDAYSTUDENT SPECIALSlAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAjj Hither & Yon —Suspend IIT professor as redDr. Gerald J. Matchett, Illinois Institute of Technology professor, was suspended lastmonth after appearing before the House Un-American Activities subcommittee. He wascalled before the committee to answer charges that he was named by Pro. Herbert Fuchs asone of the members of the Communist Party he had known in Denver.When questioned by Rep.Scherer, (R.O.) Matchett, un¬der advice of counsel, frequentlyavoided answering by invokingthe 5th amendment. Some of thequestions Matchett refused to an¬swer were: “Have you ever work¬ed for the federal government?Have you ever resided in Denver?Do you recognize your signatureon this document? What do youteach at IIT?”Dr. Matchett recently statedthat the IIT administration as¬sured him that he would have ahearing near the end of January.He further stated that he wouldbe glad to have a chance to ex¬plain to the college and studentswhy he took the position he did.Prof. Matchett has taught atIIT for 10 years and wrote Mod¬em Labor Economics (togetherwith Pearce Davis.Frats discriminate“Although restrictive member¬ship clauses are disappearingfrom constitutions, America’s col¬lege fraternities are still choosing their members on the basis ofAryanism,” reported Dr. AlfredMcClung Lee, president of theNational Committee on Frater-nities in Education, in a recentsurvey on discrimination in col¬lege fraternities.Dr. Lee warned, 'To the extentthat Aryanism persists m them,social fraternities represent a ba¬sic threat to democracy in theUnited States and to the effec¬tiveness of American leadershipin world affairs. If men’s andwomen’s fraternities will ridthemselves of this disastroustheory and practice, they will con¬tribute to the development ofdemocratic leadership.”The report did not place all ofthe blame on the fraternities.“College administrators do not, inmost cases, use their institutionalauthority to prevent the nationalsfrom perpetuating biased prac¬tices in local chapters. They donot support the efforts of studentchapters against segregation.” Dr.Lee charged that the direct pres¬sure to maintain segregation comes from “fraternity profes¬sionals” and alumni.List bad booksThe National Orgaization of De¬cent Literature monthly preparesa list of “objectionable” books.The December list of “bad books”included Butterfield 8 by JohnO’Hara, Battle Cry by Leon Uris,Nana by Emile Zola, 1919 by JohnDos Passos, N. Y., N. Y., by WillOursler, To Have and Have Notby Ernest Hemingway, Mr. Rob¬erts by Thomas Heggen, TheCatcher in the Rye by J. D. Sa¬linger, From Here to Eternity byJames Jones, and God’s LittleAcre by Erksine Caldwell.In response to this list, theDaily Athenaeum, West VirginiaUniversity’s paper .stated in aneditorial: “. . . biggest argumentagainst censorship is that nominority, anywhere at any time,should be empowered to defineacceptable literature for the restof the country. ... if we are tohave freedom, we must be able tochoose. Obviously, the freedom toread can be used wisely or fool¬ishly. But it is essential to a crea¬tive culture. When chains areslapped on creativity, culturemoves slowly.”Dudley...Concern was also expressed over the loss of sev¬eral services, such as the night guard now pro¬vided by the university.Sam Venturella, president of the Married Stu¬dents association, remarked on the “lack of com¬munication and the poor manner with which themove has begun.”“Any move that does affect such a large numberof students certainly ought to have had the recom¬mendation of the dean of students office, he said.The whole thing isn’t proving to be very beneficialto the university.”The Dudley prefabs were put up in 1947 to pro¬vide housing for veteran students and their fam¬ilies. Under the original ordinance, this housing (from page 1)was permitted for five years. As temporary hous¬ing the units do not conform to the city zoninglaws and were authorized only because of housingshortages.Another year of grace was accorded the tem¬porary housing in June of 1955, at which time thebarracks were to have been razed. At the time thepre fab council issued statements urging the Uni¬versity to build “one, perhaps two or three lowcost apartment buildings.”Under the demolition schedule provided to meetthe obligation to the city some units must be torndown this summer. The 88 units at 58th and Wood-lawn were selected for razing beginning in June,as ground is to be broken in the fall for under¬graduate women’s dorms.From Sousa...to Vaughan Williams.../ .BAND CONCERT TONIGHTTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOCONCERT BAND, conducted byLouis Lason presents its first indoorperformance in 14 years.Mandel HallTonight, 8:30 p. m. Friday, January 20Admission free and without ticketto.January 20, 1950 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3Woodward dies; Ford gives Law schoolwas ex-president $1,275 million grantFrederick C. Woodward, vice president emeritus of the {7University since 1939, died Tuesday morning in Lansing, Mich¬igan, at the age of _81.Woodward was appointed acting president of UC in 1928when Max Mason resigned, and held the office until RobertM. Hutchins became chancellor in 1929.He was elected vice-presi-dent in 1926, serving in this Woodward practiced law for threecapacity until his mandatory J'ears •" New Y°rk kecom‘retirement ta 1939. After his re- ** D,ck,n9°ntirement Woodward was appoint- c0! ege mSi director of the fiftieth anSlver- ‘a“ght subsequently alary celebration of UC in 1941. gorthwestern and was dean of* 7. Stanford law school from 1907 toWoodward, a nationally known i9ig( when he became professoreducational administrator and ot law at uclegal scholar served In the educa- Woodward took his bachelortional field for 52 years, 34 at an(j master of law degrees fromUC. One of his most notable ac- Cornell university in 1894 andcompiishments was the establish- 1895, and received honorary de¬ment of the divisional system at grees from Northwestern andUC Ford foundation has donated $1,275 million to the UC Law school. The money will beused to aid in the construction of a new building, to provide funds for law fellowships, andto expand instruction in legislative drafting.The grant provides $800,000 toward the estimated $3.5 million construction cost of the newlaw building which was one of the objectives of the University’s $32.7 million campaign. Thenew building will extend from Burton-Judson to the Bar association building and will includeB-J as a law dorm. Increase :of the student body, enlarge- graduated from law school. The The last part of the grant, $100,-’4. • fellowships will also bring law 000, will be used to extend thement Of the faculty, extensive graduates of British Common- Law school’s present training ofresearch projects, and the devel- wealth schools for a year’s study students in legislative drafting,opment of individual and seminar in the law school. Dean Edward by making possible an expansiontypes of instruction have created H. Levi of the Law school said of the tutorial method, which pro-the need for a new and larger the international scope of Ameri- vides individual instruction andbuilding. can industry and business has supervision in legal writing.Fellowship funds of approxi* created a need for lawyers with a The Ford Foundation previous-mately $35,000 annually for ten knowledge of foreign law. “The ly has given the Law school $1.4years will provide a year’s gradu- fellowships are of particular inter- million for a study project of juryate training in the UC Law school, est to the Law school because of methods, which caused much con-and a year of study abroad for its pioneering in this field of law," troversy when it “jury tapped**American students who have Dean Levi said. as part of its research.His incisive thinking won for Dickinson.Woodward was born in Middle-Woodward a reputation as one of town. New York. He is survivedthe best speakers at UC. His 1928 by his widow, the former Gabri-dedication of Rockefeller chapel elle Hyldahl, whom he married inwas printed by John D. Rockefel- 1952 after the death of his firstler, Jr. for distribution to visitors wife, Harriet, (the former Mrs.of the chapel. Ernst Freund), and by his sister,From 1942 to 1944 he was pres- Ann Woodward, of Middletown,(dent of the Chicago Council on and his daughter, Mrs. DonaldForeign Relations and from 1945 Horn, of Denver, Colorado,to 1946 he was chairman of the Funeral plans had not beenstate wide committee on public made as of Wednesday,health.In 1931 and 1932 he was vice-chairman of the Laymen’s For¬eign Mission Inquiry commission,studying medical and religiousmissions in India, China, andJapan.Author of two legal texts,Math societyhas new officerA. Adrian Albert, professor ofmathematics and acting chair¬man of the department of mathe¬matics, has been elected vice-president of the American Mathe¬matical society for 1956-57.Albert has been a member ofthe council of the society since1936, and was awarded the FrankNelson Cole prize in algebra bythe society in 1939. He has been amember of the University of Chi¬cago faculty since 1931. Dance ticketsare availableTickets are now on sale forthe Gold Diggers’ ball, whichwill be held on February 3 inIda Noyes. They are fifty centsa person.The ball is sponsored by thewomen’s dormitories, Inter-clubcouncil, the Women’s Athletic as¬sociation, the Commuters’ club,O-board, and Nu Pi Sigma. Girlswill either ask dates or go stag.Boys are also invited to go stag.Tickets are being sold by mem¬bers of the sponsoring organiza¬tions and at the student servicecenter and the student activitiesoffice. The ball will be the firstall-campus event for midyearentrants.Applications now accepted forfour SG-social science vacanciesApplications for four Student Government vacancies in the socialsciences division will be accepted at the SG office through next Tues¬day. The vacancies will be filled by appointment of the SG executivecouncil.Students who have one quarter residency and at least a “C" averageover their entire residence or the last three quarters, whichever ishigher, are eligible to apply. photo by WtsaInterclub ball king candidates meet at tea. From left to right are Hal Levy, Ed Zolpe, Aaron Sayvetx (Judge!,Bob Dalton, Mrs. Hewman, Louis Kalavity, and Mrs. Kimptoa. Carl Frankei is not pictured.Faculty and students hurtin icy road auto accidentUC’ers Leland Smith, Frank and Jean Bamberger, and Leo Treitler were hospitalized lastSunday night due to an auto accident involving three cars between 9 and 10 p.m. on anicy highway 20 miles north of Renssalaer, Indiana. They were taken to a hospital in Rens-salaer where Smith and Treitler are now. A fifth occupant of the car, Richard Swift, wasunhurt.Smith, a music department instructor, incurred a compression of the back and brokenwrist bones; he will be moved to Billings next week, authorities reported.Mrs. Bamberger, an instruc¬tor of humanities 1, sufferedcuts and bruises; she is now inBillings for neck X-rays. Her hus¬band, Frank, driver of the car, astudent in the math department,is in Billings for examination ofSpecial Maroon editionreprints 19 great pagesHUTCHINS OUT!* ^kted Chancellor’s quick exito Dr JkJL leaves educators gasping■VUKIOC tm—m iMa nM am <mt to Bw am thu feoteit tomm, rn, - ■ ■ „ Baitchina—lor >1 yto« Cb>»o*Bor to to, OMmMy at ariefo—wm am.town MM On Uto UC ctotofM* toockad. MM (MAtoM MOdand UmUmlj ■*»»l -Ml /Vr L”_ 2 tototaf toi—>WM to* tot oUtot, -to * towr Empty-eyed pmhmon. TV*" coatmud hatf-hMrtod toctant Mm m*V ttonmnn. Bunion Mlkato-lrutlto to- Cron tor to an.JJ _ On» n*on «totod tout mom Bios tonI warned you *jtS MtMrk oat M eympdtby to’toothis mess:SrrrTTnT.**.v. KaltendeaJfZ:- EditorialIt to vttfc it* fwy Oernom afti mm «f>ffowful mrtit «bot mo behold the laaviofOf him woo hM been l tight lo » lU, MlfropIrMInn to our Motto, • rose imktot tbodowtoMotoi at the neadof of tohaUMt ftamy truly be said. with no boUbif buck at•molted, thot he to the prince among Thomwho know "May thto period at mourning to totot«oul searching aim. ood be with him in thtothe special The rise and fall of football,and the educational changesat the University during its63-year history will be the themeof a special Maroon edition to bepublished on February 24.Nineteen front pages from pastissues of the Maroon will repre¬sent the theme. Some of the is¬sues that will represent the foot¬ball issue arp: the 1905 issue whenwe beat Michigan, 20, Stagg re¬tires, football dropped and whenwe quit the Big Ten.Educational changes will berepresented by: Hutchins Inaugu¬rated, reorganize educational sys¬tem, Hutchins quits, and 4-yearBA change.Famous joke Issues, such as theHutchins Out (to lunch), will beincluded.The edition will sell for 25 cents. scratches on his kneecap. Treitler,music department student and di¬rector of music at the “Compass,”55th and Lake Park, is still inRenssalaer with a dislocated hipand facial injuries. Swift, studentin the music department, wasleast injured and is now back oncampus. The occupants of theother two cars escaped with minorinjuries also.The UC musical society can¬celled its concert this Sunday dueto Mrs. Bamberger’s inability toperform. A Feb. 3 concert, includ¬ing three sonatas played by Mrs.Bamberger will not be postponed,however, it was decided yester¬day. Smith’s classes, when theyresume, will be held in his home.The five UC’ers were returningfrom Louisville, Kentucky, wherethey had attended the rehearsalsand performance of Roger Ses¬sion’s “Idylls of Theocritus” forWUCB providesfree advertisingto organizationsStudent organizations may ad¬vertise free of charge via WUCB’snightly five-minute broadcast,“Bulletin Board.” The programallows all organizations to adver¬tise social events, meetings, lec¬tures, and other activities. For in¬formation, contact W. E. Dun¬ning, c/o WUCB, B-J. soprano and orchestra, played bythe Louisville Philharmonic.Two other UC’ers,. Mac andRosemary Reynolds, were in oneof the cars delayed by the acci¬dent. They recognized L e la n dSmith as an instructor and re¬mained with the unfortunatequintet to see them safely into thehospital, staying until the nextmorning. Reynolds is an under¬graduate in the division of phys¬ics sciences. Mrs. Reynolds is em¬ployed at Billings.Richard Swift was recentlyawarded the student composerprize by the Louisville Philhar¬monic, which will play his com¬position soon.Phil Hoffmanchairs SRP“There is no change in policyor outlook," Phil Hoffman, thenewly-elected chairman of theStudent Representative party,told the Maroon Wednesday. Hoff¬man replaces Larry Lichtensteinas chairman of the party. Lich¬tenstein’s resignation was attrib¬uted to the pressure of time, sincehe is a pre-med.Due to the resignation ofGeorge Crawford, who is not inschool this quarter, the post ofvice-chairman has also changedhands. Arnie Winston has bee«elected to fiU that vacancy.Page 4 THE CHICAGO MAROONEditorialApology helps littleThe University will need a long time to build back thefriends it lost in Hyde Park this week. Mass eviction noticesserved on life-time Hyde Park residents, giving them 45 daysin which to move, will not be forgotten easily.The Hyde Park Herald perhaps summed up community feelingwhen it said, “The bad advance planning and the unbelievable treat¬ment of the tenants is certainly an indictment of the University’scommunity relations program.**Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton was quoted as telling the ten¬ants, “the University is rethinking the matter but cannot promisegeneral relief.”Since that time, letters of explanation and apology have beensent, but the damage is done. When the nail is pulled out, the holestill remains.EditorialHousing—for whom?The University Tuesday announced the purchase of sevenapartment buildings for married student’s housing, as the pre¬fabs back of Ida Noyes are slated for demolition in June.What sort of criteria should be used in the future for determiningwho gets University housing?Naturally, those in the pre-fabs will have first chance at theseapartments. Once these people begin to move out, however, the Uni¬versity will have an opportunity to decide its own criteria for appor¬tioning married students’ housing. Previously, through agreementwith the federal government from whom the prefabs came, veteranswere given preference. Married students however, are here to stay,and many of them are far too young to have been veterans.Financial need seems to be the obvious answer, since the problemis not a shortage of apartments, but their high rent. The usualmethods for determining financial need do not work well in thiscase, however. The wealth of the students’ parents, the money thestudent has in the bank, and his indebtedness do not tell the wholestory, even if one includes number of children.First, many middle-class fathers feel that a child who is marriedis not to be supported but should support himself, his wife, and hischildren. If the father gives any money, he is likely, to give it as atremendous favor, and to give very little.Secondly, married students, like all married people, almost alwayswant children, and perhaps furniture and a car. If they have the chil¬dren, buy the furniture and perhaps the car on credit, then they haveno money in the bank, and much indebtedness. It they instead scrimpand save for the day when they may have a baby or a sofa, they havemoney in the bank and no indebtedness.Thus, were money in the bank and indebtedness the factors indetermining financial need, the couple who have the baby and thesofa would get the subsidized housing, while the couple who didwithout would have to live in unsubsidized, more expensive housing.What about the factor of whether or not the student is a veteran?Veterans may carry less than a normal load without fear of beingdrafted, and thus are in a better position to support their families.They receive money from the government to help defray expenses.Thus the simple fact that one is a veteran hardly seems to make itnecessary to move one to the head of a waiting list.The married student is fairly new in our society. He is in a kindof a limbo — expected to support his family and yet expected tocarry a full load of courses. Expected to live on the least possibleamount of money, and to somehow save for the future. Expected tobe head of a household and yet to do as his parents say about anymoney they may give him. Expected to wait. Wait for independence.Wait for housing. Wait for children. Perhaps it would be better ifhe had wailed to marry, but indeed the pattern of the college mar¬riage is becoming more, rather than less, common. Temporary meas¬ures are not enough, and a long term view must be given to theproblem of the married student.Issued every Tuesday and Friday throughout the school year and intermittentlyduring the summer quarter, on a non-profit basis by the publisher, the ChicagoMaroon, at 1212 East 59th Street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Editorial offices,Midway 3-0800, ext. 1003 and 3266; Business and advertising office, Midway 3-0800,ext. 3265. Subscriptions by mail, $3 per year. Business office hours: 2 p.m. to5 p.m., Monday through Saturday."SALT of the EARTH"Sunday, Jan. 22 ' Showing at- 2 and 4 p.m.SHOTWELL HALL 55th & BlackstoneDonation $1 Auspices: American Socialist ForumBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57thValentineSpecial!2-8 x 10's15• 8 PROOFS SHOWN , January 20, 1956Football—UC ought to purchase pro teamby William H. McNeillAssociate Professor, HistoryI cannot feel that it is wiseto try to re-establish inter¬collegiate football at Chicago.Only if we fielded a team moreor less commensurate with ourreputation as an educational in¬stitution could football become asatisfactory center of school loy¬alty and pride among studentsand alumni alike; but such a teamcannot be had on an amateurbasis, nor is it easy to see howfootball players could both playgood football and get a good edu¬cation at the same time. Since,unfortunately, the public at largetends to judge a college by itsfootball team —this due to theabsurd proportions which footballpublicity receives in the dailynewspapers—we’would become alaughing stock of the Middle Westwith a genuinely amateur team recruited from among studentswho came to the University forits educational advantages andnothing else. We could not com¬pete on even terms even with verysmall schools.I wish the University adminis¬tration would seriousl^ considerbuying one of the professionalteams of this city. There might beproblems I do not forseej but Ido believe that with such a teamwe could enjoy the benefits ofpublicity, develop a center ofSchool pride and loyalty, and reapthe other very real advantageswhich a good football team canprovide. By inviting the playersto make what use they chose ofour graduate facilities we couldmake some of them into part timestudents. Freshman (and poten¬tial freshmen) could then enjoythe sight of brawn juxtaposedwith the brain we already have.Only in this way, so far as I cansee, can we have a good team anda good conscience at the sametime. Both would be good to 1937:MAROON editor McNeillhave. The only alternative, a ridi¬culously ineffectual team of ama¬teurs, would be worse than noteam at all.Football vote looks unfortunate1927:Football player Anderson by J. Kyle AndersonAssistant Director, Physical IdwcatiaaThe main reason the 50 stu¬dents reported for the class infootball during the autumnquarter of 1955 was to show theUniversity there was sufficientinterest in intercollegiate footballto again field a team. The boyswere apprehensive at first at theremote possibility of the return ofbig time football to the campus.The staff reassured them thatthere was no place for big timefootball and its attendant prob¬lems at the University of Chicago.The only sound program whichcould be offered to the studentshere would he one in which insti¬tutions of similar enrollment, aca¬ demic and athletic standardswould be met. The boys and thestaff agreed that the first consid¬eration of all students should bea sound education for later lifebut that athletics, including foot¬ball for those who would want it,should be included in that educa¬tion.This general idea plus the op¬portunity to play football devel¬oped the greatest “in-group” re¬sponse that has been seen on thiscampus in fifteen years. Theyouthful enthusiasm mounted toa peak in the scrimmage held atNorth Park College, November1. Everyone on the squad par¬ticipated in the affair. It seemsunfortunate that the efforts andhopes of this group should havebeen terminated for the time be¬ing by the recent vote.LettersComplains about cluttered CloistersAs I was walking through theIda Noyes Cloister club today,Jan. 6, 1956, I noticed that papers,cups, food crumbs were left on tables.Waste receptacles are provided for stu¬dents to place waste in. If students donot take this responsibility the admin¬istration will hire more persons to cleanup this cafeteria as It has In all othereating places on campus, thus not low¬ering the prices of food, maybe evenraising prices.If students want, and I believe mostdo, cheaper prices for food in the C shop. Commons, and the dormitoriesthe students (you and I) should workfor returning our own trays and dishesInstead of having paid personnel do thework that we could do. Although thiswould drive few students from theirpresent Jobs at the moment it wouldbe In the long run a saving to them¬selves (as part of the body, student).If we clean our own tables, who knows,maybe the University will sell ham¬burgers with catsup, onion and potatochips at University Tavern’s price of25 cents or a meal of soup, meat, pota¬toes, vegetable, salad and bread atCampus Snack Shop's price of 85 cents.Let’s clean up ourselves.Jeanne MarginDEMOCRACY AT WORK fIWhether you pinch your pennies or fling owoy {*Z£ your dollars, we suggest you visit the many fineAretail establishments in the 55th £r 57th Streetly areas.x?TX We think you will like most of the shops youX visit. We think you will like most of the people❖£ you will run into in this neighborhood.x¥'ifyv •| We think you will then wonder why millions J| of dollars ore being squandered to destroy manyX of these shops ond to dispossess many of thesepeople.Walter R. Schneernann £¥v v -> <• *:* •> Peterson Moving& Storage Co.SSlh A Ellis AvcrmStorage facilities far a trunk orcarload of household effectsPacking — ShippingLocal or long distance movingBUtlerfield 8-6711fiMJtThe giraffe can see far ahead, buteven he cannot see into the future.Wise people, who take a longview, choose a SUN LIFEinsurance policy. Call me todayand we can talk it over together.SUN LIFE ASSURANCECOMPANY OF CANADARalph J.Wood, Jr.,'481 N. LaSalleChicago 2,IllinoisFR 2-2390GA 2-5273L54-volume great booksnow in secondprintingThe Great Books of the Western World, published by theEncyclopaedia Britannica in collaboration with the Universityof Chicago, has gone into its second printing. The 54-volumework includes an introductory volume, The Great Conversa¬tion, by Robert Maynard Hutchins. The unique contributionof t iie set is the Syntopicon, Volumes 2 and 3, compiled underthe direction of Dr. MortimerJ. Adler, who was, at the timethe work was assembled, aprofessor of philosophy at theUniversity of Chicago.The Syntopicon, produced main¬ly by U of C students under Dr.Adler's supervision comprises an"idea index" through which it ispossible to trace 102 fundamental"Great Ideas” and their 2,987 sub¬ordinate topics through all thewritings in Volumes 4 to 54 of thesot. Over 400,000 man-hours ofwork were necessary to completethe job. Headquarters of the oper¬ation was the former fraternityhouse located at 923 E. 60th.In addition to boasting two ma¬jor contributions to the work, theJimmy9sSINCE 1940There's No Sale LikeWholesaleDear Student:Chances are, you love Cash¬mere Sweaters by Hinda andother famous brands.. . . Here's how you can save33 1/3% to 50%All Sizes — Colors — StylesBy Buying at Wholesale PricesCome toSamuel Marrow &Company(In tjie heart of theWholesale Market)Daily 9 to 5:34 Saturdays 9 to 3:303)8 W. Adorn* St. Suite 401 University of Chicago holds alarge portion of Britannica stock.(Thus UC collaboration on theproject is three fold.)The set itself encompasses 443works by 74 authors ... spanningWestern thought from Homerand the Bible to the 20th century.It totals 32,000 pages, comprising25,000.000 words. Editorial prep¬aration of the set occupied eightyears and cost $2,000,000. The setcontains whole works, not ex¬cerpts, and for 21 of the 74 au¬thors, all their wprks. It repre¬sents the only publication in Eng¬lish, or the only edition asidefrom rare or expensive printings,of key works by Aristotle, Hip¬pocrates, Galen, Euclid, Archi¬medes, Ptolemy, Copernicus, Gal¬ileo, Harvey, Descartes, Pascal,Newton, Montesquieu, Kant, La¬voisier, Fourier, Faraday andFreud.The second printing of thiswork is being distributed to 1600selected libraries throughout thecountry, by virtue of a grant fromthe Old Dominion foundation, es¬tablished in 1941 by Paul Mellon.Eve ExaminationsVisual TrainingODr Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372 pnoTO dy i*.n.iegarShown above is the newcommunity kitchen of Hitch¬cock hall. For 75 cents aquarter students may obtainthe use of the kitchen for"home-cooked'' meals.To holdconferenceTemple university, Philadel¬phia, will hold the tenth annualEastern Colleges Science confer¬ence April 6 and 7, 1956. Overfive hundred colleges and univer¬sities east of the Mississippi andin eastern Canada have been in¬vited to send delegates and stu¬dent speakers to the conference.Limited to undergraduates, theconference will include reportson research by students, tours ofindustrial and places of interestin the Philadelphia area, eminentspeakers, exhibits and social ac¬tivities. Papers will be deliveredon research in the fields of bi¬ology, chemistry, geology, math¬ematics, physics and psychology.Undergraduates who wish toparticipate should communicateeither with the head of theirscience department or directlyto the Eastern Colleges Scienceconference, PO Box 222, Templeuniversity, Philadelphia 22, Pa. After . . . photo by Kruegarhyde park theatrelake park at 53rd ^ NO 7 9071Student rate 50c all performancesStarting Friday, January 20ALEC GUINNESSin his latest comedy role . . . this time he's funny intechnicolor, as a worldly widowed sprig of the Britisharistocracy in a gay, sparkling sophisticated story ^of lovein Paris."TO PARIS WITH LOVE"_ and —ANNA MAGNANIAlready this year's top contender for Academy AwardBest Actress honors for her performance in the forth¬coming filmization of Tennessee William's "Rose Tattoo."Now appearing here in her first English-speaking role,her most recently released film — the work of greatdirector JEAN RENOIR.rrTHE GOLDEN COACH The Book NookBaoks, CardsRental Library1456 E. 53 Ml 3-7511 Folklore society interests manyby Bob March ,Flourishing with over 100 dues-paying members, the Folk¬lore Society is “pleased and dumbfounded” at the recentupsurge in interest that has brought folk music at UC to itsgreatest peak of popularity, hypothesls that theAs an example of the cun- “wjng Dings,” informal songous vitality of UC’s largest tests, “appeal to both the per¬sonal organization, their last in- forming musician and casual en-formal “Wing Ding” drew a rec- t” At these 8et fathers,, b . ... held four times a quarter in Idaord attendance despite a schedul- N0yeSj group and solo singing areing snafu that left even some of combined. Fifteen of the Society’sits officers unaware of the event members play some sort of in-until they noticed a calendar an- strument, and these perform sing-nouncement in the Maroon on the jn groups, or lead group sing-day for which the event was ingscheduled. Despite this lack of Folk music has long been a partpublicity 100 enthusiasts turned of the campus extracurriculum,oui,,at ,a , .' , but the first organization devotedThough unabie to explain the to folk music was Folk Union,Folkiore Society s recent snow- formed in 1950. This organizationballing, President Bob Stein of- pjace<j a heavy emphasis on per¬forming musicians, w h i c h itNICKY’SPIZZERIA & RESTAURANT1235 E. 55 NO 7-9063Barbecue Ribs - Chicken - Ravioli • SpaghettiFree delivery to V, of C. students •On any orderQuick Courteous Service — 6 Days a WeekClosed MondaysTable Service Delivery Service11 A.M. to 2 A.M. 11 A.M. to 2 A.M.Open till 3 AM. on Friday and Saturday “loaned” to other organizationsfor their social functions, andthus its active membership wasnever large. Folklore Society wasformed in 1953 to provide an or¬ganization with a broader mem¬bership.Though rarely noticed by theplanners of UC’s “integrated’*social program, campus interestin folk music has extended to thepoint of becoming the principalsource of funds for the two cam¬pus political parties.The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236photo by KruegarBefore . . .January 20, 1956are now cooking with gas'Most residents of Hitchcock hall are cookingtheir own meals these days in an attractive com¬munity kitchen located in the basement of themale dormitory.For 75 cents per quarter, a student living inHitchcock may obtain use of the kitchen at anyhour of the day, plus locker and refrigerator space.The purchase last summer of four thousand dol¬lars’ worth of gas ranges, refrigerators, lockers,tables and chairs was financed by income from theHitchcock fund, as was five thousand dollars’labor costs. v ,Channing Lushbough, resident head of Hitch¬cock, noted that the project could not have been completed without the wholehearted support ofRobert M. Strozier, dean of students; Arthur H.Kiendl, last year’s director of student housing;W. Allen Austill, present director of student hous¬ing; William B. Harrell, vice president in chargeof business affairs; Weston L. Krogman, businessmanager of campus operations; Miss Lylas Kay,director of residence halls and commons; andW. R. Zellner, superintendent of buildings andgrounds.Culinary skill among the students is surprisinglyhigh, according to Barney Berlin, secretary of thedormitory, which may account for the ease withwhich female guests are lured thither on week-Page $Hitchcock hall residents luckyTHE CHICACO MAROON January 20. 1956“IPLUS 40 COLUMBIA Hi-Fi PhonographsFOR THE SO COLLEGE STUDENTS WHOWRITE THE BEST NAMES FORVICEROY’S PURE, WHITE, NATURAL FILTER!I10 Winners! 10 Thunderbirds! win a fuiiy 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 “360’K.—insteering, radio, white side walls. Act now and win! beautiful Mahogany!Plus 10 RCA Victor 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!It contains no cotton, no paper, no charcoal, noasbestos, no foreign substance of any kind!Instead, it is made from pure cellulose—a soft,snow-white, natural material found io 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!Name this amazing filter and win! It’s easy! 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 amazing 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 backsof two (2) Viceroy packages. 3 Contest open to all students attending colleges and universitiesin the U.S.A.4 Contest closes midnight, January-31, 1956. Entries judged by TheReuben H. Donnelley Corporation on the basis of aptness ofthought, originality and interest.IS 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 cjipCIGARETTESKING-SIZEENTRY BLANKS available at Reynolds club desk, Ida Hoyes hall, University Bookstore, and Tropical NutJanuary 20, 1956 Page 7SRP sponsors Braden, O'Connor;speak on civil liberties TuesdayCarl Braden, who faces 15 years in a Kentucky jail becausehe purchased a house in a “white neighborhood” and sold itto a Negro family, will discuss his case Tuesday at 8 p.m. inJudd hall, under the sponsorship of SRP. Harvey O’Connor,author and chairman of theEmergency Civil LibertiesCommittee, will introduce Bradenand comment upon the implica¬tions of his case for civil libertiesand desegregation.Braden had allowed a house tohe bought in his name for AndrewWade IV, an electrical contractor,in a “white neighborhood.” Afterthe Wades moved in they were be¬sieged by rioters. Four monthslater Braden, his wife and otherswere indicted for sedition againstthe Commonwealth of Kentucky,lie was found guilty and sen¬tenced to 15 years. The AmericanCivil Liberties Union is handlinghis appeal.Admission to the meeting free, although a collection will betaken.Iranian to speakon Middle Eastat Int. houseisTell of Czech cardNew Year cards were receivedby both the Maroon and the Stu¬dent Government from the Inter¬national Union of Students inPrague, Czechoslovakia.The card read as follows: "TheIntemotionol Union of Studentswishes you a Happy New Year.May 1956 bring ever increasingcooperation and unity among thestudents of the world." “The Middle East and thenorthern tier of defense” willbe discussed by A. Kessel,Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. in theassembly hall of Internationalhouse. Admission is 50 cents.Kessel, a student from Iranwho is working on his PhD inplanning, worked for an oil com¬pany in Iran, and worked for theAmerican armed forces duringthe war. His area of special in¬terest is the economic develop¬ment of underdeveloped areas,with special emphasis on the Mid¬dle East.The northern tier defense, orig¬inally Secretary Dulles’ idea, isa pact between Turkey, Iraq, Iran,Pakistan, and Britain. Kessel dis¬agrees with Dulles on social, eco¬nomic, and political grounds. Presenting anti-discrimination petitions to Mayor Daley (center) are UC students <1. to r.) Naomi Reynolds,Sam Greenlee, Roy Huddleson, Diane Pollock, and Bob MacDonald. In the rear are aldermen Leonard Despresand William Harvey, one of the co-authors of a bill which would make discrimination in Chicago hospitals illegoLDaley talks to UC delegation“I’ve stated my position without equivocation; I’m in complete accord with the peoplewho signed these petitions,” Mayor Richard Daley told a delegation from the UC Committeeto End Discrimination in Chicago Hospitals.The petition presented Daley in his office M onday urges him to take action in support ofthe passage of the Harvey Campbell Ordinance, which would make discrimination in theChicago hospitals illegal.A Campus-to-Career Case History“One open door after another"“That’s how I feel about the telephonecompany,” says Walter D. Walker,B.E.E., University of Minnesota, *51.“When I joined the company I felt thatI could go in any direction. And that’sthe way it’s been.“For the first six months I was givenon-the-job training in the fundamentalsof the telephone business—how lines areput up and equipment installed. Learn¬ing those fundamentals has really paidoff for me. District Plant Engineer’s Office. ThereI made field studies of proposed con¬struction projects and drew up plans toguide the construction crews. This com¬bination of inside and outside workgave me invaluable experience.“Then I had the opportunity to go tothe Bell Laboratories in New Jersey.I worked on memory crystals—ferro¬electric crystals—for use in digital com¬puters. I learned how important researchis to the telephone business.“After two years I came back to Min¬nesota, to St. Cloud, to work in the “In July, 1955,1 came to Minneapolisas an Engineer in the Exchange PlantExtension Engineer’s Office. We do fore¬casting—not of the weather, but of fu¬ture service needs. Using estimates ofgrowth and economic studies, we makeour plans for the years ahead. We fig¬ure out where and when new facilitieswill be needed to meet future growth.“All this has been preparing me fora real future. You see, the telephonecompany is expanding by leaps andbounds. That’s why it offers a youngman so many open doors.”Wally Walker’s career Is with Northwestern BellTelephone Company. Similar career opportunitiesexist in other Bell Telephone Companies, and inBell Telephone Laboratories, Western Electric andSandia Corporation. Your placement officer hasmore information regarding Bell System companies. BELLTELEPHONESYSTEM Despres told the UC group thatthey have “done more than getsignatures.” "You’ve actually ad¬vanced interest in the ordinance,”he said.Both Despres and Campbellagreed that “We’re not runninginto much opposition now.” Des¬pres, referring to considerationsof “high political strategy,” pre¬dicted that the ordinance willprobably not be brought beforethe council for a vote until Juneor July. “And if the administra¬tion is for it, it will pass,” he said.Mayor Daley asked that his“unalterable support and assist¬ance in ending all phases of dis¬crimination be conveyed to the UCstudent body.” Vaccine release,distribution toldby local doctorACECYCLE SHOPYour Bicycle’leadquartersWe service what we sellRepairs & Parts ail makes819 E. 55 MI 3-26729 A.M. - .6 P.M. Release and distribution of theSalk polio vaccine will be dis¬cussed by Doctor Herbert Ratner,director of the Oak Park healthdepartment, Sunday at 4:30 p.m.in De Sales house.Ratner, speaking on “The ethicsof the Salk polio vaccine pro¬gram,” was a member of the com¬mittee on liberal arts at UC in1937-38, and at that time made aspecial study of the materials tobe used- in the natural sciences 2The discussion is sponsored, ad¬mission-free, by the Calvert club.Unitarian—what?SEEstory of Speedwriting shorthandDecemberREADER’S DIGEST Channing club members willmeet this Sunday evening at theFirst Unitarian church to discussthe topic, “Are you a Unitarian?What is it?”Students themselves will dis¬cuss the topic, and the club urgesany interested persons to attendthe meeting. Discussion will be¬gin at eight and will be followedlater in the evening by refresh¬ments.SHORTHANDIN 6 WEEKSukM/iOu^n, Books Bought• Any Subject• Any Language• Any QuantityClark & ClarkHYde Park 3-03211204 E. 55th St.120 WORDS PM MINUTSFamous ABC system. Now taught inover 400 cities. New day & Eveningclasses start each Monday. Attendfirst class as GUEST. Special SummerClasses for College Students ALSOthorough, intensive SPEEDTYPINGcourse. Use coupon to send for 16-oage brochure.SPEEDWRITING SCHOOL37 S. Wabash Financial 6-5471I Speedwriting School ,| 37 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago 3, III. i■ Please send me without obligation IJ your 16-page brochure on Speed- •I writing. ■I N»sr/.ij \ddress_I ^lty_ Zone_A g Phones«■■■ Midwest premier!Personal appearance!UC Prof. Appearsin Soviet FilmSee Professor D. Gole Johnson ofIhe University of Chicago in theSoviet feature-length color docu¬mentary "American Farmers in theUSSR". Also sports spectacle "Rus¬sian Holiday."Starts: FRIDAY, JAN. 20First night only: ot 8:15 Prof.Johnson will discuss his 10,000mile tour of the Soviet Union.Tickets ot Students Service CenterCINEMA ANNEX3210 W. MadisonFree ParkingStudents 50c_Page 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON January 20, 1956Coming events at UC | Book on academic freedomis hard-hitting, convincingFriday, January 20Le cercle francais, “Le festival de mnsl-que d'Aix-en-Provence," Prof. BernardWeinberg, 4 p.m.. Ida Noyes library.Walgreen lecture, "The electorate andthe power process,” by Prof. KarlLoewensteln, Amherst college, 4:30p.m.. Social Science 122.Mathematical biology meeting. *‘A sta¬tistical approach to some problems Inblood-tissue exchange,” 4:30 p.m.,5741 Drexel.Lutheran students supper and discus¬sion. 6 p.m.. Chapel house.Concert band meeting, 7 p.m., Ida Noysseast lounge.Docfilin: Variety, first of study series InGerman film, admission by $1.25 seriesticket only, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m.. SocialSciences 122.Utile! sabbath service, 7:45 p.m., andfireside at S:30, with Prof. Ralph Mar¬cus speaking on "Life’s meaning andEcclesiastes, 5715 Woodlawn.Friday frolic, 8 p.m., Internationalhouse.VC Concert band, winter concert, 8:30p.m., Mandel hall.Hitchcock open house, 9 p.m.Saturday, January 21Varsity track Olympic developmentmeet, 1:30 p.m.. Field house.Inter-club ball, Sherry hotel, members„ and their Invited guests only.Radio broadcast, “The sacred note,”WBBM, 10:15 p.m., music by Rocke¬feller chapel choir.Sunday, January 22Episcopal communion service, 8:30 pm,Bond chapel.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10, 11 a m ,DeSales house.Lutheran communion service, 10 a m..Hilton chapel.Clinics religions service, 10 a m., Bill¬ings 0-4.Concert and coffee hour, 10-12 a.m..International house.Radio broadcast, “New World," WMAQ,10:35 a.m.UniverMty religious service. Dean JohnB. Thompson preaching, II a.m..Rockefeller chapel.Orientation board, 3 p.m., Ida Noyeseast lounge.MAROON staff meeting, 4 p.m.. IdaNoves—3rd floor, apply now for mem¬bership to pack staff for spring elec¬tions. ^Baptist student fellowship. Prof. SidneyE. Mead speaking on “Religious free¬dom as American experiment," andsupper (25 cents), 4901 Ellis.Intervarsity Christian fellowship ves¬pers. 4:15 p.m., Ida Noyes.Voutig Socialist league symposium,Russia today. Its class nature," 4:15p.m.. Ida Noyes.Calvert club, "Ethics of Salk polio vac¬cine progarm,” Dr. Herbert Ratner,4:30 p.m., DeSales house.Canterbury association informal din¬ner 150 cents) 6 p.m., 5540 Woodlawn.Porter fellowship supper and discus¬sion on "Biblical interpretation of thenature of man,” with Assoc, prof.J. Coert Rylaarsdam of FTF, 6 p.m.,Swift commons.Disciples student fellowship supper anddiscussion, 6:30 p.m., Disciples church,57th and University.R-J movie: Don Quixote. 7 and 9:30p.m., Judson lounge, 25 cents. ISL caucus, 7:30 p.m . Ida Noyes eastlounge, with Sanford Band, Demo¬cratic candidate for Illinois legisla¬ture, speaking at 9.Channing club discussion. "Are you aUnitarian? What Is It?" 8 p.m., 1174E. 57th.UC Musical society, concert by memberswith works of Stravinsky. Beethoven,Milhaud, Leo Treltler, 8:15 p.m., IdaNoyes hall.Monday, January 23Hillel Hebrew discussion group,p.m., 5715 Woodlawn.Students for Stevenson meeting,p.m„ Ida Noyes library.Nes^nJesintTresttedluin “Bibiicai “"tud!^ and independent scholarship, whether by student or teacher.invited, 4 p.m.. Swift commons.Walgreen lecture, "Power controls—I:s?eeinCO4n30Up.mOnsocial sc°cncLe° i22.n‘ philosophy at Columbia university, has written a convincing analysis of the present threatsPhysiology seminar, "Use of stains In ACADEMIC FREEDOM IN OUR TIME, by Robert Maclver, Columbia UniversityPress, 1955, $4.It is evident that in recent years — the past decade — there have been gross violations12:90 of academic freedom* the firing of teachers for their political views, suppression of student3 30newspapers, and a general climate in the schools and universities hardly conducive to freeid independent scholarship, whether by student or teacher.In Academic Freedom in Our Time, Robert Maclver, a professor emeritus of politicalelectron microscopy,” 4:30 p.m., Ab- to academic freedom. His bookInternational house movie: Grand Illu- & a Study prepared for thesion (French), 7 and 9 p.m., 40 cents. American academic freedom proj-Alden - Tuthill lecture. Implications Pnlumhis nnivprsitv TT'w’Ofrom the study of theological educa- ec* al CDlumDia university, iwution in America." Prof. h. Richard books, Maclver s on the contempoNelbuhr of Tale U.. 8 p.m.. Disciples rary status of academic freedom,and The Development of Aca¬demic Freedom in the UnitedStates, by two members of theColumbia history department,church, 57th and University.Political science association, “US for¬eign policy In Germany," Prof. KarlLoewensteln. Amherst college, 8 p.m.,Social Science 201, all interested In¬vited.Renaissance society lecture, "Italian art ... ,since futurism,” Asst. prof. Joshua were written for the project.c. Taylor. 8:30 p.m.. Breasted^ Maclver believes that the rela-Tuesday, January 24 tively small role faculty membersintervarsity Christian fellowship lunch- play in the overall direction andeon, 12:30 p.m., Ida Noyes hall. .!• - ... - .Metals institute colloquium, "Theories Setting Of policies Of educationof liquid helium: survey of the pres- institutions, the appallinglv smallent position,” 4:1a p.m., RI 211. , - , . _,ftf lecture. Germany and Israel,” by numbers of professional educa-Eric Lueth. German journalist, 4:30 tors Who sit upon boards of trust-Psychology club lecture, “Some recon- tn6 V6ry institution 01 trust*sideratioii6 of the two factor theory.” ees, the lack of communicationp.m.. Swift 106. between faculty anci trustees nilSenior mathematics club. “Algebraic lead either directly or indirectlygrouDS,” 4:30 p.m., Eckhart 206. . . • , , . :review staff meeting, 5 p.m., Reynolds to abridgements of academic.club 302-304.Dot-film: The Magnificent Ambersons,7:15 and 9:15 p.m., Social Science 122,40 cents.Alden - Tuthill lecture. "Implicationsfrom the project ‘Social science intheological education’,” 8 p.m., Dis¬ciples church, 57th and University.Hillel lecture, ‘'Conterrmorary Thom-ism,” by Prof. Yves Simon, 8 p.m.,5715 Woodlawn.Chemistry lecture. “Chemistry In in¬dustry,” W. J. Soarks, director, chemi- Referring to the types of or¬ganizations that frequently at¬tempt to influence the policies ofacademic administrators Maclverstates: such as communism or ‘statism.’ ’*Concerning the Congressionalinvestigators Maclver has this tosay:"The report of the Senate inter¬nal security subcommittee, en¬titled Subversive Influences in theeducational process, justifies itsinvestigations of colleges and uni¬versities on grounds that we finduntenable. ‘Our purpose,’ saidSenator Jenner, ‘is to protect andsafeguard academic freedom.’ Al¬most in the next breath he de¬clares ‘there can be no academicfreedom until this Soviet conspir¬acy hidden in our schools and col¬leges is exposed to light.’ . . . Wehold this statement to be a totalmisrepresentation of the facts.We specifically deny that the situ¬ation in our colleges and universi¬ties constitutes a national danger.We specifically deny that in theseinstitutions ‘academic freedom isunder attack by a monstrousgrowth no individual or commu¬nity of scholars can fight alone.’“. . . Vocal minorities seek toparade under the banner of great* There is no scintilla of evidencecauses. One of their favorite de- that the policies or programs ofvices for the advancement of own any of our institutions of higherKlstri06ftrch’ Ess° bompany- 8 pm > interests, is to wield some big learning have been influenced or‘moral’ bludgeon . . . Thus, for ex- are in danger of being influencedample, certain groups which dis- by communist educators."FTS wives meeting. Prof. Sidney E.Mead, “Development of Protestantismin America," 8 p.m., 5757 Woodlawn.Canterbury association talk on “Theorder of confirmation,” 8 p.m., 5540Woodlawn.Madrigal singers meeting, 8 p.m., IdaNoyes library.SRP lecture, Carl Braden will discusshis case, 8 p.m., Judd 126.Jazz club. 8 p.m., Ida Noyes hall.Young Socialist league, "Socialism inAsian,” 8:30 p.m., Ida Noyes. like academic freedom because itpermits some professors to in¬dulge in academic ‘heresies’ clothetheir objections in the robes of‘iwtriotisin’ and ‘Americanism’and proclaiming that they arewarding off some grave menaceFor rent Two students of Spanish desire tutorproficient In the conversational aspectsof the langutyge. RE 1-0482.Part-time teacher and/or director. SouthSide nursery school. Good salary. SA1-4207.One 1 - room, one 2 - room furnishedapartment for rent. Close to UC campusand IC. For one person. 6023 Kenwood.BU 8-9424.Dormitory rooms for men. $75 per quar¬ter. Kitchen facilities, linen, library-lounge. FA 4-2077. DE 2-5833, ext. 49.Mrs. Deaderlck.All conveniences and privacy of 'home. UC vicinity. MI 3-9604.Will exchange free room for 3 nightsweekly baby sitting. Female only. DR3-6467. Wanted These quotations should notlead the reader to think thatMaclver’s book is of the natureof a long editorial. Maclver’sconclusions come only afterscholarly analyses of the con¬trast between the stated pur¬poses of the political ‘‘inquisi¬tors” and what occurred at in¬stitutions that took the safercourse of bowing to legislativecommittees.In particular he cites the out¬rageous charges by the TenneyFrench tutoring, Friday after 5 p.m., committee in California, whichSaturday and Sunday. Native college lp/4 -fhe humiliating lovaltvinstructor. Translations. Box 125, Mt. ”, . */; !! f *Carroll, Illinois. Monday to Thursday, oaths the instituting of contactthe campuses of theServicesTeacher desire, one-room apartment,Playable LUTE urgently needed forforthcoming University Theatre produc¬tion of Machlavelli’s MANDRAGOLA.Call University Theatre, Ext. 1062.Tenors . . . tenors . . . tenors for thenewly formed madrigal group. MeetsTuesday evenings In Ida Noyes at 8„Members must be able to sight sing. Need help moving? Call "Prime Movers."Special student rates. Call evenings.PL 2-6412 or HY 3-1356.French tutoring, coaching and transla¬tions. Native teacher. Reasonable. NO7-2722.For saleThree-room furnished apartment toshare with girl student. Near campusand IC. Plano. Call PL 2-9479 after 9:30p.m. H. Silver.Help wantedTake part as subject In an electro-encephalographic study. One or two 2-3Hour sessions, $1.25 hour. Institute for Larry: You’re nuts! Have you looked at typewrlter’ nle- 5732 Maryland,Personal Selling out 150 uncalled suits, top¬coats and tuxedos. $17-.50. White tuxedocoats, $9.50. Sizes 35-50. Famous brands.Open evenings till 7 p.m., Sunday 10-2 pies of Courageous action on thep.m. Abbott Clothing Company, 4086Broadway, corner Belle Plalne men onUniversity of California to inves¬tigate communist activities.Not all efforts to suppress freethought have been successful,Maclver notes. He finds the op¬position to the activities of StateSenator Broyles of Illinois by theUniversity of Chicago and Roose¬velt university, exemplary exam- of making a distinction between“party” communist and intellec¬tual Marxist or a person withother left-wing beliefs. He be¬lieves that denial of employ¬ment to “party” communists isnot an abridgement of academicfreedom; however, if a commu¬nist is already on the facultyand has tenure, and his aca¬demic performance is satisfac¬tory, removal might be unwi /■.Maclver knows and states anumber of times throughout hisbook that those who would attackacademic freedom often make nodistinction between communist,"fellow traveler,” “new-dealer,” orjust plain liberal. Would not abetter measuring-stick be j u s tplain academic competence? Afterall, who h£s yet cited evidencethat any “indoctrination” bv sus¬pect instructor has occurred? Ofcourse, we have forgotten Wil¬liam Buckley who found a fewKeynsians and suspected atheistspoisoning the minds of impres¬sionable youth at Yale.It should be noted that Mac¬lver is not primarily concerned,and rightly so, with the rightsof communists, per se, rather heshows how attempting to sun-press the few communist edu¬cators are really attempts tosuppress independent and !il»-eral thinkers who may cme<fionthe acts of various politiciansor other groups.Incidentally, Maclver empha¬sizes that no students should heexpelled for their political beliefs,and likewise they should have theright to hear speakers of all po¬litical views and affiliations.It is noteworthy that thisbook was written before thewidespread repudiation of Me-Carthyism. Although publishedlast year and the latest data andreferences cited are from 1953,the book Is timely, and instruc¬tive for 1956.Academic Freedom in Our Timeshould be required reading for allpersons in the education commu¬nity, faculty and students, as wellas administrators and trustees,—Richard E. WardDishes, books, pictures, parlor set, bedmattress, dressers, buffet, rugs, stove.Juvenile research laboratory. 907 S. Wol¬cott ave. Call Dr. Darrow, SEeley 8-4070lor appointment.Diet aid. Billings hospital needs womanwith high school education to supervisetray service and tally food orders frommenus. Other varied duties, some publiccontact. Apply Personnel office, 956 E.58th.Editorial typist to type manuscripts InUniversity associated lab. Must havegood typing speed. Will use electrictypewriter but experience on this ma¬chine not required. Hours, 8-4:30. Goodopening for girl who expects to be InChicago minimum of one year. Must beUS citizen. Salary $275-$300 dependingUpon- qualifications. BU 8-6625, Ext. 64. him lately? Mommy.Nemo: Watch out for weapon. VentonJ. G.Mossless: The madrigal singers needtenors. If you came back even youcould get In. Otherwise they look verygood. A wayward alligator.Bunny: Had lunch with Vicky today.How do you think she’d look on amotorcycle?Have learned to play "Song from MoulinRouge” on the concertina. What aboutmid-semesters? Love, thfc corpse in thecoffin.Kfnt: Thanks, will use soon. — S. part of educational institutions.A lengthy portion of AcademicFreedom in Our Time deals withthe rights of communists in theHi-Fi: fm-am tuner, amplifier and academic community, and as Mac-preamp. Cheap. NO 7-2635, Iver h;mself noteg h jg perhaps1951 Plymouth, 4-door, good running disproportionately long.condition, clean. $375. Call ES 5-2086 or .pl 2-5303. Maclver belalxxirs the point RELIANCE CAMERA APHOTO SUPPLIES1517 East 63rd St.BU S-6040JO BANKScrentire photography1420 E. 55th MU 4-7988NSA Discount “finjotr Our Fine Continental Cuisine inRelaxed Air Conditioned Atmosphere**CONTINENTAL GOURMET RESTAURANTOpen Daily (except Mondays) from 4:30 - 10:00Doily (except Mondays)Sundays — 12 Noon1508 E. 57th Street from 4:30 -• 10 P.M.Phone PLnzn 2-9355t®4t®.m'usevg/TERRY’S PIZZA“The World’s Best”FREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSSMALL 1.00MEDIUM 1.45 LARGE 1.95GIANT 2.95We also carry a full line of Italian foods1518 E. 63ri Ml 3-4045 Ya PaysYer Money and Takes Yer Chance!on ourBIG CLOCK SALE!Prices start at $1.00 at 8:00 a.m. Monday, January 23, andreduce five cents every hour 'till closing time.One day onlyTuesday all remaining sale books go for 59 cents each. Waitif you want, but you may lose the book you want if you do.Come early and join the rush.University of Chicago Bookstore 5AVENUESJanuary 20, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 9'8:30? preview successfulA studio performance of “Tonight at 8:30”, a group of selections from well-known plays,was presented last Saturday night by University Theater. The show moved quickly andeasily and, with few exceptions, the individual selections were well performed.Most of the actors seemed to know their characters thoroughly, and succeeded in get¬ting their interpretation across to the audience. Doc Film German seriesfeatures pre-war filmsVariety, starring Emil Jannings, commences the series ofGerman films to be presented by Doc Film in Social ScienceNed Gaylin, who played the husband in The Fourposter, Waiting for Lefty, and the Italian 122 for four consecutive Friday evenings, 7:15-9:15 p.m.. be¬ginning January 20. ~ rr; 7~7 ttb, Jeanne Ney, tell of the socialThese pre-Hitler films have chaos of Europe in the twenties,been selected for their techni- Greta Garbo plays the part of acal excellence and their reflection nightclub singer in The JojJessof Naziism in its growing stages. Street, a moving study of therdis-Emil Jannings plays the part of a integration of the middle class intrapeze artist in Variety, a sordid Vienna, during an era of inflationstory of murder and love intrigue, and political bankruptcy.It seemed to the twenties that The Love of Jeanne Ney, adapt-fruit seller in the Rose Tattoo,was unaffected and convinc¬ing in all his roles. His perform¬ance was strengthened by theactresses who played oppositehim; Maggie Nash, as the endear¬ing wife in The Fourposter, Ches- seemed awkward and contrived.She semed to be trying to bemoving around to create someaction in a part that called fornone.Unlike the rest of the program,. . . _ , Dream Girl failed because of poorsy Plesofsky, who played Lefty s acting and direction. Althoughwife with warmth and forceful- their lines were interesting, the formed in an obvious, superfi¬cial manner that destroyed theappeal of the play. Dean Heim-bach played the husband witha rigid awareness of the audi¬ence, and Alice Bronstein wasboring and repetitious in hercharacterization of the wife.. . . — — The technical aspects of theness, and Nora Buch, who played actors seemd to be unsure of their show ran smoothly. Lighting was for the first time a completely ed from the novel by the Sdvietthe sentimental lady m Hose characters and tired of the dia- managed so as to give a sensTattoo simply and effectively. —Uurie Richardson played asoliliquy from Member of the with bits of witty dialogue. simply as possible to allow the not only their actions but also desperate attempt to swing theactors to move around freely. All their thoughts. public to the political left. AVnis-these succeeded in sustaining the Two others in the series The sion to the series is by a seriesquickness and force created by Joyless Street and The Love of ticket only, The cost is $1.25.most of the actors.Frederic HirschWedding with a convincing girl¬ishness, but her movements logue. They appeared to be con- continuity from one number to sonal lives of the characters, fol- similar subject. This last film oftriving a thin and superficial plot the next. Settings were made as lowed their movements to reveal the series, Kuhle Wampe, was awith bits of witty dialogue.Ping-Pong, the only one-actplay on the program, was per-Concert band in Mandel tonight;first time indoors in 14 yearsTonight at 8:30 the UC Concert Band will present in Mandelhall its first indoor concert in 14 years in an attempt to reviveinterest in band music on campus. Admission is free and with¬out ticket.The Concert band was first Martha Schlamme to singin SRP's folk concertMartha Schlamme, an internationally known folk artistposer on the 200th anniversary of who sings in more than a dozen languages, will give a concertUC radio programhonors Mozart“The Stature of Mozart,” ananalysis of the music of the com-oro-anizod in 1898 bv William now has 50 members, it has also his birth’ win be the topic of the of songs from many lands sponsored by the Student ReprePalnev Harrw»r firct nrpeirW acquired a professional conduc- World” radio program at 10:35 sentative Party on Saturday evening, February 4, in Mandel,Rr th7SSv il’TSi <or Louis Lason. Mr. Lason is »•>»■ 'CST| Sunday, January 22, hall. The Student Service cen- - „ . „of the i niversity. In 1922 UC u known in the citv high over NBCs network show “Moni- for in Revnolrik rliih basement On her later tour of the Unitedacquired 100 instruments, among Kno" £is wo_k C“£hftif£ tor.” States and Canada Miss Schlarrvthem Big Bertha, tire largest bass caiumet High school bTnd T^e Participants will be Rudolph S) ™ was received with much ac-rn,n r^oonW01™’ d°nated by Concert band hopes to regain the Ganz< professor of piano, Roose- $ A ” ’ * . claim *>? *>°th audiences and1ITr viTT.noi prestige and popularity which it velt university; Irving Sablosky, A native of Vienna, Miss critics, who praised her “projectuc naa a real concert band lor ha(J ag gasman's Million Dollar music crtiic, Chicago Daily News; Schlamme escaped from persecu- tion and gift for conjuring up thee first time in 1928; by 1929 it kan<j. and Knox C. Hill, associate pro- tion by the Nazis to England, characters of the people she sangthewas going full swing under the ~ . fessor of humanities in the col- where she became a featured about” and her “intelligent re¬direction of Palmer Clark. In 1934' *or ,5* w » **. lege. Edward W. Rosenheim, Jr., guest soloist for the BBC and a spect for differing musicalHoward W. Mort, now executive gympho" y ln Bminor,1therc ' m assistant professor of humanities, renowned guest artist at the PJay- styles,” her vocal sweetness anddirector of the Alumni associa- “Unfinished*’ Schubert will be moderator. ers theatre in London. her grace.tion, became director of the band. «. .J8t movement—Allegro moderateIn 1935, Harold Bachman took * March—Seventeen Come Sundaythe baton. After that the band IntermeH^-My Bonny Boy• j ..t-. i_ , March—Folk songs from Somersetwas recognized as “Bachmans Mannin Veen (tone poem) woodMillion Dollar band.” Circa 1939 intermissionthe band declined and gradually Ck^om.?hSn?hts'*.:Rogers^6"faded away until it was reorgan- Hammersteinizod by Roland Finston, a college And.™™Student, in 1953. Solo: J. Longstreet, M. Esselstrom,UC students heard the band in j. Valentinoan outdoor performance during Biue“d;.V;.V.V.V.V.brundSder the direction of Bill Kaplan, Marches :. Sousa the Woolley scholarship program. Four awards are offered through the board of governorsa graduate student, and Leiand FMrMt0of°the Fair of the United States house, Cite universitaire, Paris. Closing date for application is Febru-smith, facuity sponsor. Since then Wav, ^rsFugd St-!Pes. *!"*?*. Erickson aryl, 1956.tie an as ou in size, i Aima Mater Lewis & Evans Applications for Woolley scholarships should be addressed to the Institute of Internet ion-Awards for study of art9music in Paris availableFour American graduate students will study art or music in Paris during 1956-57 under'Tonight7 made publicThe production of University Theatre’s Drama Workshopwhich was presented before an invitational audience last Sat¬urday night, “Tonight at 8:30,” will be open to the public theweekends of January 27 and 28, and February 3 and 4.The show featuring sevens< ones from famous plays was au(yence criticism, some scenesstaged in the intimate Reynolds win b<? cut, others re-rehearsed,Club Theater. For the public show¬ing, UTi annopnged reduced ratesof fifty cents for all admissions.Producer Marvin Phillips said and some left intact.Members of Student Govern¬ment requested that the scenefrom Waiting for Lefty be pre-that the purpose of presenting a sented before incoming new stu-preview performance was to in- dents at activities night in Febru-vite audience reaction. The audi- ary. Scenes from The Rose Tat-enee was asked to remain after too, The Fourposter, Member ofthe performance and chat with the Wedding and others will bethe actors and directors. Student presented before the public, start-director Eddie Simmons said the ing Friday, Jan. 27.| International House Movies j| Assembly hall, Moil. & Thnrs. evening at 8 p.m. |Monday, Jon. 23 — 45c — Grand Illusion (French) i= Thursday, Jan. 26 — 35c — O'Henry's Full House (American) =siiiiiiiimiiiiiniiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitimiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiitiHiiiiimimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiM al Education, 1 E. 67th st., New York 21.Applicants should be un¬married, under 35; shouldhave graduated with highacademic standing from an Amer¬ican college, university or profes¬sional school of recognized stand¬ing by the date of departure(preference given to mature stu¬dent’s previous graduate study).They must have a good workingknowledge of French, capacity forstudy on the graduate level, ar¬tistic or musical accomplishments,good moral character, personalityand adaptability, and good health.The Woolley fellowships carrya stipend of $1,000 each, to cover Allan Frumkin to speakat first of art lecturesA showing of original lithographs and woodcuts will be afeature of a lecture, “Alienation in art: Max Beckman,” byAllan Frumkin, Chicago art dealer, at 7 p.m. Sunday in theFrank Lloyd Wright house, 58th and Woodlawn.The program is one of a series of lectures and discussionson “Alienation in contemporary life” sponsored by the Meth¬odist Student fellowship.Beckman, a German ex¬room, board and tuition fees, painter, a leader in the revoltGrantees should have funds topay their own travel, althoughtheir applications can be consid¬ered for Fulbright travel grants.Appointees will live at theUnited States house of the CiteUniversitaire, the internationalstudent settlement in. Paris. Theyw’ill study at the Beaux Arts, atthe Conservatoire Nationale, or,in special case, will receive pri¬vate instruction. theological insights displayed InBeckman’s art. Frumkin has oneof the largest collection of orig¬inal Beckman prints in this coun¬try.The lecture will be open to thepublic, and those interested areasked to note the change of loca¬tion from Chapel house to theFrank Lloyd Wright house. The< 1 * SPECIAL SHOWINCSALTOF THEEARTHSUNDAY. JANUARY 22Showing of 2 P.M. and 4 P.M.SHOTWELL HALL55th St. and BlackstoneDonotion $1Auspices: American Socialist Forum TheDisc1367 E. 57th St.•Recordof the weekKurt Weill's ;Three Penny OperaEnglish with Lotte LenyaMGM 3121 3.19In against “iron rule” Bismarckismin German politics and social life.Before his recent death, he wasartist in residence at Washingtonuniversity in St. Louis.Frumkin is expected to discussthe psychological, sociological andUC prof in USSRshown in filmA talk by D. Gale Johnson,professor in the department ofeconomics and a member of the jAmerican agricultural delegation OUCTt tO StllClCtXtSto the.USSR, will be featured at xrprogram will be precededfellowship supper at 6. by aUT workshop forstage-mindedthe Cinema Annex theater, 3210West Madison, tonight.Johnson’s talk will preceed theshowing of the Soviet produceddocumentary film: AmericanFanner in the USSR. The film de¬picts the activities of the twelveAmerican farm experts W'ho tour¬ed 10,000 miles in the Soviet Unionlast summer.Johnson will speak at 8:15 p.m.between showings of the film.The film will run at the CinemaAnnex at least through Jan. 26.(Johnson speaks only the first University Theater will run aweek day workshop class startingthis quarter, that will be open toall UC students interested in thetheater, The class, under the di¬rection of William Zavis, winoffer training in acting tech¬niques, covering such subjects ascharacterization, vocal interpreta¬tion, movement on stage, and soforth.Classes are being held at 3:30on Thursday afternoon in thetheater on the third floor of Rey¬nolds club. There is no charge fornight.) Reduced-rate student tick- the class. Further informationets may be bought at the student may be obtained by calling theservice center, Reynolds club University theater office in thabasement Reynolds club.f«9« 10 THE CHICACO MAROON January 20, 1950UC scientist showstrick kills virusesi Viruses can be “fooled” into accepting a chemical thatblocks their reproduction, a UC microbiologist reported tothe Atlanta meeting of the American Association for the Ad¬vancement of Science recently,In a survey of research doneOn the food requirements ofViruses - those tiniest of living or¬ganisms that are responsible forfnany diseases such as the com¬mon eold, polio, and influenza—James V. Moulder, associate pro¬fessor of microbiology, discussedthe anti-metabolites, the chemi¬cals that “fool" the viruses.I Anti-metabolites are chemicalCompounds so similar to otherCompounds the viruses need fortheir development that the anti-metabolites are taken up into theVirus. As a result, the latter areno longer able to increase in num¬bers.In these experiments, the anti¬metabolites are first introduced into the host cell, where the virusobtains them.Among other chemicals theviruses require to increase innumber are those that are used inbuilding the proteins in nuclei ofordinary cells. These nucleopro-teins contain the same chemicalbuilding blocks found in the cellsof the host cells the viruses de¬stroy.All viruses have been found tocontain these nucleoproteins. Inaddition, many viruses containfatty chemicals. The viruses ofinfluenza require the large sugarmolecules called polysaccharides,and some other viruses have beenfound to contain vitamins or met¬als such as copper. Report says radiationbad for general healthThe importance of bacterial infections as a cause of death in experimental animals fol¬lowing exposure to certain type of radiations was discussed by a University of Chicago phy¬sician December 28.Speaking before the Atlanta meeting of the American Association for the Advancementof Science, Dr. C. Phillip Mil¬ler, professor of medicine,ascribed these infections to theanimal’s inability to destroy bac¬teria in its blood stream afterexposure to radiations similar tosome of those discharged duringnuclear explosions.Treatment with antibiotics pre¬vented infections from develop¬ing and reduced the mortalityamong white mice used in theseinvestigations.Animals like white mice be¬come susceptible to bacterial in¬fection after irradiation because of the damage to the cells andtissues which normally protectagainst disease - producing bac¬teria.After irradiations, the whiteblood cells are sharply reducedand the lymph nodes becomesmaller and less effective in trap¬ping bacteria.For a time, certain cells in theliver and spleen are able to re¬move bacteria from the blood butafter a few days, they too showthe effects of radiation injuryand are unable to keep the bloodfree from bacteria. When this happens, bacteria accumulate inthe blood where they multiplyand cause death.Adequate treatment with anti¬biotics can prevent generalizedinfection from developing andgive the animal time to recoverfrom the damage caused by irradi¬ation, provided the amount of hsradiation has not been excessive.Following exposure to veryhigh doses of irradiation, infec¬tion plays a less important roleas a cause of death because theblood-forming organs have beenpermanently disabled.NEWFlIF-TOF ftOXFirm to keepcigarettes fromorushing.No tobaceo inyour pocket. Thank a new recipe for the man-size flavor.It comes full through the Alter with an easy draw,Thank the Flip-Top Box for the neatest cigarette packageyou ever put in your pocket or purse. Popular filter price.THE NEW FILTER CIGARETTE FROM PHILIP MORRIS i i(MAM IN RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, FROM A NSW FtttUP MORAN RCOff)January 20, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 11climbs like a’56 Chevrolet! STUDENTWIVESWORK ON CAMPUSSee Your Chevrolet Dealer apply VOWPersonnel Office956 E. 58fh St.The Personnel Office has awide variety of full-timeclerical and technical posi¬tions that are open. We aresure there is one that willinterest you.WE NEEDSecretariesStenographersTypistsBookkeepersClerksClinical TechniciansResearch Technicians(including)Medical ChemistsHematologistsHistologistsBacteriologistsBENEFITS INCLUDE3 weeks' paid vacation2 weeks' sick leaveTuition remissionLibrary and recreationalprivilegesEver level off a mountain withyour foot? Nothing to it. Just pointthis new ’56 Chevy uphill and easedown on the gas.Up you go with a quiet (hy¬draulic-hushed valve lifters now inall engines—V8 or 6) rush of power.This is the car, you know, thatbroke the Pikes Peak record. Thecar that conquered towering gradesand vicious switchback turns toprove its superior performance,handling ease and comerirg ability.These are built-in qualities thatmean more driving pleasure andsafety for you. Chevrolet also offerssuch safety features as seat belts,with or without shoulder harness,and instrument panel padding asextra-cost options.There are 19 new Chevrolets—all with Body by FisRer. Drop inand drive one.Wrestlers,fencers win Maroons end losing streak.Last Saturday saw four sporting events taking place in ■ ' fLast Saturday saw four sporting events taking place inBartlett gym, with mixed results for the Maroons of thosesports.The wrestlers started at one o’clock against Marquette, andwere defeated by 24 to 8. Fiveof Chicago’s points came when Pinned his opponent in the heavy-Marquette forfeited in the 130 lb. we‘£t ^vision.The fencers started at threeclass, Chicago having forfeited in O.clock and won close victoriesthe 123 lb. division. The only win from Northwestern and Indianalor Chicago came when Dave by identical 14-13 scores. The Ma-Abelson won on points in the 137- roons won the foils in both match-lb. division. es, split the sabers, beating Indi-In an evening match, the hardy ana but losing to Northwestern,wrestlers took the duke from the and losing the epees both times.Milwaukee extension of the Uni- Co-captains Fain and Levine wonversily of Wisconsin, 30 to 7. No 11 of 12 foils matches for Chicago,less than 15 points were won by At four o’clock, the gymnaststhe Maroons by forfeit, and five opened a meet with both Minne-more by a default. Abelson again sota and Northwestern. Minne-won by decision, and George sota beat Chicago 80-31, whileBaumrucker tied in the 147-lb. Northwestern edged -the Maroonsclass. To close the meet, Mehrens 61-51.Mathews drowns Coulterin deep sea of waterSpring came early to the B-J courts last Monday, asMathews house vanquished Coulter in a five hour water battle.The affair started when six newly initiated members of theEsoteric club crossed over from the girls dorms and decidedto wolf-whistle on the Midway. Im- vanquish UIC by 75-51The Chicago varsity basketball team out-shot, out-rebounded, and generally out-playedthe University of Illinois at Chicago, to win a 75-71 victory at the Field house Wednesdayevening. The Maroons took a small early lead from UIC, better known as Navy Pier (be¬cause of their location), and held it all the way.The first half saw both teams match baskets pretty evenly until near the end of the firsthalf, when an alert Maroon offense passed the ball in for some easy baskets. Passing aiidball-handling by the Maroonswere improved in this game, ^IC defense with ease. The after next when they meet the„ . • , _ . Maroons kept it up to win by 26which saw Chicago play more p0jnts, a win that broke a three-possession basketball with less game losing streak. Coach Nor-wild passes. At the half Chicago gren used only seven players, in¬dicative of the Maroons’ lack ofreserve strength.had a solid 32-24 lead.Bill Lester, a little off on hisshooting earlier, began to hit forthe Maroons in the second half,but a rally by UIC brought thelead down to 46-41, midway inthe third quarter. Possibly in¬spired by spirited cheering in thestands, mostly by the UniversityHigh basketball squad, the Ma- Many changes have taken placein the team’s personnel sinceChristmas. Chisholm, Mart, andHenderson are no longer withthe team. To make up for this, Chicago (75)Dave Smith, a law student, andDick Mason have joined thesquad. Dick Rowland is in action alumni in a game which will beheld at the Field house in theafternoon.Bill Lester and Dave Smithwere high for the Maroons with23 and 22 points, respectively,while Stammerjahn got 20 forthe opponents.The box score:UIC (51)GRowland,! 5Smith.! 10Watkins, c 5Mason ,c 0Lester,g 9Greer,g ' 130 15 75 Canforti.fHenry,!Stmmrjhn.!Kelley,!Rotman.oSchmidt ,gCuthbertji19 1^51mediately, 50-odd members of thetwo houses sprang into action.Leaping out the first floor win¬dows, Couter house convinced thegirls that their house was the bestfor a small party, and escortedthe girls into the courts.At this, the members of Math¬ews house attacked Coulter inforce, waste baskets being usedas water guns, and within anhour the entire first floor of Coul¬ter house looked like Lake Mich¬igan. About a half hour later, Coulter made a surprise attackon Mathews, doing little damagebut enraging the members of thefirst floor of Mathews. Unfortu¬nately Stu Tolley, house directorof Mathews broke up the fight atthis point.Nevertheless a few hardy mem¬bers of Mathews awoke early inthe morning, and unwilling to letCoulter have the last laugh, theycompletely submerged Coulter’slounge in water while the mightyCoulter men cowed in their beds. roons jumped out to a command- against after an injury took himing 65-45 lead. UIC shooting and out of several games.'passing was ineffectual, while The varsity basketballers don’tChicago drove through the sieve- play again until the SaturdayFailure of football makesfuture of class doubtfulThe failure of football to be reinstated as an intercollegiate sport has no direct bearingon the future of the football class which appeared on campus this fall. This was indicatedwhen Dean Strozier said in response to this question that if there were enough studentinterest in the class (i.e. actual participants) then he could see no reason why the classshould be curtailed. ;x However, indirectly the de- short lived football class. LastcisiOn not to reintroduce inter- fall's atmosphere seemed to in-collegiate football may have dicate a return of the sport, andspelled the death knell for the that induced the athletic depart-Nothingwithout wings ment to set up the class and moststudents to enroll in it. Even then,the class had only 35 students whoshowed up regularly for practice.With no prospect of a footballteam in sight, interest in the classwill certainly drop even lower.If so, football will be as dead asever on the campus, and studentsinterested in watching or playingthe game can be referred to theChicago Bears.ACO MAROON January 20, 19561erousMothers, your daughters still go — some of them — through certain half-deserted, dim- a Center for the Study of the Christian World Mission, do-ly lighted streets to various muttering retreats, but they’ve at least been trying to get signed to serve as an “intelligence service” for the Protestantthe streets better lit. Now, that effort seems doomed to temporary failure, according to missionary enterprise, will be established here in the near fu-, much the tow's delay or the »*• b-v t ,c ^versify s Federated Theolog.cal faculty.‘ Plans tor me corner were r : *»*“7- ■_ . , announced recently by F^F ml®slormry strategy and tactics.''liscovered: when the city car- Dean Jerald Brauer and R. Pierce , ,The Cfenter is expected to focusr :—~ r—~~ Beaver, professor of missions, ,lts attention on these areas ofof the city are serviced by the who jg lQ be director of the Cen. study: the nature and purpose ofcurrent construction program ter. It will be fully opened this tho Christian mission ftfujludingThis area should he thankful fall, using space in Swift hall. theological and Biblical basest,for what it has. one may infer Arising out of an increasingly a”aly®Jf of tJ?e Past ana currentfelt need by missionary organiza- situation, ttiiafirstanding the tui¬tions and concerned individuals tures and religions of the conn*for an independent, long-range concerned ith a particularstudy center, the new' program in^e)est in the indigenizafion ofJohnson, requesting a lightingsurvey in the area 55th to 59th from the letter. “Many neighbor-streets. Cottage Grove to the lake, hoods in the city of Chicago haveSuch a survey would be pre- no street lights of any kind ”liminary to constitution of new Q^hers have defective poles which will include research, communica- hristianity, and formulation oflights.^ ^ require impnediate replacement of tlons and training. ", „ & ofStand and wait the worn out systems, and those Christian scholars and leaders missions. vThe commissioner replied in a • of still other neighborhoods must from overseas win be invited to ' ■ 'Its ''program If 'chninllulcationletter,--part of which was pub-' be, given priority because of «• os© the facilities here. It Is «. thn^b-pr-lished in the Hyde Park Herald, eessive Maintenance costs, peetod that PhD and post-doctoral sonal contacts, publications, eon-stating- that the..fifth ward will *4Within the availability of students will be trained as profes- ferenees and workshops. It is alsohave to wait until other areas funds,” the commissioner’s letter sors of missions and as research hoped to provide opportunities forconcluded, “we will consider the scholars to work all over the exchange of information among'agj&FX *3831 installation of an iMproved street world. Thebe will be a permanent scholars all over the ?world.lighting, system between 55th and wtaff of five persons' White %M .CteMljH f§W jqftt lie59th streets.” The need for a new look at mis* attached to any national‘or Inter*- The need for such a new system sions is made imperative, the com* national church bodies, it will>was illustrated on Thursday of mittee planning for the Center work closely srith wHl' .last week by a blackout over a feels, by t h e rapidly .changing not serve as a general training in-« V ' large part of this area. Every world situation and the growth of stirufe for missionaries but vTillvjj& eiraoi lamp was out on Black* younger churches overseas which devote its effdffsr uSf, tMipecfalstone, Dorchester. and,Uni\%r- calls for “a radical revision of funckjons mefttiohed khove.sity avenues and on 5?tn streetfrom KiMbark to Lake Park Bythe next night these were all on.f (Incidentally, while engaged inresearch, this reporter observedno acts of violence, lurkers-in-bushes or werewolves of any spe-cies. This is not to suggest thatthe existence of such is therebycalled into doubt; The incidenceof crime in this area has been de-creasing in recent years, accord-ing to police statistics, and demon*ry is reputed to have left thepopular mind s o me centuriesback.) ’Meanwhile, the girls are fend-ing for themselves in semi-dark*ness until the authorities see fitlHUBjl ^ to give more light.In conclusion, it must be men-tioned that this situation is notwithout significance for the sociallMk-ljihistorian. After all, it was not so, §Mm long ago that lack of luminationHP > - 'iik-41. »y in the vicinity of a girls’ dorMi-Mmd>z , mKtBb tory u Icicd a caa*. ''M lamity—at least by the inMatesthemselves. But then that was inthe good old days of yore whensocial disorganization and juve¬nile delinquency were only termsin sociology books and Kinseywas just the name on the labelof the whiskey bottle that some¬body else left on the church stepsearly Sunday morning,* Edwin Muir, British poet, critic, and translator, will givethe 196th William Vaughn Moody public lecture 8:30 p.m.Wednesday in Mandel hall.Muir, Warden of Newbattle Abbey college, Scotland, and this yearCharles Eliot Norton, professor of poetry, Harvard university, willapeak on ”A view of poetry,” and present a reading of his poems.His publications include poetry: Collected Poems 1921-1951, FirstPoems, Variations on a Time Theme, and Chorus of the Newly Dead;fiction: The Marionette, The Three Brothers and Poor Tom; literaryCriticism and history: The Structure of the Novel; Scott and Scotland,and Essays on Literature and Society. photo by BystrynA UC student peers warily through the dark and gloom of Universityavenue as she approaches her dormitory. There is little hope lor morelight in the near future.• MSMESS IttMMCE i; ALL LINES OF INSURANCE J► Phone or Writ# *| Joseph H. Aaron, '27 j► 135 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-1060* FREE RESEARCH AIDIf you are doing research on thrSoviet I moil (or are just in ter-e.N-d . use i h< h« Ip avail »b!e at t lioffires and library of the ChicagoCouncil of Ameriran-Soviet Friend¬ship Suite 40J IN'* W. Madison S\3-1877. AN 3-1878. Open'9-5, Monday-Saturday. 0 * '* ;*vB 0 R D O N €Movers and Light HaulingVI 6-9832A CASA Book Store*’A deticious French comedy—Fer-nondei is o joy throughout"N.r. HERALD TRIP, ^FERNAISDELtm * Jflifhifnl "lum Jr funr" 'Jr , J§ Scholarly Used Books — Bought and SoldImported Greeting Cardsf Reliable Typewriter ServiceHY 3-9651 1322 E. 55th StTHE SHEEPHAS 5 LEGS')PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 COMO PIZZERIA1520 E. 55 FA 4-5525Free Delivery fo U.C. 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