MSA asks UCfor lower rentsA petition asking the UC administration for lower rentsand cooperatively managed housing is to be drafted this after¬noon by members of the Married Students association.Sam Venturella, chairman of the MSA, said that a petitionwhich was written by the grouplast week, upon notice that Dud- the jurisdiction of the businessley field tenants would be evicted office to that of the dean of stu-and would be rehoused m *50 to <jents. Upon discovering that the_ .. ■ , dean of students does not control$90 a month University owned the residence hails but that stu-apartments, has been taken out dent housing is also in the handsof circulation. of the business office, the groupThe first petition had requested determined to draft new petitions,that the seven apartment build- “We would still be in the sameings in which the students were position of dealing with the busi-to be housed be transferred from ness office,” Venturella said.Allport to talk oniConquest of bigotry?A leading theorist in the fields of personality and socialpsychology, Gordon W. Allport, will discuss “The conquestof bigotry” at 8 p.m. Thursday in Mandel hall.Allport, professor of social relations at Harvard university,was among the first psychologists to tackle the study of racialprejudice systematically. He is generally accredited with theformation of many of thej « classical concepts of socialEnter candidates psychology.frir kilacc UC* As a scholar and historian ofIWTT IVI !▼ personality theory. Allport pub-iwishl# lished one of the first Americandeadline ivionday works dealing with personality.Elimination judging of condi- He has conveniently been classeddates for the UC queen contest among “trait” theorists, usingfor Wash Prom is Monday, 3:30 cross - categories of behavioralp.m. in Ida Noyes. All recognized traits to describe individual per-student organizations are asked sonality.to enter their candidates, any un- Among Allport’s works are Per-married girl who is a registered sonality, The Psychology of Ru-student at UC, by noon of that mor, and Becoming. He receivedMonday. In the first judging, all his doctorate from Harvard in Tenants decide to formcommittee for negotiationsA decision to form a committee of tenants for direct negotiation with the University au¬thorities in regard to the recently-served eviction notices on 98 Hyde Park residents wasreached at an “informal conference” Saturday in fifth ward alderman Leon M. Despres'office.This alternative was chosenin preference to one of simplyremaining in the apartments,forcing the University to bringsuit, and then hoping for a grantof one to six months’ delay by thecourt.Alderman Despres himselfagreed to write a letter to theUniversity asking for reconsideration of their ac¬tion, particularly in view of a number of hardshipcases for whom moving will be extremely difficult.The Saturday conference was first announcedas a “protest meeting” by anonymously-writtennotices, which were later contradicted by a state¬ment of Alderman Despres’ hurriedly posted Fri¬day night. Despres stated that there was no pro¬test meeting, but that he had made an appointmentfor an “informal conference” with a few individ¬uals.The Saturday meeting was attended by 20 ten¬ants, mostly women, whose spokesman was Mrs.Marceline Blair, 5547 Ingleside. University canvasses evicteesUniversity authorities reported Sunday that interviewers, includingCharles R. Gibson, manager of the University's community and realestate office, were visiting the 98 tenants who are to be evicted, todetermine if there are hardship cases who will need special assistancein relocating. By Thursday night 48 had been seen and there was“no great picture of distress."In expressing resentment at the University’s ac¬tion, various individuals fsee page 2) emphasizedthe length of time they had lived in Hyde Parkand the difficulties of relocating in this or othercommunities on such short notice, especially forthose who have to work in the daytime, who havechildren, or are invalided.In explaining the situation, Despres made thepoint that the University of Chicago has two sidesor “personalities": the academic one which hascontributed greatly in scientific discoveries andother ways to society, and then the business andproperty side.TortfircatsdJenttfi excc iUtur t *144 cfucaao11 laroonUniversity of Chicago, Tuesday, January 24, 1956 <*—-Sj'TyJ 3 1but five to seven candidates willbe eliminated.Final selection of Miss UC willbe by an all-campus vote Febru¬ary 16 and 17, the Thursday and 1922 and has taught psychologyat Dartmouth. He is a past presi¬dent of the American Psychologi¬cal association.All port is being sponsored atFriday of the week before the UC by two groups: the Alden-Tut-dance. One voting booth will be hill lecture series, which is a partplaced in Mandel corridor; the of Chicago Theological seminary’sother will “rove” through busy annual Ministers’ week; and thesections of the campus. Hiram W. Thomas lecture series. Autocratic, constitutional statesdefined by Walgreen lecturerby Oliver LeeThe basic distinction between the autocratic and the constitutional state was the majorpoint of the first three Walgreen lectures being given by Karl Lowenstein, professor ofpolitical science and jurisprudence at Amherst college.A state is autocratic, Lowenstein explained, when power is concentrated in a single powerholder, whether this be a per-Zolpe crowned l-C kingEdward Zolpe, Delta Sig¬ma’s candidate, was crownedby Mrs. Robert M. Strozier,at Saturday’s Interclub ball.About 100 club women and theirdates danced to the music of A1Ford and his band at the annualaffair, crowding the Sky room ofthe Sherry hotel. “I guess this isthe moment you’ve all been wait¬ing for,” Inter - Club presidentBrina Jaffee effused just beforethe announcement of the King,chosen by Mary Alice Newman,Mrs. Strozier and Aaron Sayvetzfrom the five candidates.photo by BystrynMrs. Robert M. Stroaiercrowns Edward Zolpe “King ofthe Interclub ball.” son, a committee, a party, or tive, legislative, and judicial pow-a class; a constitutional state is ers, a functional distinction be-characterized by the sharing of tween policy decision, policy exe-power among several independent cution, and policy control,power holders. Applying this “tripartism” toThis classification, based on the the constitutional state, Loewen-interaction and interplay of pow- stein listed five different patternser holders, Loewenstein deemed 0 f government and illustratedto be more appropriate than the them with descriptions of the gov-classifications of Aristotle, Mach- ernments most- typical of theseiavelli, Montesquieu, and others, patterns. The five patterns were:all of which were based on the direct democracy (Athens); as-purely numerical distinction be- sembly government (the Francetween the power holders in, for of 1793); parliamentarismexample, a monarchy, an aristoc- (France and Britain, where theracy, and a democracy. preponderance of power lies re-Loewenstein pointed out that spec lively in the assembly and inalthough the distinction between the cabinet); “presidentialism”autocracy and constitutionalism (U. S. A.>; and the Swiss directo-looks easy on paper, in concrete ry system (found, oddly enough,cases it becomes difficult to dis- in Switzerland),cem. For, he said, ever since theFrench revolution, all autocracieshave had to camouflage their dic¬tatorial nature with a pseudo-democratic veneer by borrowingsuch institutions as parliaments,elections, written constitutions,etc.Another innovation made byLoewenstein was a new’ “tripart¬ism” involving, instead of theusual classification of the execu- Concerts feteMozart 200Comps discussed at undergrad assembly_ . . - ... 4-1by Adrienne KincaidDiscussion of comprehen-sives, student - instructor re¬lations, spring tension and“universal” tests constitutedthe fourth undergraduate assem¬bly held last Thursday.As a jumping-off point, facultymembers Maynard Krueger andJoseph Schwab expressed theirviews on the comprehensive examsystem. Both men saw virtues andvices in the comp system as itstands at present, and made sug¬gestions as to improving compswithout abolishing them. Most ofthe students Who participated inthe discussion from the floor evi¬ denced more interest in the sug¬gested improvements than in theexisting testing system.Most controversial of Krueger’sstatements was one to the effectthat UC examinations are tooclosely related to the course read¬ings; that they should cover arjentire field rather than a course.Slightly less comment-provokingwas his opinion that the annualspring tension at UC should bedone away with, by reducing theimportance of test grades in theminds of students, parents, andfaculty.Krueger proposed that one ofthe best features of the comp sys¬tem is the beneficial effect it has had on student-teacher relations—the lack of apple-polishing that re¬sults from objective marking. Hesuggested preserving staff re¬sponsibility for exam content andexpert post-exam analysis—pre¬sumably by test administrationeven if tests were to be universal¬ized.“Cumulative” rather than "com¬prehensive” exams were set forthby Schwab as the remedy for theevils of our testing system. This,he said, would spread the tensionthrough the whole year instead ofconcentrating it in the last weeksof May. After each quarter, thestudent would take a test that con¬ centrated in detail on the workof that quarter, with sectionsbased on relating these details toother details of previous study.Schwaz explained his positionby saying too many people at UCshowed a “passion for generalitiesand contempt for particulars.”One student responded to this bystating he had never heard any¬one from this University make abroad general statement in a pub¬lic discussion.As an expansion of the “cumu¬lative” test, someone suggestedtesting on a sequence, not on asingle course, thus combiningboth Krueger’s and Schwab’sprincipal propositions. Three all-Mozart concerts inhonor of the 200th anniversary ofthe composer’s birth are beinggiven this weekend. Two of theseconcerts are to be performed atOrchestra hall by the ChicagoSymphony orchestra under thedirection of Bruno Walter.Identical programs are plannedfor these concerts, to be heldThursday at 8:30 p.m. and Fridayat 2. Tickets to the matinee per¬formance are available at 65 centsthrough the special student dis¬count.The University concert Fridaynight at 8:30 will consist of an-all-Mozart program, performed bymembers of the Chicago Sym¬phony Orchestra, under the di¬rection of George Schick, the reg¬ular conductor of the symphony.Tickets for University concertsare available in the Concert of¬fice, 5802 Woodlawn Avenue (MI3-0800, ext. 1088). Tickets at* thebox office are available at $1 withID card.Page 2 • THE CHICAGO MAROONUC's act shocks tenantsby Ed BercknuuiThe “inhuman use of humanbeings” seems to be the basiccharge against the Universi¬ty’s business office by those ten¬ants on whom it served evictionnotices ten days ago.While individual reactions vary,the factors of long residence inand attachment to the Hyde Parkcommunity, special difficulties inrelocating of elderly people andthose with children, the prospectof paying higher rents in scat¬tered parts of the city, the workmany tenants have done to maketheir present apartments into“real homes,” and the abruptnessof the University’s action—thesecombine to cause feelings of re¬sentment in all tenants inter¬viewed, even those who are will¬ing to move without protest.“We don’t begrudge the Univer¬sity’s providing housing for theirmarried students,” stated RobertKauf of 5475 Greenwood, himselfa former UC married student,“but we wish they would have6hown a more sympathetic atti¬tude toward the problems andfeelings of Hyde Park residents.”“They can’t disrupt a commu¬nity when we’ve lived here 15 or20 years.” said Mrs. MarcelineBlair of 5547 Ingleside. She andothers reported that Hyde Parkmerchants also were “burned up”about the action.Mrs. Fred Glickman of 5551Ingleside, whose husband andchild are ill. felt that relocationwould be difficult.Like MaroonMany of the tenants had readFriday’s Maroon and were appre¬ciative of the views expressed inthe editorials. “I am happy to see 9 3 V I M UV\9\ 3-VAT'It's the University. You hove on oportment.'that the Maroon has a broaderoutlook than the “public bedamned’ attitude of formeryears,” one ex-student said.One tenant felt that a Univer¬sity official’s statement that “weemptied a building . . was anindication of the unhumanitarianattitude toward tenants who arenot just pawns to be shiftedaround on a housing chess board.A US alumnus who received anappeal to aid the University “inmeeting their obligations towardrebuilding the community” was quite taken aback by the originalbrusque eviction notice. He feltthat'their subsequent explanatoryletter and promises to help findnew apartments somewhat easedthe blow but by no means eradi¬cated the demoralizing effect ofthe first shock. \There was some hope thatChancellor Kimpton’s promised“rethinking” would result in analternate plan whereby marriedstudents could be placed and yetsome tenants would be allowedto stay.Jewish appeal starts todayToday the Combined JewishAppeal begins an emergencycampaign, in addition to itsannual fund drive. The emergencycampaign returns will be used forimmigrant-settling efforts of thestate of Israel; money for the campaign will be solicited alongwith the ordinary CJA gifts.Ordinary CJA funds go togroups like the United JewishAppeal, the'Hebrew university inJerusalem, and the National Com¬munity Relations advisory council.Classified advertisementsServicesFrench tutoring, coaching and trans¬lations. Native teacher. Reasonable. NO7-2722.Need help moving? Call “Prime Movers.”Special student rates. Call evenings, PL2-6412 or HY 3-1356.Lost and foundFour keys on a keychain lost early Sun¬day morning, January 22, on the Mid¬way between Dorchester and Woodlawn.If found, please return to box 647, Bur-ton-Judson, 1005 E. 60th.Man’s ring. Found near Botany pond.Call LI 8-4704 to identify.Personal For rent1 one - room, 1 two - room furnishedapartment for rent. Close to campus andIC. For one person. 6023 Kenwood. BU8-9424.Three - room furnished apartment toshare with girl student. Near campusand 1C. Piano. Call PL 2-9479 after9:30 p.m., H. Silver.For saleOne hundred and fifty uncalled suits,topcoats and tuxedoes, $17.50. Whitetuxedo coats, $9.50. Sizes 35-50. Famousbrands. Open evenings till 7 p.m. Sun¬day, 10-2 p.m. Abbott Clothing com¬pany, 4086 Broadway, corner BellePlaine.48 Chevy. $100 or less. 1156 E. 57th. PL 2-9815. The emergency campaign willmeet Israel’s acute refugee prob¬lem by aiding, for example, the45,000 immigrants who must leaveNorth Africa in the near future.Rubin Singer and Leibel Fein, co-chairmen of the PC drive, closeda meeting of student solicitors atHillel house one week ago by stat¬ing:“The needs of world Jewry, par¬ticularly those of Israeli andNorth African Jewry, are morepressing than ever . . . While ab¬sorbing this new influx of pov¬erty-stricken refugees, Israelmust increase her defense andsecurity budget to meet the chal¬lenge presented by the shipmentsof Soviet arms from Czechoslo¬vakia to Egypt.“We therefore call upon everystudent on this campus, Jew andnon-Jew alike, to help sustainthis tiny outpost of democracy inthe Middle East by contributingto the fullest extent possible tothe Combined Jewish Appeal.”Scratch: I see you through the openwindow. Please'close It. Joy.Scratch: I see you too, but you’re scar¬ing the children. Liza.Bunny: Diana and I are playing duets.Shari is getting a white Thunderbird forher birthday. Love, a Bobbsey Twin.Et tu, Mommy. D.Burt: You can smoke and burn at thePhi Sigma Delta Smoker tonight. 5625Woodlawn. R. G. THE TREASURE CHESTRE-SALE SHOPMid-Year Clearance Sale1536 E. 57thIn the Art ColonyNick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Ave.Ml 3-4226Student DiscountDelivery ServiceBooks Bought• Any Subject• Any Language• Any Quantity ValentineSpeciall2-8 x 10'sJ158 PROOFS SHOWNClark & ClarkHYde Park 3-03211204 E. 55th St. I January 24, 1956Issued every Tuesday and Friday throughout the school year and intermlttentlvduring the summer quarter, on a non-profit basis by the publisher, the ChicaenMaroon, at 1212 East 59th Street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Editorial officesMidway 3-0800, ext. 1003 and 3266; Business and advertising office, Midway 3-0801)’ext. 3265. Subscriptions by mail, $3 per year. Business office hours: 2 n m tn5 p.m., Monday through Saturday. F 0Co-editors-in-chiefJoy S. Burbach Palmer W. PinneyCOMPASS BIG BILL BR00NZYBlues Guitar5475 S. Lake Park Tonight, Tuesday, 8:30Bar Prices: Tues., Wed., Thurs.On Campos withWaxShulman(Author of "Barefoot Boy yvith, Check,” etc.)OH, FOR THE LIFE OF A NEWSPAPERMAN!Look at the campus newspaper you are now holding. An ordi¬nary object, you think? An everyday convenience? Somethingto be taken for granted?Faugh, sirs and madams! Faugh, I say! Don’t you knowwhat prodigies of skill and labor and organization and arl andscience go into the making of your campus newspaper?Come, I’ll show you. I’ll take you to a typical office of a typicalnewspaper on a typical campus.The editor—let’s call him D. Fermin Bohorquez, a typical enoughname—calls his staff together first thing in the morning. “Allright, you guys,” he says, lighting a Philip Morris, which, natu¬rally, is the favorite cigarette of newspapermen, and of anybodyelse who knows a hawk from a handsaw, "All right, you guys,”says D. Fermin, “this here ain’t no ladies whist society, thishere is a newspaper. So get out there and get the news. Get itfirst, get it quick, get it right! Ed, you cover the ag campus.Phil, you cover the school of mines. Wally, you cover home cc.Sam, you cover buildings and grounds. Ethel, you cover themen’s gym. ... All right, get going!”With many a laugh and cheer, the reporters light up PhilipMorrises, favorite cigarette of the young and agile, and dashaway on their assignments.D. Fermin retires to his office to smoke a Philip Morris andwrite a fearless editorial scolding the university for not buyingpatches for the worn-out elbows of the chess team.On the rim of the copy desk three rewrite men — Tensing,Hillary, and Laverne—sit poised and expectant, waiting for thereporters to phone in their stories. They smoke Philip Morris,favorite cigarette of the poised and expectant. Tensing’s phonerings first; it is Ed calling from the ag campus.“Stop the presses!” cries Ed. “Got a scoop! Hunrath T.Sigafoos, professor of curds and whey, has just sold his articleThe Romance of Butterfat to the Drovers and PoulterersMonthly.”On another phone Sam is calling from buildings and grounds.“Tear out the front page!” he cries. “Got an exclusive! Harold‘Pop’ Wishnograd, superintendent of buildings and grounds,today announced the purchase of a new doormat for the vestibuleof Burton Hall. The last doormat, it will be recalled, wras eatenby a pledge named Norman Harringay for his Chi Psi initiation.”Meanwhile, elsewhere in the city room, Ganglia Questover,vivacious and ubiquitous gossip columnist, sits smoking aPhilip Morris, favorite cigarette of the vivacious and ubiquitous,and typing out her chatty, informative tidbits: “MaureenValgerholtz, popular Theta, announced her engagement lastnight to Webster Scuff, Oliver Jenkins, Cosmo Erskine, andWalter Penn Dow’dy. Wedding dates have been set for June 9,June 24, July 5, and July 18 respectively. Good luck, Maureen!. . . Irving ‘Behemoth’ Anselm, popular fullback, blew out 120feet of esophagus yesterday while inflating a football. Good luck,Irving ‘Behemoth’!... Robin Kroveney, popular Deke last year,this year popular pfc. in the U. S. Army, writes friends that hehas been convicted of deserting his post and will be executedon April 28. Good luck, Robin!”And now, friends, we take our reluctant leave of the drama, theaction, the tension, the glamor, the churning, the seething, theroiling, the sturrn und drang of the wonderful world of journal¬ism. Aloha, journalism, aloha! ©m« shuiman. i#s«The makers of Philip Morris, who sponsor this column, have got someneves for you too. IPs today's new gentle Philip Morris in today'*bright new package of red, white, and gold.*THE CHICAGO MAROONJanuary 24, 1956 Page 3 '•Stevenson backers Forum’s nonsense debateform campus group ijivpq J//"* frntitpA Students for Adlai Stevenson club has been organized ^ ^ JLJ# C/txA Students for Adlai Stevenson club has been organizedon campus, and will hold its organizational meeting tomorrow,at 3:30 p.m. in the library of Ida Noyes. Temporary officerswill be elected at this meeting and a program of activities forthe year will be discussed.Professor Walter Johnson, chairman of the history depart¬ment, has agreed to serve as —r -—— :—:—: —faculty advisor for the group, f?ubs ”d «1'1,work closely with1, jj the national Stevenson for Presi-and will addiess the organiza- (lent headquarters located in Chi-tional meeting on Wednesday.Johnson served in 1952 as co-chairman of the draft Stevensoncommittee, and accompanied Mr.Stevenson on his round the worldtrip of 1953. Johnson, whose Wal¬green lectures dealing with thestory of the 1952 pre-conventionand convention struggle for theDemocratic nomination was pub¬lished in hook form last year un¬der the title How We DraftedAdlai Stevenson, will talk of Stev¬enson the man and of some of hispersonal experiences with the for¬mer Illinois governor.The group is an affiliate of thenational Students for Stevenson cago. It plans to be represented ata national convention of Studentsfor Stevenson which tentativelyhas been set for early spring.Soc 1 lecturenow in IdaThe social sciences I lecturescheduled for tomorrow will beheld in Ida Noyes Library. Itssubject is "Desegregation: canthe court get away with it?" Thespeaker will be Assistant Dean ofStudents Stephen Wood. The lec¬ture will take place at 2:30.Tell jazz meaningA jazz concert program called "The meaning of jazz,” will be pre¬sented at Mandel hall Saturday at 8:15 p.m. The proceeds of this con¬cert will go to the Cooperative nursery school scholarship fund, whichis co-sponsoring the concert with the Interclub council of UC.S. T. Hayakawa will trace the historical and sociological history ofJazz music, and Bob Scobey’s Frisco band will play. The vocalists willbe Clancey Hayes and Lizzie Miles, who enjoyed tremendous successthis fall at the "Blue Note.” ,Tickets are $1.25 including tax, and can be purchased in ReynoldHub, at the door, from the Cooperative nursery school scholarshipfund office at 5739 Maryland,/or at the Hyde Park Co-op. by Don MoClintockAn attempt by a pair of debat¬ers from Mathews house to makeStagg field a game preserve failedby a mere three votes last Thurs¬day, when the “gay girls fromGreen” managed to preserve thehallowed environs of h o m u samericanus footballus. The de¬bate, held in the South lounge ofthe Reynolds club, was the firstin a new program of intramuraldebating recently inaugurated bythe Student Forum.The "Mathews mob,” observinga long standing rule of Chicago-style debating which prohibits theuse of facts or valid logic, ex¬plored such widely divergentfields as field mice, the Dead seascrolls, and the atom bomb. The“gay girls” struck back via adhominum, and before the day wasout the intelligence, deportment,and parentage of the “Mathewsmob” had been called into ques¬tion. The severest blow to theaffirmative case however, camefrom the audience. "How canStagg field become a game pre¬serve when, even with a lot ofalumni support, it couldn’t pre¬serve a game?”Intramural debating will getinto full swing next week, aftera final meeting to work out sched¬ules and times. At the initial meet¬ing sixteen teams, including allof Group-C, most of the B-J One of the "Mathews mob' photo by Bystrynmakes his point.houses, the Business club, Univer¬sity Theatre, and a number of un¬attached teams signed up. “Thereis still plenty of time and room,”said the spokesman, “for any twopeople to join as a team.”“Both serious and humoroustopics will be debated, and theteam chosen by Forum membersas best able to handle debate,based on showings through thisquarter, will be sent to Ohio Stateuniversity to debate in the OSUunion. The expenses for the tripFraternities give smokers“Not only has a fair quantity turned out, but the people who turnedout seemed to be very interested in fraternities,” I-F Councilpresident Larry Sherman said after the first week of collegerushing. Official college rushing will continue through Friday ofthis week. Two smokers will be held each night.Men who will be 17 by the end of winter quarter and have a gradeaverage of 1.51 are eligible for rushing.All smokers begin at 7 p.m. and run until 10:30. Refreshments willbe served.Following is a schedule of remaining fraternity rushing smokers:Thursday, Psi Upsilon and KappaAlpha PslTuesday, Phi Sigma Delta and PhiGamma DeltaWednesday, Phi Kappa Psl and BetaTheta Phi Friday, Phi Delta Theta and DeltaUpsilon will be borne by the Forum, andsuch a debate is expected to drawan audience of several hundred atOSU.A meeting on Intramural debatewill be held today in the Forumoffice, Reynolds club 201, at 3:30p.m. Any two persons may enteras a team. No qualifications neces¬sary.Braden talksCarl Braden will speak on hiscase tonight at 8 p.m. in Juddhall under sponsorship of SRP.Braden was given a 15 year prisonterm and a $5000 fine after he andhis wife helped a Negro couple,Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Wade IV,buy a home in a Louisville sub¬urb where no Negroes had livedbefore.He was charged with trying tostir up race-violence and sen¬tenced under an old sedition law.He spent eight months in jailwhile his friends collected a $10,•000 bail.Admission to the meeting willbe free, but a collection will betaken for Braden’s defense.When classes are throughAnd your girl’s close to youHere’s a good thing to do—have a CAMEL!puirt f&aSMtlIt's a psychological fact:Pleasure helps your disposition.If you're a smoker, remember— more people get morepure pleasure from Camelsthan from any other cigarette!No other cigarette is sorich-tasting, yet so mild!*. J. feyaoM* IOimn Oe.. B»i •o. n .dV ^dcu/</&it cAattfe to2. SUPERIOR TASTEL&M’s superior taste comes from superior tobaccos— especially selected for filter smoking. Tobaccosthat are richer, tastier *. . and light and mild.F I LT E R SLIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCOEFFECTIVE FILTRATIONPage 4 January 24, 1956Coming events at UCTuesday, January 24Intervarsity Christian fellowship lunch¬eon, 12:30 p.m., Ida Noyes hall.Metals institute colloquium. “Theoriesof liquid helium: survey of the pres¬ent position,’* 4:15 p.m., RI 211.FTF lecture, “Germany and Israel," hyEric Lueth, German Journalist, 4r30p.m.. Social Science 122. -Psychology club lecture. “Some recon¬siderations of the two factor theory “Prof. O. H. Mowrer, U. of Illinois, 4:30p.m.. Swift 106.Senior mathematics club, “Algebraicgroups,” 4:30 p.m., Eckhart 206.REVIEW staff meeting. 5 p.m., ReynoMsciub 302-304.Docfilm: The Magnificent Ambersons,7:15 and 9.15 p.m., Social Science 122,40 cents.Alden - Tn thill lecture, "Implication*from the project ‘Social Science hitheological education',” 8 p.m.,- Dis¬ciples church, 57th and University.Hillel lecture, “Contemporary Thom-ism.” by Prof. Yves Simon, 8 p.m.,5715 Woodlawn.Chemistry lecture, “Chemistry in In¬dustry." W. J. Sparks, director, chemi¬cals research, Esso company, 8 p.m.,Kent 106.FTS wives meeting, Prof. Sidney E.Mead, “Development of Protestantismin America,” 8 p.m.. 5757 Woodlawn.Centerbury 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 InAsia,” 8:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.Wednesday, January 25Students for Adlai Stevenson, 3:30 p.m.,Ida Noyes library.Prc-med club meeting, Abbott 133, 3:30p.m.MAROON staff meeting, 4 p.m . IdaNoyes—3rd floor, editor-ln-chlef can¬didates are reminded to get busypacking the staff.Biochemistry - zoology seminar, “Someaspects of DNA metabolism followingradiation,” 4 p.m., Abbott 101.Walgreen lecture, “Power controls II:Intra- and inter-organ controls," Prof.Karl Loewenstein, Amherst college,4:30 p.m.. Social Science 122.Carillon recital, 4:30 p.m.. Rockefellerchapel.Scandinavian club meeting, T p.m., IdaNoyes hall.Glee clHb practice, 7:15 p.m , Rosen-wald 2.Graduate history club discussion withAssoc, prof. William H. McNeill on“The uses and abuses of universalhistory,” 7:30 p.m., Ida Noyes hall.Modern dance club, 7:30 p.m., Ida Noyeshail.Japanese study group, 7:30 p.m.. SocialSciences 108.Science fiction club meeting, 7:30 p.m.,Ida Noyes library.NAACP, 7:30 p.m.. Ida Noyes hallYoung Socialist league, 7:30 p m., IdaNoyes hall.Aldeh-Tuthill lecture. “Resources forthe profession of the ministry in man¬agement counseling.” 8 p.m.. Discipleschurch, 57th and University.Civil liberties league meeting, adoptionof basic principles, 8 p.m., Ida Noyeshall.Moody lecture, “A view of poetry,” byEdwin Muir. British poet and critic.8:30 p.m.. Mandel hail.Lecture, “The Middle East and thenorthern tier defense.” A Kessel. 8:30p.m.. presented by Internationalhouse. 50 cents.Fencers tomeet alumniThe varsity fencing team willtake on the alumni in a dual meetat Bartlett gym Saturday after¬noon. Alvan Hermanson, fencingcoach, has promised the alumniequipment and custom made fenc¬ing jackets (chest 32, waist 58).Doctors, surgeons, lawyers, andan ambulance will also be presentat the tournament, as precaution¬ary measures against any unfor¬tunate occurence. It is the hopeof the varsity fencing team thatall former team fencers enter inat least one bout and thus givethe boys the confidence, courageand victory they so gallantly willearn._ 0FFBEATe rqompresentsKEN N0RDINE— Star of 'Faces in the Window"— Narrator on the Hit Record"Shifting, Whispering Sands"Nordine will nitely• MC the Offbeat review• Answer requests for poetry• Read short suspense storiesBROADCAST ON NBC NETWORKEVERY TUESDAY—9:30-10:00“ * . AlsoBob Gibson Folk SingerThe FRED KAZ Trio'*yi Classical JazzShows lues, thru Sat. start 9:00 P.M.1037 W. GRANVILLE Thursday, January 26University Theatre workshop class, 3:30p.m.. Reynolds club theatre.Statistics seminar. “Some multivariatetests with a-priori information,"4 p.m., Eckhart 207.Committee for Mikva, 4 p.m., Ida Noye*hall.Slotin lecture, “The antiproton." byProf. Emilio Segre of U. of California,4:30 p.m., Eckhart 133.Microbiology club, “Studies on the pro-duetlon of Incomplete lnfluenaavirus," 4:30 p.m.. Rickets N 1.International house movie: O. Henry'sFull House, 7 and 9 p.m.Graduate library school club meeting,7:30 p.m., Ida Noyes east lounge.SSA club discussion. “Should socialworkers unionize." 7:30 p.m., Cobb 101.Intervarsity Christian fellowship Biblestudy. 7:30 p.m.. Ida Noyes.Alden-Tuthill and Thomas lecture. “Theconquest of bigotry," by Prof. GordonW. Allport of Harvard U., 8 p.m.. Man-del hall.SRP lecture, Carl Braden will discusshis case, 8 p.m., Judd 126.Dames club, 8 p.m., Ida Noyes.TYbro a d c a s t, “The humanities,"WTTW, channel 11, 9:30 p.m.Friday, January 27Walgreen lecture. “Power controls III:Federalism and fundamental rights.”Prof. Karl Loewenstein. Amherst col- Maroons winsecond in rouilege, 4:30 p.m.. Social Science 122.Mathematical Chicago’s varsity hoopstom ’downed George Williams cog!lege Friday night, 88-71, atthe latter’s floor. It was theond straight win for the Maroons’!and the second they have woqfrom George Williams in twomeetings. Chicago got off to a.small early lead, but George Wil.liams evened it up. After that. thaMaroons jumped into a 43 31 lead!at halftime, and were never head-ed again. Mitch Watkins scored *often on tip-ins under the basket,;,and wound up with 29 points for-the night. Jim Davis was high for\the opponents with 24 points. The:.;..Maroons used only seven men inthe game, of which six scoredpoints.The Maroons play Illinois Techat the latter’s floor Friday, and §play the Alumni in the Field®Any swimmer who happened to go by the Bartlett gym house Saturday afternoon at 3:30.The box score:'Frogmen' meet at poolbiology club, “Topology,information theory, and life,” Prof.Nicholas Rashevsky, 4:30 p.m., 5741Drexel.Docfilm: The Joyless Street, 7:15 and9:15 p.m.. Social Science 122, admis-Hnj°r sabbath5 service,011?1 - 45 p m., and swimming pool must have been surprised to see creaturespropifets/^ with prof.nKermCit Ebyd 5715 such as the ones shown in the picture above. The “creatures”woodlawn. happened to be members of the skindiving club, armed toMasaryk club. Prof. John Van Prohaska,“Recent advances In surgery,”" speak¬ing nontechnically with films, 8 p.m.,International house, refreshments.University concert, Mozart birthday pro¬gram with George Schick, pianist andconductor, and members of Chicagosymphony orchestra, 8:30 p.m., Mandelhall.Informal student-faculty tea open toeveryone. Ida Noyes east louz4 pun., Thursday. loungo. the teeth for the plunge into thedangerous waters of the pool.After the skindivers exhibitedtheir equipment to new members,they all saw a diving movie and made plans for future club activ¬ities, such as a trip to the FloridaKeyes, or an underwater expedi¬tion in the summer, perhaps afterburied treasure. Chicago (88) Geo. Williams (71G r p G ' St" .SRowland,! 4 4 3 Moss.f 2 I sSmith,f 5 10 1 Orossett.f 0 0 ’Watkins,c 13 3 3 Prater.f 5 l;Mason, c 0 1 2 Drake.! 0Lester.g 7 9 3 Davis.c 9 t> ■> • :Greer ,g 1 1 5 Bailey.g 8 > V.,"sJohnson.* 1 0 0;,Umbles.g 1 5Jones* 1 0 lBrown g 0 0 l .30 28 17 27 17 27 iYOUR BIG RED LETTER DAY1. SUPERIOR FILTEROnly L&M gives you the superiorfiltration of the Miracle Tip, thepurest tip that ever touched yourlips. It’s white ... all white . ..pure whitelO Liccrn & Myths Tobacco Co