cMSA demandscut-rate rentsby Ed BeckmanMarried students at Dudley field, whose prefab homes areto be demolished in June, are urging the University to pro¬vide housing for them at rents no higher than they are payingnow. A committee, formed to negotiate toward this end, willresume discussion with Dean of Students Robert M. Strozier University of Chicago, Tuesday, January 31, 1956today.Sam Venturella, MarriedStudents association presi¬dent, stated that this negotia¬tion will serve as a test case, aprecedent for further Universityaction in regard to married stu¬dents. All of the University’s pre¬fabs are to be tom down withintwo years. Approximately half ofall married students live in Uni¬versity housing.The MSA, at a meeting Thurs¬day night, appointed as its nego¬tiating committee John Andrews,Alfred Frowlie, Mrs. Ray A.Kunze and John Sonquist. Themeeting passed a resolution thatno individual will discuss reloca¬tion with the University until thecommittee has made some ar¬rangements with the University.In asking the administration toprovide apartments at rents equalto the amounts presently beingpaid, the students are hoping thata decision will be made by somehigh official in the administration to subsidize their housing.Demolition dates on other pre¬fab sites have not been madepublic yet.Meanwhile, the University iscarrying out its program of aid¬ing in the relocation of the HydePark tenants to be evicted, thepublic relations office announcedlast week.Out of the 99 families involved,only eight cases of real hardship—due to sickness or old age—were found. 18 families have al¬ready found other housing and 42others do not need help except forthe listings of real estate agentswhich the University’s Housing*office is offering all tenants.Five other tenants need someassistance because of special prob¬lems and four were described as“resistant.” There has been nocontact with a few. It was pointedout that many tenants may besuccessful in relocating now with¬out notifying the University.Women give mixer;ask men or go stagGolddiggers ball, a new undertaking in mixer-dances, is intendedto attract all the golddigging females on campus. The dance Friday,in Ida Noyes, is sponsored by several women’s organizations.Girls may ask fellows to attend the dance, or if they prefer, theymay come stag. To even things up a bit, all fellows are also encour¬aged to come stag. — * < VMusic will be furnished by Dick Gerwin and his band. An addedattraction will be Don Levine, well known to UC’ers for his im¬promptu pperettas, who will MC and provide entertainment.For the girl commuters, a slumber party is to be held after thedance at the CTS dorms. Sixty rooms in the CTS “Gold Crest” apart¬ments have been reserved for any girl who wishes to stay overnight.The rooms may be reserved at the student activities office in IdaNoyes for $2.Tickets to the dance, 50 cents per person, are available in the stu¬dent activities office and from members of sponsoring organizations.Profits will go to World University Service, whose 1956 drive is nowunder way at UC. Allport says bigotrydisease of characterby Janice PorterGordon W. Allport described bigotry as a pathology of character, an affliction of the totalbeing, in his lecture last Thursday evening. Allport, professor of social relations at Har¬vard university, is author of Personality, the Psychology of Rumor, and Becoming.The lecture was primarily a discussion of the relation of bigotry to religion. Pointingout that seeds of bigotry are inherent in religion, Allport specified three pillars of bigotryin the Catholic and the Protestant churches: 1) The doctrine of revelation that revealedtruth cannot be tampered people-were asked such questions to take cultural and sociologicalwith, 2) The doctrine of elec- as: Do you expect to derive bene- factors into account in his anal-tion the theory of the chosen fits throuSh prayer?, or: Is your ysis. He went on to point out the. .. .. membership in a church import- relevance of such considerationsgroup, and 3) theocracy-the com- ant to you as a means for estab_ in the study of bigotry. But big.bining of civil and ecclesiastical li.shing yourself in the commu- otry, he said, is an attempt on thepower and the resultant strength- /lity? Affirmative replies to these part of the individual to solve allening of religious precepts questions indicated a utilitarian of his problems. It is a style ofProtestantism has failed to ful- ',‘cw ‘owar,ds. reliSion- When liie, a form of mind, and as such.. then, the religion was serving not it may be diminished, altered, orfill its promise of freedom and as an end but as a means towards influenced by society, but it re-release from the narrowness of an end, it was seen that the re- mains an internal structure ofligion was not incompatible with personality,the prejudiced views of the indi- In closing, Allport discussed thevidual, stated Allport. ~ question “Can we conquer big-Allport referred to the criti- otry?” Looking at the past, andcism he has received from the examining the present, he wrasOrganized bigotry has worn a University of Chicago Journal of willing to give a “guarded affirm-legal mask. The victims of bigotry Sociology because of his failure ative answer.”are persecuted not for what theyare, but for breaking laws. All¬port said this shows that the mostcallous bigot feels guilt, whichcan be expiated through the sup¬port of legal sanction. He empha¬sized here the importance of legalmeasures in their role of leadingsociety away from prejudice. Forhim stateways are an importantmeans of changing folkways.Allport pointed out the correla¬tion between a utilitarian view ofreligion and bigotry. In a studyconducted by one of his students,Catholicism through personal sal¬vation, he added, for in the end.its members are expected to cometo the accepted answers.Display activitiesat midyear showAbout 50 student organizations are expected to participatein midyear activities night, to be held Thursday at 7:30 p.m,in Ida Noyes.The night, traditionally held to acquaint entering midyearstudents with campus extra-curricular activities, is now alsobeing planned as an all-campus affair, according to PaulGlatzer, chairman of the SGAlumni play basketball with varsity;cheer possible return of footballby Bob HalaszA couple of humorous basketball games and some heated halftime talk dominated the alumni basketball affair Saturdayafternoon, played at the Fieldhouse. Fans had plenty of fun watching the real old-timers beat the varsity, 7-0, and thevarsity edge the more recent alumni, 53 - 50. At half-time ex-Chancellor Hutchins and Chancellor Kimpton were sharplyscored, as Pat Page, class of ’10, urged a UC athletic revival.The incident that gave rise to these statements was the presentation of some certificates to the UC athletic departmentby the Helms athletic foundation at half-time. Helms maint ains a hall in Southern California which is to amateur athleticswhat the Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y., is for professional basketball. The University received a certificate for the-famed basketball team of 1908.John Schlommer, who starred in athletics from 1906-09 here, received a certificate for being placed in the Helms founda¬tion. T. Nelson Metcalf, chairman of the athletic department, accepted the team certificate and commented to the applauseof the crowd: “I guess we can putit in the trophy room now thatHutchins is gone.”At this point Page got up togive a pep talk about how therewere enough “red blooded youth”in the city of Chicago to furnishUC with great athletic teams.Page also spoke of “when UC re¬sumes football.”In a preliminary game, the old-timers overwhelmed the varsity,7-0. The old-timers used six play¬ers and two referees.In the feature game, the varsitytriumphed over the alumni,53-50. The alumni used threeteams, substituting at frequentintervals. In an effort to catch thevarsity, the alumni put six play¬ers on the court in the late min¬utes, and later seven, but althoughthey made the court look like amob scene, they couldn’t quitecatch the varsity team.Nelson Norgren, varsity basket¬ball coach, played for the old-timers, and Joe Stampf, JV hoopphoto by Bystryn hripf motion witti theKyle Anderson (left) presents alumnus John Schlommer with a certificate from the Helms Athletic Foun- ’dation as another alumnus, Pat Pa9e, watches. regular alumni. committee on activities night.The affair also offers “secondchance” for old students who didnot join the extra-curricular thisfall because of indefinite sched¬ules.A gala revue, including mem¬bers of the Concert Band, theModern Dance club, Student For¬um, the Folklore society, and Uni¬versity Theatre, will be held at9:30 in the third-floor theatei\Participating organizations arerequested by the committee tobegin setting up their booths at6:30 that night.Blackfriarsre-form ranksBlackfriars, once popularorganization which producedits own student-written musi¬cal comedies, will attempt tomake a comeback tfiis year as itholds its organizational meetingtonight. The meeting, 7:30 in theIda Noyes 3rd floor foyer, is opento all students interested in writ¬ing or producing any phase ofmusical comedies.Walter Fish and John Rolker,the two undergraduates who aretrying to revive Blackfriars, arehoping to change the group some¬what from its original form.Blackfriars was once all-male,almost all-fraternity, but the newgroup will be composed of bothsexes.The new group will discuss pos¬sibilities of producing a show forthe spring Festival of the Arts.With time short, an original showwill probably not be produced, buta show such as "South Pacific”may be able to be given accordingto Fish.—Page Z THE CHICAGO MAROON VJanuary 31, 1956presents—Star of "Faces In The Window"—Narrator On The Hit Record"Shifting, Whispering Sands"Nordine will• MC the offbeat reviewe Answer requests for poetryread short suspense storiesALSOPEGGY The FREDTAFT KAZShows Wed. thru Sun. Start 9:00 P.M,1037 W. GRANVILLENo. Min. or Cover FreeExcept Fri. A Sat. $2.00 Parking WHAT’S THIS?For solution, seeparagraph below.IT'S TOASTED-Calls for unityin SC affairsThe pending contest before theStudent - Faculty - Administrationcourt between the Student Repre¬sentative Party (SRP) and the Inde¬pendent Students League (ISL) overthe ‘'legality’’ of the Jan. 23 StudentGovernment meeting will be a negativeInfluence on Student Government’sto carry out a constructive program forthe student body.The court case can only Intensify ex¬isting rivalry and distrust between thetwo parties at times .when ImportantQuestions require the cooperation of»11 members of Student Government.With the parties deadlocked at swordspoint it Is unlikely the University ad¬ministration will regard any request byStudent Government, such as the needfor adequate non-discrimlnatory hous¬ing, as representing the student body.It Is equally unlikely that the studentbody, whose interests the Student Gov¬ernment is mandated to serve, will fol¬low the leadership of such a dividedStudent Government and xiltimately Itis student support on Important ques¬tion that Is the ‘‘power’’ of StudentGovernment.The foolishness of the present con¬flict appeal’s evident when It Is recog¬nized that there are few major pro¬grammatic differences between the twoparties.Both parties agree that the UniversityShould Insure adequate non-discrim-;natory housing for all stxidents; bothparties agree that academic freedom IsImportant and should be safe-gxiardedthroxigh sxich activities as an all-campusacademic freedom week; and both par¬ties agree that East-West student ex¬change and commxinlcation Is impor¬tant and should be promoted. Undoubt¬edly more agreements coxild be foxxnd.At the same time It Is recognized dif¬ferences in program and approach doexist between the parties. However, onImportant questions sxich as outlinedabove, united action Is not only pos¬sible bxit also mandatory.It would therefore appear to serve noconstructive pxirpose to continue quib¬bling over the fact that ISL had nomore than one person at a time in at¬tendance, or that SRP acted without aquorum at the last Student Govern¬ment meeting.A court case may place ‘‘guilt” oneither or both parties, but a coxirt casecannot solve any of the real problemsof Student Government. What is neededto break the present deadlock Is a newspirit of cooperation between the twoparties in Student Government, such ashas possibly not existed In recent years.The only way to Insure this is for botharties to meet together the responsi-ilities of the Student Government.Both parties in the future shouldwork together to draft Important legis¬lative measures. Projects must not beprojects of the “majority” party alone.Clearly, any Important legislationpassed at the last Student Governmentmeeting should be held in obeyance un¬til a complete Student Assembly canact xipon them. It must be realizedthat regardless of the intrinsic merit ofany measures passed, they are mean¬ingless unless the Student Governmentas a whole supports them. At the sametime the minority pai^y must be willingto talfe a more constructive attitude Inthe activities of the government. Theymu$t do more than oppose measuresfor the sake of election propaganda.Finally, more participation by the stu¬dents in Student Government activitiesIs needed. Students can work on Stu¬dent Government committees and ex¬press their views on questions beforethe Student Government, rather thanBitting back and ridiculing the inade¬quacies of the Student Government.On this line the MAROON did a dls-eervice in its sxiperficlal editorial ofJan. 27, which said to the Student Gov¬ernment. in effect, ‘‘stop acting likechildren,” but no constrxictive sugges¬tions for solution of the problems atband were offered.It Is hoped that some of the prevloxisouggestions can help the Stxident Gov¬ernment become an articulate voicerepresenting the needs of the students.Richard E. WardeThe Maroon welcomes let¬ters to the editors on any sub¬ject of interest to University ofChicago students. Letters over250 words, however, w : 11 besubject to editing if space re¬quirements demand. Addressletters to the editors, Maroon,Ida Noyes hall. LettersUniversity rightto make evictionsI cannot agree with the loudlyvoiced criticism of the Univer¬sity’s eviction notices followingthe decision to use the University’sproperty for the benefit of the Univer¬sity. In respect of its handling of prop¬erty and money the University Is abusiness institution and should be care¬fully managed as such. We can hardlyexpect a xmiversity to be angelic in Itsaloofness to business Interests (and Inthis case, to Its stxidents’ welfare), norfor the standards of a university to bedifferent in nature from that of thesurrounding community. In this case,the University was merely three times asgeneroxis as any other local businessInstitution—providing an eviction no¬tice of six, rather than two, weeks.For a neighborhood which has gainedso much weight on its economic de¬pendence on the University and Its in¬flux of students the neighborhood hasshown little effort to xinderstand theUniversity’s attempt, in this case, toxise Its own resources for Its own pur¬poses.If the University Is to be criticizedfor anything at all. it is the failxire torecognize this problem in advance andto reserve University hoxising for stxi¬dents and faculty originally. But theneighborhood's feeling that a wolf hascome down on them can hardly be justi¬fied.David Ray Phi Delta Thetanow vindicatedIn the last issue of the Ma¬roon, Mr. Paul Breslow made astatement about Phi Delta Thetaand the exchange program which needsto be corrected. Phi Delta Theta Is notoperating in violation of the Studentcode. If he Is not aware of this, thenthe memory of the events and the finaldecision reached on this matter in 1953-54 has faded rather rapidly.Over the past several years the fra¬ternities, as a group through the coun¬cil, have given free room and hoard toan exchange student. This year in addi¬tion, we are supplying meals for theother stxident In exchange for SG re¬imbursement. It is probable that In thefuture additional free services will beprovided for the proposed NSA studentleader program.This year as in the past, a process ofrotation has been used, modified sothat each house which boards the SG-financed student will provide part ofthe free services to the other student.Phi Delta Theta as In the past, thisyear was one of the first to becomepart of the rotation plan. I personallyam quite grateful to them for theirfine cooperation and feel that so longas the fraternities are contributing tothis program of our own free will, wewill administer our contribution as wesee fit, and without using the personalcriteria of other Individuals.Larry Sherman 11 lctroonIssued every Tuesday and Friday throughout the school year and intermittentlyduring the summer quarter, on a non-profit basis by the publisher, the ChicaroMaroon, at 1312 East 59th Street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Editorial officesMidway 3-0800, ext. 1003 and 3266; Business and advertising office, Midway 3-080n’ext. 3265. Subscriptions by mail, $3 per year. Business office hours: 2 p.m to5 p.m., Monday through Saturday.Co-editors-in-chiefJoy S. Burbach Palmer W. PinneyManaging editorDiane Pollock Business managerGary MokotoffAdvertising manager -. Lawrence KesslerCopy editor Norman LewakNews editors Robert Bergman, Jack Burbach, Ronald Grossman, Fred KarstCultural editor - Judy PodoreSports editor Robert HalaszNews feature editor Sue TaxProduction manager Robert Quinn (Friday); Jean Kwon (Tuesday)Photo editor '. John BystrynCalendar editor Earl HerrickHither and Yon editor Miriam GarflnOffice manager Adrienne KinkaldStaff: Ed Berckman William Brandon, Joyce Ellin. Saralee Feldman, Jean HargittJohn Herzog. Joan Kruegar, Bruce Larkin, Oliver Lee, Robert Moody, DonaldWilson, Marina Wlrzup, George Zygmund.THE TREASURE CHESTRE SALE SHOPMid-Year Clearance Sale1536 E. 57thin the Art ColonyHEY. SLOW DOWN! WATCH THESE LUCKY DR00DIES!QUICK WAY TO BETTER TASTE: It’s illustratedin the Droodle above, titled: Lucky smokeropening fresh pack. (He’s merely doing awaywith a little red tape.) Better taste is whathe’s after, and better taste is what he’ll get.Luckies taste better, you see, because they’remade of fine tobacco . . . light, mild tobaccothat’s TOASTED to taste better. Break outa pack of Luckies yourself. You’ll say LuckyStrike is the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked!DROODLES, Copyright 1953 by Roger Pricefy iaste befteTTTT TTT T TT FORMATIONPeter SarantU. of Maryland ESKIMO RANCH HOUSE(SPLIT-LEVEL)John DorritieIona TOWER OF LONDONAS SEEN BY ENGLISHSHEEP DOG. James HanleyHoly Cross COLLEGESMOKERSPREFERLUCKIES!Luckies lead all otherbrands, regular or king size,among 36,075 college stu¬dents questioned coast tocoast. The number-one rea¬son: Luckies taste betterLUCKIES TASTE BETTER - Cleaner, fresher. Smoother!America’;C A. T. Co. PRODUCT OP CS LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTESJanuary 31* 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON ^agc 3Coming events on quadrangles Classified advertisementsTuesday, January 31 Wednesday, February 1Intervarsity Christian fellowship, lunch¬eon, 12:30 p.m , Ida Noyes.Review staff meeting, S p.m., Reynold*club 302-304.pocfilin: Man of Aran, 7:15 and *:15p.m., Sbcial Science 122.Blaekfriars organizational meeting, 7:30p.m. Ida Noyes 3rd floor foyer.DC Mountaineers, meeting and movies,7:30 p.m., Rosenwald 26.Concert band, full ensemble rehearsal,7:30 p.m., Sunny gym 302.Outing club meeting, planning of springinterim ski trip, mountaineers invited,8 p.m., Ida Noyes east lounge.FTS wives, meeting with Jerald C.Brauer, dean of FTF, speaking, 8 p.m.,5757 Woodlawn.Woodrow Wilson lecture, "The world vi¬sion of Woodrow Wilson, 8:30 p.m.,Mandel. Varsity swimming meet, UC vs. NorthCentral college, 3:30 p.m., Bartlettpool.CAP AND GOWN staff meeting, 3:30p.m., Ida Noyes—3rd floor.National cat week planning session forMAROON supplement, 3:30 p.m., IdaNoyes—3rd floor.Varsity track meet. UC B team vs. Wil¬son junior college, 4 p.m., Field house.Pre-med club, lecture by Dr. Rhine,4 p.m., Abbott 133.Humboldt club meeting, 4 p.m., Wie-boldt 408.MAROON staff meeting, 4 p.m., IdaNoyes—3rd floor.Carillon recital, 4:30 p.m., Rockefellerchapel.Glee club rehearsal, 7:15 p.m., Rosen¬wald 2.Modern dance club, 7:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.Country dancers, 8 p.m., Ida Noyes.FAMOUS LAW CASES: NO. 1—GRANSMIREvs. MIDDLE ATLANTIC BUS AND DRAY CO.Gransmire, the plaintiff in this celebrated case, lived with hisdaughter Ernest and a canary named Whirlaway on Elm Streetin Cooch, Delaware. The Middle Atlantic Bus and Dray Co.started operating a bus line on Elm Street. The passing busescaused a cut-glass chandelier in the Gransmires’ living roomto begin tinkling. The chandelier tinkled in the key of E-flat.This so unnerved the canary, Whirlaway, whose key was C-sharp, that the poor bird moulted out of season, caught a chill,and died untimely.Ernest, Gransmire’s daughter, was herself so unsettled bythe death of the canary that she flunked her final exams at theBoar’s Head Beauty and Barber College, where she had been apromising student, majoring in bangs. Now removed, willy-nilly, from the skilled labor market, Ernest found work carry¬ing a sandwich sign for the old Vienna Chow Mein parlor.Here she met a bus-boy named Crunch Sigafoos. AlthoughCrunch was not especially attractive — he had, for one thing, alarge bushy tail — he was always clean and neat and kept hisshoes shined, and after a decent interval, he and Ernest weremarried.Ernest soon learned that Crunch’s large bushy tail was notas anomalous as she had supposed: Crunch was a werewolf.After a while Ernest got sick of staying home at night whileher husband went prowling about, so she asked him to changeher into a werewolf too, which he did with an ancient Transyl¬vanian incantation. Then, thgether, the two of* them wouldlope out each night and meet a lot of other werewolves andmaybe kill a few chickens or hear some book reports or justlay around and shoot the breeze.Meanwhile, Ernest and Crunch’s landlady, a miser namedMrs. Augenblick, noticed that Ernest and Crunch never usedtheir room at night, so she, in her greed, started renting it totransients. One night a Mr. Ffolliett stayed there. In the rtiorn-ing while brushing his hair, he took a bottle that looked likehair tonic out of the cabinet, poured some, and rubbed itvigorously into his scalp. Unfortunately, it was not hair tonic,but a bottle of glue which Ernest had bought to mend a modelairplane that Crunch had given her for their paper weddinganniversary.As a result of Mr. Ffolliett’s grisly error, he was unableto remove his hat and was, therefore, barred from his usualoccupation which was lecturing to women’s clubs. He sued Mrs.Augenblick, who sued Ernest, who went to her father, who suedthe Middle Atlantic Bus and Dray Co. who had started the wholehorrid chain of events.“Ladies and gentlemen,” said the defense attorney in his.opening address, “this case, though very ramified, is coveredby law. Indeed, every facet of life is covered by law. Lawgoverns the homes you live in, the cars you drive, the food youeat. Even the cigarette you smoke is strictly regulated. Thegentleness, however, is Philip Morris’s owTn idea. Out of theirvast experience as tobacco people, out of their profound regardfor the astuteness of your palate, the makers of Philip Morrishave evolved a gentle, new cigarette, with a taste as mild as aMay morn, as subtle as gossamer, as welcome as money fromhome. I thank you.”Whereupon everybody rushed to the tobacco counter to buybright red, white and gold packs of Philip Morris and were allrendered so amiable after a few gentle puffs that the wholecomplicated case was dropped. This later became known as theDelaware Water Gap. cuu shuiman, 195aW <*, the makers of Philip Morris, sponsors of this column, rest ourcase on our new, gentle cigarette in our new, smart pack. YSL, panel on "Civil liberties In thetrade union movement,'-’ with Prof.Kermlt Eby, Jerrald Bullock, editor ofCatholic labor alliance weekly, andChicago Jewish labor .committee rep¬resentative, 8 p.(m., Ida Noyes.Ilillel lecture, "Existentialism (I),” byVictor Gourevltch, Unlv. college lec¬turer, 8 p.m., 5715 Woodlawn.Woodrow Wilson lecture, "Wilson, poli¬tician and statesman,’’ by JonathanW. Daniels, editor, Raleigh, N. C.,8:30 p.m., Mandel.Thursday, February 2University theatre workshop class, 3:30p.m., Reynolds club theatre.Statistics seminar, “Decision theory forPolya type distributions,” 4 p.m., Eck-hart 207.Movie: Mr. Deeds Goes to Town (U. S.film), International house, 7 and9 p.m.Woodrow Wilson lecture, "Wilson andCongress,” U. S. Senator Alben Bark-«• ley (D-Ky.), 8:30 p.m., Mandel.TV broadcast, "The humanities: Music:melody,” WTTW, channel 11, 9:30 p.m.Friday, February 3Last day to register to receive Bachelor’sdegree in winter quarter.Le Cercle francais, “La vie a l’Universitede Paris au moyen age,” by assoc, prof.Durbin Rowland, 4 p.m., Ida Noyeslibrary.Mathematical biology seminar, "A sto¬chastic theory of mortality: some im¬plications for mammalian radiobl-ology,” 4:30 p.m., 5741 Drexel.Docfilm: The love of Jeanne Ney, 7:15and 9:15 p.m.. Social Sciences 122,admission by series ticket only.Lutheran students supper and discus¬sion on "Lutheran church govern¬ment here and abroad,” 6 p.m., Chapelhouse.Hillel sabbath service, 7:45 p.m., andfireside at 8:30 with assoc, prof. ReuelDenney speaking “Of love, poetry, andthe Song of Songs,” 5715 Woodlawn.University theatre: Tonight at 8:30,scenes from plays by Odets, Williams,Giraudoux, McCullers, and de Har-tong, 8:30 p.m., Reynolds club theatre,50 cents. For sale35 mm camera, Nikon f 1.4 lens; Nikkorf 1.4 lens—changeable shutter; T, B,1/500 synchronized. Brand new! $200,with leather case. Masa Sugi, 5423 S.Ridgewood Court, after 7 p.m.If you can hum, whistle or sing, youcan play this electrical upright playerpiano. Excellent condition, free rolls.Gelllgan, DO 3-3266 after 8:15 p.m.Selling out 150 ’uncalled suits, topcoats,and tuxedos, $17.50. White tuxedo coats,$9.50. Sizes 35-50. Famous brands. Openevenings until 7 p.m., Sunday 10-2 p.m.Abbott Clothing Company, 4086 Broad¬way, comer Belle Piaine. Baby-sitter, permanent. Monday-Frlday.NO 7-6054.Need help moving? Call "Prime Movers.”Special student rates. Call evenings, PL2-6412 or HY 3-1356.For rentA well-recommended Chinese or Japan¬ese male student is welcome to share atwo-room kitchenette apartment with agentleman. Write John Newton, 6219Kimbark, Apt. 208.Services Law student has 4-room completelyfurnished apartment to share. HY 3-3015.One small apartment close to UC ahdIC. One person. 6023 Kenwood. BU8-9424. 'Piano instructions with a pianist.. Thor¬ough training. Beginners or advanced.At your home if north of 53rd or eastof Greenwood or at my residence studio.Norman Curtis, OA 4-9293. If not inleave message.Help wantedEditorial 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.Editor who would enjoy working ontextbooks-for vocational education andIndustrial arts. Basic knowledge In sci¬ence and some editorial experience de¬sirable. Call Mr. Paul for appointment,MI 3-4700. American Technical Society,58th and Drexel.Resident baby-sitter. Private room andbath in apartment near campus, IC. MU4-0340 after 5 p.m.Temporary interviewing jobs open withNational Opinion and Research center.5711 Woodlawn. All work in or near HydePark duflng 6-week period. Flexiblehours but 40-hour week desirable. CallMrs. Calloway, FA 4-7354. PersonalColumbine: Remember Tuesday the11th. Regards to the actors’ troupe.Felipe.Sue: What does Tufts have that UCdoesn’t? Fritz is mad. A Bobbsey twinlistened to my heart beat. Wild Billsays you should come to UC. Moneybags,RG: A pledge In hand is worth two Inthe mouth. LS.Going soon! Labe Balter. By populardemand, party.LS: Join the staff—it will cdst youmuch less. RG.Mossless: Gave J. Dorian your addressyesterday: have you written Rubfn re¬cently. Brqtz. Grundoon.Bunny:Garcia. Good luck on finals. Love,Fred-babe: Need you. Need help. Oldmoneybags quit and you got kickedoff, but it wasn’t your fault. Don# behurt. Please come back. We mean well.We eat tortillas on Wednesday nights.Added Incentive. Mexican folk songs andjingle bells on Dragon's daughter’s pho¬nograph. Lot’s of fun. Billy-Boy andSuzie Q.rA Campus-to-Career Case History(t v *I take a job from scratchThe Air Force introduced Forrest I.Hurst to communications. In 1953 hewas Communications Officer at LowryAir Force Base near Denver, Colorado.He was partially responsible for the com¬munications.setup of the President’s“Summer While House,” and in thisassignment he met members of the localBell telephone company.“The telephone people I met,” saysForrest, “were always helpful. I con¬sidered them the experts. They gave avery good impression of the Bell System.So three months before I was dischargedI wrote to Indiana Bell for an interview,and' subsequently I was hired as aStudent Engineer.”Today Forrest is in Indiana Bell’sEngineering Department, working with carrier facilities—the means by which anumber of telephone calls can be sentsimultaneously ovpr one circuitForrest is given the basic circuit andequipment requirements for a job. “Myboss farms it out to me,” Forrest says,“and I take it from scratch.” Forrestdoes the complete engineering job. Hewrites the specifications, including wir¬ing plans and the list of equipment forthe job. Then the installers take over.“I really feel that I’m contributingto |he telephone business,” Forrest says.“My wife does too. When we’re in thecar we get a kick out of driving by ajob that I engineered. Nothing can com¬pare with a career in a business that’sgrowing as fast as the Bell System. It’sthe place to move ahead.”* Forrest graduated in 1932 from PurdueUniversity with an E.E. degree. His career istypieal of those whieh exist in other Bell Tele¬phone Companies, and in Bell TelephoneLaboratories, Western Electric and SandiaCorporation. \our placement officer has moreinformation about Bell System companies. BELL TELEPHONESYSTEMJPage 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON January 31, 195$/The more perfectly packed your To the touch ... to the taste,. Firm and pleasing to the lipscigarette, the more pleasure it an Accu-Ray Chesterfield satis* , , . mild yet deeply satisfying togives . . . and Accu-Ray packs fies the most... burns more the taste - Chesterfield alone isChesterfield far more perfectly, evenly, smokes much smoother, pleasure-packed by Accu-Ray.CHESTERFIELDmild, yet theyC Liicfrr & Mvuu Tosacco CoSatisfy Yourself with a Milder. Better-Tasting smoke-packed for more pleasure by exclusive Accu-Ray(Advertisement)CIGARETTESALE!Liggett Cr Myers TobaccoCo. will hold a sale on Thurs¬day, Feb. 2, 1956, from 8a m. to 4:30 p.m. at the Uni¬versity bookstore and from8 a m. to 9 p.m. at the-Rey-nolds club desk. With thepurchase of each package ofChesterfield or L Cr M regu¬lar or king, students will re¬ceive an additional packagefree.The limit is two freepackagesPortrait Stylist-Black and White andDirect ColorPhotographyBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St.Nick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Ave.| Ml 3-4226Student DiscountDelivery ServiceLoewenstein finds state power concentrated; Give scores' JL IIdemocratic government control decliningby Oliver Lee“Autocracy is ascendant in the modem world; the march of concentrated power is again under way,” concluded KarlLoewenstein in the last of the Walgreen lectures on “political power and the process of government.Loewenstein, professor of political science and jurisprudence at Amherst college, based his conclusion on the finding that BasketballVarsity 53, Alumni 50 |§SlTrackChicago 63Vi, U.C. Track Club 40'iFencingAlumni 20, Varsity 7WrestlingNotre Dame 21, Chicago 12 ’ £-\GymnasticsNavy Pier 66, Chicago 51 .most of the institutions in¬vented by modem man for thecontrol of governmental pow¬er are today on the decline.Having described the weakness¬es of the written constitution asa check upon modem autocracyIn an earlier lecture, Loewensteinwent on to discuss the variety ofchecks and balances between theseveral branches of government.Balances within the executive andthe legislature were also illumin¬ ated (e.g., prime minister versuspresident, upper house versuslower house, prime minister ver¬sus cabinet, etc.-.If Loewenstein did not detectmuch decline in the effectivenessof the above type of controls, hecertainly did so with respect tothe “vertical controls of power,”to wit, 1) federalism, 2) civilliberties, and 3) political plural¬ism.Federalism, according to Loew-Pick candidates enstein, is withering on the vine.Nations everywhere have decidedthat local autonomy means ob¬struction to social and economicprogress which, in an age of na¬tion-wide scope of labor, industry,commerce agriculture, etc., re¬quires centralized regulation andplanning.Civil liberties, which Loewen¬stein termed the strongest checRon the power of the “leviathan,”have likewise undergone a proc¬ess of erosion. This is caused,among other things, by the head-on collision between the demo¬cratic state and fascism and com¬munism. Liberalism, LoewensteinElimination judging for the Wash Prom Miss Universityof Chicago contest will be held this afternoon at 3:30 p.m., sa‘d’ *.elt ^at had t0 taj<e ^instead of yesterday, as had been previously scheduled. -fight^ire with fire?”YoYhat inJudging the elimination contest in the Ida Noyes library, many states, including the Unitedwill be R. Wendell Harrison, UC vice president and dean of States, certain policital opinionsthe faculties; Peg Zwecker, fash¬ion editor of the Chicago DailyNews; and Mrs. Maurice Gold-blatt, wife of the State streetmerchant. 'laminated so far for Miss US COMPASS CALYPSOConrado Estanemegoare:Bobby Whaley, candidate of Phi Kap¬pa Psi; Rosemary Galll, Hitchcock Hall;Holly O'Connor. Young Democrats;Joyce Everett, SRP; Irene Samorajski,Esoteric; Ruth Kopel, Sigma; Judy Bow-ley. Quadranglers; Janine Johnson, In¬terclub council; Sandy Ford. WAA; Mar¬lene Nelson, Green; Mona Freedlander,Mortarboard; Judy Cohen, ZBT; EvelynLee. Phi Gamma Delta; Judy Goddess,Interdorm council; Deanna Cartman,Jazz club; Eliza Houston. Alpha DeltaPhi; Dorothea Cayton. Beta. Theta Pi;Jean Kwon, Maroon; Yvonne Fonvielle,Iron Mask, and Gall Thompson, DeltaUpsilon.Final all-campus election ofMiss UC will be held February16 and 17. the Thursday and Fri¬day of the week before the prom. 5475 S. Lake Park Tonight, Tuesday, 8:30BAR PRICES, NO MINIMUM on Tues., Wed., Thurs. as such are outlawed.A 3iversity of social and eco¬nomic groups putting pressure onthe government has alwaysserved as a strong check on cen¬tralized power, Loewenstein point¬ed out. But today the pluralgroups, effeciently organized,have succeeded in seizing controlof the government. Infiltrationinto the executive and the legisla¬ture is one method used; anotheris control from the outsidethrough the manipulation of pub¬lic opinion.Books Bought• Any Subject• Any Language• Any QuantityClark & ClarkHYde Park 3-03211204 E. 55th St. GINA LOLlOBRIGIDAiVITTORIO DE SICAFRISKYA gvjty corned/ of life andY love, portrayeof volatilecharacters.Today at: 4:00. 8:00. 10vbii -IHThere’s No Sale LikeWholesaleDear Student:Chances are, you love Cashmere Sweaters by Hindaother famous brands.. . . Here's how you can33 1/3% to 50%’All Sizes — Colors — StylesBy Buying at WholesaleCome toSamuel Murrow &Company(In the heart of theWholesale Market)Daily 9 to 5:30 Saturdays 9 to 33 1 8 W. Adams St. Suite