m? > ■Five social scientistsget research grantsFive University of Chicago social scientists have been givenFord foundation grants of $4,250 each to forward their re¬search in the behavioral sciences.Chauncy D. Harris, dean of the division of the social sci¬ences division stated, in announcing receipt of the awards, thatthe grants are unusual in that they are awards to the indi¬viduals on the general promise r M3EVol. 64, No. 41 University of Chicago, Friday, April 6, 1956and quality of their reseach,Mrs. Kimpton ill;hepatitis keepsher in BillingsMrs. Lawrence A. Kimpton,bedridden with hepatitis, isbeing treated at Billings hos¬pital.According to Mrs. Kimpton, shewas originally taken to the hos¬pital Saturday, March 24, with aslight case of pneumonia, but lat¬er she developed hepatitis (an in¬fection of the liver). Mrs. Kimp¬ton said she feels fine, but thedoctors say she will need muchrest and are not sure when shewill be discharged from the hos¬pital. rather than for support of aspecific project.Recipients of the awards in¬clude: Fred Eggan, professor ofanthropology, working in socialanthropology; Norman A. Me-Quown, associate professor of an¬thropology whose work covers re¬lations of language to other as¬pects of culture and linguisticmeans of tracing migration; W.Lloyd Warner, professor of an¬thropology and sociology, studentof social classes and mobility;Others are: Eric L. McKitrick,assistant professor of history,who has been making criticalstudies of various important prob¬lems of American history; andGustave E. von Grunebaum, pro¬fessor of Arabic, who is engagedin a social and economic historyof Arabia.Each of the recipients mayspend the money at his discre¬tion to best forward his studies. 500 signatures da;by anti-SG leadersby Ronald GrossmanOver 500 signatures have been obtained to date on the petitions to recall Student Gov¬ernment, members of the Committee to Further Student Affairs announced Wednesday.Zahava Dudnik, spokesman for the committee, stated that because of campus interest,circulation of the petitions would be extended through Monday.On Monday, members of the committee will meet with Dean of Students Robert M. Stro-zier to discuss possibilities of forming a successor organization to SG.A leader in the movementto dissolve SG stated: “Wehope Dean Strozier will real¬ize the significance of this move- “Although there has been Mimeo ‘Poujadism’ answersstrong opposition from certain *n answer to charges of “aba-. lifionism," “Poujadism,” and nee-quarters, campus opinion lndi- ativeism( the committee to Fur-ment and immediately call a cates manr changes in Student ther Student Affairs circulated ameeting of Student Government Government are urgently need- J^yMAs^a matter of interestPoujadism, named for Poujade, aFrench politician, has come tamean a negative attitude towardsgovernment and governmentalmechanisms. Poujade obtained alarge following among Frenchand other student leaders. ed.'Dear Ann Landers.... I have a problem'“The big trouble Is In the amour department,” said Ann Landers, really Mrs. Jules Lederer, Wednesday evening in Jud-son Lounge as she beg&n her hour and a half talk which seem ingly covered everything. The lounge was filled to capacity byRbout 100 males and 35 females as laugh followed laugh Miss Landers, a well-dressed woman in her late thirties was greetedby great applause as she opened her talk.Mrs. Landers immediately proceeded to charm the audience with her quips and sarcasm as she stated that college studentsare no different than they ever were. “The younger generation is not going to hell in a hand-basket,” she stated.^ ^*v^CreSK«Wa^>nier S^e* Pam v* the neck,” “I want to be This is the old story of the boy cool, calm, and collected, and ifment that about 20 per cent reacjable, entertaining, but most whose father is an alcoholic, she keeps her head and doesn’tOf her 3,000 monthly letters , , ’ . . . adv:ce » mother a dope addict, and whose rush into things, she will keep herwere from college students and .. . . ° ’ cousin works for the Bun-Times, boy friend. (A member of thethat each is answered personally the columnist. His probiem is whether he audience replied, “And her vir-if it had a name and address. . Mrs. Landers read one which should tell his fiancee about the ginity”) “I’ve had no B.A., B.S.,Mrs. Landers went on to say she said comes in about every cousin. or Ph.D., but I do have common See page 4 for comments andopinions from Student Govern¬ment members on the petitionto dissolve SG.that phony letters were a “real week in one form or another. When asked what she thought sense, and that is what is neces-of the changes occurring in mod- sary>” said Mrs. Landers. She at-ern society, she replied that as tended college for three and afar as she could see, the major half years.changes are in subjects which in Following the columnist’sthe past were only mentioned be- speech, there was a question andhind the locked bedroom door, answer session. Some of the ques-have now graduated to the living tions were:room and sometimes even to the q. Do you believe that Pauldining room table. Gauguin should have left his wifeWith reference, to modern and three children and go to thepsychoanalysis, she stated that South Seas to paint?although this is very worthwhile, a. I’ll leave that up to themany people consider it is some- French columnists. Paul Gauguinthing which, if not experienced, js too deep for me.is a sure sign of poverty. The Q Shouldn.t the wife supportl®tterf used “ her column, she her husband in order for the guystated, were those which she felt t a pb d ?were more interesting and which *were still not of such a tenorthat they would “twirl your tur A. Once, I answered this ques¬tion—forget the BA, forget the_ ,, . . ,« . _ MA, forget the PhD, and go outban.’ Answers to these letters ap- and get a j o.b But now> x havepear in her personals. changed my mind. The husbandphoto by BystrynStudents peer Into Judaon lounge to listen to Ann Landers (Inset)•peak on “Problems of the college student.** Great applause ensued when and wife should talk this over be-she answered the question, “How fore they are married. If theydo you go about getting a girl agree that the man should go forwhen the ratio here is three to the PhD, then by all means heone?” by looking at her daugh- should have it.ter saying, “Margo, this is where Mrs. Landers stated her quali-you’re going to school.” Her seri- fications were three years train-ous reply was that all you have jng }n psychology and even moreto do is be three times as good important, a genuine love for peo-as the next guy. pie. She considers Edan WrightAs to boy-girl relations, the as having these qualifications,columnist said that if a girl is also. merchants who supported hi*views on abolishment of taxationin general.)The text of the flyer follows:“The Committee to FurtherStudent Affairs is not offeringa definite alternative to the ex¬isting form of Student Govern¬ment on the recall petitionsthat are being circulated, sincewe hope that a Committee rep¬resenting all student groupscould much more effectivelyagree on a definite plan andpresent it to the campus. Wehope that the committee to beformed would include repre¬sentatives from all livinggroups and student organiza¬tions. Besides the meetingsshould be open for anyone thatwants to attend. However, wedo wish to state that we feelthe major orientation of a Stu¬dent Government should be to¬ward campus affairs and thatsocial activities should fallwithin the domain of a StudentGovernment.”Cite newspaper interestAccording to another spokes¬man for the committee, Chicagodaily newspapers have evinced in¬terest in the move and will coverdevelopments as they occur.Maroon readers may be intersested to learn that the story onthe SG petition was in the natureof a real “scoop.” Carrying thestory in Tuesday’s issue requiredbreaking up an already “dum¬mied” page for addition of theSG story.Students plan Academic Freedom week' The rights of teachers, loy¬alty oaths, security programs,school integration, and con¬stitutional history are among thetopics of activities being held inconjunction with Academic Free¬dom week, which begins Sunday,April 8.Academic Freedom week pro¬grams held on this campus arepart of nation-wide activities be¬ing held in member colleges anduniversities of the United StatesNational Student Association.Student groups to sponsoractivitiesMore than sixteen UC studentgroups are directly associated with the activities, by either spon¬soring films, lectures, and dis¬cussions, or designating membersto help in Academic FreedomWeek programs.The Academic Freedom Weekcommittee, composed of repre¬sentatives of participating organ¬izations, under the chairmanshipof Joyce Everett, is coordinatingevents during the week. The com¬mittee was instituted by StudentGovernment.Buttons with the slogan: “Afree university in a free society,”are being sold by the committeeto publicize the week and to helpfinance the activities. Maroon supplement to appearA special supplement on aca¬demic freedom, its political as¬pects, and problems of integra¬tion will be featured in next Fri¬day’s Maroon. The Maroon sup¬plement will also contain a tabu¬lation of the campus-wide poll onacademic freedom.The Reynolds club lounge willhave an exhibit with pictures,articles, and pamphlets on suchtopics as school integration, bookcensorship, dismissal of teachers,and loyalty oaths. The exhibit isbeing prepared by members ofSigma, Hillel, Orientation Board,and Nu Pi Sigma. * Speakers scheduledAmong the featured events ofthe week will be a round-tablediscussion with faculty membersFrank Knight, Samuel Allison,and Robert J. Havighurst, on “theresponsibilities of a scholar in afree society.” The discussion willbe held in Social Science 201, Mon¬day at 7:20 p.m.Two of the Chicago teacherswho lost their jobs for not com¬plying with Broyles loyalty oathswill discuss the oaths. RaymondMarks of the American Civil Lib¬erties Union will speak with themThursday at 8:30 p.m. in SocialSciences 122. On Friday, Herbert Aptheker,Marxist writer and historian, willdiscuss the role of the communisthistory. He will speak in Rosen-wald 2 at 3:30 p.m.Additional academicfreedom storiesAdditional Academic Free¬dom week coverage is givenon pages 3, 7, and 9.A statement on the purposesof Academic Freedom weekand a calendar of events ap¬pears on page 3.April 6, 1956THE CHICAGO MAROONinsMUMStudents Ithis “well known” event.For both those who have heardof the battle before and for those“unfortunates” who have not, agay event with a live band, allfor a very nominal price, is theobjective.let me PROVEwhat I can dofor YOU!Have you ever wondered whyother college men have so muchfun at dances, proms, parties—'while you end up with MistPotiuck of 1912? Do you blameyour plight on skin blemishes,or unsightly dandruff?Well, you’re wrong 1 I hod thevery tame problem.;Then, Ibought an After Six tux. Look atme now! I've got money, fame^jbig muscles, and girls aplentyjHere’s oil you do to becomeappealing. Try on a light-weightAfter Six Dinner Jacket. Buy it.]Then, In the privacy of your ownhome, spend 15 minutes a day inthe casual elegance of your(After Six. Right away, ybu'rahandsomer, healthier, inchestaller. Women stand in line toogle you.But act now, while there's stillhope I LUCKY DROOOLES! DO 'EM YOURSELF!LUCKIES TASTE BETTER - Cleaner, fisher, Smoother!©AT.a*. moooct or America's leadtmq mamvtacturer or cigarettesv.‘.v,v,v. /. 7.*//••*/>/■WHAT’STHISFor solution seeparagraph below,LET THIS ONE SINK IN. It’s titled: Lucky-smoking golfer liningup putt. He may miss the putt, but he’s not missing out on bettertaste. Luckies give you better taste every time. That’s becausethey’re made of fine tobacco—light, mild, naturally good-tastingtobacco that’s TOASTED to taste better. So follow through-join the swing to Luckies. Nothing beats better taste—and you’llsay Luckies are the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked!EARN >25!Cut yourself in on the LuckyDroodle gold mine. We pay $26for all we use—and for a wholeraft we don’t use! Send yourDroodles with descriptive titles.Include your name, address, col¬lege and class and the name andaddress of the dealer in your col¬lege town from whom you buycigarettes most often. Address:Lucky Droodle, Box 67A, MountVernon, N. Y.DROODLES, Copyright 1953 by Roger Price*rrs „iJg?betW'CHAIN LETTERFrank SpearU. of Mass.SAC fills six seatsHaving received only six petitions for the six at-largeseats on SAC, the council Wednesday seated all six peti¬tioners as specified in its constitution. Those seated are,John Herzog, Brina Jaffee, Barbara Quinn, Ellen M.Abernathy, Bea Speeko, and Quentin Ludgin.Organizations sending representative delegates to the coun¬cil as specified in the constitution have been asked to selecttheir representatives for next year so that the new council canbe convened to help with planning the social calendar for nextyear, according to Charles Mittman, SAC chairman. Roll eggs Dames7 bake sale bringstoday at Ida profjt ancj toothachesInt. house to hold dancecommemorating Green HallA dance on Friday night, April 6, from nine to one is beingsponsored by International House. Live music by Laszlo isbeing featured, together with refreshments and decorations,all for the low price of 35 cents. The all-campus egg roll, end ofthe six-day race, and dance, fea¬turing improvised opera by DonLevine, will be sponsored in IdaNoyes hall from 3 to 6 p.m. todayby the Commuters’ association.According to officers of the as¬sociation, all members of the Uni¬versity community are invited tothis event, which is the first an¬nual egg roll ever to be held inthis city.Th traditional egg board,which has by now been complete¬ly destroyed, was said to havebeen devoted to romantic and fri¬volous novels, cinematographsportraying in vivid scene, fishes,mural, a labor saving device, and,in short, all the inventions ofmodern science.The theme is the “Com¬memoration of the battle ofGreen Hill” which occurred onApril 6, 1863, exactly 93 yearsago. Its importance in Americanhistory is indicated by its cas¬ualty list of five killed and 15prisoners.The theme will follow the Inter¬national House policy of acquaint¬ing foreign students with Amer¬ican customs, but it will also bean opportunity for Americanswho have not heard of the battle(by some unfortunate omissionIn their education) to brush up on Vandal breaks up meetingAn attempted robbery of the Zeta Beta Tau fraternity housebrought a disturbing end to last Monday night’s chapter meeting.Just after the meeting broke up, Noel Black and Marty Levy enteredthe back room on the second floor to discover a young vandal (around20) who had just come in through the back window from the fireescape. The vandal escaped, taking nothing. The police were notified,but according to Bob Philipson, ZBT member, did not catch theyoung man.The same evening, at 11, three or four other unidentified youngvandals threw a fire extinguisher through an open living room win¬dow, discharging its contents around the room. Who were those young women selling goodies in the middleof Ida Noyes last Wednesday? Were they unlicensed peddlerspreying upon a law-abiding studentry? Was it a “charitable’*project to raise funds for Siberian orphans?As it happens, like it or not,this was a 100 per cent red-blooded, free enterprise ventureon the part of UC Dames, compet¬ing honestly but spiritedly insmall-business way with the Clois¬ter Club’s mechanized food-o-mats.The Dames is an organizationof student wives who, out of ing at reasonable prices Wednes.day and also one day last quarter.Barbara Freese, president of theorganization, said that the moneyraised will probably be used fortheir children’s clubs, if not tohelp put their husbands throughschool. She was not certaintheir desire to have something in whether the Dames would spon-the treasury to discuss how tospend, decided to capitalize onwell-known .student predilectionsfor cake, cookies and other suchcreamy - smooth, better - tast ing.tooth-decaying produce. Made bymothers as only mothers (andcertain professional chefs) canmake them, these items were sell- sor another bake sale this quar¬ter. It depends on their take fromthis one, she intimated.By the end of the afternoon,muffins, brownies, etc., had dis-appeared, leaving only crumbs—an indication that childhood lem¬onade-stand experience is indeedpreparation for life.Endorsed by the Chicago Daily NewsYour state representative must know bow to resist attacks on civilliberties and be prepared to fight vigorously for them. Elect o provenpublic servant and University of Chicago graduate.NATHAN J.KINNALLYfor state representativeVOTE DEMOCRATIC TUESDAY, APRIL 10SPOOK’S LAUNDRYWalter OstermanU. of FloridaMM• O • •• o e «• • e •WORK DONE BYNEAT WOODPECKEt- Pauline LawBarnardApril 6, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3It's a pleasure to get to know Old Spice ^After Shave'Lotion. Each time you shave you can look forward to some*^thing~special:lthe Old Spice scent — brisk^rispTfresh asell outdoors^*-, the tang of that vigorous^astringent-^-ban¬ishes"" shave-soap film, heals tiny razor^nicksT Splash Ton,Old Sp:cEjr-and_start jhe dayjrefreshedyAdd Spice to Your Life rrtOld Spice For Men)SHULTON Naw'YorS • Toronto Academic Freedom Committeeexplains purpose of week(The following statement was issued by the Academic Freedom Week committee to explain thepurpose erf Academic Freedom Week.)The Academic Freedom Week Committee concerns itself with a nebulous but most vitalproblem of the scholastic community. An atmosphere of fear and repression is of such asubtle character, that it cannot be counteracted by legislative means. This very quality ofintangibility makes for a more dangerous situation than one in which overt restrictions areexercised. Qualified instructors with unpopular views are unable to teach, members of thecommunity refrain from discussing controversial issues, certain unconventional ideas arenot presented to students for — ~—:—: t" ... : . ——— *. . , , Aptheker, author and instructor munist Historian: His Role oninvestigation and Study. at the Jeffersin School of Social the Campus,” Friday, April 13th,We of the Academic Free- Studies, will speak on 'The Com- 3:30 p.m. Rosenwald 2.dom Week Committee believeCartoon courtesy of U. S. National Student AssociationiiiiimmiiiiiimiimMiiiiiimiiiiimiiiiiimiiiiiiJiitiiimiiiiiiMiimiiiiiiiiiittCheek These Features 1V PROMPT SERVICE |y DEPENDABILITY =y ECONOMY i... and then remember ... s— The Students Favorite — |University Quick Laundry §1376 East 55th Street =PLaza 2-9097 1imiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiic that all important ideas mustbear the weight of criticism andscrutiny. Therefore, we present aprogram which is designed to examine the many problems of aca¬demic freedom.Although we may not feel thatour own community is subjectto the atmosphere of repressionwhich still exists, we feel that wemust concern ourselves with themaintenance of the conditionsconducive to the free interchangeof ideas. Furthermore, we mustcontinue to re-evaluate the condi¬tions necessary to the atmosphereof free inquiry, and strive to re¬gain our traditional freedomswhich have been somewhat in¬fringed upon in the past decade.For necessary to a democratic so¬ciety is an educational systemdedicated to the unbiased exam¬ination of ideas.* * *Because of our concern for thepresentation of important butunpopular ideas, the committeehas invited a Marxist historianto present this viewpoint. Herbert Announce schedule of academicfreedom week campus eventsFree Spring Check-Upfor your Camera atMODEL CAMERA SHOP1329 E. 53th St. HY 3-9259 Sunday, April 8Burton-Judson movies willshow, before their regular fea¬ture, the Ford foundation (Omni¬bus) film on Constitutional his¬tory.Monday, April 9“The legal rights of a Com¬munist in a free society” will bediscussed by Professor MalcolmSharp and John Nuveen, formerchief, Marshall Plan mission toGreece. Given by Alpha Delta Phifraternity and Mortar Board club,at 5747 University avenue, at 7:30p.m.Sigma Girls club will have stu¬dent speakers and a discussionon the Broyles bill loyalty oath, atIda Noyes hall at 7:30 p.m.“The responsibilities of thescholar in a free society,” a sym¬posium by Professors FrankKnight, Samuel Allison, and Rob¬ert Havighurst, will be sponsoredby the League for Civil Libertiesin Social Sciences 201, 1126 E.59th St., at 7:30 p.m.Tuesday, April 10Donald Meiklejohn, professorof social science, will lecture andlead a discussion in Green hall on“Student organization: problemsand implications.” Refreshmentswill be served after the meeting,which starts at 6:30 p.m., 5848 University avenue.The Young Socialist league willpresent Francis Heisler, lawyer,of the American Civil Libertiesunion, at 8 p.m. in Ida Noyes hall.The topic is ‘The Army loyaltyprogram and academic freedom."Thursday, April 12Edward R. Murrow’s hour-longinterview with Dr. J. Robert Op-penheimer will be shown by ISLin Burton-Judson, 7:30 and 9 p.m,“The Broyles bills: their con¬stitutionality and morality," apanel with Albert Soglin and SaraPicus, teachers fired under thebill, and Raymond Marks, ACLUcounsel. Social Sciences 122, 8:30p.m. SRP.Friday, April 13Noted communist historianHerbert Aptheker will speak on“The communist historian: hisrole on the campus.” Given by theAcademic Freedom Week com¬mittee, 3:30 p.m. in Rosenwald 2.“The purposes of freedom” willbe discussed by Professor Mal¬colm Sharp of the law school atthe Hillel foundation, 5715 Wood-lawn, 8:30 p.m.Constitutional history film atB-J. (Details given under April 8.)!Sunday, April 15CQnstitutional history film atB-J. (Details given under April 8.),jurs.;—if you need an operation...we can't get it for you wholesale. But we can provideyou with a loan at a low interest rate. A $500 loan fora year costs you only $33.10. Whenever unexpected billsoccur and you need money in a hurry come to the:Hyde Park Co-op Federal Credit Union5535 S. HARPER AVE. DO 3-1031 Choke Seale for:MSTISLAVROSTROPOVICHTop Soviet CellistMonday EveningMay 7Orchestra HallColl Mr. WollinsAN 3-1877A-JEREEKO, JEREEKO, AND THEWALLS COME TUMBLING DOWNAfter 18 yeors we are forced to call it quits.Land clearance has bought the property I am located in and Ihave to sell out.Come in and investigate our ree-dick-yoo-loss prices. Everythinghas to go. Time is running out. Our loss — your gain. A rareopportunity to stock up with some real bargains.We have always carried one of the best assortment of importedand domestic lines of any liquor store in Hyde Park. Whiskies,brandies, ginger beer, scotch, vodka, cordials, gin, terrific assort¬ment of French and German imports, and imported beers.This is an opportunity you cannot afford to miss.Con-foosh-ee-us say: Chance like this do not come often.Hyde Park Liquors1405 E. 55th PL 2-8830WE DELIVERPage 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 6, 1956Forum: Ought SC to be or not to be?_ /Claim SG unrepresentative; Comment of ISL SG protects student rights;Porter defends governmentspokesmen explain CFSAThe petitions for the censure of Student Government werecirculated with much forethought. Obviously much of thecampus is in agreement or a small group could not have got¬ten 500 signatures in only two days. We feel that there would be moresignatures already but some people are afraid and hesitant to signthe petitions because “I may hurt someone” or “Suppose you areunsuccessful and my name is connected.” When these people realizehow many signatures the Committee has we feel sure most of themwill sign.The Committee did not present a definite plan, not for the lack ofIdeas, but because we did not want to sell a particular plan to thecampus. We want the leaders of the campus groups to come togetherand formulate a plan that will be acceptable to and representativeof the entire campus.Personally we would like to see a Student Council set up with allliving groups and student organizations represented with an organ¬izational form similar to the old ACCLC. We would like individualsreally interested in student welfare to be given a chance to expresstheir ideas. The Committee has written to several universities andreceived their plans for student government, which may aid in for¬mulating changes in our student government.In our contacts with some Student Government members in thelast two days, we have found several of them militantly uncompro¬mising and insistent on keeping Student Government as it is now.They were unwilling to consider changing its forms, operations, oractivities. If the students do not want the present student govern¬ment, do its members want to force them to keep it? Is this good forthe campus or only those who want to play party politics at theexpense of the campus?However, most important of all, no matter what the final outcome,we think only good can come from this petition. We say this sincethe campus seems more aroused and aware of the problems ofstudent government than it has ever been in our recollection. Manyapathetic and seemingly uninterested students have shown realenthusiasm in a possible change of the present program.Martin GendellZahava Dudnik Comment of ISLIn the wake of the publish¬ing of a petition to disbandStudent Government, severalmembers of ISL were askedfor comments.Said Janice Metros ef ISL“Since these are the views ofthe students they should belooked into. There is reasonfor dissatisfaction. I wouldtend to place a great deal ofblame, though not all on thepresent irresponsible adminis¬tration,”Jim Handler, also of ISL,commented “From working inSG I realize that it has manyfaults. However, this is no wayto correct them, since thismovement Ls generally destruc¬tive, not constructive. Such apetition could not and appar¬ently has not appealed to verymany people who have an in¬terest in really making SG amore effective organ for serv¬ing and representing the stu¬dent body. Actually from whatI’ve seen, not too many peoplehave seriously signed this peti¬tion. I think that this show'sthat they realize that this kindof sour grapes movement isnot going to accomplish any¬thing worthwhile.”LettersAttacks CFSAIt is true that I am only a firstyear student, and it follows thatthere is much about my Univer¬sity that I do not know and cannotunderstand. This could be the reasonwhy the “Committee to Further Stu¬dent Affairs” seems childish.Mv first knowledge of this commit¬tee and Its alms was through an In¬dividual circulating the petition atB-J. He was working for the CFSA be¬cause he wanted more social life oncampus. It was his opinion that a newtype of Student Government wouldprovide “bigger and better dances-After further questioning he also cameout for washing windows and plantingflowers on campus.The one added bit of information inTuesday’s Maroon was the bid to com¬muters offering them “greater facili¬ties”—whatever that means.Although they lack constructivecriticism it is clear that these peopleare not satisfied with the present Stu¬dent Government. “Do-nothtng,’ “de¬bating society,” and “political play¬pen” are the catch phrases of ■ theirnew students’ crusade.I do not think that a “do-nothing**student government could 1) organizea German Israeli student exchange;2) prepare for a Russian student ex¬change; 3) organize a Russian culturalexchange; 4) maintain a student serv¬ice center and student publicity cen¬ter; 5) organize activities night; 6) or¬ganize an Academic Freedom Week;7) organize a reduced airplane fare toEurope; 8) print the student directoryand student handbook; 9) have con¬certs as the Mahalia Jackson and Vir¬tuoso Di Roma; and 10) act as NSA’sagent for the Experiment in Interna¬tional Living. It is probably due onlyto inadequate communications that afirst year student cannot make a longerlist of the accomplishment of this "do-nothing” government.I do not know if anybody in CFSAhas ever attended any of the “debat¬ing society’s” meetings. I have I havealso been at meetings of the NebraskaState legislature, the House of Repre¬sentatives and the Senate of the UnitedStates, and the General Assembly ofthe United Nations. Strangely enoughall of these organizations seemed to bedebating societies. I think I wouldorganize a petition to do away withStudent Government if it were not a“debating society.”I am afraid the term "political play¬ pen” is too vague to know what theCFSA means by this. Perhaps theymean that the Student Governmenthelps in some way to prepare the stu¬dent for hfe role as an adult citizenin a complicated society. I don’t knowwhat they would have against this.If the CFSA people want more sociallife, why don’t they work through theSocial Activities Council? If the CFSApeople think the commuters shouldhave “greater facilities,” why don’tthey work with the Commuters club?And if the CFSA people want windowswashed and flowers planted, why don’tthey work through the buildings andgrounds department?Certainly there are many things thatSG can do but does not, and there aresome things SG does and should not.But that is why I as a student cantalk to members of the Government,can make use of the non-memberquestion period held at each SG meet¬ing, and can vote for whomever I pleasein the next election. I cannot see anyneed for the dissolution of the presentStudent Government.Ted DientsfreyDisowns 'anger'I feel an obligation to clarify apoint in the article I wrote, head¬lined “Morgenthau lecture angersPakistani listeners” in Tuesday’sMaroon. The word “angers” was notmine; but I did suggest “riles.”Looking back, I would say that theconnotation of either word tends toconvey a wrong impression—at leastnot that which I myself received at themeeting. The discussion after Dr. Mor-genthau’s talk was not of the naturethat could be described even as “heat¬ed.” Considering the emotion one mightexpect to be generated, the codrtesy andgood nature with which differing viewswere expressed seemed, to me, remark¬able. When audience reaction is news,the assessment of it is, more than inother reporting, ultimately subjectiveand therefore more liable to error, Butit must be done.This was one of those cases wherejournalists sacrifice a bit of “objec¬tivity” and honesty in order to attractattention so that the article will beread in the first place. In this particu¬lar instance, it seems necessary to makethis clarification and to express myregret if a wrong impression has beenconveyed.Ed Berckman Defines SGI want to defend Student Gov¬ernment against those who wishto dissolve it. I feel this is neces¬sary since any good which it may havedone is not readily apparent to thestudent body.First, as to the positive good. De¬spite its usual ineptitude and utterirrelevance to student life, I believethat Student Government does do somegood. Its meetings, and the caucuses,electioneering, party fund drive, etc.,that go with it, divert the "politicians”from their studies, and assuming thatStudent Government represents thebest brains and talents on campus, thatmakes it so much easier for the restof us to excel academically—especiallyin the college where examinations aremarked “on the curve.” I expect thatthis is the reason for the large repre¬sentation from the college, and fromsocial sciences where the better stu¬dents are of course interested in prac¬tical politics. Also, there is no harmdone to Student Government membersby this, since the apparent ascendencyof student activities in the eyes of Uni¬versity administrations, lets their “poli¬tical” activities make up for their badmarks.Student Government ls an interest¬ing glass cage (or a wire one if youprefer) where we can watch "studentleaders” make fools of themselves. Itdoes harm to no one. Yet the glass isessential. Take it away and we willhave them swarming over us, intoxi¬cating the campus with notions thathave thus far been successfully con¬fined to Law north. This is the “nega¬tive good” of Student Government.The “Committee to further StudentAffairs” aims at taking away the glassand giving free reign to social busy-bodies. That would destroy all the goodin Student Government, and leavenothing to replace it. It takes away arelatively minor evil and leayes us aconsiderably greater one. I am no ad¬mirer of Student Government, but Irealize its great value in draining offthe excess energies of a group whichwithout this outlet and the limits itputs on their semi-psychopathic ac¬tivities, would contribute to the ruina¬tion of the academic values of theuniversity.E. M. Wise Students have a right to voiceopinions on student affairs. Morethan this, they have an obliga¬tion to do so. The petition toabolish student government, how¬ever, seems to indicate that anykind of moral obligation whichstudents do feel toward SG is be¬ing presently resolved merely interms of negative, uninformed ac¬tion.Indeed, “Why student government?,” many are now asking.The sponsors of the petition andthose students who have signedit seem woefully ignorant of theanswer. We w’ould suggest onewhich is two fold.As a corporate body studentshave certain rights and privileges.The UC student Bill of Rightstells us that a representative stu¬dent body exists to protect“rights essential to the completedevelopment of the student as anindividual and the fulfillment ofhis responsibilities as a citizenof his society.” The bill empha¬sizes that “It is important thatwe/ preserve and guarantee tothe student of the University ofChicago those conditions indis¬pensable to full achievement ofthe objects of higher education ina free democratic society.” Peti¬tion supporters attribute to UCstudents an unconcern with theprotection, preservation, and ex¬tension of their rights that wecannot believe to be true, andwhich we could not condone, evenwere it to prove so.A second major purpose forwhich a government exists is thatof fulfilling certain student needs.The government feels that theseneeds cannot be limited in scopeto the planning of social func¬tions. However, to provide, as wehave attempted to provide, a bookco-op, a traveling service, a ticketagency, a publicity service, re¬quires extensive manpower and steadfast interest. Thus far, peti¬tion supporters and signers havenot offered us their services, theyhave not attempted to ease thedifficulties involved in securingsuch manpower and interest.It cannot be denied that thepresent form of student govern¬ment has various disadvantages.We in Government are perhapsmore conscious of these disad¬vantages than is anyone else. We,too, feel that the existing struc¬ture might be perfected and im¬proved. But we also know thatone major weakness of Govern¬ment lies in its lack of manpower.This problem will not be solvedby abolishing the structure whichdoes exist and within which SGhas managed to serve numerousvaluable functions.Most of the supporters of the“abolition” movement would haveus scrap the existing form, eventhough they have no alternativeplan to offer. Those of the “aboli¬tionists” who do suggest plansfor a new governing body give usa proposal we feel to bo complete¬ly unsatisfactory. UC students arebeing asked to accept a non repre¬sentative organization, whichwould not be responsible to thestudent body and which wouldin effect be an aristocracy of“student leaders.”Had those who now proposewhat is, at best, an inferior andless representative governmentdevoted their energies tostrengthening what they alreadyhave, they would be better in¬formed of the real, not superficialproblems. Had they channeledthese energies along productive,positive lines — had they madereal contributions — they mightnow have the type of organiza¬tion which would be so satisfac¬tory as not to provoke requestsfor abolition. jan rorterSG President~Y\\ c^ca5°11 laroonIssued 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.Co-editors-in-chiefJoy S. Burbach Palmer W. PinneyManaging editorDiane Pollock Business manager* Gary MokotoffAdvertising manager Lawrence KesslerCopy editor „ Norman LewakNews editors Robert Bergman, Jim Birmingham, 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 GarfinOffice manager Adrienne KinkaldBilling secretary Lynford RussellStaff: Ed Berckman, William Brandon, Jack Burbach, Joyce Ellin, Saralee Feld¬man, Oliver Lee, Quentin Ludgin, Robert MacDonald, Robert Moody, RichardWard, Marina Wirzup, Adrienne Kinkaid, Miriam Garfin, Lynford Russell, JoanKrueger, Edward Wise, Gerson Greenberg, Art Taitel.TYPEWRITERSFOR SALE ★ NEW AND RECONDITIONED — GUARANTEEDREPAIRS ★ CHEMICAL WASHING — COMPLETE OVERHAULSPECIAL TYPE IMSTALLATIOHS ★ LANGUAGE — MATHEMATICS, ETC.RENTALS ★ ALL FIRST CLASS MACHINESHighly Skilled9 Conscientious Mechanicsat your serviceUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUE COMO PIZZERIA1520 E. 55 FA 4-5525Free Delivery to U.C. StudentsON ALL PIZZASMALLCHEESE ..1.15SAUSAGE ..1.45ANCHOVY ..1.45PEPPER and ONION ..1.30SHRIMP . .1.70COMBINATION ..1.75SPECIAL!Vi Fried Chicken .. . .1.00Potatoes and Bread'—[April 6, 1956Election law changesvoted by SG Tuesdayby Jim Birmingham/ Voting on almost straight party lines, Student Representa¬tive Party Tuesday night passed a bill in Student Governmentvirtually eliminating campaigning on the two days duringwhich voting is done.Overriding its own election and rules committee chairman, DonAnderson (SRP-soc), SRP outlawed electioneering within 125 feetof the polls. — THE CHICAGO MAROON Rag* 5Previously the non-electioneer¬ing limit had been 10 feet.Independent Student League! backed a compromise attemptmade by Jan Metros (ISL-coll) toset the limit at 25 feet.Miss Metros contended that theSRP bill eliminated the campus’only chance at personal question-iing of candidates they are un¬ifamiliar with.Paul Breslow (SRP-soc) re-; plied that there was ample timefor personal - type campaigningprior to the election. He alsoclaimed that it would be betterfor the campus if the campaignwas fought on the level of issuesinstead of “jumping voters.”Anderson questioned whetherthe 125 feet limit could be en¬forced. He asked Phil Hoffmani(SRP-coll), co-sponsor of the billwith Joel Rosenthal (SRP-coll),to estimate the distance betweenthem. Hoffman declined, but stat¬ed that he did not expect the lawto be so rigidly enforced that aslight miscalculation would ac¬tually matter.The new bill is actually a wa¬tered down version of a bill pre¬sented to the government lastyear by Joy Burbach (formerlyISL-soc). This bill, defeated by the ISL-dominated SG, set thelimits at 500 feet. This was thedistance requested in the originalversion of the Hoffman-Rosenthalbill.The Hoffman-Rosenthal billwas passed 16-13.. Controversy also was arousedby the student needs committeereport presented by Amie Wins¬ton (SRP-coll).The report dealt with the pos¬sibility of a student book co-op.Estimating the cost of an off-cam-puts co-op at $6,600 to $10,600, thereport indicated that such a proj¬ect was impractical.However, the report was favor¬able regarding the establishing ofan on-campus co-op.The controversy centered onthe feasibility of circulating aquestionnaire aimed at estimat¬ing student interest in a book co¬op which would provide texts ata substantial discount.Pete Carmel (ISLcoll) andDavid Farquhar (SRP-soc) con¬tended that it might be better forthe committee to obtain the replyto a query previously directed toa vice-president of the Universityrelating to this question beforeformulating a method to handlethe situation.The SUN TIMES ' recommendsSANFORD A. BANKFor State Representative Kf23rd District“The Illinois Legislaturewould be greatly improvedby aa infusion of youngblood, as represented byBank”Your Neighbors Agree:CONGRESSMAN BARRATT O’HARAMRS. DOROTHY CBRIEH M0RGEHSTERHProminent Community LeaderHERMAH FIHERProfessor of Political Science, University of ChicagoSTATE SEHAT0R MARSHALL K0RSHAKWM. R. MIHG, JR.Lawyer and Former Instructor of Law, Universityof ChicagoDOUGLAS B. AHDERS0HAdministrative Aide to U. S. Senator Paul A. DouglasMORRIS FEIWELLCivic Leader and President, University of ChicagoLaw School AlumniFRED HOEHLERPublic Administrator and Consultant to Mayor DaleyNICHOLAS J. MELASAdministrative Aide to Sheriff LehmanAlso Recommended byThe Better Government AssociationThe Illinois State Federation of LaborYOU CAN“BANK «BANK”EndorsedDemocratic Party Candidate0 VOTE DEMOCRATICTUESDAY, APRIL 10thCommittee to Elect Sanford A. BankProfessor Herman Finer, ChairmanIII ■ " 1 '■ • M 1 1 ' • ■'-V-V- . V. . . -Y. - . 23rd district candidatesdiscuss qualificationsDemocrats Sanford A. Bank, Nathan J. Kinnally, and Abner J. Mikva and RepublicansNoble W. Lee and Richard L. Samuels, candidates for representatives to the General As¬sembly from the 23rd district discussed their qualifications and answered questions fromthe audience Wednesday night at a Mandel hall mee ting sponsored by the League of Women voters andStudent Government. A fourth candidate in the Democratic primary, Edward Garrity, failed to attendthe meeting or respond to a questionnaire regardin g candidates’ qualifications, which the League hadprepared for distribution beforethe meeting.From six candidates two“will beselected by each .party in Tues¬day’s primary. Three of those re¬maining will be elected repre¬sentatives next fall.Samuels, who spoke before theother candidates, since he had toleave the meeting early, reviewedhis qualifications for representa¬tive and advocated judicial re-To investigateservice centerA committee to investigate thestudent service center and thestudent publicity service is beingplanned. Mary Alice Newman, as¬sociate director of student activi¬ties, and Janice Porter, presidentof Student Government, haveagreed to set up such a commit¬tee. Its purpose would be to makebasic recommendations as to theneeds for services on campus, theadvisability of continuing thepresent services, and the best or¬ganization and administration ofthe services with respect to eachother and to Student Government.The service center and publicityservice have been, for some time,in difficulty. Dean Strozier andMrs. Newman have let StudentGovernment take responsibilityfor its own services. However,many complaints have been re¬ceived about both agencies underinvestigation. “It seems to thebest interest of the campus andthe Student Government,” saysMrs. Newman, “that we inter¬vene.”Those asked to serve on thecommittee are Stephen Fitch,Harold Rudolph, Don Villarejo,and Allen Austil.LOAN INSURANCEPENSION INSURANCEPhone o« Writ*► Joseph H. Aaron, '27 j>135 S. LaSalle St. • RA 6-1060; form and elimination of overlap¬ping functions as did all of thecandidates later in the oneeting.Both Bank and Kinnally, whohave official Democratic partyendorsement, called for an in¬tegrated judiciary. Kinnally advo¬cated making the office of super¬intendent of public instruction anoffice.Lee devoted his opening speechto an explanation of two proposi¬tions which will appear on -theprimary ballot. One would in¬crease the salaries of Chicago al¬dermen and the other would re¬move the present limit of 33clerks and bailiffs who can bepaid more than $3500 per year.Mikva discussed the housingproblem in Chicago. Approxi¬mately 2 million people are ex¬pected to be brought to Chicagoby the Port of Chicago project,he pointed out. He attacked the“inequitable taxing system” ofthe state of Illinois and duringthe question period advocated aDiscuss ballotprocedureThe procedure for writing inthe name of Estes Kefauver onboth the voting machines and pa¬per ballots to be used in the Illi¬nois primary was discussed bythe campus Kefauver for Presi¬dent club.At their meeting last Wednes¬day they decided to urge all stu¬dents to familiarize themselveswith the write-in procedure.The organization hopes to pub¬licize the record and program ofSenator Kefauver, with specialemphasis on those issues whichare of particular concern to stu¬dents.Kefauver’s support for continu¬ing the GI Bill of Rights, his op¬position to UMT, his work in fa¬vor of Federal aid to education,and his strong stand against seg¬regation in schools were cited asimportant reasons for a large sup¬port among students.ACASA Book StoreScholarly Used Books — Bought and SoHImported Greeting CardsReliable Typewriter ServiceHY 3-9651 1322 E. i 5th St.WITH EVERY PIZZA ORDEREDFREE Portion of SpumoniORDER NOW WHILE OFFER LASTS!PhonesMU 4-1014MU 4-1015MU 4-9022 FREEDELIVERY5 p.m. to 3 a.m,7 days a weekITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIA state income tax and the repealof the sales tax.The question period began withthree questions addressed to Lee:“All Democratic candidates favorrepeal of the Broyles bil^s. Howdo the Republicans feel?” “Whydid you not actively oppose theBroyles bills?” “Why did you notvote against the Broyles bills?”Lee answered that the Broylesbills had never been a party issueand that the floor leader for theBroyles bills in the house was aDemocrat. He stated that he hadactively opposed the Broyles billsand that the vpte was called un¬expectedly while he was off thefloor.Mikva was asked whether hewould cooperate with the Demo¬cratic organization if elected. Heanswered that he would vote withDemocratic caucuses and treathimself as a Democrat.A question addressed to all ofthe candidates asked whetherthey favored the calling of a con¬stitutional convention to write anew constitution. All except Mik¬va agreed with Lee that the pres¬ent constitution would becometolerable’ after the passage ofthe judiciary act. Mikva describedthe Illinois constitution as “oneof the most antiquated” andcalled for a new constitution ifat all possible.Dresner torepresent UCSy Dresner will represent theUniversity of Chicago Studentsfor Stevenson chapter at a na¬tional conference of Students forStevenson this weekend. The con¬ference, April 7-8 at the ConradHilton, will be held jointly withmeetings of the national Steven¬son for President Committee.Purpose of the conference is tojoin with other Stevenson groupsin a redoubling of efforts to gainthe Democratic nomination forthe former Illinois governor, and1952 nominee.Dresner will report the plans ofthe conference to the campusStevenson group at a later meet¬ing.1427 East 67th St. BETZ JEWELRYHyde Park's Finest JewelersExpert Jewelryami Watch RepairingOMEGA - HAMILTON - LONGINEAND OTHER BRAND NAMEWATCHESNSA Discount to Students1523 E. 53rd PL 2-3038SPECIAL PRICETO STUDENTSOn Student HealthService Prescriptions3 RegisteredPharmaciststo Serve YouREADER’SCampus Drug Store1001 E. 611Nge I THE CHICAGO MAROON April 6, 1956Coming events on quadrangles■Friday, April 6International student relations seminar,talks and discussion sponsored by Illi¬nois region NSA, 2-10 p.m., Ida Noyesball; seminar will continue on Satur¬day, 9 a.m.-lO p.m., and Sunday, 2-8p.m.Kgs roll, end of six-day race, dance(Bob Strader, host). Improvised operaby Don Levine, refreshments, no bat¬tle of Green hill, 3-6 p.m., Ida Noyes.History and sociology seminar, “Thehistory and the study of moderncities,” by Prof. Asa Briggs, U. ofLeeds, England, 4 p.m., Social Sci¬ence 106.Mathematical biology meeting, “Mathe¬matical theory of color vision: tran¬sient phenomena,” Assoc. Prof. Her¬bert D. Landahl, 4:30 p.m., 5741 Drexel.Lutheran students supper, 6 p.m., anddiscussion at 7 with Assoc. Prof. ReuelDenney on "The Intellectual world,”Chapel house.Docfilm, first of study series, Italianstraw hat, Social Science 122, 7:15 and9:15 p.m., admission by $1.25 seriesticket only.Communication club lecture, “Thewriter's role in our society,” with U.College lecturer Isaac Rosenfeld andAssoc. Prof. Reuel Denney, 7:30 p.m..Social Science 201.B-J movie: Johnny Belinda with aca¬demic freedom movie preceding, 7:30and 9:30 p.m., Judson lounge, 25cents. Hillel sabbath service, 7:45 p.m. andfireside at 8:30 on “The problem ofIsrael: a Christian approach,” byAssoc. Prof. C. Coert Rylaarsdam, 5715Woodlawn.Folk concert by Rosalie Wax, singing“folksongs proper and improper,”sponsored by WAA, 8 p.m., Breastedhall.SSA club roller-skating party, 8 p.m.,Ida Noyes.Folklore society, 8:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.Dance at International house, 9 p.m.-1 a.m., assembly hall, 35 cents, cele¬bration of battle of Green Hill at9:30 p.m. (no egg-roll).Saturday, April 7International student relations seminar,9 a m.-10 p.m., Ida Noyes.Varsity golf meet, UC vs. IIT, 11 a.m.,Longwood country club.Madrigal singers rehearsal, 2 p.m., IdaNoyes. ,Bach singers rehearsal, 2 p.m., IdaNoyes.Science fiction club meeting, 7:30 p.m.,Ida Noyes.Radio broadcast, “The sacred note,”with Rockefeller chapel choir, WBBM,10:15 p.m.Student Zionist organizational meet¬ing, 5401 Ellis at house of Label Fein,at 2 p.m.Sunday, April 8Episcopal communion service, 8:30 p.m.Bond chapel. Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10, 11a.m., 5735 University,Lutheran Communion service, 10 a.m.,Hilton chapel.International house coffee hour, 10a.m.-noon.Clinics religious service, 10 a m., Bill¬ings 0-4.Radio broadcast, "The art of the sneer,”Dean Robert E. Stretter and Asst.Profs. Charles Wegener and EdwardW. Rosenheim, WMAQ, 10:35 a.m.University religious service. Dean JohnB. Thompson, preaching, 11 a.m.,Rockefeller chapel.International student relations semi¬nar, 2-6 p.m., Ida Noyes hall.Modern dance club class in technique,3:15 p.m., Ida Noyes.Young Socialist league, “A Marxist re¬views the pre-Clvll war labor move¬ment,p.m., Ida Noyes.Carillon recital, 4:30 p.m., Rockefellerchapel.MAROON staff meeting, 5 p.m.. Maroonoffice—Ida Noyes, members: have youdone your work this week? Academicfreedom editorial among agenda.Porter fellowship, supper at 6 p.m. anddiscussion, “The place of Christ InChristian faith,” with Prof. MarcusBarth, Swift common.Wesak festival, songs and dances of theOrient, 7 p.m., Mandel hall.Badminton club, 7 p.m., Ida Noyes.B-J movie: Torment, preceded by movieon academic freedom, 7:30 and 9:30p.m., Judson lounge, 25 cents. Young Friends discussion, "Roots ofQuaker social action,” with Prof.George Watson, Roosevelt U., 7:30p.m., 5615 Woodlawn.SRP caucus, 7:30 p.m.. Ida Noyes.Renaissance society concert, 8 p.m., IdaNoyes.Channing eulb talk, “The Poetry ofElder Olson,” with the author, 8 p.m.,1174 E. 57th.Discussion, “Legal rights of a Commu¬nist In a free society,” prof. MalcolmSharp and trustee John Nuveen, 7:30p.m., 5747 University.New Testament club, “Demythologlza-tion: a theological problem," by prof.Schubert M. Ogden, Southern Meth¬odist U., 8 p.m.. Swift common.Law lecture, “Value of blood tests asevidence In paternity cases, ’ Prof. AlfRoss. U. of Copenhagen, 3:30 p.m,,Law South.Monday, April 9Art exhibit, “Desslns d'Ecoliers Fran-cals,” 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Bclfield 159, willbe shown through April 13.Sociology seminar, "Long range researchneeded In race relations," Francis W.McPeek, Chicago commission on hu¬man relations, 4 p.m., Social Sci¬ences 302.Walgreen lecture, “The public and theprivate realm,” by Hannah Arendt.political scientist and author, 4:30p.m., Social Sciences 122.Movie: The man who came to dinner(American), 7 and 9 p.m.. Interna¬tional house room CDE, 35 cents. Symposium, “Responsibility of thescholar In a free social,” prof, emeri¬tus Frank H. Knight and prof. Rob.ert J. Havlghurst and Samuel A11Uson, Social Sciences 201, 7:30 p m.Tuesday, April 10Intervarsity Christian fellowship,lunch-eon, “The Christian counsellor, chap,lain Granger Westberg,” 12:30 pm.Ida Noyes.Varsity tennis match, UC vs. GreatLakes naval training station, i 30p.m.. Varsity courts.University theatre workshop, 3 30 p m.,Reynolds club theatre.Metals Institute colloquium, “Ultra,sonlcs, phonons, and superconductiv¬ity,” visiting professor A. B. Pippard,4:15 p.m., Research institutes 211.Discussion on “Student organization:problems and Implications,” withprof. Donald Metcklejohn, 6:30 pm,Green Hall, refreshments.Doefilm: Strange Deception (Italian,1950), 7:15 and 9:15 p.m., Social Sci¬ences 122 , 40 cents.MAROON special staff meeting to planfor special student activities project,7:30 p.m., 5537 Woodlawn.Jazz club, 7:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.Blackfriars, 7:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.Madrigal singers rehearsal, 8 p.m , IdaNoyes.FTS wives, “New Testament as awhole,” by Assoc. Prof. Robert M,Grant, 8 p.m., 5757 Woodlawn.Young socialist league lecture, 8 p m,Ida Noyes.You get the man-size flavor of honest tobacco withouthuffing and puffing. This filter works good anddraws easy. The Flip-Top Box keeps every cigarettein good shape. You’d expect it to cost more, but it doesn’t.(MADE IN RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, FROM A NEW MARLBORO RECIPE)Firm to keepcigarettes fromcrushing.No tobacco inyour pocket.NEWFLIP-TOP BOXPOPULAR FILTER PRICEApril 6, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Broyles loyalty bills safein Supreme court rulingThe Supreme court ruling last Monday, which barred states fromenforcing their sedition acts, is not likely to affect the so-calledBroyles bill.Although the act struck down was not concerned with a test oathprovision, the effect of the ruling is being studied, according to Ken¬neth Douty, executive director of the Illinois division of the Amer¬ican Civil Liberties union.Malcolm Sharp of the UC law school pointed out that the seditionact was a penal statute while the Broyles bill involved the state’sright to demand the faithfulness of its employees.Douty thought that the Carl Braden case in Kentucky would reachthe same result. lie also said that the Illinois sedition act of 1919 wasrendered ineffective by the decision.The crux of the opinion by Chief Justice Earl Warren was that Con¬gress had treated "seditious conduct as a matter of vital nationalconcern” and had "occupied the field to the exclusion of parallelstate legislation.”BJ council toshow academicfreedom moviesThe Burton-Juuson council isstarting Academic-Freedom Weekby showing a film tonight on aca¬demic freedom. Before its regu¬larly scheduled performance, anhour-long movie will be shown.Three different movies, also onthe same topic, will be shown thisSunday and next Friday and Sun¬day.Edward R. Murrow’s filmed in¬terview with J. Robert Oppen-heimer will also be shown at B-J.On Thursday, April 12, the Inde¬pendent Students League (ISL)is presenting this movie at 7:30and 9 p.m.Books Bought• Any Subject• Any Language• Any QuantityClark & ClarkHYde Park 3 03211204 *E. 55th St. Lecturer to discussreligious enthusiasm"The current American en¬thusiasm for religion” will bethe topic of three lectures byWilliam Lee Miller, a staff writerof The Reporter magazine, nextWednesday, Thursday, and Fri¬day at 4:30 p.m..in Breasted hall,sponsored by Porter foundation.Miller has taught as an instruc¬tor in Christian ethics at Yale uni¬versity and assistant professor ofreligion at Smith college. He wasformerly editor of Social Action,and radio, motion picture, andtelevision editor of the EpiscopalChurch News.Miller’s articles in The Report¬er have included "Piety on thePotomac” and “Negative thinkingabout Norman Vincent Peale.”Jimmy’sSINCE 1940Make your pickthe "pick of the pros.”—SPALDING'.You’ll stop*a lot of horsehKle"\viih'either of these fine'Spalding gloves. These are the very same gloves usedby two great names in baseball—Alvin Dark,* short¬stop captain of the New York Giants and PhilRizzuto,* veteran shortstop of the New York Yankees.Both these gloves are made with the finest leather,deep grease pocket and solid web in trap. You don’thave to break them in; Spalding does that for you. Youcan see the complete Spalding line of fine gloves atyour Spalding dealer’s, now.•Members of Spalding's^Advisory Staff SpaidinG. SETS THE PACE IN SPORTSA Knight9 Havighurst, Allisonto hold symposiumIn the first major program of Academic Freedom week, “The responsibilities of the scholarin a free society,” will be discussed by three UC faculty members in Social Science 201 at7:30 p m. Monday.Sponsored by the League for Civil Liberties, a symposium of professors Frank Knight,Robert Havighurst, Samuel Allison, will tackle such problems as: Is the scholar responsiblefor the uses to which his knowledge and skills are put? Is the professor obligated to be im¬partial in the classroom?What are the effects of ad¬vances in science and knowl¬edge on social freedom?Knight orthodox economistA former president of theAmerican Economic association,Knight is the elder statesman ofthe orthodox classical school ofeconomics in the United States.He is a professor emeritus in theeconomics and philosophy depart¬ments and on the committee onsocial thought.Give recordHavighurst, professor of edu¬ cation, is nationally known forhis studies in the sociological as¬pects of human development. Heis also one of the leading authori¬ties on the methods of teachingscience in colleges and secondaryschools.On Fermi instituteNow the director of the Fermiinstitute for nuclear studies, Al¬lison was chairman of the techni¬cal and scheduling committee atthe Los Alamos scientific labora¬tory during the later years ofWorld War II. Arendt to gavenext Walgreenlecture seriesHannah Arendt, political sci¬entist, will give a series of sixWalgreen lectures starting Mon¬day.Miss Arendt, author of T h ®Origins of Totalitarianism (’051),will discuss labor and human re¬lations in the series entitled “Vitaactiva.” The lectures will be at4:30 p.m. in Social Science April9, 11, 13,16, 18 and 20.Chicago MaroonCLASSIFIEDSStudent rote 5c per word Others 10c per word Phone: Ml 3-0800 Ext. 3265For rent Personal Wanted1 <4-Room kitchenette apartment. New¬ly' decorated. Refrigerator. Close tocampus. FA 4-5538, 6107 Dorchester.4-Room apt. with porch, just off Mid¬way, 6019 Klmbark, available May 1stor June 1st. Call NO 7-5869.Three-room furnished apartment, threeblocks from Commons. All facilitiesfurnished. HY 3-8460.For saleUpright freezer, cedar chest, book¬case, radio, dishes, etc. HY 3-5876.Portrait StylistBlack and White andDirect ColorPhotographyBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St. Attention: Maroon editors, staff mem¬bers, prospective staff members, andother interested persons. Plans for aspecial project on student activitieswill be made Tuesday, April 10, at 7:30p.m. at 5537 Woodlawn.Mossless: Maroon election coming; wishyou were here to join the staff; every¬one else has. Pogo.Knees will toe showing; Max will bewatching—at Gamin Dregs. Today—4:30.Bunny: There’s a bright golden haze onthe meadow. Curly.Proper Darling,Mrs. Wax sings, 8 o’clock tonight.Oriental Institute. See you. Improper.ServicesAnn Landers’ lovers! For only 25c youcan have a wallet size picture of AnnLanders and/or daughter. Larger sizesmade to order. Write, photo dept., Chi¬cago Maroon, Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 East59th Street. Guitar teacher for three. Reasonablerates. Call MU 4-5476 after 2 p.m., orMU 4-5050, anytime.Student, 21, drive station wagon. 8-9:15,11:30-1:30, 3:25-4:50. $1.25 per hour. BU8-7900.Laboratory mechanic. Full time. Re¬search laboratory needs men with someelectrical and machine-shop trainingand/or experience. Position requiresknowledge of electrical wiring and blazework. Apply Personnel office, 956 E,55th St.Child sitter. Student to sit with 5-year-old child from 1-3 o’clock, Mon.-Fri,DO 3-8167.Tutoring in statistics. $2 per hr. CallWilson, FA 4-5400.Five or six-room furnished apartmentto be leased by four male U of C gradu¬ate students from Oct. 1, 1956, thruMay 31, 1957. If you know someone whowould like to sublease one, please con¬tact: Larry Kessler, 1005 E. 60tli St.Phone MI 3-6000.French tutoring, coaching and transla- . _ ^ „tions. Native teacher. Reasonable. NO Wanted, one tenor for Madrigal singers.7-2722. Contact M. Zuckerbraun, B-J.Mathematics. Instruction and applica¬tions for individuals or group. Loop orSouth side. Special ararngements forgroup formed by yourself. Soglin &Assoc., 28 East Jackson, WE 9-2127.Endorsed by the Chicago Daily NewsFor liberalism ond decency to triumph, the caliber of your state rep¬resentative must be like Caesar's wife — above reproach. Elect aproven public servant and University of Chicago graduate.NATHAN J.KINNALLYfor state representativeVOTE DEMOCRATIC TUESDAY, APRIL 10 Lost and foundOne blanket. State color and claim.Found—Walker II, Hitchcock 39.Lost: Pictures belonging to press rela¬tions: the Chicago-Cornell game, Wal¬ter Eckersall, A. A. Stagg (2 prints).Return to Maroon office, 3rd floor, IdaNoyes. Reward. No questions asked.hyde park theatrelake park at 53rd NO 7-9071Student rate 50c all performancesNOW PLAYING — HELD OVER? EXCLUSIVE SHOWING!FIRST OUTLYING RUN!"SAMURAI''ACADEMY AWARDWINNERBEST FOREIGNFILM presented and narrated byWILLIAM HOLDEN"One of the 10 BEST TO SEE" — NewsweekA dazzling, fascinating, beautifully tinted (Eastman Color) treat forWestern eyes ... an Intriguing Story of touching love ond impassionedlust . . . o work of Exotic, Fantastic Beauty.— and —ALEC GUINNESS as DISRAELI, IRENE DUNNE os"The MUDLARK"Directed by JEAN NEGULESCO . , . Based on the Best-Selling NovelSTARTING FRIDAY, APRIL 13EXCLUSIVE SOUTH SIDE SHOWINGJulie Harris in Ml t!Christopher Isherwood's i am a camera— ond —ACADEMY AWARDW!NNER . „..u„"Best Documentary" ill hfif STORY”“HELEN KELLER TINKER... TAILOR...Soldier . . . Sailor? What willyour son become? Success orfailure? Career or job? It’s oftenjust a question of education andtraining. Make sure your boygets a good start towards suc¬cess. Invest in a Sun Life Juve¬nile Assurance policy today.SUN LIFE ASSURANCECOMPANY OE CANADARalph J.Wood, Jr.,'481 N. LaSalleChicago 2,IllinoisFR 2-2390RE 1-08557Bell ringers to playconcert at Mitchell towersAs part of the Festival of Arts the Societas Companariorum(Society of Bell Ringers) in cooperation with members of theconcert band and the Festival choir will present at 12 noon onFriday, April 26, a ceremony patterned after the MagdalenTower May Day ceremonyheld each year at Oxford, Ion. and a program by the black Ivanov - Fedeirobed brass and vocal choir. The than for the Ihonorable Robert W. Mason. Brit- pany to sinkish consul general in Chicago, has Balanchine vconsented to act as patron of the healthy itself. PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 *AST 55th STREETby Robert QuinnTO ELECTy . ... •*> v> - -■ -Independent Democratic Candidate — State Representative 23rd District fEndorsed ByCHICAGO SUN-TIMESHYDE PARK HERALDSTATE & COUNTY CIO CHICAGO DAILY NEWSINDEPENDENT VOTERS OF ILLINOIS- State AFL & Railway BrotherhoodsCall MU. 4-0455 Call MU. 4-0455Citizens Committee to Elect ABNER J. MIKVA — Walter Johnson, ChairmanPage 8 April 6, V056Balanchine ballet charming; -choreography inappropriateAs a nostalgic recoup of George Balanchine’s memories of the Cass© Noisette of Russia’sMaryinsky theater, New York City Ballet’s production of The Nutcracker, currently de¬lighting Chicagoans in an extended engagement at the Opera House is not quite a Balan¬chine fairy tale and not quite a Balanchine ballet.The new Balanchine Nut¬cracker, although long oncandy-cane charm, is, unfortu¬nately, a bit short on choreogra¬phic art. The first act, never seenin its entirety in Chicago before,is beautifully designed and di¬rected. It bubbles radiantly withchildlike Christmas-eve enthusi¬asm, and the gavotte-like “Grov-aster,” mirrors the parent andchild corps in a graciously charm¬ing manner. The beginning of thelittle girl’s dream as she sleepsbefore the Christmas tree withher toy nutcracker is all that achild’s dream should be—in a bril¬liant spectacle the glistening treegrows to fantastic heights, clockscome alive, toy soldiers fight awinning battle against humorous¬ly costumed mice, and a couchglides liltingly into an evanescentfairly, land of snow covered treesand dancing snow flakes. .From this point on we are on more familiar territory—the pot¬pourri of second act divertisse¬ments. All the Balanchine earmarks are there: the intricatelydesigning corps, the expectationsof crisp brilliance on the dancer'spart, and the unwillingness torecognize the fact that one dancercan make as beautiful a designas 16.Tallchief was, of course, su¬perb in the pas de deux. Herline with Andre Eglevsky in theadagio was silkenly perfect; thepair did their best with the in¬adequate material of the subse¬quent variations.Balanchine has been literal inhis interpretation of the secondact dances as representing typesof sweets. “Hot Chocolate,” givena Spanish flair, was not so unin-spiredly designed as uninspiredlydanced. “Coffee,” danced by Fran¬cisco Moncion and four tiny slaveswith an ultra-Arabian flavor be-,_w„ mHeld at Mitchell tower, an exactreplica of its counterpart in Ox¬ford, the ceremony will featurebell music on the Mitchell earii- ceremony. gan formally and symmetricallyand lapsed into an amusing in¬formality.The Chinese dance was, asusual, a resounding success, par¬ticularly with Richard Thomasdoing a devastating series ofjetes. The “Candy cane dance” ex¬ecuted with hoops and attractivestriped costumes was sheer acro¬batics, and not particularly ex¬citing ones at that. The dance ofthe marzipan shepherdesses (redflutes) bordered on the ugly, withPatrica Wilde leading her fourcohorts stiff-leggedly and dispas¬sionately. In fact, she was stiffenough to be mistaken for DianaAdams.Leon Barzin’s orchestra wasmore than adequate and, exceptfor some poorly amplified vocalsections in the first act, occasion¬ally made the pit more interestingthan the stage. First act sceneryand lighting was brilliant and ap¬propriate; those of the second actwere routine.The Nutcracker, in spite ofsome of Balanchine’s touches, isstill Tschaikovsky’s and thescenic designers’. The divertisse¬ments are crisp and formal, butnever like those we might expectin a fairy land. In Theme andVariations and Symphony in C,the glittering Balanchine stylehas no equal. But in The Nut¬cracker it would seem for moreworthwhile for the Ballet Russeto cure some of the ills of itsIvanov - Federova choreography,than for the New York City com¬pany to sink everything into itsBalanchine which is far from Chicagoland MuskChicago Symphony^plays this weekendThe young virtuoso Michael Rabin will be presented with the efii;cago Symphony orchestra, Fritz Reiner conducting, at the afternoonconcert today at Orchestra hall at 2 in a performance of thethoven violin concerto.Rabin has received most of his training at the Juilliard school of' Mmusic in New York. This will be his first appearance with theorchestra.Four first-chair symphony members will be featured in the Mozart-ASymphonie Concertante in E flat during the first half of the program;The work has not been performed by the orchestra since 1916.* * * mCBEBSaturday’s concert, the final program in the series, will be an ail.Tschaikovsky program, Conducted by George Schick. Gary Graff. ^man, winner of the Levintritt award and the Rachmaninoff fund' -piano contest, will play the first Piano Concerto in B flat minor;Other works on the program include the Fifth Symphony in Fminor and the Polonaise from “Eugene Onegin.” , ~-|F%Concert gives Elizabethan musicMusic of Shakespeare’s theatre will be presented in an Orchestra"hall concert, tonight. The program includes music of the late lf>thand early 17th centuries, performed vocally and on instruments of ,rthe Elizabethan period. a | \The concert is given as a benefit for the scholarship program ofthe Midwest Music foundation. Student tickets, available at the serv¬ice center, music, and English departments, cost from $1 to $3.50®Plays piano at UC concertAnia Dorfmann, pianist, will give the first University of Chicago <-concert of the spring quarter at 8:30 p.m. tonight in Mandel halfMiss Dorfmann, who was born in Russia, has lived in the UnitedStates since 1945. She has twice been selected by Arturo Toscaninias piano soloist in his famous Beethoven cycles. ^Her program for the concert will include Mozart’s Sonata in Gmajor; Beethoven’s Sonata Pathetique; Schumann’s Faschings-1schwank aus Wien; Ravel’s Sonatine; Chopin's Valse, op. 69, no. ,1,Valse, op. 18, and Tarentelle, op. 43. hi *'Admission to the concert is $1.50, with student tickets availableat $1 upon presentation of identification cards..April 6, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 9WUCB puts on Sundays of humanities Stracke sings at Int houseGeorge Bernard Shaw’s “Don Juan in Hell” scene from Man and Superman, performed by for foreign students9 benefitthe members of the First Drama Quartet, will be presented as a special feature for humani- * * ® *ties 2 students this Sunday at 9 p.m. over WUCB, 64C k.c. Win Stracke, bass folk singer, will give a benefit concert ofThe program is one of a series of special humanities source material broadcasts present- folk and art songs Sunday, April 15, at 8:15 in Internationaled as a public service by WUCB, in cooperation with the college humanities staffs and the House.Harriet Monroe modern poetry room of Harper Memorial library. Stracke, a local television star, was the ballad singer onNBC’s series produced in conjunction with Northwesternfilm Ail University. His guest appearances have included the DaveB1IBBB. PMBB VIB BBCBB Garroway show, “AmericanThe Italian Straw Hat, directed by Rene Clair, opens the Inventory,” “Magic Slate,”Other materials planned forpresentation this quarter in¬clude the humanities 1 pro¬pram each Sunday at 7 p.ni, fol¬lowed by “Literature for Listen¬ing” at 8 which often includesworks covered by the humanitiescourses. ,A humanities 3 program willbe presented on April 15, featur¬ing the poetry of Shakespeare,Donne, Wordsworth, Hopkins,Hardy, and Keats, covered in thecourse. This program will startat 9 p.m.Future broadcasts will includeDylan Thomas reading his ownpoetry, Shakespeare’s The Tem¬pest, and T. S. Eliot’s Murder inthe Cathedral, and Gerontion.WUCB has recently added an¬other program, “Literature forListening,” to its series of human¬ities broadcasts. This new hour-long program, from 8-9 p.m. isdevoted to the interpretive read¬ing of works of poetry and proseparticularly suited for presenta¬tion. The permanent narrator isRobert Emmitt, former prize win¬ning reader in the Florence JamesAdams Poetry Reading Contest,aided by occasional guest read¬ers.The program for Sunday willconsist of material by Plato,Keats, and Swift, with additionalminor selections.Specific times and programs ofbroadcasts may be obtained fromthe WUCB Program Guide, pub¬lisher! weekly. Copies may be ob¬tained from the studio in Burton-Judson Courts. Party endsgala weekThe All - Campus FreedomWeek committee will mark theend of Academic FreedomWeek with a party to whichthe whole campus is invited.This party will be held nextFriday evening, April 13, inIda Noyes Hall.Documentary film group’s series of French films this eve¬ning. The film will be shown in Social Science 122 at 7:15and 9:15 p.m.The basic situation concerns the distress of a lady who issurprised with her lover by a horse — the horse eats her newstraw hat; how is she to ex-plain to her husband? InClair’s hand this somewhatmechanical farce takes on newlife, for the director uses it large¬ly as a vehicle to satirize Frenchprovincials of the nineties.Following The Italian StrawHat will be L’Atlante, perhaps thebest known film of the avantgarde director Jean Vigo. Thethird film features in its castFrancoise Rosay, Louis Jouvetand Jean Louis Barrault—Drolede Drame, directed by MarcelCarne (celebrated for his filmChildren of Paradise). Drole deDrame is a satire on English re¬spectability and a take off of thewho-dun-it tradition, revolvingaround the ineptitudes of Scot¬land Yard. The final film of theseries is La Marseillaise, also fea¬turing Louis Jouvet, and directedby Jean Renoir. Renoir’s usualironic detachment shows throughin this study of the Revolution.•Admission to the series is byseries ticket only< Cost of a ticket,admitting to four films, is $1.25.Films shown in Social Science122, 7:15 and 9:15. Tickets at door. “America’s Music,” “Stud’sPlace,” and “Hawkins’ Falls.”Currently he is appearing onWBKB on his own program,'“Time for Uncle Win.” He has ap¬peared with the Chicago Sym¬phony and this summer he will benarrating “Peter and the Wolf”with the Grant Park Symphony.'Stracke’s program will be abenefit for the Foreign Studentscholarship of UC. Reserved tick¬ets at $2.50 and unreserved at $1will be on sale at Reynolds club,International house. Mail ordersmay be sent direct to Int house,1414 E. 59th. Workshop gives'Martin Luther’The Poets’ workshop will pre¬sent a reading performance of“Martin Luther,” a verse play byRuth Herschberger, at the 1020Lake Shore drive, on Friday andSaturday, April 6 and 7, at 8:30p.m., one dollar contribution. Theplay is directed by Roland Rudeof Northwestern, who broughthis production of Kafka’s TheTrial to the Reynolds Club lastyear.The actors are primarily fromUniversity Theatre, includingGeorg Wellwarth, Alex Hassilev,George Crawford, Robert Emmitt,Omar Shapli, and William Tsokos.‘Exhibition Momentum9gives student partyExhibition Momentum will hold on Saturday, April 7, at 8:30 p.m., its annual blast for thestudent population of Chicago. The party is to be a masked ball, and is to be held at 3212N. Broadway, and is for the benefit of Exhibition Momentum. iPete Stone and Pete Stein will be on hand tc/sing folk songs, and to play, along with sev¬eral other guitarists from the Folk Lore Society at the University of Chicago. There willbe dancing and libations for all to participate in. *Masks are required in orderGABE'S INC£ (Formerly Winter's)\ N.W. Corner 55th & Kenwood HY 3-5160£ SUITS - COATSJ CAMPUS WEAR} ACCESSORIES ££ The name OJVLY has been changed $ to be eligible for the prizes,which will be objects gatheredfrom the treasured collections ofMomentum “found object” collec¬tors. Found objects include allthose which please the finder fortheir aesthetic value rather thantheir functional one. Anyone canfind his own found objects, butMomentum promises to • have acollection of found objects rivaledby no licensed finder known. Mo¬ mentum has hinted that some ofthese objects found might finduse in some foundry, or factory,or fishbowl.The party is open to all stu¬dents from Northwestern, the In¬stitute of Design, Roosevelt uni¬versity, and the Art institute, aswell as those at the University ofChicago. The receipts from theevenings adventures will be usedto help Exhibition Momentumcover its expenses in putting onJ. Paul Sheedy* Was Always A Scapegoat TillWildroot Cream-Oil Cave Him Confidence1* got Sheedy’i goat the way everyone kidded him about his messy hair.Even his girl horned in: "Sheedy, you shaggy stinker, you lack confidence— you’re pasture prime.” Well J. Paul felt pretty sheepish about this, sohe tried Wildroot Cream-Oil. Now he has confidence innanny situation because he knows his hair looks healthyand handsome, the way Nature intended ... neat buttnot greasy. Wildroot Cream-Oil contains the heart ofLanolin, the very best part of Nature’s finest hair andscalp conditioner. Try it yourself. Butter get a bottle ortube of Wildroot Cream-Oil today. With Wildroot onyour hair, the girls will goat to any lengths for a datewith you.+ of 131 So. Harris Hill Rd., Williamsvilh, N. Y.Wildroot Cream-Oil•: gives you confidence Endorsed by the Chicago Daily NewsServing with honor and ability for 17 yeors as an Assistant State'sAttorney ond prosecuting without regord for political favoritism willmoke Nathan J.KINNALLY, a proven public servant and U of C graduate, on “honor'' stoterepresentative. Vote Democratic, Tuesday, April 10. its annual exhibit, which thisyear is to be held from May 23through June 20 at 72 E. 11thstreet. ,The address, 3212 N. Broadway,is easily reached by first takingeither the IC or the subway tothe loop, and then catching theBroadway - Devon streetcar onDearborn Street. Thirty-two-twelve is the address of the Har¬old Taylor American Legion post,the hall in which the party is tobe held.BORDON E’Movers and Light Hauling]VI 6-9832►►►NICKY’SPIZZERIA & RESTAURANT1235 E. 55 NO 7-9063Barbecue Ribs - Chicken - Ravioli - SpaghettiFree delivery to V. of C. studentsOn any orderTable Service11 A.M. to 2 A.M. Delivery Service11 A.M. to 2 A.M.Open till! 3 A.Iff. on Friday and Saturday TheSHORTESTRoute*** to business successis thorough training insecretarial skills. Katha¬rine Gibbses favored bymost college women...and employers, too.Special Course for College WomenWrite College Dean forGIBBS GIRLS AT WORKK( fHARINESECRETARIALBOSTON 18. . . It Mar!berou*h 81PROVIDENCE 8 . . . ISSAngullSLNEW YORK 17 . ... 730 Patk A»e.MONTCLAIR. N. J. . 33 Plymouth St.PL - 0 PICADILLY* THEATRE 51st andBlackstone“ROSE TATOO”STARTING FRIDAY, APRIL 6, FOR ONE WEEK ONLYANNA MAGNANI"BEST ACTRESS"in herACADEMYAWARD ROLEbased on the play by TENNESSEE WILLIAMS— and — . nERNEST BORCNSNEACADEMY AWARD"BEST ACTOR"in his newest role “Square Jungle” TheDisc1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the weekBEETHOVENSymphonies 8 & 9von Korojon2 Angel Records 5.98Page 10SPORTS BRIEFSBaseballers in exhibitionThe varsity held their first game Monday, an exhibitionscrimmage with Wilson junior college. Held very informally(no official score was kept), but Gene Crain, Bruce Colby,Art Antonik, Robin Powell, John Mann, and Kent Karohl gotbase hits. Rain delayed proceedings, but the baseball squadalso held a scrimmage Ttiesday.Fishing class being offeredThe athletic department is offering instruction in all kindsof casting for all admirers of Izaak Walton’s pastime. EveryTuesday evening at 7:30 p.m., beginning April 17 and endingMay 22, experts in the arts of bait casting, spin casting, flycasting, and fly tying, will demonstrate and teach their spe¬cialties.Among the instructors will be Bill Gill, former Americanbait casting champion. A tournament will be held Tuesdayevening, May 29.Some tackle will be available for those who do not bringtheir own. Students can sign up for the class by phoningathletic office or seeing Kooman Boycheff.Play intramural volleyballIntramural competition in volleyball has started in collegehouse, fraternity, divisional, and “B” leagues. The leagueswill last until April 16-17, and an eight-team eliminationtournament, featuring the winners and runner-ups in all fourleagues, will choose an all-University volleyball team.Netmen face 9 opponentsFor the first time in quite some while, Bill Moyle’s habitu¬ally successful tennis team is in danger of a losing season.Charlie Knight and Ray Kunze are the only veteran regularson this spring’s squad. Sixteen men are vying for the otherpositions on the squad. The netmen will face nine opponents—including always rugged Notre Dame on their courts, May 15.Golfers tee off tomorrowIn golf as well as tennis, prospects are poor, but KoomanBoycheff’s 1956 team will be trying for a good start Saturdaywhen they meet IIT. Two veterans from last year are return¬ing: Bob Phillipson, and Wendell Maramuto. Three new stu¬dents out for the team, Bob Somerville, Don Lusk, and BillMurray, are here on Chick Evans’ scholarships. These arecollege scholarships given nationally to boys who have cad¬died on golf courses. THE CHICAGO MAROON April 6, 1956Runners to open outdoorsThe University of Chicago’s varsity track team will launch their outdoor season Satur.day against their blood brothers, the UC Track club! The Maroons ended their indoor seasonundefeated in competition with other colleges.However, the varsity will be considerably hampered during the outdoor season by theloss of Chuck Rhyne, Joe Howard, Kim Valentine, and Sam Greenlee. Rhyne, Valentine, andGreenlee have run out of outdoor track eligibility, while Joe Howard has graduated and isattending medical school else¬where.There'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 Price*Come toSamuel Murrow &Company(In the heart of theWholesale Market)Daily 9 to 5:30 Saturdays 9 to 3:30318 W. Adams St. Suite 401Seatonsfey ShopCHICAGO'S NEWESTAND MOST DISTINCTIVEshop for menWashable Cottonand Dacron CordLapseom 714* Hook Vent29.95608 n. michigan avenuewh itehall 3-2410 STUDENTWIVESWORK ON CAMPUSThe 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 recreationalprivilegesapply NOWPersonnel Office956 E. 58th St. Rhyne and Howard weremainstays of the team, Rhyne be¬ing a consistent winner in themiddle distance runs and valuablein the relay races, while Howardwas a winner in the weightthrows. Greenlee in the middledistances and the relays, and Val¬entine in the mile and two milegave the varsity added depth. Thefour trackmen will be missed.The meet with the Track clubSaturday afternoon was arrangedwhen a meet with Chanute AirForce base was cancelled. CoachHaydon’s runners can use thepractice out on Stagg* field.So That1 You May KnowBARNET HODESFrom“Who’s Who in America"HODES, Barnet, lawyer; LL.B., Northwestern Univer¬sity, 1921; assistant corporation counsel of Chicago,1923-27; alderman 7th Ward, 1931-33; memberIllinois State Tax Commission, 1933-35; Corporationcounsel of Chicago, 1935-37. Lieutenant CommanderU. S. Coast Guard Reserve (T), 1944-47. Lectureron municipal corporations, Northwestern UniversityLaw School, 1936-40. Co-chairman Patriotic Foun¬dation of Chicago for erection of Lorado Taft'smonument to George Washington, Robert Morris andHaym Salomon, formally dedicated December 15,1941. Chairman Civil Liberties Committee, NationalInstitute Municipal Low Officers, 1944; chairmanCity of Chicago flying mission to London for UNCapital, 1946. Appointed by Governor chairmanState of Illinois Inter-Faith Commission, 1945.Member Chicago Zoning Board of Appeals, 1935-47;Vice President Illinois. Municipal League, 1936-42;Member U. S. Civilian Defense Volunteer ParticipationCommittee, appointed by President Roosevelt, 1942.Impartial Arbitrator, Ladies Dress Industry; ExecutiveChairman National JeHerson Jubilee, 1950; chairmanState of Illinois Protection of the American Heritage,1949; owarded Cross of Chevalier of the Legion ofHonor (France); chairman The American HeritageCouncil, 1951. Appointed member of fhe Universityof Chicago Citizens Board, 1955.Member Illinois, State, Chicago Bar associations;member of District of Columbia Bar Association;Delta Sigma Rho, Nu Beta Epsilon (founder). Re¬cipient of Civic Merit Award by Junior Associationof Commerce, Chicago, 1934; Chicago Civil LibertiesCommittee award for distinguished service in defenseof democracy, 1939; Decalogue Society of Lawyersaward of merit for distinguished services, 1941. Mem¬ber Board of Directors Northwestern UniveVsity AlumniAssociation, 1952. Secretory of Citixens' Committeeto Bring Republican and Democratic conventions toChicago, 1952. Author, "It's Your Money", "Essayon Illinois Taxation", "Law and the Modern City".Home: 5555 Everett Avenue. Office: One N. LaSalleStreet, Chicago. Give sports calendarDay Team Opponent Time PlaceFriday JV track Crown Point 4:00 Stagg fieldSaturday Track U. C. Track Club 2:00 Stagg HeldSaturday Baseball Knox (doubleheader) At KnoxSaturday Golf Illinois Tech 11:00 Longwood CCMonday JV baseball Luther south 3:30 AwayU. S. SENATORPAUL H. DOUGLAS, soys:"BARNET HODES — it the best wardcommitteeman of the best ward inChicago.**ADLAI STEVENSON says:"BARNET HODES — a fine citizenand a dear friend.**CONG. BARRATT O'HARAsays:"The high esteem in which I boldBARNET HODES is based upon manyyearrof close association and an in¬timate knowledge of his fine quali¬ties of leadership.**STATE SENATORMARSHALL KORSHAK, says:"BARNET HODES is an outstandinglawyer and civic leader. He has giv¬en our community the benefit ofhis best efforts.'*MAJOR GENERALSAMUEL T. LAWTON, says:"We are proud of the high caliber ofpolitical leadership which BARNETHODES has given our community.**Vote for all of the candidatesendorsed by the Democratic PartyApril 10, 1956Re-electBARNET HODES5th WordDemocratic Committeeman lApril 6, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Rage llPetition to oust SCby Ronald GrossmanIn o surprise move, petitions were circulated Monday evening asking for the dissolution of Student Government.Led by Marty Gendell, Zahava Dudnik, and Steve Oppenheimer, the committee is seeking over 1,000 signatures on petitionswhich state briefly:"We the undersigned, aware that student needs and affairs have not been handled adequately by the existing form of StudentGovernment, petition that the Student Goverment be dissolved."We recommend that a committee representing all student groups be called to form a workable successor organization."The petitions are signed by the "Committee to FurtherStudent Affairs."The petition was registered with the Student Activitiesoffice which issued mimeographed forms permitting the peti¬tions to be circulated. Mary Alice Newman, associate directorof student activities, signed the permission forms.According to a spokesman nothing for constructive handlingfor the committee, when the 0f student needs and affairs, butrequired number of signatures use SG as a debating society.”is obtained, the petitions will be The spokesman continued, “Al-turned over to Dean of Students so> we j^opg to place under theand Director of Student Activities jurisdiction of the new group beRobert M. Strozier for action. r a student Government or other-Beginning at 5 p.m. Ia9t night wise, many things which are now(Monday!, the group canvassed not handled by SG, such as great-dormitories, pre-fabs, Int. house, er facilities for the 3000 com- chicacpVol. 64, No. 40 University of Chicago, Tuesday, April 3, 1956and fraternities, and all organiza¬tions which meet on Monday.Another spokesman for thecommittee remarked: “One of thethings we hope to accomplish bythis petition, besides dissolvingthe existing form of Student Gov¬ernment, is to show that studentsdo care about campus affairs.Present apathy concerning SG isdue to the common belief and im¬pression that student governmentis nothing but a ‘political play¬pen’ for its members, who care muters who attend this univer¬sity.”The spokesman made it clearthat students living in the variousliving groups were responsible forthe circulation of petitions in theirrespective areas.Interested parties may sign thepetitions all day today (Tuesday)in Mandel corridor and in front ofCobb hall. Redfield recipient ofroyal Huxley medalWUS and NSAState seditionlaws nullifiedSfotes ore barred from enforcingtheir sedition laws the U. S. su¬preme court ruled Monday. Onlythe federal government can prose¬cute subversive activities. The ef¬fect of this decree on the Broylesbill is as yet uncertain. collect textbooksTextbooks for universities in the underdeveloped areas ofthe world, particularly Asia, will be collected in the dormitor¬ies today and tomorrow in a books for Burma drive sponsoredby the Illinois region of the National Student association.Books which are particularly needed are scientific textbooks, advanced texts such as physics, and copies of the "greatbooks" such as Plato and Aris¬totle. College syllabi are not souseful. All books are packagedand mailed without charge by On March 22, Robert Redfield, Robert M. Hutchins dis¬tinguished service professor of anthropology, joined the ranksof three other American anthropologists who have receive/Great Britain’s Huxley medal.This medal has been awarded for 53 years since the firstpresentation in 1900, by the Royal Anthropological institute.The medal is presented to theMaroon apologizesfor scrambling eggsStark raving idiots were responsible for the extremely con¬fused story which led loyal Maroon readers to believe thatInternational house was sponsoring a dance, or perhaps anegg roll, in Ida Noyes Friday.It is not so.International House is celebrating the 93rd anniversary ofthe battle of Green hill with a dance, in International house,without eggs, at 9:30 p.m. Friday.. Admission to the dance,without eggs, is 35 cents per person.The egg roll, as no one could tell from the story, is notbeing held by International house at all. Commuter's associ¬ation has planned this all-campus event for Friday afternoon,from 3 to 6, in Ida Noyes.Celebrating the Battle of Green hill is bad enough in itself,without the added confusion of the Maroon story. There wereno eggs at the battle, anyway. World University Service, tothose universities which needthem.A book drive on the campus ofRosary college, River Forest, Illi¬nois, has already collected 300books. These books will be com¬bined with the Chicago collectionto form the Illinois contribution tothe national book drive, spon¬sored by NSA and WUS. scientist (distinguished in anyfield of anthropological re¬search in the widest sense) chosenby the council of the Royal insti¬tute to present the Thomas HenryHuxley memorial lecture.Lectures to 200Redfield delivered his lecture,“Societies and cultures as naturalsystems,” in the rooms of theRoyal Society of Great Britain be¬fore an audience of about 200anthropologists. Lord Raglan,president of the Royal institute,then presided over a dinner inone of the dining rooms of theHouse of Lords.The medal, which is awardedfor the lecture presentation, isusually given to the speaker aftercompletion of his lecture. Raglan, however, presented the medal toRedfield before the lecture. Dur¬ing the concluding procedure twoBritish anthropologists, RaymondFirth and Meyer Fortes, discussedRedfield and his lecture, movingthat the body thank Redfield. For¬mal procedure concluded with thepassing of this motion by thebody.List recipientsThe other three Americans whohave received the medal are Al¬fred Kromer and Robert Lovvie ofthe University of California andthe late Ralph Linton of Yale uni¬versity. Redfield is the 55th re¬cipient.The Huxley lectures are print¬ed at some time following theirpresentation in the Journal of theRoyal Anthropological institute.Open meeting tofeature 'locaiites' Zanders will sootheCandidates for representatives to the General Assemblyfrom the twenty-third district willdiscuss their political views atMandel hall tomorrow at 8 p.m.The candidates are the follow¬ing: Sanford A. Bank (Dem), Ed¬ward S. Garrity (Dem), NathanJ. Kinnally (Dem), Noble W. Lee(Rep), Abner J. Mikva (Dem),and Richard L. Samuels (Rep). campus with adviceAnn Landers, noted Sun-Times "advice-to-the-lovelorn’*columnist will speak tomorrow, 7 p.m. in B-J, Judson loungeas a guest of Vincent house. She is known for her sharptongue and her ability to get right to the root of the prob¬lem ("if you know* what Imean").Although her topic will beMorgenthau lecture angers Pakistani listenersby Eld BerckmanWhen Americans thinkabout the problem of Asiathese days, there are threegeneralizations they usuallymake; that the issue there issimply “freedom versus tyran¬ny”; that all Asia is aflame witha peasant revolt; and that na¬tionalism is a growing threat tostability. This appraisal was stat¬ed Thursday night by Hans Mor¬genthau, director of the centerfor the study of American for¬eign policy, and he went on toexplain how and why these be¬liefs appear false to him after hisrecent tour of Southeast Asia andJapan.The topic of Morgenthau's talk,sponsored by the Pakistan Stu¬dents’ association, was originallyannounced to be “Pakistan and itsproblems,” but his references tothat country were primarily asspecific instances of general prob¬lems. Nevertheless, several Pak¬istani students challenged Mor¬ genthau on his statements abouttheir country, most of which hadpreviously appeared in a seriesof articles in New Republic.Communist gains in Asia havebeen a result of their exploitationof specific grievances in concretesituations, rather than of the gen¬eral attractiveness of Marxistideology, the UC professor stated.“The juxtaposition of ‘Democracyversus communism’ is meaning¬less to Asians and has no relationto their actual experiences.” Hegave several illustrations.“Why do the intellectual eliteamong overseas Chinese flock toCommunist China to study? It isnot that they have an affinity forCommunism or are victims ofCommunist propaganda. But theydo not find in their own countriessufficient outlets for their abilityand ambition, in either educationor employment.” The Chineseoffer them scholarships, and theycome back indoctrinated.As for the second generation,it is true, Morgenthau said, that peasants are revolting in somecountries, but one cannot speakof Asia as a whole. In other coun¬tries they want anything butchange. The top US diplomat inThailand had told Morgenthau,when he asked about the local po¬litical situation, “the people arehappy.” Later he decided this un¬usual answer adequately de¬scribed the situation in which thepeople “enjoyed misgovernment.”Turning to nationalism, Mor¬genthau said that the existenceof the small, independent stateis accidental and dependent onthe temporary stalemate betweenthe two great power blocs. “Theindependence of these nations isnot likely to survive the stale¬mate.”He predicted that small statesnewly-free from colonial rule willbe forced, by their need for somesubstitute of organization and or¬der, to unite or else be conquered.It was the use of Pakistan asan example of a country whose“viability” is questioned which drew a spirited response fromeral took exception to Morgen-thau’s charge that Pakistan is not“justified” as an independentstate and that the peoples of Eastand West Pakistan have no inter¬est in common except fear ofHindus.Members of the audience feltthat Morgenthau underestimatedthe unifying role of religion andthat he exaggerated the difficul¬ties Pakistan has to face. Theychallenged his statement In theNew Republic that Jinnah, the“father” of Pakistan, “did origi¬nally not believe in its viability.”Morgenthau replied that hecould not offhand give his sourcefor that statement. He explainedalso that he had been speakingobjectively and that personally hewas sympathetic to many of theaims of Pakistan.The final article in the Morgen¬thau series in the New Republicappeared in the April 2 issue. “Problems of the college student,"she will include information abouther column, her methods, and hermore interesting letters.Afterwards, she will answerquestions posed by the audience.She has expressed the hope thatmany couples will be presentsince “they could get their prob¬lems settled right then.”When asked to bring her hus¬band and daughter along, she re¬plied that although her 16 yearold daughter would love to come,the girl’s presence would inhibither answers.The entire campus is invited byVincent house in the hope thatthose attending will achieve “in¬ternal peace and tranquility.”YR, 2 Demto battleKefauver and Stevenson back¬ers will battle it out Thursdayafternoon at 12:30 in Reynoldsclub in a Student Forum spon¬sored panel discussion.Young Republicans will also bepresent on the panel to defendthe Eisenhower administration.Page 10 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 6, 1956SPORTS BRIEFSBaseballers in exhibitionThe varsity held their first game Monday, an exhibitionscrimmage with Wilson junior college. Held very informally(no official score was kept), but Gene Crain, Bruce Colby,Art Antonik, Robin Powell, John Mann, and Kent Karohl gotbase hits. Rain delayed proceedings, but the baseball squadalso held a scrimmage Tuesday.Fishing class being offeredThe athletic department is offering instruction in all kindsof casting for all admirers of Izaak Walton’s pastime. EveryTuesday evening at 7:30 p.m., beginning April 17 and endingMay 22, experts in the arts of bait casting, spin casting, flycasting, and fly tying, will demonstrate and teach their spe¬cialties.Among the instructors will be Bill Gill, former Americanbait casting champion. A tournament will be held Tuesdayevening, May 29.Some tackle will be available for those who do not bringtheir own. Students can sign up for the class by phoningathletic office or seeing Kooman Boycheff.Play intramural volleyball Runners to open outdoorsThe University of Chicago’s varsity track team will launch their outdoor season Satur.day against their blood brothers, the UC Track clubr. The Maroons ended their indoor seasonundefeated in competition with other colleges.However, the varsity will be considerably hampered during the outdoor season by theloss of Chuck Rhyne, Joe Howard, Kim Valentine, and Sam Greenlee. Rhyne, Valentine, andGreenlee have run out of outdoor track eligibility, while Joe Howard has graduated and isattending medical school else¬where.Rhyne and Howard weremainstays of the team, Rhyne be¬ing a consistent winner in themiddle distance runs and valuablein the relay races, while Howardwas a winner in the weightthrows. Greenlee in the middledistances and fhe relays, and Val¬entine in the mile and two milegave the varsity added depth. Thefour trackmen will be missed.The meet with the Track clubSaturday afternoon was arrangedwhen a meet with Chanute AirForce base was cancelled. CoachHaydon’s runners can use thepractice out on Stagg* field. DayFridaySaturdaySaturdaySaturdayMonday TeamJV trackTrackBaseballGolf Opponent Time PlaceCrown Point 4:00 Stagg fieldU. C. Track Club 2:00 Stagg fieldKnox (doubleheader) At KnoxIllinois Tech 11:00 Longwood CCJV baseball Luther south 3:00 AwayIntramural competition in volleyball has started in collegehouse, fraternity, divisional, and “B” leagues. The leagueswill last until April 16-17, and an eight-team eliminationtournament, featuring the winners and runner-ups in all fourleagues, will choose an all-University volleyball team.Nelmen face 9 opponentsFor the first time in quite some while, Bill Moyle’s habitu¬ally successful tennis team is in danger of a losing season.Charlie Knight and Ray Kunze are the only veteran regularson this spring’s squad. Sixteen men are vying for the otherpositions on the squad. The netmen will face nine opponents—including always rugged Notre Dame on their courts, May 15.Golfers tee off tomorrowIn golf as well as tennis, prospects are poor, but KoomanBoycheff’s 1956 team will be trying for a good start Saturdayw hen they meet IIT. Two veterans from last year are return¬ing: Bob Phillipson, and Wendell Maramuto. Three new stu¬dents out for the team, Bob Somerville, Don Lusk, and BillMurray, are here on Chick Evans’ scholarships. These arecollege scholarships given nationally to boys who have cad¬died on golf courses.There'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 Murrow &Company(In the heart of theWholesale Market)Daily 9 to 5:30 Saturdays 9 to 3:30318 W. Adorns St. Suite 401ieaanSTIvyCHICAGO'S NEWESTAND MOST DISTINCTIVEshop for menWashable Cottonand Dacron CordLapse am 7 Vi" Hook Vent29.95608 n. Michigan avenuewh itehall 3-2410 STUDENTWIVESWORK ON CAMPUSThe 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 Technicians1 including)Medical ChemistsHematologistsHistologistsBacteriologistsBENEFITS INCLUDE3 weeks' paid vacation2 weeks' sick leaveTuition remissionLibrary and recreationalprivilegesapply NOWPersonnel Office956 E. 58th St. So That You May KnowBARNET HODESFrom“Who’s Who in America”MODES, Barnet, lawyer; LL.B., Northwestern Univer¬sity, 1921; assistant corporation counsel of Chicago,1923-27; alderman 7th Ward, 1931-33; memberIllinois State Tax Commission, 1933-35; Corporationcounsel of Chicago, 1935-37. Lieutenant CommanderU. S. Coast Guard Reserve <T), 1944-47. Lectureron municipal corporations, Northwestern UniversityLaw School, 1936-40. Co-chairniun Patriotic Foun¬dation of Chicago for erection of Lorado Taft'smonument to George Washington, Robert Morris andHaym Salomon, formally dedicated December 15,1941. Chairman Civil Liberties Committee, NationalInstitute Municipal Law Officers, 1944; chairmanCity of Chicago flying mission to London for UNCapital, 1946. Appointed by Governor chairmanState of Illinois Inter-Faith Commission, 1945*'.Member Chicago Zoning Board of Appeals, 1935-47;Vice President Illinois. Municipal League, 1936-42;Member U. S. Civilian Defense Volunteer ParticipationCommittee, appointed by President Roosevelt, 1942.Importiol Arbitrator, Ladies Dress Industry; ExecutiveChairman National Jefferson Jubilee, 1950; chairmanState of Illinois Protection of the American Heritage,1949; owarded Cross of Chevalier of the Legion ofHonor (France); chairman The American HeritageCouncil, 1951. Appointed member of the Universityof Chicago Citizens Board, 1955.Member Illinois, State, Chicago Bar associations;member of District of Columbia Bar Association;Delta Sigma Rho, Nu Beta Epsilon (founder). Re¬cipient of Civic Merit Award by Junior Associationof Commerce, Chicago, 1934; Chicago Civil LibertiesCommittee award for distinguished service in defenseof democracy, 1939; Decalogue Society of Lawyersaward of merit for distinguished services, 1941. Mem¬ber Board of Directors Northwestern UniveYsity AlumniAssociation, 1952. Secretary of Citizens' Committeeto Bring Republican and Democratic conventions toChicago, 1952. Author, "It's Your Money", "Essayon Illinois Taxation", "Law and the Modern City".Home: 5555 Everett Avenue. Office: One N. LaSalleStreet, Chicago. U. S. SENATORPAUL H. DOUGLAS, says:"BARNET HODES —• is the best wardcommitteeman of the best ward inChicago."ADLAI STEVENSON says:"BARNET HODES — a fine citizenand a dear friend."CONG. BARRATT O'HARAsays:"The high esteem in which I boldBARNET HODES is based upon manyyears of close association and an in¬timate knowledge of his fine quali¬ties of leadership."STATE SENATORMARSHALL KORSHAK, says:"BARNET HODES is m outstandinglawyer and civic leader. He has giv¬en our community the benefit ofhis best efforts."MAJOR GENERALSAMUEL T. LAWTON, says:"We are proud of the high caliber ofpolitical leadership which BARNETHODES has given our community."Vote for all of the candidatesendorsed by the Democratic FortyApril 10, 1956Re-electBARNET HODES5th WardDemocratic Committeeman IApril 6, 1956 THE CHICAGO MAROON Rage 11Commemorate birthof Buddha SundayThe Wesak festival, the annualTo discuss 'reality of Cod'Professor Abraham Joshua Heschel, eminent Jewish scholar and philosopher of religion,will present the sixth annual Charles W. Gilkey lecture on Thursday, April 12, at Breastedhall of the Oriental institute, 1155 E. 58th street.Heschel, a professor of Jewish ethics at the Jewish Theological seminary of America in commemoration of the birth ofNew York, will speak “About our reasons for believing in the realness of God." The lecture ?uddhf' ^ .cel^rated Sun-is in tribute to Dr. Gilkey, dean emeritus of Rockefeller chapel. . day at 7 in. Mandel hal1-Professor Heschel was born ?°"gs of China and dances fromthe festivities. Lighting of in¬cense in honor of the Buddha, andsome words by Rev. Kubofe ofthe Buddhist church at 5487 S.Dorchester, will be the religiouspart of the ceremonies. Everyone«rdiscussesAfricanin Warsaw, studied philoso¬phy at the University of Ber¬lin and the Roshschule fur dieWissenschaft des Jeudentums. Hecame to this country in 1940 andhas been on the faculty of theJewish Theological seminary ofAmerica since 1945. He is the au¬thor of “Man is not alone,” “Godin search of man,” “Man’s questfor Goa/’ “The Earth is theLord’s,” and “The Sabbath.”Reinhold Neibuhr, noted theo¬logian has said of him, “Dr.Heschel represents one of thetreasuries of mind and spirit bywhich the persecutions, unloosedin Europe, inadvertently enrichedour American culture. But hewill not long remain unknown.... It is a safe guess that he willbecome a commanding and au¬thoritative voice not only in theJewish community but in the re¬ligious life of America.“It (his writing) is the work ofa poet and mystic who has mas¬tered the philosophical and scien¬tific disciplines and who, withconsummate skill, reveals the di¬mension of reality apprehendedby religious faith, as distin¬guished from all the coherencesand sequences and casualtieswhich science charts and phil¬osophy arranges into a totalrational scheme.”The lecture is sponsored by theB’nai B’rith Hillel foundation oncampus and the University ofChicago. Professor. Abraham JoshuaHeschel (at left) will give theannual Charles W. Gilkey lec¬ture April 12.Stillmanof Southby Roger Bernhardt“Although American and South African racial problems have had a similar development,their present nature and the attempts at their solution must differ because of certain strik¬ing factors present in South African history which did not appear on the American scene."So concluded Calvin'Stillman, assistant professor of social sciences in the college, while speak¬ing to the Charming club Tuesday night. Stillman’s topic was the Union of South Africa andis invited.The Wesak festival in India issimilar to the Christian Christ¬mas in that there is an exchangeof gifts and a giving of alms tothe poor, said Shyam-CharanMajhi, secretary of the India as¬sociation. The festival in Indiais mainly for children. Gifts andclothing in gay colors, particu¬larly yellow, are given each child,and the festival continues all day.issuessituationWax sings again!Rosalie Wax, examiner and teacher on the Social sciences2 staff will give a folk concert this evening at 8 p.m. inBreasted hall of the Oriental institute. Mrs. Wax will singballads “proper and improper" including those of EnglishGerman, Yiddish, and Nor-UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies4 haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor wegian origin.Members of the Women’s ath¬letic association, the sponsoringorganization, are selling tickets at50 cents each. Tickets can be ob¬tained at the Reynolds’ club deskand at the door.Pete Stein of the Folklore soci¬ety will appear with Mrs. Wax.FREE RESEARCH AIDIf you are doing research on theSoviet Union (or are just inter¬ested), use the help available at theoffices and library of the ChicagoCouncil of American-Soviet Friend¬ship, Suite 403, 189 W. Madison. AN3-1877, AN 3-1S78. Open 9-5, Monday-Saturday. Writers meet,offer prizesInteresting to amateur writersin this area is the second sessionof the Chicago Writers’ Confer¬ence, scheduled for April 27 and28 at the Fine Arts building, 410S. Michigan avenue.Prizes totaling $150 are beingoffered to all contestants in thecategories of fiction and non-fic¬tion.Information concerning entryof manuscripts, or the programof the two-day conference, may beobtained by contacting Irv Leiber-man, program chairman, 1555Luxor rd., Cleveland, Ohio. its present problems.Stillman asserted that un¬derstanding of the South Afri¬can racial issue depends onfamiliarity with the popula¬tion and interaction of the SouthAfrican community. In contrasthe compared it with the simulta¬neous development of Americansociety which began only twenty-five years earlier.While the American colonieswere from the start relatively in¬dependent of their motherland,the original South African set¬tlers remained under close theo¬cratic rule from the Dutch Re¬formed Church. The white com¬munity spread with the migra¬tion of Boers fleeing British rulewho encountered an independentgroup of immigrants—the BantuNegroes. The Kaffir wars ensued, of Dutch descent, the Negroes,those descended from both grougs,and a small number of Indians.The Afrikaaners dominate the re¬gion politically and economically,thus maintaining the sway ofDutch Reformed morals. Theirlatest policy is “independent de¬velopment,” hereto called apar¬theid. This doctrine—which Still¬man calls "economic lunacy”—in¬volves isolation of each racialgroup with its own separate de¬velopment; it necessitates urban¬izing and industrializing newlands to serve as homelands forthe African Negroes.However modern economic in¬terests are functioning in the op¬posite direction. Industrializationhas made both the Negroes andthe much-hated British segmentleading to a comparatively stable 0f the population essential to thesociety in which the Boers were Afrikaaners. It has also led to themasters over their African slaves.This society was disrupted by thediscovery of diamonds and theconsequent invasion of foreign¬ers.Africa splitAs a result of these episodesSouth Africa is now split intofour separate groups: the whites,a majority of them Afrikaaners“Enjoy Our Fine Continental Cuisine inRelaxed Air Conditioned Atmosphere**CONTINENTAL GOURMET RESTAURANTWeekdays and Saturday: Open from 5 p.m. - 10 p.m.Sundays: Open from 4 p.m. - 10 p.m.1508 E. 57th Street Phone PLaza 2-9355LAST CHANCEQet Your Cap & Qown SubscriptionTODAY!!♦*2°° DOWNTwo Full Months To Pay♦A Special 10% DiscountThis Week ONLY! Endorsed by the Chicago Daily NewsIt's time that the state legislature takes cognizance of student needs.But its more important that the legislature do something about them.Elect a proven public servant who as a former student and graduateknows our problems. Nathan J.KINNALLYfor state representativeVOTE DEMOCRATIC TUESDAY, APRIL 10 formation of economic classesusually associated with a capital¬istic system. These economic mo¬tivations of the Afrikaaners arecompletely at odds with their at¬tempts at cultural self-assertionthrough rigid segregation.Although industrialization hascaused untold suffering to theAfricans, it is nevertheless theonly possible solution:^ the racialproblems there. Stillman hopesthe logic of economics will finallywin out over apartheid.The talk was well attended andthe discussion following was en¬livened by a few people recentlyback from South Africa who do¬nated sidelights on the situation.BE PREPARED FOR SUMMER DRIVINGSUMMER SPECIALTUNE UP $4.98|SINCU|*|tiWEfcl upRoad ServiceMechanic on DufyComplete Lubrication$1495HARPER SUPER SERVICESPECIAL ! !Heavy Duty BatteryDealer in Sinclair Products5556 Harper Ave. PL 2-9654 Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372'N3:30 TO « P.M. DAILY820 On YourRadio Dialit.:Page 12 April 6, 1956associates for the new women’s dorm to be builton Dudley field, back of Ida Noyes.Devoting the Issue to the development of theUniversity, Cap and Gown’s 1956 book will con¬tain this drawing proposed by Eero Saarinen andCorporation gifts now majorUC fund campaign sourceFor the first time in the history of the University, corporation gifts have become one ofthe major sources of support in a UC fund campaign, Edward L. Ryerson, chairman of theboard of trustees, announced Sunday.As the University moves toward the second half of its $32.7 million campaign goal to re¬new its resources for the next decade, corporation gifts have totaled over $1.6 million of the$17 million contributed to the campaign so far.Individuals and foundations ~—~—rrr;—T~z:— rr—:—— :still represent the dominant ^ corPorallon S‘tts ,0 the annualsharp of thp pamnaipri total begun on the occasion ofsnare or tne campaign total, the uc,s fiftieth anniversary, inbut the significant aspect of themoney from business and indus¬trial firms is the large propor¬tionate increase over their con¬tributions to all previous fundcampaigns by the University.’Will replace individual’“We have every reason to be¬lieve that in the future the cor¬porations. who have replaced theindividual as the creators ofwealth, will likewise replace theindividual as the leading sourceof educational contributions.Without this enlightened attitudeof the corporations, the future ofprivate education would be dis¬couraging,” Ryerson said.The University of Chicago, Ry¬erson pointed out, was created bythe gift of an individual, John D.Rockefeller, and the $35 millionwhich Rockefeller gave Univer¬sity between 1891 and 1910, in anunparalleled instance of personalbenevolence, enabled UC quicklyto assume outstanding stature.Rockefeller’s gifts supplied themomentum that carried the Uni¬versity until 1924. A developmentcampaign was launched that yearwhich produced $9.5 million, theshare of corporation gifts being 1941, also saw negligible supportfrom the corporations.Recognize valueBut during and after the secondworld war there was an increas¬ing recognition by the corpora¬tions of the value of privatelyfinanced higher education. Thisrecognition came not alone be¬cause universities were a sourceof much-needed trained person¬nel, and of technological advancesmade possible by the “pure” re¬search of the universities, butalso because of a changed phil¬osophy on the part of manage¬ment. In brief, industry began toregard support of education as asocial obligation.Thus, since 1941, the amount of development program assumedan increasingly significant rela¬tion to the UC’s support. In thefive years between 1950-55, infact, corporations donated no lessthan $6 million to the UC’s an¬nual development programs.More unrestrictedThe trend moved toward unre¬stricted gifts rather, than con¬tinuing in the former pattern ofgrants for industry-related re¬search, fellowships in the field ofthe corporation donor’s interest,and scholarships for the childrenof employees.Of the corporation gifts madeso far to the current campaign,seven have been $100,000 to $200,-000; eighteen have been from $20,-000 to $50,000; and 42 have rangedbetween $100 and $15,000.^llltllHIIItlHiillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilHiillHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIHiHIHIIHillllllitlllllllllllllllttlllllllllllllllllllE| International House Movies §I Room CDE, 7 and 9 p.m. f| Monday, April 9 — 35c |I The Man Who Came to Dinner (American) iiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiniitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiiHiiiiiiiiiHtiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiimiifiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin^VANAn exclusive, hygl-enicafly clean mov-ing service—at NOCOST. Foror long-dis¬tance moving, callPETERSONMOVING & STORAGE CO.55th & Ellis AvenueBUtterfied 8-6711 COMPASS5475 S. Lake Park Jazz — Sunday Afternoon, 3 to 7"THE SOUTH WATER STREET FIVE"THE ATOMIC AGECompass gets to the bottom of Atomic PileWed. - Sun., 9 p.m.Folk Music Tuesday at 9featuringBOB GIBSONHis Banjo Hr Jamaican and American SongsNEW MINIMUMS: WEEK DAYS & SUN., 1.00; FRI., 1.50; SAT., 2.00LOW PRICES CONTINUE FOR WEEK DAYSTERRY’S PIZZA"The World’s Best’FREE DELIVERY TO ALL UC STUDENTSSMALL 1.00 LARGE 1.95MEDIUM'... ..1.45 GIANT 2.95We algo carry a full line of italian foodg1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045 Campaign themeof '56 yearbookDevelopment of the University will be the theme of the 1956 issueof the Cap and Gown. Such pictures as that of the proposed women’sresidence hall on Dudley field, 58th street between Woodlawn anrtKimbark avenues, are included in a special section of the Cap an<lGown which will be out next month.A ten per cent discount can be had on the price of the new issue ifbought this week. After the end of the week, the price will be S3instead of the special offer of $4.50.A German band will play around campus today to publicize th»sale of the yearbook.SG Committee formson fund campaignStudent opinion on the University’s three-year $32.7 millionfund campaign has been recognized by the recent formationof a Student Government Committee on the Campaign. Pur.pose of the committee is toobjectives and procedures,and to report student views tomembers of the University’s de¬velopment office in charge of thefund raising.The committee has met threetimes with Dean of Students Rob¬ert M. Strozier. Its members:Carolyn Eggert, Dorothy Hess,Jan Hubka, Don McClintock,Spike Pinney, Jan Porter, EddieSimmons, and Dave Utley.At its first meeting, GeorgeWatkins, vice-president of theUniversity in charge of develop¬ment, explained the workings ofthe campaign. Subsequently thecommittee attended the civic ban- inform students of campaignquet given by the Mayor andChancellor.Future plans include a possibleproduction of Shakespeare’s “Py.ramus and Thisbe” portion of \Midsummer Night’s Dream (withrewritten prologue to publicizethe committee) and a series ofletters to alumni, explaining thepresent University.The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236Endorsed by the Chicago Daily NewsEloct ono who knows how to fight for o true liberal program. Electa proven public servant who will give clean, honest and efficient gov¬ernment. Elect a University of Chicago graduate. Elect Nathan J.KINNALLYfor state representativeVOTE DEMOCRATIC TUESDAY, APRIL 10©Of course. ’Mostoften. Because a few momentsice-cold Coca-Cola refresh youIt’s sparkling with natural goodness.'pure and wholesome — andnaturally friendly to your figure.4Feel like having a Coke?iBorneo UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMEANY ItThe Coca-Cola Battling“Coka" h a manta-ad troda-morK Company CWtoopo^ Iinle> TR94, THE COCA COlA COMf AWf