Propose SC changeby Norman LewakExpansion of powers, responsibility, and scope forthe Government are the hoped-for results of a pro¬posed plan of "University Government" now beingconsidered by Student Government's commissionon SG.Although detailed plans have not as yet been drawnup, favorable response to the proposal has been re¬ceived from Dean of Students Robert M. Strozier andDirector of Student Activities Mary Alice Ross New¬man, according to Don Miller, president of SG.The proposed University Government would be builtaround the nucleus of the present SG. Faculty andadministration representa-► tives would be added, as vot¬ing members of the assembly.I However, the student mem¬bers would retain a large major¬ity: approximately 50 students to; ten faculty and administrationmembers. Representatives of theJ living groups and, perhaps, otherorganizations would be added to»the executive council of the Gov¬ernment.. } Extend jurisdictionThe jurisdiction of the Univer-, j jsity Government would be extend-' ed to such fields as regulations'tor student discipline, setting ofdorm regulations, calendaring ofsocial events, student activities,budgetary power, curriculum, andperhaps athletic policy.According to proponents of theplan, the Government will be tru¬ly University-wide in nature. Theassembly will continue to havejurisdiction over the campus as awhole; the dorm governmentswill continue to have their indi¬visual jurisdictions. However,the University Government willbe an attempt to unite the va¬rying governmental units. Sinceit will have administration andfaculty representatives, the plan’sadherents feel that the Govern¬ment will be in closer touch with the faculty and administration. Inthis way it will be truly Univer¬sity wide.Concerned with students“University Government willcontinue to concern itself withstudents and student problems,”according to Miller. “The additionof faculty and administrationmembers will make possible suc¬cessful implementation of the in¬creased powers of the Govern¬ment through improved commu¬nication between the Governmentand administration, greater stat¬ure for the Government, andheightened deliberation withinthe Government.”The living groups, as wellas other campus organizationswould continue as self-governingbodies. The assembly would haveno legislative powers on internalmatters of these organizations.The court, however, would be¬come the final judicial body forall organizations in the event ofalleged injustice.Lose autonomy, say opponentsOpponents of the plan feel thatalthough the increase of powerssounds enormous when expressedin vague generalities, it wouldamount to a great deal less whenspelled out in specifics. In that Vol. 65, No. 21 University of Chicago, Friday, January 25, 1957case, SG would be losing its au¬tonomy and gaining, at most,some paper powers.The plan’s proponents have an¬swered that SG will not be losingautonomy by adding faculty andadministration members. It willinstead be gaining prestige.The opponents point to the his¬tory of the Government to showthat SG has always maintainedits autonomy and still gained inpower. “Student Government onthis campus,” they claim, “wasoriginated by the students and ithas spent the past seven yearsincreasing its powers without re¬linquishing any of its autonomy.It is true that governments onother campuses have the powerof handling disciplinary cases, butthese governments are extensionsof the administration instead ofbeing true ‘student’ govern¬ments.”“Perhaps SG has increased itspowers by itself,” answer the pro¬ponents. “However, at this pointa University Government is need¬ed in order to acquire and success¬fully handle further administra¬tive powers, which are not opento SG because of deficiencies inits organization.”“The only power worth losingautonomy for,” reply the oppon¬ents, “is money. Since it is quiteunlikely that the business office will relinquish control of thebookstore, the University Govern¬ment will not have the six-figurebudget that comparable (less au¬tonomous) governments on othercampuses have.”Work out plan“The commission will attemptin its next few meetings to workon specific organizational plansfor University Government,” saidSylvia Thompson, - chairman ofthe commission. “The plan wouldbe worked out in conjunctionwith the dean of students, thefaculty senate, and student organ¬izations. If approved by a two-third vote of SG, it will be sub¬mitted to a campus vote in theform of a new constitution ”It is felt by most observers,that all the basic documents ofStudent Government will need re¬vision. This would include theStudent Code, Statute of Powers,and the Constitution.Under the present setup the re¬lationships between these docu¬ments is as follows:The Constitution of StudentGovernment was adopted by thestudent body in a campus refer¬endum, and approved by the Ad¬ministration, in the spring of 1947.The Student Bill of Rights andthe Statute of Powers of StudentGovernment were together adopt¬ed by the student body in a cam¬ pus referendum, and approved bythe administration, in the springof 1950.These three documents formthe fundamental constitutionalcompact between the studentbody and the administration, andgovern the relations between thestudent body, Student Govern¬ment, recognized student organ¬izations, and the administration.The Student Code consists ofregulations governing all recog¬nized student organizations. Itsprovisions are adopted by jointaction of Student Governmentand the administration, accordingto the procedures of the Statuteof Powers.The Statute of Powers providesthat certain special organizations,such as the Inter-fraternity coun¬cil, the Interclub council, and dor¬mitory councils, may legislateregulations for their member-organizations on matters internalto those organizations. These reg¬ulations are not included in theStudent Code, and may be ob¬tained from these' special organ¬izations, or from the office of thedean of students.Regulations governing studentsas individuals, rather than asmembers of organizations, are is¬sued by the office of the dean ofstudents, and appear in the Man¬ual of Students.Bus service initiated to campus area;No more hiking from 1C or CTA stopsby Ronald J. GrossmanBus service to serve theimmediate campus areawill be instituted Monday,February 4, Weston L.Kragman, University busi¬ness manager announcedWednesday.The bus service will furnisheast - west transportation fromStony Island west down 59thsheet to Cottage Grove then to57th street and back east to StonyIsland. The service will be avail¬able to University personnel andthe student body only. Rides willeosf five cents each with provi¬sions for passes good for un¬limited rides available at $2.00each.According to Krogman, theservice will be for the benefit ofUniversity employes and studentswho must walk lengthy distancesbom public transportation (Illi¬nois Central electric towards theeast and CTA buses on CottageGrove at the west). Hospital andclinics employees, for example,may be forced to walk nine blocksfrom the IC station at 59th streetto the clinics buildings.At the outset of the transpor¬tation service, the “bus” will bea station wagon. When use war¬rants a larger vehicle, a “schoolbus” will be used with a seatingcapacity of 28 to 30. This type ofbus, which has a maximum ca¬pacity of about 40 passengers, istbe sort in use throughout Chi¬cago for the benefit of school chil¬dren.Drivers and vehicles will beGarnished by the Chicago schoolransit, Inc., a private transpor¬tation agency. According to Krog¬ man, the fares will not cover thecosts of maintaining this trans¬portation, and therefore thescheme may be considered a Uni¬versity-subsidized venture. “Werecognize the pressing need ofmany students and employees forservice of this sort,” he said.The bus will operate from 7:30to 10 am and from 3:30 to 11:30pm, Monday through Friday. Thebus will not run on official Uni¬versity holidays.Details of the route and stopsof the bus are as follows:Route givenBeginning at Stony Island and59lh street the bus will proceedwest on 59th street to CottageGrove, stopping at Harper (theIC station), Dorchester (Interna¬tional house), Kimbark, Univer¬sity, Ellis, Drexel, and CottageGrove avenues. The bus will then turn north to 57th street andproceed east to Stony Island, stop¬ping at Ellis, University, Wood-lawn, and Dorchester avenues andthe 57th street IC station. It willthen turn south on ’Stony Islandavenue returning to the startingpoint.It is expected that the bus willcomplete this circuit approximate¬ly every 15 minutes under normalconditionsHow to get ticketsPassengers will be admitted tothe vehicle only upon presenta¬tion of a ticket purchased in ad¬vance.The driver will not he permittedto accept cash or sell tickets. Oneride tickets will be sold at fivecents each, and a pass good forany number of rides by one per¬son during one month will besold at $2 each. Tickets will be on sale at the following locationsbeginning Wednesday, Janu¬ary 30:Billings cashier’s office (Bill¬ings hospital,Room A116A)University BookstoreBursar’s office, window 1(Hours: 9 am to 12:30 pmand 2 to 3 pm, Mondaythrough Friday)International houseReynolds club deskRiders restrictedBecause of legal restrictions,use of the transportation servicewill be limited to members of theUC faculty, administrations, em¬ ployees, and student body. Whenpurchasing tickets, identificationas a student, employee, or facultymember will be required. Krog¬man urged all employees whohave not already been issued iden¬tification cards to obtain themfrom their departmental offices.He stated that a temporary IDcard form is being made availableto departments for this purpose.Krogman stated that further in¬formation concerning the trans¬portation service may be obtainedfrom Mr. C. F. Mack in the de¬partment of Buildings andGrounds, extension 3082.The route of the bus will be west down 59th street toCottage Grove avenue; north on Cottage Grove to 57thstreet; east on 57th street to Stony Island avenue; andsouth on Stony Island to 59th. Bus stop are indicatedby X marks.MiowxyTRUSTEE SWIFT ANSWERS GADFLY see poge 52 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 25, 1957HITHER AND YONStudents have many names, ideasby Bob Brown andMarge RussellA rose by any . . .Texas: It’s called by manynames, but nobody needs adictionary to tell what itmeans.This conclusion could bereached after reading of theplea — and theanswers — of aTexas U profes-i sor-> th . Lecturing be¬fore his Marri¬age and FamilyLife class, theprofessor asked the students foradditional words and phrases toadd to his collection of terms usedto express love and affection.The professor had alreadynoted such familiar ones as neck¬ing, spooning, pitching woo,imooching, and courting up aatorm. He also had such rarerterms as sparking, grubbing, coo¬ing, perching, pruning, andachnooking.But the professor still got theseto add to his collection:Woodsies — from Colorado U;river-banking—from Missouri U;dealing—from California; flick-ing-out — from Alabama U; and from an unidentified source —charging.(Daily Texan)Scholarship funds...Florida State: Students herehave paid a grand total of $1,448in parking fines during the lastfour months, reports the FloridaFlambeau. The fines were collect¬ed by the university for parkingviolations occurring on univer¬sity property.Where does the students' moneygo? The university uses the stu¬dent fines to finance 10 scholar¬ships for undergraduates; alwayshas enough in the fine fund totake care of these needy students;Florida FlambeauLike quarter systemNorth Carolina: Students inthis southern university have be¬gun a petition to have their uni¬versity change back to the quar¬ter system of classes.Complain the students: twosemesters a year means too manyclasses at once, for both the pro¬fessors and the students; toomany exams coming at one time.(Daily Tar Heel)Could George make it?Connecticut University: GeorgeWashington could not get on thefaculty at GW University. A pol¬ icy of limiting its faculty to be¬lievers in God has been put intoeffect at George Washington uni¬versity. According to informationsupplied by historians that wouldexclude George Washington.Though some students and fac¬ulty members have raised loudprotests against the new rulingthe loudest denunciations havecome from none other than theWashington pulpits. One such comment came from Dr. A. Pow¬ell Davies who said that althoughhe was decidedly atheist, he feltthat every university should haveat least one or two atheists on itsstaff, “If only to keep the theistsstepping lively." With a trend to¬ward conformity, he declared, nolonger is a bright student to havea chance to argue with an ac¬complished atheist.” (ConnecticutDaily Campus.)SIT DOWN in the common room/ take out your Luckies—and who pops up to share the fun? None other than thatfriendly, familiar figure, the Lounge Scrounge! He’s a slyguy, too; he knows which cigarettes taste best—and heknows just who carries ’em. Luckies taste better to buyersand borrowers—and no wonder! A Lucky is all cigarette: ; ; nothing but fine, mild, good-tasting tobacco that’sTOASTED to taste even better. Light up a Lucky right now.You’ll say it’s the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked!WHAT DID THEY CAll THE_ TROJAN HORSE?Phony PonyFARRIS HOTCHKISS.WASHINGTON * LEE WHAT IS A 97-LB ARAB?Weak SheikJOHN RUGGIERO.YOUNGSTOWN U-WHO KEEPS THE NAVY IN STITCHES?JOHF BRADY.PROVIDER 16 COLLEGESailors' Tailors WHERE DO YOU KEEP A HIGH HORSE?ROBERT LONS.MISSISSIPPI SOUTHERNSTUDENTS! MAKE $25Do you like to shirk work? Here’s some easy money—start Stickling! We’ll pay $25 for every Stickler weprint—and for hundreds more that never get used.Sticklers are simple riddles with two-word rhyming answers. Both wordsmust have the same number of syllables. (Don’t do drawings.) Sendyour Sticklers with your name, address, college and class to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box 67A, Mount Vernon, N. Y.Luckies Taste Better WHAT DO YOU GET WHEN YOUFORGET TO SHAVE?kr/yy w1li/paJEAN SHAWRADCLIFFE Stubble TroubleV••IT'S TOASTED” TO TASTE BETTER : : ; CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER!AMERICA'S leading Manufacturer of cigarettes•A. T. Co. froduct or Nix Russian visitQueen’s university: The Ca.nadian World University Stu¬dents association has deeidnot to invite a group of Russiastudents to tour Canada at tlpresent time.The question of a Russian toutwas first suggested by the Canadian students who attended intoiJnational seminars this summer iJEurope, and who subsequentlyvisited Russia. Some of these sudents were impressed by the <i«,sire of Russian students and professors to visit Canada and e*change ideas with their Canadi^counterparts, reported t h«Queen’s Journal.Some opposition to this pip,posal came from French Canadianuniversities, but the assembly a*a whole favored the idea. IIow.ever, the lack of informationpractical difficulties made an ex¬change difficult this year. Actionon the proposal will be taki-nafter an investigation by univer¬sities throughout Canada.(Queen's Journal)1An opple a day , . ,University of Washington: Tiftathletic department of the Uni¬versity of Washington orderedan apple vendor to stop sellirrjapples in front of the pavilio'nbefore and during football games,The order was given as a resultof students throwing apples a .ydcores at football games. The di*rectors thought that by gettingrid of one source of the apple sup.ply, the delinquency woulddecreased. (University of Hash*big ton Daily)Intreshing, eh?Washington, D. C.: Not that ithas any significance, but theest figures on alcoholism showsWashington leading the nationboth in the consumption of alec-hol, and in the percentage of th$population that are alcoholics .. .(Temperance league press re¬lease)Valentine Special1 —8x10 —$6.956 proofsphotographerBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th Street-W TV NF w ww tv wwww yytyyy’ Y; Mortgage Insurance; Emergency insurance[ Phone or Writet Joseph H. Aaron, '2713S S. LaSalle S». • RAii33 a. LOMiie aIaaaaaaaaaaaSINCE 1940.VF- .-V.. ‘AAA*r ■ ,> , /4B«YI *v.-. ,v.-. •*■ Jan. 25, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3End Tillich series next weekby Oliver Lee lich’s current lectures by sum- three functions is not possible, which, in effect, every ethical Toward the end of his lecturePaul Tillich, world famous niarizing one 0£ thern> delivered even in Kant, who tried to make idea has a claim to validity so Tillich turned to a discussion oflong as it grows out of a natural- autonomous culture. Science,istic setting (and which therefore philosophy, literature and otherhas no real content), cannot get branches “developed out of theaway from religion. For scientific mother womb of religion," hehonesty is the unconditional im- said, and they have continued onperative for the genuine natural- since the Renaissance to becometheologian, is giving the last January 17three Of a series Of sixteen Discusses Kant’s morality a more radical separation thanthe Stoics. For, Tillich pointed7llWip ipptnrp« todav Mondav Having in preceding lectures out, Kant emphasized the uncon-public lectures toaay, Monday, develo d th thesis that thp dltlonaI> or categorical, characterand Tuesday, at 11:30 in Man- J56 , ... of the moral imperative. The ulti-clel hall. The series, sponsoredt>v the Federated theological fac- f*9 mora|ity’ religion, and cul- perative, said Tillich, transcends ists many Qf whom would be wil- almost completely autonomous offey tne reaeraieu mcoiugicai ture—are interdependent and in- mere desires, feelings, and im- J ^’ began January 3 and deals separable. Tillich discussed the Passions, hence is spiritual. TheSI Vith the topic, “Life of the Spirit’. SAVAral attpmnf. mnlpp Ql_ moral imperative is ‘filled withultimate substance."Deems scientists religiousEven naturalistic ethics, inPH>adian>ly atI low.n aMin ex-actiontak^univerial)': T'#Uni.lered/ilio'nimcs,•esull> a .ydie d i-‘tiing■ sup.rlV ash- . , . . several attempts to make moral-Tillich Is professor of Chr.shan- „ autonomous from rell ion and»>• at the Harvard. umvers,l>' culture and demonstrated how, in,ivinity school and ra currently hjs view (hcy ,alledThe supreme attempt to makemorality atuonomous was madeby Immanuel Kant, said Tillich.In Kant’s system, the moral law ling to suffer martyrdom for the religion. Eut Tillich concluded onpreservation of their scientific in- the note that the cultural funotegrity, Tillich held. They thus tioan of man’s spiritual life is,acknowledge an unconditional nevertheless, essentially unitedcommand, that is, a religious with the religious and moralcommand. functions.visiting professor of the FederaLed tehological faculty at UC.< Born in Germany in 1886,Tillich received his Ph.D at theUniversity of Breslau in 1911^After serving for four years as is internalized in the individual^haplain in the German army dur- rather than being prescribed bying the first world war, he taught religion. Such a morality, saidat several German universities Tillich, actualizes freedom andAnd published numerous books on gives dignity to the individual,theology in German. “In this sense morality establishesTillich came to the United the inviolability of every person,States in 1933, holding a pro- and with it, the greatness andfessorship of philisophical theo- holiness of very person.”logy at the Union theological sem¬inary in New York until 1955, Dean Coggeshall returns;reflects on year in D. C.iat it- Iathowsationalcfi-f ’IKs..Vs ru¬ by Mary FinkleDr. L. T. Coggeshall, dean of biological sciences, has returned from a one-year govern*ment post as special advisor on health and medicine to President Eisenhower. Coggeshall,Kant, in liberating morality formerly chairman of the UC department of medicine, spent the last few days of 1956 infrom the religious and cultural Austria, near the Austro-Hungarian border. As a member of Vice-President Nixon’s official^J.°ntext continued the Stoic tradi- party, he examined the health status of those Hungarian refugees who are parolees for USment at Harvard. Ills most recent tion, which preserved the great- ... _books are Bilhlical Religion and ness of man amidst cultural and Citizenship. artisans, teachers, technical ex-rnc Search for Ultimate Reality religious decline through the ele- Describing the refugees perts, and students. These people,(1955), and Love, Power, and Jus- vation of the individual. “The whom he examined, Cogges- characterized by a love of Hun-tice (1954). only real competitor of Christi- hall referred to them as “high gary and an abhorrance of Com-, An attempt will be made here anity in the ancient world was type people," generally 40 years munism, were extremely keyedto give the reader an idea of the Stoicism,” Tillich held. or younger, healthy, and well- UP during the revolution; butcontent, scope, and flavor of Til- But complete separation of the clothed. They were highly-skilled they felt a certain insecurity asIs the snow getting you down?Call B &l G; they'll clear it up!If you’re tired of shoveling snow off your si dewalk, here’s a novel way of avoiding healthy, men uiouoiei jore/giciiiiOj meexercise and heart attacks: give the job to the University and let the department of build- Red Cross is pooling the effortsings and grounds clear it off. of member nations for maximumB & G is responsible for policing the University grounds when its snows, including all soon as they crossed the border.Coggeshall communicated withthe people in German or English,or, when necessary, with the aidof an interpreter.Pool relief fundsThe International Red Cross Isthe group most concerned withexamining all the refugees forhealth factors. This being one oftheir “disaster programs," theVity and campus sidewalks, ac- efficiency.After the initial health inspec- Coggeshallenrdincr tn Carl F Mnnlr R » through falls on the ice is handled of University avenue north of tion, religious groups generally tary of Health, Education, andn f s - iiacK, oc by the legal department. Beecher house, among others— take over to determine the wel- Welfare Marion B. Folsom inIOreman. Qnma Ilniimrelft, pMmi.allrc QrA K., clanm ninAC rtr Vionf. fdiVe UeCeSSltleS Of all CltlZOnShipestimated. . Some University sidewalks — are heated by steam pipes or heat-irV" maJor moving job is han- University avenue on the Bart- ed tunnels which pass under paroleesdied by three pieces of equipment: jet gymnasium side, the west side them,a revolving broom for light snow, Coggeshalla half-ton Ford truck with at¬tached snowplow for medium. snow, and a caterpillar tractor forheavy snow falls.The machinery is kept in theservice garage at the corner of57th street and Ingleside.Since snow rarely follows a* timetable, the order to move be-‘gins when the fall exceeds twoinches, initiated by the campuspolice if at night or by the level¬ing and trucking division of B &; G if by day.Special requests for service can‘ be made by members of the Uni¬versity through B & G’s orderdesk, extension 3076.Front steps are policed by aregular B & G crew, but Mackasserted that it is not feasible tohand-scrape paths through the1 packed snow, “the tractor is liableto take the sidewalk with it." Lia¬bility for injuries sustained that 70 per cent of the refugeesare Catholic, 15 per cent Protes¬tant, and 5 per cent Jewish. January, 1956, and he then tooka year’s leave of absence fromUC.Commenting on contemporaryproblems in government health' Mayor Daley has asked Cogge- administration, Coggeshall em*shall about the problem of per- phasized the importance of get-manent resettling of immigrants ting more people to obtain ade-to the US. In response, the dean quate health insurance policies,has suggested that Hungarian re- He also mentioned that modernlief money collected in Chicago medicine’s cures for illnesses that(no\y about $100,000) be sent to formerly had a substantial fatal-the central organization at Camp |ty rate in the younger years hasKilmer. brought about a rapid incrementEnjoys tour of duty in the number of older people.Coggeshall considers his year This poses a threefold problem:in government an enlightening ex- that age group is more prone toperieneg, and he was “tremend- chronic illnesses, the people areously impressed” with its effi- more refractory to treatment, andciency He was appointed by the illness attacks after their mostpresident as assistant to Secre- productive employment years.B fir G infernal machine10% Discount to UC Students and PersonnelAll Laundry and Dry Cleaning ServicesCOMPARE THESE LOW NET PRICES8-LBS. WASHED & RUFF DRIED 59‘10-LDS. FLAT WORK $F2DRESS SHIRTS '■ 22QUALITY DRY CLEANING — RAPID SERVICE — REASONABLE PRICESFREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERYPhone PLaza 2-9097UNIVERSITY QUICK LAUNDRY1376 E. 55th Street /t] Student’s Special!6.95 CORDUROYPANTS ..now 4.993.95 IVY LEAGUE A $CSHIRTS now L for V14.95 ALL WOOL FLANNELSIvy or Regular now 7.9917.95 WORSTED FLANNELSIvy or Regular now 9.9524.95 CORDUROYSPORTCOATS now 17.9534.95 Mohair BlendHOODED COATS now 19.99Our Prices Can't Be Beat . . . It's Smart To Buy For LessD & G Clothes Shop744 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-2728"In the Neighborhood for 40 Years**Hours: 9 o.m. - 8 p.m.# Mon. - Fri. — 9 o.m. - 9 p.m., Saturday*■4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 25, 1957EditorialSuggest Student Government changesLast week, we urged all those who had gripeswith Student Government to go to the remainingopen hearing of the commission on SG (Tuesday,Law North, 7:30) to express their complaints. Wewould like to reiterate this plea.But those who go should give thought in ad¬vance to what they want to say. They should putdown their complaints in writing and, if possible,think of ways to solve the problem.The members of the commission are only hu¬man. If students come just to voice general andvague grievances, the commission members willunderstandably become irritated. However, if spe¬cific and concrete ideas are expressed by the par¬ticipants in the hearings, everyone will profit.SG is undertaking the commendable and diffi¬cult project of taking a critical view of itself andattempting to improve what it sees. We, as inter¬ested bystanders, should do all we can to help ourelected representatives.Since we have suggested that the critics of SGshould put their ideas for improvement of theGovernment on paper, we hereby offer our ownadvice.Increase court powerSetting aside all question of who was right andWho was wrong, the case of Phi Gamma Deltaversus the Interfraternity council shows the needof an extension of judicial powers for the Student-Faculty-Administration court of SG.At present the court has no jurisdiction in theinternal affairs of I-F or I-C council. Thus, thereis no appeal (except to the dean of students) pos¬sible for any of the constituent members of thesecouncils. We reiterate that we are not taking sideson the present case. Yet it is obvious that the rightof appeal from the judgment of a body that isprosecutor, judge, jury, and law enforcementagency — all in one — is a necessity.The court should be given the power to try suchappeals. The dean of students, who has the finalvoice on all student activities, now functions as theonly substitute for the court. This puts him in fheprecarious position of having to appear as arbi¬ trator between student organizations. The courthears many caSes involving student organizationsand this would be an appropriate addition to theirjurisdiction.Presentation of billsA major criticism of SG in the past has dealtwith the disorganized appearance of the plenarysessions of the Assembly. This may be attributedin part to lack of communication between thepolitical parties. This causes the members to sus¬pect the motives of the opposition and thus takesides by parties rather than on the merits of thelegislation. We grant that some of the legislationis brought up for political purposes. This evil cannot be avoided by legislation, only by good faith.However, most of the legislation is probablybrought up in good faith. It is unfortunate thateach party automatically suspects the legislationof the opposition.Aside from the abolition of parties, which seemsimpossible and impractical, the solution wouldseem to lie in a better method of letting the mem¬bers know what’s in a bill. At present most of therepresentatives find out about the legislation fromthe party leaders in a parliamentary caucus heldright before the plenary sessions. We propose thatthe following procedure be adopted.All bills and pro and con argumentation shouldbe reproduced and in the hands of the SG mem¬bers at least 24 hours before the plenary sessions.If a member reads a bill — and the arguments forand against it — for himself, by himself, he willbe able to judge its merits more objectively thanif it is hurriedly presented to him in the pre-meet¬ing parliamentary caucus. The bill and argumentsshould have no indication as to who sponsored it.Along with this procedure should go a tighten¬ing up of the restrictions on special bills (billswhich can be brought up during the meeting forimmediate consideration (they normally must gothrough committees). Such a bill should be validonly in real emergencies.RepresentationWe understand that new schemes of representa¬ tion are being considered by some. This would in¬volve a change in the SG constitution whichthough difficult is not impossible. Granted that*the present system of representation by divisionsis not perfect. We, however, can not think of a bet- *ter one. Yet the present system should be cleanedup somewhat. The Assembly is overpopulated. The ,College representatives carry the brunt of the/work, yet there are more divisional members thanCollege members.As the enrollment rises, the membership of SG(based on one member per 100 students) rises. »We propose that the Assembly have a fixed num¬ber of members, perhaps 35. The numbers of mem¬bers per division would still be allotted on a basis *proportionate to population. However, the propor¬tion would take into account the number of stu¬dents from that division voting in the previouselection as well as the number of students rogis- *tered in the division. Since the College usually hasthe highest percentage of voters, this would insure .added representation to the College, which sup¬plies the highest percentage of the active membersof the Government.Spring electionsWe would like to reiterate our recommendationthat the SG elections be held in the spring. OnNovember 2, we noted that this would lead to amore efficient SG, less electioneering, and better-informed voters.Increased efficiency would result from the factthat the Government would be organized andready to start working at the beginning of the iautumn quarter. At present, the autumn quarteris wasted with elections of the Assembly recupera¬tion of the members, and organization of SG.The electioneering would be limited to thespring quarter, during which the other election ofthe year (for NSA delegates) takes place. By thistime, the new students will have become ac- 'quainted with SG, the parties, and the prospectivecandidates. They will thus be better informed vot¬ers. As it stands now, the candidates and issues ’are presented to the entering students as one ofthe many and varied occurrences of O-week.Letters to the editorSuspect Dean Strozier ■.. . . ::<■ -• . ‘t;Phi Cam incident showsIS HITLER DEAD? 'woeful' inadequacy of codeI thought he was dead until last week. That was when I picked up a copy of the latestMaroon and turned to the last page. There to my horror was a photograph of our own dean,Robert M. Strozier. The resemblance of Mr. Strozier to a certain infamous person was shock¬ing. I was tempted to add a little more hair (something Mr. Strozier wishes he could do),a mustache, and there he was — ——— Der Fuehrer in person!Such a remarkable resem¬blance prompted me to do someresearch so that I could establishWithin my mind the true identityof Mr. Strozier. This took me intothe farm country where “Bob”was supposedly born. There Ifpoke with Miss Terry, “Bob’s”eighth grade teacher: “Robertwas always a little wild — hadsome strange ideas. ‘You’ll see,’he used to say.” Then I recalledthe instance when Dean Stroziercame to one of my classes in theCollege with the expressed inten¬tion of getting some of the stu¬dents to transfer to a less desir¬ous hour. At first nobody wantedto go, but the Dean delivered sucha powerful speech that we foundourselves marching out in uni¬son to the strains of “DeutchlandUeber Alles.”Just a year ago the Maroon•sked Dean Strozier to commenton the new fad in dancing, “Rockand Roll.” “I think it’s terrible,”he said. “In my day they used todo the goose ste — I mean waltz.”Now I might be willing to con¬cede that this is no sufficient evi¬dence to warrant suspicion con¬cerning the true identity of DeanStrozier. But then I secured a If anything constructive hasbeen accomplished by the re¬cent decision of the I-F coun¬cil against Phi Gamma Delta,it is the baring of a woeful in¬adequacy of the present rushingcode.The majority of the council hassucceeded in giving a vote of con¬fidence to the atmosphere of“gentlemen’s agreement” and“spirit of rushing” in which UC’sfraternity system presentlythrives. Proper magnification ofthe decision seems to be providedby the highly improper expenselevied on Phi Gam. Certainly thecouncil’s majority cannot thinkthat making an example of PhiGamma Delta will result in amore strict adherence to thisGermany, 1936?transcript of the meeting of theBoard. When the problem of howto collect tuition more effectivelywas discussed, Dean Strozier in¬sisted that stragglers be visitedby a group which he said wouldbe called the SS. And what aboutthat armor-plated 1933 Packardtguring car that the Dean likesso much? It’s the only Packardwith direction signals labeled,Recht und Link.When did Dean Strozier cometo UC? Right after World War II.Why does he spend so much timeat the Museum of Science and In- Chicago, 1957dustry in the captured U-boat?The other day I asked him:“Dean Strozier, w'hat is your ad¬dress?” Looking at me very care¬fully and adjusting his monaclehe answered with vibrance: “Why,the U-505. You wouldn’t happen tohave an American cigarette?”Ray Caparros(Editor’s note: The precedingletter is printed, of course, withsome misgivings. No person inhis right mind could possibly con¬sider Mr. Caparros' words as hav-ing a particle of truth. On theother hand, did you ever noticethe resemblance of ChancellorKimpton to Mussollini? ) Gadfly policyDue to a lack of contributions. Gadfly will not be pub¬lished this week. The Maroon will attempt to keep thiscolumn alive as long as reader interest and contributionswarrant the column.Send articles to Gadfly, c/o Maroon office, Ida Noyes.-f/y/i ctoccvcp11 laroonEditor-in-chief Ronald J. GrossmanManaging editor Norman LewokBusiness manager Gary Mokototf“spirit”; for such ambiguousvalues are often difficult to sup¬port.Despite the lengthy debates ofthe past, explicit rules defininglimits to rushing activities interms of time, place, and eligibil¬ity are not difficult to make. UC’Sfraternity life now shows anurgent need for them. The powerthat any such council needs tosurvive, the authority that I-Fhas found so difficult to com¬mand in years past—should bevested in such a definite code, notwielded by a subjective and un¬predictable majority, as it waslast Thursday night.Bob DaltonBill MillerPhilip ColemanDon RappePhi Delta Theta fraternity ‘Jan. 25, 1957 • CHICACO MAROON • 5f'i ’ LETTERS TO GADFLYSwift denies Gadfly’s conclusionsHarold H. Swift, honorary trustee of L/C, has been with this University almost since thebeginning of its existence. He graduated from UC in 1907. He is now serving his 42nd yearas a trustee and for 27 years was chairman of the board.He is best known in connection with Swift and Company, one of the world's largestmeat packers.The Gadfly article in your issue of January 18, 1957,headed "LAK picks up pieces, then is dropped?" quotesk from an address I made to a group of alumni on Febru¬ary 25, 1955, which was published by the University andsent to some alumni in connection with the campaign forfunds now in progress.In support of the thesis of the writer of Gadfly that Mr.Kimpton will be dropped by the trustees of the University,the phrase, "Trustee Harold Swift sounded the keynote"precedes a quotation from this talk. Later in the article1 some of my material is used as argument, without quotes,as though it were the writer's, and the writer's thesis isthen developed with assumptions explicitly denied in theconclusion of my talk. The writer of Gadfly failed to in¬clude this very pertinent statement, which was to the effectthat after Mr. Kimpton has put strong foundations underour brilliant superstructure we will not go into a period ofdeterioration as occurred when Mr. Judson was president,Reader agrees with Gadfiy:thinks UC needs two headsCertainly I agree with the major premises of last week’s Gadfly:After Hutchins had lost financial soundness in bringing the University to the fore academ¬ically, a chancellor was selected on the basis of his ability to regain that soundness. Kimp¬ton has accomplished this task with the excellence to be expected of a man hand-picked forthe job. But to have a fund- because when the drive is completed Mr. Kimpton will stillhave youth, vigor, enthusiasm, ideas, and understanding.Thus, my material and my name have been used byGadfly as an argument for conclusions which I expresslydisavowed in the talk from which the material was taken.The use of quotes out of context, as in this article, seemsto me totally unjustified, as is the omission of an impor¬tant statement which is contrary to the inference beingdrawn by the Gadfly writer.I understand the American Society of Newspaper Editorshas adopted a code of ethics which govern their articlesstressing truth, accuracy, good faith, and thoroughness.The University of Chicago is dedicated to the search fortruth. It particularly disappoints me that a publication bystudents of the University should not require its specialwriters to comply with the ethics of the profession.Harold H. SwiftAuthor clarifies articleraiser permanently in aposition which calls for a vis¬ionary, a scholar, a crusader, isTolly—a folly the more insidiousbecause its result is not a singlelarge disaster, but a “creepingmediocrity” which easily passesunnoticed in the tranquilizing at¬mosphere of million-dollar grants.I can only hope that the powersthat be concur with these beliefsof the Gadfly and myself. Buthere I must part company withthe estimable insect. He talks ofthe pendulum of greatness oscil¬lating between the highs of thevisionary chancellors and thelows of the men whose necessaryjob it was to pick up the financialpieces afterwards. case. For greatness, a selection ofUniversity leaders is requiredbased on intellectual attainmentand vision. For solvency the basismust be an equally intangiblemixture of money-raising ability,diplomacy, knowledge of practi¬cal psychology, and intelligence.Select leaders with the first qual¬ity only and an ultimate swing ofthe pendulum to a low will result.Select for the second alone andthe University will have the ma¬terial means for greatness, butnot the spiritual. Select a mancombining some of each ability(as do most colleges) and perma¬nent mediocrity results. Top abil¬ity in either field is rare enough; to handle both fields simultane¬ously.But why is it not possible toconcede that providing the spirit¬ual guidance and providing thematerial means for a great Uni¬versity are two different admin¬istrative functions. Each is point¬less without the other, but thetwo are separate. Although thefirst function must unhesitatinglybe accorded the greater impor¬tance, why would it not be desira¬ble to have an office high in theUniversity hierarchy, the sole pur¬pose of which would be the carry¬ing out of the second function.For such an office it would be dif¬ficult to find a person better qual¬ified than Chancellor Kimpton,the possibility of finding a manAre we then to believe that it of highest achievement in both is who has abundantly and spectac-1s impossible to maintain both . , _ ., , ularly proven his ability in thisgreatness and solvency at the almost ni1-Even could such a man field during the past severalsame time? ’ be found it is still questionable years. R. H.I do not believe this to be the whether or not he would be able (Name with-held) The author wishes to clarifysome statements which ap¬peared in, and some insightswhich were read into, lastweek’s Gadfly.First, all the material in thefourth paragraph, like that pre¬ceding, is a quote from HaroldSwift. The quotation maiks wereleft out inadvertently. Thesestatements are not conjecture onthe author’s part, but a publicstatement by the former chair¬man of the board of trustees,made in the presence of the Chan¬cellor and published by the Uni¬versity Press.Second, what follows from thispoint is purely conjecture. Nosecret information is revealed, notelephone wires have been tapped,no confidences betrayed. The au¬thor is not a dejected facultymember, a dejected administra¬tor, a dejected student—he is notdejected. Except for the Swiftquotes and the brief biographies,all statements are the author’sopinions and the author’s conjec¬tures. Third, the requirements for theappointment of the Chahcellorhave not been adopted. They havebeen drawn up by the author onthe basis of what other univer¬sities have done and what the au¬thor thinks the board of trusteeswould do. The three names listedare simply three who stand outin the confines of the broadoutlines previously determined.There are others. Obviously, thesemen are not wandering off in therarified air of pure scholarship.They are also administrators, butthe problems with which theChancellor must deal in futureyears will be those of the curricu¬lum: Kimpton has solved the ma¬jor financial problems!Fourth, the comments in Gad¬fly are conjecture and prediction,not indictment. The author hasstated that “Kimpton’s forte isfinance, not education; he is anadministrator, not a scholar.”This is not to say that Kimptonis a stranger to scholarship orestranged from education.The author hopes the air abovecampus is now somewhat clearer.PertinaxEditor's ColumnKimpton Gadfly error of judgment: RJGA previous issue of the Ma¬roon stated that “the Maroondoes not always agree withwhat is written in Gadfly,” but,it continued, despite such dis¬agreement, articles are still print¬ed in fulfillment of the Gadflypolicy to provide “provocativeand stimulating articles to thecampus.”It is a further policy of Gadflythat articles will not be edited,but will be printed just as writ¬ten with the author’s name heldIn confidence.Such articles, usually not writ¬ten by the Maroon staff, point upthe dichotomy which exists be¬tween editing a story to followthe Maroon’s policy and the re¬sponsibility which the newspapermaintains for everything that isprinted in it. Either articles of acontroversial nature are edited toadhere to the policy or viewpointof the newspaper, or that publi¬cation must accept full responsi¬bility for the printing of sucharticles.There exist no “outs” for anewspaper: despite opinions andrumors to the contrary, this news¬paper, or any newspaper is re¬sponsible for every word printed in it, be it news story, advertise¬ment, editorial, letters, or a fea¬ture such as Gadfly.Thus, the Maroon cannot dis¬avow responsibility for state¬ments or opinions printed in itspages simply because the state¬ments do not agree with those ofthe newspaper or its editor.Last week’s Gadfly, entitled“LAK picks up pieces, then isdropped?” is an example of thatresponsibility. The matter is sim¬ple; the editor made an error ofjudgment in allowing it to beprinted.Many times in the heat of “pro¬ducing ” a newspaper — with atight deadline to meet (the Ma¬roon is published more than 20miles away, causing very earlydeadlines) decisions are madeconcerning what goes in the pa¬per which might not be madewere more time available for con¬sidering the possible effect of thestory.The particular article in ques¬tion — the Gadfly postulatingChancellor Kimpton’s “demise” inthe near future—is a grave ex¬ample of this kind of error.It is certainly in questionabletaste—“patting him on the backwith a knife” said one reader. Re-gardless of whether or not a piece of writing agrees withstanding Maroon policy or withthe views of its editor, writingwhich can be construed to be inbad taste should never be run.Time and again Gadfly has statedviewpoints or attacked policies towhich I, as editor, and other mem¬bers of the Maroon staff, havebeen diametrically opposed. Buttime and again we have run thearticles if the writing was of highcalibre, or if no vicious attackson personalities were made. Inthis case, an error of judgmentwas made.Trustee Harold Swift and oth¬ers of the faculty, administration,and student body are perfectlyjustified in their criticisms ofthis particular Gadfly. Especiallyjustified are criticisms concern¬ing the misquoting of Mr. Swift,thus grossly distorting the orig¬inal intent of his statements. Al¬though the omission of quotationmarks from one of Mr. Swift’sstatements quoted in the articlewas an inadvertent error, the in¬ference drawn from the quotedstatements was, I believe, delib¬erate in intent.The Chancellor does not deservethe treatment he received at thehands of Gadfly and the Maroon.The Maroon’s editor is personally a great admirer of the man andhis work. On the wall of the Ma¬min office, are two pictures—oneof Kimpton and one of Hutchins,the previous Chancellor. Printedabove the pictures are the words:“Our Leaders.” This is done withgood-natured humor, of course,but with sincerity.The Maroon will never hesitateto attack Kimpton or any otheradministrator for policies or de¬cisions which we consider harm¬ful or disadvantageous to thecampus. But, hopefully, the Ma¬roon will never again permit thiskind of subtly vicious attack on aman undeserving of such treat¬ment.Rushing can be fun . . .This past week, as well asthe week to come marks anextremely important time inthe life of ten of UC’s student or¬ganizations—the ten Greek letterfraternities — as rushing getsfrantically underway.Rushing is the lifeblood of anyfraternity. As fraternities havelarge financial obligations in themaintaining of house, cook, andemployees, it is extremely im¬portant that membership bekept at certain levels for financial reasons. Joining a fraternity is aserious step — lifelong associa¬tions and school-long ob igationsare thereby incurred. The rushingevents—“smokers”—are calculat¬ed to convince the would-be pledgethat each house is the best andis the best for him.For these reasons, it is hopedthat all eligible males will takeadvantage of the time and effortthe fraternities are exerting inthe two-weeks’ rushing events.Written invitations are of no sig¬nificance, as all smokers are trulyopen events—with all males in¬vited to them.And should any seeds of doubtexist in the minds of rusheesconcerning disorganization or dis¬satisfaction in fraternity ranksbecause of the recent fine of onehouse—have no fear. The Inter¬fraternity council, as many otherorganizations at this grand andstrange institution, is similar toTopsy: “It jest growed.” And“jest growing” sometimes over¬looks the hard fact that definite,written rules must govern eachorganization or the minoritygroup of vultures which sadlyexist in almost any organizationwill swoop to their feast— Ronald J. Grossman.6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 25, 1957Coming events on quadranglesFriday 25 JanuaryFTF lecture series, “Life and the spirit,"fourteenth of series through Tuesday29 Jan., Paul Tillich, German theo¬logian. Harvard, 11:30 am. Macdel,free.Zionist organization, 12:30 noon, Rey¬nolds club basement.Le Cercle Francais, “Ramuz et la suisseromande,” M. Jean Devaud, 2nd and4th Fridays of month, 4 pm, IdaNoyes.Lutheran club, visit Hull house, China¬town dinner, 6:15 pm, leave Chapelhouse.Folkmusic, “Wingding,” Folklore so¬ciety, 7:30 pm, Ida Noye6, non-mem¬bers. 25 cents.Play reading, "Tiger at the Gates,” byJean Girardoux. students read, 7:30pm, Int house room A. Varsity gymnastics, UC vs. Indiana Ballstate teachers college, 7:30 pm, Bart¬lett.Lecture, “Russia today,” Morris Rubin,editor Progressive, 8 pm, 172 W Adams,Midland hotel, 50 cents.Concert, Wagner Lutheran choir, profSigvart J. Steen, director, Wagnei col¬lege, Staten Island, NY, 8 pm, Rocke¬feller chapel, offering.Calvert club, ice skaiing, 8 pm, Northstands, 25 cents.Varsity basketball, UC vs George Wil¬liam college, 8 pm, Field house, $1.UT—Tonight at 8:30, “Pheasant underglass,” John Meyer, original musicalrevue, 8:30 pm, Reynolds club theatre,75 cents advice, $1 door, also Sat.,Sun.Hillel fireside, “Political behav'or ofAmerican Jews: Is there a Jewishvote?” politic sci prof Bradford Yves*- erfield, 8:30 pm, Hillel house, (Sab¬bath service, 7:45 pm)Calvert club, folkmusic led by Folkloremember, 10 pm, DeSales house, 5735jS^POn Campus/f (Author of “Barefoot Boy With withMax QhuhmCheek,” etc.)WHO WENT TO THE PROM...AND WHY“Hello,” said the voice on the telephone. “This isWerther Sigafoos.”“Who?” said Anna Livia Plurabelle.“Werther Sigafoos,” said Werther Sigafoos. “I sitnext to you in psych. I’m kind of dumpy and I alwayswear a sweatshirt.”“I’m afraid I don’t remember you,” said Anna Livia.“I’m the one whose lecture notes you’ve been borrow¬ing for two years,” said Werther.“Oh, yes!” she said. “What do you wish, Walter?”“Werther” said Werther. “What I wish is to takeyou to the Junior Prom next April.”“That’s months away, Westnor,” said Anna Livia.“Werther,” said Werther. “Yes, I know, but you areso round and beautiful that I was afraid you mighthave a date already.”“As a matter of fact I do, Wingate,” said Anna Livia.“Werther,” said Werther. “Oh, drat!”in of ctamfleM/1 giwM mrjyMirt *Anna Livia did not really have a date, but she wasexpecting to be asked by Stewart Stalwart, athlete andBMOC, handsome as Apollo, smooth as ivory, driver ofa 2.9 litre Bugatti, wearer of faultless tweeds, smokerof Philip Morris Cigarettes, which, even without hisother achievements, would by itself stamp him as a manof discrimination, as the possessor of a pleasure-orientedpalate, as one who smoked for the pure joy of it, who hadsought and found a cigarette brimming over with zestand zip and hearty good fellowship — Philip Morris!Well sir, Anna Livia waited for Stewart to ask her,but two days before the Prom, to everybody’s amazement,he asked Rose-of-Sharon Kinsolving, a nondescript girlwith pavement colored hair and a briefcase.Anna Livia sobbed for a spell and then, not wishingto miss the most gala event of the junior year, shephoned Werther Sigafoos.“My Prom date has come down with a dread virus,”she said, “and I’ll accept your invitation, Waldrop.”“Werther,” said Werther. “Oh, goody ganders!”The next day Anna Livia received a phone call fromStewart Stalwart. “My Prom date has come down witha dread virus,” he said. “Will you go with me?”“Certainly,” she said and immediately phoned Wer¬ther and said, “I have come down with a dread virus andcannot go to the Prom with you, Whipstitch.”“Werther," said Werther. “Oh, mice and rats!”So Anna Livia went to the Prom with Stewart andwho do you think they ran into? Rose-of-Sharon withWerther, that’s who!Stewart had felt obliged to ask Rose-of-Sharon be¬cause she always did his homework, but she had weaseledout because she really wanted to go with Werther withwhom she felt a great oneness because they were bothso dumpy. He fell wildly in love with her at the Prom,and today they are married and run a very successfulfive-minute auto-wash in New Bern, N. C.Anna Livia and Stewart are happy too. They ar«still juniors and have not missed a Prom in six years.©Max Shulman, 1957All i well that ends well, say the makers of Philip MorrisCigarettes, who bring you this column each week throughthe school year. And, speaking of things that end well — andbegin well too — try today's zestful new Philip Morris! Univ.Saturday 26 JanuaryVarsity fencing, UC vs. Lawrence Instof tech, 1:30 pm. Bartlett.Varsity track, UC track club invitationalrelays, 2 pm Field house.Concert Band rehearsal, 2 pm, Mandelhall.Varsity wrestling, UC vs. Knox college,3:30 pm, Bartlett.Indian Republic day, stage show, re¬freshments, everyone welcome, Indiaassoc, 8 pm, Int house assembly hall,free.C dance, “June in January,” not formal,refreshments, Student Union, 9-12pm, Ida Noyes, 75 cents per person.UT—Tonight at 8:30, same as Friday,8:30 pm, Reynolds club, $1.Sunday 27 JanuaryAnglican mass, weekly, 8:30 am. Bondchapel, (breakfast afterwards, 35cents)Lutheran Communion, weekly, 10 am,Hilton chapel.University Christian religious service,“It is also blessed to receive,” profBernard M. Loomer, 11 am, weekly,Rockefeller chapel.O board, weekly, 3 pm, Ida Noyes.Carillon concert, Mozart birthday cele¬bration, James R Lawson carillon-neur, 4:30 pm, Rockefeller chapel.Calvert lecture. “Calvert club and Cath¬olic action,” Rev Wm Quinn and JosConnerton, 4:30 pn>. DeSales houseFilm: Martin Luther, controversialmovie, 5, 7, 9 pm, also Mon, Tues,Augustana Lutheran church, 54 andKimbark.Porter supper-lecture, “What is theholy spirit?” theolog student LarryC Crockett, 6 pm, Swift commons.Baptist fellowship, Sunday evening clubon TV, 6 pm, members home, supper50 cents. <L»-Canterbury weekly supper, 6 pm, 5540Woodlawn, 50 cents.Quaker supper discussion, weekly, allwelcome, Quaker house, 5615 Wood-lawn, 7 pm, (supper 6 pm)Channing club, "A liberals view of wor¬ship,” Dr. Leslie Pennington, 8 pm,Unitarian church, 1174 E 57.Critics of religion lecture series, “Thecritic as evolutionist: T H Huxley,”Zoology prof Alfred E Emerson, 2ndof 4 lectures, 2 and 4 Sun of month,Methodist club, 8 pm. Chapel house.Chamber music concert. Musical So¬ciety, Henri Eccles Sonata g minor,Bach Sonata b minor, chorals Purcell,Brahms, Mozart; Charlotte and Rich¬ard Vlkstrom, James Mack, ConnieMcElroy, Sylvia Kcstrale, 8:15 pm, IdaNoyes.UT—Tonight at 8:30, same as Fri, Sat.,8:30 pm, Reynolds club, $1.Monday 28 JanuaryLecture, “Life and the spirit,” visitingprof Paul Tillich, 11:30 am, Mandel. Film: The Brave Bulls, 7 and 9 pm, Inthouse, 45 cents.Lecture. “2 views of man: medieval andmodern,” prof Otto G von Simson,condition of modern man art exhibit,8:15 pm, Breasted hall, 1155 E 58.Tuesday 29 JanuaryFTF lecture series, “Life and the spirit,"last of series, Paul Tillich, Germantheologian, Harvard, 11:30 am, Man-del, free.Films: Childbirth and caesarean sec¬tion of twins, Pre-med club, 3:30 pm,Abbott 133.MAROON staff, 3:30 pm, Ida Noyes.TV broadcast, "Origins of contemporarymusic,” comparison of Haydn, Wag¬ner, Hindemith; pianist Jeanne Bam¬berger, composer Leland Smith, Thehumanities: arts of today, 6:30 pm,channel 11.Jazz cluo. weekly, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Madrigal singers rehearsal, 7:30 pm,Swift commons.Concert band rehearsal, 7:30 pm, Man-del hall.Lecture, “Empirical problems in thesociology of religion,” Joseph HFichter SJ, Society for social research,8 pm, Soc Sci 201.FTF wives lectures, “The heritage andAgriculture, Conservation,” KermitEby, weekly, 8 pm, Woodlawn house.Canterbury lectures, “Work of thechurch in hospitals” Rev Grainger EWestberg, chair dept of religion andmedicine, 8 pm, Brent house, 5540Woodlawn.Alpha Phi Omega, meeting to discusspossible service projects that APO cando during remainder of school year.Ida Noyes, 8 pm.Gates hall coffee hour, everyone wel¬come, weekly, 10-12 pm. Gates lounge. Concert band rehearsal, 7:30 pm, Man-del.NAACP. educational and business.everyone welcome, 8 pm, Ida NoyesCoffee hour, weekly, 9 pm, Green hall,TV broadcast, “Sinners and saints inthe nursery” 1800's ideals of child¬hood and child rearing, prof Rich¬ard Wahl, Everybodys America, 9 30*pm, Channel 11.Friday 1 FebruaryDoc film: Foolish wives, Erich von Stro¬heim, European directors of Holly¬wood films, 1st of series of 4 films$1.50 for series to Doc Films thru FacEx, or at door, admission series ticketonly, 7:15 and 9:15 pm, Soc Sci 122.WUCB Marathon, participants welcomeannually, 8 pm-8 pm, Sat., BJ lounge.Square dance, "Hitchcock Hoedown,”females free, escort service, men 50cents, H-S men 25 cents, all welcome.8:30 pm, Hitchcock. ’»Concert, annual winter concert band,8:30 pm, Mandel.Saturday 2 FebruaryVarsity fencing, uc vs Detroit u, 1:30'pm, Bartlett.Dance, BJ-WUCB Marathon dance, allwelcome, 8 pm, BJ library.Folk music concert, Odetta and BobWilson, famous singers now at Gate*of Horn, Folklore society, 8:30 pm.Mandel hall, $1 and $1.50.Wednesday 30 JanuaryFTF worship, RE prof Ross Snyder, Iowau, 11:30 pm: Bond chapel.Intervarsity Christian fellowship lunch¬eon-discussion, Premartial sexual re¬lations, weekly, 12:30 noon, Ida Noyes.Varsity swim, UC vs Notre Dame, 3:30pm, Bartlett.Evensong, weekly, Canterbury club, 5:05pm. Bond chapel.Glee club rehearsal, weekly, 7 pm, IdaNoyes.Orchestra comediae-musicalis rehearsal,7:30 pm, Ida Noyes.Varsity track, uc vs Wilson Jr. college,7:30 pm, Fieldhouse.Lecture: “Social control in parochialschools,” Joseph H Fichter SJ, NotreDame u, Society of social research,8 pm, Soc sci 201.Debate, “Resolved: American studentsare politically apathetic” UC studentsfrom Czechoslovakia, Belgium, GrBrit, Panama, vs Chgo catholic Uni¬versity club, 8 pm, Int house homeroom.Folk dancing, beginners special, gymshoes. Country dancers, weekly, 8 pm,Ida Noyes.Thursday 31 JanuaryEpiscopal Communion, weekly, 7:30 am.Bond chapel. Want to take"Fatal Step”?Meeting for youA lecture and discussionevening for engaged coupleswill be given Thursday, at 7:30 jin Ida Noyes hall.Sponsored by the dean of stu¬dent’s office, the evening will fea¬ture as speakers Granger West- 'berg, associate professor of re¬ligion and health and Dr. N. Ed¬ward Davis, chairman of the de¬partment of obstetrics and gyne¬cology and chief of service atLying-In hospital.According to Mary Alice New¬man, director of student activi¬ties, the lecture-discussion is opento all engaged couples andcouples seriously consideringmarriage.Letters to the editorla khochu perepisyvatsia Parking availablein nearby areasDear unknown friend:I should like to change letters with you as I am much As a sympathetic responseinterested in the life and work of the students abroad and t!10Su comP^a*n bittei ly, , . , that they have no place toespecially of the students who park, ,he student Needs Commit-Study English. My name is want to know about such things, tee had a pleasant conversationKorneva Valya. I am 18 years . I,shou1^ li,ke to change text- with that part of Our FriendlyAt e books and photoes (sic) of our Administration (OFA) known asof age. I am a second-year student lnstitute. Please, write about the Development Office, whichof the English faculty of Blago- yourself, your friend, your stud- reminded us that there are twoveshchensk Pedagogical InstituteI do my best to have a good com¬mand of English.I should like to know, if youalso study any language Yvhich isforeign to you and should be gladto hear from you about the waysyou work to master the language.As to my friends and me, I think ies and ask me questions and Ishall try to answer you soon.Yours trulyKorneva ValyaPoste restra.ite78 Leninstreet post-officeBlagoveshchensk upon theAmur; USSR parking areas, a fairly close onebeing the Institutes and a moreremote one at 58th and Maryland.Rumors that OFA has com¬pletely neglected the situation arefurther proven false, since thenew women’s dorms and the newLaw School building will havefull parking facilities in accord¬ance with the Chicago buildingcode. Unfortunately, the usual(Editor’s note: The precedingthat we learned to read and write letter, printed here exactly as re-English more or less decently dur- ceived in the Maroon office, wasing the first year of study. ^dressed to “The University of “TackT'fTn'ds': “prohiwSThis year we are learning to Chicago Faculty of Pedagogics— further expansion of nark-speak English but find it difficult. to a second year student.” It is fnjf faei]ities atPthis time PWe can retell the texts we read suggested that air mail be usedwithout difficulty but our every- in answering Tovarisch Korneva, H‘*rb ^ipperian,day use of English speech is lim- as his letter dated November 16, Chairman, Studentited. Probably it is because we 1956. was received last week.) Needs Committeehave no habit of talking English.You will do me great favor if youadvice (sic) me how to improvemy “spoken” English. Refugees in need of helpNow some words about myfriends. There are 14 students inour group. We are good com¬rades and we help one another inour studies. Last year we hadtwo examination sessions andnone of us failed. Most of us hadonly excellent and good marks inall the subjects. This year weshall have exams: in Englishphonetics, English grammar, Eng¬lish lexics, Russian linguistics andfive tests: in history of the Com¬munist party of the USSR, Latinand German, in English lexics,phisical (sic) culture.When I get your answer I shallwrite you about our social ar.dscientific work at our institute,about the books we read, theplays we see at the theater, ourwinter and summer sports if you While the civic and studentgroups in this country have beendeeply involved in rendering as¬sistance to the Hungarian refu¬gees, very little attention hasbeen paid by them to over 125,000Egyptians who have been render¬ed homeless and destitute as a re¬sult of Anglo-French and Israeliinvasions of Egypt. According toa report from Paul Johnson of theAmerican friends service com¬mittee ,and Russell Stevenson ofthe American council of volun¬tary agencies, over 60,000 refu¬gees from Sinai and Port Said arenow confined to go ernment refu¬gee camps, and are in urgent needof shelter, food, clothing and med¬ical supplies. The government ofEgypt is providing these refugeesan allowance of 25 cents per per¬ son per day and plans to resettlethem in Port Said and Sinai. Butthis settlement is well nigh im¬possible during the next twelvemonths.The Jews of Egypt, who untilOctober 1956 were living in fair¬ly peaceful conditions in Egypt,and who, as a result of the Israeliattack, are being now coerced toleave Egypt also stand in needof our assistance. Whatever maybe our differences with BenGurion and Nasser, the plight ofthese refugees should evoke oursympathy. May I persuade theStudent Government and otherstudent groups on the campus totake a lead in this matter, andinitiate a relief drive to aid thesevictims?—Brijen K. Gupa.ff" >». (Jw n w m « IV v v n w »Reporter attends smoker;discusses ABCs of A, Bby Bob HalaszAn important part of the promotion of any fraternity is the fraternity smoker, since itj is, at least theoretically, an entering student’s first impression of fraternity life on campus.Operating on the above principle, this reporter trudged to the smokers of two frater¬nities, which shall be designated as Fraternity A and Fraternity B.Fraternity A’s house was small, cozy and well-lit. Visitors are asked to sign their namesand addresses in a book, a standard practice at all smokers. A member then makes out acard with your name on it, ——and pins the card to your la- Near the end of my visit I re usual invitation to lunch, whichpel. By this device, all but the ce*ved the standard invite back was not offered until I reachedvery near-sighted members can for lunch the next week. This is the door. Rushing ScheduleTimes for all smokers: 7:30 to 10:30 pmFriday, January 25 Phi Delta ThetaAlpha Delta PhiMonday, January 28 Psi UpsilonKappa Alpha PsiTuesday, January 29. . Delta UpsilonPhi Delta ThetaWednesday, January 30 Zeta Beta TauAlpha Delta PhiThursday, January 31 Phi Sigma DeltaPhi Gamma DeltaFriday, February 1 Beta Theta PiPhi Kappa Psithe second stage of the processof joining a fraternity.Fraternity B’s party was more» movie projector and showed the ,A'S'„,bUt n°thi"?inAi„i* went on except for the usual millcall you by your first name at aglance.Fraternity A then wheeled out Porter reports. • . •members being pitched, individ- . „ „ , , . . , ..n . - mg around and introductions. TheI pally anc collectively, into Botany joun„e was hjw£er less furnishedI pond. The movie was shown ^unge was Digger, less iurmsned,1. . , and dimly-lit. The members are. . * not particularly subdued types,, The visitors were pretty con- but perhaps the absence of alco-fused by the fact that both mem- hoi cramped their style. Anotherbers and visitors wore identical difference between B and A wasname cards, so that only the the greater number of girls atmembers could (presumably) tell the former’s party,who was what. However, it must B’s members gave me a close,.be said for Fraternity A that head to foot scrutiny. One mem- of the total WUS program forhl?J,tf,he“C tast,e °bvi0,uf.1J' promoting international coop- fully rather than voice their ca. One was on U S foreign policy,themselves to me more than once, disturbed by my crooked necktie, ‘ . , f opinions. To a great extent, Miss particularly in regard to colonial-The party broke up into little kindly straightened it for me. erauon. 1 ne runas or tne trip Porter found that Indian students ism. Most questions centered ongroups for the remainder of the There were no movies, and the came out of a special grant from are more interested in pursuing race relations. The Indians wereevening. One of the members only group activity that went on the Ford Foundation and not vocational studies than in obtain- well informed on the current situ-from WUS funds raised on uni- ing a liberal education. ation with questions centering onversity campuses which are spent During her stay in India Miss Autherine Lucy who was then inon direct student aid—food, medi- Porter found three questions re- the news. The third question wasLast Sunday afternoon the World University Service committee presented Janice Porterwho spoke on India. Miss Porter, former UC College student and last year’s president ofStudent Government, opened her talk by explaining that WUS has asked her to be a mem¬ber of a group of ten American students who were to attend an international seminar inPoona, India.The seminar and tour of Indian universities in which Miss Porter participated were a part? the total WUS program forpromoting international coop-showed me around the house, was the brief, but abortive at-which was neat as a pin. Fra ter- tempt to sing by a quartet in one•nity A’s house is small, and has corner. The singing was off key,few boarders in it. Some houses but it did not turn my stomach,are much bigger and have to take Fraternity B’s members did notin several boarders to make the offer to show me the house, andplace a paying proposition. so I left, having received thephoto by FinstonMembers of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, “Butch” Kline(left), Rick Ellis (center) and Dave Leonetti (right), chatwith two potential brothers.SC sponsors 'tiger' flight cine, books, housing.Although she remained in Indiaalmost half a year and has formedsome deep convictions about theculture, Miss Porter felt that herknowledge was by no means com¬plete. She found the Indian peo¬ple whom she met were genuinelyinterested in helping visitingforeigners to know their country.She and other Americans wereinvited into Indian homes regard¬less of whether the Indians likedthem personally or whether theyliked Americans in general, butrather because the Indians feltit their duty. How many Ameri¬cans, she asked, have this samesense of duty toward foreigners?The Indian students partici¬pating in the seminar were morereticent than the vocal Ameri¬cans. She felt that this was due tothe traditional Indian attitudetoward teachers and adults. Whenan adult was present the Indianstudents tended to listen respect- peatedly asked her about Ameri-Janice Porter on the high divorce rate.While in India, Miss Porter metand spoke to only one Communist.He was a quiet, dedicated man,convinced that Communism wasthe only answer to India’s prob¬lems as an underdeveloped coun¬try. He was quite ready to giveup his life for his cause.After her four thousand miletour of Indian universities, MissPorter went to Naranyanpur, avillage of two thousand in Prac-lash, a large forested state innorthwestern India. She stayedwith Arna Sucksdorf, the Swedishfilm director, who was making afilm about the aborginals. Thesepeople, one of the few groups ofaboriginals remaining in India,were happy, outgoing, and nat¬ural Although Miss Porter andthey had no common tongue,communication was no problem.Miss Porter closed her talk byshowing several pieces of silkshe had brought back from India.The Student Governmentsponsored charter flight toEurope is now seeking passen¬gers. Arrangements have beenmade with Flying Tiger-PanAmerican Airlines for a 114-seatsuper constellation to leave NewYork on June 18 non-stop forAmsterdam.The return departure date hastentatively been set for Septem¬ber 10. There is a possibility thatthis return date may be extendedas much as a week if desired inorder to allow more time inEurope.Students, people associatedwith the University, and theirfamilies are eligible to be passen¬ gers. Special arrangements areavailable for small children. Thecost of the round trip flight is$330 and all inquiries should bedirected to the SG office, ext 3274.This year’s flight has increasedby 46 its seating capacity. Theaccommodations include a brandnew Super Constellation" equippedwith pressurized cabin, and host¬esses will serve meals while inflight.The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 Eye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372TERRY’S PIZZA"The World’s Best”SPECIAL OFFERWITH THIS COUPON25c Discount on any Pizzaeaten here ... or deliveredSmall 1.00Medium 1.45 Large 1.95Giant 2.95FREE DELIVERY FORU. OF C. STUDENTS1518 E. 63rd MI 3-4045 *!immmmmmmmrnmm** REDEEM YOUR SWIFT COUPONS HEREYOU’LL FIND COUPONS IN SWIFT’S2 PAGE COLOR ADS INmsJanuary 28 LOOKFebruary 5 JOURNALFebruarymumTHIS IS NOT A COURON-DO NOT CLIP!Bring your coupons toCO-OP SUPER MART5535 SOUTH HARPERPlenty of Free Parking8 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 25, 1957Plan not considered P,sp“/e ln.st,.tu.ffparity principleby Norman LewakA quorum call by Otto Feinstein (SRP-soc) cut short Tuesday's SG meeting before the re¬port of the commission on SG reached the floor. Thus the by-law changes concerning com¬mittees, passed at Monday’s commission meeting, will not be considered until the next SGmeeting, at which time the entire report of the commission is due.The commission proposal trimmed the number of committees to seven and created sevendepartments. The committees would continue to function as bodies to propose, investigate,and write legislation. The newly-formed departments would cations, (publications run by SG,take over the executive func¬tions now handled by the com¬mittees.The seven committees and theirgeneral fields as outlined in thecommission meeting are:• Election and rules—SG in re¬lation to itself• Committee on recognized stu¬dent organizations—SG in re¬lation to organized students• Student needs—SG in relationto individual sttidents• NSA-Student rights—SG in re¬lation to issues that extend be¬yond the campus• Student-Faculty relations—SGin relation to faculty and ad¬ministration• Community relations—SG inrelation to the community• Committe at large—SG in re¬lation to the minority partyThe executive departments willbe public relations, student publi- mainly the student directory), stu¬dent services, student travel, in¬ternational student exchange andorientation, activities coordina¬tion, and finance. Directors andmembers of the department mayor may not be members of theassembly. New departments willbe created and existing ones dis¬banded according to need.Debate exchange billsThe quorum call occurred dur¬ing debate on a bill “to discon¬tinue efforts towards a Russianexchange.” A bill “to state theStudent Government's policy onstudent exchanges” had previous¬ly passed after a quorum had beencalled, found absent, and then re¬trieved. This bill, as finally pass¬ed, read:Student Government be¬lieves in student exchangebetween the University ofChicago and the universitiesof ail nations when such ex- Student Government refusesto waste its time and energyin attempting to set up stu¬dent exchanges when andwhere legal and economicconditions make such ex¬changes impossible.The meeting was recessed untilthe call of the chair after thequorum was found lacking thesecond time. According to theconstitution, SG must meet atleast once a month. A recessedmeeting starts at the point atwhich the recess was called. Thusthe first order of business willbe the Russian exchange bill.rA Campus-to-Career Case HistoryClaire Hruska (left) discusses progress of a new telephone building with the contractor.What’s a civil engineer’s jobin the telephone company?Claire Hruska graduated in 1953 fromthe University of Washington with a B.S.in Civil Engineering. Today he’s withThe Pacific Telephone and TelegraphCompany.“I supervise construction at everystage,” Claire says. “Every telephonebuilding is designed around the equip¬ment that will he in it. When a buildingis needed, I wTork closely with the archi¬tect to make sure his plans fit the needs.Then I check the contractors’ bids. Whenthe contract is let, it’s my responsibility to see that the builder sticks to the plansin detail.“Right now I’m handling the construc¬tion of several telephone exchanges, alarge office building in downtown Seattle,and additions to other buildings. It’ssatisfying work, because I’m on my own alot, and getting the jobs done is up to me.“I’ve got a career that offers big as¬signments and responsibilities, and realopportunities to get ahead in a businessthat’s growing rapidly. That’s what Iwas looking for.”Claire Ilruska is typical of the many young menwho are finding rewarding careers in the Bell Tele¬phone System. For more information on careeropportunities in the Bell Telephone Companies,Bell Telephone Laboratories, Western Electric andSandia Corporation, see your placement officer..-A UC nuclear physicists reported last week that experimentswith the University’s 450-million electron volt cyclotron havecontributed to the contradiction of a 30-year-old fundamentalconcept called the “principle of conservation of parity.”Results of the tests, begunchanges are both desirableand feasible, and economical¬ly and legally possible.Student Government willcontinue to work with NSAto liberalize present immi¬gration laws to make possi¬ble exchange with all nations.As originally proposed, it hadanother section which read: in September, parallel thoseannounced in New York by Co¬lumbia university.The experiments followed oneof two approaches suggested bya pair of Chicago-trained theo¬retical physicists who first repu¬diated the parity principle, Tsung-Dao Lee of Columbia and Chen-Ning Yang of the Institute forAdvanced Study at Princeton,New Jersey.In relatively simple experi¬ments, Valentine L. Telegdi, asso¬ciate professor of physics, andJerome I. Friedman, research as¬sociate, both in the University’sEnrico Fermi Institute for Nu¬clear Research, used the decay ofthe pi meson—believed to be re¬sponsible for the force holdingthe atomic nucleus together—toshow that matter is not equally“right and left handed” but showsa definite preference for one.This was determined by thedecay tracks of the meson in pho¬tographic emulsions. A pi mesonshot from the University’s cyclo¬tron came to rest in the emulsion,where it disintegrated into a mumeson. The mu meson, in turn,decayed into an electron.The last two stages held thekey for the disproving of the oldtheory. According to it, there should be no correlation betweenthe initial motion of the mumeson and the direction of its re¬sulting electron. Instead, Teleg-di‘s experiments showed theirrelative motions had a preferencefor the same general direction.In effect, there appears to bean excess of the mu mesons spin¬ning with the same handednesswhen emitted. This opposes theparity principle which held thatequal numbers of particles spin¬ning both clockwise and counter¬clockwise in respect to their direc-tion of motion would be created.Before beginning the tests,Telegdi and Friedman construct¬ed a triple layer iron shieldaround the emulsion to preventcancellation of the effect by weakmagnetic fields existing in thecyclotron area.Telegdi’s results, in conjunctionwith those obtained at Columbia,imply the production of muo-nium, a short-lived combination ofthe mu meson with electronspresent in the emulsion, whichhe had predicted earlier.Comparisons of the Chicago re¬sults with those of the Columbiaexperiments, which used elec¬tronic, rather than emulsion, tech¬niques, were made by telephoneon January 13.Activities list releasedThe official list of recognizedstudent organizations has beenreleased by the office of studentactivities and the student govern¬ment committee on recognizedstudent organizations (CORSO).The list, naming the “chief ex¬ecutive” of each organization hasmore than 91 groups listed as of¬ficially recognized. The groups range from the Maroon and Stu¬dent Government to the “Pre-Raphaelite Pigeon and SquirrelFeeding Society” whose avowedpurpose could not be determinedby the reporter.Any group may become recog¬nized upon filling out an applica¬tion stating that there are at leastten registered students and a fac¬ulty advisor for the group.Y Coeds Club presents theTONY LAZZARA ORCHESTRAfor Snow Hop DanceSATURDAY, JANUARY 26 9:00 pm —12:0075c to Y Members & College Students$1 to Non-membersHYDE PARK YMCA53rd & DorchesterIJan. 25, 1957 • CHICACO MAROON • 9'Labor and capitalism at Student Union givesother's throats:' Brown“In„a capitalistic economy the interests of labor are incompatible with those of manage¬ment, asserted Oscar Brown, Jr., public relations director of the United packinghouseworkers of America, in a lecture Sunday arranged by the International house educationcommittee.They are incompatible, Brown held, because whatever concessions labor obtains frommanagement, it obtains at the : : : : —;expense of the interests of ^ meeting with success. unions so that labor could exertninnatrpmpnt- thp twn ^rn.mc Among the reasons Brown gave more influence in politics. Hefre coStag lor ,‘h7SaS^T *•*-_«* ^ou.d have • •jects and therefore cannot helpbut fly at each other’s throats.Speaking on “American labor at as well as that of the rank andthe crossroads”, Brown pointed file. Another reason was that “theout that membership in Ameri- bosses are getting a lot smarter”,can labor unions, after rapid in- a new generation of executivescrease during the great depres- being in charge who are so willingto come tj agreement that laborprganizers have lost most of theirtalking points.Brown therefore suggested thatan alternative way of strengthen¬ing the labor movement would beto concentrate on organizing moreeffectively those already in themilitancy among labor leaders, insisted on a strong civil rightsdue to a new yearning for respect- plank at the Democratic nationalability and comfort on their part convention last fall and thussion and the second world war,has risen but little since the endof the war. The task of “organi¬zing the unorganized” which wasstressed at the time of the mer¬ger of the American federationof labor and the Congress of in¬dustrial organization a year agoRedevelopment proposalpending council approvalyears.Brown’s reply to the attacksavoided the economic issue whilestressing the non monetary gainsa worker receives from his mem¬bership in a union, particularlyunits, mostly residential, on an area most of which now stands job security, access to grievancevacant after clearance of dilapidated stores and homes.The plan includes underground parking for each building, parks,and a shopping center at 55th and Lake Park.Actual construction finds will be derived from private sources,but federal and local sources will provide about $9,600,000. procedure, andhuman dignity. self-respect andings physician reportsJudy Bowly 'doing well7Judy Bowly, who was seriouslyinjured by fire on November 24,has made continuous progressand is doing “extremely well”,said Dr. Clifton Mountain of theBillings hospital surgical staff.Miss Bowly, second-year stu¬dent in the College, was severelyburned in the same fire whichfatally injured former UC stu¬dent Dave Prochaska.Dr. Mountain stated that at thepresent time, no surgical proce¬dures are necessary. He furtherreported that Miss Bowly is ingood spirits.Letters and cards may be sentto her, care of Billings hospital. I-C king judgingnext WednesdayInterclub council announcednrr fit ftio 1-*T".nr novl_.f n v. Tv,lovnti iV) U yrdllfnl-n rvlnnnThe lurking will take placefrom 3 to 5 nm in the library ofT fa Novpc hall. Judges will be R.Wendell TTarri=on. vine presidentof UC; Mrs. John P. Netherton.and Mrs. Mary Alice Newman, di¬rector of student activities.Candidates from the girls’ clubsare: Delta Sigma, John Jurck;Esoteric, David Zimberoff; Mor¬tarboards, Norman Phelps; Quad-ranglers, Richard Zimmerman;Sigma, William Murray; Wyvern,John DeZauche III.Interclub ball will be held at theDel Prado hotel Saturday, Feb¬ruary 2, and is open to all clubmembers and their guests.Judy Bowly UNIVERSAL ARMY STORE1144 E. 55th DO 3-9572SALE NOW IN PROGRESSJ©% Discount on All MerchandiseWith This Coupon OnlyDUNCANSTATIONERS &PRINTERS1313 E. 55thHY 3-4111(Next Door to Post Office)OFFICE SUPPLIESARTISTS' MATERIALMECHANICALDRAWINGEQUIPMENTNS A DiscountWatch for Openingof Our NewSelf-Service Store1221 E. 55th There’s always a table atReynolds Club Billiard RoomSnooker - Billiards - PoolOpen 9 a.tn. • 10 p.m. Ladies incitedluiiimiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitmiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiHHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii^I COMO’S Cafe Enrico !RESTAURANT & PIZZERIA1411 E. 53 FA 4-5525 - HY 3 -5300Small Large Small Large12" 14" 12" 14"Cheese .1.15 1.55 Combination . . 1.75 2.25Sausage .1.45 1.95 Chicken Liver . . 1.60 2.10Anchovy .1.45 1.95 Mushroom . . . . 1.60 2.10Pepper Cr Onion 1.30 1.80 Shrimp 1.75 2.25Bacon & Onion .1.60 2.10 Pepperoni .. . . 1.60 2.10forced the Dixiecrats out of theparty.This, he said, would have turn¬ed the Democratic party into anorganization with whose interestslabor could identify its own.Brown lamented the fact that theword “class” has become a “dirtyword” in America, and that tospeak of oneself as a member ofthe working-class at once stampshim as a radical.During the question periodseyeral students from the busi¬ness school and the departmentof economics took the position,with varying emphasis, thatAmerican labor unions have notadvanced the economic interestsof their members. At this, a stu-A $15 million Hyde Park rebuilding plan is now pending the dent from England remarked thatapproval of City council and federal housing agencies. The he had not heard anti-labor state-plan would convert 55th street into a tree-shaded avenue of ments of that kind for twentymiddle-class modern apartment buildings, town houses, and shop¬ping facilities.Chancellor Kimpton described the plan as “most exciting andimaginative.”The plan, developed by Webb and Knapp of New7 York, must beaccepted before construction can begin. It would build 750 to 825 Above and below, two of the “leggy” girls you could have pur*chased cigarettes from at SU’s Night of Sin last Friday evening.Night of Sin. photo by Finstoaphoto by FinstoaRound and round she goes and where she stops. . . . Only Stu¬dent Union knows? Above are shown participants in SU’s Nightof Sin, gaily betting the lucky mazunia they purchased for 50 centsupon entrance to Ida Noyes, transformed for the evening into agambling den.June in January'...“June in January” is the theme of the first C-Dance ofthe winter quarter to be held tomorrow evening from nine tomidnight in Ida Noyes hall. Sponsored by Student Union, thedance will feature a decor of spring flowers and foliage, announcedAnna Guckenheimer, chairman of the event.Billy Heller’s orchestra will play for dancing during the eveningand intermission entertainment will be provided by the CountryDancers. Admission is 75 cents per person and refreshments willbe served.Free Delivery on AU Pizza to VC Students IT’S FOR REAL! by Chester FieldI’M THE WORLD’S GREATEST POETIT’S EASY TO SEE,.♦From my tie to my toes, I reek poetry!Most poets praise one lousy moon at a timeBut me, I get dozens of moons in a rhyme.If one moon’s poetic, why you can just betA sky full of moons is poetic-er yet!MORAL! Like a sky full of moonsa Chesterfield King is out of thisworld, ’cause it’s got everything...big length, big flavor, the smoothestsmoke today because it’s packedmore smoothly by Accu • Ray.Like your pleasure RIG?A Chesterfield King has Iverythlngl$50 for every jJ philosophic:potion. Chesterfield, P.O.iced verse accepted for puhU-Box 21, New York 46, N. Y.g UnM * Iim Mw10 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 25, 1957The Bel Air Convertible (above). The Chevrolet Corvette (at right).Only franchised Chevrolet dealers /CHEVROLET 4 display this famous trademarkSee Your Authorized Chevrolet DealerFromm sponsors Szigeti concert seriesFORMOVINGEXPERTPACKINGMODER "1STORAGECALLPETERSONMoving & Storage Co.55th & Ellis AvenueBUtterfield 8-6711by Dave ZackIn three concerts to be givenin Goodman theater February18, 25, and 26, the noted vio¬linist Joseph Szigeti accom¬panied by pianist Carlo. Bussotti, ance of works by contemporary ed American scene, Fromm wantscomposers. The Fromm founda- to and does personally see wheretion, founded by a man who lives his money goes,almost in the shadow of UC’s grey a large part of the Frommramparts, is engaged in a differ- foundation’s $50,000 annual budg-ent sort of fight for the apprecia- et goes toward the commission- terest concerns the performancetion and encouragement of mod- ing of some fifteen new works, of modern music. In recent yearscerts on campus as well as at the festival in Massachusetts, whichGoodman theater in Chicago, andat the Metropolitan Museum ofArt in New York.Another aspect of Fromm’s in- would give students and youngprofessional musicians a chanceto concentrate on performanceof new music.Fromm is seeking an audiencemade up of people who can ap-will present a cycle of eleven audience’s “Aye!ern composers not yet given an Works commissioned this year contemporary compositions have predate the concept that he isworks for violin and piano writ¬ten during the twentieth century.The cycle, featuring highlightsof the development of contempo¬rary music, is Szigeti’s brainchild.He premiered over half the workshe will play and helped to gainfor the rest the place in acceptedviolin repertoire that they now*ecupy. The Chicago series will for the eighth annual festival of been performed at the summer presenting, of music that wasPaul Fromm, whose Kenwood the arts being held at Urbana, festivals, but always by musicians startling when it was first pre¬residence looks down on Stein- Illinois, this spring include two unused to what is really a differway’s and the Red Door book- operas, The Bell Tower, by Ernstshop came to the US from Ger- Krenek, and Esther, by Jan Mey-many just before the war. Hiswine importing business flour¬ished in America, and by 1952Fromm decided he had the where¬withal to start to make a dreamhe had long cherished come true.Fromm was a lover of contempo¬rary music, and realized that the erowitz; new symphonies by Wal¬lingford Riegger, Gordon Binkerdbe sponsored by .he Pro™. foun-J _ A. ? 2 — ^ ^ m nun 4- i a M vinttl 4- IA r'AAdation, in cooperation with threeChicago universities, includingUC.Composers knownEach of the works that will beperformed next month is by a were over.He set up a non-profit founda¬tion, dedicated “to the further¬ance of contemporary music.’’ Hisoriginal board included the late such works have been publishedand Ellis Kohs, a work for men’s stitute for the study of performvoices and percussion by AlanHovhanness; and several compo¬sitions for diffexent chamber com¬binations. •The Fromm foundation’s pur¬pose-securing an audience forcontemporary music—is also fur¬thered by publication of chamberand solo works by American com¬posers such as Ben Weber andJerome Rosen. A total of nine sented but is now representativeof the gradual growth of contem¬porary music. Through the otherwork of the Fromm foundation,Fromm is seeking an audiencethat can keep apace with the de-ance techniques of modern music velopments that a continuation ofassociated with the Tanglewood this growth must bring.ent musical idiom from any they¬’ve seen before.Founds instituteFromm wants to found an in-Millard Binyon of the UC facultyand well known violinist Alex-composer now universally known ander Schneider.The wine-importer devotes mostof his time to his foundation, and so far by Boosey and Hawkes.Record seriesThis month the first in a seriesof recordings called “TwentiethCentury music” were released bying a free hand in putting across Epic records. Works recorded in-what began as his own idea. elude Wilhelm Kilmeyer’s MissaFromm himself is hardly the Brevis and a Mass by Lou Harri*vin<?kv r-ivpI Debussv Bartok— PrototyPe of a wealthy patron of son, as well as two works byvinsk}, Ravel. Debussy, Bartok arts At a young fifty he’s a Leon Kirchner, a string trio and afriendly, sincei'e, and cultured duo concertante for violin andand respected, whose work per¬formed twenty to fifty yeais ago remajns jts sole supporter, want-would have brought gasps of in¬dignation from many a supposed¬ly sophisticated audience. Stra-viithese names are almost householdwords today, but their composi- man who happens to have enough piano. Eudice Shapiro, playing in WUCB marathontries for big kittyFive hundred dollars is the goal for WUCB’s sixth annualmarathon for the benefit of the UC-University of Frankfurtstudent exchange. The marathon will be broadcast from theBurton lounge next Friday, February 1, beginning at 8:00pm and continuing for 24 hours.The WUCB tradition of an annual marathon originated in1952, when 500 dollars wastions were universally unacceptedwhen they were first performed.During his career on the con¬cert stage for the past three similar circumstances.Fromm sees $$$$Unlike the founders and sup-decades, Szigeti has fought an porters of mammoth foundationsoften lonely battle for the accept- which abound on the income tax-money to do what many a UC Mandel tonight, is violinist andstudent might want to do under Kirchner accompanist.Each year the foundation spon raised for the March of Dimes.Apparently some staff mem¬bers decided that it would be a is followed closely by an avidaudience watching intently forthe first staff member to falterfine idea not only to raise money under the strain. Arrangementsfor a worthy cause, but also to have been made for female in-sors several concerts, introducing see who S{ay awake the to watch the marathonworks that have been comm is- .sioned. In recent years the foun- lon8est-dation has sponsored such con- The progress of each marathonany similarity toa sports car ispurely intentional/ THE '57 CHEVROLET : s : sweet, smooth and sassy!It doesn’t just look like it loves the road, clings to curves andlaughs at hills. That’s the way it goes. Come on in and seewhat it does for driving fun! *It’s not just a coincidence thatChevy handles and acts like asports car. Chevrolet engineersplanned it that way.They set out to build a car thatwould take to the road with crisp,solid steering and quicksilverresponsiveness. A car with up to ♦special high.performance 270-h.p.245 h.p.* Come try it! engine also available at extra cost. in Burton lounge all Friday night.Pledges may be phoned in atany time during the marathonand will be collected by smilingstaff members. The phone in Bur¬ton lounge may be reached sim¬ply by calling Burton-Judsoncourts and asking for WUCB.As part of the marathon pro-gram, the farewell address -offormer Chancellor Robert M.Hutchins will be played. The ad¬dress which Hutchins made in1951 has become a traditionalpart of the program.Also planned are many folkmusic and classical music pro¬grams in as varied a program aspossible. Featured will be thefamed “Pi’o Nauseam” ensemblein its third ear-shattering per¬formance. Led by its conductor,Sir Frederick Beckman, the groupwill present a varied program ofatonal music including the immor¬tal “Jangle Bells” and Nemo’s“Concerto in Nothing Flat.”Newly - elected WUCB stagemanager Bob Levner has invitedall students to view the marathon.Details of the spectacular pro¬gram schedule are included in thespecial marathon edition of theWUCB program guide, availableon campus Monday.UT pleases full houseswith verse and vaudevilleLow Shakespeare, an original verse play, the decaying South, and a vaudeville teamall appeared, and in that order, before somewhat amazed but apparently delighted capac¬ity houses in the Reynolds Club theatre last Friday and Saturday nights. The occasion was“Tonight at 8:30 , the second in a three-weekend series put on by student actors and direc¬tors of University Theatre.A portion of the “Pyramus and Thisby” scene from A Midsummer Night’s Dream wasdirected by Richard D’Anjou Jan. 25, 1957 • CHICACO MAROON • 11and was indeed aimed at pleasjng the groundlings. Thoughenergetic performance were givenby Donald McClintock as Bottom-Py ramus and George Crawfordas Flute-Thisby, and though GaryHarris made a substantial Wall,the production romped andstomped and roared itself intoexhaustion.It would seem difficult enoughto present any scene out of con¬text. It would seem twice as dif¬ficult to present half a scene,omitting half the characters. Py¬ramus and Thisby opened with abang, but it developed a definitelimp midway in performance.Each gag was repeated more thanonce too often, and unadulteratedslapstick goes flat fast.Because of the cutting of thescene, no characterizations ofBottom, Flute or Snout were es¬tablished. The audience saw onlya ranting, raving Pyramus, amincing Thisby and a stumblingWall. There was no irony, henceno raison d’etre. The result,though noisy, was dramaticallyunsound.Ruth Herschberger has writ¬ten a short, succinct, and at timesbitterly bright verse play. Fergusis based on the oldest of trian- 'Tonight at 8:30' runs againPheasant Under Glass, by John Meyer, an originalstudent-produced musical revue, runs this weekend, thethird in the UT experimental series. Tickets purchasedin advance of the performance cost 75 cents; at thedoor, $1.gles: he, she and “the other wom¬an.” The author’s concern is withshowing the trappings ratherthan the stuff of life, and thedialogue abounds in talk of food(poetic food, to be sure), andother small comforts, like tidykitchens and well-mannered gar¬dens. The play is a light, offbeattreatment of the same old story.The action in Fergus is in threescenes and moves significantly ifnot logically from the table of amarried couple to the counter ofthe grocer’s to the table of the“other woman.” The three majorcharacters perish around this ta¬ble in the final scene, the “otherwoman” with her lover’s “bestshrubbery knife” in her back, thehusband from poisoned marjoramand the wife from remorse.The production, under the adeptand firm direction of Linda Lib¬era, was smooth. With much un¬derplaying it moved from awhimsical opening to a hilarious closing. All was done with a rath¬er frightening sophistication.Marilyn Goldsmith’s interpreta¬tion of the wife had subtlety andunderstanding. Sam Robinson inthe title role had an infectiousgood time following his character¬ization to the absurdity of its con¬clusion. An attractive, not verydeep ingenue was presented withprecision by Alice Bronstein.And yet one wonders, after allMiss H e r s c h b e r g e r ' s talkof gothic farmhouses and roseswithout thorns, if a comic produc¬tion was really what she meantat all.Wayne Caudill’s direction ofThis Property Is Condemned sus¬tained admirably the usual Ten¬nessee Williams mood of nostal¬gic decay. Palmer Pinney de¬serves plaudits for his sensitiveinterpretation of the boy with thekite. And Martha Silverman inthe difficult role of Willie, was aconsistent, if somewhat intensewith any consistency (ditto theaccents).The most successful and con¬vincing member of the cast wasLola Campbell, playing the roleof Lavinia. Sue Perkins and Ar-nim Seielstad presented with hu¬mor and considerable agility theparts of Julie and Alex.Willard Moody started poorlyas Edward, but improved greatlyas the play progressed, exhibitingin some scenes remarkable skilland understanding. Alice Bron- 3/te tji/Suni photographers1171 CAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433CINEMAChicago Ave. at MichiganSTUDENTRATE60°Every day EXCEPTSaturday, uponpresentation ofyour studentI. D. card StudentsStudent wivesJOBS • JOBS • JOBSIf you can type and are able to work 20 hours or moreper week please visit the personnel office.Ingleside Hall956 East 58th Street photo by FlnstonDon McClintock, George Crawford, and Gary Harris playthe principal characters (!) in last weekend’s “Tonight at8:30” production of Pyramus and Thisby. The show ran Fri¬day and Saturday nights in the Reynolds club theater.UT interpretation of 'Cocktail Party'called static, lacking in significanceOne unfortunate thing about dramatic readings is that the static quality of the physicalpresentation — which is not necessarily disturbing — frequently seems to induce a deeperstatic quality in the directional working out of the characters and the interplay among them,which can be very disturbing. This happened from time to time in University Theatre’s “To¬night at 8:30” reading of T. S. Eliot’s The Cocktail Party. At its best the production waseffective and entertaining. At its worst, it was less disturbing than dull.Theie were some good stejn was not quite successful in the production may be attribut-scenes and there was some the difficult role of Celia, but this able to Richard E. Leidberg’s di¬good acting. But if we are to may be due to the nature of the rection, but there were a numberfollow with anything more than part, which is easily the hardest of good directoral touches as well,abstract (or theological) interest of all to convey within the terms The ensemble scenes were gen-the tortured meanderings and of a reading. erally handled skillfully, and thepontifical advice of Eliot’s eharac- Otto L. Schlesinger played the physical staging was well adaptedters as they diligently work out key role of Sir Henry Harcourt- to the purpose,thier various salvations, the char- Reilly colorlessly and without the This was a conscientious, gen-acters must be sharply etched and dramatic tension the part re- erally leisurely presentation ofdeeply motivated, even when their quires, but he read intelligently the play. It proved thoroughlyarguments are the most abstract, and was able to present some of sufficient to start the usual inter-While all the actors were able to Eliot’s trickier phrasing with sur- mission theories and argumentsdo this for a while (just as some prising clarity. as to what it’s all about,of them began the play with at- Some of the shortcomings of Raul Sellstempted English accents), mostof them were unable to keep it up 13-year-old, discussing with equalinnocence the fifth grade and aprostitute sister. Sullen music,sweating lights, crow calls, a dis¬tant Cannonball Express, and theunhurried pace of the acting alladded to Williams’ moody dia¬logue. The result was a movingpiece which was, in this opinion,the high point of the evening.Georg Wellwarth and OmarShapli were the vaudeville team.Both have suits and will travel,for according to the program theystepped into the show at the lastminute to present improvisationson everything from Beethoven’sFifth Symphony to “Jabber-wocky” in a Dada style. Well¬warth is an accomplished mime,and Shapli, among other non-sence, did a telephone bit thatbrought down the house.The evening’s bill of fare was alively kind of theatrical smorgas¬bord. True, one could quarrelwith one or two directors abouttheir interpretations, but inter¬pretations they had. And the* freshness and sincerity of all thestudents in all the productionsmore than compensated for anoccasional glimpse of inexperi¬ence.Samantha IvesContinuing its irrational pol¬icy of having UT’s student-handled productions reviewedby non-students, two formerUniversity Theatre actors satin for the Culture Vulture atlast weekend’s “Tonight at8:30” performances.Raul Sells acted on campusnot so long ago, and is now as¬sociated with a downtown pro¬fessional acting venture andwith Chicago’s cultural radiostation, WFMT.Samantha Ives, who was partof the group responsible forthe initial series of student-directed productions at theUniversity, is from time totime a contributor to a Chi¬cago-published magazine.NOW RENTINGFOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCYMayflowerHotel6125 KENWOOD AVE.PL aza 2-6700BEAUTIFULLY PANELED LOBBYAUTOMATIC ELEVATORS — SWITCHBOARD SERVICEFREE GAS AND ELECTRICITY• SINGLE ROOMS WITH PRIVATE BATHS ANDSHOWER, $13 PER WEEK AND UP• 2V2-ROOM BEDROOM APARTMENTS WITHPRIVATE KITCHENS AND PRIVATE BATHSAND SHOWERS, $90 PER MONTH AND UPThe South Side's Most Beautiful and Modern HotelClose to All Transportation, Shopping and Jackson Park2y2-ROOM BEDROOM APARTMENTS ARE NEWLYFURNISHED AND DECORATED WITH WALL TO WALLCARPETING. KITCHENS HAVE NEW STOVES, REFRIG¬ERATORS, SINKS, AND CABINETS. ALL BEDROOMSHAVE TWIN BEDS.Single Rooms Are JSewlg DecoratedPrivate Baths and ShowersApplications will be accepted on a basisof references, employment and character.INSPECTION INVITED12 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 25^_1957Culture VultureIf the Vulture were as hep as he should be, he’d be perched with one claw on a guitar and the other over a licoricestick this week. Folk music is heading for campus from all directions, while jazz, both pure and modified, has been broughtto the notice of our bird. At least as much to Vulture’s liking, Chicago symphony programs and art news have also foundtheir way into the Maroon’s weekly column.On campusFolk sing-in’Bob Gibson and Odetta will ap¬pear in Mandel next Saturday,February 2, at 8:30 pm. Gibson,whose LP, “Offbeat Folksongs”on the Riverside label is the topselling folk disc in Chicago, wasappearing with his banjo at thenear north’s “Gate of Horn” dur-”ing most of the past year. Odetta(she really has a last name, Fe-lious), recently came to Chicago’s’’Gate” from the West coast. NextSaturday’s concert is sponsoredby Folklore society, which is spon¬soring a Wingding (for those whowant to make their own folk mu¬sic) in Ida Noyes tonight Admis¬sion to folk concert in Mandel is$1 general admission and $1.50 re¬served, with tickets available atthe Reynolds club desk and stu¬dent service center.Saturday, February 9, a some¬what more specialized programof folk music will be presented byJoe Glazer, educational directorof the United rubber workers.Glazer and hi£ guitar will appearunder the auspices of AmericanCivil Liberties Union and UC’sGovernment at the same place,hour and price as Folklore socie¬ty’s program. Glazer, who touredEurope singing American unionsongs to European labor groupsfive years ago will include songsfrom the usual repertoire in aprogram that will probably leanheavily toward songs of the typeon his “Songs of Joe Hill” Folk¬ways record.Rockefeller ChoirRichard Vikstrom, director ofthe UC Choir, has announced thatrehearsals have begun for a PalmSunday performance of Bach’sfit. Matthew Passion. The choirhas vacancies in each section, anditudents with considerable vocal|ind musical background can ap¬ ply for auditions by calling ex¬tension 1082.University theaterTonight, tomorrow and SundayUniversity Theater presents itslast “Tonight at 8:30” productionfor 1957. Look around you for im¬pressions of last week’s shows byformer UT actors.Tonight the curtain will rise onthe first musical produced by UT,Pheasant Under Glass. It’ll be arevue, written and partly directedby College student John Meyer.The two act show consists of anumber of sketches, ranging fromextremely low to rather high hu¬mor, a few sexy songs, and a jazzballet. The music, conceived anddirected by Bill Mathieu, a stu¬dent of jazz composer Bill Russo,will be played by a ten-piece or¬chestra which includes the jazzretinue of trumpets, drums, piano,string bass and tenor sax, plusflute, clarinet, mellophone and (!)’cello. This weekend’s three per¬formances will take place in thatroom up the Reynolds club stairs.Tickets may be obtained in ad¬vance for 75 cents, or bought atthe door for $1.The Vulture again serves warn¬ing that droves of potential audi-photo by FinstonUT actor Don McClintock in¬dicates exuberance at thoughtof next Tonight at 8:30 offer¬ing, “Pheasant Under Glass.”mere is a Place in inis ricrare tor You!OPPORTUNITIESfor Students with Bachelor Degrees in★ CHEMICAL ENGINEERING★ CHEMISTRY★ MECHANICAL ENGINEERINGThis is a chance to get a head start In ypur professionalcareer with General Chemical Division, Allied Chemical &Dye Corporation. Company representatives will be on thecampus for interviews February 8.Contact Placement Office Today For an Interview^Appointment and Descriptive LiteratureGENERAL CHEMICAL DIVISIONALLIED CHEMICAL 4 DYE CORPORATION40 Rector Street, New York 4, N. Y. ences were turned away lastweekend due to the limited capac¬ity of UT’s upstairs auditorium.Marv Phillips, director of Uni- /versify Theatre, announced lastweek that profits of Sundaynight’s performance of UT’s mu¬sical will be turned over to Black-friars, revived traditional groupthat will produce a fraternityish Istudent written show next spring.“We want to encourage ratherthan compete writh the newly re¬organized dramatic organizationon campus,” said Phillips.Over 100 students will havetaken part in “Tonight at 8:30”as actors, authors, directors, andproduction crew members in thisyear’s series of nine dramaticevents. As campus dramatic activ¬ity. UT’s annual series is probablyunique among theater activitiesin American colleges and univer¬sities.Concert handNext Friday, February 1, theUC concert band, directed byLouis Lason, will present its sec¬ond annual winter concert. Peoplewho flock to Mandel hall at 8:30can hear the band, which wasreorganized last year after a 17- ,year lapse, play band transcrip- ftions of works by Bach and Ros¬sini and original band works suchas Prokofief’s “March Opus 99”and Gustave Holst’s Second Suite ;for military band.Elsewhere . . .The Chicago symphony orches¬tra is back in Orchestra hall, andChicagoans who couldn’t find itsfar flung substitute auditoriumsduring the past month and a halffilled the old auditorium lastTuesday to listen to Bruno Walterdirect Brahms’ “A German Re¬quiem.”At the end of the work therewas silence similar to the lengend-ary quiet that followed Lincoln’sspeech at Gettysburg, then Wal¬ter and soloists Brunnetta Mazzo-lini and William Warfield werecalled back again and again. Twohundred members of Northwest¬ern university’s choral union sangin the monumental work.The program Tuesday startedwith Beethoven’s “Creatures ofPrometheus” overture, writtenfor a forgotten ballet. During theoverture and at the beginning ofMozart’s 25th symphony inter¬mittent knocking could be heardagainst the north wall of Orches¬tra hall. The construction workthat had caused one wall to cracklast November was still going on.The Vulture, perched atop a gal¬lery seat, expected director Wal¬ter to make the grand gesture ofheaving his baton at the wall,with the dignified shout of “Theystop, or I stop!” He made no suchmove, but the audience fidgetedthrough two movements of sub¬lime but spoiled Mozart. The start OdettaMODEL CAMERAHyde Pork's most completephoto and hobby shopExport modelsNSA Discount1342 E. 55th IIY 3-9259 of the third movement evidentlyinspired some Thor of construc¬tion laborers to a frenzy, but theorchestra played, apparently un¬perturbed. Finally some bravesoul who may have reserved hisfirst balcony ticket in Reynoldsclub shouted, “Hey! Shut up outthere!” The orchestra kept onplaying but the pounding stopped.The Chicago symphony was safe¬ly home.They’re doing the German Re¬quiem again at 2 pm today. Getin the gallery for 65 cents. It’sreally worth experiencing. NextTuesday at 2 pm John Weicherwill direct the orchestra in a chil¬dren’s concert featuring the dancein symphonic music. Next Thurs¬day at 8:15 and Friday at 2 SirThomas Beech am will be guestconductor. Symphony will playHaydn’s Symphony 97. Handel’s“Great Elopement Suite” selec¬tions arranged by Beecham him¬self, Brahms’ Third Symphony,and Berlioz’ Trojan march. Satur¬day, February 2, John Weicherwill direct another popular eve¬ning concert.Studebaker (healer“Much Ado About Nothing”opened Tuesday night to beginthe end of the first series pre¬sented by Chicago’s repertoiretheater. Given the highest stampof approval by the Culture Vul¬ture’s drama llama, the Shake¬speare comedy will run ’till Feb¬ruary 17. Subscription tickets forStudebaker’s second series arenow available in the Student serv¬ice center.Art instituteStudents interested in photog¬ raphy would do well to see LisaLarsen’s exhibition now on dis¬play at the Art Institute. MissLarsen, young and beautiful, ac¬cording to all reports, is one ofthe nation’s foremost free-lancephotographers. Pictures in the ex¬hibition w'ere taken w’ith a 35 mmcamera, mostly at very highspeeds. Also or possibly moreworth viewing (no criticism in¬tended) is the display of Amer¬ican art honored at the interna¬tional art show, the Biennale, inVenice this summer.Do scientistscommunicate?Ability of the scientist to com¬municate with the layman will beconsidered when NBC’s networkservice Monitor consults a panelof scientists and scholars on the“New World” broadcast, Sunday,at 10:35 a.m.Produced by the University ofChicago, discussion will centeraround the question: do scientistsspqak our language? ModeratorEdward Rosenheim, Jr., will askpanelists to discuss whether thescientist lives in an ivory tower,and if so what effect it may haveon society.Participants will be three Pur¬due university faculty members:A. A. Potter, dean emeritus ofengineering, authority on engi¬neering and thermodynamics;Marbury B. Ogle, Jr., professorof political science, and RandallMcVay Whaley, assistant head ofPurdue’s department of physics.On Making and Breaking the LawWhitehead—THE F.B.I. STORY $4.95Behind the scenes in America's crusade against crime and subversion. Foreword by J. EdgarHoover.Belli — READY FOR THE PLAINTIFF ...' $6.50The story of personal injury, by the foremost P.l. lawyer. A ''must” for doctors and lawyers andtheir clients.Mason—HARLAN FISKE STONE: PILLAR OF THE LAW ...... $8.75"The story is pure fascination/' says Adolf A. Berle, Jr.Sutherland, ed.—GOVERNMENT UNDER LAW $7.50Papers and speeches from the conference held at Harvard Law School for the bicentennial of thebirth of John Marshall.University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUEJan. 25, 1957 • CHICAGO MAROON • 13City cultural events reviewedArt Institute features two new exhibits: 'ftev/ew' oil Saleintriguing sculpture, varied city scapes for C7HflfV6ffSCIf'VTwo shows of painting and sculDture are heinp exhibited together this month at the Art MTwo shows of painting and sculpture are being exhibited together this month at the ArtInstitute. The 62nd annual American exhibition and a group entitled “The American artistpaints the city”, our entry at the Venice biennale last year, dominate the second floor gal¬leries, and perhaps the art news in the country as well. In this limited space no justice canbe done to the event; what follows is an account of what I think are its high points.The various city-scapes in the first rooms have, for all practical purposes, only their sub¬ject in common. There are — —-The American annual is a much the first prize, had breadth andmore homogeneous affair than is an imposing and entomologicalits thematic companion. Yet even shape in metal. Jomes Brooks’shere it is certainly possible to “R 1953,” the second prize is anapparently loose and relaxed ab-where tract expressionist canvas. Butit has an underlying rigor andexamples from our old and pa¬rochial traditions: the socialsatire of Reginald Marsh andJack Levine, the poetic urbanism . ...of John Hopper, the magic real- 9uarr]r .Wltb uneYe^ s^lecism of George Tooker’s “Subway Tlon' in.the. Bie;n"ale> wbei7;Station.” And there are also ,. wby Katherine Kuh _works by Jackson Pollock and 1 ldn 1 plck a more successful and rightness in the forms. Its colors,William DeKooning, large and fePresentative Marin or Fein- red and green, have more mysteryviolent abstractions which have j,rV’er’ ^ *s Puz^hng, in the than any hues, so reminiscent oflittle enough to do with the city, Annual> t0 ,se.e the choice of Christmas, have a right to be.or, for that matter, anything but °nly a _very trifling Rico Lebrun. The sculpture section is stud-that which has become a new ob- „!de r:°™_.the!’,e_P°or w.orks by with fine things such as thoseject for these artists—the act ofpainting itself. Between these twoextremes is the “IndustrialNight” by Lee Gatch—clearly thebest work in the group. It holds by Culture VultureChicago Review’s tenth anniversary issue, on sale the firstweek of February gets off flying with a vigorous defenseof Nelson Algren against critics who feel like skimmers orvoyeurs when reading his novels about Skid Row' and “thewild side.”The lead article is followed by an essay by Erik Erikson(psychiatrist author of Child-good painters, the American an- by Roszak and Steppat. There isnual unfortunately also contains also a witty piece by Noguchi,many poor works by poor paint- part ceramic, or urn, part enor-ers- mous chesspiece — “The Queen.”But yet, what is outstanding Finally, Richard Hunt’s “Arach-in a peculiar tension, the quali- about this exhibition is that it ne>’ an insect Prometheus in theties of a moon scape and the high- awarded prizes to really signifi-way at night, illuminating them cant creations, and that it has anwith a transparent and delicate intriguing collection of sculpture.harmony of blue and orange. Seymour Lipton’s “The Cloak,” last gallery, closes the show withthe image of an eviscerated, butdefiant sub-human figure.Max Kozloff hood and Society), written incollaboration with Dr. Erik-son’s son, Kai, former UC stu¬dent. Its theme, “The confirma¬tion of the delinquent,” calls fora re-examination of the parentalrole in delinquency.The fiction section roars awaywith a rollicking story about apassel of nouveau-riche Chicagojazzmen who inherit part of asmall Ohio college town and endby tearing the place to pieces.Fast-paced and good-humored, thestory has the picaresque qualityof Steinbeck’s Tortilla Flat.Jack Mathews, whose work hasappeared frequently in Irish asStudebaker play gets high praiseThough the Much AdoAbout Nothing program gavelittle indication, private wordhas gone out that the Stude¬baker Theater has undergonesome major shifts in administra¬tive authority. If last night'sopening was a sample of whatthis change may bring us in thefuture, those who’ve instituted itare much to be thanked. The in¬terminable procession of mustysemi-classics and heroines witha curiously shared tendency tofidget has finally made way for aproduction with sensibility andsparkle. Everyone has wantedStudebaker to succeed; it has beencustomary to speak reservedly ofthem in the way one speaks be¬fore children of a not-quite-deadaunt who has money. Now theyhave brought us a production ofwhich they needn’t be ashamed,and which may compare well withthe Old Vic company when it ar¬rives.The production was directed byBasil Langton, himself a veteranof the Old Vic and King’s RoyalTheatres in London. He haschosen to set his play in a con¬siderably post-Armada Spain, buthe has avoided the stylistic enor¬mities which too often accompanythese abridgements, and the ac¬tion was well carried off in a sat¬isfactory world of guitar-bearingfantasticoes and beautiful womenwho would seem (with a coupleof appalling exceptions) to haveteethed on a First Folio binding.It would be difficult to imaginea more charming Beatrice than Barbara Baxley’s. She played witha grace and disarming natural¬ness which it seems difficult toassociate with her Actor’s Studiotraining; and after Jerome Kiltyhad shed some opening night ten¬sion he turned in an equally en¬gaging Benedick. The more soberhalf of the plot—the Hero-CIaudiostory—having been mercilessly(or mercifully) pared, left an un¬impeded view of Beatrice andBenedick’s rackety domain andthese two gave it an unfailingcharm. Certainly Tresa Hughes’Margaret deserves warm commen¬dation. She has shown here, as inall her work with Studebaker, anarresting ability to fashion some¬thing interesting out of a nothingpotential. The playing of VernonSchwartz, Lee Henry and EugeneTroobnick, who may be well re¬membered by frequenters of theold Playwright’s Theater, was asmight be expected, uniformly ex¬cellent. There was in fact an un¬usual dearth of offensive acting.The only really lamentable per¬formances were those of thepriest and Dogberry. Friar Fran¬ks’ part as written is negligible,and was made noticeable only byits embarrassingly awkward ren¬dition. Dogberry, on the otherhand, is the primary role in a number of scenes with great en¬tertainment potential, and theDogberry, dragged unwillinglyinto prominence by the unimagin¬ative and unskelled effect of Jack well as American magazines, con¬tributes a short, stark character-study entitled “Emma Bragg diedthis morning,” and GermanaMack, who recently came to thiscountry after marrying a GI. con¬tributes a provocative story aboutconvent life.Student writing appears fromthe winners of last year’s Acad¬emy of American poets prize(George Starbuek) and John Bill¬ings Fiske prize (Wayne Caudill).Also, Warren Lee has an essay onthe significance of Samuel Beck-et’s writing. In placing Waitingfor Godot and his novels as some¬thing more than eccentric aber¬rations in the stream of litera¬ture, he gives valuable basic hintsfor the reading and enjoyment ofBecket’s work. Arthur Castillodiscussed Colin Wilson’s “TheOutsider” a touchstone by whichto evaluate a cross-section ofcritics and literary tub-tnumpersboth in England and America.Poetry appears by Beth G.Fawkes, Donald Finkel, RichardAshman, Knute Skinner, LeonardNathan, and Deborah Pierce.As befits an anniversary issue,they infest, but they appear witha great air of inevitability sinceby a ruling of the musicians’union they are provided in alldramatic productions whetherHollander, was a very bitter dis- solicited or not. The theater, by the^whiter Review^‘epitomizesTheappointment. His roles with the same ruling naturally, must concern with fine writin" andStudebaker have in all cases been pay them. But this new group, fresh viewpoints which has wonentirely unsatisfactory, and it used in the lobby duringThe Im- the Review an international repu-seemed an unaccountable outrage moralist and now in the offstage tation as one of America’s mostto observe robustious Dogberry, invisible for Much Ado, has rend- stimulating quarterlies. This edi-with all that juice and all that ered itself at last (with O’Hor-joy, being handled so indifferent- gan’s help) not only sufferablebut integral.Clive Rickabaugh’s setting issimple, beautiful and eminently specialistsuitable to Shakespearean move-ly.As to the rest, Much Ado is aproduction that promises to ripenas it runs. Some nice choreog- tion’s critical articles excellentlydemonstrate the broader func¬tions of “criticism” in a magazinedirected to the intelligent non-raphy was exhibited, but it will ment; and Theoni Aldridge’s cos-be better exhibited when it is bet- tumes are lavish and very pleasur-ter rehearsed. The special music able to behold. Studebaker’s Muchcomposed for the event by Tom Ado About Nothing, taken all inO Horgan added a great deal of ap( js such a piece of theater assweetness and light. It has been this reviewer plans to see again,profoundly agreeable, during ourlast two visits to Studebaker, tofind that the orchestra whichquavered so painfully through“Ol’ Man River” during DesireUnder The Kims and “The VolgaBoatman” during the run of AMonth in the Country has beenremoved and given a fairly harm¬less replacement. Orchestras inthe theater are getting to besphinxes; they’re rarely veryamenable to the terrain which —Wayne Caudill. Nick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Ave.Ml 3-4226Student DiscountDelivery Service‘•hi* guitar is a weapon ...”JOE GLAZERSaturdayFebruary 9Tickets at SG & Reynold's Club Desk Mondel Hall$1 & $1.50ism mmrwyrwyrwwwwwvwv'wwwwBORDONE\ Movers and Light Hauling <VI 6-9832 EUROPE20 Countries, 70 Days, $1305Summer '57—shorter trip optionalEurope for Collegians255 Sequoia, Pasadena, CaliforniaThe T\ •Disc1367 E. 57th St.RECORDOF THE WEEKODETTASings Ballads and BluesTrodition 1010 $3.99 SPECIAL HALF-RATE TICKETSFOR STUDENTSBalcony $1.25 On Sale at Reynolds ClubRISE STEVENSConcert — Saturday, Feb. 2 — 8:15 p.m.South Shore Temple7215 Jeffery Ave.^\\AWWW%\A\\\VVAA\AV\\W\AVX\\\\W\\\\\\\V^STUDENTS LAUNDRY SPECIAL978 lbs. Laundry — Washedand DriedShirts finished to order 13c ea. additionalKWIK-WAYLAUNDRY & CLEANERS \1214 E. 61st St. 5(Between Woodlawn fir Kimbark on 51st) £ hyde park theatrelake park at 53rd NO 7-9071Held Over! 2nd Big Week!PONTI-DeLAURENTIIS' production of LEO TOLSTOY'S"WAR & PEACE rrPerformed by a brilliant international cast headed by:AUDREY HEPBURN HENRY FONDA MEL FERRERas TMatasha as Pierre as Prince AudreyJOHN MILLSas Platonthe Peasant HERBERT LOMasA'apoleon OSCAR HOMOLKAasGeneral Kutuzov"Current & Choice. A brilliantly pictorial treatment of Tolstoy's greatnovel, with some of the best battle pieces ever seen on film . . .Audrey Hepburn is perfectly the Natasha described by Tolstoy . . .as Pierre, Henry Fonda builds beautifully into his part, acting to thevery limit of his considerable powers." —TIME MAGAZINEFor This Engagement Only — All Seats 85cThe Student Rate Will Be Resumed Immediately For Our Next ProgramSCHEDULE OF FEATURE TIMESFriday, Saturday «^d Weekdays — 6:00 ond 9:25Sunday — at 2:00 - 5:30 - 9:00Coming Next: Friday, February 1stFirst Outlying Showing ofTENNESSEE WILLIAMS' Cr ELIA KAZAN'SA r%w ■ rrBABY DOLL'.14 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 25, 1957CLASSIFIED ADSStudent rate 5c per word Others 10c per word Phone: Ml 3-0800 Ext. 3265For rentm, 2 room furnished apartments. Rea-tonable. Close to campus. FA 4-5538.Female student has 4 room apartmentwith private kitchen and bath to share.$32.50 apiece. FA 4-2683.Help wantedInterviewers, coders, tabulators, statis¬ticians to work on psychological re¬search projects for major advertisingagency. Experience not essential. HoursOften flexible. Pay according to skillsrequired for each project. CE 6-7252,Extension 232. Mrs. Spitz.Part time. 8 am to 12 pm, girl to teachnursery school children—no degree nec¬essary—5 days a week—located on cam¬pus, 1445 E. 60th Street. Contact MI3-2172 to 5:15 pm; Grovehill 6-7369 afterT pm.Jtesearch specialist. Our Library Re¬search Department is planning a majorexpansion program. We need severalAdditional persons to handle subscriberInquiries. A college degree plus excel¬lent typing will qualify you for thischallenging and instructive work. WorkIn Harper Library. ENCYCLOPAEDIABRITANNICA. 425 N. Michigan. White¬hall 4-2350.The Maroon needs to train an Adver¬tising Manager (male or female) fornext year. Pay, excellent. Hours to suitacademic program. Job includes work¬ing with local merchants. Training pro¬gram starts immediately. Start as As¬sistant Advertising Manager, becomeAdvertising Manager next year. CallBtxt. 3265 this afternoon or MondayAfternoon. Telephone salesmen. Must have salespersonality. Unlimited earnings if tal¬ented. 6:30-9:30 pm daily. Apply Satur¬days. 166 W. Washington Street, Room412. 475 uncalled suits, topcoats, tuxedoes.$17.50 up—famous brands—sizes 35 to50—open daily 9 am to 7 pm. AbbottClothing Company, 4086 N. Broadway,corner Belle Piaine.Services WantedStudent with converted ambulance willdo light moving and hauling. BU 8-5535or RA 6-4145.Student’s wife will care for child inher home. Reasonable and dependable.FA 4-3085.French tutoring, coaching and transla¬tions. Native teacher. Reasonable. NO7-6162.Mathematics. Tutoring and instructionin the standard courses for individualor group. Loop or South side. Specialarrangements for group formed byyourself. Soglin and Associates. 28 E.Jackson. WE 9-2127.Carmen’s Used Furniture store. Movingand light hauling. 1365 E. 55th. MU4-9003, MU 4-8843. ,Poor but proud student working waythrough college by selling quality highfidelity systems at discount. Person¬alized service. Audio Consultants, c/oJean Kwon, Foster 16.Alterations on ladies garments and finehand sewing. Reasonable. Phone KarenDavis. PL 25219. Female university employee and studentneeds l*/2 or 2'/2 room apt. near campus.Will pay reasonable rent. Has excellentreferences. Call MI 3-0800, Ext. 2602days, AT 5-4480, Apt. 429 evenings.Wanted—Male student to share apart¬ment with med & history students.Kitchenette. PL 2-6700, Ext. 349.Cook available. Elderly spinster. Forsmall family, Hyde Park. Stay. WriteMaroon, Box 101.Full time secretarial position availableat Hlllel Foundation (Jewish StudentCenter). Call PL 2-1127 for interview. Placement officeservices givenOne of the least known, and yet most valuable, servicesfound on campus is the Office of Vocational Guidance andPlacement, located in room 305 of the Administration build¬ing.Vocational guidance is described as the process of comingto a better understanding of self and occupations so that suit¬able plans can be made forPersonalsFor sale1954 Encyclopaedia Britannica; Hi-Fiturntable, amplifier and speaker. GR7-8016. I am looking for a sponsor for a Koreanstudent. Can you help me? Phone PL2-8740.The only national student socialistmagazine in the US is Anvil, on sale atthe UC bookstore.Mama: Surprise! loooong letter to fol¬low. Mumbo-Jumbo will hoo-doo you.The fourth witch.Bald Eagle: APO is coming back. Lookslike a grand organization. Moneybags.Judy; Harry the horse just called. It’sPretty Baby in the second at Hialeah.Bet you a quarter! RD. the educational and vocationalfuture. It involves learningmore about individual abilities,interests, and goals, as well asthe requirements and opportuni¬ties in different occupations.The vocational counseling serv¬ice is based on the needs of theindividual. Characteristically, itinvolves an interview, the use ofstandardized tests, the evaluationof test results, personal data,and counseling.During the initial interview thecounselor and the client discussfactors which concern the client’seducational and vocational prob¬lems. A program of tests willprobably be arranged. The testsare selected to provide useful in¬formation about the client; theydo not give all the answers andare not helpful to people whoexpect this. When the tests haveinterested X 1Graduates in \ EngineeringPhysicsMathematics iftMissileSystemsresearchand developmentThe technology of guided missiles is literally a new domain. No fieldof engineering or science offers greater scope for creative achievement.Research and development atLockheed Missile SystemsDivision cover virtually everyfield of engineering and scienceand have created new positions forgraduates possessing outstandingability in the following fields:ElectronicsResearch and development asapplied to missile systems andassociated equipment.ComputersFor solution of complex problemsand missile guidance.Systems EngineeringResearch and development inmissile systems. Antenna DesignRelated to missile guidance.CommunicationsIn the broad area of informationtransmission.Electromechanical DesignAs applied to missile systemsand related equipment.InstrumentationAssociated with aerodynamics,physics and electronics.PhysicsTheoretical and experimentalaero-physics, upper atmosphereresearch, optics, nuclearphysics and spectroscopy. StructuresStructural design and analysis ofmissile systems.ThermodynamicsAerodynamic heating andheat-transfer problems.AerodynamicsConcerning performance ofmissile systems.DynamicsAs related to missile bodyflight problems.Operations ResearchApplied to tacticalweapons operations.•V"Advanced Study ProgramGraduates in Physics, Electrical, Aeronauticaland Mechanical Engineering are invited to contacttheir Placement Officer regarding the AdvancedStudy Program which enables students to obtaintheir M.S. Degree while employed in theirchosen field.The complexity of missile systems researchand development has created a number ofpositions for those completing their M.S. andPh.D. degrees. The positions carry immediateresponsibility commensurate with the advancedacademic training and experience required. Representatives of the Research and Engineeringstaff will be on campusThursday, February 7You are invited to consult your Placement Officerfor an appointment.IllMISSILE SYSTEMS DIVISIONresearch and engineering staffLockheed Aircraft CorporationVAN NUYS• PALO ALTO • SUNNYVALECALIFORNIA been completed, an appointmentis made for discussion of test re¬sults, background and training,and vocational ooportunities.No standard battery of tests isgiven. The tests vary with theneeds of the individual, and canbe broken down into the cate¬gories of intelligence, aptitude,personality, and interests. Thetests take from a half day to aday and a half to complete, anda personal interview takes abouttwo hours. Incidentally, they werenot compiled by the Universityof Chicago, but from various oth¬er sources.Individuals over the age of 16are eligible for this service. Thetesting phase of the program,however, is not always suitablefor persons over 30.The fee for this service is $7.30for regular students of the Uni¬versity. Appointments may bemade by phone, University exten¬sion 3291, or in person at the Of¬fice of Vocational Guidance andPlacement, Administration 303.Initial appointments are ordinar¬ily made for Tuesdays qnd Thurs¬days since these are the daystests are given.Noise invadesIda Noyes hallAdorning the main staircase InIda Noyes is a Bell 21 amplifierspeaker, a Christmas addition.The tuner is a Ileathkit, made byRick Karlin.The hi-fi is playing music fromtwo of Chicago’s fine music FMstations, WFMT and WEFM, butaccording to Alan Austill, assist¬ant director of student activities,requests for music from otherstations will be gladly honored.The hi-fi set is the latest additiondesigned to make Ida Noyes a“comfortable, cheery place forstudents.’’PERHAPS THIS MANCAN HELP YOURalph J. Wood, Jr. '48FR 2-2390 RE 1-0855is a member of your commun¬ity. He is engaged in one of themost exacting and unselfish ofall professions. His success de¬pends directly upon the degreeto which his neighbors realizethe need for substituting thecertainties of life insurance forthe uncertainties of life. Heknows that the ownership oflife insurance brings peace ofmind and greater happiness;means safeguarded homes andprosperous businesses; guaran¬tees completed education forthe young, and carefree retire¬ment in later years. He knowsthat no one can have too muchlife insurance.He is thoroughly qualified togive expert advice on the lifeinsurance program best suitedto your particular needs.SUN LIFEASSURANCE COMPANYOFCANADA1 N. LaSalle Chicago, ’ll.Jan. 25, 1957 • CHICACO MAROON • 15Larkin reports NSA activitiesby Bruce D. LarkinIISNSA vice-president,International affairsFifty-six national studentorganizations sent representa¬tives to the International stu¬dent conference last Septem¬ber. These national unions of stu¬dents—that is the jargon phraseby which they label themselves—'were from countries in everyhemisphere and on every conti¬nent. Their constituents are stu¬dents in every "faculty.”In Ceylon, a new country whichgained independence withoutbloodshed; in Nicaragua, whichsuffers from the dictatorship ofthe Somozas; in the establishednations of Europe; in communistYugoslavia; in Indonesia; in Al¬geria; in the strife-ridden Unionof South Africa; in each of these-countries there is a national un¬ion of students with unique aimsand unique problems. But eachnational union, and the studentsit represents, is vitally concernedabout higher education.The students of France operatea health Insurance scheme towhich almost all students sub¬scribe. The students of Argentinaoperated a radio station fromUruguay during the Peron dicta¬torship. The care of Hungarianrefugee students in Austria is car¬ried on by a Coordinating Com¬mittee which sprang from a meet¬ing of national union representa¬tives on 11 November; the Com¬mittee is staffed by 35 studentsfrom 17 countries.NSA at CeylonThe US National Student asso¬ciation (USNSA) is one such ‘‘na¬tional union of students.” It doesnot claim to represent all US stu¬dents, but simply to be the "mostrepresentative” US student organ-DuPont companygrant will helpmath and scienceGrants from E. I. du Pontde Nemours company, inc., ofWilmington, Delaware, total¬ing over $40,000 will help supportresearch and education in mathe¬matics and science at UC in thenext year, it was announced byR. W. Harrison, vice presidentand dean of faculties of the Uni¬versity.The major items in the grantsare $13,000 for six fellowshipsto be awarded to graduates takingadditional study to prepare forteaching science or mathematicsin high schools, and $20,000 forthe company’s renewed member¬ship in the University’s institutefor the study of metals, whichconducts basic research in solidstate chemistry. ization. Five USNSA delegatesattended the sixth internationalstudent conference at Peradeniya,Ceylon, in September. A USNSArepresentative is one of the 35students working for Hungarianrefugee students in Austria. An¬other USNSA representative re¬cently visited Warsaw and Cairo.Students in Paris, Hamburg andTokyo act as USNSA representa¬tives as wrell.UC’ers activeFour University of Chicago stu¬dents are now active in the workof the USNSA international com¬mission. Clive Gray, former UCstudent government president, re¬ceived his MA in absentia a weekbefore leaving Vienna for War¬saw. Allen Janger, Maroon editor1954-55, is USNSA overseas pub¬lications director. Jerome Grosshas taken a brief leave from hisstudies to work with Hungarianstudent refugees; he sits as proxyfor the USNSA international vice-president on the highest policycommittee of about eight personscoordinating the work of the re¬settlement agencies and othergroups solving special problemsof students coming to this coun¬try. Bruce Larkin, a student atthe university until last June, isin charge of the USNSA interna¬tional program as internationalvice-president.The international commissionof USNSA administers a FordFoundation grant of $128,000 asits foreign student leadershipproject. Five letters were sent toeach of USNSA’s 310 memberschools describing action on Hun¬garian student problems duringthe two months after 23 October.Fifteen regional international stu¬dent relations seminars are beingheld this year to describe thework of the national unions andinternational student organiza¬tions. A report of the national stu¬dent congress, held at the Univer¬sity of Chicago in August, will bedistributed to more than 3000overseas addresses. USNSAteams last summer visited LatinAmerica and India, Pakistan, andNepal; the latter group spoke tomore than 70,000 students.To many observers — and tomany USNSA constituents on thecampus—the work of a nationalunion appears as something sep¬arate from education. To many this is the "extra-curriculum”-—something even antithetical toscholarly study and research. Butto those who work with any ofthe national unions that interpre¬tation is a wrong interpretation.The programs of the nationalunions must serve education.That service may come in manyways. 'The national union of SouthAfrican students has fought hardagainst introduction of apartheidin the Universities of Cape Townand Witwatersrand. Many SouthAfrican students believe that thequality of their education willsuffer if members of the differentraces cannot study together atthe university level. They jointhat argument with the ethicalarguments in opposition to apar¬theid.The Union Generale des Etudi-ants Musulmans Algeriens urgesAlgerian independence; its mem¬bers consider independence a nec¬essary, though not sufficient, pre¬requisite to vital and free highereducation in Algeria.USNSA and the cultural arm ofthe Confederacion Nacional deEstudiantes Universitarios (Chile)have agreed to reciprocal visitsby groups of 25 students during1957. The visits will be designedto demonstrate basic features ofthe educational, industrial, andsocial structures in each country.Neither union considers the visitsas adequate as long-term experi¬ence in conveying these institu¬tions, but each hopes that theparticipating students will formaccurate impressions into whichformal university knowledge canbe fitted.Unions informMany national unions informtheir member student bodiesabout university conditions inother countries. This is done onthe theory that students andscholars throughout the worldhave a joint interest in each oth¬er's well-being. The students ofmany countries, working togeth¬er, can solve academic problemsmore satisfactorily than the stu¬dents of one country workingalone. It is argued that totalitar¬ian limits upon free inquiry, eco¬nomic bars to educational oppor¬tunity, and physical barriers to communication inhibit the properdevelopment of higher education.Therefore the national unionsseek to promote free inquiry, edu¬cational opportunity, and com¬munication among students.Basic to each national union areits constituent university centers.Participation at the campus levelis the sine qua non of a nationalunion’s existence. The problemsdealt with are often different, butthe local student governmentmust look to the national union asa group which is its servant onthe national and internationallevels, where one student govern¬ment alone would be impotent.The Perserikatan Perhimpunan2Mahasiswa Indonesia (2 indicatesplural) has arranged to exchangegraduate engineers with the Na¬tional Union of Australian Uni¬versity Students, something localuniversities in either countrywould have found it hard to do.Formed In ’20sThe national unions of studentswere organized as early as the1920’s (England, Wales and North¬ ern Ireland) but most, includingUSNSA, date from the end ofWorld War II. The nationalunions are young, and many arelocated in educationally youngparts of the World. The nationalunions will grow with rapidly ex¬panding systems of higher edu¬cation. The concerns of students—especially in nations where stu¬dents are few—wrill mean a greatdeal, because the students areslated to become leaders of thecountry to a degree not imagin¬able in the United States. Stu¬dents, in fact, are a potent forcewhile they are students; they donot wait for graduation. The na¬tional unions must serve as con¬structive and responsible chan¬nels through which the studer/tfof the rapidly developing areaswill solve their own problems.As younger nations developUSNSA will continue to representUS students to students abroad,provided the local student govern¬ments take a peek over their localuniversity walls every once in awhile.Medical school applicantsmust take MCAT examCandidates for admission to medical school in the fall of1957 may take the medical college admission test in May, itwas announced by the Educational Testing service, whichprepares and administers the test for the Association ofAmerican Medical Colleges. — . : —: ~r-. , ° will be given twice during theCopies of the bulletin of in- current calendar year. Candidatesformation and applications forms taking the May test, however, willmay be obtained from pre-medical be able to furnish scores to insti-advisors or directly from the Edu- tutions in early fall, when manycational Testing service, 20 Nas- medical schools begin the selee-sau street, Princeton, New Jersey, tion of their next entering class.The tests, required of appli- Candidates may take the exam-cants by almost every medical ination on Saturday, May 11,1957,college throughout the country, or on Tuesday. October 29, 1957.Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon51 OS Lake Park Ave. MI 3-20GOSPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — .9 a.tn. -II p.m.Chicago premiere:“The Fate of Marina”Soviet drama film of a brokenromanceAlso color travelogue"In the Dombai Valley"Milda Halltonight at8 p.m.3142 S. Hoisted Chopin ClubSunday at3 p.m.1 547 N. LeavittAuspices: Film Forum Adm. 90c aiimiiimiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiimiiiiiimiiiiiiimiiiimimiiimiimiiiiiiiiiiwiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiii^International House Movies| Monday evenings, 7:00 A 0:00 p.m. — East Lounge |= Monday, January 28 — 45c — The Brove Bulls (American). ||^iiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimimimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiuiiimiimiimiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiimmmmiimmiiiiiiimiiifrFYOU *ARE ELIGIBLE A CASA Book StoreScholarly Used Books — Bought and SoldImported Greeting CardsReliable Typewriter Service1322 E. 55th St. IIV 3-9651Send Todayfor FREEProfessional and ^~-snz» ■ 1'Businessman'sWholesale Diamond ,Brochure. Write Jackson'sDiamond Brokers, Dept. I644 Broadway, Gary, Ind. ♦>* If You're| Free, Human and Over 21you can borrow from your credit union.TY And if you ore younger you con get o loon when you hoveadult co-signers.You get life insurance benefits too. Come in today.| Hyde Park Co-op Federal Credit UnionDO 3-1113* 55S5 S. HARPER*A ’"In the Co-op store **COK|” IS A ftCOtSTCRtk HM0K-MARIL. COPYRIGHT 1MI TWI COCA-COLA <SociologySpin a platter. *. have some chatter.,.and sip that real great taste of Coke.Sure, you can have a party withoutCoca-Cola—but who wants to!Bottled under authority of theCoca-Cola Company byThe Coco-Cola Bottling Companyof Chicago, Inc.SIGN OF GOOD TASTE’16 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 25, 1957VUC varsity trackmenoverwhelm WheatonChicago’s varsity track,team won its first dual meet ofthe season last Saturday in the fieldhouse, overwhelmingWheaton by a score of 76-28.,T . Other firsts for Chicago wereMaroon runners again gave captured by. A1 jaCobs, in theevidence of their strength and 60-ysrd dash: Bill Weaver in theConditioning, and of the power broad jump; Phil Goldstein,, inWhich in recent years has made the shot put; and, the mile relaytrack a major sport on this cam- team of Hosea Martin, Pete Me-pus. Freshmen and veterans got Keon, Art Omohundro, and Char-together and set the pace by cap- ije Rhyne.turing firsts in eight of the twelve Chicago’s remaining pointsevents, and sweeping three of were scored by; Bud Perschke,th001' who took second in the 880; DaveThe sweeps were in the 440, Northrop, second in the poletwo-mile, and high jump. In the vault; Arno Hanel, second in the440 Charlie Rhyne took first with shot put; Brooks Johnson, second351.3, Hosea Martin captured sec- in the 60-yard dash; A1 Jacobs,©nd, and George Karcazes took third in the 70 yard low hurdles;x^lhird. The two-mile was won by Omohundro, second in the mile;Dave Houk in 10:34.5, Spike Pin- Ivan Carlson, third in the mile:ney was second, and Ned Price and, Don Richards, who took sec-took third. In the high jump, Dan onds in both the high and lowTrifone won with a jump of 5' hurdles.11%*, Pete McKeon took second,And Bob Mason took third.Trifone, a senior who is com¬pleting his fourth year here, wonhigh scoring honors by taking meet, at the fieldhouse at 2 pm.firsts in both the high jump and This meet promises to offer nothigh hurdles, as well as third in only stimulating competition forthe broad jump. After the low the participants, but also a greathurdles race, Trifone was heard deal of color and interest for thewailing; “Who ate my Post spectators. There will be five re-Toasties?” * lays and eight individual events.The varsity and UCTC will behost to Loyola, DeKalb, Wheaton,Marquette and Northwestern, to¬morrow in an invitational relaysSwimmers split 2 meetsLast weekend the swim team journeyed down to St. Louis,losing to Washington U on Friday evening, but bouncing backto beat St. Louis U on Saturday afternoon.At Washington U, the Maroons won five of the seven individual©vents, sweeping two of them, but lost on the heavily scored relays,the last one deciding the meet in favor of Washington, 47-39.- At St. Louis U, the meet was much more lopsided with ChicagoWinning easily, 52-34.Dick Rouse and Tony Lisco won three events apiece in the twomeets, with Ken Currie and Doug Maurer nailing down two wins.Next Wednesday, the Maroons, sporting a 4-2 record, will return tothe waters of Bartlett pool to meet the Notre Dame swim club in ameet which should prove exciting. Cagers, Lester go wildUC’s basketball team sprang to life last Saturday in the fieldhouse, as they completelyburied their opponents, Aurora college, by a score of 105-58.The onslaught was led by Bill Lester, who broke the University’s single game scoringrecord by sinking nineteen shots from the cou rt and four out of ten free throws for a grandtotal of 42 points.Gary Pearson, forward, lent a capable hand to the team’s effort, and contributed a totalof 30 points. Between the twoof them, Lester and Pearsonaccounted for 72 of Chicago’stotal.The former single game scor¬ing record was set last year byMitchell Watkins when he scored37 points. This was done, curi¬ously enough, against Aurora ina game which was nip and tuckall the way and finally ended upas an 111-110 victory for the Ma¬roons.This year's game, however, wasa different story entirely. ‘ UC’scagemen were ahead from theoutset and were not pressedthroughout the game. Coach NelsNorgren swept his bench cleanin the final moments of the gameand everybody got a chance toplay.The next home game for theMaroons will be played on thefieldhouse court tonight, at 8 pm,with Chicago’s neighbor to thenorth, George Williams college,furnishing the competition.Honor Norgrennext SaturdayAt the end of this academicyear, Nels Norgren, great UCathlete and coach, will retire. Inhonor of his 35 years of serviceto the University, Norgren’sfriends among alumni, fellowcoaches and members of the Uni¬versity community have been in¬vited to a reunion in his honor.Norgren will be the guest ofhonor at a luncheon at the Quad¬rangle club on Saturday, Febru¬ary 2.All campus is invited to theannual alumni-varsity basketballgame which will be presented inNorgren’s honor at 3 pm, Satur¬day, February 2, at the fieldhouse. tnaNryWhat! Von say you can't see the basket?CIGARETTE SALELiggett & Myers Tobacco Co. will hold a sale onMonday, January 28 from 8 a. m. to 5 p. m. at theUniversity Bookstore and from 8 a. m. to 9:30 p. m.at the Reynolds ClubFREE - 2 PACKS - FREEBUY 4 PACKS. GET 2 FREE!s'19•itl to* Sponsored by your localCHESTERFIELDand L &Representative