4-F may ban KAPDocument jfcoomKappa Alpha Psi will lose "a reasonable rule for the councilrecognition as a University of to f°l!ow.”Yol. 70 .... No. 40 University of Chicago, Tuesday, Jan. 16, 1962SSA studies probation Chicago fraternity if it doesnot pledge at least five menthis rush period.The Inter-fraternity councilvoted to suspend Kappa Alpha Psiif it does not have seven membersfrom the University of Chicago orhas not met all its financial obli¬gations” and ‘‘attendance require¬ments” of the council by October,1962.Kappa Alpha Psi is a predomi¬nantly Negro fraternity whoseIota chapter senes not only UCThe school of social service as principal investigator, direct- for the four year period. This isadministration (SSA) is un- ov o1 the school’s activities in the about one third of the normal. i i Project, and as liason between the case load,dertakmg a five-vea . University and the probation de- p ... ..investigate the role of reha- partment. He said that this is Proba,K)n officers working with severaj other Chicago colleges,bilitation in probation. the first research experiment of , experimental group will seek The Iota chapter currently liasThe study, which will begin its kind ever undertaken. ° ®ain * °se P?rS?n? Problems active members two ofnext October, will try to discover o. the o.ionrW wh.ch actl’e memoeis>whether probation counseling ismore effective in rehabilitationthan ordinary counseling.The SSA project, which will becarried out in conjunction with theprobation and parole departmentof the United States district courtlor Northern Illinois, will stressmeans of assisting offenders tobecome useful members of society.Experiments will attempt to to learn those personal problemsof the offender which brought him sexenBen S. Meeker, chief probation into conflict with the law, and the whom are UC students,parole officer of the probation offender’s capacities and opportu- Uoyd Sonders, a Georgenities for solving them. They willand parole department of theUnited States District court forNorthern Illinois, will be admini¬strative supervisor for the proba¬tion service aspect of the study.In the study, one group of menon probation will be used as theexperimental group, and will begiven the intensive treatment. also try to discover which of theproblems are caused by the of¬fender’s outside environment andwhich by his emotional make-up.Evaluation of the success or fail¬ure of the project will be madeafter the four years by deter¬mining how effectively the mem- W; Il¬ia ms college student and presidentof the Iota chapter, said that al¬though he realized that he wasthinking very optimistically, hethought that his fraternity wouldget five pledges.The motion to suspend the fra-support and strengthen the offend- Another group, the control group, bers of the two groups are funct- ternitv justified the action on theer’s motivation, capacity, and op- will receive normal probation ioning in such areas as employ- bagis ofreceiveportunities to solve his life’s proh- treatment,leins. Each of the project’s probationCharles H. Shireman, assistant officers will carry a case load ofprofessor in the SSA, will serve 20 to 25 or a total of at least 125 ment, family life, and attitudestoward authority, as welt as thedegree to which they avoid fur¬ther criminal offenses. ‘‘the ruling of 1921”which requires Kappa Alpha Psi tohave a minimum of seven mem¬bers. Neither Perry Const as,director of student activities, norLowell Meyer, president of theInter-fraternity council knewwhose ruling this w'as. Meyer sail,University liquors, known situated at 55 and University until months after the Castro govern- however, that he thought it vvc.sT'' “■ “ ment came to pow?er.‘‘I was in Cuba lor 13 years.”Ben said, ‘‘and haven’t found amore beautiful country or nicerpeople anywhere.”Ben said he left Cuba beforeofficial suggested he look is along any reprisals began. ‘‘It just61 street, but »he particular block didn’t look good to me, so I sodUT elbowed out by UCto generations of UC students bu,lt__ .<jjt ” - 1 ve bemerely as seems Pierce tower there?en sent to half a dozen. places in the past couple ofdoomed to closure by the Uni- Vveeks,” Ben said, ‘‘and none ofthem have any vacancies.”One place where a University When asked specifically whyKappa Ali>ha Psi was being sus¬pended, Meyer replied that theyhave failed to pay fines for notattending Inler-fraternity councilmeetings failed to pay an assess¬ment for the Inter-fraternity ball,and failed to participate in suchInter-fraternity activities such asthe ball, the Chancellor’s dinner,and the beer blast.Meyer said that the purpose ofthe motion to suspend is to “forcethem (Kappa Alpha INi) to heactive.” He stated that the Inter¬fraternity council officers will helpKappa Alpha INi by attending itssmokers.The constitution of the Inter¬fraternity council gives the coun¬cil the power to “expel” a mem¬ber but not to “suspend” one.When asked what the differencesbetween expulcion and suspensionare, Meyer said that they diiTeie-donly in “the connotations of thewords.”Accoring to the Inter-fraternityconstitution, “Expulsion meansthat the member expelled is auto¬matically de-recognized as a P a¬ternity and barred from all privi¬leges and activities pertaining tothat status, including rushing.’-The Iota chapter maintains ahouse on 47 street but will con¬duct its rush at Ida Noyes hall.versity’s plans for expansion.The tap room, which has beenon 55 street for nearly 30 years,is located now at 55 and Ellis,where the University plans tobuild an adjunct to the Home forIncurables.It University plans follow' thetime-table presently laid out, UT Troubles in Francecontaining vacancies is owned bya church.Ben says he feels he’s being‘‘worn out sent to these places, iswell as closed down.”As a result of these difficulties,would have to close no later than Ben said, he is going to court Fa- take at least a generation toApril 30. day to contest his eviction. over that.” Ben said.Ben Krakover, the present pro- “i don’t have much hope of Ben and his family have ownedprietor of UT, explained that he is winning,” Ben said, “but at least UT for more than a decade. Bennot averse to moving, having done I might be allowed to remain open himself became manager of it twoso only several years ago, but that through April 30.” The peace and tranquility parly led by ex-military officers.i v ^ _ French president Charles De The French police and the para-lo mav wife, ‘Hell, let's get out Gaulle claims undet his troops have intimidated andw hile we can still travel.’ ” present regime does not killed many Moslems needlessly,Ben believes Castro has done exist, according to Saul Mendel- often without ,he al„horit tt(Cuba irreparable harm by des- son- ...Mendelson, lecturer in history eir suPenots-troying the confidence US busi¬nessmen had in it. “I think it’llet at Roosevelt university in Chicago,discussed the present “Crisis inFrance” at a meeting of the YoungPeople’s Socialist league on Sun¬day.The primary sources of agita-years ago when his equally well tion in the French situation, hesaid, are the French national pol- Mendelson further explainedthat the OAS has plastiqued(bombed with a bomb looking likeplastic! many offices in Franceand have attempted to bribe manypeople, including Brigette Bardot.Then, quoting figures, Mendel¬son showed that in the periodfrom 1953 - 1958, the economyno other suitable location can be Bon himself has been moved in known brother, “Sammy,” died.found. a mote violent way once before; “If they close me dowrn, I don’t ice, French paratroopers in Alge-Krakover, known to his patrons lie’s a Cuban refugee who left exactly know' what we’ll wind up ria, and the Secret Army organi-simply 5s "Ben," 'said UT was Havana voluntarily in 1959, five doing,” Ben said. zation, (OAS.) an anti-communist Srew at a faster rate than in theperiod from April, 1958 to present.During the 1953-1958 period,real w'ages—a measure of wages'buying power—rose faster thanthe gross national product. UnderDeGaulle, real wages rose nineper cent while the gross nationalproduct increased 15%.DeGaulle points with pride tothe decrease of average man-daysof strike per year -seven milliona year from 1953-1958 to one mil-To counter governmental influenceACLU: Civil liberties are neededNEW YORK — Mountinggovernmental and militaryinfluences on Americans’lives must be countered bv ,. , , , . . \ ation (even where civilians are ma broadened and more persistent; ,, f . , . . , r. f „ ...... f. command) of broad stretches ofdefense or civil liberties, the _ , Ui«* without rushing officials into i'!-considered decisions or imperilingsociety, by comparison, onlychildish tantrums,” Malin wrote.. . What faces us is the national security interestsgovernmentalization and militariz¬ation (even where civilians at EducationAmerican Civil Liberties union(ACLU) W'arned yesterday in its4lst annual report.Writing in the introduction tothe report, Patrick Murphy Malm,the union’s executive director,noted that the heightened East-West conflict will increase “thegrow ing pressure of the ‘garrisonstate” in the United States. HeCalled for Americans to exercise“good management” of their free¬dom “to prevent the extremes oftotalitarianism and tyranny” inour country.The “garrison state” wall be so Civil rights“Rapid elimination of racial dis¬crimination,” the ACLU repot tsaid, “will require more than free¬dom rides. In the South, the out-“Those who defend educational standing present needs are for the a year during pjs regime,freedom will need to understand Negro citizens to make the mostthat in addition to the precise of every opening there is for Mendelson explained that duiingappointed officials (municipal and wording of a loyalty oath there voting, and for the white business- the fil‘st three years, workersstate, not just federal) will be cut are other vital matters. For ex- men in all cities to emulate their vvere af, a*d o! DeGaulle s authori-back, the areas of private decision ample: helping to see that the in- fellows in Dallas and Atlanta .n **ve P°wer» so iew st,‘h<es tookevitable large governmental in- bringing about school desegrega- Place-vestment in the direly-needcd tion. In the North ,the outstanl- Last year, however, the man-expansion of public and private ing need is for state and municipal days of strike greatly outnum-facilities and teaching staffs is action against discrimination in bored those of any year of theaccomplished with the minimum employment and housing. South 1953-1958 period. Mendelson saidof regimentation -and without the and North, the foes of discrimina- that the increase was due to airreparable tear in the national tion . . . must not neglect wnat change in attitude on the part oflibertarians might concentrate at- fabric which (as this year hjs can bo done nearby, privately as the people toward the authortiivetention to combat these pressures, graphically shown) w'ould be well as government ally.” policies of DeGaulle.caused if coercion and maneuverand compromise lead to govern-our life, from top to bottom. Thecitizen’s control over elected a^dby individuals and groups of allsorts will be narrow'ed; businessand labor, science and education,will be told what to do,” he con¬tinued.The ACLU report discussedseveral specific areas where civilFree speech“In the field of free speech, go^d"omnipresent and so relentless management will require thosethat it will require, in the defense who defend free speech to under¬ mental support of religion,” wroteMalin,of civil liberties,sophistication andever before,” thesaid. “It threatenspeople far more directly and far President Kennedy and Secretarymore deeply than the violation of of Defense McNamara and Sena-the free speech of those whoopiwxsed the entry of the United Legal processMore than adherence to fiffiiamendment guarantees will beneeded in defense of due process,Malin commented. Law enforce¬ment agencies in their drive totor Fulbright to keep the milita *y curb crime can be encouraged tomuch mcie stand that there are far more vitalstamina than matters than the precise legalACLU report definition of obscenity,” Malmfar more wrote. “For example: helpingprotect the rights of innocentcitizens. The military servicescould improve their code of jus-establishment from officially pro¬states into World War I, or of moting any view—any view at ellthose who sought to organize —about medical care for the aged!labor unions in the 1920’s. It will Or: helping newspaper publishers tice. Governmental administrativebe part of a purpose so nigh-minded, and in a world-wide con¬test w’ith stakes so high and un and editors and reporters to give agencies could develop a code ofas many citizens as possible every practice assuring fair hearings andlast bit of information about adequate review of cases involvingimaginable destruction so near, governmental operations (the C<m- businessmen, labor leaders, andthat it will make the House un* tral Intelligence agency in Cuba farmers, who are “increasinglyAmerican activities committee and and the school board in New controlled” by the regulation ofthe Smith act and the John Birch York), which can be published the administrative agencies. ^. f, . ,A polar bear rests opposite Ryerson and a snowman,on top of Pierce tower after the weekend snowstorm.Editorial refuted LettersNine campus fraternitieshave written a letter refut¬ing last week’s Marooneditorial discouragingfirst year students from join¬ing fraternities.Addressing itself to the firstyear student, the letter attacksmainly the Maroon’s statementthat individualism is suppressedin fraternities.“Individualism can be sub¬merged within a group or it canbe demonstrated and developedwithin the group. This will de¬pend more on you than it willupon any group you decide tojoin,” the letter states.Drafted by the members of theInterfraternity council, the letterthen states what fraternity lifeoffers.“Fraternity life at Chicago pro¬vides the opportunity for a num¬ber of men to manage and directliving, sleeping, social, and cul¬tural conditions entirely for them¬selves without outside control . . .What fraternity membership canprovide is a means of escape fromwhat might be called higherilliteracy, to which college stu¬dents are highly susceptible. “These higher illiterates, whocan read, talk, and discuss ideas,many times are unable to under¬stand what these symbols rep¬resent in the reality of face toface human interaction . . . Thefraternities provide a place whereyou are able to test your ideas—to argue- to learn—to mature,”the letter says.“Any group is dependent uponthe quality of its members andfraternities are not excepted . . .(A fraternity) is a place whereyou can determine what you shallbe while you are maturing andlearning.”The letter is signed by all thefraternity presidents except JamesZagell, president of Beta Theta Pi.Zagell stated, “We disapprove ofthis letter. The Maroon editorialis not worth the immense, gigan¬tic reply the Inter-fraternitycouncil gave it.“The most severe criticism theeditorial made was that in a fra¬ternity a member loses his indivd-uality. That’s for the individualto reply to.”Zagell felt that the editorialwas “transparently wrong,” say¬ing “If a man has indivuality hedoesn’t lose it in a fraternity.” Explain UC fraternities role(Editorial's note: The Maroonhas received several letters com¬menting on the recent editorialon fraternities. Unfortunately, be¬cause of a lack of space, we areunable to print all of them.To the editor:I am rather surprised by theapparent paternalistic approachof the Maroon to the Freshmanclass, an approach so unbecomingto a student organization thatloudly decries any attempt of theUniversity to assume such a pro¬tective posture over the studentbody.In advising Freshmen on thequestion of joining fraternities theMaroon has seen fit to draw aconclusion based upon lew' and in¬distinct premises. Fraternities aredescribed as harboring “in¬groups,” necessitating completesubmission to such groups. Is itnot a fact that any group of indi¬viduals who choose to join an or¬ganization tend to share commonexperiences? Why, I have evenseen three or four Maroon n’affmembers congregating in restau¬rants or on street coiners.The handshakes or chapter flagof a Fraternity serve the sameUnderwood Corporation, along established, youthfully ag¬gressive company, has recentlyjoined forces with Olivetti,Europe's largest manufacturer ofoffice machines. With a com¬plete range of electric andstandard typewriters, and withdistribution of Olivetti calcula¬tors, accounting machines, elec¬tronic and data-flow systemswithin the United States, Under¬wood now offers the most com¬plete line of office machinesever to be available from asingle source.Because of this recent expansionof domestic marketing facilities,and an increase in overseasoperations, Underwood hasestablished an accelerated man¬agement program for qualifiedbusiness school graduates. Theobjective is to place qualifiedmen in corporate managementas soon as they have indicatedtheir readiness for this level.Aptitude and inclination willdetermine whether managerialassignment will be domestic orforeign.Successful applicants will attenda four-weeks session at theUnderwood training center.From here they will be assignedto Underwood marketing areasfor on-the-job training. Dura¬tion of this training and futureappointments are contingentsolely on the progress and aspi¬rations of each individual.For information or to arrangefor an interview, contact yourPlacement Director. A represen¬tative of the Underwood Cor¬poration will be on campusThursday, February 15th. purpose of identification as doesthe mast head of any publication,even the Maroon. Mugs and pad¬dles are no more indicative of afraternity member’s sense of be-longii g than are Maroon presscards representative of a student’smembership on a newspaper.The question of stereotyping andthe loss of one’s identity is alwaysa sensitive matter among collegestudents. There is no magic for¬mula that transforms a fraternityrush class of individuals into atroop of toy soldiers, each wear¬ing the same clothing and think¬ing the same thoughts. Fraterni¬ty men retain their individualtraits and are respected for them.They do share a common goal, asdo all students: namely Iheir scho¬lastic and individual character de¬velopment.Editorial writers are commonlygiven a journalistic license to ex¬press views and opinions. Viewsand opinions, however, which mustof necessity be reinforced by co¬herent arguments and rationallybased facts. I would suggest thatthe Maroon, in order to perpetu¬ate its fine editorial reputation, might substantiate its views withless emotion and mibre clarity andconsistency.E. David WangerPresident, Mu chapterPhi Sigma DeltaTo the editor:I am very glad to accede tothe request of the president ofInter-fraternity council that Isend you, for publication thisweek, if you please, the presentnote and the following statementof the official position of my of¬fice concerning the fraternity sys¬tem as an approved part of the ex.tra curriculum of the University.“It has been traditional for thefraternities at Chicago to hold toa place of full membership in theintellectual community of thequadrangles, rather than orbitingin giddy space around it. In thesocial and ’political’ life of thecampus, the fraternities have nev¬er had nor sought a position ofoverpowering dominance; butneither have they lost sight f. rlong of the responsibilities arisingfrom the fact that all students,directly or indirectly—and thus il,eUniversity itself - are affected bythe presence- of the fraternitiesamong us.“This Chicago tradition is anideal, realized over the years invarying degrees at different timesand in different individual situ¬ations. It is in keeping with thehistorical origins of the Ameri¬can college fraternity and with anew recognition, in the years sinceWorld War II, of certain import¬ant potentials in the fraternitysystem.“The value of fraternity Is ne¬cessarily potential, not guaran¬teed, for any student, any chap¬ter, or any college. Where it is ful¬ly achieved, group idealism en¬ters into effective balance withvalues individually held; chapteractivities afford the member bothpleasure and constructive socialexperience and. in addition, partlythrough satisfying these needs,sharpen his attention to the intel¬lectual task; and one part of thetotal result is growth in ntonlcharacter.“The fraternities certainly donot offer the only way to suchachievement; in offering one way,however, they are fully indorsedand encouraged by the Univer¬sity.”John P. NethertonDean of StudentsCalendar of eventsTuesday, 16 JanuaryLutheranchapel,Lecturefo rmalBillingsLecture:Paul FMeeting:eral membership, 3:30 pm, Ida Noyeshall.Meeting: Council of university senate.Business east. 106, 3:40 pm.Motion picture: Social science 122. 4pm, "The art of classical flreece.”Colloquium: Research institutes 211,4:15 pm, "Electronic structure ofthe rare earth metals,” Allan R.Mackintosh.Rifle club: Fieldhouse, 7 pm.Folk dancing: International house, 7pmChristian science testimony meeting:Thorndike Hilton chapel, 7:15 pm.Record concert: International house,8 pm. communion service: Rond1 1:30 pm.series: Basic genetic*. •'Thegenetics of man,** Dr. Grow,: pi 17, 12:30 pm."The balanced Christian, ” Mr.Vomer, Swift 208, 12:30 pm.1SLU winter quarter gen-foreign car hospital & dinkdealers in:• mg• morris• austin• riley• lambretta5340 s. lake parkdo 3-07Q7service clinic: 2306 e. 71stmi 3-3113bob testermg psychiatristMODEL CAMERALeica, Bolex, Nikon,Hasselblad Dealer1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNT2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jos. H, 1912'***Its what's up front that countsJon. 16. 1962 • CHICAGO MAROONChicago raced to a commanding. » 32-23 halftime lead by shootingat a .520 pace and holding theHighlanders to eight baskets in28 attempts. MacMurray fired inten straight points in the firstfour minutes of the second stanza,however, to take the lead, 33-32.From then on, Larry Liss, who1 allied 18 points, kept the Maroons*, •, in the game with his deadlyshooting.The lead see-sawed throughoutthe second half. Liss’ jump shotk with 50 seconds left gave UC a54-53 lead, but Larry Krulac ofMaCMTirray nfftlchcd it-20 secondslater. This set the stage for Ze-mans’ game winning basket.IM scoreboardIn Thursday’s IntramuralBasketball action, in the Frater-, nily League, Phi Sigma Deltabeat Della Upsilon 23-15; PhiKappa Psi won over Phi Delta. Theta, 31-13; Psi Upsilon crushedZeta Beta Tau, 43-11; and BelaTheta Pi edged Phi Gamma> Delta, 14-10.In the Divisional League, thefollowing scores were reported:. Ids 41, International House 22;Unknowns 57, Business 26; Para¬sites 23, F.A.Q. 20; Jocks 25, Jack• Rabbits 18; Hitchcock 41, Geog¬raphy 6; C.T.S. 42, S.S.A. 19;Flying Bolsheviks 28, CalvertHouse 25; Laughlin House' overApartment Dwellers by forfeit.R. 3. Reynold# Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem, N. CLUp front is and only Winston has it!Rich, golden tobaccos specially selected and speciallyprocessed for full flavor in filter smoking.PHISIGRUSH SMOKER7:30 p.m., CHAPTERH0|)S£Thursday. 5025 S.Jonuory 25th Woodlown*iner justifies Israel UC girls visit burlesqueProlessor of political science'Herman Finer offered three mainjustifications Friday night forIsrael’s recent trial of AdolfEichmann.Finer discussed “Crime andpunishment: in retrospect” at the'second of three Hillel foundationFriday evening programs dealingwiih the Eichmann case.» A main justification for thetrial and procedure, according toJ'iner, is Israel’s “right of self-' assertion," which accomplishedtwo things. Israel calls attentionto herself from among theworld's 104 nations, and she keepsalive the memory of the sin com¬mitted hy Germany, and specific¬ally Eichmann.History has proven, says Finer,that those nations which don’t an¬nounce their own existence areignored, and even discredited ininternational relations. Thereforeit is necessary that Israel, smalland surrounded by enemies as sheis, draw the attention of the worldto herself and her- Vights.Eichmann’s trial follows theprecedent of the Nuremberg trialsin attempting to establish theprinciple that following ordersgiven by a government docs notexempt anyone who executes them from the charge of inhumanityand murder on the grounds thathe was merely carrying out orders.According to Finer, the mainQuestion is, “Will this principlebe the guiding principle in inter¬national law lor the future?”Liner's three arguments fortrial and punishment were edu¬cation or reformation, not forEichmann in this case, but forthe rest of the German |**ople;deterrence because of the know¬ledge that one will be punished;and retribution.Retribution, he said, differs fi-om revenge in that it is not anindividual avenging himself on an¬other individual who has injuredhim, but society’s dispassionatelypunishing someone for takingaway the rights it has given toits members.Whether Eichmann’s trial willaccomplish its aims only futuregenerations can know, said Finer.But at least, there has been aconscientious attempt to improvethe principles governing humanconduct in the world.Chivalry beats studies18 American automobiles, 1truck, 1 MG; 1 Renault, 1 po¬lice car.This is the arithmeticwhich proves chivalry is not deadin Hyde Park.The snow was knee deep inplaces. Cars were stuck all overthe south side when Universityof Chicago student Gene Vinogra-doff went out lor a late-eveningdrive. Necessity forced him topush the first stuck car he cameacross blocking his way. But as hemoved on he found a great many more stuck cars. By 1 am Mondaymorning he had pushed 22 ofthem out of drifts.Vinogiadoff said, when askedwhy he did it that it was achallenge, like trying to climb amountain. “It was there so I‘climbed’ it,” he explained.What did the people who werehelped think? According to Vino-gradoff (who was wearing a dirtybroad-brimmed Texas hat and adark trench coat) “people weredamned suspicious.” But; suspic¬ious or not, they accepted Vino-gradoff’s help.When asked if he thought hisevening was well spent, hum IIstudent Vinogradoff replied: “Il£ was like old times at In Friday’s games, in the Col- should have been reading Plato.”the fieldhouse Friday night. ,0£e House League, Dodd beatJoel Zemans scooped in a Iu,ls North> 29"14: Mead, led bylay-up shot with seven sec- *Shorey North, 28-23; Hendersononds remaining to give the North won by forfeit over EastMaroons a o6-55 basketball victory T , m .u u . tt. *J I, and Thompson North beat Eastover MacMurray. All five UC jj by forfeit.starters played steady ball, as ‘Hie Maroons racked up their sixthwin, snapped their two-game los¬ing streak, and appeared to haveshaken off their early seasonslump.Cagers nip MacMurray Famed for the researchwhich carries its faculty mem¬bers from Texas to the Nu¬bian valley in Egypt, UC’shorizons were broadened still fur¬ther Friday by fifteen undergrad¬uate women seeking truth in Chi¬cago’s Follies Burlesque.The fifteen, members of thecast of UC’s production of “PalJoey,” have roles calling for themto demonstrate bump and grinddancing. Unfortunately, accord¬ing to the show’s director JerryMast, "none of the well-scrubbedgirls I picked were able to bumpor grind at all.”Males passing through theshow’s Ida Noyes rehearsal roomwere seen shaking their headsat the girls’ futile attempts."This was a sorry state of af¬fairs,” according to one memberof the chorus, "and we decided todo something about it.”So, shepherded by Mast andseveral male escorts, the girls em-Mrs. Beadle 'digs1 snowTo the editor:As a charter member of theCommittee on Grass, and thus byextension a booster for campusbeautification, I’d like to commendthe sculptors of the assorted snow’- barked on a field trip to the Fol¬lies, one of Chicago’s leadingburlesque houses. The girls spentthree hours observing the “chor¬ines” bump, grind and strip,sitting along with what one of the“Pal Joey” cast members de¬scribed as “sailors, lecherous,balding men, and UC students.”As the show' continuned instruc¬tions were w hispered by Mast and“Pal Joey” choreographer RobertaPickser. “See that — swing yourhips in an arc and make thosebumps sharp,” Miss Pikser washeard to command.After an hour of observation,the girls felt that they had wit¬nessed a long enough demonstra¬tion. But, according to reports,“The boys with us refused toleave.”After their experience, the girlsfeel that they will better be ableto solve their own problem. “Nowif we could overcome embarrass¬ment, we’d be in tine shape,"stated one member.or campus grassmen, dinosaurs, sages, courtingcouples and the like which sprangup overnight after Sunday’s bigsnow. They are a splendid addi¬tion to ihe campus scene.Muriel Beadleforeign car hospitalsee page 2 DR. A. 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