Th<s Issue . .The Melting PotBy Noble StocktonPage 2Roh-roh, NorthwesternAn Editorial. . . Page 2 On Campus . .Olsen Poetry TalkIda Noyes Square DanceColwell B-J AddressSee Calender. . Page 2University of Chicogo, Tuesdoy, November 18, 1947 31TRIB BARES HUTCHINS PLOTFinal MeetCalled ForFood Co-OpFinal plans for organizing acampus eating co-op will be madeat 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in SocialScience 122.Immediate goals were set at 200members and $1,500 capital, at ameeting Thursday at which HarryWoolf, temporary head of thegroup, announced plans made byan interim committee organizedat a preliminary ^meeting twoweeks ago.The $1,500 is needed before thegroup can incorporate and legallycommence operations. After theco-op is functioning, a second 200members will be accepted.It is expected that a member ofthe co-op will be able to eat threemeals a day for $1.25, plus pay¬ment of a $10 membership feewhen joining.The AVC, represented by GeorgeBlackwood, is taking a leadingpart in organizing the co-op. Mem¬bers of Student Government havealso expressed interest in the pro¬gram. After the co-op is set up,however, it will be an independentorganization.All students on campus are eligi-Die to become co-op members. Amimeographed leaflet with detail¬ed information about the co-op isavailable at the AVC office in ‘theReynolds club. WILBER KATZ3 Campus StudentsElected To UWF BoardRobert Mack, Steve Benedict,and Howard Lord, of the campuschapter of UWF, have receivedword of their election to the na¬tional UWF student council.Mack is president of the campusUWF chafer and of the SoutliSide Committee for World Gov¬ernment. Benedict is associateeditor of “Common Cause,” month¬ly publication of the Committee toFrame a World Constitution, anda member of the national execu¬tive council of UWF. 55th Street ParadeHonors H. P. JubileeHyde Park will celebrate itsDiamond Jubilee and the openingof the new 55th street with a par¬ade next Monday. Music, songs,military drills, and a fashion showwill complete the entertainment.Harry Seeberger, parade chair¬man, announced that the decor¬ated floats, army units, and ad¬ditional paraders will march down55tl> street at T:30 pjn. and term¬inate at the Univ^ity of Chicagofield house, 56th and Greenwood.As a preface to the celebration55th street merchants are staginga series of merchandise showingsin observauice of the completedpaving project. An automobile isalso to be giyen away in a lottery,for which tickets are now beingdistributed. ROBERT M. HUTCHINSColwell To ExplainHow U. of C. Is RunErnest C. Colwell, president ofthe University of Chicago, willspeak at Burton lounge tonightat 8:15 on “How the UniversityIs Run.”The address is open to resi¬dent and associate members ofthe University house system andtheir guests.Post-Degree EmploymentRepresentatives of some of thenation’s best known corporationswill arrive on the quadranglesshortly to interview and selectstudents for post-degree employ¬ment, the office of vocationalguidance and placement, Cobb215, announces.Immediate registration with thisoffice is necessary for interestedstudents. 'Rogge Blasts Truman,Reactionary TrendO. John Rogge, former specialassistant to the U. S. AttorneyGeneral, denounced the divisionof this country “in a number ofhostile, fearful and mutually sus¬picions blocs” by a drive of reac¬tion “of more terrifying propor¬tions than any we have ever ex¬perienced,” before the NationalLawyers’ Guild meeting in Breast-ead hall Friday night.Lashing out at President Tru¬man, the Thomas committee, andthe Taft-Hartley bUl, the recentlydismissed government prosecutorcried that “reaction in this coun¬try is trying to sell us a goldbrick” and charged that “reac¬tion is ready to take the nextstep—fascism.”Rogge saw “the gravest and themost incalculable consequencesfor the future of the Americanpeople” In such things as “theknifing of labor, an acceptanceof scarcity rather than abundanceof production, an acquiesence tounconscionable profits, the ab¬sence of any economic controls,the discrediting of the late Frank¬ lin D. Roosevelt, the rebuildingof Germany, the necessity of warwith Russia, and the destructionof civil liberties” now in progress.Attacks TrumanRogge declared that Truman isagainst rationing and price con-tol as police state methods butobeys the “wishes of large finan¬cial and industrial interests” infavoring a loyalty check which isaimed at “thought control” overliberals.The Thomas committee wasclaimed to violate “not only thefirst amendment, but also thefifth, sixth, ninth and tenthamendments as well.”“If we are riot protected fromthe arbitrary, abusive methods ofsuch a political grand jury,” Roggecried, “then we have no properclaim to the appellation ‘democ¬racy’.”Rogge called the Taft-Hartleybill “a weapon of oppression de¬signed to enslave the workers anddestroy the American trade unionmovement.” Swindler 'Takes'Campus LoveliesThe publicity given last week toa confidence man currently “work¬ing” the University campus hasbeen unsuccessful in discouraginghis operations, John L. Berg-stresser, assistant dean of studentreports.The swindler, sporting suavedress and fluent Spanish, is re¬portedly using the followingmethod.First step is to approach a likelyyoung lady on a purely socialbasis, usually in some spot like thecoffee shop or International house.A date follows, at the conclusionof which the gentleman sadly an¬nounces to the lady that he haslost his wallet.Accentuating his foreign man¬nerisms, the swindler then ex¬plains that he is staying withfriends on the north side. Unfor¬tunately, however, the “friends”are out of town, and since it wouldtake days to wire to South Amer¬ica for money, he begs a smallloan from the lady to tide himover.The lady, of course, never seesMr. Swindler again.He is reported to be about 5feet, 6 inches tall, with blond,curly hair and an acne-scarredface. ROBERT REDFIELDtion!” and bearing such sub-headsElder Olsen To SpeakQn Poetry ThursdayElder Olson, assistant professorof English at the University ofChicago and author of two vol¬umes of poetry, “Thing of Sor¬row” and “Cock of Heaven”, willspeak Thursday evening, 8 p.m.,in Social Sciences 1Z2 under theauspices of the Chicago Review.His topic will be “A Critiqueof Contemporary Poetry”. Ticketswill be sold at the door, 25c perperson.Socialist Club MeetingPostponed One WeekThe meeting of the Socialistclub with Daniel Bell as spe£kkeroriginally scheduled for Fridayhas been postponed until nextweek. Plan W^ould Replace UN,Erase National StatesBy ED ENGBERGIn a lengthy, front page “exclusive" by Frank Hughes,a Chicago Tribune staff writer, Chicagoans were told yes¬terday that the “sometime chancellor" of the Universityof Chicago, Robert M. Hutchins, was chairman of a com¬mittee to “frame a world constitution . . . which wouldsupplant the United Nations, abolish the United Statesand all other countries as nations, ——and govern, tax, and regulate theworld’s people with power to seizeand manage private property.”The constitution, described bythe Tribune as a “highly restrict¬ed secret document . . . the prod¬uct of a self-styled committee toframe a world constitution” wasprinted by the University, “payedfor from the coffers of the Uni¬versity of Chicago and privatecontributions,” and distributed to“40 or 50 selected internationalsympathizers in various parts ofthe world.”(A story by the Chicago Sunclaiming a University spokesman,believed by the MAROON to beMortimer J. Adler, as its source,asserts that the constitution wassent to 200 people).Chicago Profs NamedOther members of the commit¬tee include 10 professors, one ofwhom, the Tribune takes greatpains to point out, is a Rhodesscholar. Mortimer Adler, philoso¬phy of law professor; G. A. Bar-gese, humanities professor; Rob¬ert Redfield, dean of social sci¬ences; Rexford Guy Tugwell, “for- ... ,mer New Deal brain truster and ^ Follows Alien Principles, Setsnow political science professor,” World Army, Gives Wealth to• and Wilber G. Katz, dean of the All, Omits Right to Worship,law school-all of the Univer- American Idea Reversed, Secretsity were included on the com- Meetings Described, and Provisionfor Dictatorship,” went on to stateOther committee members that Hutchins’ “fright over thenamed were: Stringfellow Barr, explosion of the atom bomb andpresident St. John’s college: Al- disgust with the failures of UNbert Guerard, literature professor, led him to appoint the commis-Stanford university; Harold A’, gion and direct it to'^draft a con-Innis, head of the department of stitution for a more powerfulpolitical economy, University of supra-national government.”Toronto (Canada); Ehrich Kahl- rr. ver lecturer New School for Social Tribune,er, lecturer. New bcnooi lor ^lai ^contains the usual constitutional^search, New York, and Charles ^ ^Mcllwain, government professor, and articles setting forthHarvard university. goreming.Copy Readers Join In Thruout, it follows socialist orThe story, headed “World Marxian principles, foreign to theState’s Super-Secret Constitu- United States, but indorsed—ac¬cording to Hutchins—by all 11authors.”Marx-RooseveltThe powers supposed by the con¬stitution include rights “to layUniversity Theatre will present and collect taxes all over theDisplaced Person, its second pro- world and draft its own budget,due tion of the quarter, 8:30 p.m. xo regulate and operate world-Friday in Mandel hall. Perform- wide transportation and commu-ances will also be given Saturday nications. To regulate commerceand Sunday nights. of federal (world) interest. ToWritten by Alvin Keller while a umit and control weapons andstudent at UCLA, Displaced Person military forces of all nations. Towas first produced there last fall, decide national boundaries andOn the strength of that produc- form new nations and unions. Totion, the continental rights were expropriate public and privatereserved. Keller is now at Yale property whenever and whereverwhere his play will again be pro- necessary. To administer colo-duced in December. jGeorge Blair, director of Uni-versity Theatre, states, “Keller be-lieves Displaced Person as a play Turkey-Trot Givenis not concerned with ‘displaced Tomorrow At Idapersons’ but with the displaced ^ jmorality on the post-war con- ,tlnent. Keller also believes that Zmany Americans are DPs through will be staged Saturday mlack of understanding.”Yale Kramer, BUI Alton, and A no-date-required affair, theLee Royoe will play the leading dance will feature refreshments inroles. Of the three. Bill Alton is o^ddition to square dancing. Therathe only one having previously ap- ^ special dance contest,peared in University Theatre pro- prizes,ductions. Roles in Roots of the Instruction will be given at 7:30Lilacs, East Lynne, and Box and p.m. and the dance wiU squareCox were his latest appearances, away at 8.'Displaced Persons'To Be Given Fridayra9«2 THE CHICAGO MAROON Tue»6»y, November 18, 1$^7Ceilendar of EventsNext Week onQuadrangles TheMusic StandBy Andy Foldi THE MELTING POTNOVEMBER 18INTER VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: Luncheon meeting andBible study, third floor, Ida, 12:30 p.m.CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION: 7:30 p.m. Thorndike Hiltonchapel.CONGREGATIONAL: Supper meeting with Birger Mathison fromNorway as speaker. Meeting at Chapel House.HILLEL FOUNDATION: Intermediate Hebrew, 3:30 p.m. History ofJews in Modern Times, 4:30 p.m.RECORDED CONCERT: Reynolds club, 2:30-4 p.m.DAMES CLUB: Bridge party, Ida Noyes, 7:30 p.m. for wives of studentsand faculty.HUMAN DEVELOPMENT SEMINAR: Tea, 3:45, Commons, Judd 112.Seminar, 4:30, Judd 126. “Social Survey and Interviewing Methodsin Industrial Relations Research,” Burleigh Gardner.LECTURE: T. V. Smith will speak on “The Good as the Happy,” Down¬town lecture, 8 p.m., 32 W. Randolph, 75 cents.NOVEMBER 19LECTURE: Wallace Fowdie, “Cocteau: the Theatre,” 7:30 p.m. SocialScience, 82 cents.! Chaides W. Anrod, “The Financing of Pension Plans,” downtownlectufe, 19 S. LaSalle Series admission only, $10.PIANO RECITAL: Irene Schreir, pianist, will play C-minor variationsby Beethoven, Reynolds club. South Lounge, 4-5 p.m.CALVERT: Critical analysis of writings by Bloy, Mauriac, and Ber-names by Henry Rago. 7:30 p.m.HILLEL FOUNDATION: Elementary Hebrew, 3:30 p.m. Choral group,4:30 p.m.PRESBYTERIAN: Tea with foreign student as guest, 3:30 p.m. atChapel house.NOVEMBER 20CALVERT CLUB: Thanksgiving party.HILLEL FOUNDATION: Elementary Yiddish, 3:30 p.m. Hebrew speak¬ing group and arts and crafts, 4:30 p.m. Faculty siminar on “Men■' and Ideas,” W. A. Irwin, speaker; Daniel Bell will lead the dis¬cussion, 7 p.m.RECORD CONCERT; Reynolds club, sponsored by Student Union,2:30-4 p.m.BADMINTON TOURNAMENT: Ida Noyes gym, 7-10 p.m.LECTURE: Kenneth Arrow, “Forecast of National Income,” 4:30 p.m..Sunder Joshi, “The Koran: Mohammed’s Society of Equals Restson an Unqualified Monotheism,” University College 6:30 p.m.,75 cents.Appllcotions AcceptedFor Bodminton TourneyEkitries for this fall’s champion¬ship badminton tournament, to beheld Thursday from 7 to 10 p.m.in Ida gym, are being accepted bythe SU office in Ida and at theReynolds club desk until 5 p.m.tomorrow.Prizes will be awarded winnersin men’s singles, women’s singles,and doubles. Chapel House to HoldSodie Howkins PartyChapel House’s Sadie HawkinsDay party will be held at 8 p.m.Saturday at the Hyde Park Baptistchurch, featuring square dancing,refreshments, and social dancing.It will be a no-date affair. Sad¬dle Hawkins dress is optional, andeveryone is invited, with admis¬sion, 60 cents.Do you like Dancing?Here’s a dance nobody likes. Arthur Murray nevertai3ght it.It’s called the "All Day Squirm" and is per¬formed by gents who wear undershortswith an unholy center seam that keepsthem on the St. Vitus Varsity.THE STRETCHTHE SQUIRMTHE WRIGGLEMoral: Switch to Arrowshorts and relax. Arrowshorts have no centerseam, but do have plentyof room where it counts.Super comfortable, these super-shorts come in plainwhite oxford and broadcloth with Gripper fasteners.11 up at your favorite Arrow store.ARROW SHIRTS and TIBS'UNDERWEAR JL HANDKERCHIEF$_l^$PORTS SHIRTS' There are not many Masses inmusic literature which contain a“Credo,” ending on an”^ imperfectcadence.Yet this is precisely what hap¬pens in the Mozart F major MissaBrevis, which the Collegium Musi-cum is performing Sunday at 5p.m. in Rockefeller chapel.Throughout his life Mozart haddisagreements with the archbishopof Salzburg. These disagreementswere artistic and otherwise, andMozart expressed his attitude to¬ward the archbishop in this casemusically. Not only did he end the*Credo on an imperfect cadence,but he repeats the word “Credo”throughout the section, pianissi¬mo. The religious conviction whichthe creed is supijosed to conveybwomes decidedly unconvincing.As a Mozart sacred composition,the P major Mass is second onlyto the great Requiem. The afore¬mentioned Credo should strike afamiliar note when we hear it,since it uses the Georgian intona¬tion, the same “theme” which Mo¬zart used in the finale of theJupiter Symphony. Faithful at-tenders of Collegium concertsshould not confuse this Mass withthe D Major Mass (K. 194) whichthe Collegium performed a fewyears ago.As it Is customary, solos in the.Collegium are rotated from cmesinger to another. For next Sun¬day’s edheert Siegmund Levariehas selected the following four forthe solo portions in the Mass:Marion Harkins, soprano; DorothyWoods, alto; Alan Stone, tenor;Stirk Orwoll, bass. 'The orchestrawill include the customary stringsand two horns, in addition to theorgan. .Dr. Siegmund Levarie, of course,will conduct the Mass. Admissionto the concert is without chaige. BY NOBLE STOCKTONThis is the sort of thing that Student Governmentshould be doing.Although it wasn’t widely publicized at the time, thestudents in the Department of Sociology had a great dealto do with reorganizing their department, revising therequirements for Master’s Degree, an^ clarifying depart¬mental regulations, following a little orderly indigpationlast spring.Student Government didn’t do it, because it was stillrelatively newborn at that time. A group of Sociologystudents met, decided they didn’t like certain aspects oftheir department and the way it was run, and drew up alist of grievances.The department administration E. L. White, and Morris Haimo-itself had been considering reor-ganization for some time. Im- part,* Goldhamer said, ‘thepressed with the students* energy reorganization was actually for-and interest, they invited the oiulated along the lines of thegroup to organize the department students request. At present, al-student b6dy for the purpose of though the students did not re*submitting questions and sugges- Qoest it. Doctor s Degree require-tions. At a general meeting of oients are also under scrutiny,the student body, such a petition Many students in the Physicswas approved department feel that their de»The studente can’t take sole use »me o) thecredit for it, since the departmentwas in a more than receptivemood. But the petitioners re-Quested—and eot—the folio wine* seldom cover quite thequested and got the following. ground. It has even beenInstead of eight separate ex- ^ ^ aaminations for M.A. qualifying a *exam and another seven for final ^ . ,, ^M A examinations a single com- students who recentlyM.A. examinations, a single com for work toward Master’sprehensive is now given m each regardless of individu^^se. Other chang^ in Master’s gtlidents’ merits.Degree requirements were also ,j,here should be a good placefor Student Government to tryCreation of a new position. Sec- wings,retary of the Department, now JMozart Mass ScheduledCollegium Musicum will presenta performance of Mozart’s MissaBrevis in F Major on Sunday at 5p.m. in Rockefeller Chapel. Dr.Sigmund Levarie will conduct theprogram. filled by Herbert Goldhamer. toaid in administration and consultwith students on their programsand research plans.In Goldhamer’s phrase, “a moreunambiguous formulation” of ex¬aminations and department regu¬lations generally.Efforts to keep enrollment Ineach seminar course down to aworkable level.Official clarification of depart¬mental policy as to recommenda¬tions for job placement.Establishment of a more per¬manent student-faculty commit¬tee to continue the exchange ofinformation and suggestions. Pres¬ent members are David Bisno, Record ConcertsNow In ReynoldsIFben Your G.I. UnderwearWears Out!Arrow UndershirtsArrow Shorts(Patented seamless crotch)... Switch to ArrowCome in and reconvert with Arrow products—famousArrow shorts with Gripper fasteners and seamlesscrotch—Arrow “Guards”—^Arrow T shirts and under¬shirts. We have ’em!Ijytt*ARROW SHORTS Afternoon record eon eeriemove today from Ida Noyes toReynolds club south lounge, LenPearson, Student Union musicehairman, and Bob Johnson,Reynolds elub director, an¬nounced yesterday.The change is an effort toplace the concerts within reachof more students. The 2:30 p.m.time remains the same.Today’s program Is “Brahm’sFirst Symphony” and Rimsky-Korsakov suite from “Le CoqD’Or.’* Beethoven’s “KreutnerSonata** and Brahm's “FourthSymphony” will be heard Thurs¬day, Complete program si-hed-ules will be posted in the Rey¬nolds club.Add New TalentTo School OperaThree new names have beenadded to The Music Master roster:Laurine Hodges, soprano, and amember of the University musicdepartment; Dorothy Michie, alto;and Wendell Osborn, bass. Theyappear in the second act of theopera and partake in a trio. TheMusic Master will be presented atMandel hall on December 7 and 9,Sunday and Tuesday, respectively.Tickets are on sale at the informa¬tion office.Reserve OfficersTo Discuss UMTProcedure and past results of th(Universal Military Training detachment which has been put iieffect at Port Knox, Kentuckywill be explained tonight in detaito all interested officers at th<regular chapter meeting of the Re¬serve Officers Association at thiKnickerbocker hotel, campus rep¬resentative George Braden re¬ported.For those officers Interested, thiAmerican Defense Medal and thiVictory medal will be presenteeupon display of the original cop]of separation papers. /"All Goul Divided" TicketsStill Available For StudentsTickets for the benefit perform¬ance of “All Gaul Divided” at theCivic Theatre this Friday nightare still on sale at the Informa-ti<Mi Office, International house,and the American Veterans Com¬mittee office in Reynolds Club.mMTueMioy# Noventber 18, 1^7 THE CHICAGO MAROONProfessors Present Conflicting ViewsOn World, Third Party, College f oge fSmith OptimisticOver U. N.; VoidsThird Party IdeaThomas Vernon Smith is fa¬mous as an advocate of toleranceand compromise in politics, andas a U of C philosophy professorsuccessfully elected to Congress.The associations are well earned.No sooner had he established him¬self in the office easy chair thanyour reporter became a test audi¬ence for a scheduled Ohio Cham¬ber of Commerce speech, in whichSmith quaintly and earthily re¬minded the gentlemen that menof intelligence and integrity oftenhave conflicting ideas about theGood, and that the job of politicsis to bring them together intocommon action.Turning to our question, theamiable 57-year-old Texan wasimpatient with students who fore¬seeing impending doom, have anitch to leave the ivory tower rightaway. "Hold onto your hats! Ifyou’ve no more confidence in pres¬ent-day leaders than that, theworld’s done for anyway."With a trace of a drawl that inItself might soothe a worried elec¬torate, Smith went on to findgrounds for optimism in the pres¬ent world situation, pointing tosuccessful re-education in Japanand the functioning of the UN sosoon after a devastating war. Headmitted a natural backwash inmorale and conditions during thepost-war years, but insisted thatthe war hysteria would cease be¬cause it is groundless: "Neithernation wants to fight, and neithernation is ready to fight."Switching the discussion to thetopic of his Sinai Temple Forumdebate with Dr. Herman Finer,Smith felt that a third party couldonly fit into the American systemif it forced a unification of partsof the old parties, and thus be¬came the second party.The large American parties, em¬bracing groups with confKrtinginterests, force a substantial meas¬ure of compromise and concessionbefore programs and platformsare enunciated, thus easing thefinal concensus necessary to ac—tion. Where several parties basedon ideological principles are in¬volved, compromise fails, and an¬archy or totalitarianism may re¬sult.Asked if the College's liberaleducation would spawn politicallyactive men, he was doubtful. Thetendency here is to instill a set ofprinciples which have little rela¬tion to the motives and results ofpolitical action. The student isforced to make the adjustment be¬tween ideals and realities in thepolitical world of self-interest andcompromise, and the result is toofrequently disillusionment, cyni¬cism, and apathy.Smith has no bone to pick withpliilosophy; he feels it the "truehome of the human spirit,’’ andincidentally makes a living at it.But ideals and ideas are emptywithout experience; and for thepolitician, the ideas had better beflexible enough to take some dentswhen content bangs into them.Perhaps there is a need for a cur¬riculum centered around the ad- By CURT CRAWFORD(This is the first in a .seriesof interviews with persons whoare active in shaping world af¬fairs. Curt Crawford has select¬ed men made available by theSinai Temple Forum lectures,and will put to each the ques¬tion, in effect: *‘Do you thinkthe world is heading toward acatastrophic war between Rus¬sia and the U.S.? If so, whatshould you and we do aboutit?")justment of principles to realities,with the chance to benefit fromthe experience of those who havemade the adjustment. •Throughout the conversation, hemaintains a soft, anecdotal man¬ner of speech which belies theAristotelian terminology. There isno break in style when ho dis¬misses a pwint with the phrase:"There jist ain’t any sich animal."His tone is confidential, with aquiet, catching enthusiasm aboutthe ideas he’s putting across.He’s proud of the many friends(e.f., Ohio’s Sen. Taft) which histolerance and geniality have wonhim, and keeps up a correspond¬ence with well over a thousand ofthem. The following incident,which he likes to relate, is illus¬trative:During a sp^h in the IllinoisSenate indicating machine rule.Smith referred to a colleague as a"rat." The accused hotly inter¬rupted, flung off his coat, chal¬lenged the liar to battle. Smithpeeled, offered a choice of arms,including some special Texan de¬vices, then broke the tension andmade a friend with: "Yessir, anyweapion you want, provided yougive me a head start of 300 yards."Bettelheim AtPolitics ClubProfessor Bruno Bettelheim, sur¬vivor of internment in Nazi con¬centration camp, will address anopen meeting of the Politics clubat 3:30 p.m. Fiiday in law south.He will speak on "The Concentra¬tion Camp as a Class State: a So¬ciological Analysis."Bettelheim, a victim of Nazi ter¬ror in the camps of Dachau andBuchenwald, observed at firsthand the effects of totalitarianismupon the individual. At present,he is director of the University’sOrthogenic schoolRecently-elected officers of thePolitics club are Don Chenoweth,president, and Gail Conningsby,secretary-treasurer. Finer Realistic OnWorld's State; RoleOf Student StrongInterestingly enough, Smith’sopponent in the Mount SinaiTemple Forum debate on a thirdparty, Dr. Herman Finer, disagreeson every issue presented in the in¬terviews. Not unusually attempt¬ing to make a deadline at the lastminute, we trotted out to Dr. Fin-er’s home Tuesday, found him inthe midst of carpenter’s altera¬tions, but nevertheless ready totalk business.For the uninitiated. Finer wasborn 49 years ago in England, andhas spent much of his life teach¬ing at the London School of Eco¬nomics, researching in the U.S.and Europe, writing and caucus¬ing.When we suggested that perhapsthe world was getting along prettywell after all. Finer shot back:What about the German p>eacesettlement, the Balkans, Greece,Chma, Korea, Italy? What aboutPetkov, Maniu, and Mikola.iezyk.What about the moral gulf be¬tween Russia and the U.S.?Favors Chicago PlanAsked about the advisability ofspending time with political ac¬tion during academic training,PHner replied, "After all, there are24 hours in a day." 'The tonesounded like; "Yes, if you want todo so badly enough to create thetime,” but we neglected to check.He incidentally suggested that awell-educated student, ivory-toweror no ivory-tower, is more sensi¬tive to world needs than nmnypoliticians.As for the effect of U. o: C.liberal education on buddingstatesmen. Finer found Smith’sreasoning "pedantic.” UC studentsare not taught Utopia; they real¬ize espiecially through the socialand political science courses themotives and results of politicalchange, and the shady characterof the means—ends relationshipin politics.The discouragement in thatfield comes rather from the un¬pleasant fact that it involves a PCAMarshall PlanProgressive Citizens of Americaunanimously endorsed the Mar¬shall Plan at their meeting Friday,with the restriction that it not bejust another military mission, butreally give aid to the people whoare in need of it.Also announced at the meetingwas the circulation of i>et’tionsfor the purpose of supporting theSabbath Resolution which callsfor abolition of the House of Rep¬resentatives Un-American Activ¬ities Committee on the groundsthat it is not performing its dutieslegally or in a proper manner.Other PCA activities includeclose co-operation with SG, AVC,and CORE, on their anti-discrim¬ination program.lot of hard work, and that re¬forms don’t arrive in a day. As fdrthe opposite criticism of U of Ceducation, that it produces toomany debunkers. Harvard, Yale,and Columbia are just as prolific,according to Finer.British Labor PartyOn the third party issue. Finerwonders at Smith’s objection topolitical ideolc^y parties. A partyis organized on some principle, sowhy shouldn’t the principle, besocial reform rather than patron¬age? If the U.S. is to exert powerin the world for free and demo¬cratic ideas, they will be clearerabroad and at home if parties arevoted in or out according to them.He scorns American liberalswho, murmuring that reaction¬aries control the mass media ofcommunication, quail at the taskof building a third party. "As longas men have got heads to thinkand hearts to feel and legs toperambulate around on, they cando their own communicating. TheBritish Labor Party started onthat basis, and so can the Amer¬ican."Tonite 8:30—Motmee Sot. Only!Engoging comedy—Claudia CassidyGood show-^Ashton Stevens Argonne RadioTower InstalledA 50 watt, high-frequency radiostation has been put into opera¬tion by the Argonne National Lab¬oratory, it was announced recently.The transmitter is designed toprovide communication betweenthe outlying stations of the' Ar¬gonne Laboratory.The broadcasting equipment islocated at 56th and Ingleside ave¬nue. The antenna tower is ap¬proximately 150 feet high and isprovided with red aircraft-warn¬ing lights.Because it broadcasts on fre¬quencies much higher than thoseused by commercial stations thestation will not interfere withradios in the community.BLACKSTONE • TONIGHT 8:30“i Have Never Witnessed a BetterProduction.”—Stevens, Hei .-Amer.!Ts fttw! ns oiFm.1947 ,Oscar Straus’ MusicalComedy Success?with BILLY GILBERTPrices (tax incl.—Main FI: 1st Bale.:Sat. Mat f3.M 13.00 $2.40Sun. to Fri. Eve. 4.20 3.60 3.00Sat. Eve 4.80 4.20 3.60 3.00400 Second Balcony SeatsEach Perf., $1.80, $1J!0Mall Orders—EncloseStamped Self-Addressed EnveloperrBOOKS NOWAlbert Schweitzer—Out of My Life and Thought. .$3.00Robert Graves—The Future of Swearing 1.00E. M. Forster—Anonymity:A Literary Enquiry 60Farrington—Science and Politicsin the Ancient World 3.75Mayer—Max Weberand German Politics 2.05Freud—The Ego and the Id.... 1.85Dreiser—The Stoic; Last ofThe Financier and TheTitan Trilogy 3.00E. Smith—Spacehounds of IPC—Science Fiction 3.00JAMES D. STAYER, BOOKS1313 Eost 55th StreetPUza 0860 — Chicago 15, Ill. HARRIS TONIGHT AT 8:40liMliiaiw Matinee Tomoirow, 2:40/OHN C. WILSON pfsenttTALLULAHBANKHEADk NOEL COWARD'S.EST COM^ ALL CAULIS DIVIDEDCIVIC THEATREWacker at WoskingtonEVES. find. Sun.) $3.60, 3.00, 2.40, 1.86,1.20. MAT.: $3.00, 2.40, 1.80, 1.20.-Good Seats Now *AT BOX OFFICE OR BY MAIL ORDER UmVEttSETYOF CHiCAGO-LOVES SPiKE ?"Spike’s stage review lavishfeast of fan."—BULLIET, NEWSNiTELY 8:30FUN FEST, FRI. 10:30 P. M.STUDEBAKER Mats. Sat.,THEATRE, Cen. 8246. Sun., 2:30Ktjmsimd AitMUSICALDEPRECIATIONREVUE*/fadSt^THECITYSUCHIlSandSS stogt artists2h Mom Of mm M/tmssBUY SEATS NOW. EVES., 8:30—(Fri. 10:30 P M., $1.20-1.80-2.40-3.00-3.60. MATS. SAT. & SUN. at2:30 P. M. — $1.20-1.80-2.40-3.00(tax inc.) Mail Orders Accepted.with DONALD COOKMATS.: Wed. & Sat.: $3.00-2.40-1.80-1.26EVES., 8:40 (except Sunday)—$3.60-3.00-2.40-1.80-1.26ATTENTION BURTON-JUDSONComplete Cleaning • PressingLaundry Service• ATUax S\ookServing Hi# CempiM 30 Yeert1013-15 E. 61st St.ACROSS FROM BURTON-JUDSONPhone MIDway 7447 ^ SELWYN • TONIGHT, 8:30MATINEES WED.-SAT. 2:30The Theatre Guild & John C. Wilson pnuntALFRED LYNNlUNT . FONTANiVE() JUisPimTniMA New Comedy by TERENCE RATTIGANDneeted by MIL LUNTEVES: $4.20, $3.60, $3, $2.40, $1.80, $1.20.WED. MAT.: $3, $2.40, $1.86, $1,20.SAT. MAT.: $3.60, $3, $2.40, $L80, $1.26All Prices Include Tax.SCHUBERTMATINEES; WED. aii4 SAT.LIMITED ENGAGEMENT• ICHAta OSCA,RODGERS ^ HAMMERSTEIN Zndpreieet’.Mary Marlin# In Thn Mv$icaf SmpthMv$it and lyries by IRVING BERLINBook by HERBERT fc DOROTHY FIELDSOwvcImJ by lOSNVA lOOANSen and lighting by JO MIElZINEtOoncei by HELEN TAMIRISCotivm.i by LUCINDA BALLARDTickets at University Information Off, How Much DoYou Know AboutChristian Science?If you are not correctly informed about ChristianScience, how con you discuss it intelligently? Take thisopportunity to learn some of the facts bout this re¬ligion that has done so much to heal humon ills andfree sufferers from human misery. AttendA FREE LECTUREeNEitied"CHRISTIAN SCIENCE REVEALSTHE BROTHERHOOD OF MAN"%by Clayton Bion Croig, C.S.B., of Cincinnati, O.Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church,The First Church of Christ, Scientist,in Boston, Moss.FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21st4:30 PM.in Judd Hall (Grad. Ed.) 1265835 Kimbark Ave.Christian Science Organizationat The University of ChicagoCordially invites YonTHE CHICAGO MAROON TuM^ay, Narambar 18, 194755«h St. REOPENS for CELEBRATIONThe Nome of the Monstrosity Snndao— Third free if you cot two —ICE CREAM DIPPERAlso Hambnriters aad Steak Saadwiches915 E. 55tli St. BUTterfield 542731 Years on 55th St.XHENRY T. HANSONXhai*dware paintsglass oilske>’s madeX909 E. 55»h St.MIDwy 0008DRESSES a' LINGERIECORSETS a FITTINGAND REPAIRROOD QUALITY SHOPI372 E. SSth H. P.2430STEVAN’SLUNCH--1321 East 55Yh StreetRt^ordsElecirieal AppliancesotHYDE PARKRadio ft Appliance Co.1344 E. SSth St.FAIrfax 6115— CHOICE MEATS —FRESH DRESSED POULTRYBUTTER and EGGSBEN’S MARKET1422 E. SSth St.^ IVE DELIVER ...PHONE MIDWAY 8751 Try to look over ourCHRISTMAS SIFTSSee ourWATCH REPAIRINGJEWELRY REPAIRINGHYDE PARKJEWELERMidwoy 96561353 E. 55tli St. for PAINTING Heedson ond offthe compusHARRY S. BROWNWall PaperftPainter’s Supplies1307 E. 55th^Phones: Hyde Pork 0122Midwoy 0171 Liquors!Cold Bottle Beer!Dependable Wine^!HARPER LIQUOR STORE1466 East 55th StreetFAIrfax 1233-7699-1318Eorqette%Beauty Shopfeatures the newHelene CurtissuperMsnicnermaiienl. nave1323 E. 55th St.DORchester 3043Follow the parade toPAUL’S HARDWARE & PAINT SUPPLY906 E. 55th Street MIDway 9754Popalar prices atTEN O FOER RESTAERA]\TGood food is gdNNl healtli *1004 EAST 55TH STREET MIDWAY 7262EDELSTEINCLEANERS & DYERSExpert cleoning, pressing, ondrepolring . , , hots cleonedDOR. 3352 1115 E. SSthiOCAl AMD LONG MSTAMCf HAUUNOo&0 YtAMS OF D^WDABLiSBIVKi TO THi SOVJU^ASK FOB FBa SSimATt055th and ELLIS AVENUECHICAGO IS, ILLINOISPhone BUTterfield 671 1DAVID L. SUTTON, Pros.your Shopping Worries Are Over!A NEW 55TH STREETIS HEREWE HAVE THE THINGS YOU HAVE BEEN. WAITING FOR: vToys • Gomes • Dolls • WogonsNovelties • Forty FavorsHollmork CordsT. ILWOirESTABLISHED 18941401 EAST SSTH STREET DORCHESTER 3070 H ARR Y^SPETITECLEANERS and DYERSPICK-LP AND DELIVERYAJLTERATIONDORCHESTER 30571413 EAST 55TH STREEThardwareN general hardworeD house furnishingsE repair serviceR point and glasselectricolS jonitor supplies0 hyde park 3338hyde park 1700N 1444 E. SSth St. Expert Hotr DyeingPermonent Woving otBEA’s BEAUTY SALON849 E. 55th St.DOR. 1821Open EveningsPARKER’S54 Yeors on 55tb St.Dry Goodfif andReady-to-WearFor the FamilyA good place to s$hop1333-5 E. 55th St.at Kenwood Ave. Near Campus —a Rexatt storewith fouutaiu lunchesShagamDrugsHyde Park 244155th and InglesideFAY ROSSChildren's and Ladies' Wear1421 E. 55th .St.MIDway 42D0The AlbumPhotographer1171 E. SSth St.Mid. 4433At1428 E. 55th St. at BlockstoneHANLIN PHARMACYXPrescription IPruggistX^home-made ice creamX^phone Hyde Pork 0203Wr DeUrerChoice Meats, PoultryTHE HEW CEHTURYMARKETMax DiamondPhone Hyde Pork 62951419 Eost 55th StreetMr. AmericaYou try to save money, time, clothes, medical biHs.How about Wifesaving?She's your most valuable assetBendix the Best Wifesnver Ever MadeSaves IJp to 30 Days of Labor Every YearLet us prove this to you . • •HAVILL RADIO & APPLIAHCE1461 E. 55th S». PLAxa 7800■'fkip:Tuetdoy, November IS, 1947 THE CHICAGO MAROON Pe9« fF HYDE PARK DIAMOI^D JEBILEETHE COMMUNITY BOOK SHOP1404 E. 55th St. — MIDwoy 0567Marxist books, pomphlets,and periodicals — the~best, of the new books—children'sbooks—labor and folk recordsTelephone ond moil orders promptly filledAttention l-F QueensMiss llis InglisonnouncingThe new management ofBeaiitv ^Salon^48 E. 55ti. Open EveningsPhones: Mid. 2878, Plaza 332455TH STREET JEBILEE SPECIAL!OUR REGULAR $10.00REAM OIL PERMAISENT WAVECONDITIONING SCALP TREATMENT INCLUDED.DUCTION ON OTHER PERMANENTS FOR S-ISO2ONLY* JO50RICA KALFMAIV BEAUTY SALON)227 E. 55th Hyde Park 7473If A QUARTER OF A CENTURYON 55TH STREETBERG^S FEK SUOV1619 E. 55TH STREETCARRONSEPARTMENT STORES>2-68 E. 55TH ST.‘We Have Everythiag — We IMev.er Say ‘No’ ”MIDWAY 8060Is.Living Portrait of BeautyGlamor Pictures areDYNAMIC PORTRAITS IT'SFUNTO EAT ATPark RowRESTAURANT1527 E. 55thGive yourI-F QUEENa Corsage fromCORNELL FLORIST1645 E. 55thFAIrfox 1436Eat' HereSNOW WHITEGRILL1145 E. 55th St.SandwiehesLight LunehChili and HamhurgersOur SpeeiaiiffFood to Tuke'OutSIDNEY T. HOLMESd . IR A N D E Lit Hm nww owner of HieHARPER FOOD SHOP1504 E. 55th St.The season'soutstandingglove values .. •choice selectionof styles, in deerskin, cope-skin, pigskin, fine knitted wool.Lined and unlined. Croftedto hand-perfection.GEORGESMEN’S SHOP UNIVERSAL TAILORS & CLEANERS1211 E. 55th StreetFIRST RATE CLEANIIVOMINOR REPAIRS FREE WITH CLEANIIWGDeluxe Pressing # All Garnvents Carefully SpongedQuick Service o Reasonable PricesOpen 7:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M.. . . you'll always get the latest in yard goods and accessoriesot reasonable prices ot . . ,HYDE PARK FABRICSI1109 E. 55th StreetHyde Park 2702Open Thursday ond Saturday EveningsANNA CHRISTINEWomen’s Xeeessories and Gifts1746 Eosf 55th StreetGifts individually wrapp^ andV mailed to any destinationdressesFRANCES R. HALE1658-1660 East 55th StreetBeauty ShopSwedish Rakery GoodsFresh Daily Hors d’OuYres andFaney Sandwiches'onOne Day NoticeCOLD WAVINGPERMANENTSTINTING A DYEINGHAIR SHAPING1637Eost 55th MIDway9535 Try the NewBreckScalp TreatmentatFlorris BeautyShop1207 E. 55thFAIrfox 0309Featuring TelevisionHI HAT CLUBCocktails ' Good Food1150 Eost 55th St.Just Off University Ave.SWEDISH-AMERICANFOOD SHOP1129 East 55th StreetNeor University6 THE CHICAGO MAROON TiMMby, November 18, I947Not So Wild A DreamWhew! Saved again.If it weren’t for our benefactors in the Tribune Tower,the University would have gone to pK)t long ago. Our“sometime chancellor of the University, who frequentlytakes off on world saving jobs not connected with educa¬tion at the Midway,” should stay at home within the con¬fines of academic life and not go beating around as if hehad a responsibility to fulfill.With the. objectivity typical of the Tribune, FrankHughes, a Tribune staff writer, has forewarned the worldof a real threat to “red-whit^-and-blue democracy as prac¬ticed by Thomas Jefferson.”We find it extremely difficult to ridicule the Tribunetime after time with tongue in cheek, because frankly theirpolicies and prostitution of news values are making usdamn mad.Most of the story concerning the Hutchins committeewas taken up with nonsensical interpretations of twistedfact material. Laying bare the facts would probably nothave taken up the space alio ted to it on the front page.As it was, the story was “jumped” from page one to page14, to page 15, to page 16 and thence to page 17.Best of all was the series of thumbnail sketches, ap¬parently designed to acquaine Tribune readers with the in¬famous personalities involved. Following are some ex¬cerpts:G. A. Borgese is listed in congressional reports as sponsor of the.American CcMnmittee to Save Refugees, one of a network of refugeecommittees stemming from the communist medical bureau connectedwith the Spanish civil war fionts.He was president of the League of American Writers, which num¬bered such stalwarts as Upton Sinclair, Donald Ogden Stewart, RexStout, and Langston Hughes, and was for ‘Writers who have clearlyindicated their sympathy with the revolutionary cause’.* • «Hutchins’ most notorious connection was his service on the ad¬visory council of the Moscow State university, summer session, 1935.* • *Mortimer J. Adler is another radical who was reported to have said*‘we must do everything we can to abolish the ubited States.”James T. Farrell, in his book. The Frightened Philistines, gavethis (jstimate of Adler: ‘‘Every time I see the name of Mortimer J. Ad^ler 1 am reminded of a remark Samuel Johnson made about an 18thentury poet. ‘He was dull in a new way and made many thing himgreat.' As a contemporary obscurantist and obfuscator, Mortimer J.Adler bows to no one—not even to Waldo Frank. He writes with apomposity that some people mistake for profundity; his scholarshipis superficial; and, althugh he is fond of using the word logis, hisreasoning is weak, even shabby.”Rexford Guy Tugwell wa.s raised from an obscure professorshipPAUSE FOR COKEHELPS MOTORISTSORIVE REFRESHEDPLEASE retumempty bottles promptly•OTTLED UMn» AUTHO«fTY Of THf • '•''••f/LHY WCHICAGO COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY, ...co-CoOa Company at Columbia university to a dominant place in the New Deal by thelate Franklin D. Roosevelt. As undersecretary of agriculture he wasthe manipulator behind Henry A. Wallace’s radical agriculturalschemes at the time of the ‘‘slaughter of the million little pigs.”One of his most famous quotations is that ‘‘business will logicallybe required to disappear” in the new social order the New Dealerswere forming. He made a trip to Soviet Russia and came back full ofnew ideas for state planning patterned on the Communist Gosplan,some of which he was able to put over in the early days of the NewDeal.Tugwell has written several books on socialist planning and onSoviet Russia and in his tenure as governor general of Puerto Ricointroduced socialist planning and state-operated factories to the un-• enthusiastic citizens of that American dependency. He came to theUniversity of Chicago from Puerto Rico last year.The Tribune’s antics nothwithstanding, the fact re¬mains that the proposed constitution is a genuinely news¬worthy commodity. We ourselves see a need for such adocument, although we realize that it is probably destinedto remain of purely academic interest for many years tocome. But it may give thinking people something to shootfor, and that, we think, is good.m * *Rah-Rah, Northwestern! .Northwestern university’s football team lost to NotreDame by only seven points—one touchdown—last Satur¬day, and the students at Evanston are no doubt proud ofthe Wildcats’ showing. While they are able to wax ecsta¬tic over their- gridiron showing, it appears to us thatNorthwestern students were guilty of extreme shortsighted¬ness last week in a more important matter than athleticendeavor. For last Thursday the Student Governmentboard voted, 9-5, not to affilate with the National Studentassociation. (University of Chicago students approvedaffiliation in the organization by a nine to one ratio inthe October election.)The student governing body decided not to affiliatefor the following announced reasons: (1) NSA is not yeta workable organization. (2) It will not, in the opinion ofthe committee, do Northwestern any good. (3) A decisionnow does not mean Northwestern will never be able toaffiliate.The Daily Northwestern also thought the schoolshould not affiliate, but for a different reason. “We can’tjoin without finances, or without depriving the studentsof vital campus functions,” said the lead editorial in Fri¬day’s paper.A letter from a student printed in this same issue hadtliis to say about the committee’s three reasons for reject¬ing affiliation: (1) “If all the universities in this countrytake this attitude, NSA will not be a workable organiza¬tion. It cannot be workable unless every university is .will¬ ing to work. (2) It U an organisa¬tion formed to deal with problem.snot Northwestern problems, ifnothing else, NSA can wake upstudents to the fact that the worldis in a mess and needs intelligentleadership. (3) Does this meanthat if the other universities arewilling to put over NSA, North¬western will condescend to join’That sounds like the typicalNorthwestern attitude.”It appeared from the campusdiscussion of NSA that many stu¬dents feared that NSA was Com¬munist-dominated, despite the de¬nial from Northwestern delegate*to the Madison convention thatthis wasn’t true. Dawn Clsurk, oneof these delegates, stated: ‘‘Wehad heard a lot about ‘Commun¬ist domination’ of the organiza¬tional meeting. We also realizedthat we rejwresented a conservativeschool. So we took it easy at first.But before the week was over, wefound ourselves believing in itwhole-heartedly.”Intent on the coming footballgame with Notre Dame howeverthe students couldn’t be ralliedbehind NSA. Yes, Northwesternstudents are on the ball. They arebusy learning the new dance stepsand fathoming the intricicies ofthe T-formation. The eiom bomb’Pooh, what’s that. HVJl to thee,O Wildcats, and majC you havebigger and better footpall teams.-4^.Tempest' Try-Outs HeldBy University TheatreTry-outs were held yesterday forthe Tempest, University Theatre’snext production.Try-outs will again be held at4:30 and 7:30 today in ReynoldsClub theatre.All University members are eli¬gible.ROOMS FOR urn STlIDEiWSI HAVE A NUMBER OF ROOMS for one, two ot threestudents in a locality adjacent to the campus. The build¬ing is being completely renovated and remodeled andkitchen facilities are being installed for the benefit of thestudents. New plumbing fixtures have been installed andeach room will be equipped with a wash basin. New fur¬niture has been purchased including Hollywood beds. Theprice for rooms ranges from Five to Seven Dollars. Ad¬dress: 6037 South Woodlawn (a few hundred yards southof Ida Noyes Hall). Published every Tuesday and Fri¬day during the academic year, exceptduring examination periods by THECHICAGO MAROON, an Independentstudent organization of the Univer¬sity of Chicago.CO-EDITORS:Lawrence H. BerlinMilton R. MoskowitzBUSINESS MANAGER:James E. BarnettMANAGING EDITOR:Ed EngbergASSOCIATE BUSINESSMANAGER:Melvin LackeyLlIVCOLX MERCURYIN HYDE PARKSpecializing In Ford ProductsWE SERVICE AlVll REPAIRALL MAKES OF ALTOS' SIMONIZERODY AND FENDER WORKFactory Trained mechanic*LAKE PARK MOTORS, inc. 5601 HARPER AVE.S. TAUBER, President • ' E. KAPLAN, Treasurer....Tuesday# IS, 1^7 THE CHICAGO MAROON F«f« 7THE PALETTEby JOHN FORWALTERThe 58th Annual Exhibition ofthe Art Institute, composed of ab¬stract and surrealist art, is a closerunner-up to the ekrly 1945 Mu¬seum of Modern Art Exhibition.The N. Y. exhibition of abstractsrt was chosen from both Euro¬pean and American sources andthe current show from this coun-ti-y only, but the latter’s excellenceleaves little real regret for therari-owing of the field. Thereshould be no doubt after this showthat American abstractions cancompete in the* field.This show has reminded not afew of the armory show of 1913,which was a declaratory exhibi¬tion. The present exhibition maywell be another such milestoneand reflect much credit on thecurators of the museum who per¬sonally selected the entries afterextensive forays over the coun¬try—Katherine Kuh and WalterSweet are to be much commendedfor this work. Of the 256 pieces—230 paintings and 26 pieces ofsculpture—there is little of the“filler” which one normally findsIn an exhibition.Prises AwardedThe first prize went to Rico Le¬brun for an oil painting. VerticalComposition, the rewards beingthe Harris Silver medal and $500,a.s the picture was not availablefor purchase. Bigger money wentto the second place winner, Wil¬liam Baziotes, for his Cyclops,which was purchased by the $750award. Third prize, $750, went toEugene Berman for an oil, Bella\eneiia.Of these prizes, awarded by adistinguished jury, many wouldagree wholeheartedly with thejudges. However, after having seenseveral of William Baziotes’ works,I am afraid the award was made tothe painter and not his painting;there were a number of betterpaintings in the show. The BellaVenezia was well selected. The firstprize probably presented a problemof narrowing the choice down fromamong a number of peers, so onecannot quarrel with that.Among the pictures which oneshould not miss when he sees theshow, are: 25. by Peter Blume;87. by Lee Gatch; 98. Black Wavesby Morris Graves, winner of a $300award; 103. by George Groz; 106.bv Leah Rinne Hamilton; 124.sculpture by Foster Jewell; 126. byWalter Kamys; 150. by Ezio Mar-tinelli; Tragedy of Hamlet byKeith Martin, winner of $600prize; 159. by Knud Merrild; hon¬orable mention; 179. by I. RicePereira; 189 by Abraham Rattner;IPl. by Edna Riendel; and 194. byliopez Rey.Spectre of Kitty Hawk by Theo¬dore Roszak, winner of $500 awardand his oil, Opposition Within aCircle, were both fine pieces. Oth¬ers are: 211. by Kurt Seligman;234. by Yves Tanguy; 250. by Ru¬dolph Weisenborn; and 256. byKarl Zerbe.The judges awarded prizes <nototherwise mentioned) to Alexan-Films on Davis Cup,Social Doncing PlannedTennis and social dancing filmswill be showii in the East Loungeof Ida Noyes tomorrow and Thurs¬day.On Wednesday films of the 1947Davis Cup tennis matches W'ill beshown at 10:30, 12:30, 1:30, 2:30and 4:30.Thursday’s film, an instruc¬tional color film on ballroom danc-irig. was made by five couples oflast year’s Social Dance Club.Showings wUl be at 3:30 and4^30 p.m.Admission is free. der Calder for his mobile sculp¬ture, to Attilio Salemme for hisoil. The Astronomical Experiment;to Boris Marge for Sanctuary, anoil, to Harry Bertoia for SilentColors, an oil, to Serge Chermayefffor his oil. New York No. 2; toRichard Koppe for his tempera.Floating Wires; and to Harry C.Fockler for a watercolor, Hiro¬shima.This is a show which one shouldnot miss. It is worth an afternoondowntown.Many will be interested in therecent translation of Wassily Kan¬dinsky’s book. Point and Line toPlane, 1947, Cranbrook Press,$4 50. This is in the field of visualfundamentals, such as Kandinskytaught in the Bauhaus. Hutchins... Prof. McKeon DiscussesWork With Gilson, Laski,On Philosophic GroupConcert Time HasPiano RecitalIrene Schreir will gfVe a pianorecital at 4. p.m. tomorrow in theweekly Concert-Time program inthe Reynolds Club.The daughter of Edith Jonas,well known European concert pi¬anist, Miss Schreir was bom inVienna and studied music widelyin Europe.Now attending Roosevelt Col¬lege, she is studying under Leon¬ard Shur and Oswald Jonas. Shewas “discovered” by Gerhard Kra¬mer, college student in Meadhouse, who wrote to the StudentUnion music department abouther and suggested portions of herprogram.Three LettermenReturn to Sabers'Three lettermen, Arthur Cohen,Donald Thompson, and LeonStrauss, are ^ returning to sabersquad practice for the fencingseason aiiich begins in January.Last year the team took secondplace in the national collegiatemeet, and in the NCAA, won morebouts than all Big 9 teams com¬bined.Cohen, a member of the 1948Olympic saber team, took secondin midwest foil and saber ama¬teur competition, and fifth in thenational collegiate saber meet.Strauss placed second in the na¬tional collegiate epee, and fourthin the foil competitions. He andThompson placed in open sabermeets.Alvar B. Hermanson. fencing in¬structor, urges all men interestedto come out for fencing squadpractice held every afternoon atBartlett gym from 3:30 to 5:30p.m. (Continued from page 1)nies and dependencies. To estab¬lish agencies which would developnatural resources and elevatephysical and intellectual stand¬ards anywhere. To coin money,control credit, and administer aworld bank. To organize and di¬rect the use of the world armywhich would supplant all nationalarmies . .“The bill of rights,” accordingto the Tribune, “appears to be acombination of Franklin D. Roose¬velt and Karl Marx rather thananything taken from the UnitedStates constitution. It con^insa paraphrase of the Marxiandogma, ‘from each according tohis abilities; to each accordingto his needs,’ which the PinssianSocialiS't held out(as the ultimategoal of Communism.”Committee Publishes MagazineFor four months the committeehas been publishing a magazine“Common Cause” which is thename of an older publication or¬ganized by Mrs. Natalie WalesPaine in New York City last Janu-_ary and which has been published,again according to tne Tribune,“to combat communism, fascism,and other totalitarian doctrinesand support red-white-and-blueAmericanism as practiced byThomas Jefferson.”No RelationMrs. Paine recently disclaimedany connection between the twopublications. “In the first issueof this (Hutchins Committee)magazine,” said Mrs Paine, “anattitude is expressed towardAmerica and democracy on onehand, and Soviet Russia andcommunism on the other, whichis completely at variance with thestated principles and measures tosupport them advocated by Com¬mon Sense Inc.”The article went on at greatlength to relate and interpret themechanics of the committee alongwith meeting places, personalitiesinvolved and implications endan¬gering Tribune Americanism. By RICHARD RANSEENRichard McKeon, distinguished service humanities pro¬fessor, spent eight weeks in Europe this past summer, work¬ing in four important capacities for UNESCO and the U. S.State Department.Rassion Film ScheduledFor Showing TonightThe Documentary FilmGroup will show the Russianfilm, THE MAN WiiH THEGUN, in Social Science 122,'at 7:15 and 9:15 tonightMusic was especially com¬posed for this film by Sho-stakovitch.The film tells the story ofa Russian soldier who iscaught in the revolution of1917 and encounters Leninand Stalin. ^ Late in June, McKeon flew toParis to accept appointment to acommittee of experts to assistUNESCO. In addition he was theonly American member of an im¬portant UNESCO group, the Com¬mittee on Philosophic Bases forthe Declaration of Human Rights.'This Committee assisted the U.N.Commission on Human Rights,now' developing an internationalBill of Human Rights. McKeonw orked with Etienne Gilson,French philosopher, and E. H. Carrand Harold Laski, British politicalwriters.Notable Men PolledThe Committee distributed ques¬tionnaires to notable men all overthe world, in order to get the im¬pressions of their philosophical,historical, and social backgroundsand viewpoints.Replies were received from Mo-andas Ghandi, Alfred Weber,German philosopher (brother ofthe late Max Weber, sociologist),Benedetto Groce, Italian philos¬opher, Arthur H. Compton, Nobelprize winner while at the Univer¬sity of Chicago, and tluee men (»'vthe University of Chicago staff:Ralph Gerard, department ofphysiology; Quincy Wright, pro¬fessor of international lajv, andCharles E. Merriam, professoremeritus of political science.The Committee used these twoquestions as the. basis of theirstudies;“Have tlie concepts of the classi¬cal declarationsF of human rightschanged since they were first con¬ceived in the 18th century; howhave cultures been affected by theoriginal declarations, and by sub¬sequent changes in their ownvalues?”Second, “How do the new ‘rights’ which man has establish-,ed within recent times conflict is¬sues or contradict each other; howmay all these differences be har¬monized?”McKeon’s Committee on Philo¬sophic Bases hopes to resolvemany baffling intellectual prob¬lems that have, at times, dividedthe U.N. With solutions to theseproblems understood and agreedupon by member nations, the morepractical political operations ofthe U.N. will be made easier.Two More JobsWhile McKeon was s6ll in Paris,Milton Eisenhower, U.S. represen¬tative on UNESCO’s ExecutiveBoard, asked McKeon to act in hisplace. This Board has charge ofthe program of action, and duringMcKeon’s term, they planned theprogram and budget for 1948.In addition, McKeon was at¬tached to the Paris Embassy, act¬ing as Counselor on UNESCO af¬fairs for the State Department. Hewas liaison between UNESCO andthe State Department, directingthe flow of information betweenthe two, and helping to furtherUNESCO’s program.Before returning, McKeon madea survey of the universities inAiperican-occupied Germany forthe U.S. Military Government. Hissurvey included suggestions forAmerican aid to these universities.McKeon’s belief in the worthand strength of the United Nationsmay be expressed with two state¬ments from the preamble toUNESCO’s constitution: “Sincewars begin in the minds of men, itis in the minds of men that the de¬fenses of peace must be construct¬ed .. . the peace . . . must befounded, if it is not to fail, uponthe intellectual and moral solidar¬ity of mankind.”WE FIT THE HARD-TO-FITFactory Outlet Shoe StoreHAND-TUKNED, MADENATIONALLY ADVERTISED WOMEN'S SHOES1521 E. 55TH STREET FAIRFAX 7654A glamour portraittor Christmas?You bet!Art FrazinStudioBUT. 56151352 E. 53rd St. Permit us to wax rather oralOn the charms of a ladynamed Coral.She can steal any swainFrom Tacoma to Maine^So give heedy we implore^ tothis moral:ALWAYS WEAR HOSIERYFULL-FASHIONED It says, "FOR THE GIRL IN THEpiSee them at Marshall Field • Carson-Plrle-Scott # Wleboldt’sFro kotklit: “WAIDIOBE TKiCKS'*. Rriti Jitf| Boiil. lie., Dipt N, 1375 Brsadway, NiiiUrh IBTHE CHICAGO MAROON Tuesday, November 18, 1947Not So Wild A DreamWhew! Saved again.If it weren’t for our benefactors in the Tribune Tower,the University would have gone to pot long ago. Our“sometime chancellor of the University, who frequentlytakes off on world saving jobs not connected with educa¬tion at the Midway,” should stay at home within the con¬fines of academic life and not go beating around as if hehad a responsibility to fulfill.With the. objectivity typical of the Tribune, FrankHughes, a Tribune staff writer, has forewarned the worldof a real threat to “red-whit-e-and-blue democracy as prac¬ticed by Thomas Jefferson.”We find it extremely difficult to ridicule the Tribunetime after time with tongue in cheek, because frankly theirpolicies and prostitution of news Values are making usdamn mad.Most of the story concerning the Hutchins committeewas taken up with nonsensical interpretations of twistedfact material. Laying bare the facts would probably nothave taken up the space alloted to it on the front page.As it was, the story was “jumped” from page one to page14, to page 15, to page 16 and thence to page 17.Best of all was the series of thumbnail sketches, ap¬parently designed to acquaine Tribune readers with the in¬famous personalities involved. Following are some ex¬cerpts:G. A. Borgese is listed in congressional reports as sponsor of theAmerican C(Mnmittee to Save Refugees, one of a network of refugeecommittees stemming frmn the communist medical bureau connectedwith the Spanish civil war fi onts.He was president of the League of American Writers, which num¬bered such stalwarts as Upton Sinclair, Donald Ogden Stewart, RexStout, and Langston Hughes, and was for ‘Writers who have clearlyindicated their sympathy with the revolutionary cause’.* • *Hutchins’ most notorious connection was his service on the ad¬visory council of the Moscow State university, summer session, 1935.. • • *Mortimer J. Adler is another radical who was reported to have said•*we must do everything we can to abolish the ukited States.”, James T. Farrell, in his book, The Frightened Philistines, gavethis ^timate of Adler: ‘‘Every time I see the name of Mortimer J. Adiler I am reminded of a remark Samuel Johnson made about an 18 thentury poet. ‘He was dull in a new way and made many thing himgreat.’ As a contemporary obscurantist and obfuscator, Mortimer J.Adler bows to no one—not even to Waldo Frank. He writes with apomposity that s<Mne people mistake for profundity; his scholarshipis superficial; and, althugh he is fond of using the word logis, hisreasoning is weak, even shabby.”Rexford Guy Tugwell wa.s raised from an obscure professorshipPAUSE FOR COKEHELPS MOTORISTSDRIVE REFRESHEOPLEASE retumempty bottles promptly S at Columbia university to a dominant place in the New Deal by thelate Franklin D. Roosevelt. As undersecretary of agriculture he wasthe manipulator behind Henry A. Wallace’s radical agriculturalschemes at the time of the ‘‘slaughter of the million little pigs.”One of his most famous quotations is that ‘‘business will logicallybe required to disappear” in the new social order the New Dealerswere forming. He made a trip to Soviet Russia and came back full ofnew ideas for state planning patterned on the Communist Gosplan,some of which he was able to put over in the early days of the NewDeal.Tugwell has written several books on socialist planning and onSoviet Russia and in his tenure as governor general of Puerto Ricointroduced socialist planning and state-operated factories to the un-enthusiastic citizens of that American dependency. He came to theUniversity of Chicago from Puerto Rico last year.The Tribune’s antics nothwithstanding, the fact re¬mains that the proposed constitution is a genuinely news¬worthy commodity. We ourselves see a need for such adocument, although we realize that it is probably destinedto remain of purely academic interest for many years tocome. But it may give thinking people something to shootfor, and that, we think, is good.* * *Rah-Rah, Northwestern! .Northwestern university’s football team lost to NotreDame by only seven points—one touchdown—last Satur¬day, and the students at Evanston are no doubt proud ofthe Wildcats’ showing. While they are able to wax ecsta¬tic over their gridiron showing, it appears to us thatNorthwestern students were guilty of extreme shortsighted¬ness last week in a more important matter than athleticendeavor. For last Thursday the Student Governmentboard voted, 9-5, not to affilate with the National Studentassociation. (University of Chicago students approvedaffiliation in the organization by a nine to one ratio inthe October election.)The student governing body decided not to affiliatefor the following announced reasons: (1) NSA is not yeta workable organization. (2) It will not, in the opinion ofth*e committee, do Northwestern any good. (3) A decisionnow does not mean Northwestern will never be able toaffiliate.The Daily Northwestern also thought the schoolshould not affiliate, but for a different reason. “We can’tjoin without finances, or without depriving the studentsof vital campus functions,” said the lead editorial in Fri¬day’s paper.A letter from a student printed in this same issue hadtliis to say about the committee’s three reasons for reject¬ing affiliation: (1) “If all the universities in this countrytake this attitude, NSA will not be a workable organiza¬tion. It cannot be workable unless every university is will-mm FOR mm studentsI HAVE A NUMBER OF ROOMS for one, two of threestudents in a locality adjacent to the campus. The build¬ing is being completely renovated and remodeled andkitchen facilities are being installed for the ber^fit of thestudents. New plumbing fixtures have been installed andeach room will be equipped with a wash bosin. New fur¬niture has been purchased including Hollywood beds. Theprice for rooms ranges from Five to Seven Dollars. Ad¬dress: 6037 South Woodlawn (a few hundred yards southof Ida Noyes Hall). ing to work. (2) It ig an organiza¬tion formed to deal with problemsnot Northwestern problems, itnothing else, NSA can wake upstudents to the fact that the worldis in a mess and needs intelligentleadership. (3) Does this meanthat if the other universities arewilling to put over NSA, North¬western will condescend to join?That sounds like the typicalNorthwestern attitude.”It appeared from the campu.sdiscussion of NSA that many stu¬dents feared that NSA was Com¬munist-dominated, despite the de¬nial from Northwestern delegate*to the Madison convention thatthis wasn’t true. Dawn Clark, oneof these delegates, stated: ‘‘Wenad heard a lot about ‘Commun¬ist domination’ of the organiza¬tional meeting. We also realizedthat we reiwresented a conservativeschool. So we took it easy at first.But before the week was over, wefound ourselves believing in itwhole-heartedly.”Intent on the coming footballgame with Notre Dame however,the students couldn’t be ralliedbehind NSA. Yes, Northwesternstudents are on the ball. They arebusy learning the new dance stepsand fathoming the intricicies ofthe T-formation. The atom bomb’Pooh, what’s that. Hail to thee,O Wildcats, and may you havebigger and better football teams.Tempest' Try-Outs HeldBy University TheatreTry-outs were held yesterday forthe Tempest, University Theatre’snext production.Try-outs will again be held at4:30 and 7:30 today in ReynoldsClub theatre.All University members are eli¬gible.Published every Tuesday and Fri¬day during ihe academic year, exceptduring examinatiCMi periods by THECHICAGO MAROON, an independentstudent organization of the Univer¬sity of Chicago.CO-EDITORS:Lawrence H. BerlinMilton R. MoskowitzBUSINESS MANAGER:James E. BarnettMANAGING EDITOR:Ed EngbergASSOCIATE BUSINESSMANAGER:Melvin Lackey•OTTLED UNDER AOTHORfTY Of TMe rrv** lYCHICAGO COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY, -ca-Colo Company LINCOLN MERCURYIN HYDE PARKSpecializing In Ford ProductsWE SERVICE ANR REPAIRALL MAKES OF AtJTOS' SIMONIZERODY AND FENDER WORKFactory Trained mechanicsLAKE PARK MOTORS, me. 5601 HARPER AVE.S. TAUBER, President • E. KAPLAN, Treasurer..Tuesday* Haveiwber IS* 1947 THE CHICAGO MAROON Fate 7THE PALEHEBY JOHN FORWALTERThe 58th Annual Exhibition ofthe Art Institute, composed of ab¬stract and surrealist art, is a closerunner-up to the ekrly 1945 Mu¬seum of Modern Art Exhibition.7’he N. y. exhibition of abstractart was chosen from both Euro¬pean and American sources andthe current show from this coun¬try only, but the latter’s excellenceleaves little real regret for thenarrowing of the field. Thereshould be no doubt after this showthat American abstractions cancompete in the* field.This show has reminded not afew of the armory show of 1913,which was a declaratory exhibi¬tion. The present exhibition maywell be another such milestoneand reflect much credit on thecurators of the museum wIk) per¬sonally selected the entries afterextensive forays over the coun¬try—Katherine Kuh and WalterSweet are to be much commendedfor this work. Of the 256 pieces—230 paintings and 26 pieces ofsculpture—there is little of the“filler” wh.ch one normally findsin an exhibition.Prizes AwardedThe first prize went to Rico Le¬brun for an oil painting. VerticalComposition, the rewards beingthe Harris Silver medal and $500,as the picture was not availablefor purchase. Bigger money wentto the second place winner, Wil¬liam Baziotes, for his Cyclops,which was purchased by the $750award. Third prize, $750, went toEugene Berman for an oil, Bella\cnezia.Of these prizes, awarded by adistinguished jury, many wouldagree wholeheartedly with thejudges. However, after having seenseveral of William Baziotes’ works,I am afraid the award was made tothe painter and not his painting;there were a number of betterpaintings in the show. The BellaVenezia was well selected. The firstprize probably presented a problemof narrowing the choice down fromamong a number of peers, so onecannot quarrel with that.Among the pictures which oneshould not miss when he sees the.•Oiow, are: 25. by Peter Blume;87. by Lee Gatch; 98. Black Wavesby Morris Graves, winner of a $300award; 103. by Gteorge Groz; 106.by Leah Rinne Hamilton; 124.sculpture by Foster Jewell; 126. byWalter Kamys; 150. by Ezio Mar-tinelli; Tragedy of Hamlet byKeith Martin, winner of $600prize; 159. by Knud Merrild; hon¬orable mention; 179. by I. RicePereira; 189 by Abraham Rattner;IPl. by Edna Riendel; and 194. byIx)pez Rey.Spectre of Kitty Hawk by Theo¬dore Roszak, winner of $500 awardand his oil. Opposition Within aCircle, were both fine pieces. Oth¬ers are: 211. by Kurt Seligman;234. by Yves Tanguy; 250. by Ru-oolph Weisenborn; and 256. byKarl Zerbe.The judges awarded prizes (nototherwise mentioned) to Alexan-Films on Davis Cup,Social Dancing PlannedTennis and social dancing filmswill be shown in the East Loungeof Ida Noyes tomorrow and Thurs¬day.On Wednesday films of the 1947Davis Cup tennis matches W'ill beRhown at 10:30, 12:30, 1:30, 2:30and 4:30.Thursday’s film, an iixstruc-lional color film on ballroom danc-was made by five couples oflast year’s Social Dance Club.Showings wUl be at 3:30 and^•20 p.m.Admission Is free. der Calder for his mobile sculp¬ture, to Attilio Salemme for hisoil. The Astronomical Experiment;to Boris Marge for Sanctuary, anoil, to Harry Bertoia for SilentColors, an oil, to Serge Chermayefffor his oil, New York No. 2; toRichard Koppe for his tempera,Floating Wires; and to Harry C.Fockler for a watercolor, Hiro¬shima.This is a show which one shouldnot miss. It is worth an afternoondowntown.Many will be interested in therecent translation of Wassily Kan¬dinsky’s book. Point and Line toPlane, 1947, Cranbrook Press,$4 50. This is in the field of visualfundamentals, such as Kandinskytaught in the Bauhaus. Hutchins... Prbf. Me Keon DiscussesWork With Gilson, Laski,On Philosophic GroupConcert Time HasPiano RecitalIrene Schreir^will gfve a pianorecital at 4. p.m. tomorrow in theweekly Concert-Time program inthe Reynolds Club.The daughter of Edith Jonas,well known European concert pi¬anist, Miss Schreir was bom inVienna and studied music widelyin Europe.Now attending Roosevelt Col¬lege, she is studying under Leon¬ard Shur and Oswald Jonas. Shewas “discovered” by Gerhard Kra¬mer, college student in Meadhouse, who wrote to the StudentUnion music department abouther and suggested portions of herprogram.Three LeUermenReturn to SabersThree lettermen, Arthur Cohen,Donald Thompson, and LeonStrauss, are, returning to sabersquad practice for the fencingseason w*hich begins in January.Last year the team Uxrfc secondplace in the national collegiatemeet, and in the NCAA, won morebouts than all Big 9 teams com¬bined.Cohen, a member of the 1948Olympic saber team, took secondin midwest foil and saber ama¬teur competition, and fifth in thenational collegiate saber meet.Strauss placed second in the na¬tional collegiate epee, and fourthin the foil competitions. He andThompson placed in open sabermeets.Alvar B. Hermanson, fencing in¬structor, urges all men interestedto come out for fencing squad,practice held every afternoon atBartlett gym from 3:30 to 5:30p.m. (Continued from page 1)nies and dei>endencies. To estab¬lish agencies which would developnatural resources and elevatephysical and intellectual stand¬ards anywhere. To coin money,control credit, and administer aworld bank. To organize and di¬rect the use of the world armywhich would supplant all nationalarmies ...”“The bill of rights,” accordingto the Tribune, “appears to be acombination of Frankhn D. Roose¬velt and Karl Marx rather thananything taken from the UnitedStates constitution. It con^insa paraphrase of the Marxiandogma, ‘from each according tohis abilities; to each accordingto his needs,’ which the PnissianSocialiS't held out( as the ultimategoal of Communism.”Committee Publishes MagazineFor four months the committeehas been publishing a magazine“Common Cause” which is thename of an older publication or¬ganized by Mrs. Natalie WalesPaine in New York City last Janu-_ary and which has been pubMshed,again according to tne Tribune,“to combat communism, fascism,and other totalitarian doctrinesand support red-white-and-blueAmericanism as practiced byThomas Jefferson.”No RelationMrs. Paine recently disclaimedany connection between the twopublications. “In the first issueof this (Hutchins Committee)magazine,” said Mrs Paine, “anattitude is expres.sed towardAmerica and democracy on onehand, and Soviet Russia andcommunism on the other, whichis completely at variance with thestated principles and measures tosupport them advocated by Com¬mon Sense Inc.”The article went on at greatlength to relate and interpret themechanics of the committee alongwith meeting places, personalitiesinvolved and implications endan¬gering Tribune Americanism. By RICHARD RANSEENRichard McKeon, distinguished service humanities pro¬fessor, spent eight weefes in Europe this past summer, work¬ing in four important capacities for UNESCO and the U. S.State Department.Late in June, McKeon flew to ‘rights’ which man has establish-,Paris to accept appointment to a within recent times conflict is-committee of experts to assist or contradict each other; howUNESCO. In addition he was the *^ay all these differences be har-only American member of an im¬portant UNESCO group, the Com- monized?”McKeon’s Committee on Philo-mittee on Philosophic Bases for sophic Bases hopes to resolvethe Declaration of Human Rights, many baffling intellectual prob-'This Committee assisted the U.N. lems that have, at times, dividedCommission on Human Rights, the U.N. With solutions to thesenow' developing an international problems understood and agreedBill of Human Rights. McKeon upon by member nations, the morew orked with Etienne Gilson, practical political operations ofFrench philosopher, and E. H. Carr the U.N. will be made easier,and Harold Laski, British p>olitical Xwo More Jobswriters. While McKeon was sfill in Paris,Notable Men Polled Milton Eisenhower, U.S. represen-The Committee distributed ques- tative on UNESCO’s Executivetionnaires to notable men all over Board, asked McKeon to act in histhe world, in order to get the im- place. This Board has charge ofpressions of their philosophical, the program of action, and duringhistorical, and social backgrounds McKeon’s term, they planned theand viewpoints. program and budget for 1948.Replies were received from Mo- addition, McKeon was at-andas Ghandi, Alfred Weber, t^'Ched to the Paris Embassy, act-German philosopher (brother of Counselor on UNESCO af-the late Max Weber, sociologist), for the State Department. HeBenedetto Groce, Italian philos- liaison between UNESCO andopher, Arthur H. Compton, Nobel State Department, directingprize winner while at the Unlver- flow of information betweensity of Chicago, and three men on two, and helping to furtherthe University of Chicago staff: UNES(X)’s program.Ralph Gerard, department ofphysiology; Quincy Wright, pro Before returning, McKeon madea survey of the universities inemeritus of political .xience.The Committee used these twoquestions as the basis of theirstudies:Rassion Film ScheduledFor Showing TonightThe Documentary FilmGroup will show the Russianfilm, THE MAN WITH THEGUN, in Social Science 122,'at 7:15 and 9:15 tonight.Music was especially com¬posed for this film by Sho-stakovitch.'The film tells the story ofa Russian soldier who iscaught in the revolution of1917 and encounters Leninand Stalin. lessor of international law, and Aiperican-occupied Germany forCharles E. Merriam, professor Military Government. Hissurvey included suggestions forAmerican aid to these universities.McKeon’s belief in the worthand strength of the United Nationsmay be expressed with two state-“Have the concepts of the classi- ments frwn the preamble tocal declarations of human rights UNESCO’s constitution: “Sincechanged since they were first con- ^ars begin in the minds of men, itceived in the 18th century; how is in the minds of men that the de-have cultures been affected by the fenses of peace must be construct-original declarations, and by sub¬sequent changes in theirvalues?” ed . . . the peace . . . must beown founded, if it is not to fail, uponthe intellectual and moral solidar-Second, “How do the new ity of mankind.”WE FIT THE HARD-TO-FIT\Factory Outlet Shoe StoreHAND-TURNED, BENCH MADENATIONALLY ADVERTISED WOMEN'S SHOES1521 E. 55TH STREET FAIRFAX 7654A glamour portraitfor Chriatmas?You bet!Art FrazinStudioBUT. 56151352 E. 53rd St. ALWAYS WEAR HOSIERY- Permit us to wax rather oralOn the charms of a ladynamed Coral.She can steal any swainFrom Tacoma to Maine^' So gipe heed^ we implore^ tothis moral:FULL-FASHIONED It says, "FOR THE GIRL IN THESee them at Ifarshall Field • Carson-Plrie-Scott # Wleboldt’sFni koaklit: “WAIDIOBE TUCKS”. Writ! My Biif. Ik., Dipl N, 1375 Breutvay. HtwIoA IBais so muchbetter to smokemorris offers the smoker ^in no other cigarette. For PhilONE, the ONLY cigarette recog-nd throat specialists asbenefit foundMorris is thenized by leading nose aidefinitely less irritatingRemember: Less irritation means mtissmoking enjoyment for yojL _Yes' If every smoker knew what Philipknow, they’d ALL change toMorris smokersPHILIP MORRISfoge 8 THE CHICAGO MAKOON Tuesday, Noyember 18, I947Activities Program Good; [facilities PoorChicago Unusual WithIts Student'Run ProgramBy MICHAEL WEINBERGPresident of Student UnionThe University of Chicago, in relation to the size andinterests of its student body, has one of the largest andmost comprehensive recreational programs in the country.This is the conclusion of a preliminary study carriedon by the Student Union board. Student Union has care¬fully compared the recreational activities of this and othercampuses, and found the U. of C suffering little by suchcomparison.Concentrating specifically on the Union activities are actually plan-programs of the Student Union ned, scheduled and run by stu-Board here and elsewhere, the dents. Although Student Union hassurprising conclusion was reached two faculty advisers, all of the ac-that, without a Student Union tual activities work is conductedbuilding, as large a program of by volunteer student aid, number-activities is presented here as at ing at present more than 150 peo-many of the larger unions around pie.the country.This is unusual not only in view While activities on this campusmay be numerous and diverse, itof the lack of a building devoted is still very important that theyto social purposes, but also be- are rather badly inter-related andcause of the lack of a paid and suffer from incomplete and oftencontinuous Student Union staff, obsolete facilities. Student UnionChicago may be the only campus carries on a constantly expandingIn the country in which Student program of providing what activi¬ ties are not present, and workingwith other groups on campus toput on “bigger and better” activi¬ties than could be handled separ¬ately. This program in some wayalleviates the conflicts and dupli¬cations so omnipresent at Chi¬cago.Facilities NeededThe facilities problem is a hard¬er one to solve, and resolvesaround the increasingly clear needfor a Union building, or great ex¬pansion of the facilities now exis¬tent in Ida Noyes hall and theReynolds club. Chancellor Hutch¬ins stated in 1940 that the recog¬nized student organizations on thecampus “are putting a seriousstrain on the facilities of the Uni¬versity.” The situation has cer¬tainly not been improved sincethen.Some facilities needed on cam¬pus are: more student organiza¬tion offices, bedrooms for visitingguests of the University, largerarts and crafts provisions, musiclistening rooms, a browsing library,gallery for changable wall exhibits,and a small, well-equipF>ed theaterwith a projection booth. Other fa¬cilities might be: outing equip¬ment, locker and bag lunch eat ing rooms (for off-campus stu¬dents), a dark room, etc.The Student Union board is cur¬rently working on a survey and in¬vestigation to discover just whatcampus recreational needs and fa¬cilities are, and upon completioncf the study a detailed recommen¬dation will be placed before thestudents and Administration.Recreation GaloreWhile the University of Chicagois rather poorly off in services andfacilities, facts show that studentsshould have few complaints thatthere are too few social events oncampus. As an example, the Uni¬versities of Minnesota and Wis¬consin have two of the finest Un¬ion buildings in the nation, andyet in terms of utilizatioiTChicagoappears to be ahead. Omitting theprograms of fraternities, officialuniversity lectures, etc., and re¬ligious and political organizations,the week of Nov. 2-8 would appearthus for the three campuses:Sunday: Chicago—S. U. promontorypicnic, discussion of public speaking,afternoon dorm tea dance, Noyes Box,one act comedy “Box and Cox." Min¬nesota—No Program. Wisconsin—Sing,classical recordings, square dance. In¬ternational friendship hour,Monday: Chicago—Talk on racial re¬lations, S. U. Contemporary music lec-HIUP MORRIS ture. Minnesota—Information film u/<.consin—University Forum. ’Tuesday: Chicago—Recorded s iiconcert. Minnesota—Music listeninghour. Wisconsin—Cinema shop sooraidancing.Wednesday: Chicago—Jaz* concert sU. Minnesota—Play, “Importance of iu'ing Earnest.” Wisconsin—Jazz rernr<ihour.^***"i*5?y\^***?*®®—S. U. record con-cert. Table tennis tournament. MinnLsota—Square dance Instruction. the.itor(above). Wisconsin—Coffee hour niaV“The Vagabond King.” ’Friday: Chicago—Renaissance SocietyMusicale, Foster House dance, S U recorded concert. Minnesota—Music listen'ing hour, theater (above), social dance'Wisconsin—Danskeller, dancing to rec¬ords.Saturday: Chicago—S. U. square danceB,-J. college dance, Talley music lec¬ture. Minnesota—Theater Ubove). Wis¬consin—Danskeller with orchestra".Plans OutstandingStudent Union has often statedthat it will attempt any reasonableprogram which students indicatethey wish, so long as such activi¬ties are consistent with its pur¬poses and University regulations.The field Is a big enough one tofurnish the most diverse recrea¬tional interests on campus withgoals, work, and a definite part inan increasingly integrated pro-giam.Some of these diverse interestshave already been apparent to theboard, and as a result studentsmay look to the future for suchpossibilities as dances and specialactivities in conjunction with Var¬sity sports events; an AssociatedPress teletype service to give stu¬dents the latest news; a phono¬graph album of Chicago song.s;tours of the campus and else¬where; special lectures on socialdevelopment; etc. It should bepointed out that the above activi¬ties are proposed, not definite.The Student Union board is con¬tinuing to make plans so thatthese ideas become actualities; al¬though such plans depend to ^great extent upon financial pos.si-bilities, they are mainly deter¬mined by the interest of Chicago’sstudent body, as evidenced in ac¬tive participation on committee.sand attendance at events.Gale AddressesCampus AVCSy Gale, recently elected Chi¬cago area chairman of AVC. andMike Toumy, new area treasurer,addressed members of the cam¬pus AVC chapter at its first meet¬ing in the Ida Nowes theater onThursday night.In connection with their talks,Dave Green announced that 22members of the campus chapterhave volunteered to devote threehours per month to area work.Reports on the recent conven¬tion were made by .Tom Stemau,chapter vice-president; platform,by George Blackwood, doipesticaffairs chairman, and GeorgeCooley, vetei'ans affairs chairmanand newly elected member of thearea executive board; Dave Green,elections, and a report on howdelegates voted.Student Talent SoughtStudents who can sing, dance,play instruments, etc., are invitedto attend Student Union talent au¬ditions to be held this week.Auditions will be held tomorrownight from 7 to 10 p.m., Thursdaynight from 7 to 10 p.m., and Fri¬day afternoon, 3:30 to 5:30 p.m.in the third floor theater of IdaNoyes hall.TRY A PACK .T. TODAY Stony Islond ot 59th St.FountainServiceMidwayHuddleTASTYFOODSteaks • ChopsBarbecue