This Issue . . .What I* Democracy?A letter and an answer fromthe editor. . .Page 5, 6, 7 On'^jCampus.. .I^xclusire Interview withProf. Paul Douglas, Prob¬able Condidote for Senate.Page 4. .University of Chicogo, Friday, Jonuary 9, 1948I NSA GroupTo InvestigateJoining lUSTti6 executive committee of theNational Student Association metin Chicago over the Christmas va¬cation, and the most importantdevelopment^was the naming of afoiir-man committee to go abroadthis summer and investigate theadvantages and disadvantages ofaffiliation with the InternationalUnion of Students.William Birenbaum, of the Uni¬versity of Chicago, was elected toUie committee, and he was theonly one of the four electees whowas chosen on the first ballot.Birenbaum was active in the form¬ing of NSA and narrowly missedbtung elected president of the na¬tional student group at the Sep-iemljer national convention inMadison. Wisconsin.Other members elected to therus committee were: LawrenceJaffa, from the Harvard DivinitvSchool and chairman of the Mas-.sachusetts Regional NSA; MartinMcLaughlin, national Catholicyouth leader from Notre Dame;and Donald Frazier, from the Uni¬versity of Minnesota Law School.Milton Dobkin of Southern Cali¬fornia, and Robert West of Yale,were named as alternates.The four-man group will leavelate in July for either Rangoon,Burma, or Prague, Czechoslovakia.Both of these places are centersof lUS activity. Staying abroadfor about two weeks, the commit¬tee will meet with lUS delegate.sfrom the various nations repre¬sented and make a report on itstrip to the NSA convention nextSeptember. The site of the conven¬tion will be either Chicagd orMadison again.Other steps taken by the NS.\executive committee at its Chicagomeeting were the issuing of invi¬tations to nine prominent educa-tor.s to serve as an Advisory Boardfor NSA and the application forState Department approval of aCulturale to be held at the Uni¬versity of Michigan, and to whichforeign students will be invited.Every region in the country wasrepre.sented on the 35-man execu¬tive committee’s meeting, said Bir-eiibaum, and it was announcedthat 60 of the 361 colleges repre¬.sented at the Madison conventionhave voted to affiliate with NSA. BRITISH SCHOOLS GIVEPLANS FOR U. S. PUPILSInformation about summerschool oportunities in Englandis available in the Office of theDean of Students, Cobb Hall203.The University of Oxford willoffer to graduate students aseries of studies on ‘‘EuropeanCivilization in the TwentiethCentury” from July 2 to August13, 1948.The University of Birming¬ham will hold at Stratford-up¬on-Avon a summer school on‘‘Shakespeare and ElizabethanDrama” from July 3 to August14. The Medical School of theUniversity of Birmingham willoffer a number of courses in¬tended for graduates of Ameri¬can and European universitieswho have had work in appro¬priate fields of science andmedicine. Hutchins Joins Borge FeaturedSeminar GroupOn Deadline Eve At Relief DanceEllington ConcertCancelledTicketsTo Be RefundedThe Duke Ellington concert or¬iginally scheduled for January 17has been canceled, A VC announcedthis week, as the result of an er¬ror by the booking agency.Refunds on all tickets to thecampus concert may be obtainedin the AVC office, room 302 Rey¬nolds club, any afternoon between1 and 5 p.m.The concert was cancelled be-cau.se of previous agreements madeby Ellington with the Civic Opei-aipuse,. where he will appear onJanuary 11, and with the Regaltheater, where he will play nextmonth.The Regal contract provides thatthe theater must approve all otherappearances made by Ellington inthe Chicago area within 60 daysof his concert there.Both the theater and the CivicOpera house refused to sanctionthe concert scheduled by the AVCin Mandel hall, because they be¬lieved the campus show woulddivert patronage from their con¬certs.As the MAROON goes to press,AVC is still negotiating with thebooking agency, and a new Elling¬ton concert may be scheduled forApril, Chancellor Robert Mr. Hutchinshas joined the Preparations Com¬mittee of the University’s SummerSeminar in feurope, as last minuteapplicants hurried to beat tomor¬row’s deadline on applications forthe group.Application forms will be avail¬able at the desk of Mr. Fitzpatrickin Cobb 203 until tomorrow noon.The addition of Hutchins to thealready imposing list of Universityofficials on the Preparations Comrmittee lends additional prestige tothe school’s first venture in over¬seas education.The project offers any studentdoing divisional work an oppor-portunity to investigate problemsof his own choice in Europeancountries. Faculty members willaccompany the group in eachcountry and confer with studentson the progress of their research.The student has the option ofdoing his work for credit, if it isacceptable to his department, buta paper summarizing his findingswill be required of every partici¬pant by the Seminar Committee.It is anticipated that funds willbe raised, either by the Committeeor by the University, to pay trans¬portation expenses to and fromEurope. Personal living expienses inEurope will have to be paid by thestudent.The Preparations Committee,which Hutchins joins, has beenfunctioning for a quarter, securingvisas and shipping space, and liv¬ing accomodations in Europe.Other faculty members on thecommittee are Deans Wright andMcKeon, and Professors HermanFiner, Quincy Wright, and T.Walter Johnson, who has justjoined the group. Topflight piano comedian Victor Borge will lead asparkling parade of prominent artists from downtownnighteries into the spotlight tomorrow night at Inter¬fraternity’s benefit C-Dance for the'World Student ServiceFund—1948’s first campus social event—from nine untilone in Ida Noyes Gym.Fritzie Freund’s 16-piece or¬chestra will also be on hand aaBorge, Danish virtuoso turned key¬board jokester, and fellow enter¬tainers giv^9WSSF’s new all-cam¬pus drive for foreign student re¬lief funds a rousing kickoff.Dance sponsors hope to coaxBorge into his madcap melodyspecialty, “The Blue Danube Up¬side Down” and, according toPauline Mathewson and PaulWeiss, the students responsible forthe arrangements and decorations,there is a chance that Borge willagain demonstrate his “phoneticpronunciation,”Profits from the dance will bedonated by the I-F Council toWSSF. Tickets at one dollar aperson will be sold at tiie door be¬ginning at 8:30.Cod Will Be Subject AtAdler Lecture TonightMortimer J. Adler, professorof philosophy of law in the lawschool will speak on the exist¬ence of God in a public lectureon ‘‘The Great Ideas” at 7:30tonight.The lecture, one of a series ofeight presented to students ofthe Great Books of the ModernWorld, will be held at 32 WestRandolph street under the au¬spices of University College.Moskowitz Elected^Maroon^ EditorMilton R. Moskowitz was electedEditor of the MAROON at an elec¬tion which consumed less than aminute of time Monday afternoon.His nomination was unopposed,and a formal, written ballot wastherefore unnecessary.Moskowitz served as Acting Edi¬tor of the paper for the last threeissues of the autumn quarter. Pre¬viously he had been co-editor withLawrence Berlin. According to thepaper’s constitution, he will re¬main in office for the rest of theacademic year, with elections forthe ’48-’49 sesikon to be held latein the spring quarter.It was somewhat of a meteoric^■ise for Moskowitz, who first en¬tered the Division of Humanitieslast September. He had completedtliree years work at New YorkUniver.sity, where he was Editorm the school’s bi-weekly paper.Appointed as Managing Editor ofMAROON at the start of thentumn quarter, he became co¬ editor following the resignations ofPete Day and Emerson Lynn.Immediately after Monday’smeeting the newly-elected Editorannounced the appointments ofFritz Heiman, Melvin Spat, andDave Broder as Managing Edi¬tors. Other executive posts will befilled by Dave Canter, News Editor.John Stone, Feature Editor, GerryScherba, Rewrite Editor, and Mur-ra^ Harding, Sports Editor.Moskowitz expressed the hopethat the paper’s return to a once-a-week basis this quarter wouldonly be temporary. He plans to or¬ganize a well-trained staff, so thata returp to a bi-weekly schedulewill be possible in the spring.Positions on the MAROONNews, Sports, Copy, and Rewritestaffs are still open, and inter¬ested students should report tothe paperjs offices on the secondfloor of Reynolds club this Mon¬day afternoon after 3 p.m. Meet W. MichiganIn Debate TomorrowNewPlans AnnouncedTomorrow at 2 p.m, the Univer¬sity debate squad will meet thedebaters of Western MichiganCollege in Burton Lounge and inBurton Library in two debates onthe subject: “Resolved: that afederal world government shouldbe established.” The Universitywill be represented by David Ladd,Howard Schuman, Curt Crawfordand Ray Marks. The squad, spon¬sored by the Student Forum, theofficial speech and debate organi¬zation of the University, is but oneof the many teams that participatein the radio broadcasting and var¬sity debate programs of the Stu-(ient Forum, headed by WilliamBirenbaum. »Purdue University was met byanother UC debate squad today inan exhibition debate on FederalWorld Government. James Mul-cahy, Sheldon Stein, Larry Bostowand Hillel Black were participants.On Sunday, the Student Forumwill present a panel discussion be¬fore the Jewish Peoples Instituteon “Palesine, a workshop forWorld Peace” with Ned Chapin,HiUel Black, Ferd Saks, ^MerrillFreed and Sheldon Stein.A radio broadcast over WBEZon “Should German Youth BearWar Guilt” and a debate withUniversity of Illinois Navy Pierdebaters on Federal World Gov¬ernment took place Wednesdayand Thursday.Students interested in partici¬pating in radio broadcasting orvarsity debate should report toMr. Birenbaum in Reynolds Club303. Political UnionAnnouncesScheduleFour meetings of the StudentPolitical Union will be held duringthe winter quarter, at 4 p.m. onalternate Mondays in Classics 10.Next Monday, the topic, “Is UNthe Best Solution for World Gov¬ernment?” will be debated by HansFreistadt, representing the Com¬munist club: Tom Farr, chairmanof the South Side Committee forWorld Government, and WatsonParker, chairman of the Conser¬vative league.The other scheduled'topics are:“Are American Civil Liberties inDanger?” on January 26; “WhatShould Be Done With Germany?”on February 9, and “What RoleShould Labor Play in the 1948Elections?” on February 23.The political organizations par¬ticipating in SPU include the U.of C. Communist club, the Con¬servative league, the Politics club,the International Relations club,the Liberal society, and the Con¬servative club.Each discussion opens withmembers of those groups express¬ing their personal views on thesubject of the day, with generaldiscussion following. All students,regardless of political affiliation,are urged to attend and expresstheir views. cruitedServicecovery”NEW FUND RAISINGCAMPAIGN IS PLANNEDLocal workers are being re¬fer the World StudentFund’s “Road to Re¬fund-raising campaignfor foreign academic relief to takeplace from January 26 to February6, under the direction of a com¬mittee CQ^isisting of Robert Fri-auf, Jeanne Lohman, Kurt Mel-choir, Doris Mersdorf, WilliamParsch, Virgin^ Ryan, DorothyWarshaw, and Pauline Mathewson,co-chairman of last year’s drive.These board members representvarious sponsoring organizations,which include the Calvert Club,the Hillel Foundation, InterchurchCouncil, the National Student As¬sociation, and YWCA.Faculty assistance is being pro¬vided by Eli Shapiro of the Busi¬ness School, Max Rheinstein ofthe Law Faculty and Mrs. DorothyMeredith from the Lab Schools.It is anticipated that dormitor¬ies will be canvassed completely,and that every non-dormitory resi¬dent will receive a written solici¬tation letter, with personal can¬vassing wherever possible.Workers are now urgently need¬ed for the two-week campaign, tohelp in preparation and distribu¬tion of literature, organization of(Continued to Page 11)Delegation To LobbyFor Subsistence IncreaseA delegation of veterans fromthe U. of C. will join other groupsfrom all over the country in Wash¬ington, D. C., on Monday for “Op¬eration Subsistence,” to lobby witliCongress for subsistence increasesunder the GI bill.Campus work on the project hasbeen under a special committeeheaded by George Gaman, Thecommittee has canvassed the pre¬fabs for first-hand informationon living costs, prepared pamph¬lets, and is now raising funds forthe delegation.The drive is a continuation oflast year’s “Operation Subsist¬ence,” which worked to have theRogers bill passed. This year’s U.of C. delegation will include twodelegates sent by -AVC and anyother individuals or groups whichcare to participate. The delegations will lobby forpassage of the Rogers bill, S. 1394,with amendments raising monthlysubsistence allotments to $100 forsingle veterans and $125 for mar¬ried veterans.The Rogers bill, passed unan¬imously by the Senate'of the 8QthCongress, is still pending in theHouse of Representatives. TheMorse ’oill, also providing subsist¬ence raises, died when the Hou.seadjourned last fall without takingaction on it.Contributions are needed to payfor delegates’ transportation toWashington. Bus fare will costabout $25 per delegate. Any per¬sons who wish to make donationaare urged to leave them as soon aspossible at the AVC office on thethird floor of the Reynolds club.W.'>: 1CONTAINSNON-ALCOHOLICLANOLIN!9 AAAIN AND AGAIN the choice of men who putgood grooming first — that’s Wildroot Cream-Oil. No wonder when new users from coast to coastwere questioned, 4 out of 5 who replied said theypreferred it to any other hair tonic they had usedbefore. For generous trial supplyfree, send this ad with your nameand address to Wildroot Co., Inc.Dept. C-1, Buffalo 8, New York.FINGER-NAILTEST?/TRY ITI Scratch your head. If you• find signs of dryness or loose uglydandruff, you need Wildroot Cream-Oilhair tonic. Grooms hair... relieves dry¬ness .. .removes loose dandruff. Containssoothing Lanolin, an oil resembling thenatural oil of your skin.YOUR HAIR CAN LOOK LIKETHIS WITHWILDROOTCREAM-OILCAN YOUR SCALP PASS THEBELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM2 a littli wildroot criam.oil• does a lot for your hair. Keeps itwell groomed all day long. Leaves notrace of that greasy, plastered downlook. Makes your hair look and feel good. One look and you’d say that a great deal ofwork lies ahead before this new telephonecentral office is completed. That’s true. Butalready, much of the job -is done!For months telephone men have beenhard at work—in offices and in the field.One group has carefully studied business andpopulation trends and has forecast the tele¬phone needs of the community for years tocome. Another has determined the amountand types of equipment that will best meetthese needs. Still others have found ways tomake this new equipment a part of our^world-wide communications network.At our Western Electric plants the tele¬phone equipment—the switchboards, framesand switching mechanisms, th6 cable, wireand^relays—has been scheduled and is al¬ready being manufactured.All this ard more before the ground wasbroken!-The telephone business is a constantly ex¬panding business in which thousands ofcollege men are finding interesting and re¬warding careers.There’s a future in telephony.Pate 2 THE CHICAGO MAROONU.ofC. Will ChooseNSA RepresentativesNominations are now open for delegates to the IllinoisRegional assembly of the National Student association, andmost students are eligible for the posts.The regional assembly will meet February 7 and 8 onthe University of Illinois campus at Urbana. Six U. of C.delegates will be elected from the nominees- by StudentCk)veinment. Delegates need notbe SG members, however.Members of the U. of C. delega¬tion to Urbana will serve on panelsto study problems of ^udent gov¬ernments, educational opportuni¬ties, international student affairs,and social and cultural activities.BG will choose delegates on thebasis of interest and knowledgeof one or more of those fields.Qualifications for delegates arethe same as for membership inBG—one quarter of previous resi¬dence on campus, calling at least Garret Speakstwo courses, a minimum average m ^ ■of C, and intention to remain in I O f^OllTlCS VhHJDachool for the rest of the year,. Next FridayNominations may be made by *Any student, and should be turned Emmanuel Garret will addressthe quarter’s first open meetingta to the Student Government of- ^lub next Fridayfice on the third floor of the Rey- 3:30 p.m. in Haskell 108. TopicHolds club as soon as possible. of his talk w’ill be “Is Europe Go-ing Socialist? The Relationshipof Nationalization to the Achieve¬ment of a Free Society.”Now editor of “Labor Action”and member of the National Com¬mittee of the Workers Party, Gar-ADA’s “Operation Registration” rett played an active role in thedrive opened this week with the radical student movement of theenlisting of precinct workers on , , ,^ ^ ^ ^ ^ X Ill 1932 he was a delegate toTuesday and Wednesday at tables Anti-War Congress,In Cobb, Social Science and Ida held at the University of Chicago.Noyes. He was also instrumental inStudents who sign up as pre- Ior**iding the New York StudentLeague and later the NationalIn its February issue, PULSEwill continue its policy ofprinting the best student poetrysubmitted. All students whohave poems of any length intheir possession are urged tosubmit them to PULSE poetryeditor.PULSE also announces thatthe Science-Fiction essay con¬test, announced at the end oflast quarter, is still open. En¬tries should be submitted byJanuary 15. UT Presents"The TempestUniversity Theatre director,George Blair, has announced thatthe program for winter quarterproduction will proceed asplanned. This means that U T. willbegin the new year with a produc¬tion of William Shakespeare’s“The Tempest” in Mandel hall onJan. 30, 31, and February 1The show will be directed byIrwin Weil, the sets designed byChris Rolling. Aristophanes fa¬mous comedy, “Lysistrata.” will bepreseri+d early in March.Jean-Paul Sarte’s “The Flies”will open in Mandtl Hall late inApril. Blair hopes to schedule an¬other show for spring quarter buthas no definite announcement tomake as yet. Show »Shop. U.T.’snew experimental theatre, will re¬main inactive until later in thequarter.Asked to evaluate UniversityTheatre’s progress during thispast year, Blair declared that onthe whole he was encouraged bythe ever-increasing UniversityTheatre aUdience, if displeased bytheir negative attitude. PCA MEETS TODAYTO DISCUSS WALLACEA lively discussion on HenryWallace’s candidacy for presi¬dent is expected at P.C.A.’s firstmeeting of the winter quarter,which is being held this after¬noon at 3:30 in Haskell 108.Election of delegates to thenational convention, committeereports on last quarter’s ac¬tivities, and consideration of aparty to be held sometime inJanuary, are also Included inthe agenda.Club RushingOpens TodayAll women in the third year ofcollege and above will be’ gueststo an Interclub rushing tea thisafternoon from 4-6 in the EastLounge of Ida Noyes Hall. Thetea, sponsored by all women’sclubs on campus involves no obli¬gations but is designed to presentand explain the club system tointerested women and to introduceto the guests the president and afew members of each club.Delta Sigma Party ToniteDelta Sigma will hold an opienparty at the Sigma Chi House,5615 Woodlawn, tonight from 9until 1. Entertainment, dancingand refreshments are on theagenda. A meeting of the MAROONnews staff will be held today at3:30 p.m. in the paper’s offices onthe second floor of Reynolds club,Dave Canter, News Editor, an¬nounced yesterday. Friday, Jonuary 9, I943"Review'' OutNext WeekTHE CHICAGO REVIEW, offi,cial literary quarterly of the Uni¬versity of Chicago, will make itsfirst appearance of the year .short¬ly, it was announced today byMary Zinn, editor.“The Review is being printedby a Milwaukee tirm due to a con¬siderably lower bid offered by «shop there,” Miss Zinn stated,“and because of abnormal teciini-cal errors in the proofs an un¬fortunate delay arose. Howeverour last page proofs are muchmore satisfactory, and I hone toput the Review on sale this com¬ing week.”'The quarterly will feature a newcover design. Some of the high¬lights include a speech made byLouis-Ferdinand Celine which isprefaced by Milton Hindus of thefaculty; the Fiske Prize for Poetrywinner for 1947 by David Coving¬ton Fowler; a poem by Hollywoodactor Vincent Price; poem bv stu¬dent John Forwalter; an essay onE. M. Forster by Reuben Brower;two poems by Gerta Kennedy, andan es.say by Siegmund Levarie ofthe faculty.. Staff members of the Revieware at work on the next issue,parts of which are at the printer,and readers may look for it towardthe end of this quarter.ADA SeeksPrecinct Workerscinct workers have been askedto spend about one and one-halfhours a week in contacting voters,urging them to reg^ter, andchecking on fraudulent registra¬tion. This is the^irst time thatthe latter has been attempted inthis area by an independent po¬litical organization.ADA has not yet endorsed anyspecific candidates for politicaloffice. Official approval of can¬didates can be made only after avote to that effect by a majorityof the membership present at ameeting c«-1-led for the purpose. Student League.The AlbumPhotographer1171 E.~55th St.Mid. 4433 More thanmeets the eye...Page 3JamMry 9, 1947 THE CHICAGO MAROONGreat Books ClassesTwo accelerated sections of theGreat Books in the Modem Worldwill be offered by University Col-Ifgc this winter Cyril O. Houle,dean of University College, hasannounced.The first-year sections, whichhave been organized by popularrequest by persons who'were un¬able to attend fall sessions, willmeet weekly for twelve weeks, and PEKARSKY, SPEAKSAT HILLEL TONIGHTHillel's first Friday Fireside ofthe winter quarters will featureits Director, Rabbi Maurice B.Pekarsky, on “Implications of theJewish State for American Jews”tonight at 8:30 in Hillel House,5715 Woodlawn. Sabbath Serviceis scheduled for 7:45.bi-weekly for the last six meet¬ings.the Coliege ofthe future?At this university you can learn how to smashatoms and how to play the trombone.At this university there's a crime laboratory andone of America's finest symphony orchestras. 'At this university they have raised the PerfectPig and are making startling discoveries incancer resear<;h.% I'At this university you can hear on the radioevery lecture needed for a degree.At this university they’ll tailor-makd any courseyou want — if you need it.At' this university the culture of the present ismore important than the culture of the past.Where is this fabulous place? It’s in the heart ofGopherland. Yes, it’s the famous University ofMinnesota, an incredible and colossal monumentto mass education. Read all about it in a fascina¬ting profile, written by top reporter Collie Smallexclusively in January Cosmopolitan.Also in January CosmopolitanLaura Z. Hobson’s first story since "Gentleman’s Agree¬ment’’ ... A complete novel, "The Long Run" by JeromeWeldman..."What’s Wrong With State Patriotism", byPhilip Wylie and hours of enjoyable reading by MargaretCulkin Banning, Elizabeth .Janeway, Albert Deutsch,Katherine Brush and many others.You*ll Find America’s Greatest Writing inCosmopolitan STUDENTUNIONEVENTSStudent Union Toboggan PartyWeather permitting, the StudentUnion’s Outing Department willsponsor a toboggan party Sundayat Palos Park. Those interested ingoing are asked to meet in frontof Ida Noyes hall at 12:30 p.m.Prom Ida Noyes, the party willgo to 63rd and Halsted to board asuburban bus for Palos Park at1:10 p.m. Round trip fare costs75c.Some hiking and two or threehours of tobogganing are plannedfor the afternoon. Toboggan rentis $1 an hour for 4, 6, or 8 people.The party will return at 7:30.Those who can bring automobilesare asked to do so.SU Ice Skating PartyInstruction and Exhibition byGail Sparks will be featured in to¬night’s ice skating party under thenorth stands of Stagg Field. Theparty, sponsored by Student Un¬ion’s Games Department begins at7.Ice games will be introduced andrefreshments served.Human Development LectureThe second in a series of HumanDevelopment discussions will beheld next Thursday, from 3:30-5, in Ida Noyes East Lounge. DickWorthington and associates fromthe Human Development commit¬tee will lead a discussion on thetopic, "What’s Wrong With So¬cial Life at Chicago?” Exam ScheduleSat., Jan. 10—Admissions Test.Tues., Wed., Jan. 13, 14—General Education Tests.Mon., Jan. 19—Language Reading Examinations for’ Higher Degree*:In the Division of the Humanities, in the Schools, in the Divisionof the Phy.sical Sciences.Mon., Jan, 19—Reading Examination in Spanish: In the Division ofthe Social Sciences.Sat., Jan. 24—Admissions Test.Mon., Jan. 26—Reading Examination In German: In the Division ofthe Social Sciences, in thp Division of the Biological Sciences.Sat., Jan. 24—Admissions Test.Mon., Jan. 26—Reading Examination in German: In the Division ofthe Social Sciences, in the Division of the Biological Sciences.Mon., Feb. 2—Reading Examination in French: In the Division of theSocial Sciences, in the Division of the Biological Sciences.Mon., Feb. 2—Language Reading Examinations for Higher Degrees:In the Division of the Humanities, in the Schools, in the Divisionof the Physical SciencesSat., Feb. 14—Admissions Test.Mon., Tues,, Feb. 16, 17—Entrance and General Education Examina¬tions in Centers.Tues., Wed., Feb. 10, 11—General Education Tests.Mon.-Fri,, Feb. 23-27: Examination for Bachelor’s and Master’s De¬grees: In the Division of the Social Sciences*, in the Division ofthe Humanities*.Sat., Pcb. 28—Admissions Test.Mon., Mar. 1—Language Reading Examinations for Higher Degrees;In the Division of the Humanities, in the Schools, in 'the Divisionof the Physical Sciences.Tues., Thurs., Mar. 2 and 4—School of Business Examinations II*.Tues., Wed., Mar. 9 and 10—General Education Tests,'Thurs., Mar. 11—Humanities I Special Art.Thurs,, Mar. 11—Humanities I Special Music.Pri., Mar. 12—English I Qualifying Test.Sat.^ Mar. 13—Admissions Test.Tues., Mar. 16—Language I Comprehensive Examination.Tues. and Thurs., Mar. 16, 18—School of Business Examination I*.Sat., Mar. 27—Admissions Test.SU Noyes BoxFeatured at this Sunday’s NoyesBox will be a five piece band andintermission entertainment pro¬vided by the Campus Talent Com¬mittee of Student Union. Thefloorshow at 9:30 will includeArnie Horwitch andCJo. mimickingDanny Kaye and the Andrews Sis¬ters, Nat Eek. Ballet satirist, andDick Boubelik, pianist> Earl Kama-25on will M.C. the show.Noyes Box hours are from 7 to11 in the Cloister Club of Ida Noyeshall. Snacks are available. *Offered if there is a sufficient number of registrations to justify theexaminer in giving that examination.Registration for an examination for the Master’s Degree inthe Humanities and the Social Sciences, the Bachelor’s Degree, orfor the completion of the College requirements must be made inthe Office of Test Administration, Lexington hall, Room No. 5, atthe beginning of the quarter in which the student expects to takethe examination.1!l h Rne’sLuncheons from 50cDinners from 70cSandwiches1606 East 55th St.FAIrfax 5553Closed Wednesdays University ConcertsThis QuarterTuesday, 27 January, at 8:30 p.m.Gullet Quartet: Beethoven, Quartet in E. Flat Major, Opus 74;Bartok, Quartet No. 4; Mozart, Quartet in C Major, K. 465.Tuesday, 10 February, at 8;3C p.m.Isaac Stern, violin: Bach, Sonata in G Minor: Reizenstein, Pro¬logue, Variations and Finale; Copland, Sonata; Brahms, Sonatain D Minor, Opus 108.Tuesday, 17 February, at 8:30 p.m.Roth Quartet: Borodin. Quartet in D Major, No, 2; Bartok,Quartet No. 1; Beethoven, Quartet in F Minor, Opus 95.Tuesday, 2 March, at 8:30 p.m.Eva Heinitz, viola da gamba; Dorothy Lane, harpsichord; Bach,Sonata in D Major for viola da gamba and harpsichord; D’Herve-lois, Prelude, for viola da gamba alone; Abel, Sonala for viola dagamba alone; Bach, Sonata in G Minor, for viola da gamba andharpsichord; Scarlatti Four Sonatas, for harpsichord; Marais,Suite in A Minor for viola da gamba and harpsichord.LINCOLN MERCURYIN HYDE PARKSpecializing In Ford ProductsWE SERVICE AND REPAIRALL MAKES OF ALTOSSIMONIZERODY AND FENDER WORKPoge 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, Jonuary 9, 1948Editorial OpinionSome SuggestionsTo Campus PoliticosMuch has been said about the “confused liberal ” andthe events of the past few weeks drawn attention tothis modern phenomenon once again. Why is it thatcannot seem to combine their forces collectively ^common foe*^ Why must they spend so much time fightingTZns themselvel that in the end only their enemiesf jiC'fit? These are the recurring questions brought up by theannounced candidacy of Henry Agard WallaceThese differences among liberals were present before theWallace third party movement however, and th^ couldbe easily discerned right here at the University of Chicago.Over a half a dozen political organizations, of varyingshades of opinion, exist on campus, each ofthat its program is the only road to utopia. The MAROONitself is unable to take a firm stand on Wallace and otherissues, because these same differences divide the editorialstaff and leave no common ground on which to stand.Peace hangs in the balance today all over the world,and this disagreement among liberal forces is, if anything,helping to tip the scale toward war and the world-destruc¬tion promised by the atomic scientists if man cannot learnto live with his fellow man. To suggest a solution for allthe world’s problems in this editorial would be presumptu¬ous, juvenile, and of no help at all; but we think that wecan offer some practical suggestions to University of Chi¬cago political groups.The MAROON asks all the political organizations oncampus to form an active Student Political Union. Leteach organization continue its present activities and haveits representation in the Student Political Union decidedaccording to the number of members. This combined grcftapcan then discuss and take a stand on major issues. Themajority opinion must be accepted, and any group walkingout because the majority view does not coincide with itsown will be sanctioning in that action world-wide conflictand war. Certainly we students, studying at the site of thefirst sustained chain reaction, must recognize that agree¬ment among men is the world’s last hope.This Student Political Union, if it is ever formed, couldhave its own administrative set-up and it should have astaff to publicize the formation of the group and the subse¬quent action of the body on campuses and in newspapersand magazines all over the country. Such a step would bean object lesson, not only to outsiders, but to ourselves.If it works, we move ahead with greater confidence; wewill have proved that disintegration among liberals canbe overcome and strength can be found in co-operation.What do you say, AVC, PCA, ADA, UWF, Socialist Club,Communist Club, Marxist Club, AYD, Politics Club, andYoung Republicans?* * *Brawny Ann ArborThe University of Michigan, boasting of one of thefinest (and, we suppose, best paid) football teams in thecountry, proved itself worthy of this brawny if not entirelybrainy distinction, at the Rose Bowl on New Year’s Day.Less ballyhooed, but to us a great deal more indicativeof what the Ann Arbor campus has to offer, was its reac¬tion to the Carl Marzani-CIerhart Eisler appearance, sographically described by a University of Michigan studentin this week’s MAROON.Compare this to the way that the Eisler-Marzani teamwas treated at the University of Chicago, where the usualfacilities were granted to an officially recognized campusorganization without threats, violence, tomatoes or rotteneggs.Apparently the administration at Michigan doesn’tthink it’s doing such a good job of education if they can’ttrust the students to make up their own minds withoutthe need of administration “guidance.” Michigan Students Mob EislerAnd Marzani At Ann ArborTli^ Universityof Ckicogo Otticioi StudentNewspoperThe Chicago MaroonACP AH-Ameriean, I94S, ^1946, 1947MILTON R. MOSKOWITZEditorFritz Heimann, MelvinSpat, David Broder:Managing Editors JAMES E. BARNETTBusiness ManagerMelvin LackeyAssociate BusinessManagerExenitive Editors: Dave Canter, News; John Stone, Feature; Gerald Scherba,Rewrite; Murray Harding, Sports; Ed Engberg, Assistant to the Editor.Staffs: Barbara Evans, William Klutts, Hal Kome, Shirley Wood, Rewrite; Miri¬am Baraks, Ane Longstreet, Barry Miller, Charles Williamson, Political; MorrisBrown, Joan Kapp, Albert Schaffer, Eileen Stone, Cory; Curt Crawford, ArnoldDolin, Robert Ginsburg, Norma Horwitz, Richard Ranseen, Mark Riensberg,Feature; Andrew Foldl, James Goldman, Music; Betty Stearns, Frances GeorgeSteiner, Drama; John Forwalter, Art; Pat Golden, Office Manager.News Staff: Mary Ann Ash, Lewis Baron, David Berley, Robert Blauner, LewCase, George Coade, Dolly Dahl, Patricia Flom, Harvey Frauenglass; SHalneGerald, Mary Gleason, Rona Green, Marlon Hecht, Don Jameson, Harry Kilb,Marilyn Kolber, Lewis Llpsitt, Chuck Marquis, Ann Marschak, Judy MarxThomas Parrish, Margaret Rlemer. Ane Russel, Dan Rutenberg, Beve Segal,George Slderls, Louis Silverman, George Soter, Lee Vickman. Sports Staff:Arthur Aronson, Carl Gylfe, Harold Harding. (The following is a letter re¬ceived by Harvey Miller, a Uni¬versity of Chicago student, from afriend of his at the University ofMichigan. See editorial on letterbelow.)December 18, 1947Dear Harv;I only wish I could begin to de¬scribe to you the chaos of thisweek at the great University ofMichigan. It is worse than any¬thing you could imagine and isthe first outward sign, naked andunashamed of fascism in America,that any students, including my¬self, have witnessed. I will try todo justice to the events of the pastweek, though, believe me, theyhave to have been seen to be be¬lieved in their entirety.As you know, Ed has for thepast few weeks been trying to finda meeting-place for Eisler andMarzani to speak but was unsuc¬cessful. Neither the Universitynor any other organization intown would allow them the use ofa hall. Finally, Ed discovered thatthe League had been rented byoutside organizations in the past,so he went to the woman incharge* and reserved a room, pay¬ing the ten dollars for it in ad¬vance. The vice-pres’dent of theLeague got in touch with the ad¬ministration and the next day astatement was issued saying thatas HYDA was not a recognizedgroup, it could not use any Uni¬versity facilities on any occasion.He also stated that Eisler wouldnot be allow^ed to speak at all.Then Ed got in touch with city of¬ficials to secure a place at FelchPark. Permission was granted bythe city clerk and Monday morn¬ing leaflets w’ere passed out. Inthe afternoon fraternity h^Jusesand quads received anonymouscalls telling them to appear at thepark that evening with eggs, snow¬balls, and the like. We found outlater that it was the Alpha DeltaPhi fraternity ostensibly and somebusiness administration students.But the affair was too well or¬ganized, with people stationed onthe library steps and all along theroute, telling people w'here to go,for it was to have been spon¬taneous. That is all I know con¬cerning the organizational end ofthe demonstration, but it was cer¬tainly well done.My girlfriend and I got to FelchPark about eight. The meeting wasscheduled for eight fifteen, but bythat time the place was “mobbed,”in the literal sense. It wasa lynch mob such as no one hasever seen before. Groups of stu¬dents were swarming all over theplace yelling "We want Eisler!”,yelling the Internationale, andscreaming “Red.” They werearmed with lead pipes, eggs, to¬matoes, and mounds of snowballsfilled with rocks. They were evenyelling Christmas carols to relievetheir pent-up aggression whilethey were waiting. (The Free Pressreported that the students weremerrily caroling and cavorting inthe snow.) One student climbedup into a nearby tree and yelledhe was Gerhard Eisler; the wholemob pelted him with so manysnowballs and with such fury thatI thought he would surely nevercome dowm alive. As time went onthey began fighting cruelly amongthemselves. They didn’t know that, the mayor had rescinded the per¬mission in the afternoon, and thatif the two had .spoken, they wouldhave been arrested for inciting ariot. Ed and the two of them andall the correspondents drove upin a car. Ed got out to speak tothem, fool that he was, but theTime correspondent wouldn’t lethim risk his neck and knockedhim down. Foi’ once I am gratefulto a Time correspondent. He wouldhave been murdered.While we were waiting we gotword to go to Georg’s place wherethe two of them were. I wish youcould have seen the tense atmos¬phere. I had the picture in mymind of a German schoolroomwith an old professor standing, upand speaking of liberty, mobbedby the youth of the Bund—Ger¬many 1933—here in America. Areporter had told part of the mobwhere they were. Led by a formerhead of the Interfratemity Coun¬cil, they surrounded the place,broke into the cellar, shut off thelights, and started to break downthe door. The Time correspondentcalled President Ruthven, who de¬nied all responsibility for the ac¬tions of the students. Eisler even¬tually came out to speak to themob, and that took some courage.They started throwing eggs, andyelling such things as “You Rus¬sian Jew'-bastard,” also “We don’tw'ant your type in America—theBill of Rights isn’t for you.” Theyimitated his accent and w'ouldn’tlet him speak a decent word. Aswe left Marzani was speakingmagnificently. My girl friendswere actually crying all the wayhome. It was that upsetting; therewere repercussions like thatthroughout the dorm. I won’t de¬scribe the distortions in the papersthe following morning.The student legislature opposedthe action of the University by agood plurality and voted to seekthe return of Eisler under legisla¬ture and University auspices. They picked my committee to see Ruth'ven this morning. The co-chair¬man is violently 9Pposed to hav¬ing- “Eisler the criminal” returnalthough he wants a debate onCommunisHi scheduled, which isdodging the issue. Ruthven insi.st-ed that his refusal was not ablanket refusal, but just an ‘ at-the-time” refusal. He told us tosee the lecture committee of fac¬ulty members “whom he wouldnot prejudice,” since he did notwant Eisler back “because thereputation of the school would beinvolved.” If they said yes it wouldbe all right with him. We stronglydoubt if it will be all right withthem. The legislature passed a mo¬tion to atone for the disgracefulconduct of the students, but Ruth¬ven said that the administrationdid not cause this violence, be¬cause it did not occur on Univer¬sity property. A high official toldEd that the University’s excusefor its refusal was that Eisler wasa criminal, but that the real rea¬son was that important peoplehad been calling every day — acase of personal liberties versusthe public purse.Yours, ElizabethLetters To The EditorTo the Editor:While looking through the Stu¬dent Union program for the Win¬ter Quarter, 1948, we noticed thatthe Washington Prom was to beheld on February 21 in BartlettGym. We were greatly shockedthat the one all-campus formaldance was to be held there.It is a well known and admittedfact that the University of Chicagolacks the normal proportion of .so¬cially mature and well adjustedpeople. There is little doubt thatthis is a result of the Administra¬tion’s policy and publicity depart¬ments, and must be accepted. Butthat we are cheap has never beenimplied by others or admitted byus, at least until now.That the New Trier High .school should have a formal dance at theDrake hotel while the Universityhas to have its only all school for¬mal dance in the gym is ridiculous.Well, fellas, you won’t have toworry about being “half-safe” thatnight!Ten Students.To the Editor:Campus social life will hit a newlow if the Washington Prom isheld in Bartlett Gym as announcedon the Student Union Winter Pro¬gram. This situation goes muchdeeper than the immediate factthat our largest social activity ofthe year is to be held in the muchu.sed boys’ gymnasium.It is the final attack on out(Continued on page 5)Douglas RejectsWallace SupportBy FRITZ HEIMANN andNOBLE STOCKTONPaul H. Eiouglas, U. of C eco¬nomics 'Professor who has beenendorsed for the U. S. Senate bythe Illinois State Central Demo¬cratic Committee, stated that hewould not accept Wallace support,if it were offered him, when inter¬viewed exclusively by the MA¬ROON yesterday.' “Wallace is not a Communist ”he said, “but most of his supportwill be from Communist sources.”He likened Wallace’s position tothat of a well-meaning Trilbyunder the power of the Svengali.“They are out to wreck the Demo¬cratic Party,” he said.Douglas holds that the Demo¬cratic Party is still the most effi¬cient instrument for liberals andthat support from Wallace’s partyto Democratic candidates wouldbe a “kiss of death.”He stated that unless westernEurope were aided, it would prob¬ably go Communistic. “That iswhy the Communists are fightingthe Marshall Plan. The isolation¬ists are playing right into theirplans by also opposing it. That iswhy the Communists have givenorders that there must be a thirdparty. For they want to takeenough votes from the progressiveDemocrats to elect the reaction-aiy wing of the Republican party,which is emerging as a real ally.”Douglas revealed that his cam¬paign will revolve around nationaland international issues. He -ex¬pects to start in downstate Illinoisearly in March, before the April13 primary. He said he did notexpect any real opposition in the primaries. Around the middle ofApril he plans to hire a soundtruck and campaign continuouslytill the November elections. Hesaid that he would carry his cam¬paign “to every county, to everytown square and every factorygate in Illinois.”.Douglas plans a leave of ab¬sence from the University duringthe spring and summer quartersto conduct his campaign.55 and graying, Douglas has fol¬lowed a remarkably active career.He became Professor of economicshere in 1925, served on many gov¬ernment committees and commis¬sions under Franklin D. Roosevelt,and topped off his University andgovernment work in 1942 by en¬listing in the Marine Corps as aprivate at the age of 50.At his own request he was sentto the South Pacific 'Theater foractive duty, and rose through theranks to the grade of Lieut. Colo¬nel. He was wounded twice du¬ring his service. His last woundwas received in the Okinawa in¬vasion and hospitalized him for14 months.Douglas was discharged and re¬turned to his chair of economkshere in 1946. He has written sev¬eral books on economic problems,and was elected president of theAmerican Economic Associationlast year.Student Government will holdits first meeting of the quarternext Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.Law North.On Monday afternoon, fr^''”2:30 to 4:30, the SG office will be(Continued on page 5)friday, January % 1947 Page 5THE CHICAGO MAROONLetter To The Editor Whnt Tef Continued from page *4^ istent entity. Now Student Union ww ■ XO(Continued from page '4^decaying social life for which Stu¬dent Union was the last hope. Thediscontinuance of the annualQririnff Formal should have thewarning.Who wants to “Wave the Flagfor Old Chicago’* with the pre¬vailing spirit of our campus lead-Bill Phillips.To tlie Editor:It has been generally observedthat the organized social life ofour campus has been steadily ap¬proaching the status of a non-ex¬ istent entity. Now Student Unionhas announced that the Washing¬ton Prom, our last remaining tra¬ditional social function, is to beheld in Bartlett Gym. Since theWashington Prom is a formaldance and not an athletic event,we believe a more fitting locationcould be chosen.We do not ask that the campusrevert to the fabulous “Rah-Rah”life of former days, but we domaintain that certain lines shouldbe drawn. We would as soon seeour basketball games played in thelobby of a hotel as c formal dancein Bartlett gym.Dave Kahn and Al t^ernon.Blind ArtistsDOUGLAS REJECTSWALLACE SUPPORT(Continued from page 4)open to all students with specific a 4,complaints about food prices on xjfl /\Ttcampus or with information as tocomparable prices at restaurantsin the college vicinity.Len Schroeter, chairman of theSO Committee on food prices, ishopeful that if sufficient data aregathered and presented to theproper authorities, food prices atthe University-operated restaurantwill come down.emUGO'S FIRSTHYDE PARKSELF SERVICELAUNDRY30 Minute Wotk9 Minute Drying ServiceHOURSMon. to Fri. 8:30 AM to 9:30 PMSaturday 8:30 AM to 5:30 PMSunday 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM912 E. 55th St. Tuesday evening RenaissanceSociety will present VISUAL ANDNON-VISUAL ART EXPRES¬SION. The exhibition will be heldin Goodspeed Hall.This exhibit, arranged by Vik¬tor Lowenfeld, professor at Penn¬sylvania State College, is one ofthe most unusual that has beenpresented in some time. It con¬tains works by blind, partiallyblind, and artists of normal vision.It is arranged to present two typesof artistic expression into whichall art falls. This idea has beenpresented powerfully in a book byLowenfeld which will be on ex¬hibit at the gallery.The show will run from January9th until January 31st, open to allthe students without charge.Opera House Sun., Jon. 11::0 N. WACKEK MAT. & KVE.presents“Americo'sGenius of Jazz"With His FamousOrchestraIN CONCERTGet Set for anAmazing MusicalTreat-r— - AfternoonOnlyDirect from Carnegie HallGood seats now at Box Office andMail Order for both performances.PRICKS: ?1.24; ?1.86; $2.47; $3.10;$•1.71 (Tax Inc.). Please send self-addressed stamped envelope for mailorders. For inf. Franklin 7800. TABLE TENNIS TOURNEYInaugurating a new system oftable tennis tournaments, StudentUnion is sponsoring a preliminaryelimination contest next Thursdayevening. First round winners willreturn on Friday evening for thefinals.Both events will begin at 7 inthe Game room of Ida Noyes hall.Prizes wifi be awarded to the win¬ners.The Reverend John B. Thomp¬son, Dean of Rockefeller Me¬morial Chapel, will preach atthe University religious serviceSunday at 11 a.m. His subjectwill be, “The Church Militant.’*OPERA HOUSEIn Person—In Concert!MARIANANDERSONAmerica's Greatest Controltofrice-s: $1.24, $1.86, $2.47, $3.10, $3.71(Tax Inc.). Good Seats Now at BoxOffice and by Mail. Enclose stamped,self-addressed envelope. For infor¬mation Phone Franklin 7800. GREGG COLLEGEA School of Iwsinoss—Proforrod byCoHog* okI Womon4 month"'INTENSIVE COURSESECRETARIAL TRAINING FOR COLLEGESTUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough, intensive course—startingJune, October, February. Bul¬letin A on request•SPEOAL COUNSELOR for G.l. TRAINING• ^Regular Day and Evening SchoolsThroughout the Year. CatalogPresident, Jolin Robert-firegK. S.C.D.Director, Paul M. Pair, M.A.THE GREGG COLLEGE37 S. Wabash Ava., Chlcage 3, llliaaia LETTER TO THE EDITORCONCERNING A RESTATEMENTOF DEMOCRACYAs a member of the Universitycommunity I have been intenselyinterested in the events surround¬ing and leading up to the demon¬stration on University Avenue thispast Monday. As a single incidentI do not consider it too consequent-tial. We have remnants of discrim¬ination here at the University.That is bad. The man who is in aposition to do something about ithas been working steadily in thedirection demanded by his idealsand those of the University forwhich he works. That is good. Hismethod of going about it—con¬sidering his authoritarian powerand the manner in which he hassometimes wielded it—is extremelydemocratic. He seeks to persuade.Living with men who disagreewith him, he would arrive at acommon ground of action by themKhod of reason and mutualgoodwill. Anyone can see the dis¬parity in his position. It is thatinherent in democracy itself,which is simply this: When twomen, equally honest, equally sin¬cere, equally anxious to do' theright thing, disagree—who is to bethe judge? This situation cannotbe solved by majority rule, andneither can the situation at Bill¬ings. Mr. Hutchins gave the classicdemocratic answer to this dilem¬ma: let reason be the judge. Ofcourse different people may seethe dictates of reason differently,but the substance of democracy isthe belief that they see it differ¬ently not because of any incon¬stancy in reason itself, but becauseof their own fallibility in discern¬ing where reason lies. Because ofmy belief m this I can only com¬mend the action of Mr. Hutchins.Democracy The IssueCertain elements of the studentbody, however, did not see it thisway. As a simple disagreement be¬tween personalities there is noth¬ing disturbing about this. But thedisagreement strikes at the veryprinciple on which there can beany hope of agreement at all. Itcasts in doubt the most funda¬mental tenet for which both par¬ties supposedly stand. * This prin¬ciple is not the admission of Ne¬groes to Billings Hospital—importrant as this undoubtedly is—butdemocracy itself. /As I have said, I do not con¬sider this particular demonstra¬tion particularly earth-shattering.Undoubtedly the students par¬ticipating did so because of theirbelief in the principles for whichwe all stand and with which dis¬crimination on the basis of skin-color cannot be defended. As ademonstration of citizen opinionon the issue of discrimination forthe guidance of a proper legisla¬tive bo^ I have nothing to sayagainst it. But from its inceptionand by its^ very nature it wassomething much more insidious;for insofar as it was an arbitraryattempt to put pressure on peoplewho disagreed, it was mob rule.FRIDAYJAN. 30OPERA HOUSEDAVE GARROWAY'S11:60 CLUB^ JAZZ CONCERTureatest Aggregation of Top “Hall ofStars Ever Assembled IncludingELLA FITZGERALDAMERICA'S NO 1 SINGERILLINOIS JACQUETand his all-star orchestraOAVE GARROWAYAS MASTER OF CEREMONIESOMpr *oi*f^**®'^ at Bo* Office and Mail$3 71 51-24; fl-86; $2.47; $3.10;Please send self-staniped envelope for mallFor inf. Phone Franklin 7800. eCl lAfVII TONIGHT—8:30•tLff in Mats. Wed. & Sat. 2:30ThGThMlr* 6uM I Wilwiiilli . FftItlANNEA Ntw Omtiy^h^EVES. (Exc. Sun.) $1.25, $1.85,$2.50, $3.10, $3.71, $4.33. WED.MAT. $1.25, $1.85, $2.50, $3.10.SAT. MAT. $1.25, $1.85, $2.50, $3.10,$3.71. (Tax Inc.)Prompt Attention to Mail OrdersEnclose Stamped, Self-AddressedEnvelope HYDE PARKThe Home ofCINEMA CLASSICSNOW ENDS MN. 10THHARRIS TONIGHT AT 8:40Matinee Tomoirow, 2:40JOHN C. WILSON preienl#TALLULAHBANKHEADto NOEL COWARD'SBEST COMEDY ADDEDShort Subject Digestwith DONALD COOKMATS.: Wed. & Sat.: $3.00-2.40-1.80-1.20EVES.. 8:40 (except Sunday)—$3.60-3.00-2.40-1.80-1.20 Starting Sunday, Jan. likhDouglas FairbanksRuth WarrickinALEXANDRE DUMAS'“Corsican Brothers” Democracy?This is one method of political ac¬tion. It is not the democraticmethod. If this method can pre¬vail in supposedly one of the mostenlightened institutions in thecountry, one expressly dedicatedto education in democracy, per¬haps we had better take a secondlook at the ground on which westand.Intolerant ToleranceI find this so disturbing—evenfrightening — because it is notsimply confined to University Ave.between 57th and 58th Streets, noreven to certain groups of “liberals”on the campus. It is widespread. Ittakes the form of cat-calls at po¬litical meetings, of irresponsibleabuse of responsible men, of in¬tolerant “tolerance.” Much of thisis very human effervescence andrefreshing criticism. Much of it isanything but. The “anything” hasbeen variously described as intel¬lectual, moral, spiritual (if youwill) bankruptcy. In the rarifiedatmosphere of intellectual en¬deavor much has been said “aboutit and about,” much faith has beenplaced in reason, but steeping our¬selves in this nebulous realm wefeel uncomfortably insecure. Ideasmake corttact with Ideas. Theyfade, they melt’into one another,they chase each other down thelabyrinth of mind. Finally theydisappear into infinity. And so,disappointed in our pursuit, weacquire a disgust for that whichfoiled us. One time man had a re¬spect for infinity. He had a namefor it. He called it God. He had afaith that the answer was there—somewhere—up ahead. No more.Tiring of the chase, we lookaround to find ourselves surround¬ed by emptiness—echoes of “pastregrets and future fears.” We re¬turn to the world of experience,sapped of its meaning. But the lifeis still in us. Time is still ahead ofus. We must pursue the objective.But the objective is no longer inthe sky. It is here, now. It must be.—Whefe Job could once ask, “Cana man by searching find out God?”we only can ask, “Can a man byorganizing gain a'dollar an hour?”Not that I disparage a dollar anhour. A dollar will buy a hundredcents worth of anything—exceptunderstanding. And understandingis the lifeblood of ideas. And de¬mocracy is an idea.This is putting it in hyperbolicterms—terms inappropriate and alittle repugnant to an age of se-manticists. But I have seen it hap¬pen. I have seen your “liberal”stormed with ideas, confrontedwith the intangible, the incompre¬hensible, stripped to the heart—and with yet an instinct of the“one true way”—fall back on thenaked sword. It is a terrifyingsight. What can one say in theface of action for action’s sake? Itis like refuting art for art’s sake.It is like proving the existence ofGod. >Faith In ManAbraham Lincoln knew whatdemocracy was. He had the faiththat - democracy must have—thefaith in the man beside you andthe spirit of reason in all of you.He abolished slavery, but he wasno abolitionist. He disagreed withhalf the nation on matters ofprinciple, but he knew he couldn’tchange the minds of men by fiat.He knew the answer to the ques¬ tion: What do you do when twomen, equally honest equally sin¬cere, equally anxious to do theright thing, disagree? He appealedto reason. And no tragedy couldhave been greater than that thisman was forced to the sword—bythe sword.And what do you do when twomen are not equally honest andequally sincere? This question isthe naivest of all. They alwaysare. If they weren’t, democracywould be an impossibility. If youthink you have seen men who arenot equally honest and equallysincere, your eyes are short-sight¬ed. Look ui) to the sky. For allmen are created equal. This is thefaith of democracy. Wealth, pow¬er, intelligence — even the waythey treat or are treated by theirequals—all may be unequal. Butthese are not the man. They donot touch the essential integrity,that well-spring of creation, whichsome have called soul. Herein, andhere alone, lies the equality ofman. Equate men on their wealthand you get communism, equatemen on their power and you getfascism, equate men on their in¬telligence and you get nonsense,but equate men as men and youhave democracy.Equality of ManThis is another way of puttingthat ethical mandate given by oneof the profoundest minds in allhistory: Love thy neighbor gis thy¬self. But the first one is even moreimpiortant, which is no doubt whyhe put it first: Thou shalt love thyGod with all thy heart, and withall thy soul, and with all thy mind.Of course, the modern intellecthas generally rejected the word“God,” due largely to its presentconnotations of bigotry, tyranny,and irrationality, which I confessis not easily understood consider¬ing the fact that there has beenmore tyranny and bloodshed inthe last half century in the nameof everything under the sun ex¬cept God than in possibly anyother comparable period of his¬tory. However, be that as it may.It doesn’t have to be called’God.You might call it Truth, for in¬stance. If you can ask, “What istruth?” I can say nothing. Ofcourse, I can always turn the ques¬tion back at you and ask, “Whatare you?” which is what the ques¬tion implies. If you say you are abunch of atoms. I’ll say is thattrue, and you’ll say no but it’s aworkable hypothesis, and I’ll saywhat’s a workable h^othesis, andyou’ll say don’t be silly, and I’llsay don’t be a workable hypothesis,and there we sit. The point is thatas long as I consider you a col¬lection of atoms, or a collection ofinstincts, or whathaveyou. I’ll treatyou as just that, and a hypotheti¬cal that at that, and feel free tochange my hypothesis any time Idamn please. I may even consideryou a fatheaded bigot and knockyou in the teeth if you get in myway. Of course, you’ll say this isbad. and you’ll be right, but youwon’t know why. For between twoequals with conflicting purposesthere is no possible basis of judg¬ment. I must give man the creditof being a rational creature.Otherwise I have no basis onwhich to come to an agreement(Continued on page 6>ISBELL'SChico^o's MostCELEBRATEDRESTAURANTS1435 E. 51st Street940 Rush Street590 Diversey PlocePage 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, Jonuary 9, 194gJJh44-Restatement Of Democracy 'Maroon Editor(Continued from 'page 5)With him—other |han what I want.But given a set of assumptions, arational creature tends to drawthem out to their logical conclu¬sion. The idea of existence aroundwhich his life is oriented is sel¬dom if ever completely conscious.But the deepest ideas have the The MAROON received this letter from Gerald Rodgers at theclose of last quarter, immediately after the protest strike held onDecember 8. Because we thought that it was imporant, we savedit and are devoting an unusual amount of space to it and to ananswer. We would appreciate hearing student reaction on the con¬tent of the two articles All fetters received wjll be run in aseparate section of the paper, and Rodgers has promised to replyto the MAROON and all future critics.each other is to SC MEETS WEDNESDAY; I don’t know how fashionable racy, of translating them into thethe thesis of Gerald Rodger’s let- world of reality. For Rodgers theter has become in intellectual cir- ideals of equality and justice existcles, but I am glad that it has not only on paper and in his mind; hereceived any wide-spread popular- disparages active efforts to elim-ity, because it is a pernicious phil- i*^8,te existing inequalities Andosophy. When it is read for the those of us who do fight to makefirst time, it may sound good, but these ideals more than an abstractyou feel inwardly that something concept, to make them a livingis wrong: it rubs the wrong way. force, he condemns as being unA second and third reading ex- democratic, as trying to forceposes the weak, theoretical grounds opinions down dissenters’ throatsupon which the argument rests,‘re- Speaking of the student walk-^t was an arbitrary attempt toput pressure on people who di.s-Pirst of all, I don’t un¬derstand the use of the word,arbitrary,” which Webster definesprofoundest effects. Retarded by ally react uponhabit, he may take generations to g^y nothing that is not obvious. ^51(5 FOR STUDENT GRIPESarrive at the conclusion. But the ^ society and the o* ^ n -conclusion is incvitftblc. * Student CJovernment will nold TPinQiiv von tpaIizi* tliAt this ic- < ^ ±^ . . ... individual is each the judge of the u first meetine of the Quarter ® ^ \ out last December 8, Rodgers savsdilemma is to have some tribunal other, which is all that modern next Wednesday at 7:30 p.m, in ^^f strength and meaning as-to appeal to. Four obvious reasons social science has to say, is to de- Law North. sociated with the ideal of democ- ^gre^this tribunal must be outside of stroy the substance of all law. As a On Monday afternoon, from 2:30 racy.human definition — and thereby, practical matter we may act upon to 4:30 the SG office will be open Rodgers damns all men wholor all human purposes, infinite ^ jn^jority vote and believe we are wi^specific com- happen to have a social conscience ^ x uu miuw tnai mereand eternal, and (since it is a fv, f ,fw, fuan plaints about food prices on ^ho therefore want to im- was a vote taken to decide whpt>i»rtribunal) immutable. Ignatius Loy- nearer the truth than otherwise, campus, or with information as prove their fellowman’s lot “The a strike should be h<»idOla had such a tribunal, but he did but the humility of wisdom goes to comparable prices at restau- democrat“instinc! were L hilh uTnot believe all men were equal In no lurther. The true democrat to- ^^nts in the college vicinity. t velv ws tha^t Suy in some nld it we re;h« .Its Sight Karl Mar. wanted all <^>’a.rman o, the rnsUZtol^'o^her^o^d ^01, rjn^^fcrgatol. "et:men to equal, but he had no ^ obtained If you Committee on Food Prices, is the truth be obtained. If you want er understanding of what Rodgerstribunal to apical to when they Heaven on earth God bless sufficient data are heaven on earth. God bless you, really means. Let us say. “It wasr ^ and presented to the but the Devil take you.” This is an an attempt to put pressure Zthat the two necessanlv eo to- ... Proper authorities, food prices at argument which can be used people who thought that Neeroe^You may say this is too idealistic University-operated restaurants against any movement designed to should not be admitted to the Unilbring about a change in the sUtus versity hospital on equal footingquo, whether it’s for an increase with whites.” What it boils downthat the two necessarily go together, that one alone is as goodas none. to be practical. At least one per- will come down.Now to believe that all men are son has told me it is too reaction-pro-Clause lor American Pride...equal in the eyes of this tribunal, ary to be in step with the tinjes— a new lecture series on arbitra- in wages (“Not that I disparage a to then is this* ought such pres*it is necessary to believe that all a symbolic phrase. I say that in- tion and industrial relations opens dollar an hour.”) or, as in this sure be applied? (In considfnrimen have an equal chance to know fofar as we have had democracy at the University of Chicago’s case, for the wiping out of racial this question I do not wnnfits dictates. This means that as m this nation or anywhere else, downtown college, 7:30 p.m. Mon- discrimination at the University argue the particular merits of thklong as one man disagrees, the we have believed in these things, day, January 12 at University Col- of Chicago. It’s a question of im- specific case. It .strikes much decotruth is not known. It even im- And in^far as we have believed in lege (19 South LaSalle street). plementing the ideals of democ- er than that. I think both ^plies further that it can never be these things, to that extent and — —known, for even if no one dis- ^0 further have we had democ-agreed there is always the chance racy. Men of principle may or maythat someone will be born tomor- tiot be in step with the times, butrow, who will. But you will notice they are always in sympathy withthis is far from saying there is no eternity. If you think this is meta¬truth. On the contrary, the belief physical, you think right, for thethat there is an absolute truth is of democracy is as metaphysi-absolutely necessary. The present cal as Hell. And as long as wetendency to make values relative children who c?n ask, /to society and the individual is the “Why?” metaphysics will be with_most pernicious undermining ofdemocracy, or any society, that God help us if they ever, stopcould possibly occur. To say that asking, and start dictating,society and the individual mutu- By GERALD RODGERS THEGETTYSBURG ADDRESSSALEON MANY OFFFRIDAY. USED BOOKSJAN. 9FRIDAY, JAN. 16THE RED DOORBOOK SHOP1328 EAST 57th STREETPhone PLAza 6445 . .. it Just ten stirringsentences in all. Butthey are an immortalexpression of democracyand freedom. Shownhere, in Abraham Linc<»In’Bown handwriting, is partof the manuscript fromwhich he spoke on theafternoon of Nov. 19,1863. The original, alongwith more than ahundred documentsfamous in Americanhistory, is on exhibitaboard the “FreedomTrain”. This train is nowon a nationwide tour.Watch for its arrivalin your area!C.^7iXBe proud of what you write . . .and the way you write it!Pride comes with the possession of a Parker *‘51’For this is the world’s most-wanted pen ... flaw¬less in its beauty and performance. It writesin a way that does you proud. No urging.No coaxing. The “51” starts instantly.Coasts across the page with clean, easystrokes. Two sizes: regular “51” andnew demi-size. Both with choiceof custom points. The ParkerPen Co., Janesville, Wis.,U.S.A., and Toronto, Can. Parke r"51 49U/€^Copr. 1948 hv The Parker Pea ConpMjfTHE CHICAGO MAROON Roge 7'''Fridoy. J*"''»TRepI ies To Rodgers Letter Campus UWFConvention Hostponents and opponents of thestrike will be able to see thenegative implication of Rodgers’ideas.)In responding to this question,Rodgers would probably say, "No,such pressure would be undemo¬cratic action. When we comeacross undemocratic procedures,wc must agitate for their elimina¬tion. We have to reason with thosepeople who support these prac¬tices. That is the democratic way.”Frankly, I do not believe thatRodgers himself realizes the fullimplications of what he is saying.Surely he wouldn’t propose unani¬mous consent as the only basis forpassage of legislation; yet, that isexactly what he is asking us toaccept. His principles are not onlyimpractical, as he himself suspects,they are unworkable. Granted thatwe will never achieve perfect de¬mocracy on this earth, what iswrong with struggling to bringabout the greatest amount pos¬sible? If a Negro is lynched, mustwe refrain from pressing for an anti-lynch law because there hap¬pen to be individuals who thinkthat lynching is a fine, old, honor¬able custom? Rodgers has suchadoring respect for every otherperson as "equally honest andequally sincere,” that he appar¬ently has become insensitive t-o thelack of democracy around him. Hehas the idea of truth—of democ¬racy—in his mind, and hopes toachieve it "only in some transcen¬dental other-world.”My chief complaint againstRodgers’ definition of democracyis that it is too narrow. Democ¬racy means a whole lot more thanthe spirit of compromise, which isevidently the highest good inRodgers’ value .scale. In his longletter on the subject of democracy,he fails to mention even once thepositive connotations of this ideal,with the sole exception of dwell¬ing at, length on the right of eachindividual to have his own opin¬ion. The end result is to limit de¬mocracy. For instance, take theissue of economic democracy. East¬ ern European countries have calledthemselves democracies becausethey say that they have providedfpr the economic wants of the peo¬ple. This, they say, is more im¬portant to the people than freedomof speech.'ITiOse reactionaries in Americawho attack these countries mostvociferously reiterate over andover the necessity of individualfreedom to democracy; at thesame time, however, they areusually the ones who are least in¬terested in social and economic re¬form in the United States.These people, mainly big indus¬trialists and others with vested in¬terests, would applaud Rodgers’"restatement of democracy,” be¬cause it does not threaten them atall, it allows them to continue todeny democracy to labor, smallfarmers, and Negroes. The favoriteargument of American reaction¬aries during the past 40 years hasbeen the same, hackneyed catch¬ words: free'enterprise, rugged in¬dividualism, freedom of speech,freedom of the press. (RememberHayek’s "Road to Serfdom,” whichsaid that any government plan¬ning was "undemocratic” and astep to totalitarianism.) The prob¬lem facing us today is to work forgreater ^onomic and social de¬mocracy, while still retaining ourindividual freedom. In solving thisproblem, Rodgers is no help at all,because he completely ignoreswhat we are lacking and what wemust therefore work for.To say that "the idea of de¬mocracy is as metaphysical ashell” should not be a deterrent onhuman aspirations for a betterlife in this world. The myths thatsustain us must have a basis inour daily lives. And children willcontinue to ask, "Why?”, the wayyoung Tom does in "Gentleman’sAgreement,” as long as we are notliving up to our ideals.By MILTON MOSKOWITZPflIUP MORRISis so muchbetter to sniokelPHILIP MORRIS offers the smoker an extrabenefit found in no other cigarette. For PhilipMorris is the ONE, the ONLY cigarette recog¬nized by leading nose and throat specialists asdefinitely less irritating.Remember: Less irritation means moresmoking enjoyment for u.Yes! If every smoker knew what PhilipMorris smokers know, they’d all change toPHILIP MORRIS. A three-day Midwestern Confer¬ence, attended by delegates fromthe nine midwestern states, Mon¬tana and New York, was held oncampus January 2 through 4 bythe United World Pederaliste.Campus chapter of UWF was hostto the delegates.The conference set up and con¬ducted workshops for the exchangeof ideas and methods for cam¬paigning for world government.Dr. Harold C. Urey, U. of C. at<Hnicscientist, closed the conferencewith a report on his recent trip tonorthern Europe.Prominent among the politicalaction programs now underway inthe midwest, enthusiastically re¬ceived by the conference, is theChicago Plan, developed by thecampus UWE chapter.This plan involves precinct-by¬precinct activity throughout thecommunity and speaking engage¬ments before community or¬ganizations and home-discussiongroups.Recommendations made by theconference included national poll¬ing of UWF membership periodic¬ally for the purpose of issuingstatements of majority and minor¬ity 'opinions on important issuesrelating to world government.Chicago’s delegation to the con¬ference included Tom Farr, BobMack, Phil Jaynes, Amy Walters,Louise Chamberlain, Steve Bene¬dict, and Alex Pope.Stassen ClubMeets TuesdayThe first meeting of a new cam¬pus organization, the U. of C. Stu¬dents for Stassen, will take placeTuesday at 4 p.m. in Classics 18.All students are urged to attendthe initial meeting.The group announces as its pol¬icy the support of the principlesof the Minnesota plan of social re¬form initiated by Gov. HaroldStassen during his term in office.The plan of action includes in¬stituting these reforms nationallyas well as working for an effec¬tive world organisation to insurepeace and for action now on acivil liberties program. The lasttwo points, members of the Stu¬dents for Stassen feel, are the mostimportant issues of the comingpresidential campaign.John Francis, temp>crary chair¬man of the group, said that itspurpose is "to determine whetheraction by students can be a factorin the forthcoming election tocounter in some measure certaintypes of party organization.”TERESA DOLANDANCING SCHOOL1208 E. 63rd St (Nr. Woodlown)LEARN TO DANCE NOW!We can teach you to be a reallygood dancer. Our years of experi¬ence Is your guarantee. No frills—Just satisfying results. Let us helpyou now! ,PRIVATE LESSONSDAILY 11 A.M. TO 11 P.M.Call for Trial LessonLearn Waltz, Pox Trot, Rumba,Samba and Tango in group lessons,$1.00, Sun., Mon., Tues., Wed., Sat.Evenings at 8:00.Phone Hyde Park 3080BICYCLES RENTEDat 35c per hourG&G GRILLat the Corner of57th and Stony IslandTRY A PACK... TODAY We Caterto Forties TelephoneFAIRFAX2119tage $ THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, ionuaiy 9,. 1948Norman Thomas DiscussesWallace, Socialist Policy Education Committee 'Asks College ChangeBy JOHN STONE —-Many educators were given a committee replied calmly that doc-good jolt“recently by the publica- tors, dentists, and many othertion of the findings of President professional men were sadly onTruman’s Committee on Higher the decrease In ratio to the popu-Education. The committee felt that lation. At any rate education wasBy CURT CRAWFORDNot running for President onany third-party ticket in 1948 isNorman Thomas, five-time Soc¬ialist party standard-bearer andevangelizer for the good life basedon cooperatives and world dis¬armament. We found him at theHotel Webster, resting betweensessions of his party’s CentralCommittee, which was planningelection strategy lor this year.At Mandel Hall the evening be¬fore, he’d called for a World Fed¬eration of Cooperative Common-yrealths, with controlled disarma¬ment as the key stepping-stone.The Baruch plan contains themechanism, but its prohibitionmust be extended to all mass-pro¬duction weapons, to bases andmilitary missions.His speaking manner showedlong experience in winning audi¬ences by informality, clever satir¬izing. and just plain grandstand¬ing. A clear, booming tone, especi¬ally reserved for such contempt¬ible symbols as “free enterprise”and “incentive,” would effectivelyvanquish them without the needof a puny mike. Tall, almost gang¬ly, aristocratically old, his handsBweepingly expressive, the ex¬parson laughed with his listenersat conservatives who castigateplanning, then establish the in¬volved machinery of a Taft-Hart-ley Law.Disarmament Ls no new plankin Thomas’ almost pacifistic for¬eign platform. Since his early daysof southern rural preaching,through the rise and fall of Ger¬many’s Kaiser and Hitler, and thestormy weather of isolationisinand ‘America First,’ he has advo¬cated disarmament as the one ideawhich could galvanize the worldinto peace,Wallace ‘Fuzzy Thinker*His plea of disarmament, oppo¬sition to UMT, and call for Amer¬ica to mend her own democracysuggested the question: Whyaren’t you and Henry Wallace to¬gether? Thomas was emphatic:•‘Wallace refuses to recognize thevery brutal facts about the Sovietregime.’*We interposed Wallace’s defensethat an overabundance of anti-Russian propaganda in the USneeds no additions: rather, that itshould be balanced with criticismof American blunders. He wasimpatient with such an approach:•‘if something is grey (i.e., the Soviet regime) and people, arecalling it black, you’ve no right-4ocall it white. You’ve got to call itgrey and explain why.”Thomas swung his legs over onearm of his much-too-small pluslichair, while his fist summed upthe case against Wallace on theother. “If he really understandsthe Communists, why go out of hisway at a recent meeting of theUnited Electrical Workers to praisethem and call their oppositionwhich included Henry’s old friendJames Carey, red-baiters?“Perhaps the Wallace ‘Christianmysticism’ is consistent with hispleas for peaceful cooperation withRussia, but how square it with hisadvocacy of the Morgenthau‘hard-peace’ proi>osals for Ger¬many? What about his extremereluctance to side with Rooseveltinterventionism, tlien his constantspeech-making in support of thewar once we were in? It just Ix'f >down to the fact that he’s a fuzzythinker about everything exceptthe genetics of com, where theysay he’s really a genius.’*Communist FervorThomas is truly worried aboutthe Communists, compares theirfanaticism with the religious fer¬vor of Islam, or of the 16th Cen¬tury Catholics and Protestants.Communism has, a dynamic ex¬pansionism Which far overshadowsthe imperialism of American capi¬talism, and it has been Communistintransigence which has blockedthe peace.As a contrast, the NAM, suppos¬edly arch-prototypes of Americancapitalism, have no particular de¬sire for interventionism or impe¬rialism, and don’t even suppjort theMarshall Plan. (Although, come*a depression, and the US mightgo aggressively afield for markets.)Socialists, he felt, need to con¬tinue as a bridge between the USand Russian systems, pointing outthe mistakes and exploitations ofeach. But the totalitarian, un¬principled, fanatic nature of theSoviet slave economy (their onlyplus mark is in race relations)makes it extremely difficult to •maintain the level-headedness ofa middle ground. The picture isn’tbright, but there is a hope thatman will think enough of preserv¬ing his race to undertake a con¬trolled disarmament.Political EducationSwitching the subject, we askedwhat kind of education our politi¬cians w “governing class” shouldreceive, and its relation to the U.of C. Well, we have the task ofeducating people for citizenship,but from this point Thomas andHutchins part company. He doesn’tbelieve in the Great Books, or Neo-Thomism, and it seems to him thatstudents with a necessarily limitedamount of time should learn bi¬ology, not from Darwin’s Origin ofSpecies, but from modern writerswho’ve brought Darwin up to date.And this warning to you Pla-tonists: the term, “governingclass,” brought the Republic tomind: “I was really entranced byit when I was young, Utopianthough it seemed, but I’m nowconvinced that establishing itwould mean a Fascist state.”Rudeis Will GivePiano Recital•The Student Committee of theRenaissance Society presents Na¬talie Rudeis in a piano recital to¬night at 8:15 in Mandel hall.Miss Rudeis, well known on thecampus, is a native of Chicago, anda formerUniversity of Chicagostudent. She has studied in Chi¬cago under Sergei Tamowsky, un¬der Joseph Lhevinne at the Julll»ard Graduate School of Music inNet)^Yorfc City, and is now study¬ing with Artur Schnabel.She has given two previous re¬citals in Mandel hall, two in down¬town Kimball hall, and has doneradio work for the ColumbiaBroadcasting Company on theWest Coast.Miss Rudeis’ program includeswcWcs by Mozart, Brahms, Bee¬thoven, and Schubert. The studentbody and the general public areinvited. Admission is free. what was needed in American col¬leges was more democracy and themeans to get it.The most surprising statementin these first two volumes of a sixvolume report was that the pres¬ent swollen college i>opulationshould be at least doubled by 1960,giving a census of something likea billion students. The increase offacilities, which are entirely in¬adequate to meet current demands,would be led by public colleges andbacked by government funds: butthe committee cautioned thatschools should expand onlythrough capable personnel andgood equipment.The machinery to attain thisend they clearly stated: the fir.sttwo years of college at public ex¬pense, lowered tuition, and a gov¬ernment grant of $135,000,000 forscholarships and fellowships.Moreover, the type of educationwas to be different. The committeefelt that “specialization has shat¬tered liberal education”: that edu¬cation to a large extent should beaimed at general welfare, ratherthan individual interest.But could there be a real stepforward without doing somethingabout segr^ation and discrimin¬ation in the ^hools? The com¬mittee came out with a blunt no.The report attacked schools prac¬ticing discrimination and askedthat no government allotments begranted such schools. The^ com¬mittee pleaded for voluntary drop-ing of the race-color-creed ques¬tions on student applicationforms: but it was also realisticenough to demand some sort ofcompulsory measure, such as “FairEducation Practices” laws, whichwould bar ‘quotas’ on certaingroups in America’s colleges.All this aroused loud protest inmany quarters. Some educatorsset up the cry of a “Ph. D. pro¬letariat,” a resultant condition inwhich there would not be enoughprofessional jobs to satisfy thosewith college education. To this the not only for an isolated clique thathad position and money to buy it.The committee’s theme: more edu¬cation for a better nation.FINISHING COLLEGE?THE EASTERLING COMPANY, mer¬chandising nationally advertisedSterling Silver has openings in anumber of sales territories for ca¬pable college trained men. Theseassignments offer substantial earn¬ings and advancement in a virilegrowing company.For interview callMr. Walker, Webster 4542,or write, 330 South WellsStreet, Chicago. LIMITEDENGAOEMEIVTDOC EVANSDIXIELAND DANDBEE-HIVELOUNGESSlh at HarperPiO INCREASEIN I PRICES SENSATIONALVALUES!Dress and SportSHIRTSSKICAPSArmy 50% WoolSOCKS...6 prs. for $2.40‘1*14479COupALL WOOLANKLETS.Shrinkless 59B-15 TypeFLIGHTJACKETSALL WOOLMITTENS.. $1495’49*HCMDREDS OF OTHERITEMS AT RARGAINPRICESSHOP NOW!SURPLUSOUTLET943 E. 55th STREETBUT. 7155^HtttmittlUimHililHItlHIIIimillllllHIIIUIIIIIHIMIHIUINIHIHIHimilllillllltllllllllllllllUlllIHUIttlUIIIIUIIIillllllillllllinilllllllllilllHtlilHmiHlltiHHtllllHmmilllllimillill^lOllR BilLlIEATTENTION BURTON-JUDSONComplete Cleaning • PressingLaundry Servicem axServing the Cpnipus 30 Yeort1013-15 E. Hist St.ACROSS FROM BURTON-JUDSONPhone MIDway 7447^iiiiiinrrmiiJ.OuinillliMlMlllvOs 1 Hove you lost your equilibrium during the hectic Christmas rush |i or during the Quarter's Opening? Sometimes we hove, and a very 1§ prominent professor remarked—"little fun helps oil of us in these |§ days of strain and stress." Try these suggestions ... iI WHAT AM I DOING HERE by Abner Dean $2.75 |I THERE’S A FLY IN THIS ROOM by RaH Kircher $2.00 |I All Williani Steig titles $l.50-$2.00 |I COMPLETE CHEERFUL CHERUB by Rebecca McCann... $2.75 |I PSYCHOLOGY IN LIVING by Wendell White $2.95 |I TALL TAKE AMERICA by Walter Blair $2.50 |I PERSONALITY by Gardner Murphy $7.50 fI MANAGING YOUR MIND by $. H. Kraines. $2.75 |I PSYCHOLOGY IN ACTION.by Joseph Clawson $4.00 |I CHARACTER GROWTH EDUCATION by F. Kembei $3.50 |I $BLF-ANALYSIS by Karen Homey $3.50 |I UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE I^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiUiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiniiiiiiHiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiKiifliiimnmtnififfiniiiiiiiiiiiiifmmifttiittttmNmiittiiiiiiHHiiutiiirTHE CHICAGO MAROON Pa9e 9Fridoy, January 9, 1947Hollywood Film Fails InAttack On Anti-Semitism THE MUSIC STANDGian Carlo Menotti's ''Medium'Fails To Solve Opera ProblemsBy ANDREW FOLDIFew operas are being written inthe twentieth century and stiMfewer are performed. When a worklike Gian Carlo Menotti’s “TheMedium” achieves a 6-month runon Broadway, it deserves somecareful scrutinizing. The work i.snow playing in Chicago at theStudebaker. Is it an opera, and ifso, is it a successful one?There are only two ready-madecategories into which we can tryto fit this work by its very nature.Either it is a play with music oran opera. Other stage types, likemusicals, ballet can be arbitrarilyexcluded. Let’s briefly look at theplot first.Madam Flora makes a living byholding seances with the aid ofher daughterr Monica, and Toby,the mute servant. At one of theseseances she imagines a pair ofhands around her throat andslowly begins to disintegrate men¬tally. She hears the voices in theseance returning, accuses the serv¬ant of trying to kill her, and fin¬ally in a drunken rage shoots themute, who, by the way, was in lovewith the daughter. poser-librettist-stage director uti¬lizes skillfully. One would suspectthat this really might ,.be a play,but the music assumes a functionthroughout the work which elim¬inates this possibility. The charac¬ters sing, as in opera, the musicattempts to characterize at least'two of the protagonists, and theorchestra is more than a merebackground accompaniment.This leaves opera as the onlycategory which includes the neces¬sary qualifications which charac¬terize “The Medium.” But the com¬poser does not solve the problemof opera well. The relation be¬tween text and music is a curiousone. At the climactic moments ofthe play Menotti relies entirely onthe spoken word, pushing musiccompletely into the background.The musical climax, the “hallucin¬ation monologue” of Madam Flora,does not coincide with the dram¬atic climax which is the actualmurder.The result is a curiously lop¬sided effect, which is very unsuc¬cessful opera and too involvedwith music to be a play.By HOWARD KAMINSKYIn the Maroon some weeks agoMark Reinsberg’s review of themovie Gentlemen’s Agreement ap¬peared. At the time, I had onlyread the book, and did not feelqualified to object to w^hat I con¬sidered an inadequate piece of crit¬icism. I have now just seen thefilm, and since it faithfully fol¬lows the book, I found no occasiontc change my earlier opinion ofthe work, either as art or propa¬ganda. The book was lousy; themovie was only slightly less so—in both respects.In both film and book there isonly the vaguest of efforts madeto present anti-semitism, either asa part of the pattern of Americanlife or as one of the mechanismsof Fascism. The appropriatephra.ses are in the book and, sur¬prisingly enough, in the movie, too,but the basic conception of thebook is attack on the froth of anti¬semitism. The Jews shown are alla.'^sociated with the topmost crustof American society, and everyleading character in the movielives in a palatial, terraced apart¬ment, or the next thing to it.In spite of one or two divergentapproaches, the movie is preoccu¬pied* with the problems of wealthyJf w.c V ho can’t live in fashionable Connecticut suburbs, or can’t getinto the best vacation hotels, orare forced to endure insults as theysit in luxurious metropolitan cafes.To a large extent, of course,these problems are the problems ofall Jews, and to this extent, a cer¬tain service is performed in mak¬ing Gentiles aware of the psycho¬logical burdens they load on theJewish people. But this service ismore than offset in the incredible,typically Hollywood presentationof locales and protagonists on alavish scale that makes the mostbiting insult appear to the movie¬goers as a mere initiation, a smallprice to pay for the privilege ofliving opulently, a privilege ap¬parently enjoyed by most Jews.Prejudice ConfirmedAs so many found out in thearmy, there is a tremendousamount of grass root anti-semi¬tism, .soaked into the thinking ofalmost all Gentiles, whether theylive in large cities, small towns, orrural .shacks. When these peoplego to see Gentleman’s Agreementthey will find their basest preju¬dices confirmed—at worst theJews will appear to them as a uni¬formly wealthy or prosperous race,presumably living off the sweatand blood of the Christian worker: at best, the whole problem of anti¬semitism will appear as an unim¬portant matter, of interest only tocertain wealthy circles of Jewsand Gentiles.Perhaps the failure of Gentle¬man’s Agreement is to be explain¬ed by a remark made in the book,but omitted in the movie. Some¬body who says that anti-Negrofeeling is also a menace is told thatwhile this is true, the struggleagainst anti-semitism must receiveprior and exclusive attention. Asa matter of fact, anti-Negro prej¬udice receives no attention ineither book or film.Yet Fascism operates in manyways, and it happens that, if inGermany anti-semitism was theoutstanding narcotic fed to thepeople, in America it is Jim-Crowthat smooths the way for reactionon all fronts. It is somewhat of afeat to write a whole book on anti¬semitism and not devote any spaceto the other, more decisive racistpatterns in the white mind. IfLaura Holson has succeeded, ithas been at far too great cost. Itis unfortunate that when Holly¬wood finally summoned the cour¬age to attack this issue, it couldonly create a movie in its own vul¬gar, money-dominated image. The plot provides excellent dra¬matic p>ossibilities which the com¬ Performance Not SpectacularThe performance is not toospectacular. The outstanding con¬tribution in this opera is made bythe mute servant, portrayed byLeo Coleman. A Katherine Dun¬ham pupil, he turns in a remark¬able performance in his dancingrole.Marie Powers, the MadameFlora, has the necessary qualifica¬tions for her role. She has astrikingly big voice with a big colorchange between her upper andlower register. She is, furthermore,a remai-kable actress. If, on theother hand, you heard her singthe contralto -solo in “The Mes¬siah” with the Swedish ChoralClub on December 21, you w'ouldhave discovered that Miss Powersis a rotten singer.Evelyn Keller as Monica has thebest voice in the cast. She seemedto labour with a slight cold onopening night which resulted ininsecure intonation in the toprange.“The Telephone” is a frivolouscurtain raiser with equally friv¬olous and insignificant music.Maria D’Attili as the lady with thebusy telephone does her nonsensecharmingly.CUILET QUARTET BACKTHIS QUARTERThe Guilet Quartet W'hich madeits first Chicago concert appear¬ance under University of Chicagoauspices in 1946 will return to theMidw'ay campus for the openingconcert of the winter quarter at8:30 p.m. Tuesday, January 27, inMandel Hall.Organized in 1940 by Messrs.Guilet and Laporte, the GuiletQuartet is composed of DanielGuilet first violin, Jack Gk)ro-detsky, second violin, Frank Brieff,viola, and Lucien Kirsch Lap>orte,violincello. The players have im¬pressive individual reputations.Mr. Guilet is a former concert-master of the Opera Comique inParis. Mr. Gorodetsky has beena member of the Cleveland Sym¬phony Orchestra under the batonof Rodzinski. Mr. Brieff is a prod¬uct of the Juilliard School ofMusic, and Mr. Laporte has occu¬pied first desks in the New YorkSyn^phony and CBS Symphony.The January 27 concert will in¬clude: Beethoven’s Quartet, E flatmajor Opus 74 (“Harp”), Bartok’sQuartet No. 4; and Mozart’s Quar¬tet, C major, Kochel No. 465 (“Dis¬sonance”). The Mozart Quartet Isknown as the Dissonance quartetbecause it opens with some of theseverest dissonances found in clas¬sical music.Inoculations against influenzawill begin next week in the dormi¬tories, Dr. Clayton Loosli, directorof University Student Health, re¬ported yesterday afternoon.ZngmmtbitgRubber accelerators lead the wayto new agricultural fungicidesVulcanization accelerators for rubberand agricultural fungicide.s would seemto have little in common. But the w'idevariety of interests of men in the DuPont organization sometimes result inoutstanding developments from suchapparently unrelated products.A rubber chemist suggested to a plantpathologist that derivatives of dithio-carbamic acid, NH2-C(^SH, parentsubstance of a well-known group of rub¬ber accelerators, be tested as insecticides.His suggestion was based on the possi¬bility that sulfur combined in this formmight be more effective than free sulfur,r. recognized insecticideEntomologists and plant pathologistsinvestigated the fungicidal as well asthe insecticidal properties of thisgroup. One of the first compounds test¬ed, sodium dimethyldithiocarbamate,(CH,)jN-C(S)SNa, even in dilutionsof 1:30,000, was found to be a powerfulfungicide, but somewhat injurious toplant life.This led to a systematic program ofresearch including other metallic salts,the ethyl, propyl, butyl, phenyl, andother aryl derivatives of the dithiocar-bamates and thiuram mono- and di¬sulfides, and the related compounds made from ethylenediamine and mor¬pholine. In this phase of the work, or¬ganic chemists played an importantrole by suggesting various derivativesand preparing them for tests. I.<ater, incases where proper dispersion ^ind ad¬herence of the compounds to plants wereimportant, the skill of physical chemistswas called upon.In general, the compounds of greaterchemical stability were found to be lesseffective. Fungicidal efficiency dimin¬ished with increase in size of alkyl radi¬cal, and as aryl radicals were substitutedfor alkyl. Thus the unusual .situationdeveloped that with the exception ofthe bisethylene (dithiocarbamates), thefirst and simplest products tested, themethyl derivatives, proved to be thebest fungicides.Iron and zinc dimethyldithiocarbam-ates, (CH3)2NC(S)-S-M-S-(S)CN(CHj)j, are now sold as “Fermate” fun¬gicide and “Zerlate” fungicide respec¬tively, for control of fungous diseases ofmany fruit and vegetable crops, to¬bacco, flowers and other ornamentals.Zinc ethylenebis (dithiocarbamate),Zn(-SC(S)NHCH*CHjNH(S)CS-),marketed as “Parzate” fungicide, hasspecific action in the control of late B. L. Richards, Jr. Ph.D., Cern*ll *44, and A. H.Ooddin, M.S., University df West Virginia *32,lest efficiency of “Parzate” fungicide in controlof tomato late blight and bean rust. EquipmentIs specially designed loborotory spray chomber.blight on potatoes and tomatoes. Tetra-methylthiuram disulfide, (CKj)2NC(S)-S-S-C(S)N(CH3)2, is used in twocompositions, as “Arasan” disinfectantfor seeds and ’’Tersan” fungicide forturf diseases.Overall, the derivatives of thesegroups of compounds proved to be out¬standing as fungicides, rather than asinsecticides. Although a marked degreeof specificity for different pests wascharacteristic of the members of thisseries, it is interesting to note that allthree were highly effective. This workoffers still another example of how thebreadth of interest in a company likeDu Pont can lead to worthwhile de¬velopments.Questions College Men askabout working with Du PontWhat are the opportunitiesfor research men?Men qualified for fundamental or applied re¬search are offered unusual opportunities infacilities and funds. Investigations in thefields of organic, inorganic and physicalchemistry, biology, parasitology, plant path¬ology and engineering suggest the wide rangeof activities. Write for booklet, “The DuPont Company and the College Graduate,”2521-A Nemours Building, Wilmington 98,Delaware.**« U. 5. PAT.Of EBETTER THINGS FOR BETTER LIVING...THROUGH CHEMISTRYMore facts about Du Pont — Listen to "Cavalcadeof America," Mondays, y P.M., CST on hiBCField testing of premising fungicides, Including ”Parzate” fermulatlens, for control of tomote late blight.Mfdge 10 THE CHICAGO MAROON FrMoy, Umiorr 9. W48€"Pick the ABC cigaretteFOR Mildness and you pickYOURSELF A WINNER"THE DEAN OFAMERICA'S SPORTS WRITERSTO SATISFY ME!you ckanye to OAester^ioldTHE FIRST THING YOU WILLNOTICE IS THEIR MILDNESS. t/Mts tfmuse o/ ///eirJtff/it Coudmat/onlior/dd Besi 7oIta(xos■-/Ji,AlWAYS MILDERMj better tasting^ COOLER SMOKING1Copyright 1948, bcccTT & Mveis Toracco Ga/ Tryouts To SeekStudent TalentWith the opening of the WinterQuarter, deficiencies have beenfound in the chorus of the Col¬legium Musioum and in the Uni¬versity Symphony Orchestra.For its Winter Concert, Sunday,February 15, at 8:30 p.m. in Man-del Hall, the University SymphonyOrchestra is in need of a snaredrummer for one of the composi¬tions to be played. 'All interested players are re¬quested to call Mr. Si^und La-varie, conductor of the Orchestra,at extension 1164 or see him in hisoffice. Classics 42.Openings for tenors and bassesare available in the chorus of theCollegium Musicum for concertscheduled in the Winter Quarter.Auditions will be held today inMitchell Tower, room 200, 3 to 5p.m., also by Mr. Levarie.PSI UPSILON ELECTSROBINSON PRESIDENTPsi Upsilon fraternity electedJohn K. Robinson as president forthe next nine months in an elec¬tion held this week.William Grey was elected firstvice president; Eugene Swantz,second vice president; RoderickMacPherson, recording secretary,and James Hotchkiss, correspond¬ing secretary.'The chapter house is located at5639 University ave. -WIRE-RECORDINGS OF''MUSICAL OFFERING"A new wire recording of Bach’s*The Musical Offering” and the5th Brandenburg Concerto will beplayed in Wieboldt 408 on Tues¬day, January 13, at 7:30. The per¬formance which is recorded is theone Dr. Siegmund Levarie con¬ducted at the first Kimball Hallconcert last fall. Everyone is in¬vited.SU ENLARGESBOARD, BUDGETVElected to Student Union Boardmembership Tuesday night at thefirst meeting of the Winter Quar¬ter were the following: JanetMeyers, Secretary; Jane Simmons,Games Department; and DickGolden, Information Department.The Board also approved a budg¬et for the quarter and made plansfor Student Union’s enlarged ac¬tivity program.First Roller Skating Party ofthe Winter quarter will be heldnext Wednesday in Ida NoyesGymnasium. The party, sponsoredby Student Union Games Depart¬ment,, will begin at 7:00. Refresh¬ments will be served.CLASSIFIEDADSOUR WATCH cleaning andrepair service offers stu¬dent work and studentprices, three-day service,and one year’s guarantee.Also new watches at sub¬stantially below prevailingretail prices. Drop in anyevening. Dick Rogers andDavid Curry, 1400 E. 53rd.Room 360.FOR SALE: Two new RCA•record demonstrators atwholesale price. Finest re¬production possible. CallVincennes 2387-.FOR SALE: Practically newguitar with carrying case.Call M. Fowler, Room 303,CTS, Dorm. But. 9019.WANTED: Live-wire studentsalesman to represent per¬sonalized BEER MUG man¬ufacturer on campus. Con¬tact CASEY & BLAKE,37 No. Mountain Ave.,Montclair, N. J., immedi¬ately.WALNUT DESK, walnut upbolstered occasional chair,maple dinette set. PhoneDorchester 5724.Frkby« Smmiiwf % W7 TNE CHICAGO MAROON I^I9€ 11AVC To Hold SymposiumOn Civil Liberties Thursday Federalist SignPetitions HereTwo hundred U. of C. studentsa day were reported to have been“Civil Liberties versus Restrictive Covenants” will be the signing cards approving the prin-subject of a symposium at the rst AVC meeting of the cipie of federal world governmentwintier quarter, Thursday, Jan. 15, at Ida Noyes Theatre in a drive opeped Monday byat 7115- Robert M. Strozier, Dean of Students and AVC area united world FederalistsVice-Chairman Robert Ming, profesaor of Law, will head Por several months the campusthe list of speakers, after which a panel discussion will beheld.Professor Ming and a repre¬sentative of local real estate as¬sociation will first speak on re¬strictive covenants, presenting thefacts from different points ofview. Following these speakers willbe Dean Strozier ahd Homer Jack,head of the Chicago Councilagainst Racial and Religions Dis¬crimination, who will discuss whatAVC as an organization can do inmatters of this kind.The scheduled speakers will thenjoin in a panel discussion. W. C.Munnecke, vice-president of theUniversity in charge of businessaffairs, will participate in thepanel discussion, if he is in thecity, to explain the University’sposition on this problem.Chapter business matters will Fund Drive BeginsWith Dance(Continued from Page 1)special functions and drives, andsolicitation.The World Student Service Fundsupports students and facultiesabroad. In many cases it is theonly source of outside aid for war-devastated, universities. Centers oflearning which have suffered in¬tolerably during the war frequent¬ly find they can carry on withtheir work only through WSSPaid.As the American arm of an in¬ternational cooperative body formutual student aid, the WorldStudent Relief, WSSF has aidedoverseas schools for over ten years.The effectiveness of its work has UWF chapter and the South SideCommittee for World Government,of which the campus group is amember, has been canvassing for SPORTSCagers SufferTwo SetbacksBy CARL GYLFE ———Chicago’s varsity cagers experi- Baskets by Bill Gray and R^yenced a rather unhappy holiday Freeark cut the visitors lead toseason, being shaded, 50-44, by 25-17 just as the horn ended thefirst half.A wiser Maroon team startedthe second half and the visitors*Cornell college on December 19th^ and outrushed by Depauw lastsigners among registered voters Saturday, 63-44.and other residents of the Hyde Depauw brought a typical high- ftactics began to showPark area. speed Indiana quintet to the field- “P ‘he foul column Unfortu-sThe card reads “I believe that house that had too much energy "ft® ^ue mam^ to the accurate\ine cara reaas, i oeiieve inai Tv/rarrv^n«: Rnv Freeark’s shooting of Jeff Horsfall, the Cor-only a Federal World Government, , t , t A i JIh, , , . . long shots kept the DePauw leadcapable of making and enforcing ^ minimum during the firstworld law can maintain a just and half. The margin atlasting peace. Therefore, I urge was 29-23 in favor of the “Goldenmy elected representatives to exert Avalanche’’ from Greencastle.every effort toward the formation immediately after the secondof an effective-world government j^^lf tip-off, the DePauw fastbreak began to sweep down on theMaroon guards in much the samemanner that opposing forwardsreasonable and lawfulby anymeans.’*The c^pus AVC chapter hasurged its membership to support pour down on the hapless goaliethe drive, as a method for foster¬ing the national AVC platform’splank for world government. of the Chicago Blackhawks.With Fred Gardner whipping in nell lead was maintained.Jacot, Koch, Pickerell and Hors-'half time banished from the gamevia the foul route in quick suc¬cession and the Maroons quicklycut the gap to three points, 46-43.However, Lloyd Fons and RayFreeark also had to leave becauseof excess indiscriminations, andthe battle of free throws was set¬tled in favor of th» Hilltoppers.Ray Freeark and' Johnny Sharpwere the kingpins in the DePauwgame , each netting '17 points.Chapter ousine.ss matters win woir. ... ' c ibe considered during the early acknowledged by UNESCO WOrnGn S ^DOnSpart of the meeting. A Civil Lib- which has recognized the World ^erties Report will be presented by Student Fund as its official agency OrOaniZe NOW’ f of academic groups. ^ three quick baskets, the visitors “siim” Gardener put in 16 forgarnered ten points while holding the Greencastle team. Bill GrayJack Geiger on results of the pro¬test “Operation Walkout.’’tieu)CLASSICALRECORDS! Studentfor reliefAt present, drives are being heldon campuses throughout the na¬tion to rai.se the $2,000,000 goalwhich will meet only the minimumneeds of those trying to gain edu¬cations in the face of stark hunger Registration for women’s bowl the locals to a pair of free throws.The lead was extended to 49-33with five minutes left to play.Johnny Sharp, diminutive Ma¬roon forward, stepped in with of the Maroons and Horsfall ofCornell each contributed 16 pointsto the cause.Composite Box Score:PGPodulka 2Sharp 10January to give the home crowd a glimmer pons 2ing and basketball tournaments three successive long one-handersscheduled for Thursday,22, will close at 5 p.m. on Monday, ot hope and to cause the DePauwJanuary 19. Registrants at Ida regulars to come steaming backNoyes main office include the oi^to the floor,and chaotic destruction. The quota Quadranglers, BeecherJ Foster, After De Pauw strengthened the Cullen 0Linden 0Boise 1Panes 0Freeark 8 FT P TP13 5561000449for the University of Chicago is$7,000. /Anyone having even a little timeto spare between now and Febru¬ary 6 is urged to leave his name Green, and students from the 1st lead with a pair of tip shots Rayand second year of college. Prac- Freeark dropped a booming longtice and game hours are: Basket- shot for the last real threat of theball, 4:30 Monday, Tuesday and game. A few free throws by bothWednesday; 7:30, Tuesdays and teams put a tame ending to an WILLIAMS ASSUMESDEVELOPMENT POSTLynn A. Williams, president ofat the WSSF office in Chapel Thursdays. Bowling hours are late otherwise thrilling, hard shooting„ cot/k i.r ^1. former vice-president of StewartHouse, 5810 Woodlawn, or with afternoons and evenings. A bil- game.Marytary. 5810Pelz, Chapel House secre- hard tournament will be scheduledlater in the quarter.just released byRCA VictorRossini—Overtures DM-1037Beethoven—Theme and Vari¬ations in F Major. .DM-892Verdi—Aida(complete) DMC-100Gobrielli—Processional andCeremonial Music . DM-928Wagner—RienziOverture '.DM-569Schubert—Die Winterreise . . . .M-692Clazonoff—Raymonda DM-1 133Khacthaturian—Masquerade Suite. DM-1166Tschaikowsky—Symphony No. 5. . DM-1057Mozart—Fine KleineNochtmusik ....DM-1163Boch—BrandenburgConcertos DM-1050Franck—Symphonyin D Minor DM-840Debussy—Songs(Maggie Teyte) ...M-322HERMAN’S935-7 Eost 55th St. Warner Corporation has as-Cornell’s Hilltoppers arrived in sumed his new duties as vice-pres-the fieldhouse riding on the crest ident in charge of development atof a minor string of victories in- the University of Chicago,eluding one the previous night Williams, whose appointment toover North Central. the central administration ol theChicago held varying leads for university was made October 25,about the first eight minutes of succeeds Neil H. Jacoby, who re-the game when a pair of break- signed to become professor of eco-away shots by the visitors’ Jack nomics and dean of the school ofKoch gave them a lead they never business at the University of Cali-relinquished. fornia.Koch, Jacot, and Horsfall in- Thirty-eight years old, Williamscreased the lead with some pass received his bachelor’s degree fromand block tactics that can be best Yale tJniversity in 1929 and hisattributed to the fact that Coach bachelor of law from Harvard LawKoch of the “Purple” is also head ^^’bool in, 1932. He w.as admittedman in football. to the Illinois Bar in 1933.‘‘Dentyne Chewing Gum!”“Well, rub my eyes —if l*m dreaming of deliciousDentyne Chewing Gum, don't wake me up! I’mall set for that keen, clean taste —and do 1 likethe way Dentyne helps keep my teeth white, tooP’Dentyne Gum —Made Only By Adams U.T1131-1133 E. 55th St.COMPLETE SELECTIONOF BEVERAGES 'B' SquadTakes WinNorth Central college of Naper¬ville invaded the fieldhouse lastnight to engage the Maroons var¬sity but the results were not avail¬able at press time.Coach Anderson’s ‘B’ squad en¬tertained the Indiana Harbor Ath¬letic Club in the fieldhouse lastMonday and walked away with a41-30 victory.The Bees held a comfortablelead throughout the game. Brad¬ley and Lindell each contributed10 points for the locals and Ret-tinger pushed nine through thehoopv.CHECK WITH US FORTEXT BOOKSHard To Find Reference Books — DictionariesRELIGIOUS BOOKS — ALL THE NEW TITLES —GENERAL SUBJECTSFiction, Trovel • MODERN, EVERYMAN & LOEB Libraries • All BooksWOODWORTH'S1.311 E. 57th St, OPEN EyENINGS — Mondoy-Wednesdoy-Fridoy TOOMBS BOOK SHOP1367 Eost 57Hi StreetHyde Pork 6536Out of Print BooksPrints ond CordsTASTY FOOD?THAT’S OUR HOBBYHOBBY HOUSE53 rd at Kenwood67th ond StoneyDAWN TO DAWNWaffles • SteaksCheeseburgers1Ifavorite song • • •IFran Carlin looks lovely in rayon tissue taffeta print;Sweetly old-fashioned with its quaint red or blueflowers on black background . , . frankly new-look withits flattering mid-calf length. You’ll findit in junior sizes 9 to 15, $35, Young Chicago Shop—Sixth Floor, South, StateWear a two-strand choker of simulated pearls,$4 plus federal excise taxJewelry—First Floor, South, WabashA pretty tune to toast the campus belles . .;the maids that beguile with a smile and a style.Quadrangle queens looking for jaunty new frocks thatset the campus clocks spinning to keep pace,stop under their favorite State Street time pieceand take in the fashion airs of Marshall Field &Company. You’ll find we have the key to what youwant to wear for 1948’s snow rides and snow ballswhether you’re country girl fair or city girl debonaire.favorite fashion • • •fo nUHRSITVGIRL.. r- *3