ionUniversity of Chicago, Friday, March 5, 1948 receives setbackBy MILTON R. MOSKOWITZDiscrimination at the University of Chicago has re¬ceived a hard right to the jaw. Dr. Emmett Bay, head ofthe medical school’s admission board, told the MAROON31 last Friday that a Negro will probably be in the next en¬tering class and that “from now on” Negro medical stu¬dents will have no difficulty in their work here.Dr. Bay denied that the board has been discriminatingagainst Negroes in the admission of students to the medicalschool, as was charged last fail by the campus Anti-discrimination Committee. He said that there just hasn’tMADISON, WIS., Mar. 2-(Special)-Two Intefim representatives of the National aPPl«=ant_Student Association (NSA) to the International Union of Students (lUS) in Europe have board has already acceptedresigned their positions as a result of the failure of the lUS secretariat to condemn the L^“b^t%h“student’^af^yto to pick and the^ard L toaction of the present Czechoslovakian government with regard to the treatment of stu- return his reaistration fee if he decisions through personal in¬dents in Prague. or any other Negro students do through interviews, TO SSA sun lu, Ih. "'S E SIS, “XI Sh. rSiiSSUC debaters win ISutrS SJES g y SE.g“S.T..XTJUv- ueDaiers win resignations have been ac- dents (NUS) had been dissolved ^Previously, Negro medical stu ^ xboard metcepted by the NSA Staff. by Communist “action commit- dents at the University of Chicago P® ^ J^at ^ btees.” were sent, to Provident Hospital yf^r, witn eachleast one All alleged reactionary profes- their last two years of clinical Q^^-Slf lio^sAs yet there have been2in NSA repshuff over to lUS quitCzech affuirthird tournamentnoPolice fire on studentsOn February 25 atstudent was killed and several sors and students have been ban-^^work.)wounded when police fired on a ned from the university at Prague Asked about the allegation that f * ^ k .d-Setting the most outstanding procession of 1,500 students and every democratic principle has a member of his board had in 1945 stanaara tests accepted by medi-record of the history of UofCde- marching to ask President Benes been violated, Ellis said. said, “this is not an appropriate cal schools for the determinmg ofbating. University teams chalked install the new government. _ _ time for the admission of a Negro individual personality, so personalup their third consecutive tourna- James Smith, University of IRscIlO iViiclW3V medical student,” Dr. Bay admit- (Continued on poge 6)• ted it to be true, saying, however, ,_ that that was not the general OrOSniZ© S6min8rsubmitted their resignations via "" opinion of the board and that theUC scores perfect record telegram to Bob Smith, vice- By YALE KRAMER man who said it has l**^t the school The students selected for theTeam captain Lowden Wingo president in charge of internation- Radio Midway seems to be here now. Summer Seminar in Europe havegnd his colleague Ted Wiley end- al student activities for the NSA. to stay! Plans have been drawn Admission procedure described organized as a new campus organ-the tourney with a perfect rec- Ellis was in Switzerland at the tor a studio in the basement of dj*. Bay described in detail the ization, with Paul Berger as chair-ord, defeating the debaters from time of the change of the Czech and Dean Bergstrasser has admission procedure for applicants man, Malcolm Norris, vice chair-Kansas University, Michigan government. Smith was in Prague already had several bids from con- medical school. Right now, ^^^yNedzel, secretary, andas Ellis’ proxy during the latter’s tractors for the job.illness. Dcodlmc is Moy 1All student groups dissolved The station staff, consisting ofin succession* vCv&IawOnient win of the season Iwt week- Texas, and William Ellis, Harvard,end at the l^iversity of Indiana ^jg representatives to the lUS, W||| hum 8ICI81IITInvitational Debate Tournament. f.hpir rp.cie-nat.inn.c via ^By YALE KRAMERState, Purdue, and Indiana. JimMulcahy and Sheldon Stein metand defeated Indiana State andCanisius College of Buffalo, NewYork.Canisius College and the U of C,co-winners of the Indiana Tour¬ney. will tangle here tonight at7:30 in an exhibition debate atJudson Lounge. Representing Chi¬cago will be Jim Mulcahy andSheldon Stein,NU debates UCAt the same time in Judson Li¬brary, Northwestern will debateou the I\e said, the school receives 2,000applicants a year, which is double Sherwood Miller, treasurer.The countries to be visited byindividual students engaged in in-Dorms and fratsplan CARE helpEllis’ communication, which was production men, scriptwriters, and ^ ® pre-war gu e. y dependent study and research in-forwarded to the national office engineers, are working to meet England, France. Sweden,here, stated that the Czech stu- the broadcasting deadline on or About i.ouu oi me appucauons Holland, Belgium, Switzerland,dent demonstration was fired on about May 1. Auditions for the ^^ver discu^ed by the admis- sp^in, Italy, Czechoslovakia, andand that all student groups and Radio Midway Workshop are be- ®mn board, as they are eliminated Palestine.ing held today from 3-6 p.m. in clerically because of low grades. The group, consisting of 51the Judson library. From 20 to 35 of the accepted 65 members and 9 alternates, has'This group will be devoted to chosen quickly. These students been actively engaged in manifoldthe production of original scripts are those with first-rate grades activities despite its very recentsimilar to those heard on the Co- and “personal qualities well- origin. Important functions arelumbia Workshop series. Plans are known to the admissions board,” now being handled on committeealso being made, to adapt and said Dr. Bay. level. 'The finance committee co-Campus dormitories and fra- dramatize the more malleable of ordinates general fund raisingsame bill as Canisius, ternities are instituting a program Great Books. ^ * A*<l ventures and is headed by Ronaldspeaking against the Evanston- to aid Europeans through the Co- WGU—World's Greofrest University? ^ Reifler. The Solicitations Commit-ians will be Frank Miller, Larry operative for American Remit- The call letters WGU have been foreign Students tee, with Phil Oxman and. JohnBo.stow, Kenton Stephens, and tances to Eufopie. The goal of the assigned the station. Who knows A campus committee has been Forwalter in charge, oversees ac-Hillel Black, program is a CARE package a but that they might stand for formed under the leadership of tual soliciting. Preparations are inUniversity debaters have taken nionth from each house partici- World’s Greatest University? The Don Bushnell to further co- the hands of Harry Gourevitchtop honors at the Universities of pating. following prospectus has been operation and understanding be- and his aids, veterans affairs areHope to foster friendship drawn up by the Staff of Radio tween University of Chicago stu- taken care of by Thomas BennettIt is hoped that contact may be Midway: dents and students in foreign uni- and committee. Seminar study ismade with the recipients of the “The Staff of Radio Midway af- versifies. cared for by Daniel Bergman’spackages, and that in this way a firms and avows its belief in ra- The committee is planning to group and publicity by John Mal-more personal relationship with dio as a public service, a far- put on a book drive during the last Ian’s committee,the receivers will be fostered. reaching medium, and a vast and week of the present quarter and Since the university is not fur-Funds will be raised by small untapped art form. To prove our a number of deVates to raise nishing travel expenses the groupn^ed monthly contributions from house faith we have decided to bring to money and supplies for needy must solicit $30,000 for this pur-foreign pupils. In the spring quar- pose. Fund raising is both an or-Miami, Northwestern, and Mundelein College tournaments earlierthis season, /Nominaf’e Miller forAVC prexy postSherwood Miller, seniorstudent and charter member of members. Any surplus over the the students and staff at the U.tile U. of C. AVC, was the sole cost of one ten dollar package will of C. the highest quality and most ter the drive is to be highlighted ganization and an individual en-candidate nominated for the office be used for bulk shipment. Food inof chapter chairman of AVC at bulk may be sent at one-third thela.st night’s membership meeting, cost of distributing individualMiller, who is the present chair- packages,man of the Rules Committee of ah countries included in”CAREthe Student Assembly and mem- CARE serves fifteen Europeanborship chairman of AVC, has countries. By special arrangementsbeen a leader in campus politics with the governments, packagessince 1945. are distributed duty and ration (Continued on poge 2) by a carnival. terprise.Hoopsters rap Knox, 51-49Coach Nels” Norgren’s Maroons finished their ’47-’48 basketball season in a minorNominations .remain open for free. All.countries that are willing blaze of glory as they defeated Knox 51-49 and dropped a 31-24 contest to highly toutedthe chairmanship until the first to cooperate on this basis are in- w^ashington U.t^n wiii^be”heid^'Aprn''io!^'^ Sd^ations^^^^^^ political con- Freeark, veteran guard, was the main offensive show in last Saturday’s Knoxgame. Ray abandoned his well known long shot and drove in for six of his seven bas¬kets. His total of 18 points was followed by Bill Gray’s 11 and Johnny Sharp’s 10.lysistrata^ opens tonightUniversity Theatre presentsAristophanes* Lysistrata at 8:30(anight, tomorrow, and Sunday,in Mandel Hall. General admis¬sion will be $.50 at the door.Change title holdersThe title role will be played byViolet Salzer, not Lee Marko aspreviously stated. Miss Salzer waslast seen as Cassandra in theU T.’s production of Agamemnon.The supporting cast will be led by(George Applegate as the AthenianMagistrate.Lysistrata, written by AncientGreece’s greatest comedy maker,is a robust, risque political satireon the Peloponnesian Wars.Women pledge obstinenceIn the play, Lysistrata (literal¬ly. “sender home of armies”) de¬ities that it is the women ofGreece who must end the war.Hors is an ingenious method: apan-hellenic “sex-strike.” Id^sis- trata gathers all the women of thewarring Greek city-states in theAcropolis, where they pledgethemselves to abstinence and lockthemselves up with the moneysupply.Finally the men can stand celi¬bacy no longer; Lysistrata, her¬self, has some difficulty in re¬straining some of the livelier mem¬bers .of her .fprce. Peace parleysare arranged under her guidance,and a compromise between Athensand Sparta is arrived at.Ail get drunkThe play closes with the joyfulmen and women mingling indrunken revelry.Robert E. Carter, a graduatestudent in the Humanities willdirect the comedy from his owntranslation of the original. 'Thesettings are designed by KeithGilchrist. Both teams played the samebrand of hard driving basketballthroughout the game. Chicagomaintained a slight edge mainlydue to the hard shooting of Free¬ark and Gray.Chicago held a four point leadthroughout the last four minutes.This lead was whittled down totwo when King of Old Siwashdropped a one hander. A basketby Gibbs of Knox with five sec¬onds remaining was nullified bya blocking penalty, and the Ma¬roons had their second victory ofthe year.Chicago unveiled an Oklahoma“Aggie” type of offense Mondayagainst the Bears of WashingtonU. and came within three minutesof creating one of the larger up-sete of the season. Poting for the MAROON ore new omi oM Inter-Frat Council Officers. FrontDuring the first two minul^ Melos of Phi Gommo Dolto ond Dick Gibbs of ZBT, new ond oldof the game, the Maroon guards p|.esident, respectively. Bock row, Jerry Ruskin ond George Broden, new(Continued on pogo II) secretory ond troosuror ond their predecessors Roger Dovis ond Art Fort.THE CHICAGO MAROONI Friday, March 5, 1945Calendar of EventsNext Week onQuadrangles Registration *What Cctreless Love Can Do*UC howls over HootenannyBy PAT GOLDENTODAY, MARCH 5MATHEMATICAL BIOPHYSICS MEETING; "A Statistical Approach to theProblem of Aging; Theoretical and Empirical Findings.” 5822 Drexel,4:30 p.m.LECTURE: “Persian Gardens.” Myron Smith, speaker. Oriental Institute, 8 p.m.UNIVERSITY THEATRE; "Lyslstrata,” Mandel hall, 8:30 pm., admission50 cents. „DOCUMENTARY FILM GROUP: “Way Down East,” 7.15 p.m, Soc. Scl. 122,no single admissions.RECORDED OPERAS: 2:30-4, Reynolds club. ^VAUDEVILLE MIXER: 3:30, Ida Noyes theatre.HILLEL FOUNDATION: Sabbath Service, 7:45 p.m. Fireside. 8:30, HenryFinch will speak on “An Introduction to a Medieval Philosopher; JosephAlbo.”LUTHERAN; L.S A. meeting 7:30 p.m.. Chapel house.INTER-FAITH: Meeting. 3:30 p.m.. Chapel house.INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: Luncheon meeting, 12:30 p.m.,third floor, Ida Noyes, speaker: Dr. Edson Peck.OPEN PARTY: Delta Kappa Epsilon will hold an open party at the HotelWindermere, ballroom, 9-1 p.m.FENCING: Illinois vs. Chicago, 4 p.m., Bartlett.SWIMMING: Ill. Tech., 4 p.m.. Navy Pier, 2.30 pm., Bartlett,THEOLOGICAL PARTY; Ida Noyes. 8 p m.MARCH DANCE; 9 p.m.. Burton Dining Room. Del Baker Band. Free.PCA MEETING: Richard Watt. “Third Party,” Haskell 108, 3:30 p.m.RADIO MIDWAY: Audition, Judson Library, 3-6 pm.SATURDAY, MARCH 6SQUARE DANCE: 8-11:30. p.m., Ida Noyes gym.UNIVERSITY THEATRE: "Lyslstrata,” 8:30 p.m., Mandel hall, admission 50BASKETBALL PLAYDAY: Ida Noyes, luncheon, 12:30, Tickets, 60 cents forluncheon.KELLY BOWERY PARTY; Kelly Hall.SWIMMING MEET; Finals, 2:30, Bartlett Pool.SUNDAY, MARCH 7SONG FEST: 8-10 p.m., Ida Noyes.NOYES BOX: 7-11 p.m., Ida Noyes.UNIVERSITY THEATRE; “Lyslstrata,” 8.30 p.m., Mandel hall, admission50 cents.UNIVERSITY ROUND TABLE: WMAQ, 12:30 p.m.EPISCOPALIAN; Holy Communion, 8:30-9:15 a m.. Bond Chapel.ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL: Morning service, 11 a m The Rev. James GordonGllkey will deliver the address.BAPTIST; Inter-Racial meeting. 7 p.m.CHANNING CLUB: Hve2don Kafka will comment on "The Recent CzechCoup,” light supper, 6 p.m., open discussion. All students invited, 1stUnitarian Church.VESPER SERVICES; Jean Lelsk, soprano; Frederick Marriott, organist.CARILLON RECITALS. 3.15 p.m., Mr. Marriott.CALVERT CLUB: Herbert T. Schwartz, "The Intellectual Life and Its Con¬sequences, Breasted Hall, 3:30 p.m.MONDAY, MARCH 8NAACP: Meeting, 3.30, Classics 10. Adoption of a chapter constitution andelection of officers. Everyone welcome.ILLUSTRATED LECTURE SERIES: 4 p.m., Reynolds club.MEETING: Young Mothers for MacArthur. Bartlett Gymnasium. 9:30 p.m.AYD MEETING: Anna Louise Strong, “U. S. and China,” Judd 126, 3:30 p.m,BASEBALL MEETING: Bartlett Gym Trophy Room, 4 p.m. All candidatesmust be present.TUESDAY, MARCH 9LECTURE: “Political Folklore in Labor Relations.” Jacob J. Weinstein, 8 p m.,19 S. La Salle, room 809, admission 75 cents.CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION: Thorndike Hilton Chapel. 7:30 pm.LECTURE; "Atomic Energy and Medicine,” Raymond E. Zirkle, Kent hall 106,8 p.m,HILLEL FOUNDATION: Folk dance group. 8 p.m.RECORDED OPERAS: 2:30-4 p.m., Reynolds club.STUDENTS FOR WALLACE: “Wallace and Third Party,” Swift 106, 3:30 p.m,MANLY HOUSE LECTURE: Henri Rago, “Poetry of T. S. Eliot.”SHIRLEY MILLER MEMORIAL SERVICES: Bond Chapel, 4 p.m.DOCUMENTARY FILM: “Her First Affair,’.' “Easy Street,” 7:15 p.m., 9;15 p.m.,Soc Scl. 122.WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10PRESBYTERIAN; Dinner meeting. 6 p.m.. Chapel house. "What Do Presby¬terians Believe?” Dr. Haroutunlan.CONCERT TIME SERIES: 3 sopranos. 4 p.m., Reynolds club.CAMPUS TOUR: 3:30, Information Office desk.FACULTY OPEN HOUSE & MIXER: 7-10. Ida Noyes.LECTURE: "Haydn and Modern Music,” Rudolph Kollsch, lecturer, 8:15 p.m.,Kimball hall, admission $1.50.CARILLON RECITAL: 4:30 p.m., Mr. Marriott.BAHA’I FELLOWSHIP MEETING: Open discussion on "The Baha’i Patternfor Peace,” 4 p.m., room A, Ida Noyes. *LECTURE; "The Nature of Social Science, Pour,” lecturer, Milton B. Singer,4.30 p.m., Mandel hall.LECTURE: "Post-Gothic Cathedrals and the Gothic Revivals.” Lecturer,Clarence Ward, 7 ;30, Oriental Institute.UWF FILM SERIES: "Carnet du bal,” Soc. Scl. 122, 7 & 9:15 p m. "OpenSecret,” & Edward Teller, atomic scientist, Mandel hall, 8 p.m., freeadmission.TZFA: Seminar, “Yishuy In International Affairs,” 7:30, Ida Noyes.THURSDAY, MARCH 11RECORDED OPERAS: 2.30-4, Reynolds club.HUMAN DEVELOPMENT DISCUSSION: 3:30. Id.a Noyes.DUPLICATE BRIDGE TOURNAMENT: 7-10, Ida Noyes.HILLEL FOUNDATION: Record concert, 8 pm.^ Mozart festival.METHODIST; Meeting, 7 p.m.. Chapel house. “What Do Methodists Believe?”ART AUCTION; Dance room, Ida Noyes, 7-10 p.m.Campus musical groups offerfull program for future weeks Registration for an examinationat the end of Spring Quarter mustbe made in the Office of TestAdministration, Lexington 5.'Reg¬istration for the Spring Quartercloses on April 15, 1948.Office hours of the Test Admin¬istration are: 10 to 12 a.m. and2 to 4 p.m.; Saturdays, 10 to 12a.m. If there are any questionsconcerning examinations, phoneMr. Robert Woelner, Cobb 215, orTest Administration Office, ext.393.A fee of $2.50 is charged foreach late registration accepted.Students may register by mail ifit is impossible for them to reg¬ister in person.Wallace group rapsTruman doctrineSpeaking at a large meeting ofthe University Students for Wal¬lace on Wednesday evening. Dr.L. Straurianos, Professor of GreekHistory at Northwestern, present¬ed a vivid analysis of “Greece andthe Truman Doctrine”.In the first of a series of politi¬cal analyses to be presented byStudents for Wallace, which inthe first three weeks of its exist¬ence has acquired 300 members,Straurianos traced the course ofCivil War and Anglo-Americanintervention.“The continuation of theChurchill policy,” Straurianoscharged, “has led directly from‘bloody Sunday’ in 1944 to thelatest request by the Truman ad¬ministration for an additional$250,000,000 for Greece.”Following a presentation offacts, the Professor concluded thatthe “military situation of theGreek Government is as bad as itever was, and the economic situa¬tion has become deplorable.”He concluded that “the basicfallacy in the Truman Doctrineis the sustaining of a governmentthat will never have popular sup¬port. The Truman Doctrine is themost efficient salesman of Com¬munism in Greece.” By ELARESWhen Anny first began hooting in the North Woods, shenever expected howling in connection with folk-tunes, tooriginate a folk-song recital. Admittedly she did not takethe U. of C. student body into account.Her error was illustrated by the energies expended indiscussion and letter writing by various parties interestedin last Monday’s Hootenanny held “ -—•in the Reynolds Club. The storm ^o^lowed this with 15 other .veij.over the gathering centered k«.What do we seek to preserv*around . two of Anny s hootin’ )„ our writing and singing? i, idittys. filth, lechery, violence, murder orOne, Careless Love Is a ballad faith, honor, good will? , . ,... ... ... ^ Why can t love of man for womanwith subjm matter that befits ^t for women kind “the title. It IS the story of a young eapriciou.. slaj.woman w-ho finds herself left pf which WilUe boasted?pregnant by her lover and then ^hy can’t “Careless Love" be d'e.'left. In ten subtle and lyncalj^j^ ,,om a sophisticated cam.verses she bemoans her fate and p^^ repertoire and replaced bv15 met by the callousness of her .pngs of value that show honorone-time beau. To PiettV tune respect for women and chil-are set words which at first show pren instead of banal, trifling dis.her worry and then her deter- respect and complete neglect,mined attitude as the song nears ^o the rescue of the near-de-Its close with Pass r.'.y gate and ,pass my door, but you wont pass ^ Hootenanny singer who wrote:my forty-four. ..j confess," Stone wrote,The other is a tale of t'wo more “that my conception of song has.voung people.'.Pretty Polly tells been hopelessly debauched everof an engaged couple, Willy and since I first heard the licentiousPolly. He asks the young maid to music of ‘Tristan and Isolde.’ Ttiecome up into the hills and see high moral standards I nurtured.some “pleasures.” Polly hops be- . ^ . never survived beyond myhind on Willy’s horse and away first literary contact with thethey ride. lecherous . . . villain who marriedAnna Jane Burkhardt was ex- Hamlet’s mother. Moreover I havetremely disturbed over these two taken to carrying a portable fignumbers and the type of folk- leaf with me whenever I visit anmusic they represented. Angrily, art gallery just in case a bawdyshe wrote to the MAROON. “What sculptor has been up to someare the functions of song?” She naughty strategem.”Musical offerings in the comingweeks will include a concert byCollegium Musicum, a lecture-concert on Haydn and “ModernMusic,” a Mozart opera, and thecomplete cycle of Beethoven trios.Dr. Sigmund Levarie will con¬duct the Collegium Musicum ina program devoted to originalcompositions and their arrange¬ments by other w’ell known com¬posers Sunday at 8:30 p.m, in theInternational House AssemblyRoom.Finol lecture WednesdoyThe final Kimball Lecture-Con¬cert of the 1947-48 series will begiven March 10 by Miss EthelWerfel, who will talk on “Haydnand Modem Music.” She will beaccompanied by the Pro Artequartet of the University of Wis¬consin. Sponsored by the Student Com¬mittee of the Renaissance So¬ciety, Andrew Foldi will conductan unusual version of Mozart’s“Bastien and Bastienne.” Pup¬pets, under the hand of GeorgeTressel w’ill perform the actionswhile singers and an orchestra be¬hind scenes will provide the music.To perform Beethoven' Continuing the Mandel Hallconcert series, the Alberni Triowill perform the complete cycle ofBeethoven’s piano trios during thespring quarter.Radio ...(Continued from poge 1)varied in adult entertainment.This, together with sincere serv¬ice to the school and its commun¬ity, becomes our single aim—anda singular aim in radio.” TERESA DOLANDANCING SCHOOL1208 E. 63rd St (Nr. Woodlown)LEARN TO DANCE NOVi^!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 IPRIVATE 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 3080 SPRINGVALUESSHIRTS 69®3 FOR $2.00Men's Gripper TQi^SHORTS I 51^Rope Soled "70aSCUFFS I 57®For the ShowerMOCCASINS— $^95Leather Laces /iLHeovy $159SWEATSHIRTS... 1White and SilverFlannel $049SHIRTS LPlaid and GrayFine Poplin QQikWAC SHIRTS 570®Mercerized OCl^SOCKS 00®Ankle LengthFATIGUES—Reclaimed 570®M-34 Drawstring $045FIELD JACKETS .. . 0Brand NewHundreds oi Other Itemsi. C. SALES CO.Surplus Outlet943 E. 55th STREETBUT. 7155 BOOKS FOR EASTERTHE IMITATION OF CHRIST by Kempis... .$3.50With Iliustrotioiis by Volenti AngeloTHE PILGRIM’S PROGRESS by Bunyan.. $2.00With Engrovings ond WoodcutsElegy In a Country Church Yard, By Gray. .$2,00Complete Poems With Wood-EngrovingsPSALMS OF DAVID $2.00Rec'ommenclt^ for Lenten Readini^:Butler: Best Sermons In 1947 $2.75Cadbury: Jesus; IVhat Manner of Man.. .$2.25Knudsen: Christian Belief $1.75Knox: On the Meaning of Christ $2.50Luccock: In the Light of the Cross $1.75Joy: Albert Schweitzer, an Anthology $3.75Seaver: Albert Schweitzer, the Man and HisMind $5.00Taylor: The Christian Hope of Immortality. $2.00Best Loved Hyms and Prayers of the Ameri¬can People $1.98Nichols: Primer for Protestants $1.50FOR THE CHILDREN’S EASTERGolden Egg Book $f.00With The Most Beoutiful Eoster ColorsEaster Book of Stories and Legends $2.75Picture Stories From Lite of Christ $1.00The White Bunny With Magic Nose $1.00Jesus and His Friends $1.25How the Rabbit Fooled the Whale and theElephant 50cThine is the Glory 65cJohnny Cottontail $1.00Illustrated Book of Favorite Hymns $1.25University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue theCoiss\.Page Sf^y, March 5, >»*• THE CHiCAGO MAROONDouglas talks on local andinternational problemsPaul Douglas, U. of C. professor and a candidate forU. S .Senator, called for the strengthening of the U. N. ina speech this week before the United Nations Associationin Chicago.He said that the “abuse*’ of the veto power by Russia andthe failure to set up an International Police Force, haveConservative Leagueissues future policyA statement of policy, designed,to be the opening gun in a rally ofconservative forces on this cam¬pus, was issued this week by Wat¬son Parker. Conservative LeaguePre.sident, after tentative adop'-tion by the League in a meetinglast week,“One of the greatest handicapsthe conservative face is ignor¬ance.” Parker said. “The conserv¬ative duty is to rally all classicalliberals behind us.”The two main tenets of theconservative policy are: first,maintenance of the individual asopposed to the state: and second,support of the existing economicsystem* of free enterprise.As a concrete application ofthese ideas, the ConservativeLieague is planning a petitioncampaign against the actions ofthe Communists in Czechoslova¬kia The League will be supportedin its drive by Students for Stas-sen, United World Federalists, andStudent Republicans.INCOME TAX SERVICEBy Mail or phoa»—*for busy peopleE'RRF at Internal RcTemoc OfflcMif you wait in line for lioursORAt rurrenrjr exchange prices. No M%increas<> in price after March 1.By eXPKRIRNCED ALUMNUS. PhoneWalbrook 2133 (10 a.K.—10 p.m.)for appointment at fuimpas loca¬tion, or mail 1947 data and. If avail¬able. ropy of 1946 return to—Albert Bofman, 6329 S. May, Chicafo»1.Will phone you for other neededinformation, then complete and mailyou a 1947 return in duplicate. rendered the organization largelyineffective.In another Chicago addressDouglas said that slashing theMarshall plan appropriation wouldtransform it from a recovery intomerely a relief plan.In Lawrenceville, Douglaspraised the Roosevelt rural elec¬trification program and pledgedhimself to work for its extensionto every farm in Illinois.Appearing with Adlai E. Steven¬son in West Frankfort, he joinedthe gubernatorial candidate incondemning state mine adminis¬tration. Stevenson, speaking inHerrin, Illinois, had previouslycharged Grov. Green with laxity inallowing mines to continue to op¬erate despite their acknowledgedunsafe conditions.PoliticalBriefsUOPWA supports WalloceThe student chapter of UOPWAvoted 25 to 3 to support the Wal¬lace for President campaign atits regular meeting, Thursday,February 26. In addition the chap¬ter voted to support the decisionof the downtown local to supportthe third party candidacy.Campaign urges UMT banITic Campus Committee againstConscription, as a follow up tothe National Youth Assembly heldin Wash. D.C., conducted a letterwrRing, telegram and petitioncampaign this week, nettingnearly a tltousand signaturesagainst UMT. This campaign wasdirected by A1 Bofman, Milt Ga-man, Leon Letwin, and SallyTomchin. House can dock NSAUnless Joint Congressional Resolution 295 enabling theU. S. Maritime Commission to operate vessels is passed,NSA plans to establish work-camp seminars to aid in re¬constituting European universities to their pre-war stand¬ards,-will face withdrawal.These trips to Poland, Switzerland and France by a groupof 20 Midwest regional studentswere scheduled to aid in recon- i istruction work and to provide dis- SG DOOK GXChdnQBcussion of common problems byAnna Louise StrongStrong Speaks onU. S. and ChinaAmerican intervention in theChinese civil war will come underclose scrutiny on Monday, March8, when Anna Louise Strong willspeak on “The Truman Doctrineand China” in Judd 126. The lec¬ture is sponsored by the AmericanYouth for Democracy.A well-known correspondentand author of a number of bookson China, Miss Strong has justreturned from a two year stay inCommunist China and NorthernKorea. American and foreign students.The House resolution callc forcontinuation of the Wartime Com¬mission’s authority to sell, charterand operate ships. Authorizationof funds adequate for the opera¬tion of the program will then beavailable. The NSA negotiatingcommittee cannot ask the Mari¬time Commission to provide thenecessary transportation facili¬ties, if the continuation is notgranted. will begin March 15Operation of the Student gov¬ernment book exchange is sched¬uled to commence on March 15 inthe Alumni room in Ida Noyes.Applications are now being ac¬cepted by Ben Glazer, Chairmanof the Board of Control, for thetwo vacant positions on the Ex¬change staff.Veterans under the G.I. bill whomake purchases at the ExchangeLetters urging the passage of will be given receipts which per-the bill should be sent to the mit refunds when presented to theSpeaker of the House, Joseph University Bookstore.Martin, individual Congressmen Exchange wUl be open fromand especially to Representative ^Alvin F. Weichel, Chairman of ^ ^ P.m. Monday throughthe House Merchant Marine and Friday, during the weeks of MarchFisheries Committee. 15, March 29, and April 5.Congress fails vet housing lobbyThe four U. of C. delegates tothe National Veterans HousingLobby in Washington last week¬end reported upon their returnearly this week that the lobby hadbeen unsuccessful in obtainingthe 218 signatures necessary todischarge the Taft-Ellender-Wag-ner housing bill from the RulesCommittee onto the floor of theHouse.Agree riiot Hi is Congress foileJ themWhile over 100 signatures hadbeen obtained, George Blackwood,Dave Green, Constantine Kontos,and Dennis Fleming were unani¬mous in feeling that the remainder could not be secured from thisCongress.Dave Green, however, pointedout that there were several sub¬stantial accomplishments made bythe lobby. “It is the first time thatall major veteran organizations,except the American Legion, havebeen able to unite on a program ofsocial legislation that affected theentire population and not (mlyveterans.”Set up petmouettf lobbyAmong the resolutions adoptedby the lobby in its final plenarysession was a decision to set up a permanent veterans housing lobby.The delegates, who came fromevery state, also unanimouslyagreed that they would accept nohousing bill that did not containat least as many provisions forpublic housing as the TETW bill.The veterans also came out infavor of continuation of rent con¬trols and strongly opposed thepractice of restrictive covenants.Among the speakers who ad¬dressed the lobby were: Sens.Taft, Ellender, McCarthy, Tobey,Lodge, and Taylor. Several Rep¬resentatives also spoke.It's ARTAnd h®*'® , MOONEY'S hot arrangement of“i'fli looking Over a Four Leaf Clover"(An MGM r«l*a»«) N"Four leaf clover** has turned into a real four leafclover for ork-pilot, Art Mooney. His record iskeeping jukes in clover.An experienced hand in the music biz—Art followithat famous experience rule in the choice of acigarette, too. “I’ve smoked many different brandsand compared,” says Art, “and Camels suit me best.”Try Camels! Discover for yourself why, withsmokers who have tried and compared, Camels arethe “choice of experience”!R. J. Reynolds Tobacco CompaBRWinston-balein. North Carollo*Poge 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON Fridoy, March 5, 1943Editorial OpinionPaul Douglas —a disappoinfment I Letters To The EditorIn past-years the MAROON has given thorough cover¬age and support to U. of C. professors who have run forpublic office. It has, for instance, backed Paul Douglas whenhe ran for Alderman. Professor Douglas is scheduled to bethe Democratic nominee for Senator in the coming elec¬tion, and the MAROON would like to be able to extend itsfiupport to him as it has done in the past. However we’reBorry to say that the ex-Marine economics professor has—as yet—given us no indication that he is worthy of liberal,progressive support.Douglas is going to run against the infamous, Tribuneprogeny, Curly Brooks, but one would never know it fromthe speeches the professor has made up to the presentmoment. Instead of concentrating his fire on the reaction¬ary record of the Republican Senator, he has attackedHenry Wallace and the Progressive Party and has takenthe consistent anti-Russian line that Brooks himselfespouses. ^ ‘On Universal Military Training and domestic issues,Douglas has not clearly defined his position. All that canbe made out of his recent talks is that he believes Russianaggression is the number one problem of American foreignpolicy-makers. We submit that this is not enough to makeus urge his election, since Curly Brooks would probablyagree heartily with him on this point.It may be argued by some that it’s still early in thecampaign, that the primaries haven’t even been held yet,and that Douglas is appealing to the down-state vote. Thismay be true, but voters can only be expected to decide onthe basis of what a candidate says, not on what he doesn’tsay. And so far, Professor Douglas has been ignoring theprogressives and liberals, perhaps operating under the as¬sumption that they will automatically vote for him againstBrooks.When the campaign develops, and Douglas then adoptsa strong, liberal platform—coming out vigorously for acivil rights program, an end to loyalty purges, scrappingof the Taft-Hartley bill, a federal education program—theMAROON and Illinois progressives will commend him. Butright now we have to say that we are rather disappointed.[We hoped for better things from a U. of C. professor. To the editor:We are once again amazed andhorrified to hear of another mis¬carriage of justice in the South.Last week Mrs. Rosa Lee Ingram,a Negro woman and widowedmother of twelve children, wassentenced with two sons, aged 15and 13, to die in the electric chair,convicted of the murder of a whiteGeorgian, Mr. Stratford. Whatreally happened, as told by herson Charles, is as follows:On November 4, 1947, Mrs. In¬gram went over to Stratford’sfield to get her hogs and mulesthat had strayed. He shouted,“Get those hogs and mules outor I’ll kill them.” She explainedthat she was getting them out andwarned that two of the mulesbelonged to ♦he white landlordwho owned both their farms.Stratford left and came back wav¬ing a rifle. He fell upon Mrs.Ingram and struck her, thenraised the rifle to shoot. Shegrabbed his gun but he held ontoit and pulled a knife, and beather head with the handle. Shewas bleeding terribly when hertwo young sons rushed to therescue and with a club stnickStratford the blow from which hedied, thus saving their mother'slife. put through a progressive pro¬gram of European recovery if sheis pressured by letters, telegrams,and such petitions as U.W.F. cir¬culated, calling for full aid withno political or economic strings,administered in a spirit free fromthe contamination of partisandomestic politics.HAROLD LORD, ChoirmonU of C United World FederolisfsTo the editor:Students, you’re all a bunch ofjokers! You may think your littlecampus organizations are dyna¬mite, you may think that you'can help establish University poli¬cies, but you are suffering fromdelusions of grandeur. Your 2cisn't expected or wanted, eventhough it may be tolerated. If youdon’t believe me, ask Pre.sidentColwell. %Mrs. Ingram went home andquieted her children, immediatelysending Charles to tell the sheriffwhat had happened. When lawofficers came and dragged thebleeding mother and four of hersons to jail they were not in¬formed of their rights. They weretaken to different jails where theywere held without legal counsel,with no one supporting the otherchildren all winter, until last weekwhen an all-white jury in a oneday trial sentenced the three todie.A hasty decision?The action of the National Student Association repre¬sentatives in Prague and the official NSA viewpoint ex¬pressed in its new release reprinted on page one of today’sissue strikes us at first glance as being similar to the tan¬trums of a spoiled child, when it doesn’t get what it wants.' NSA wants the International Union of Student tocondemn the Communist coup in Czechoslovakia. lUS re¬fuses to do so. NSA then packs up and decides to go home.What this does then is to accentuate the east-westconflict and plunge us one step closer to war. Even if wedisagree with the majority of the lUS member nations,wouldn’t it have been wiser to stick with the organization80 that American students would still be able to presenttheir ideas to other students? What good is accomplishedby withdrawing and isolating ourselves?Almost as alarming is the hasty decision of the NSAleaders at Madison to the effect that this probably endsall consideration of affiliation with lUS. We think it wouldhave been a little more appropriate to ask the NSA mem¬ber schools their opinions first. We are confident that everyoneon this campus will be as enragedas we are about this and willagree with us that action mustbe taken to save the lives of themother and her children and toprevent the establishment of thisbrutal thing as legal precedent.Please send telegrams, as we havedone, to President Truman and toGovernor Thompson of Georgiain her behalf. It is also import¬ant that you contribute money toher legal defense fund and to helpher family. Send it care of theN.A.A.C.P., Americus, Ga. Wehope students will volunteerthrough the Civil Rights Congressto join the nation-wide groupwhich will visit President TrumanMarch 18.Iro Lichton, Leon Letwin, DonielFox, Eugene Jocobs, Morion Byrnes,Ruth Stickle, Irving Holpern, LloydMendelson, Morvin Miller ondMorilyn Mendel.Executive Members, A.Y.D. In his address delivered atMandel Hall on Wednesday, Feb¬ruary 25, Mr. Colwell thoroughlydiscussed the policies of the U. ofC. The speech, in effect, ’ wasnothing more than a report onfinances, past and present, reiter¬ating and particularly emphasiz¬ing costs of operation, upkeep, andresearch at the U. of C,, includingthe method and means of pro¬curing money for the University.Besides his financial statement,Mr. Colw’ell did mention a fewother things such as the organi¬zation of the college, departments,schools, and divisions. “These,”he stated, “are headed by deanswhom we try never to get in thesame room together.” Ha, ha-very funny. He mentioned thestudents in a somewhat similarinsignificant light: “Our admin¬istration here,” he said, “is head¬ed by the Board of Trustees, agroup of 35 men, who have abso¬lute power over the policies of theUniversity. The Board is at thetop of our ladder of power andt-he students are at the bottom.”And again, later in the speech,“you students aren’t importanthere . . . not in the least import¬ant. If you're in the college you are fairly Important because we'reshaping your ideas. Once you'reout of the college and go into thedivisions or the schools, you loseyour small importance. We areno longer interested in shapingyour ideas. Your role is to gamand accumulate knowledge fromyour professors. The student work¬ing on his Ph. D. isn’t importantIjere at the University, but ourresearch professors are . . . theyare working on new ideas. Per¬haps this is not the thing to sayhere where we have some studentspresent, but it is a truth andshould be accepted as one.” (Thismay not be an accurate word forword quotation. I did not takenotes as I did not expect to writethis paper.)My dear sir, If the students ata University are not important,who is? Certainly not the admin¬istration. If students are merelyto attend classes at an institutionset up by rich donators and con¬trolled by an all-powerful Boardof Trustees, who seem to con.sidefstudents a necessary evil to theorganization of this peculiar typeof BUSINESS ENTERPRISE, thenI say it’s time the students weregiven some importance.•—Lei* S. OtifA MINUTEWITHTHE EDITORSBy ED ENGBERGIn 1945, during the hot flush ofpostwar optimism and plastic au¬tomobiles, a book by William Ziff,hopefully entitled, The Gentle¬men Talk of Peace, was published.Last week the gentlemen—all ofthem—were again talking of war,Even the most casual radio lis¬tener could hardly escape thealibly smug predictions of WalterW’inchcll and Drew Pearson. Win-chell wasn’t worried about WHEMWorld War III was goinir toSTART—what he would like l«(Continued on poge 7>MAKE LUNCHTIMEREFIIESUMEKT TIME/ The Chicago Maroon To the editor:Last week you printed a letterfrom Mr. Hans Freistadt, Presi¬dent of the Communist Club,criticizing the United World Fed¬eralist stand on the Marshall Plan.Mr. Freistadt states that Ameri¬can aid to Europe must not beused as a political weapon. Thisaccords completely with theU.W.F. stand.ACP All’-Atnertean^ 1945, 1946, 1947MILTON R. MOSKOWITZ JAMES E. BARNETTEditor Business ManagerFritz Heimann, Melvin Spat, David Broder:Managing EditorsDAVID S. CANTERNews CoordinatorBXECL'TIVE EDITORS: Harry Kilb, School News; Louis R. Silverman, News-Feature; John Stone, Feature; Gerald Scherba, Rewrite; Robert Adams,Political; Murray Harding, Sports; Eileen Stone, Copy; Ed Engberg, Assistantto the Editor.ASSISTANT EXECUTIVE EDITORS*. Buddy Cohen, Copy; Jane Higgins, JuliusLewis, School News; Solly Dahl, Regina Hutt, Student News; Lew Lipsltt,News-Feature; Robert Schakne, Political.STAFFS: Robert Albright, David Broyles, Barbara Evans, James P. Jones, WilliamKlutts, Noble Stockton, Shirley Wood, Rewrite; Miriam Baraks, Ted Flnman,Devra Landau, Herb Neuer, Charles Williamson. George Ira Wilson Jr,,Political; Harvey Frauenglass, Joan Kapp, Ane Longstreet, Chester Luby,Joyce Schmuckler, Joanne Tharp, Copy; Curt Crawford, Bernard Kaplan,Feature; Richard Allen, Andrew Poldl, Gerald Gains, James Goldman. DanRutenberg, Music; Rosaline Blason, Betty Jane Stearns, Francis GeorgeSteiner, Richard Young, Drama; Arthur Aronson, Robert G. Olasser, CarlGylfe, Harold Harding, Rex Reeve, Sports; Pat Golden. Calendar; Lee Dop-pelt. Exchange; Mary Ann Ash. John Below, Ann Collar, Art Dubinsky, YaleKramer, Lora Lee, Evallne Wagner, David Wylie, News-Feature; ReginaldMajor, Maimon Nasatir, Photography.DEPARTMENTAL EDITORS; Eugene DuPresne, Movie; John Forwalter, Art;Beve Segal, Exchange; Marilyn Kolber, Religion; Chuck Marquis, Fraternities;Joan M. Brady, Ann Marschak, Women’s Clubs.MEWS STAFF: Karl Bruce, Michael Cann, ^ean Chapllne, David Curry, JoanGanzberg, Mary Gleason, Lee Goldberg, Marlon Hecht, Norma Horwltz. Don, Jameson, Roalda Jensen, Burton Kanter, Louis Kerlinskl, Pat King, JudyMarx, Fred Menenko, John T. Porter Jr., David A. Relbel, Annie Russell.George Siderls, Donald Stewart, Lee Vlckman, George Worth.BUSINESS STAFF; Roger Davis, Assistant Business Manager; Ray Frceark,Advertising Manager; Rocky McPherson, Assistant Advertising Manager;Ted Jayne. Circulation Manager; Randy Peterson. Offica Manager; JaneAommers, Jack Joseph, Dan Roin« Advertising SoUtHenk Mr. Freistadt feels that prioritymust be granted those nationswhich sacrificed most in the fightagainst Hitler.The purpose of the MarshallPlan is not to reconstruct thenations of Europe singly, but toreconstruct Europe, as an eco¬nomic unit. To this end, all EJuro-pean nations, including Russia,were invited to the Paris Confer¬ence to map out their needs forthe next four years. Russia didnot attend. Czechoslovakia didnot attend, though willing, be¬cause of pressure from the Krem¬lin. Fourth, and not first as Mr.Freistadt implied, on the list sub¬mitted by this conference was theindustrial reconstruction of Ger¬many. Economists say that Eu¬rope cannot recover without thisreconstruction.Mr. Freistadt concluded hisletter by asking why U.W.F. hopesthat the same Congress whichpassed the Taft-Hartley Bill willenact a program of unselfish re¬lief. The Federalist answer to thisquery is that Congress will only '•OTTLB) UNDCI AUmOHiTY OP THg COCA-COLA COMPANY lY 'COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF CHICAGO. INC. rO 1948, Th« Coca-Cola CoiAponyinfer,.. 74- iVnaW IlMdgttiiiiikiBfliiitfclllMIIMii II >1 III i I ii'ntuiliSi'lfriday» Morcli 5, 1948 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5Summer Project Plans PresentedFurther informationconcerning these projectsand other opportunities forsummer service may beobtained from Mr. ElbertCole at Chapel House from9 a.m. to 5 p.ih., Mondaythrough Friday.\ By ED ENGBERG people will be selected—on theWhat are you going to be doing next summer? basis of applications—to partici-At this writing, the combined forces of snow and Walter in the Lisle Fellowship sum-Winchell make such a question seem either untimeiy or MlunTlook!unnecessary. According to Winchell, tfie departments of out, Denver, Colorado. The ideaplans and training of the various services will be making behind this project is to get youngn.ir decisions for us. P^^Pi® together to participate in aThose of you who have faith, however, are probably in- The fellowship participants live,terested in travel, work, or leisure. Some, whose troubles eat, and most important, workare other than academic, will probably feel obligated to together in different communities,hoard enough of the filthy stuff to enable a return to the people are chosen (pur-campus next autumn. The many pamphlets, letters, and backgrounds as possible to “ex-suggestions that have poured into the office during the past periment with practical methods ment seminar. For $20 (room,few weeks offer ideas for every- of solving some of the problems of meals and transportation—weap-b^xiy and anybody. tration showing three healthy- a world community.” ons and missies are not includedTo get the most distasteful idea l^l^i^g Americans standing on the if it’s work and money making price) any one may takeoff the agenda first, you can go of some apparently Swiss you’re interested in, there are sev- P®*”^ trips to Washington.—;4.i— r American Friends ServiceCommittee is sponsoring a series ofprojects which are most eloquentlyon the cover of their illustratedcollegiate Christian Council issponsoring a Meet-Your-Govern-eral YMCA and YWCA work semi¬nars in which the participants areencouraged to go to various in¬dustrial centers where communitybj Quantico (if you are male and either yodeling or carry-in reasonable condition) and be- ^ heated discussion. Sincecome a United States Marine offi- sexes are reresented we as-cer in just eight weeks of training. project is open to - i.4Details may be had at the nearest everyone. Further information living will be provided at costs that ^olu^r:Marine recruiting office. writing for an even the Wallace platform doesn’tIf you would prefer to travel folder to: AYH Travel Serv-^hink conceivable, and where stu-<and who wouldn’t), the American Northfleld, Massachusetts. If dents go out and get jobs in indus-Youth Hostels offer a plan for see- t^hings are getting tough, however, try. If you know some nice pro-Ing Europe or the Americas atconsiderate prices, ranging from asojourn to Quebec for 95 dollars,to a trip to the Balkans (ahem)for 650 dollars. The two-monthtrip and work projects begin onJune 10 and July 5. The docu¬ment that we received has an illus- you can send $15 immediately andbe registered immediately.Another pamphlet received froma representative of the Lisle Fel¬lowship Inc. has the following in¬scribed on its cover: “We inviteyou to share in a living experi¬ence—One World in Action.” Fifty vincial people that you would liketo see at work—you might subtlypush this one. Applications andinformation may be had by con- “Each summer hundreds of studentsvolunteer for work and study projectssponsored by the American FriendsService Committee In the United States,Mexico, an! Elurope.“Details differ from year to year, butthe general patterns are similar; thatwonderful sense of helping build ahouse or a bridge with one’s own hands;those “bull-sessions” late at night,thrashing out deep differences in ideasand Ideals; the way the walls of ignotacting regional YWCA’s and ranee and isolation come tumbling downVAyrr'A’« working cooperatively with residentsiivityAS. Qf underprivileged neighborhoods or asIf vou want a nerfectlv denress- internes in mental hospitals, reforma-li you want a peiietuy uepiess torie®. industrial plants, and consumering summer, the National Inter- co-operatlves; the snared play aftershared work; group singing and danc¬ing, swimming and tennis; the gather¬ing In silent worship and meditationafter strenuous activity: searching thusin group silence for the meaning of thegreat release that comes of joininghands, minds, and hearts on a problem“These summer service opportunitiesare sponsored by the Quakers in thebelief that peace is more than the ab¬sence of war, and that only a- we cometogether to create can we find ways tosurmount chaos.”Headquarters of the American FriendsService Committee are at 20 South 12tliStreet, Philadelphia 7, Pennsylvania.Last, but far from least, is aprogram that will allow you tostay right at home and while awaythe summer nights at the localbeach. Rockefeller MemorialChapel is sponsoring a Commu¬nity Volunteer Service throughwhich students are encouraged toparticipate in local communitywelfare services of various types.There are a multitude of openingsranging from Storyteller to Pub¬licity-aide, including receptionists,librarians, sports director, re¬search, teaching, ad infinitum.Interested? If you are not acomplete misanthrope and want toget that feeling of having accom¬plished something besides gettinga healthy sun tan, contact theseorganizations.If Winchell wins, however, con¬tact your local recruiting ofiBcerfor further details.O/WASHINGTON'SFAREWELLADDRESSHere, in our First Presi¬dent’s own handwriting, ispart of the far-sightedspeech he delivered tothe American people 152years ago. The spirit ofthe doctrine still applies.It calls for a firm unityamong our people . . .emphasizing, above all,the need for ’’every citi¬zen to take pride in thename of an American.”The original is now aboardthe ’’Freedom Train”—a traveling exhibit ofthe most significant docu¬ments in our history. Hedy s a chamier—a siren, no doubt.Wherever you find her a crowd is about.They sigh at her smile and they swoon at her pout^And you never will find little Hedy withoutHOSIERY lihHFULL-FASHIONED■)£e proud wAat you write ...and the way you write it!Naturally you’re proud when you own a Parker‘51”. For this is the world's most-wanted pen. Itglides with satin-smoothness . . . gives new free¬dom to your thoughts and fingers . . . makesWriting more fun! Whether it’s an exam—atheme—a letter, this is the pen that will al¬ways show you at your best. Ask for the61” in either the regular or new demi size.Choice of points. The Parker Pen Com¬pany, Janesville, Wisconsin, U. S. A.,and Toronto, Canada. Parker'S 1 **WeII, I can keep the Dentyne.Chewing Gum, can’t I?”**Wh«t's a little rap like twenty years if 1 canhave all I want of delicious, clean tastingDentyne Chewing Gum. Just think—twenty yearsto enjoy that rich, long lasting flavor and all thattime Dentyne will help keep my teeth white.”Dentyne Ctim —Miade Only By AdameCovyriiikt 1948 by TM Pftrkw IVa ObWIMinef oge 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON Fridoy, March 5. 1943is so muchbetter to"smokePHILIP MORRIS offers the smoibenefit found in noM^s is the ONE, the ONLY ajnized by leading nose and throatdefinitely less i££i2iiS8- 'Remember: tsss irritationsmoking enjoyment for yo^Yes! If every smoker knewMorris smokers know, they d ^PHILIP MORRIS. means moteTHE MUSIC STAND ^idstutes plun pool of booksBy LEW LIPSETT•Tlans for the huge Midwestern Research library are moving forward at a satisfac¬tory rate,” Allen T. Hazen, U. of C. library director, announced this week.Instigated by the U. of C., the project now under discussion by universities inportunity to do some solo playing, eight Midwest states will house all the little-used books and periodicals belonging to in-^babiy^the^iri^ioia d'^gam^ performed four sonatas by dividual campus libraries. This will make more space available in the campus buildingsthose books which are drawn more frequently.By JAMES GOLDMANEva Heinifx scores in d'Hervelois ond Abel;Tone quolify alters from oncient styleThe large audience which heard accompanist, was given theEva Heinitz in Mandel Hall Tues¬day night witnessed what was op-Iwltal in tWs urea since the Chi- 1” * competent and mu-cage Fire. Since all papers con- sicianly manner,cerning such activities were prob- iMcorat rfemondedably destroyed by that conflapa- selection of the recitaltion it would be difficult to estab- i*. * ^ i ^lish the existence of gamba reel- *“ *tals before that date. It may and harpsichord by Marais. Thefairly be assumed from the enthu- music was lovely and the per-siastic reaction ^ of the audience formance exquisite if wae maytha.t there should be more such occasional lapses intorecitals and soon. , ^ ^ . .poor intonation. This w<Mrk was•..h ^.to aot well do-e audienceThe recital opened with aso-._..nata by J. S. Bach. It was in this oae of .the movements,work and another by the same the Musette, as an encore,composer that Miss Heinitz did jjj ^0 performance of thisher poorest playing of the eve- ^ork, as in all the others, Missning. The music was performed Heinitz’ playing was distinguishedwith a minimum of dynamic va- ]^y ^ wonderful sense of rhythmicriety. This removed from the accuracy. This unusual and won-music a large amount of its lifeand vitality. It must also be said Discrimination...iCMttniMd from pog« 1)interviewfi are still relied on heav¬ily.Poor odiicoHoH it couseDr. Bay said that the lack ofqualified Negro applicants couldbe traced to their poor elementaryand high school training.Members of the campus JointAnti - discrimination Committee,when told about the MAROONinterview, commented on the ab¬sence of any statement on Billingshospital. The committee said that Roport boing compilodH. H. Pussier, associate directorof U. of C. library, collaboratingwith E. W MacDiarmid of the Uof Minnesota, are conducting acomprehensive investigation onproblems involved in the projectand will distribute their report tointerested libraries soon.24-Hour tervicoAccording to the plans a studentin any of the affiliated universi¬ties will have access to any docu¬ment or text within 24 hours. Suchrapid service, Hazen stated, willbe facilitated by a teletype net¬work Interconnecting all schoolsattempts to obtain a statement of in a manner similar to the Newderful feeling for rhythmic preci- policy from the University regard- England Deposit library foundedSion is one of the most important its admission policy at Billings t>y Harvard.Building to b« locoted hereWhen the construction of thethat in these two works in par- factors which makes the soloist’s Hospital have proved unsuccessticular Miss Heuntz seemed to playing as fine as it is. ful.**find it difficult to play all of thenotes at their proper pitch, i.e.In tune. It is not easy to under¬stand why these Bach sonataswhich are bread and butter tomost viola da gambists receiveda relatively poor performance.Virtuosity disployedIt was in the works for violada gamba alone that the soloistrevealed her remarkabilities bothas a technician and as a musi¬cian. These works, by d’Herveloisand Abel, were virtuoso music andas such exploited the full poten¬tialities of the instrument. Theperformance of these works wasa beautiful and memorable one.After the intermission DorothyLane, who served as a very able proposed building is. completed,huge collections of little-usedbooks and documents from cam¬puses in Illinois, Michigan, Wis¬consin, Minnesota, Iowa, Ne¬braska, Indiana and Missouri willrepose there for use by universityresearchers throughout the Mid¬west.Librory i« cotologing volumesIn addition many European-published books now being sent tothe United States on a co-opera¬tive plan will go into this centrallibrary, in addition to state andfederal documents. Those booksand documents which are to bemoved into the institution are nowbeing catalogued by the Universitylibrary in a special category inpreparation for the move.newCLASSICALBECORDS!just released byRCA VictorBARTOK, Concerto ForViolin DM-1120.BEETHOVEN, Sonata No.8 in C Minor OP 13DM-1102.GRIEG, Peer Gynt SuiteNo. 2 (Op. 55) M-902.MOZART-Liszt, Don JuonFantasy M-577.MOZART—Le Nozze DeFigaro, DM-313-314315.The Ruboyot of OmorKhayyam DM-1055.Verdi - Aida, Vol. Ml,DM-54.HERMANS935-7 East 55th St.MIDway 6700TRY A PACK... TODAYTHE CHICAGO MAROON f age 7Friday. Morefc 5, 1948ON THE SCREENBy EUGENE DU FRESNE BOOKS Sexual Behavior In TheHuman Malethings to come. Directed by William Cameron Men-zies, with Raymond Massey, Ralph Richardson, CedricHardwicke. Based on the book by H. G. Wells. Hyde ParkTheatre, week run starts today.We must content ourselves with describing the filmsince we are deprived of thethe story of greed and bureaucracyleading the nations of the earthInto a completely destructive war.In the course of twenty years thewar passes through every stageof horror from the bombing ofcivilians to the use of bacteria,i^fter a time the nations havecompletely stripped themselves oftheir industrial potential, but thestruggle continues on a local level,between neighboring communities.The diplomatic and military “ser¬vices” . have entirely lost theirmask of culture and science andstand as what they are: petty,robbing warlords.Into this chaos the men of sci¬ence inject an organizing element:their own political consciousness.United, they hold monopoly on allwar potential and they end thefarce. Reconstruction begins.'Revolt in 2036By 2036 the cities of the worldlook like something that Prank comfort of pat labels. It tellsLloyd Wright was too timid toeven dream about. Man movestoward the c<mquest of interplan¬etary space, but a psychotic artistrebels. He will not be satisfieduntil the whole world follows hisconception of the good life: com¬plete standstill. Restrictions onwar must be removed, cures fordiseases abandoned, “For survivalof the fittest, y’know.” The vio¬lence of his followers is met, notwith violence, but with a fait ac¬compli. .The space vessel islaunched with human passengersand it is demonstrated e^ven tothe dullest that human endeavoris no longer to be halted by mad¬men.HER FIRST AFFAIR. With Dan-ielle Darrieux. French, with En¬glish subtitles. EASY STREET.With Charles Chaplin. Documen¬tary Film Group, Social Science122, Tuesday, 7:15 and 9:15.ISBELL'SChicago's MostCELEBRATEDRESTAURANTS1435 E. 51st Street940 Rush Street590 Diversey Plcwy,1063 Bryn Mowr Ave.ARE YOUUNAWARE OF. UNDERWEAR?ARROW SHIRTS and TIESIf you’re laughing on the outside—dying on the inside (fromcreeping shorts with a cruel centerseam) you’re not aware of thewonders of Arrow underwear!Switch to Arrow shorts and relax.Arrow shorts (with the patentedBeamless crotch) come in a varietyof styles with either gripper fast¬eners or buttons and are Sanfor¬ized labeled, guaranteeing less thanVfo shrinkage. $1.25, $1*50, and$1.75.UNOERWIAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTS |1 By Alfred C* Kinsey, War dell B# Pomeroy, Clyde E* MartinAfter taking nine years to complete, the firstof a massive study in eight volumes, the SexualBehavior in the Human Male (W. B. Saunders,$6.50), otherwise known as the Kinsey Report, ismaking history. If its findings in any way indicate(as they do) the real sexual life of the male inAmerica, it should be the kind of a book that helpsmake revolutions. The findings of this nine yearstudy completely disagree with the sickeninglysweet words thrown at us by the moralizers in ourmoving pictures, over the radio, in our press andin our slick magazine fiction.Tlie Kinsey Report has, by this time, been dis¬cussed oil over the country. Dorothy Thompson hasbeen unhappy about its method of getting at thefacts. The student paper, The Swarthipore WeeklyPhocnir, has been suspended for editorializing onthe book. And the prudes have already explained itaway in horror, with some interpreting the reportas proof of the Sodom that modern America hasbecome. ^The raison d’etre of the • Kinsey Report wasvoiced years ago when D, H. Lawrence wrote withfiery indignation about the secrecy which surroundssex, in an essay entitled Pornography and Obsenity:inflammation which, when rubbed or scratched,precious. ... It is the kind of hidden sore orinflammation whoch, when rubber or scratcher,gives off sharp thrills that seem delicious. So thedirty little secret is rubbed and scratched more andmore* till it becomes more and more secretlyinflamed, and the nervous and psychic health ofthe Individual is more and more impaired. . .The furor the book has caused is indicative ofwhat happens when a “big lie” is exposed. Not thatthe Dook is a Bible we swear by, not at all. This isthe important thing—the book throws into broad,clean sunlight the sexual activity of 6,000 people,forty times more than any other previous study.Whether you approve of all the methods used ornot, whether you completely refuse to believe whatit says, or whether you will say that it proves noth¬ing—you cannot say the report does not exist. Itdoes. Twelve thousand people have been inter¬ viewed, each has been asked from 300 to 570 ques¬tions, every attempt was made to get the truth. Itseems to us that even with a varying margin oferror, what the book says demands to be heard.The report warns throughout that so far muchof the findings may not be validly generalized. Thereport does not base itself on:. . . preconceptions of what is rare or what iscommon, what is moral or socially significant, orwhat is normal or what is abnormal. . . .This in itself is a revolution in an approach tosexual behavior. This is scientific method appliedto social sciences. In the introduction it is putthis way:One may wonder what scientific knowledge wewould have of the digestive functions if the pri¬mary taboos in our own society concerned foodand feeding.In talking about the thousands of people whohelped make the report, Kinsey says:Even the scientist seems to have underestimatedthe faith of the man of the street in the scientificmethod, his respect for the results of scientificresearch, and his confidence that his own life andthe whole social organization will ultimately bene¬fit from the accumulation of scientifically estab¬lished data.The Kinsey Report finds that what actually hap¬pens in human sexual behavior in relation to mar¬riage, chastity, homosexuality and other sexualpractices completely differs from the acceptedstandard. One of its most shattering, suggestedconclusion.s has to do with these accepted morals—religious standards and civil law. If the law wereenforced, if there “a clean-up of sex offenders” asour yellow press headlines periodically scream, then“five per cent of the population should support theother 95 per cent in penal institutions.”This book is important. It should be read byfemale as well as male. It can be the beginning ofthe throwing aside of fairy tales and ancient mis¬conceptions and the getting to the what is and thewhat is not of the real world we live in.Normon SpringerEditors ...(Continued from poge 4)get, he said, was the “scoop” onwhen it was going to end.Pearson talked of the westernpowers going to war immediatelyfollowing the Italian coup which,he predicted, would come offwithin the next sixty days. Listen¬ers were hoping that Henry Mor¬gan’s parody on the great Pear¬son, formerly of Pearson and Al¬len, would 1^ truer than it wasTHE SHORT- funny. “And now we give youDrew Morgan,” said Morgan’s an¬nouncer, “whose predictions are100 per cent accurate—14 per centof the time.”Following God’s gift to the Jer-gens Company, we went to theclothes closet and took out a dustybut otherwise well conditionedEisenhower jacket. There were apair of sergeant’s stripes and afew inglorious beer checks on itthat had to be taken off—afterwhich it went to the cleaners. Be¬fore sending it off* however* weCOMFORT!Arrow shorts . . , the mostcomfortable on the mar¬ket. Just can’t creep upand take you unawaresbecause of the patentedseamless crotch.Arrow shortsfrom $1.25Arrow “Guards’*from 95cArrow T shirtsfrom $1Arrow undershirtsfrom 85cCome in and see us forArrow underwear.liyttorfsFOR ARROW mERWFAR tried it on and looked at it inthe mirror. It spoke of better phys¬ical health but serious mentalsickness.Who’re we going to blame thistime? Everybody will* be pointingshaky fingers at everyone else. Itis hard to conceive that any oneperson or group of persons—be itStalin or Truman or the Politburoor this nation’s big industrialists—are really, conscientiously andpurposefully, chuckling over theprospects of another war. Cer¬tainly it’s not the man on thestreet either in Moscow or Chi¬cago.Some have stopped lookingfor a solution—people who makeit necessary for us to sendour Ike jackets out to the clean¬ers. We would like to think interms of peace, we would like tobelieve that U.M.T. is neitherexpedient nor advisable. Thereare those sitting in their officesat 9 Rockefeller Plaza, NewYork, in the “Tribune” Tower,in the White House, in the Sen¬ate and House Chambers and inthe Kremlin, who have acceptedthe inevitability of war. InWinchell’s glib smugness there isa forthrightness—he lets youknow that he thinks it’s inevit¬able.Meanwhile we go quietly off toour classes, always looking for an¬swers. The students in the^ physi¬cal sciences department are to beenvied. Under present foreign pol¬icy their studies in nuclear physicsbegin to have real meaning. TheHumanities department is notnearly so well off.BICYCLES RENTEDat 35c per hourG«G GRILLat the Corner of57th ond Stony IslandTelephoneWe Coter FAIRFAXto Forties 2119fage 8VA changes policy;will sfop subsistenceautomatically in JuneAll veterans must register at theOffice of the Advisor to Veterans,940 E. 58th st., for the Springquarter in order to receive allot¬ments for this period, accordingto Joseph Borberly, campus veter¬ans advisor.Tronsfers need VA opprovalStudents who are transfering toother schools must have the ap¬proval of their present VA officeif they wish to avoid delays insubsistence allowances.Those veterans who have notturned in supplemental certificatesof eligibility should do so at theearliest opportunity,Fitzpatrick hasforeign addressesUniversity students desiring tocorrespond with other students inforeign countries are urged to seeMr. Mallory Fitzpatrick in theOffice of the Dean of Students,Cobb Hall 203. Mr. Fitzpatrickreminds those who have inquiredbefore that more letters come inall the time.Zirkle will complete lectureseries on atomic energyThe final lecture in the currentStudent Forum series, “Some As¬pects of Atomic Energy”, will bedelivered at 8 p.m, Tuesday inKent 106 by Raymond E. Zirkle,Director of the Institute of Radio-biology and Biophysics. His lec¬ture will be entitled “Atomic En¬ergy and Medicine.”WANT ADSWATCH OUT OP ORDER3-day cleaning and repairing service,or advantageous trade-in on newwatches. David Curry, 1400 East 53rd.ROOMS. Converted high grade apart¬ment building for male students only.Near campus. HYDE PARK 3060.WATCH REPAIRING for students.Prompt, honest work, guaranteed, byU of C. student. Jim Boynak, 5748Klmbark, afternoons.POR SALE; 22 ft. gaff rigged cabinsloop: keel; S. Chaikin, Jones Lab.,Rm. 209.FOR SALE: Mich, books and sets. Li¬brary table, chairs Study lamps. Cab¬inet radio. For information, call HYDEPARK 1941.LOST. Notebook Pol. Scl. 348. Impor¬tant. BUT. 4594WILL SHARE 2V2 room apartment. MalePrivate bath, furnished, $10 week. Nearcampus. BUT. 4594.WANTED—A SECRETARY. University ofChicago Nursery School, 5750 Woodlawn.rive day, 37*^ hour week. If interested,call for appointment. Midway 0800,Local 768.Free! Special Offer:With every purchase of one ofour custom - mode genuine agedMcditerroneon briors, we will in-loy 3 sterling silver letters on thebowl. English or Greek.Available in Billiard,Pot or Curved Shapes.$5.00Specify Shape ond Letters DesiredOrder today forprompt deliverySatisfaction GuoronteedGAYLORDSDept.C Brockton, Mass.CHICAGO’S FIRSTHYDE PARKSELF SERVICELAUNDRY30 Minute Wash9 Minute Drying ServiceHOURSMon. to Fri. 8:30 AM to 9:30 PMSaturday 8:30 AM to 5:30 PMSundoy 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM912 E. 55rhSr. THE CHICAGO MAROON PrMoy, March 5, 1941TOSACCO f ARM8R. MUUINS,I’ve tried themall and I likeChesterfield the best” ’fSTAKRING INDAVID O. SELZNICK’S PRODUCTION“THE PARADINE CASE”DIRECTED lY ALFRED HITCHCOCKBESTERFIEIDilLWAYS MILDER IBettER TASTING (^OOLER SMOKINGae|>)rrig|K I94A t»ocm * Mvat Tmaooo GaFriday. Moreh 5, 1948 THE CHICAGO MAROON PageStudent Union EventsSki tripA .-'ki trip to Aspen, Colorado, for between quarters is beingplanned. Information is obtainable in the Student Union office.exhibitApplications forms for the Student Union Art Exhibit are nowavailable in the SU office. The Art Exhibit is to be held in Ida NoyesHall April 7 to 20. The application forms must be submitted beforeMarch 19. An entrance fee of $1.00 will be required of entering artists.Facufty Open House and MixerA Faculty Open House and Mixer will be held Wednesday eveningjn Ida Noyes Hall. From 7 to 10 all the facilities of Ida Noyes Halluill be available. There will be dancing, bowling, roller-skating, tabletennis, and swimming.Campus tourThe last Campus Tour of the quarter will be held Wednesday.The lour, led by Chuck Whitmore, will leave from the InformationOffice at the Press Building at 3:30.Squore doneeA square dance will be held tomorrow night in Ida Noyes Gym.Dancing will continue from 8 to 11:30, after a half-hour instructionpeiiod. Admission is 20 cents and refreshments will be sold.Vaudeville mixerThe Vaudeville Mixer will be held this afternoon at 3:30 in theTd« Noyes Theater. These mixers are held as a chance for talentedpeople to gather to present their specialties, to dance, to criticize,find to enjoy refre.shments.Bridge tournamentA duplicate bridge tournament will be held Thursday night from7 to 10 in Ida Noyes Hall. An entry fee of 30 cents will be charged,q'ickets will go on sale at 6:30 that evening.Noyes 9ox showT.; is Sunday night from 7 to 11 the,Noyes Box will feature theCampus Kings Band. At 9:30 a floor show, including Arnie Horwictchwith record imitations, Christine Brooks, and the “Can Can Dancers”will be presented./ceCuMDfs0^/946"The Greotesf Show on Ice"Opens Mor. 15th—18 Days Only!Motinees Sunday March 21 ond 28Kes. Seats «1.2S, fl.75, 92.60, 93.10,93.80SPECIAL ATTENTION TOMAIL ORDERSSend self-addressed stamped envelopewith rheck or money order. Ticketsalso on sale at Lytton's. State &Jackson or at the Arena Box Office.ARENA ,^2 liDel.8500OPERA HOUSE Sun. Aft.«Mor. 7thIN PERSON — IN CONCERTJEANETTEMacDONALDStar of Screen, Stage, Radio, OperaOKKATKST LIVING * ATTRACTIONGood seats now at Box Office andMail Order. PR'CES: $1.24; S1.86;$2.47; $3.10; 83.71 (Tax inc.). Pleasesend self-addressed stamped enve¬lope for mail order. For infoimationPhone Franklin 7800. H .4 R R 1 S"CHICAGO LOVES ‘JOHN LOVESMARY.’ ’’—Claudia Cassidy, TribuneR0D8ERS I. HAMMERSTEINh JOSHUA LOfiAN(3oHYLOV*8► MJRT cj;A Mew CoiM^ by NORMAN KRASNA0>r«(*ed by MR. LOOANPRICES: Eves., inc. Sun.: $1.25, $1.85,82.50fi 13.10, $3.71: Mats., $1.25, $2.50,$3.10 (tax included). Dekes hold openhouse tonight atWindemere EastDelta Kappa Epsilon will againinvite the entire campus to its an¬nual open house, to be held thisyear in the Grand ballroom of theWindermere East hotel tonight at9 p.m.Few acquainted with KappaAlpha Psi fraternity, whose youthvocational guidance program wrasdescribed in last week’s Maroon,realize that the K A Psi constitu¬tion places no restriction on race,color or creed.K A Psi’s present membership,however, is composed entirely ofNegroes, whose hopeful conten¬tion is that future societies maygenuinely support such non-re-strictive brotherhoods.Fijis fete foundersThe Phi Gams entertained somefifty of their alumni Mondaynight at a smoker and buffetdinner in their chapter house at5613 University avenue.Some of the attendant Fijinotables were Armond Donian,president of Nonebetter IceCream, Red McKittrick, Ad Man¬ager of the Tribune, John Dille,president of the National News¬paper Syndicate and Fred Selk-rigg, vice-president of Reming¬ton Rand Co.In the opening -celebration oftheir 100th anniversary the PhiGams w’ill come costumed as An¬cient Greeks to a chapter partytomorrow night.Phi Delts, Zebes inifiatePhi Delta Theta will initiatefive more men this week. Thenew^ initiates are Joseph Baker,Hal'Barnes, William Essen, Lari-yGold, and Joseph Wagner.Zeta Beta Tau initiated Leon¬ard Shapiro and Benji GlazerMonday night. The two youngestZebes will also entertain theirolder brethren at a chapter partytomorrow night. Del Baker will lead B-J dance;Bell, Hutchins will receive socksOPERA no E S ESundoy Afternoon, March 141 AFTERNOON ONLY AT 3:30 P.M.BLANCHETHEBOMHic'/zo-Soprano, Star of the Metropolitan<>ood seats now at Box Office and MailOrder. PRICES: $1.24, $1.86, $2.47, $3.10,$3.71 (Tax included). Please send self-addressed stamped envelope for mallorder. For inf Phone Franklin 7800. SELWYN • NOW PLAYINGDirtct from Sonsotiomil Ont Yoor Run in Ntw^YorkJEAN DALRYMPLE presents . ^uin Th* FAMOUS COMtDY HITby GEORGE AAANKER WAHERS ond ARTHUR HOPKINS'wiih FAY MCKENZIESEATS NOW PRICES: Every Night including Sunday $4,33, 3.71, 3.10,2.50, 1.85, 1.25, Soturdoy Matinees (ond Wednesdoy Motinee, 1stWeek) $3.71, 3.10, 2.50, 1.85. (All prices include tax).LINCOLN MERCURYIN HYDE PARKSpecializing In Ford ProductsWE SERVICE AND REP.41RALL MAKES OF ALTOSSIMONIZERODY AND FENDER WORKFactory Trained MechanicsLAKE PARK MOTORS, inc5601 HARPER AVES. TAUBER, President The quarter’s last B J CouncilDance, rocked by the Del Bakercombo, will furnish free fun at 9tonight. Chamberlin’s FiresideParty will compete with the bigaffair, but Mathews has scheduledits Ides of March dance for Satur¬day.Beecher aped sorority shenani¬gans this week with an initiationof new residents. Wednesday’shell night included Helen Kotar-ides’ imitation of Green Hall’swee hours. Thursday the alum’sand residents attehded a dinnerand formal candlelight ceremony.Henri Rago, chairman of theHumanities 3 department, will bethe guest of Manly House 'Tues¬day evening, March 9, to lectureon the poetry of T. S. Eliot, Mr.Rago, who went to De Paul andNotre Dame, writes for the NewRepublic.Mathews’ series of speakers wascontinued with a discussion ofasthetics by Dr. Sidney Zink.Every member of Dodd will con¬tribute 25 cents each month to-w’ard C.A.R.E. bundles for Europe.Beecher gave a faculty dinnerlast Thlursday at which Dan Bellwas promised a pair of argylesocks. This started a rivalry withGreen Hall girls, who immediatelystarted on bediamoned bobbysocks for Bobby H.Stan Parslo has arranged aseries of Sunday concerts at B JW'hich will feature campus talent.Lucy Nedzel, wife of Vincent’shouse head fiddled two weeks ago.Mrs. Nedzel made her violin debutwitn the Chicago Symphony Or¬chestra when she was thirteen.This Sunday Sam Anderson ofDodd will give a piano recital. Itis hoped he will encore with anoriginal composition. Jeanne Lisk,solo soprano with the ChapelChoir, will sing in the near future.Kelly Hall will give its tradi¬tional Bowery Party tomorrownight in Burton Lounge. Pood andentertainment will be on handand a combo featuring Bill Pryor,Lowell Siff, John Santini, andSPECIAL OFFER!Fluorescent Desk, tampo FREE aUOPtSCfNT TUBE!o R«tuUrlT *19 00 SPECIAL 9**o Bcouttful Broojc Ftoitb• Starling Sviii«.be Olsrs-Pnd R«6c<ioisRegularly yethog (or 819.00 8tleading rorev, ihi« bcauitiully d<>argned d««k tamp removes all ^rcand trtcreases light eftciertcy. Tltis•fkique lamp was designed for col¬lege students and is standard equip*ment in iMr newest college dor¬mitories. Height, 12'A'; ^bado,liH* 8 AC. only. Paul Jackson, wiill supply the mu¬sic for dancing.Mary Kay Darden of Snell Halland^Wes Hirt of Woodlawn Hallwere married last Saturday. Thecouple are from Albuquerque,N. M.. Section 2 of Hitchcock Hall iscomposed of student nurses af¬filiated with various schools. Thenurses, who will be here for threemonths, are interested in campussocial life — looking for dates,that is.University FriendsCommittee will startcollecting old clothesBy MARILYN KOLBERConducting the quarterly drivefor good used clothing to be sentthrough the American FriendsService Committee to those des¬perately in need abroad, theYoung Friends Group (Quakers)on campus is again collectingw-earable items.Clothing boxes for collectionwill be placed next Monday, inall campus dormitories, Ida NoyesHall, Reynolds Club, 3rd floorHarper, V and the laundry housesof the Greenwood and CottageGrove pre-fab units.Chapel will feature Dr. GilkeySpeaking on “The Divine Pur¬pose Enfolding Your Life,” theRev. Dr. James Gordon Gilkey,minister of the South Congrega¬tional Church of Springfield,Massachusetts, will deliver thesermon at 11 a.m. in RockefellerMemorial Chapel on campus nextSunday.Haydon speaks tcChicago Ethicol SocietyDr. A. Eustace Haydon, who w asChairman of the Department ofComparative Religion at the Uni¬versity of Chicago for many years,will speak on “Religion Down toEarth” at the Sunday MorningMeeting of the Chicago EthicalSociety at 11 a.m, ne::t Sunday inCurtiss Hall, Pine Arts Building.Negro Pastor willaddress LutheronsSpeaking at the meeting of theLutheran Student Association,Rev. Robbin Skyles, Pastor of St.James Lutheran Church for col¬ored people, the only ordainedNegro Lutheran Pastor fromPennsylvania to the west coast,w'ill speak on “The Problem ofBeing a Christian and a Negro”tonight at Chapel House at 7:30p.m.Calvert sponsors lectureHerbert T. Schwartz, Ph.D., willspeak on “The Intellectual Life:Its Spirit( Conditions, and Meth^ods” next Sunday afternoon, at3:30 p.m. in Breasted Hall of theOriental Institute.The lecture, sponsored by theCalvert Club, will be open to thepublic and no admission charged.Doctor speaks to Westminster“What Do Presbyterians Be¬lieve?” will be the subject of Dr.Joseph Haroutunian’s address tothe Westminster Fellowship onWednesday evening, March 10, atChapel House. vi 5312 SO.> LAKEPARK HYDE PARK I OPENNIGHTLY6:00l^OW THRC MAR. I ITHH. G. TIELLSSPECTACLE^^THINGS TO COME”Raymond Massey — Cedric HardwickeEXPERIENCE YOIJXL NEVER FORGET'’STARTING MAR. 12THSTEWART GRANGER—PHYLLIS CALVERT/ *^THE MAGIC BOW’’ONLY CHICAGO SHOWINGTHC CHICAGO MAROON Friday, Mafck 5, 1948Freeark named first winner of U High crowned'Most Valuable Player' award tournament champsRay Freeark, star guard of the Maroon basketballsquad, was named the team’s Most Valuable Player, follow¬ing a team vote Tuesday afternoon. Freeark, who waselected team captain at the same time, thus becomes thef.rst winner of the newly initiated MAROON-Student Unionannual award.FYeeark’s play throughout therecently - completed season hasbeen outstanding in every respect.Offensively, he was second highscorer for the souad with a totalof 163 points for the season—nomean accomplishment for a guard.Defensively, his fine play has beena strengthening and steadying in¬fluence to the Maroon squad. Apolislied and exceptional ballhandler, his offensive specialty isa high-arching two handed shotfrom near mid-court — a shotwhose accuracy has often heloedto relieve the weariness of Chi¬cago fans.The winner of the award is aveteran of two years of juniorvarsity and three years of varsitybasketball, as well as two years offirst-string baseball. Freeark alsohas a substantial claim* to an “Iron Man” title, having spentless than 15 minutes on the benchthis season (with the exception ofthe several games he has left viathe foul route).Honor studentNow a student in the SocialScience division, Freeai^ is amember of all three campus honorsocieties (Owl and Serpent, IronMask. Skull and Crescent). He iscompleting his second quarter asAdvertising Manager of the MA¬ROON, and is a member of PsiUpsilon fraternity.Such a combination of scholas¬tic and athletic ability is a rarething on other campuses in thesedays of heavily subsidized players.The Most Valuable Player awardfinds a worthy recipient m RayFreeark.TRY OUR FAMOUSSTEAK FOR TWOMORTOX’SSERVING FROM 12 NOONPark*9 Ij^mding Re9tauram45437 LAKE PARK AVENUEFor ResorvatioBS — Plaza 90S8 MAROON expands serviceThe Sports Dept, of The MA¬ROON announces that all eventstaking place during the week willbe integrated in the calendar onpoge 2, "Next Week On Quod-rongles."Roy FreearkThe U. of C. splash artists,with an 11-2 won-lost record,are prohibitive favorites to winthe first annual CThicago In¬vitational Meet, which gets un¬der way tonight in BartlettPool.I.I.T., Loyola, and the NavyEher branch of Illinois, all pre¬vious Maroon victims will beour guests in the two - daymatch. The prelims start todayat 3:30.Tomorrow the action startsat 10:30 a.m., when the diversfrom the various schools willpit their skills, and continuesin the afternoon, the finals be¬ginning at 2:30. There will bea diving exhibition during thefinals as a special added at¬traction. Gymnastscapture thirdin 3-way meetThe U of C gymnasts weretopped by Michigan and Wiscon¬sin in a triangular meet herelast Saturday. Michigan, the win¬ner, tallied 34 points, Wisconsintook a close second with 33Vi, andthe Maroon squad garnered 28enough to ensure them last place.In spite of the team showing,two Chicago men were outstand¬ing. Don Snyder won the sidehorse event well ahead of theMichigan and Wisconsin men, andreliable Bill Vrettos won the hori¬zontal bar and tied for secondon the parallel bar.The Michigan and Wisconsingymnastic teams, the first everentered in interscholastic com¬petition by them, proved to besurprisingly strong. In previousmeets this year, the Maroon squadbeat Illinois, while dropping oneto Minnesota.TOOMBS BOOK SHOP1367 Eost 57Hi StreetHy<fe Park 6536Out of Print BooksPrints ond CordsTASTY FOOD?THAT’S OIJR HOBBYHOBBY HOUSE53r<i at Kenwood67th and StoneyDAWN TO DAWNWoffles o SteaksCheeseburgers 60ING HOME, EASTER?. Why not ride aChartered BusInexpensive - DirectCALLCbo. S. Handler5460 S. Groonwood MID 10050or -AMERICAN BUS DEPOT6270 S. Stony Islond FAI 9392 The U. of C. Junior Varsity bas¬ketball team swept through atough play-off schedule to takethe championship of the PrivateSchool League’s annual tourna¬ment last Saturday. The jmrwhich has kept a regular seasoncliampion from winning the tour¬nament was. very much in evi¬dence as previously undefeatedConcordia fell to the U. Highsquad in the semi-finals by anoverwhelming 39-24.Strong finish in finolsWith major foe Concordia safe¬ly removed from the running, theJV’s went on to a strong finish mthe finals against Chicago Chris¬tian. Though holding but a slim18-17 margin at half-time, theU. of C. quintet pulled away to a31-24 victory.Well-coordinated teamwork wasthe outstanding feature of the U.High drive to the championship.Special defensive shifts used onteam captain Duncan Hansen aft¬er his 25-point sccH^ing sp’-peagainst Luther proved of littleavail, as other men took advan¬tage of the resultant holes In theiropponents’ defenses. Particularlyoutstanding was lOth-grader AlecOottschalk, the only man ever tobe brought up from the LabSchool squad to play with theJV’s.Stam|»f protaos feomCoach Joe Slampf had thehighest praise for his boys aftertheir performances in the Con¬cordia and Christian games. “Per¬fect team play” was exhibited inthe Concordia game, he said, add¬ing that this year’s squad was “asgood as any I have ever had ”Stampf’s praise is understandable—the score at the end of the firstquarter of the contest stood at16-1.U. High - Concordia rivalry Lsnot a new thing. Last year leaguechampion U. High was victor by a31-30 score in the regular season,but lost. 22-24, in the tournament.This year the positions were re¬versed, as league - leading Con¬cordia took the JV’s by 3 pointsin the regular season, only to losegame and title in the teams’ tour¬nament meeting.Dmmcf^ Aer tmHAWAIIANORCHIDCorsage In the final round of all-fra-iernity basketball playoffs. PhiGamma Delta took the “.A”crown with a 36-30 win overPsi U. Alpha Deli forfeited toPhi Psi and D. U. defeatedZBT, 25-11, for the other twofinal round ganie.s.The championship remainsundecided in “B** competition.Psi U. and Phi Psi are at pres¬ent tied for first place, and apossibility exists that Beta maythrow the playoffs into a three-way tie if they defeat Phi Gamin a replay. ^Results in the final round of“B“ play: BeU, 28, D. U., 19;Phi Psi, 26, Alpha Delt, 24;Psi U., 26, Phi Gam, 24.by AIR EXPRESS6 Royal HawaiianOrchids—an exquisiteensemble—beautifullyberibboned, onlyf 750# DEUVERED IT WILL GIVE HER A THRILL shewill never forget, and blossom in hermemory long after commonplace floralgifts are forgotten.flowers are not jyst flowers whenthey come all the way from the tropicalparadise — direct to her — in a RoyalHawaiian Hotel gift box, with your nameor greeting card inr.ide.Sturdily packaged...insulated to pro¬tect against climatic changes...and de¬livered within 24 to 36 hours, but yourorder must be in our hands 3 days 6«-fore date of bonded shipmentSeud check or money order. Gr writeon your business letterhead and we willbill you.BILTMORE FLOWERS AND GIFTSDIPT. OS • IILTMORI NOTH • LOS ANOILES 14, CALIFORNIAmm OF ‘4$ J—*-if-Fashion*s**Honor Grads**SEMINYLeillSWITH PATtNTED HCH_ Taking first place incollege activities thatcall for smart attire, thenylons which bear the Seal ofthe Dancing Twins featurethe patented Gusset Heel*for snug fit, the Gussetoefor comfort...plus a care¬free, seam-free beauty 1Sold under leadingbrand names at smartdoUege shops and stores. VW*AM • •na.IiB..Ruppert Knickerbocker Beer and Ruppert Ale, Jacob Ruppert, New York City—1948-ff'—Today_Try New Yorki Most Famous BeerrrMay. MokIi 5f 1948 THE CHICAGO MAROONi’’ »»■■( 4Call fencing victoriesfault of HermansonThe impressive record of victories scored by the fencingteam has long been a cause of justifiable pride among Chi¬cago sports enthusiasts. Yet few know the reason for theirconsistently fine performance. Most of the credit must goto Coach Alvar Hermanson, who has quietly compiled oneof the finest records ever made in Maroon sports annals.Coptoined five aportsBom in Stockholm In 1895,Hermanson attended the RoyalAcademy of Athletics, where hecaptained teams in such diverseBports as swimming, track, soccer,water polo, and, of course, fencing.He came to the United States in1922, joining the athletic staff of at 75 victories, 14 defeats, and 6the U. of C. in 1926. In ’34 he be- ties, for a winning percentage ofonly eight matches in nine sea¬sons. Last year his Maroon fenc¬ers were runners-up to the na¬tional championship, as well asbeing unbeaten in ten regularmatches. The total record com¬piled by his teams to date stands Correction, please!Our deepest apologies to Mar¬quette University, which wasslanderously and incorrectlynamed as loser by one-halfpoint to the Maroon track teamin a four-way meet held hereon February 21. The error wasmere wishful thinking. Mar¬quette, as it happens, beat ourthinclads by some 24 points ina dual meet earlier in theseason.The article should havenamed Loyola as the unluckyloser by the aforementionedone-half point.UC wrestlerstake fourth incame acting head coach of fenc¬ing, and assumed the post perma¬nently in 1936. Married in 1931, he1b the father of three daughters. .821—good shooting in anybody’slanguage.Coach Hermanson’s individualproteges are also on a par withIn both collegiate and national the performance of his teams. Hecompetition his record is one of has coached three national epeethe highest caliber. In 1936 he champs in the past decade, pluswent to Berlin with the Olympic a large number of men who havesquad as trainer, and he was placed first In national collegiatechosen as one of the head coaches and Big Ten cc«npetition.for the 1940 games at Helsinki,which were called off due to thewar.Seven Big Ten titlet Ifidivkiuol strengHiThe present Maroon squadboasts an impressive list of cham¬pions, including Cohen of theIn prewar competition his U. of Olympic squad, Strauss, runner-C fencing .squads won seven Big up in epee in last year’s NCAA,Ten championships, went through and Thompson, who has placedlour unbeaten seasons, and lost highly in several national meets. Though competing with an In¬complete squad which includedonly three varsity men. HankBlake's wrestling team took fourthplace in the annual Wheaton In¬vitational Wrestling Tournamentlast Saturday.All of the Maroons’ scoring wastallied by regulars Joe Muldoon,Jack Humphreys, and GeorgeCulp. Muldoon and Humphreyswon the 128 and 175 lb. divisions,respectively, while Culp took thirdplace in the 145 lb. class.Winner of the meet was hostWheaton College with 30 points.Runners-up were Illinois Normalwith 16, Bradley with 13, and theMaroons with 12. Maroon hoop recordis 2 wins, 16 lossesCoach Nelson Norgren’s 28th season as head basketballcoach has just come to an end. On the surface it was thesame old story, two wins against 16 defeats. However therewas a definite rise in the individual quality of play.Only four of the defeats could be classed as routs. Inseven of the other losses, the Maroons were turned back inthe last two minutes of play. Someof the losses could well be attribu- and turned in an especially wor-ted to the lack of height the team thy game against Washington,had to cope with. Coach Norgren suffered almostCapt. Ray Freeark, voted the as much from an inability to findmost valuable player by his team- competent officials for the gamesmates, played the most consistent from the de-emphasisgame throughout the year. Ray athletics. "With the Big Ninewas the principal ball handler and professionals keeping thea hard playing defensive man. His top-notch officials busy two toconsistency at the free throw line three nights a week, the athleticaugmented his field goal accuracy tiepartment was forced to secureto place him as the team’s number ^tio frequently double astwo .scorer with 163 points. school officials. The resultsBill Gray got off to a slow start consistently unpleasant toin a forward position but cama coach, team and fans,into his own as the first stringcenter. Despite the fact that hefrequently played against mentwo to three inches taller than (Continued rom poge 1), . j • X controlled the ball and had thehimself, he dropped inJ73 points bewildered “speed merchants"from St. Louis looking question-ingly at their bench for instruc-to lead the maroons in that de¬partment.John “Monk” Sharp was thenumber three man ‘n tallying The pace of the game was evi-pomts. John was plagued by hot ^ent in the score. With eightand cold nights throughout the of playing gone, Chicagoseason but still hit for 118 points. Poge 11Hoopsters .. .led 7-3. After 12 minutes hadSpence Boise and Gene Podulka jj.,were not outetandmg scorers, but Maroons' favor. The 13-13 half-their floor play was at times out- time tie was effected by a lastSpence reached his form just alittle before the end of the seasontry Ruppert.its Delicious! ^nding Gene was a proven per- desperate scoring spurt ^ by theformer from last year s team but y^gi^^orsWashington was unable tospeed the game up during thesecond half and the score wasdeadlocked at 24 all with a littleless than three minutes remain¬ing. At this point the Maroon“Ironmen” tired and the Bearsbegan to penetrate the unusuallytight defense."MOSER"(PAUL MOSER, Ph. B.. J. D.)35 YearsJ 7 r r . the secretarial schoolpreferred by college tuomen!Bulletin "C” free c«t request57 Fast Tackfion BoulevardChicago 4, 111,, Wabash 7377AT I HI4 ACODICKSmokesCHESTERFIELDSHE SAYS“Coffee and Chesterfields are per¬fect for Between Class Relaxation.”A nationwide survey shows thatChesterfields are TOPS with CollegeStudents from coast-to-coast. (Originator of the INTENSIVECOURSE for college women)Carlelon H. 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Y,li rSE-?-Friiloy, March 5, 194S■Perfect suit hat -.ts-J'basic navy with spanking while pique trimming'$6.95 ^Moderately Priced Millinery—Fihh Floor, Middle, StateStore Hours, 9;15 to 5:45FRVORITf S0H6...qUHDRIinElE BHBV^a_wonaerful old tune they song when Blackfrierj and footbatl'were all the rage . .< when the lights went up on excitingshows and a halfback had a halo all his own. No moregentlemen masquerading^ no more-gridiron blues . . .but the gals go on looking lovely. They’restill zooming around the Reynolds Club in fashions that^set eyes sparkling . , . fashions the Field’s way!-FRUORITG FRSHIOn.,.Classic TWEED SUITKatie Murphy sports the college girl’s dream of a suif. ,-eand her college man s dream of what the well-dressed gal wearspn campus! It’s sturdy, yarn-dyed tweed in combinationsof pink and navy or pink and brown. Sizes 10 to 18, $65The Suit Shop—Sixth Floor, North, State