Colwell tells student leadersabout contemplated raiseThe University is now contemplating a raise in tuition[01 next year, President Ernest C. Colwell told a group of CJ* OH*H* coaaOOCQSc.ajtudents representing six of the largest campus organiza-;ions Monday afternoon.Colwell stated that although he doesn’t like to .leesmother tuition raise, the only alternative would be a$1,000,000 underwriting of next Uniyersity of Chicago, March 12, 1948Ernest Colwell year’s budget from the Univer¬sity’s reserve fund. He doesn’t be¬lieve the board of trustees wouldsanction such action.According to the U. of C. prexy,Chancellor Hutchins, who has thefinal say on any hike, has alwaysbeen agaiftst tuition increases be¬cause he does not want to have theselection of students automaticallymade oiv the basis of economicstatus.Colwell feels, however, that un¬less the University receives an un¬expected gift, the state of thebudget may force Hutchins tochange his mind.The decision will be made bythe middle of April, Colwell. said,when the Board of Trustees meetsand the Chancellor hands downhis opinion.The students were called in toInform them in advance that theschool is thinking of such a move,so .that it wouldn’t come as ashock, if it is approved. Colwellemphasized that any “student agi¬tation’’ will have absolutely no ef¬fect on the final decision.Despite this warning the eightstudents who saw the President—Ed Diamond, of AVC, Milton R.We wish to extend our sincere Moskowitz and James E. Barnett,lanks to Dean Strozier and MAROON, Lois Jacobs andresident Colwell for the manner Marko, of Student Govern-i which they handled the pro- Michael Weinberg, Jr., ofo.sed tuition increase. As reported Student Union, Joan Lundberg, ofLsewhere in these columns, a ^I'^rclub Council, and Nick Melas.roup of students representing Inter-fraternity CouncU—metlajor campus organizations vere Wednesetoy apd a campus commit¬ted in and presents wfth the teeilient facts. One needs only to viewpoint on the contem-)ntrast this intelligent method raise,ith the bungling way in which Jerry Greenwald, chairman ofolumbia university handled this the Student Needs Committee ofime problem last week. Colum- Student Assembly, and Johnla's surprise proposal resulted in Keating, chairman of the Domes-icket-lines and demonstrations, tic Affairs Committee of AVC,here is no need for such tactics were named co-chairmen of the; the U. of C. committee.However, we feel that as stu- A meeting of all campus or- MAROON comes out twiceweekly in spring: Moskowitzwill inaug]JuestEditorialn Open Letter to thatudent Body: Beginning Friday, April 2, the'MARCXDN will resume publication as a semi-weeklyon Tuesdays and Fridays, announced Milton R. Moskowitz, retiring editor. Geared sinceJanuary to a weekly appearance, the staff will now step up its activity to a higher levelas the spring quarter opens. ^A busy three-month period of news, copy and rewrite staff expansion anjirtrainingevoked a statement from Editor Moskowitz to the staff in which he said: ?‘W^had toretrench to a weekly publicationthis quarter, because of the lack COof a good news staff in the fall LjUUKquarter. In putting out a twelve-page weekly, we are faced withtwo problems, which often con- | Vflict. One, we want to have ade- sales on Moquate coverage; and two, we want ... ,to have an interesting paper. In complete plans for the Stu-attempting to satisfy the latter dent Government Book Exchangedemand, we have sometimes failed were announced this week by Dickto provide adequate news cover- Gable, Representative on theage. Thanks to you, we now have Board of Control,a news staff, and thanks to you. Books will be sold from March 1.5I can definitely state that the MA- to March 19, and from March 29ROON will resume a semi-weekly to April 9. The exchange, locatedin the spring.” in the Alumni Room on the secondSharp increase in staff mem- «<><»• “a Noyes will be openbership, inauguration of a corres- Monday through Friday frompondent - publicity system, andestablishment of a higher level of oMilton K. Moskowitz 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.The exchange will accept books.resigns;election tod^ news coverage, while maintaining tor sale, April 2. To sell a book,the balance of editorial and fea- ^ student must fjll out a form.or ofthe MAROON since December of file the book on the proper shelf,and address a postcard to him¬self, so that the exchange maynotify him when the book is sold.A charge of 10 per cent with aminimum of 25 cen«» will be im-Editor PQ^IQriS^ t,ure content resulted in the deci¬sion of the MAROON to come outof its “retrenchment” to a week¬ly edition.Members of the edHorial boardme ouiv.c ux. posed to cover the cost to the ex-last year, has resigned from that aS MeWin change. If there is a larger vol-Spat; Assistant to the Editor, Ed trade, the cost will beEngberg; Executive Editors Harry lowered.Kilb, Louis R. Silverman, Robert Employees are still needed. TheAdams, Eileen Stone, Gerald wage rate is a dollar an hour. In-Scherba, George Sidens, John terested students are urged to con-Stone, Murray Harding and David tact Ben Glazer, 5749 Woodlawn,S. Canter. Hyde Park 10246.lents we must present our siden terms of what a tuition raisevill mean to many of us—stu-lent hardship, tightening of our(Continued to poge 7) ganizations which want to par¬ticipate in this campaign willbe held tomorrow morning at10:30 in the AVC office, thirdfloor of Reynolds Club.'orty colleges ok UNissembly replica here position “due to the press of aca¬demic requirements.” His positionis being sought by Ed Engberg,now Assistant to the Editor, andDavid Canter, present News-Co¬ordinator.M.'*.«/owitz, a student in theHumanities Division, has been incharge of the MAROON’S reor¬ganization and expansion of staffsthat have made next quarter’sreturn to twice-weekly publicationpossible. Previous to becomingEditor, he served as ManagingEditor and Co-Editor with Law¬rence Berlin. Anti-discrimination repliesto statement by Dr. BayFollowing publication last week of the MAROON inter-With acceptances of invitations by letter, telegram, long distancelone calls, and ham radio still pouring in, over forty colleges areepared to represent nations of the world in the National Intercol-siatc Assembly of the United Nations, sponsored by Chancellorutchins and the U. ot C. Student Forum, on March 24, 25, and 26.Among the many assignments made to different schools, Franceto be represented by the University of Chicago in the persons of)is Jacobs, Richard Gibbs, and Francis Gedfge Steiner. The United-ates will be repre.-^ted by Harvard; China by Southern Methodist;sentina by Maryland, Brazil by Michigan; Byelorussian S. S. R. bysk; Chile by Radcliffe; Ukrainian S. S. R. by Montana State; Saudiaoia by Deleware; Poland by Connecticut ;^ew Zealand by Northirolina; Iraq by Tennessee, and the Union of South Africa by Westrginia. Russia will be represented tentatively by Columbia or Stan-rd. A meeting of the MAROON staff view with Dr. Emmet Bay, head of the medical school’sMonday failed to produce a new admissions board, the Joint Anti-Discrimination Committeeeditor, necessitating another elec- . . . , x, « • x x xtion meeting this afternoon at 4:30 this week released the following statement:The admission of a Negro medical ty member and administrator has thestudent — the first since 1941, when to be nlore u* peful that democ-_ 1.. , X X,. racy in these areas is on the way.Provident Hospital withdrew from the ' ^ x x^ ^ . X .XV- XV- The one most positive step we haveJim Crow training agreement with the the on-the-record promise thatUniversity—marks a significant dent in such Negro students as are admittedthe discriminatory policies discovered will take all of their training wifi theirby the students in the University’s white classmates. The Joint Anti-Dis-medical branches. Eveiy student, facul- crimination Committee, their friends onthe faculty and In the Federated Theo-p.m. in the South Lounge of Rey¬nolds Club. Engberg received amajority over Canter on both bal-lotings, but failed by two, andthree votes to receive the neces¬sary two-thirds plurality.oted men to speakThe plenary sessions of the Assembly will be addressed by speak-s of international reputation. Warren Austin, U. S. delegate to theN. Assembly, will speak in Mandel hall on March 24 at 1 p.m. Sena-r Claude Pepper will talk to the Assembly on March 26 at 9 a.m. oni Constructive Program for Peace through the U.N.,” also in Mandelill. Other speakers will include Adlai Stevenson, who will speak atp.m. in Mandel hall on March 26; J. Katz-Suchy, Polish delegateeaking for Oscar Lange, who will talk on “Veto Power in the U.N.”I March 25, ot 1 p.m. in Mandel hall; Herman Finer on “EconomicJvelopment in a Peaceful World,” 1 p.m., March 24, in Mandel hall;iiiicy Wright on the “'rrusteeship System,” at 7 p.m., March 24,Law North, and Atomic Scientist Dr. Leo Szilard at 7 p.m., March, in Law South.Senator Glenn Taylor will also address the Assembly with timeid place to be announced.orld wide interestNationwide comment has been offered on the Assembly. Two for-fn consulates have frequented further information and U.N. Secre-ry-General 'Tryve Lie has written that he is “most deeply interestedthis undertaking, and wishes it full success.” logical schools have long called for suchstatements. Further work in the cam¬paign that began a year ago may pro¬duce them with regard to medical schoolpolicy, Billings and Lying-In Hospitals,the Cancer Research Hospital, the re¬moval of photographs from admissionforms, and the like.The Joint Anti-Discrimination Com¬mittee has been puzzled at the medicalschool’s statement concerning the “ab¬sence” of applications from the manyqualified, well-trained Negro pre-medi¬cal students who are crowded out bythe physical limitations of Howard, Me-harry, and the few northern univer¬sities which do not discriminate byquota or otherwise. The Committee hasbeen assured by educators and admin¬istrators of these other schools thatsuch students are being advised to ap¬ply to U. of C. We hope this willend the university’s curious lack ofqualified Negro applicants.Though the Committee has received(Continued to poge 6)Condidotes for editorship of the MAROON, Ed Engberg and DoveCanter shake hands for the stoff at Monday's meeting in the ReynoldsClub theater. Over 70 stoff-members attended the meeting, with Engbergfailing by a few votes to obtoin the necessary two-thirds majority. An¬other meeting is scheduled for this ofternoon. New issue of 'Pulse'will appear on Wed.The latest issue of “Pulse” willappear Wednesday. Featured writ¬ers of this issue are Milt Mosko¬witz, co-author with Maria Kendeof a" short story; Francis GeorgeSteiner, offering another criticism,this time on Henry James; EdDiamond and Hal Nieburg. CD Cf•>3 CD HH CD Piage 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, March 12, 194jCalendar of EventsNext Week onQuadranglesBy BAT GOLDENTODAY, MARCH 12LECTURE: “Radiobiological Studies on Viruses,” Eckhart 133, 8 p.m.LECTURE; "The Immortality of the Soul,” Mortimer J. Adler. 32 West Randolph,14th floor, 7:30 p m., admission $1.50.DOCUMENTARY FILM GROUP; "Cavalcade,” Soc. Sci. 122, 7:15 pm. No singleadmissions.BILLEL FOUNDATION; Sabbath service, 7 45 p.m. Fireside, "The Jewish Theatre,”David Itkln, 8;30 p.m.TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT: Novelty pairings, 7-11 p.m., Ida Noyes.INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: Luncheon meeting, speaker. Rev.William B. Hallman, third floor, Ida Noyes, 12;30 p.m.INTER-FAITH COUNCIL: 3:30 pm.. Alumnae room, Ida Noyes.PCA AND STUDENTS FOR WALLACE PRESENTS; Hootenanny. Mandel hall.8:30 p.m., admission 90 cents. Leadbelly, Pete Seeder, Hallie Wood, BettySanders, Duke of Iron.TRACK: Central AAU, 7 p.m., Bartlett.COMMUNIST CLUB; "What Really Happened in Czecho-slovakia,” Max Weiss,National Education Director, Communist Party, Social Science 122, 4:30 p m.SATURDAY, MARCH 13 /ANTI-TUmON RAISE COMMITTEE: 10:30, AVC office. All campus organizationsInvited to send representatives.TRACK: IIT Relays, 3 pm. and 7 pm.SUNDAY, MARCH 14 'UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO ROUND TABLE; WMAQ, NBC. 12:30 p.m.COLLEGIUM MUSICUM: Compositions and Their Arrangements, Sigmund Leverle,International House, 8:30 p.m., free.ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL. President Howard Lowry will deliver the address, 11 a m.VESPER SERVICES: Chapel'choir, Gerhard Schroth, director; Frederick Marriott,organist.CARILLON RECITAL: Mr Marriott, 3:15 pm.BAPIST: Meeting. 7 p.m., "The Place of Discipline in Christian Living,” Dr.Roland Schoerb.UNITARIAN CHANNING CLUB: Panel discussion with Rev. Clifton Hoffman,supper at 6, all students invited.BONG FEST: 8-10:45 p.m., Ida Noyes Library.NOYES BOX: 7-11 p.m., Ida Noyes,BIRD WALK OUTING: Time and place to be announced.TUESDAY, MARCH 16 Give Hootenonny InMandel hall tonightStudents for Wallace andPCA will present a Hootenannytonijfht at 8:30 in Mandel hall.General admission will be 90t‘at the door.Toni8:bt’s folk-song concertwill feature the all-star cast ofPeople’s Songs, Inc., PeteSeeger and his banjo, I>eadbelly.Betty Sanders, The Duke ofIron, Hallie Wood, and BrownieMcGhee.'Pulse' forms campusfree verse contest,new poetry circleA Free Verse contest, designedto lure furtive campus poets fromtheir garret and cellar cubicles,was opened this week by “Pulse,”campus magazine.With the bait officially set toinclude publication of the winningpoems and a select volume ofverse, Pulse announced the speci¬fications as follows: The poemmay be on any subject but mustbe unrhymed verse and no longerthan forty lines. The deadline isApril 10.“Pulse” is also starting a poetrycircle during the Spring Quarter.The first meeting will be heldon April 2, with Milton Hindus aschairman. Chancellor Hutchins steals showpresented by Quadrangles Club“The Little Red School on the Midway,” latest in ^long series of annual Quadrangles Club theatricals, waspresented to overflov/ audiences Friday and Saturday witha cas't which included President Colwell, many well knownfaculty members, and radio analyst Clifton Utley. EvenChancellor Hutchins got into theact in the final performance, ef¬fectively stealing the show.Produced and directed by Mrs.Libby Lindsay, wife of Dr. John R.Lindsay of Otolaryngology, withlyrics and dialogue by Dr. JamesCate of History, the skit presentedDean of Students Robert M. Stro-zier as a Southern senator investi¬gating academic subversiveness.Colwell, in hill-billy attire andbare feet, player Professor Ibid,and James Atkins, Executive Sec¬retary of the Alumni Association,played the Chancellor until Hutch¬ins made a sudden »nd surpriseappearance on the stage Saturdaynight to speak the last few linesof the Chancellor’s part. He re¬ceived an ovation.Colwell ad libbed to Hutchins, song,who resigned from the Quadrangle the musical com^y unfolded.Club several years ago in a dispute Among the many prominentover alleged discrimination, “In.. , . j ,, V campus figures appearing in thethe old days. Chancellor, such anincident as this would call for a P*o<^^ction were Dr. Joseph Mullin,college cheer—there’s no reason a Biological Sciences Dean, andnow why we shouldn’t have a iJr. Frederick Owens of Sur^jery.Robert M. Hutchinsand the next numbei ofLECTURE; "Individual Rights-Group Responsibilities,” Jacob J. Weinstein,8 p.m., 19 South La Salle, room 809.LECTURE: “The Nature of Social Science TV,” Milton B. Singer, 4:30 p.m.,Mandel hall.CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION; 7:30 p.m., Thorndike Hilton Chapel.REGISTRATION DAY: Registration polls for primaries on April 13, open from8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Look up polling places in neighborhood.WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17CARILLON RECITAL; Mr. Marriott, 4:30 p.m.Jandrey tells of Foreign Service;Quiz Kids vie with UC alumniFred W. Jandrey, Foreign Serv¬ice Officer, will speak on “Whatthe United States Foreign ServiceIs and Does” before University ofChicago students on Tuesday eve¬ning, March 16.In his talk Mr. Jandrey willoutline the qualifications of For¬eign Service candidates and willrelate how diplomatic and con¬sular officers are representingAmerican political and economicinterests throughout the world.A native of Neenah, Wisconsin,Mr. Jandrey was graduated fromthe University of Wisconsin in1930 and entered the ForeignService the following year. He hasserved at Southampton, Naples,Calcutta, Melbourne, Brisbaneand Perth.He was returned to the Depart¬ment of State for duty in 1947and is assigned to the Division ofForeign Service Personnel Highlight of the Annual Mid-Winter Alumni Reunion and Re¬ception, on Sunday afternoon, willbe a clashing of intellects betweenthe Quiz Kids—Joel Kupperman,Pat Conlon, Mark Mullin, Lon¬nie Lunde, and Joseph Mullin,Dean of Bi Sci students, and anall alumni team composed of Lon¬nie’s dad. Jay Berwanger, AveryO. Craven, professor of histoiT,and Robert Merriam, Aldermanof the 5th Ward.The battle will be staged inMandel Hall at 2:30 before anaudience of alumni and familiesas the regular Quiz Kids program.• Afterwards, at 3:30, there willbe a reception in the ReynoldsClub Lounge at which the Kids,President and Mrs. Colwell andVice-President Emeritus and Mrs.Emery T. Filby will be presented.Refreshments will be servedduring the Social Hour.He can’t take his eyes oH herSee them at Marshall Field • Carson-Ph-ie-Scott • Wleboldt’sFnt ktohlft; “WAIORm TRICK” WtHi lidy NiR, Ik., Rift A, 137S IroaRwiy, Ntv Yuk II How many operators willwe need NEXT YEAR?I’liis i.s blit one of the many questions telephonemen are called upon to answer.Part of their work has always been to anticipatedemands for personnel . .. . to determine whatadditional equipment must be provided, what newconstruction will be necessary to handle the con¬stantly increasing demands' for service.Careful planning in every phase of telephonework requires the services of many qualified men.For them, this growing business offers the oppor¬tunity for active, interesting careers.7 here’s a future in telephony.Vn'4ay» Marcfc 12^ 1948 THE CHICAGO MAROON - -I'fag# 3Kass vs. Birenbaum on Czechs6y BEA KASS(Bea Kass is chairman of the NSA committee of the Student Assembly. Due tospace limitationSj both letters have been severely cut.)The actions of the NSA officers in severing all relations with the lUS is a seriousdisservice to American students, international student cooperation, and the cause ofpeace. It is totally outside the scope of the officers’ constitutional rights.By accepting and using press popular approval in May, 1946. In Communists or against the Com-and other distortions of fact con- an election free even to American munists.” Said President Benes:cerning recent political events in correspondents, the Communist “Should there be any attemptsCzechoslovakia, these student Party emerged as the leading par- from any side to force (the Com-“leaders” have completely missed ty with 38 per cent of the vote. munists) out of the government,the true significance of these Obviously neither the program I would not give my consent to it.events. What are the real facts nor the leadership of the new For me there can be no govern-about Czechoslovakia? Czechoslovakia sat well with the ment without the Communists.”Czech politicol program once powerful landowners and Gottwald urges resignation occeptanceSince its liberation in May, 1945. industrialists, a group repudiated Premier Gottwald appealed forCzechoslovakia has been governed by their collaborationist war rec- support to the nation. He urgedby a coalition led by National So- ord. Encouraged from abroad, that the resignation of the 12cialists. Catholic Peoples Party, particularly by the U. S. State ministers be accepted, since theySocial Democrats, and Commu- Dept.’s anti-Communist, “free en- had deserted the program of thenists. Their joint program stres^d terprise” crusade, they attempted National Front. On Feb. 22. 8000rationalization of key Industries, to sneak bdck into power via the delegates to a conference of thedivision of landed estates among conservative parties. Works Councils of all Czechoslo-the peasants, and removal of col- Non-Communists reach accord vak factories seconded the de-laborators from political life. This Several days prior to the pres- mand They also called for estab-program was given overwhelming ent crisis,‘the N. Y. Times re- Ushment of People’s Action Com¬ported that the non-Communist mittees . . . popular assemblies ofparties in the government had the town meeting type, made upprivately reached an accord for an of all parties and organizationsrrcsenting...Cum Ixiude antl-Communist stand. U. S. Am¬bassador Steinhardt almost simul¬taneously boasted that Czecho¬slovakia would soon find its way . . . pledged to action on this pro¬gram.HUS not dissolvedSuch an action committee wastato the camp of the Marshall organized by the Czech students.Plan nations. ^he Czech National Union ofThe showdown began on Peb. students was not dissolved.J3 when 12 anti-Communist mm- ^ group of 1500 students, aIsters resigned. As the late foreign minority of Prague students, par-minister Jan Masaryk pointed out. ticipated in the only demonstra-WITH PATENTED HEaBerp ar« ihe nylon* that lendtliitinctiofi to your important orc*»#it>iid—on campus and off.nic Sealof the Da'^cihg TtviHS identifiestheir exclusive Gusset Heel*for ankle-hugging fiti theirCussctoe for comfort . . . theirsleek, smm-frte lovelioess.Sold under leading brandBauies at smart collegeahops and storea.•u.il Pnt. N«. tSMsra Some people . . . thought it wm against the Cabinet reorgan-possible to govern without the j^atlon. Contrary to press reports,however, these students were notfired upon and no students werekilled. One student was injured bya passing automobile, anotherwounded in the leg by an acci¬dentally discharged bullet. A UPdispatch stated: “Jim Smith,American vice-president of the*IUS . , . said police and govern¬ment officials permitted three toplUS officers to make a full in¬vestigation of the incident.” Againcontrary to foreign press reports,only two students were arrestedfor trial under criminal law.^^ Oth¬ers arrested for disorderly con¬duct were released. »-MOSER’(PAUL MOSER. Ph.B.. J.D.)35 Years, i I , , the secretarial schoolpreferred by college tvomcn!Bulletin “C” (ec9 Cii request57 Past Jackson BoulevardChicago 4* 111., Wabash 7377(Originator of the INTENSIVECOURSE for college women) By WILLIAM BIRENBAUM(Bill Birenbaum is head of Student Forum and is amember of the four-man negotiating team elected by NSAta lUS.)The resignations of James Smith and William Ellis asinterim representatives of the National Student Associationto the International Union of Students, and the subsequentsevering of relations, comes as a tragic shock to Americanstudents who sincerely desired to create an effective anddemocratic world student community.The shooting and imprisonment The failure of a Communist-of Czech students, and the arbi- dominated lUS Secretariat to con¬trary dissolution of the Czech Na- demn an incident arising out of ational Union of Students by Com- Communist coup should surprisemunist Action Committees are no one. Such condemnation wascondemnable components of the a political impossibility. We mustimposition of a Communist Gov- assume either that the Americanernment on the Czech people by an representatives did not recognizeundemocratic minority. This fact, this impossibility or that, recog-and other facts like it, are parts nizing it. they had predeterminedof the world of reality in which the desirability of the ensuing re-we exist. suits. 'This implies the decision byNSA realized this when it the American representatives thatauthorized the negotiation effort communication and cooperationwith lUS. NSA realized that lUS were no longer possible or desir-was a Communist-controlled or- Rhle through the medium of affili-ganization. Presumably, NSA was a-tion with lUS. This was an un-also aware of the nature of Com- fortunate value judgment,munist groups and the acts of Reaffirmation of Western de-Soviet - sponsored governments in mocracy or condemnation of Com-Roumania, Hungary, Greece, and munist tQtalitarianism is not theYugoslavia. Nevertheless, NSA ad- issue in this affair. Words needvanced the negotiation effort. And 1^ arranged to describe thethis was proper.Desirability of cooperationThe negotiation resolution con- students of the East and West,ceived at ^^adison assumed the Birenbaum offers proposalsdesirability of cooperation and Appended to Birenbaum’s letterrepresented an intense effort to was a series of proposals to thebridge a rapidly expanding gap be- National Executive Committee oftween East and West. At the same NSA. Especially noteworthy amongtime, it explicitly recognized the these were recommendations thatundesirability of political collabo- the executive committee issue aration with the Communists. statement condemning the actionHowever, it stated a somewhat of the Czech government, and ^atunrealistic basis for action. It NSA confirm the resignation^ ofposted a distinction-between po- William Ellis and James Smithlitical and other forms of action; and take appropriate measures toand it stated as a condition of replace them without delay. Biren-affiliation that NSA not engage in, baum also suggested tiiat the ex-or be bound by, political action ecutive committee reconsider itstaken by lUS. However delicate appointments to the lUS nego-this distinction, a substantial and tiating team, either confirmingworthwhile area of common action them or dissolving the presentterrible tragedy of the Czechdebacle. The real tragedy is theforeclosure of cooperation betweencould have been defined. team and appointing a new one.“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 followsthat famous experience rule in the choice of acigarette, too. “IVe 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”!It's ART MOONEY'S hot arrangement of"I'm Looking Over a Four Leaf Clover"(An MGM release)R. J. Reynolds TobdccorompanrWinfton-Saleni, North Carotin*rGive peace a chanceStudents on campus are going into exam week thisMonday, but the large amount of letters the MAROON hasreceived this week on the events which have transpired inCzechoslovakia indicates to us that the U. of C. studentdoes not immerse himself entirely in academic interests.We think this is good, because the students taking examsin Bartlett, studying in Harper, and writing editorials forthe MAROON before December 7, 1941, were not immuneto the Selective Service draft and we think that those whoconsidered world affairs and politics as outside the realmof a college newspaper found themselves the worse off whenthey were thrown into the conflict.There is sympathy in this country for the students inPrague who demonstrated against the assumption of powerby the Czech Communists. Many students on the Universityof Chicago campus felt that they would do the same thingunder similar circumstances. ,Missed entirely, however, in most of the discussionswhich have appeared in our press and on our radio is thelarger context of which the Czechoslovakian affair is onlya part (not to speak of the grave distortions and exaggera¬tions which have been appearing in the Hearst-McCormickjournals). The question, “Why did this happen?”, hasreceived scant attention, with people in both Russia andAmerica only too happy to heap all the blame on one side.Disagreements as to who has contributed most to the ev6r-widening split are present on the MAROON staff. Recog¬nizing these differences and taking them into account, wewould like to say this:We frankly don’t know whether an aggressive, expan¬sionist Russian foreign policy has been responsible for theeast-west conflict and the Czech crisis. It might have been.'We do feel that American foreign policy has contributedto the situation by being consistently anti-Soviet and anti¬democratic, and the Communist moves in Eastern Europemay have been a reaction to this policy.^ Now, it’s not possible for us, nor is it our responsibilityto change Russian foreign policy. As Americans, however,we can affect our own, and we believe we should work tothat end. What do we mean by “changing American for¬eign policy?” Well, it would mean the end of U. S. supportfor the semi-fascist governments of Greece and Turkey; itwould mean the removal of all aid to the Chinese Nation¬alist government; it would mean a halt to the pussyfootingof the Palestine question by the State Department, a policywhich thinks in terms of oil and bases in the Near East;and it would mean the operation of a Marshall Planstripped of its anti-Russian application and its dependenceon a rebuilt Germany, and applied equally to all the coun¬tries of Europe. Let us not forget that the appropriation forChiang-Kai-Shek has been made part and parcel of theMarshall Plan in Congress, and if we are to assume thatwe have a consistent foreign policy, then the part mustbe intertwined with the whole. If the part is designed toprop undemocratic regimes, is the opposite true about thewhole?Until we change our foreign policy along these lines,we cannot claim to have worked for peace with Russia.When we do make these changes, and then Russian for¬eign policy proves to be intractable, it will be-time to thinkof Universal Military Training and more drastic Winchell-like measures. But up to now we have not given a real peacepolicy a chance.Some may feel that the following of such a policy in¬volves a risk on our part. They say that we are gamblingon the hopeful assumption that Russia wants peace, andthat we will be in a bad position if our assumption provesto be wrong. Admitting this to be true, we think that worldpeace is worth that gamble. If we refuse to take this risk,then the only alternative left to us is war. Let us decideonce and for all which course we are going to follow andlet’s act accordingly.MILTON R. MOSKOWITZ,Retiring EditorThe Chicago MaroonACP Ail-American, 1945, 194€, 1947FRIDAY, MARCH 12, 1948Issued weekl)' by the publisher, The Chicago Maioon, at the publication•ffice, 5;0t» South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Subscription price:Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions by mail, $1 per quarter.Entry as second class matter applied for at the post office at ChicaeoIllinois, under the Act of August 24, 1912. 'MILTON R. MOSKOWITZ JAMES E. BARNETTEditor^ Business ManagerFritz Heimann, Melvin Spat, David Broder:Managing EditorsDAVID S. CANTERNews CoordinatorBXECUTIVE EDITORS: Harry Kilb, School News; Louis R Silverman, NevFeature; John Stone Feature; Gerald Scherba, Rewrite; Robert AdarPolitical; Murray Harding, Sports; Eileen Stone, Copy; Ed Engberg, Assistato the Editor.ASSISTANT EXECUTIVE EDITORS: Buddy Cohen. Copy; Jane Higgins, JullLewis. School News; Solly Dahl, Regina Hutt, Student News; Lew Line!News-Feature; Robert Schakne, Political. A MINUTEWITHTHE EDITORS Letters To The EditorBy MILT MOSKOWITZRetiring editors are usually ac¬corded a column for their “swansongs." I would like to take ad¬vantage of this opportunity to payhomage to the man I would pickas the “Man of the Year” on theU, of C.-campus—Jack Geiger.Such homage is long overdue,for Jack has won enduring respectand admiration from all who havewatched him in action on the Mid¬way. Entering school here justabout a year ago, he has assumedleadership in all the campus anti-discrimination fights and wasautomatically accepted as theleader of the U. of C.’s delegationto the National Students Associa¬tion Reigional Assembly la.stmonth.Prejudice is perhaps Jack’snumber one target, and he w’asactive in this fight before comingto this campus. At the Universityof Wisconsin, where he was ex¬ecutive editor of the Cardinal, he Chicogo MAROONTo the Editor:The MAROON editorial of lastFriday withholding support fromProfessor Paul Douglas, Demo¬cratic candidate for United StatesSenator from Illinois, coming asit does eight months before thegeneral election strike’s as hastyL\VVaA\AVV\VV\\AVVVVVVV\'VVVVVVVVlVVVVV\'VVVVVVVVVVVVV\'\'\white magic for EostorJock Geigerparticipated in campaigns againstdiscrimination in the University'smedical school, dormitories, andrestaurants.Jack left Wisconsin in March ^’44 for a 33-month stretch in theMerchant Marine. Working asship’s radio man, he shipped outthree times on the Booker T.Washington, the ’ first Americanship to have a Negro captain andan inter-racial crew.During the past hectic yearJack has been in the thick ofmany struggles, notably the Fern-wood area housing fight and thestudent walkout last December.Perhaps what he is mp.st proud ofin terms of accomplishment is theYMCA’s decision to stop puttingon minstrel .shows, a move takenby the national religious organiza¬tion at Jack's in.stigation.I actually do not have the .spacehere to do Jack Geiger ju.stice, butI hope .some indication has beengiven as to the kind of man he is.He makes you realize that a liberalshould not only be concerned withinequality, but should make hisliberalism a modus vivendi and dosomething about removing all in¬justices. Van Hauton pulltt wfii/e nwglc out of the hat for you— Mith line, {smooth white hroath-lulh and oifortl shirts inall your favorite collar motJeip. I'hese shirts feature thewizardry of Van lleiisen's sewmanship in every detail: thenew low-setting 'Tomfort tjontour” collar styling,action-room tailoring, tapered lit, tug-proof pearl buttons.They’re Sanforized, too—a new shirt free if yourVan lleusen shrinks out of si/e. Make like a bunny toyour nearest dealer. $3.50, $3.95 and $4.95.Philups-Jones Cohp., New Yohk 1, New Yomk.Yon"re the man most likely to stietved in^VanHeusen ShirtsTILS . SrOHT SHIHrS . PAJAMASAA/VVVVVVVIAVVVVVLWVVWWVWAWVAAAAAAWAAAWIAAAVU/ViLINCOLN AIEKCCRYIN HYDE PARKSpecializing In Ford ProductsfBE SERVICE AND REPAIRALL MAKES OF ALTOSSIMONIZEBODY AND FENDER WORKFactory Trained McehaniesLAKE PARK MOTORS, inc560i HARPER AVE.S. TAUBER, President E. KAPLAN, TreatMrerTo the Editor: and ill advised. It violates theWe reactionaries are profound- fundamental canon that no manly heartened by General Douglas ought to be judged guilty until heMac Arthur’s recent exhibition of is given ap opportunity to beselfless service to his nation. I am heard. And as to one issue in par-establishing on this campus a ticular — the Taft-Hartley law —Students for MacArthur club, the the editorial is misleading,secret purpose of which is to draw jt is true that Mr. Douglassliberal support from the Students not made definitely policy prolfor Stassen, and ensure the elec- pouncements on a number oftion of Robert Alonzo Taft as our critical issues. But It should benext president. Anybody want to remembered that he Is now onlybuy my Wallace button? an unopposed candidate in -heNoble Siochtcfi primaries, and the general elec-rormer Polificol Editor tion campaign against his Re.publican opponent has not veteven begun. And certainly a for¬mer Marine colonel would notcommit the strategic blunder offiring his heaviest guns before iheenemy was in sight.In the absence of these polityiContinued on next page)%5SS!!^ftidar, March 12, 1948 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5More Mail(Continued from previous page)pronouncements, The MAROONtifts chosen to presume that PaulDouglas is not a liberal. In theligiit of his distinguished record^ i Chicago alderman and hisunquestioned support of theRoosevelt New Deal, that pre-aumption is totally unwarranted.The editors of The MAROONindicate that they withhold theirsupport from Mr. Douglas in partbecause he has not demanded“scrapping of the Taft-Hartleybill." Short-shrift can be made ofany innuendo that Douglas hasnot adopted a “strong, liberal”platform on that statute,. In theCongressional Record Of July 15.1947. Rep. Melvin Price (Dem..Ill ) caused to be reprinted ananaly.si.s of the act which Douglashad prepared for the Decatur. Ill..Herald-Review. In the course ofthe article in which he urged apresidential veto, Douglas flayedlarge section of the bill as Inimicalto the cause of “unionism and or¬derly industrial relations.” Hisposition on the bill has been en-thu.siastically endorsed by CIOuniorw and he is unmistakably aligned with those who stand op¬posed to the most objectionablefeatures of the Taft-Hartley act.One final point: Mr. Douglashas indicated in clear cut fashionthat he supports the Marshallplan. As to this Issue, undoubtedlya critical one in the campaign.The MAROON has nothing to say.Thus as to those issues he hasdiscussed. The MAROON is silent:and as to those things he has notdi.scussed. The MAROON speakswith eloquence. This certainly isa strange ^conception of the hon¬est and responsible journalismwhich the editor espoused in hiseditorial of February 6.We differ sharply with PaulDouglas on some issues; we do notexpect to agree entirely with anypolitical candidate. But certainlythe presumptions are all in hisfavor. And they point irresistiblyto liberalism, courage, and integ¬rity. These presumptions may berefuted in the days to come. Butthey have not yet been overturned.As such it seems to us unjustifi¬able and Irresponsible—certainlyat this premature stage—to write off Paul Douglas as a disappoint¬ment.Sam GoldenAbe KrasftAlan StraussTo the Editor:True freedom loving progres¬sives should commend rather thancondemn the resignation of JamesSmith and William Ellis as NSArepresentatives to the lUS for thedismal failure of the lUS secre¬tariat to condemn the action ofthe Czechoslovakian governmentin the wholesale destruction ofacademic freedom (which includesthe right to march in protest) ofstudents and professors. As NSA’spersonal representatives to thelUS in Prague, Smith and Elliswere in an excellent position tofully appraise the situation there.Thus, when these two recognizedstudent liberals decided that theironly recourse was resignation fromlUS, we must not brand their ac¬tion as hasty, but realize that tothem the situation in Prague andwithin the lUS fully warrantedtheir action.The MAROON editorializedthat this action of Smith and Ellis“accentuates the east-west con¬flict and plunges us one stepcloser to war,” But let the Editorsof the MAROON remember thatit was not Smith and Ellis whoengineered the Czechoslovakian coup or fired upon the marchingstudents or dissolved the CzechNational Union of Students. Rath¬er it was the “present Czechoslo¬vakian government” that perpe¬trated these crimes against de¬mocracy, and to them go uncon¬demned is to appease away aca¬demic liberty and human freedom.The MAROON asks the questionof “What good is accomplished bywithdrawing and isolating our¬selves?” No good except to freeourselves from being hampered byan International group that re¬fuses always to stand up for aca¬demic freedom! No good except tonotify the world student bodythat the American Students donot condone the murdering of stu¬dents, whether they be murderedby Fascists. Communists, orSouthern Lynch Mobs. No goodexcept to rally the world studentforces that believe in academicfreedom and human rights to theextent of fighting for them to or¬ganize for the full advancementof their program against the evilsof Fascism and Communism. Forby their action, the NSA is notisolating themselves from the restof the world’s students ^for I be¬lieve that the Austrian studentsresigned from lUS last year), butis now free to the inthe formation of a new interna-PHIUP MORRISis so muchbetter to smoke!PHILIP MORRIS offersbenefit found in no other cignized by leading nose and throat spec.definitely less irritating. „ more"Member: Less irritation means more.h.. ph.-^T... know, .»PHILIP MORRIS. tional students’ organization, onethat will not equivocate their op¬position to police state tactics, butwill remain in the forefront ofthe world struggle for humanrights, freedom and decency.Joseph MinskyTo fhe Editor;Last Friday a leaflet was dis¬tributed on the Campus attackingthe MAROON editorial on Prof.Paul Douglas. The first paragraphof this leaflet concluded with thefollowing astonishing statement:“The real reason for the MA¬ROON opposition lies in Douglassupport of the Marshall plan forthe feeding of Europe’s starvingmillions.” Since the MAROON didnot even mention the MarshallPlan, we are forced to assumethat one or more of the signers isendowed with the extraordinarygift of mind reading.For the information of thoseinterested, the real reason for theopposition of progressives to thecandidacy of Paul Douglas i.s nothis support of the Marshall Plan,but other considerations.In a recent U. of C. RoundTable Discussion Mr, Doualas notonly failed to condemn but al^oimplicitly accepted the TmmanLoyalty Program and its resultingpurges. Regarding the ThomasUnAmerican Committee we haveseen no statement of his whichwould indicate his opnositioneither to its methods or its pur¬poses. He has failed to commithimself on UMT. Even in 1946 hebemoaned demobilization: “In thissituation it would seem to be fohvto put our heads in the sand andto dismember our armed forces ”His pronouncements of the lasttwo years have disolayed a super¬nationalism and jingoistic flavorthat is alarming to those who pre¬fer peace.In the field of foreign affairsMr. Douglas has very decisivelyaligned himself with those forceswhich consider Russian-Americanconflict inevitable and who preach,prepare, and are ready to prac¬tice war. In the summer of 1947he told members of the AVC atIllinois that he firmly approved ofthe Truman- Doctrine. This inspite of the Truman Doctrine’sobvious support of reactionaryregimes. Mr. Douglas’ hystericalanti-Sovietism has led him topostulate a policy close to Mr.Bullitt’s. In his speech acceptingthe Democratic Party Nomina¬tion, in which he painted a hor¬rendous picture of World Com¬munist Revolutions, he also said:“It is better, therefore, to stopaggression in its early stages be¬fore it goes too far, just as thebest time to stop a fire is whenit is still small.”As an indication of Mr. Douglas*pre.sent politics we might take thestatement of Jake Arvey, leader ofChicago’s not so liberal Demo¬cratic machine: “There was not amurmur of protest against Doug¬las in the County Central Com¬mittee when his name was pro¬posed.”Asher SoloHArthur BiermanGeorge CooleyZBT elect chiefsZeta Beta Tau held its annualelection of chapter officers lastMonday night. The results are asfollows: President, Sid Katz; Vice-President, Paul Weiss; Treasurer,Benji Glazer; Secretary, Art Baer;and Dean Brodkey, Historian.HOLIDAYThe Most Talked AboutPipe Mixture in^America☆' Aromatic inthe pack...Aromatic inthe pipe!TRY A PACK... TODAY Holiday also comes in a 16Humi'Seal Glass JarLmu* a BrttttMc CMUMar, ttlchMeaO.Fige 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, March 12, 1948UT s' Lysistrata' drops deadDespite audience's effortBy ROBERT NASSAUIt wasn’t the audience’s fault Sunday night. They wanted to like University Theater’slatest* effort, Lysistrata, but even their predispositions didn’t help much.Everyone came prepared to slap thighs (their own), elbow ribs (their neighbor’s),and guffaw knowingly. Most of them left unexercised. The anticipated clods of dirt turnedout to be a few grains of sand.U. T. The men’s chorus gave somelaughs in their acting, which con¬sisted mostly of fist-shaking, dod-derings and kicks.The high spot of the eveningwas the scene between Jules Man-del as a love-sick husband andIngrid Weisler as his abstainingwife. If the show was saved, thisis 'the thing that did it. JeromeSteiner did a clever bit as Man-del’s lackey. We hope his voice(with no lines he was almost asquiet as some of the speaking ac¬tors) is as good as his sense ofcomedy. Mr. Blair might do wellto keep an eye on him for thefuture.Better than lost yearIf staying awake is any criterion,this was a better play than Car¬ter’s “Agammemnon” last year.We certainly didn’t miss thosesoporific choruses that lulled usin his former epic. While we’reat it. a few last words to Mr.Carter and University Theater.their naughty lines or were simply person who suggested that formances of Chamber Music,saving the good ones for theirAudience tried hardIf the cast had tried as hard as^e audience, it would have been avery funny evening. As it was, onlyonce did the acting rise to the lowlevel Oil which Aristophanes wrotehis play. The cast did try, and de¬serve E’s for effort, although asfar his histrionics is concerned,what a few of them should get isa reproving “tsk, tsk” and a heart-to-heart talk. As a whole, thegroup couldn’t seem to decidewhether it should be smiling orleering and the audience sooncame to share their dilemma.The leader of the men’s chorushelped things along by talking asif he were belatedly eating hisdinner. Judging by the noise, itmust have been a good meal. Inthe matter of unintelligibility,however, he was no worse than alarge portion of the cast; at leasthe seemed to enjoy himself. As forthe others, whether they justcouldn’t bring themselves to utter southern dialect for the Spartansand the square dance for the con¬cluding revels, you have an enemywho apparently will stop at noth¬ing to destroy you. Smite him nowor you’re doomed.Alberneri trioperforms cycleThe Alberneri Trio will performa cycle of Beethoven Trios inMandel Hall April 13. 16 and 20.Alexander Schneider, the violin¬ist, was formerly a member of theBudapest String Quartet, and hasrecently received a great deal ofpublicity for the recordings ofBach and Mozart sonatas that hehas made. Bernar Heifetz, ’cellist,was formerly a member of theKolisch String Quartet and is atpresent the first ’cellist of theNBC Symphony. Erich Kahn, thepianist, is well-known for his per-friends down front, we don’t know.Some praise deservedPrevious carpings notwithstand¬ing, there were a number of thingsin the show which deserve praise.The set, as'is usual with U. T.,was excellent; it was handsome Simpson wins essay contestAlan Simpson, assistant profes- tyrannies that had ever stainedsor of the social sciences in the the human mind. It means theCollege, was named as winner of pledge given by the first American, ^ Speech contest sponsored Congress to the whole Americanand suited the needs of the play over Station WENR in connection people.perfectly. The costuming was good, with America’s Town Meeting "It means the difference be-although a little more color and program. tween honest doubt and blind in¬glamour would have cheered up The 35 year old former British fallibility; between the open andthe proceedings. Violet Salzer did Army major won an all-expense- the closed mind; between thea nice job as Lysistrata, though paid trip to New York for two, journey begun and the journeyshe sometimes lacked spirit, espe- after his 100 word essay on "What ended,cially in her last scene, and lost Free Speech Means to Me’’ wasa lot of her good lines. The chorus selected as the best from overof old women was usually fun, 5000 entries submitted,particularly little Ruth Bronsteini Simpson wrote:who always seemed to put more means the faith which Mil-into her roles than anyone else in held. It means the scornwhich Jefferson felt for all theSPRINVALUET-SHIRTS G:s69<3 FOR $2.00Men's GripperSHORTS 79«Rope SoledSCUFFS 79cFor the ShowerMOCCASINS—Leather Laces $295HeavySWEAT SHIRTS .. . $|59White and SilverFlannelSHIRTS $249Flaid ond GroyFine PoplinWAC SHIRTS .... 98cMercerizedSOCKS 35cAnkle LengthFATIGUES—Reclaimed 98cM-34 DrowstringFIELD JACKETS . . . $345Brand NewHundreds of Other itemsJ. C. SALES CO.Surplus Outlet943 E. 55th STREETBUT. 7155 "It means the difference be¬tween ballots and bullets; betweenan opposition in Congress and anopposition in jail; between dis¬cussion and submission."It means the duty to listen aswell as the right to speak."ARROW WHITEIS ALWAYS RIGHT!Whether'Dart, Dale, Hull, or any other of Arrow’smany fine white shirt models is your particulaifavorite—^you’ll always be correctly dressed in anArrow white.We may be temporarily short of certain styles (scgreat is the demand) but come in anyway and seeour selection of sparkling whites made by Arrow—America’s foremost shirt maker.’Arrow shirts from $3.5Q—^Arrow ties from $!•XjyttoiVsm ARROW SHIRTS IMUSIC STANDBy ANDREW FOLDICollegium's arrangemenf concertwill be held in Int. Uouse SundayContrary to the statement in last week’s MAROON, theCollegium Musicum’s next concert takes place this Sunday,March 14, at the International House Assembly Hall at8:30 p.m.The concert, devoted to compositions and their ar¬rangements promises to be most interesting. Needless tosay, the performances will followthe composers’ instructions to theletter.Siegmund Levarie, conductor ofthe Collegium, will split his dutieson Sunday between conductingand providing figured basses whennecessaryCollegium pravides its own soloists'The opening work on the pro¬gram, a Trio Sonata by the Ital¬ian, Albinoni, who, incidentally,has also written some fifty operas,will be played by flutists GeraldMeinwald and Paul Diesing, Sieg¬mund Levarie at the harpsichordand ’cellist Marijane Carr. Thetheme of the sonata is utilized byBach in a piano fugue which Dor¬othy Walters will F>erform. MissWalters has appeared as soloist atseveral concerts on campus duringthe past few years.Frances Pietch, member of theCollegium since 1938, plays theCorelli Violin Sonata. The Gemi-niani Concerto Grosso arrange¬ment of it will be performed bythe orchestra with ConcertmasterElmer Rosen, newcomer PaulGlickman and Marijane Carr inthe solo parts.Unpublished Mozart arrangementto be playedThe Mozart orchestration of theBach fugue will be conducted froma photograph of Alfred Einstein’smanuscript copy of the work. Noneof the set of six three-part fugueswhich Mozart orchestrated in 1782are available in published form.The lady-singers of the Col¬legium join forces in a Handelduet, with Dorothy Walters at thepiano in Brahms’ original accom¬paniment to the Handel composi¬tion.The entire orchestra will per¬ form fantasias by Byrd and Par¬sons, both sixteenth-century Eng¬lishmen, based on a Gregorian"Gloria."Styrk Orwoll, who played asomewhat lunatic mute servant inThe Music Master, will sing theabove-mentioned "Gloria," as wellas the Gregorian hymn, "AlmaRedemptoris Mater." He will bejoined by tenors Lawrence Laneand Alan Stone in a Dufay chan¬son based on the hymn.A reminder to the music lover;come early. Collegium concerts arefree, seats are unreserved and thecrowds are notoriously larger thanthe capacity of the InternationalHouse Assembly.Discrimination ..(Continued from page 1)many indications that significantchanges are talcing place at BllllnKbHospital, in regard to Negro patients, noofficial word on policy has been ma<lepublicly. The students feel most keenlythat democracy need not announceItself in whispers.The statement is signed by LoisJacobs for Student Government,Jack Geiger for AVC, Bruce Saganfor PCA, George Blackwood forADA, Chuck Stanley for the AVCArea Council, George Cooley forthe United Public Workers, HildaGrey for UOPWA - CIO, HenryLohman for CORE, Hans Freis-tadt for the Communist Club,Jerry Kelly for the SSA Club,Marilyn Mendel for AYD, A1 Vo-taw for YPSL, Saul Mendelsohnfor the Politics Club, Sally Tom-chin for YWCA and Karl Zerfossfor the Young People’s BaptistFellowship.The Best Known and Best LikedWhite Shirt in the WorldBears This Label jlJlXOtV. tMNfOPIXtO •■MiKtMT.WKFrom Cairo toMexico City andfrom Stockholm toShanghai, Arrowwhite shirts areknown in the finestmen’s stores.With U. S. demand for Arrow whites still far fromfilled, we cannot yet supply the stores in 100 for¬eign countries that carried Arrow before the war.But when we can, you may be sure that Arrowwhite shirts will still be an export America may beproud of and that the Arrow label will continueto mean style, quality, and value in the Americanmanner!ARROW SHIRTS and TIESUNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTSFnday, March 12, 1948 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Hither and YonBy BEVE SEGALNew York U. Commerce Bulletin categorized- student cigaretteborvowers into four classes: The good natured creep who patiently* waits until he is offered; then, eagerly helping himself, he asks, “Doesanyone care for a smoke? The thrifty soul, never refusing your kindoffer, places your cigarette carefully among his own. The apologizerhas a different qualm every day for running out of smokes; while theslirewd character stares at your produced pack as if it was a bar ofgold from Port Knox until you are forced to inquire weakly: “Oh, didyou want a cigarette?” If Congress ever placed a law making the non¬payments of cigarette debts a capital offense, he would have littledifficulty in obtaining student support. . . .“Purdue U.** announced a “Best Soldier** contest to createinier^t in the R.O.T.C. Prizes will be awarded to the best studentsin all classes of basic military training. What, no Purple Heartsfor blisters? . . .Ohio State students are petitioning the university to relax a rul¬ing against speeches by candidates for political office, to allow Wal¬lace to speak. “Petitions to bring Wallace here are being receivedvery favorably by the students,** the Progressive Citizens Committeestared. . . .“XT. of Washington** news staff launched a layout experiment.“Therefore, if it appears that the Daily werb laid out by a psycho¬pathic editor, readers will understand that the new make-up is atrial to partition the page into quarters to make for easier readingduring class.** . . . Tex Beneke, the Moonlight Secenaders and his.15 piece orchestra will appear at “Washington U.** for one oftheir afternoon concert series. . . .Kutgers’ comment on the New Look. New Look, like a book—can’ttell contents from cover. Can'i- see knocked knees—unless you lookunder cover. Plans are well underway for the formation of Rutgers’chapter of Phi Beta Kappa.Donald J. Atkinson* Switched to Wildroot Cream-OilBecause He Flunked the Finger Nail TestWHY ACT like a donkey just because your cars arepointed? Don’t “burro** your roommate’s bottle ... ofWildroot Cream-Oil, that isf Get some for yourself. Seehow it grooms your hair neatly and naturally without thatgooey look I See how quickly it goes to woric relievingannoying dryness and removing ugly, loose dandruff IWildroot Cream-Oil hair tonic is non-alcoholic^ it con¬tains soothing Lanolin. Helps you pass the Fingernail Test.No wonder Wildroot Cream-Oil is ''again and again thechoice of men who put good grooming first I’’ Get a tubeor bottle today at any drug or toilet goods counter. Andask your barber for a professional appli¬cation.+ s/38 Deumant Terrace, Kenmore, N.Y, BOOKSf. THAT WINTERhy Merle MillerIn full page ads. Merle Miller’s novel That Win¬ter (WiMiam Sloan Associates, $3) has been hailedas the post-war novel on the veterans by a vet¬eran. We approached the book with eagerness. Thepost-war U.S.A., the 1945-1948 world is chargedwith contradictions. The papers are full of them.You can’t turn around without coming across a fieldjacket, a crowded apartment, sixty bucks that goeslike tlie wind, etc. This is real material for nn hon¬est, capable writer.We were disappointed. Miller’s book is aboutthree vets in the winter of ’45-’46, living in a NewYork apartment and rolling in money und liquor.One is a millionaire’s son, another is a radio writerand the last, the “I” through whom the story istold, is a poor sucker who is working for thirty dol¬lars a day for a newsweekly (Time-Newsweek).There is little resemblance here to the millionsof vets and their problems. Not that the whole world■ought to be in That Winter, but we looked hard,wanting to find something of what the world lookedlike over the' ruptured duck. We didn’t find it toany degree that would warrant calling the bookthe post-war novel.Miller attempts to catch some of the problems ofan infinitesimal number of men, the boys who hadthe money, the apartments, the women and enoughscotch-and-soda around to push the real worldaway every time it smashed in on them. And thescotch flowed like wine. There is a truth in handlingdrinking as it relates to self-pity and disillusion¬ment and Miller sometimes is revealing.There is an honest liberalism hovering aboutthe book but it seldom breaks through to the readerto be translated into what is known and can be felt. The few sections of the book where we momen¬tarily stop racing through slick expiosition, are thesections that show anti-semitism in action. Millergives lip service to the world around him. There aresentences, paragraphs which attempt to unob¬trusively tell us about Rankin-Bilbo and the inevit¬able-war boys. There is excellent material on whatit is like to work on a weekly news magazine, butthe reader picks it up like a magazine article writ¬ten for people who already know and are convinced.The essence of the novel, which Miller at the endtries to cancel out, is echoed when one girl says toPeter, the narrator, “I sense a certain self-pity inyou—and it’s not becoming.’’ Later a friend says,“You just got to stop feeling sorry for yourself.’’This is what we think is wrong with the book. Itthrows into high relief men who are just too sorryfor themselves and that is not enough. It makesthem just a little too important. We want to beable to see *them from some kind of a distance,but we do not. We feel the author himself is com¬pletely wound up in a little breast-beating world ofhis own. Miller tries to picture these men but hedoesn’t extricate himself from them. He takes theeasiest way out by using the first person and theflash-back technique, “I remember when, etc.,’’with little restraint.The writer tries to change the dominant impres¬sion of the book with his ending. He wants to con¬vincingly pull his characters out of their holes afterthe millionaire’s son commits suicide, but he failsto. We finish the book with an impression of over¬all weakness.Norman Springer,SU elects Weinberg, Oatesstudent Union reelected MichaelWeinberg as president and JimOates as vice-president in an elec¬tion held Tuesday.EHected also were Janet Meyers,secretary, and Chuck Whitmore, Virginia Hill instructs Sigmas;Clubs elect, officers for yearPreceding a party given in honor of their retiring*president, Ruth Calladine, the Sigmas were entertainedlast Monday night with a speech by Miss Virginia Hill,treasurer.Next quarter, elections will beheld for chairmanships of SU’s14 departments. Petitions forthese posts are now available inthe SU office.COMr- TO NOYESBOX SUNDAY head of a fashion and modeling school in Chicago. MissHill’s subject was poise and personality.The Sigmas now have eight new election of officers. ’The new Ex¬members, who were formally ini- ecutive Council members are:tiated at Ida Noyes Hall. They are President, Pat Kivlan; Vice-Presi-Joan Brady, Betty Watson, Joy dent, Jane Adams; Treasurer,Dutmen, Jenny Jensen, Nancy Betty Watson; Rushing Chairman,Lederer, Janet Clifton and Norma Pauly Heerman; Secretary, MollyWayne. Franklin; Social Chairman, MaryOn March 1, the club held their Aley.Announce other officesThe pause that refreshesTHE HIGH-SIHNOF REFRESHMENTlOTTlED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COiA COMPANY BYCOCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF CHICAGO. INC.* (g) 1948, The Coca-Cola Company Results of elections held recenNy bysix othc clubs are as follows: DeltaSigma — President, Nancy Vogelsang;Vice-President, Beverly Slmek; Corres¬ponding Secretary, Irene Macaroll;Treasurer, Janet Myers; Recording Sec¬retary, Mae Svoboda; Custodian, JeanTaggert. Chi Rho Sigma — President,Nancy Carpenter; Vice-President, ElsaLindenberg; Treasurer, Carol Thompson;Recording Secretary, Rose Kushan.Mortar Board: President, Marie JeanMartin; Vice-President, Barbara Evans;Secretary, Langden Collins; Treasurer,Ruth Ann Johnson; other offices werefilled by Nancy Bay, Pam Shannon,Anne Campanella, Ann Marschak, andEdel Thies. Tau Sigma Upsilon—Presi¬dent, Selma Warshaw; Vice-President,Nanni Kahn; Record Secretary, BarbaraSunshine; Corresponding Secretary,Marilyn Fischer; Treasurer, GloriaBaumgarten. Quadranglar — President,President, Cathleen Murphy; RushingChairman, Martha Dyer,; Social Chair¬man, Barbara Kenyon; Recording l^c-retary, Claire Magnusson; Correspond¬ing Secretary,, Marge Howard; Treas¬urer, Corrine Nelson; Pledge Captain,Paula Sorenson. Wyvern—President, PatWandell; Vice-President, Jane Sommer;Corresponding Secretary, Nehema Glass-man; Record Secretary, Eveline Wag¬ner; Treasurer, Dorothy Eberhardt; Co-Rushing Chairmen, Donna Johnstonand Pat Edgeworth; Keeper of theArchives, Jean Kapp; Mistress of Cere¬monies, Caroline Gilman.Editorial . .(Continued from page 1)collective belts, and, in somecases, dropping out of school. Bypresenting our picture we thinkthat we may be able to forestallthis increase. The decision hasnot been made yet! It is up toChancellor Hutchins to say “yes”or “no.” He has heard only oneside of the issue so far; andwhile it is understandable thatthe Business Administration isconcerned about using deficitunderwriting to finance thebudget, we think the U. of C.students should be heard frombefore they are inflicted withan increase.The undersigned feel that onlyby rational and concerted studentaction can results be obtained.They heartily endorse the tempor¬ary joint committee set up to pre¬sent the student viewpoint to theadministration and urge all or>ganizations to participate. Ed Dia¬mond, AVC; Lois Jacobs, LeeMarko, Student Government; NickMelas, Interfraternity Council;Mike Weinberg, Student Union;James Barnett, Milton Moskowitz,MAROON.V-* \V MAROONewsBriefsEleanor lauds UC travelersPlans for the U. of C.’s SummerSeminar in Europe were warmlyendorsed by Mrs. Eleanor Roose¬velt last week as the appointmentof a businessman’s committeespurred solicitation of funds forfares of participating students.Interviewed in Philadelphia byPaul Berger and Marshall Rosen-bluth, U. of C. students, Mrs.Roosevelt commended the ventureas a contribution to internationalunderstanding and praised the in¬itiative shown by Chicago stu¬dents taking direct charge of theprogram.Deboters active in springUniversity debaters will remainactive during the Spring vacationwith four contests on their agenda.On March 13 they will meetKalamazoo College on campus,and on March 17 Duquesne will betheir guest. Four of the squad willtravel to St. Louis on March 22for a‘tilt with Washington U., andon the 30th the team w’ill matchwith debaters from the U. ofDenver.Strike supporters .Meet Sat.Saul Alinsky, director of theBack-of-the-Yards Council, andchairman of the National Citi¬zens’ Committee for the Packing¬house Workers, will speak at ameeting of the Campus Commit¬tee for the Packinghouse Workers,to be held Saturday, March 13,1 p.m., in the A.V.C. office ^3rdfloor of Reynolds Club). Themeeting is open to all interestedpersons.Dance Dept, gets new focesOut-going chairman of DanceDepartment of Student Union,Bernie Baum, announces the fol¬lowing appointments for the de¬partment: Marshall Lowenstein,chairman; Paul Rosenblum, treas¬urer; Barbara Weil, secretary;John Thomas, bands; Phil Sha¬piro, refreshments and checking;Doris Koller, tickets; Mike Sale-vesh, * hall arrangements; FrankKoucky and Charles Whitmore,co-chairmen of decorations, andAnn Campanella, mike.Blood will flow in springAll students who pledged bloodcontributions to the World Stu¬dent Service Fund will be con¬tacted for appointment before theend of the third week of theSpring Quarter.Honor senior womenTen new members were initi¬ated into Nu Pi Sigma. SeniorWomen’s Honorary Society, onMarch 4. The initiates, chosen fortheir scholastic achievement aswell as their service in many cam¬pus activities, are Nancy Bay,Virginia Mainzer, Ruth Calladine,Josette Dermody, Vivian Gardner,Jean Hirsch, Lois Jacobs, NancyKerr, Harriet Martin, Joyce Rich,and Adeline Russell.W.^TCH REPAIRING for students.Prompt, honest work, guaranteed, byU. of C. student. Jim Boyack, 5748 Kim-bark, afternoons.LIKE-NEW KODAK 35. with RANGE¬FINDER; leather ever-ready case; Men¬delsohn spesdgun, $85. Call WENtworth2663 evenings.ROOMS. Converted high grade apart-nient building ^o** male students only.Near campus. HYDe Park 3060.BICYCLES RENTEDat 35c per hourG«G GRILLaf the Corner ofSTfh and Stony Island > FAtMWSIcigarette,S by ftOlAiNfHtI think it’s a gooc■CO flavor.* buy a good Parcel:ve smoked Chesterfields for yearsI know THEY SATISFY^ STARRING IN"DREAM GIRL"A PARAMOUNT PICTUREilLWAYS MILDER SETTER TASTING (gOOLER SMOKINGLR48, LiQcm fk Mvm CtkBfafesfe?' Minin iiir—III! fffi^“'Tr;^i'' AFriday, March 12, 1948 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 9Report work of world gov't groupA discussion and summary of the World Constitution,which will be released on March 22, will appear in a sub-setpieiit issue of the MAROON. The following article is adescription of the preparation of the long-awaited report.The MAROON extends its thanks to i’rofessor G. A.horgese for his advice and help in the writing of this articleand of the forthcoming summary.By GEORGE SIDERIS“Control of the bomb is an absurdity. What is essentialis control of man.’’. . . Denis de Rougemont. .On March 22, the University sponsored Committee toFrame a World Constitution, with headquarters at 975 E.60th St., will present for public criticism and considerationthe fruit of its labors: the preliminary draft of a proposed“Constitution for World Government.” The work that hasgone into the making of this constitution has been tre¬mendous; for two years it has occtSpied the minds andenergies of some of the foremost men of our time. Statistics:13 meetings, extensive research leading to 150 documentstotaling 4,500 pages soon to be ihade available in 25volumes), 6 different constitutional drafts with numerousvariants.There are two reactions w’hich this committee and itsconstitution can foster: one is d'^gmatism, a hysterical re¬coiling from a revolutionary piopusal, World Government,which our minds cannot immediately grasp, as evidencedby the Tribune “expose” last November; the other is anattempt to understand the reasons for and the significanceof such a proposal, literally of world changing import.The Tribune alleged that the constitution was a “super-.secret” undertaking. May we quote from Coninion Cause,(on sale at the bookstore), the Committee’s official publi¬cation since July, 1947, and our source of information forthis article; -'Extreme prudence and restraint were de¬manded by the very magnitude of the assignment, unlessFOR YOUNG FOLKSAPPLESEED FARM by Emily Taft Douglas $1.50A chormmg ond inspiring story obotit Johnny Appleseed ond hiswonderful odven*ures in the pioneer midwest for the 7 to 11 -yeor-clds. Autogrophed copies ovoiloble now.RIVER DRAGON by Carl Lane $2.50Adventures of Mojor Stephen Long in the Missouri territory in theearly 1 800's.MRS. PiGGLE-WIGGLE by DeHy MacDonald $2.00She delights in hoving children dig for treasure in her bockyordond olso in their ro'ding the fomily ice box.JUNIOR SPORTS ANTHOLOGY $2.50A treosure of the most exciting sports stories for boys ond girls.THE MELENDY FAMILYby Elizabeth Enright $2.95Three fovorite books brought together in one volume.DANGER TO WINDWARDby Armstrong Sperry $2.50One of the best sea stones ever written.- /TNE DIG WAVE by Pearl Buck $2.00An exciting odventure of o Joponese boy only Peorl Buck couldwrite it, *JANE by Jean Gould ^. $2.50A chorming biogrophicol story of the novelist, Jone Austen.BRIGHT APRIL by Marguerite de Angeii... $2.50This is April's story, especially her 10th Birthday ond its mostwonderful surprise,BE IKL’RE TO REIBEMRER THE VOCNG FRY FOREA.STER . . . SEE THE HEI.IOIITFLI. DISPFAYOF BilSISY RABBIT B«bOkS A!\H TOYS.University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue Wilbur Katz G. A. Borgesethe ‘tinge of megalomania’ should be allowed to become*thecolor and substance of the whole enterprise. Hence—and cer¬tainly not from conceit or from a spirit of controversy—the long pro¬tracted reluctance of the Com.mittee to any kind of self advertisementand propaganda.” On August 24, 1947, Borge.se in a Round Table dis¬cussion on the Committee said, “The Committee to Frame a WorldConstitution was built in the earliest days of the atomic age. Aftertwo years of work we have framed a preliminary draft. We plan topubli.sh it by the end of this year. "These, several months in advanceof the Tribune story, we believe sufficient indications that the Com¬mittee never had under-handed motives.Men on committeeFirst, perhaps it would be better to list the men wlio were promi¬nent in formulating the ron.«titution and those who .signed it.The ro.ster <on the eve of the first meeting, November, 1945 > com¬prised:RoV>ei t M. Hutchins, President.Richard P. McKeon, a philosopher and hellenist, former Dean of theHumanities Division, University of Chicago—Chairman.G. A. Boige.se, Professor in the Humanities Division, University ofChicago—Secretary,Mortimer J. Adler, Professor of Philisophy of Law, University ofChicago.William E. Hocking, emeritus professor of Natural Religion, MoralPhilo.sophy, and Civil Policy, Harvard.Wilbui G. Katz, Dean of the Law School, University of Chicago.James M. Landis, Dean of the Law School, Harvard.Charles H. McTlwain, Professor of Science of Government. Harvard.Reiiihold Niebuhr, Professor of Applied Christianity, Union Theologi¬cal SemtnaTy, New York. - -Robert Redfield, former Dean of the Division of the Social Sciences,University of Chicago.Beard.sley Ruml, Treasurer of R. H, Macy and Company and Chair¬man of the’Federal Reserve Bank of New York.Rexford Guy Tugwell, former Governor of Puerto Rico; Profe.ssor ofPolitical Science at the University of Chicago.A thirteenth member joined the Committee in the interval be¬tween the first and the .second meeting «December, 1945'.Albert Leon Guerard, Profes.sor of General Literature, Stanford Uni¬versity.Three members, after valuable contributions given in the inauguralSELWYN • NOW PLAYINGDirtet from SonsoHoniil One Yeor Run in New YorkJEAN DALRYMPLE presentsin The FAMOUS COMEDY HIT WBSIU.ESQDEby GEORGE AAANKER WAHERS ond ARTHUR HOPKINSwith FAY MCKENZIESEATS NOW PRICES: Every Night including Sunday $4.33, 3.71, 3r10,2.50, 1.85, 1.25, Saturdoy Matinees (ond Wednesdoy Motinee, 1stWeek) $3.71, 3.10, 2.50, 1.85. (Ail prices include tor).ISBELL'SChicogo's Most*CELEBRATEDRESTAURANTS1435 E. 51st Street940 Rush Street590 Diversey Pkwy.1063 Bryn Mowr Aye. phase, withdrew: Hocking andRuml for impediments of busine.ssor distance, Niebuhr on motiva¬tions personal and political alike.Three new members joined theCommittee in the sub.sequentmonths: Erich Kahler LsinceApril, 1946), Visiting Professor inCornell and other in-stitutions;Stringfellow Barr (also sinceApril), former president of SaintJohn's College; Harold A. Innis♦ since July), Professor and headof the Department of PoliticalEconomy, University of Toronto.Landis, having been appointedmeanwhile Chairman of the CivilAeronautics Board in Washing¬ton, resigned from the Committeeat a later stage (May 1947), -All the members of the Com¬mittee, with the exception of Mc¬Keon who dissented on relevantmatters, endorsed and signed thedraft.How the Committee begonKahler said; “No historically in¬formed person claims that theidea of world government is aninvention of our age.” The hi.s-tory of the Committee is quite dif¬ferent. It first began upon theChicago campus in a RoundTable discussion August 12, 1945—.six days after Hiroshima. In thatrii.scussion (.4tomic Force: ItsMeaning for Mankind), the con¬clusion was reached that a worldorganization was essential.One month later, on Septem¬ber 17, 1945. McKeon and Bor-gese, in a memorandum to Hutch¬ins, stated their belief that theuniversities should take a posi¬tive step toward forming a worldgovernment. They reiteratedHitchin’s contention that the at¬tention of institutions of higherlearning should be drawn closerto the commanding problems ofthe age.“We do not think that a worldconstitution or a preliminaryproject will be drafted by bureau¬cratic or diplomatic bodies. Theirmotions are inhibited by statu¬tory routines; their initiatives,even in the most open-minded ofnations, must stop at the dog¬matic wall of national soverignty.’*They went on to say that theclashing of interests and doctrinesbetween individualism and collec¬tivism is too powerful to allow fora mediation on the present levelsof international association.'Continued on page 10)H\n ms“Thr Fane and the Farcincs at theHarris are a Hit, a Knotkout, in fact,the l.oganhcrrifs.”—Ashton Stevens, Herald-AmericanRODGERS & HAMMERSTEINIn Association with JOSHUA LOGANpresentJOHX LOVESMARVA New Comedy by NORMAN KRASNADirected by MR. LOGANPKICKS: F.ves.. inc. Sun.: fl-Z.*), SI RS,J2..'>0, S3.10. $3.71; Mats., $1.25, $2.50,t3.10 (tax included).TERESA DOLANDANCING SCHOOL1208 E. 63rd St (Nr. Woodlown)I.EARN TO DANCE NOW!We can teach you to be a reallygood dancer Our years of experi¬ence is your guarantee No frills—jufit satisfying results. Let us helpyou now!• PRIVATE LESSONSDAILY 11 A M. TO 11 P.M.Call for Trial LessonLearn Waltz, Pox Trot. Rumba,Samba and Tango in group lessons,$1.00. Sun., Mon., Tues., Wed., Sat.Evenings at 8;00.Phone Hyde Park 3080/ceCrmes0^/94^“The Greatest Show on Ice"Opens Mor. 15th—18 Doys Only!Matinees Sundoy Morch 21 ond 28Res. Seats $1.25, $1.75, $2.60, $3.10,$3.80SPECIAL ATTENTION TOMAIL ORDERSSend self-addressed stamped envelopewith check or money order. Ticketsalso on sale at Lytton’s, State AJackson or at the Arena Box Office.ARENA8500 Erie St.fmgt to THi CHICAGO MAROONWorld gov*t report(Continued from page 9)How the work was organisedThe first consideration of theCommittee was: which of the pos¬sible forms of world governmentshould be used. Mcllwain’s state¬ment below will serve to illustratehow an answer was reached:“There are 3 conceivable formsof world organizations: a leagueof soverign states, a unitary sov¬ereign super-state, ,and a federa¬tion. . . . The first of and secondof these forms are entirely logical,but history has shown that in thepresent* state of the world theyare unworkable. The third, worldfederation, is no doubt illogical,but it is a form of governmentwhich has in the past succeededin fact for long pieriods at least.”Gorgese, in July, 1947, CommonCause states that “The politicalintent of a world constitution tobe submitted to world opinionwould not be to frighten or “en¬circle” anybody. Its purpose andeffect should be to procure analignment of the majority of man¬kind, so convinced and convinc¬ing as to bring home to everybodythat peace through justice andworld authority is an acceptableand desirable proposition for eachand all.”Russia vs. AmericaHie big problemTo quote Borgese, “Should aplausible blueprint of a WorldState become available, it bidsfair to anticipate that all “neu¬trals” would favor its adoption.They — Indians or Europeans orLatin Americans, Asiatics or Af¬ricans, Malayans or Arabs—are that in such a world governmentthe United States will prove itselfto be the main force. Althoughthe right is conceded to the otherpeoples to send their representa¬tives to the world government,yet this government would essen¬tially have to be sort of an ex¬panded American federal govern¬ment. . . . Such plans . . . arethoroughly reactionary.” (TheBolshevik, Moscow, Nov., 1946.)It’s a little like two bathersstanding at the edge of a coldlake—“I’ll jump in if you’ll jumpin.” But without any humor. Thesituation is grim. On August 21,unarmed and nearly all destitute.They make up, nonetheless, thefour-fifths of mankind.1947, the Library of Congress pub¬lished a report on Soviet policy.In it was the striking image ofWorld War in, out of which “notone Rome'would emerge, but twoCarthages.”A conciliation, say the WorldFederalists, may be obtained onlyin a world government. To thosewho would debunk the possibilityof world government due to fric¬tion between Russia and the U. S.,Borgese has said, “(they) point tothe invincible opposition of Rus¬sia. But they think of Russia as aconstant in a world of variables.Ru.ssia too may change” — if aworkable plan for world govern¬ment can be evolved—“It is ourbelief that the truth and valueof such a plan—and much soonerthan defeatists like to anticipate—would penetrate Russia, wouldbreak any iron curtain.” Campus startsaid committeefor strikersA Student Committee for thePackinghouse Workers was organ¬ized this week under the leader¬ship of the University chapter ofPCA.The Committee will aid theUnited Packinghouse Workers-CIO when they go out on strikeMarch 16. The main issue in thestrike is the workers’ demand fora 29-cent per hour increase.Among the, eight campus or¬ganizations represented at themeeting were: ADA, AVC, SSA,UOPW, PCA, Students for Wal¬lace, Socialist Club, and Commu¬nist Club. Although some of theorganizations have not yet offi¬cially endorsed the Committee, itis expected that each will do soafter its next general meeting.Lowry givessermon SundayPresident Howard Lowry ofWooster College will deliver thesermon at 11 am. in RockefellerMemorial Chapel next Sunday.In the afternoon, at 4 p.m., theChapel Choir with GerhardSchroth conducting and FrederickMarriott, Chapel organist, accom¬panying, will sing the musical ' Fridays MavcIi 12, 194gSTUDENT UNIONEVENTS"Night of Sin"The high price of wicked living will take a sharp nose dive onApril 2 when Student Union brings Monte Carlo to Ida Noyes for a“Night of Sin,” 8 to 11.Phony money will be thrust upon entering guests, and those whostagger from the gaming tables with the largest amount of worthiestscript will win prizes.Ski tripA Student Union three-day ski trip group will leave Friday eve¬ning, March 19, by chartered bus for Northern Wisconsin.Inquiries are invited in the Ida Noyes SU office.Florida TripReservations for the nine-day hrterquarter trip to Florida arestill being taken, but the deadline is 5 p.m. Monday. Deposit of $35 ofthe estimated total cost of $50 is required.Ping Pong tournamentTonight, Student Union is holding a table tennis tournamentin Ida from 7 to 11, with the emphasis on doubles.Noyes BoxThe Noyes Box is open from 7 to 11 this Sunday for dancing andrefreshments, and the Song Fest meets at 8 in Ida Library with folkmusic featured. *Student Pow-WowUnder its new name. Student Pow-Wow, the Human DevelopmentDiscussion Group will hold five meetings in April, on Thursday after¬noons, 3:30-5 p.m. in Ida Noyes.Chairman Carol Finkelhor has announced as topics “Making theAdvisory System Work,” “Study for Comps,” “The House System.”and “The Future of University Sports.” The group, which began withdiscussions of “What’s Wrong With Social Life at Chicago,” meetseach Thursday afternoon.vespers. School of Drama, will be the guestitkin addresses Hillel speaker at Hillel tonight at 8:30,Prof David Itkin. organizer and using as his Fireside subject,director of the De Paul University “Jewish Theatre.”“The main difficulties lie withthe other fifth: more exactly, withRussia and America, the two sov¬ereign giants.”The cause of their antagonismis twofold. One, a desire for world¬wide government; two, more im¬portant is the fear each has ofthe other. Russia is fearful that aworld government will be a worldunited against Russia under thedominance of the U. S.; the U. S.that it would mean a relinquish¬ing of national power at a timewhen Russia shows no willingnessto join such an organization.“Back of this idea, wrapped in* high-sounding phrases, is to befound the drive of American capi¬talists toward the establishmentof their dominion all over theworld. ... It is tacitly assumedDr. W. Hortongives Hooverlectures“The Next Phase in ChristianUnity” will be the title of theHoover Lectures on ChristianUnity to be given at Mandel Hall,on four successive evenings, Mon¬day through'Thursday, April 5 to8, at 8 p.m., by Dr. Walter Mar¬shall Horton, noted churchman,educator and theologian of theOberlin Graduate School of Re¬ligion, Oberlin, Ohio.Under the auspices of the Dis¬ciples Divinity House of the Uni¬versity, the lectures will deal withthe three major movements whichhave gone into the making of theWorld Council of Churches ofChrist which will be constitutednext August in Amsterdam. Dr.Horton will review each of tliemovements critically, in terms of«. its values, its limitations and itspermanent features which must bepreserved His final lecture willindicate new aspects of a religiousnature which must emerge if thecause of Christian unity is to befurther promoted.TASTY FOOD?THAT’S OUR HOBBYHOBBY HOUSE53rd at Kenwood67th and StoneyDAW!M TO DAWNWaffles • SteaksCheeseburgers Here’s Money-Saving VALUETOP QUALITYSUITSRich-looking fabrics — the kincJof quality and workmanship thatusually bears a $60.00 price tag.All sizes — double and singlebreasted models.646 NORTH CLARK STREETCORNER ERIEs837 EAST 63RD STREETNEA« COTTAGE GROVEboth stores Open Evenings, Monday WORLD NEWS from ERIEListen to ULMER TURNER Monday thru Soturdoy,7:30 A.M., STATION WJJDSPORTS NEWS from ERIEListen to JIMMY EVANS Tuesday '■and Thuredov*8:45 P.M., STATION WINDand Thursdoy till 9:00. Oosed Saturdoy Evenings,Friday, March 12, 1948 THE CHICAGO MAROON Poge 11Fencers end 'third straightundefeated yearThe U. of C. fencing squadclosed a brilliant season this pastweek end, defeating the Univer-.viiy of Illinois, 16-11, on Friday,and trouncing Illinois Tech, 18-6,on Saturday.The fighting mini’s epee teampioved unexpectedly tough anddefeated the Maroons, 6-3, Thomp¬son taking two and McDowell oneof the Chicago victories. Chicago’s/oil team came through with sixvictories, however, Strauss win¬ning three, Kenner tw'O, and Col¬well one. The sabre team alsoperformed brilliantly by winningseven matches, Westley and Cohenmaking their usual clean sweep,and Scharf adding another.A lineup liberally sprinkledwith reserves won handily fromthe Techhawks, sweeping foil andsabre, 7-2, and epee, 4-2.The Maroon swordsmen end theseason whth a record of sevenwins, no losses and one tie. Thenext official participation of the.«;quad will be the NCAA ^Cham-pionships at Annapolis. Strau.ss,Cohen, and Thompson will bearthe Maroon standard. Roy Freeork is shown obove receiving the MAROON-^onoted holfof the Most Voluoble Ployer Aword for the '47-'48 bosketboll seosonfrom T. Nelson Mclcolf, Athletic deportment heod. Dean Robert M.Strozier also presented o Student Union octivity poss for the next yeor ondo letter of commendation from Chancellor Robert M. Huchins to Freeork. 1.1. T. Relays featureFonville, DillardBy CARL GYLFEIllinois Tech will present its 1948 relays carnival inthe U of C fieldhouse tomorrow afternoon and evening.This huge track contest will attract most of the universitiesand colleges in the midwest.Chicago will be competing in the college division withsuch schools as Loyola university, Baldwin-Wallace, Grin¬ned Bradley, and others. The university division will beentered by powerful teams from Dillard will be competing in theMichigan, Illinois, Northwestern, college division. 'and Wisconsin. Illinois will send their full quotaCoach Ned Merriam plai^ on ^ performers, headedentering relay teams in the sprintmedley, distance medley, and twomile relay. John Adams. Ken Mul-cahy, John Bokman, Tom Bene-dek, Charley Ostot, and HerbRothenberg will be the partici- flight milerT wlIl nit be entered hrpants in these events.^ the mile run due to the heavy^b Vosberg Will compete m the outlined for him in the vari-by the Big Nine jumping cham¬pion, Dwight Eddleman.Adorns out of mileJohn Adams, the U. of C.’s toppole vault and has an excellentchance of copping a medal if hecan attain his high of 13 feet inthis meet.Fonville Olympic HopeCharles Fonville of Michigan,the white hope for the Olympic ous distance relay events. John isundefeated in dual meets this yearand has placed third in the Michi¬gan State relays in competitionwith some of the other leadingmilers in this end of the country.Preliminary events will be runshot put, will be the center of at- off at 2:30 in the afternoon andthe finals will start at 7:30 in theevening.Salisbury fakes track titleIn a rout of monumental pro¬traction as he points for theworld’s record tomorrow night.The Michigan weight man hasheaved the shot well over 56 feetno less than a dozen times in com¬petition this year and is approach -ing the 57 foot record in every portions, Sali.sbury house annexedmeet. intramural track honors at theNorthwestern will send down Field House Wednesday. TakingBill Porter, one of the brighter first in every event but one, thestars in the hurdling field. Porter “Rah-Rah Boys’’ of Salisburywill not meet Harrison Dillard, amassed a total of 56 pointsthe world record holder from Bald- against 14»2 for the nearest ofwin-Wallace, due to the fact that their seven opponents....because ifs slow-aged!• « Uliutmaicij.• • more del» more d/*/; • ” '^. for anA,1,1'•/w C"i!"SUfPIIITRuppert Knickerbocker Beer and Ruppert Ale, Jacob Ruppert, New York City—1948Today—try NewYorki Most Famous BeerKU VV I111 Vb ■ Biin ■ CHICAGO’S FIRSTHYDE PARKSELF SERVICELAUNDRY30 Minute Wash9 Minute Drying ServiceHOURSMon. to Fri. 8:30 AM to 9:30 PMSoturdoy 8:30 AM to 5:30 PMSundoy 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM912 E. 55th St, AT l int AUOMARYZliYYCHESTERFIELDSSHE SAYSThey are the best all aroundcigarette on the market•A nationwide survey shows thatChesterfields are TOPS with CollegeStudents from coast-to-coast.“Not even Frankie Swoonatra could make memiss Dentyne Chewing Gum! That nifty flavorreally sends me—I mean it really does. And theway Dentyne helps keep my teeth white, I wantaturn on the old smile all the time.**Dentyne Gum — Made Only By Adams“Come on, Johnny, mother promised us DentyneChewing Gum if we only sat through it once!’IQtlRITE sonsVOU'UG GOT .TO STUDY TO STUV...end of the ouarter, time for exams andIt’s an old, old tune. "Forward passesdon’t pass in classes...for you’ve got tostudy to stay!" But even this blackcloud has its silver lining...springvacation’s on the way and shopping is inthe air. You’ll find the best song atMarshall Field S: Company where brightfashion notes in a brand new key areJust waiting to be played.FnUORITE FRSHIOn...BEIOUED BIOUSE BBO SKIBTJudy Sheridan looks disarmingly feminineand lovely in this beguiling whitebatiste blouse with Venise lacfb collar...The Blouse Shop—Sixth Floor, Middle« Wabashteamed with this circle-skirt of navy orblack rayon faille. Blouse, sizes 32 to38, Ji»14.95.. .skirt, sizes 10 to 16, $16.95