M^AROON electionwill continue todayThe MAROON staff last Friday held elections for editorduring the next two quarters, but the balloting ended in adeadlock between the two candidates, David Broder andDavifl S. Canter.Present Editor Ed Engberg announced that a re-election will be held today at 4:30 p.m. in the ReynoldsClub theater.BernsteincautionsveteransGI readjustment allowances arenot Intended as summer vacationpay, Samuel C. Bernstein, IllinoisCommissioner of UnemploymentCompensation, advised studentveterans today.Bernstein is agent for the Vet¬erans Administration in conduct¬ing the readjustment allowanceprogram provided in the Service¬men's Readjustment Act of 1944.“A veteran is not eligible forreadjustment allowances for un¬employment if he is receiving sub¬sistence allowances for educationor training under the Act or if heis not available for suitable work,"said Commissioner Bernstein."This means," he explained,**that between school terms andduring vacations student veteransshould make sure that their sub¬sistence allowance payments havebeen discontinued before filing forreadjustment (unemployment) al¬lowances.“Further, the veteran who ismerely planning to rest betweenschool terms is not eligible for re¬adjustment allowances, Bernsteinsaid."He must be looking for employ¬ment and be ready and willing toaccept any suitable job offered, heexplained.' Federal law provides that fur¬ther readjustment allowances areforfeited by a veteran who know¬ingly accepts an allowance to^hich he is not entitled.In addition, fraud is punishableby fines and prison sentence, Bern¬stein told the MAROON.Cancer dance featuresstars and door prizesThe Collegiate Answer to Conquer Cancer will be bothan enjoyable and powerful one, if U. of C. students turnout for the star-studded Benefit Dance scheduled for theChicago Arena on May 28. Proceeds from the dance, bidsfor which are $3.80, will go to the American Cancer Society,which in the past has given large sums of money to cancerresearch at the University. ■About 5,000 Chicago-area col- Eddie Condon, the stars of "Jazzlege students are expected at the 8-t l-he Philharmonic,” and Edendance, which is informal and be- Ahbez, author of "Nature Boy,”gins at 9 p.m. Although ticket will be among the many other en-sales at Chicago have been less tertairicrs.than spectacular, the inducement People attending the dance areof a 14 karat gold wristwatch, to ask^'d not to buy corsages in ad-given out Monday if 150 bids yance; 1,000 have been donated,have been sold on this campus, is jqj. adding toexpected to push sales. Provided cancer funds. Owner of thethe minimum number of bids are ^rena, Allen Loeb, is contributing^Id at that time, a drawing will building free of charge. Chair-be open to all buyers at 3:30 either dance is Noel Gold¬in Mandel Corridor or the Rey- bjatt, a Northwestern student;nolds Club, as a sign will indicate, heading the U. of C. committee isIn the meantime, tickets are on Mj^g Weinberg, assisted by Edsale in the Student Union office Engberg, members of Student Un-Noyes, in Reynolds Club ion, and the Inter-Club Council.203, in Burton-Judson entries andfraternities, and from 11:30-1:30, Those interested in attendingand 3:30-4:30 daily in Mandel dance are advised to get theirCorridor and Ida Noyes Foyer tickets before the time set for theTo aid in determining the hold- Monday and to be at theing of the drawing, all dormitoryand fraternity ticket' sellers are fow at 9:30 P^iday. The Chicagoasked to phone campus 1798 andindicate their total sales to date North McQlurgby 5 o’clock tonight, Friday. streets.Entertainment at the BenefitDance will be of superb quality andquantity: the orchestras of RayMcKinley and Louis Jordan willperform; Irv Kupcinet, Sun-Timescolumnist, wUl M. C.; "John LovesMary” star Jan Sterling will pre¬sent the many door prizes; andJane Powell, the King Cole Trio, University of Chicago, May 21, 1948Broder has been with the Ma¬roon for three quarters and atpresent is a managing editor.David A. Canter has been with thepaper for the seven quarters andhas had previous editorial experi¬ence at other schools and on la¬bor-union newspapers.John H. Mathis was electedBusiness Manager of the MA¬ROON for 1948-1949 at the busi¬ness meeting last week. Mathissucceeds James Barnett, who hasbeen Business Manager for thepast two years.Mathis, after a year in the Col¬lege, served two years in the SouthPacific in the Naval Reserve. Hereturned to the U. of C. for twoquarters and then once again en¬tered the service, this time for atwo-year stretch in the ArmyCounter Intelligence Corps. Hecame back to Chicago this quarterand has worked as A.ssistant Busi¬ness Manager under Jim Barnett.SC text martopensJunellstudent Government’s Book Ex¬change, successful last quarter incombatting inflationary prices ofthe Bookstore, will open again atthe end of the spring quarter, Jer¬ry Greenwald announced thisweek.The Exchange headquarters inthe Alumnae Room of Ida Noyeswill be open from 11:30 to 1:30 onJune 11, June 12, and June 15 toJune 19, as well as the first twoweeks of the summer quarter.Students will use the same pro¬cedure in selling and buying booksas was used last quarter. One newimprovement on the system hasbeen made which will allow thosebooks unsold during the summerquarter to be carried over into theautumn quarter. Billings halts biasNSA votes Chicago planA mail referendum of dele¬gates to the Illinois assemblyof the National Students Asso¬ciation has ratified the planfor united anti-discriminationaction proposed at Champaignlast March by Jack Geiger ofthe U. of C., with amendmentsby Mundelein College delegateHelen Jean Rogers.Mary Jo Domino, Rockfordcollege delegate in charge ofthe referendum, yesterday an¬nounced approval of:1. NSA-supported anti-dis¬crimination groups on all af¬filiated campuses, directed es¬pecially at discrimination inadmissions and utilizing the re¬sources of NSA and civil lib¬erty groups.2. NSA support for repeal oftax-exemption legislation forany institution practicing dis¬crimination.3. A central NSA anti-dis¬crimination office to directthese efforts.4. Interracial student work¬shops. Racial discrimination no longer exists in the admissionpolicies of the University hospitals and Clinics, the JointAnti-Discrimination Cpmmittee, representing 31 campusorganizations, announced yesterday.In the first full report since the publication of its“Discrimination-Action” pamphlet six months ago, theJADC reported these results of its year-long campaign:For the first time, Negro pa- :Campus groupsblueprint actionA campaign to extend the civilliberties work begun on campusthrough Chicago and downstateIllinois was mapped out today byThe staff of PULSE Maga¬zine will meet at 4 p.m. Tues¬day to elect an editor for thenext academic year.Incumbent A1 Whitney hasannounced that he does notchoose to run for re-election. New * Review^appears todayA spanking new Chicago Reviewhits campus today! The editorsdecided that the old magazine wastoo dull in appearance and havecome up with a completely re¬juvenated issue.Featured on the "modern writ¬ing” side is a translation by U. ofC. student Neal Oxenhandler fromPaul Eluard, French Surrealistpoet, as well as a critical introduc¬tion to his work. Also two Review"firsts”: the first English transla¬tion of of the Spanish poet LuisFelipe Collado, and the first storywritten in English by Cuban JoseMario G. Zayas.In contrast to the avant gardeportion of the issue are stories byHenrietta Weigel, author of therecent novel Age of Noon, andNeville Braybrooke, editor of thewell-known British literary jour¬nal, The Wind and the Rain; anda critique of modern poetry byElder Olson, Aristotelian Profes¬sor of English at the University ofChicago.Poet Peter Viereck contributes"Incantation at Assissi.” A pageof "Sketches for Sculpture” byEOINA, Parisian artist, and stu¬dent poetry by Mary Reinsbergand R. A. Park round out thelatest issue.UC writers to getcash for novelsThe largest single award of¬fered to students for writing abil¬ity was made public by Robert M.Strozier, Dean of Students.. Any student registered at theUniversity of Chicago who is un¬der 30 years of age may competefor the Ann Watkins Fiction Fel¬lowship prizes of $1,500 and $500to be awarded for the two bestnovels submitted by July 1, 1948.In accordance with the termsof the award, students who havenever published in book form mayenter a novel with a minimum of50,000 words.Manuscripts may be submittedto the Dean of Students office. tients are being admitted andtreated at Lying-In hospital.Negroes have been accepted aspatients at Billings hospital, sub¬ject only to the criteria which ap¬ply to Whites, since shortly afterthe student protest walkout of Dec.8, 1947.Admit first NegroA Negro student—the first inseven years—has been accepted bythe University Medical School withthe promise that he will receivehis full four years training oncampus, rather than receivingsegregated clinical training atProvident hospital, as had beenpast policy.Negro patients in Billings hos¬pital are now not treated exclu¬sively in private rooms or specialwards; in many cases, Negro pa¬tients share semi-private rooms Jack Geigerand open wards with other pa- the American Veterans Commlt-tients. tee, CORE, and Student Govern-Lying-in still segregotes ment.The committee also reported, agenda is a city-however, that Negro mothers now effort by each chapteradmitted to Lying-In hospital for Chicago to begin investigationspre-natal care will be segregated negotiations with hospitalsin the hospital’s Mother’s Aid Pa- throughout the city and to pressvilion following delivery and dur- pass^e of a "Pair Healthing post-natal convalescence. This P^^-^tmes ordin^ce by the Ghi-was the only charge of continuingdiscrimination made by the JADC. .. Vt, **/®"*^At the same time, with the pas-Jack Geiger, chairman of theJADC, said the announcement wasbased on:1. A new statement of policy re¬cently transmitted to the commit- sage of the University of Chicago’s"Discrimination - Action” plan bythe Illinois region of the NSA.students here hope to aid stu¬dents elsewhere to extend work ontee by Vice-President Harrison discriminatory admission policiesand initialed by Chancellor Hutch- of colleges and universitiesins, and throughout the state. Chicago’s2. A new investigation by the NSA delegation is expected tostudent group—the same commit- Press for adoption the same plantee which published 17 pages of NSA’s national convention thisevidence documenting its discrim- summer,ination charges in November. Legislotive action plannedChancellor Hutchins agreed thatthe charges of discrimination rati¬fied by the hospitals were "sub¬stantially accurate” and said ef¬forts would continue to bringabout progress.The new statement from the ad¬ministration, labeled "AdmissionPolicy, University of Chicago Hos¬pitals and Clinics” states:Race provision removed"Apart from the students andstaff of the University, the selec¬tion of patients in the University The Chicago students furthefplan to mobilize support—includ¬ing a possible state-wide studentlobby—for passage of a statewideFair Health Practices Act and astatewide Fair Educational Prac¬tices Act by the Illinois legislature.Similar bills, barring universitieswhich practice discriminationfrom state tax exemption, havebeen passed in New York state.Action on FEPC, long on thecivil liberties agenda, will con¬tinue. The year-long civil liber¬ties campaign grew from a quietof Chicago Clinics is based solely investigation by A VC and COREon the following factors: i-o reach the front pages of• (a) ability to pay the cost of newspai«rs and newsmagazme*medical care—a cost which may throughout the country,be considerable in those caseswhere it seems probable that theperiod of observation and treat¬ment must be long.(b) usefulness as teaching ma¬terial.(c) interest of one of the clini¬cal investigators in the particulardisease presented by the patient.”The statement was discussed- Phi Delis throw'Arabian Nights'Phi Delta Theta tonight opensits doors to the campus as it holdsits 22nd annual Silly Strut, anwith Billings hospital superinten- Arabian Nights party, at the chap-dent Ray Brown, who emphasized house froni 9 to 1.that "these are the only bases for Exotic trappings will transformselection of patients, staid 5737 Woodlawn into a rep¬lica of Bagdad, with a thief in ev¬ery shadow and a tawny haremgirl at every auction block.Mustafa Sheik Mohammed Allben Carroll Cline has sparked thepreparations, which include a cave(for "Open Sesame”), deserts,palaces, and spouting fountains.Willie Randall and his orchestrawill provide music. Phi Delta andtheir dates will be dressed straightfrom Scheherezade, with costume*optional for guests.Cliksman talks on campusJerry Gliksman, author ofTELL THE WEST, speaks oncampus next Thursday.The former Warsaw Laborlawyer will discuss "Concentra¬tion Camp Society” before anopen meeting of the SocialistClub in Rosenwald Z at 3:30p.m.r*9e 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, May 21, I9<Calendar oj EventsNext Week onQuadrangles Student Forum institutessummer Speech Clinicend radio broadcasts Collegium Musicumperforms Sunday Navy wants QradsBy JOAN GANSBERGTODAY, MAY 21EXHIBITION (Renaissance Society): Victor Hammer’s Work. Goodspeed 108.I 9 a.m.-5 p.m. through June 19.' BASEBALL GAME: Chicago vs. Illinois Tech. Stagg Field. 2:30 p.m.PUBLIC LECTURE: ‘Revolutions of the Seventeenth Century: Economic andSocial Background of the Revolution in Seventeenth Century England.”R. H. Tawney, Mandel Hall. 4 p.m.BASEBALL GAME: Junior Varsity vs. Parker High School. North Field. 4 p.m.PUBLIC LECTURE: (University College) "Jones’ Education and the WoHdTragedy,” Sunder Joshi, 19 S. LsiSalle St., 6:30 p.m., 75c.PHI DELTA THETA: Open Party. 5737 Woodlawn, 9 p.m.-l a m.INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: Luncheon meeting, third floor,Ida Noyes. Speaker, Dr. Charles Young, 12:30 p.m.LUTHERAN: L. S. A. dinner meeting. Chapel House, 6 pm.HILLEL FOUNDATION: Sabbath service, Hillel House, 7:45 p.m , Open House,8:30 p.m.SPLASH PARTY: Ida Noyes Pool, 7-45-9:46 pm.SATURDAY, MAY 22BASEBALL GAME: Chicago vs. De Pauw University, Stagg Field, 2:30 p m.NATURE HIKE: Meet at Ida Noyes. 8:30 a m.SQUARE DANCE: Ida Noyes Gym, instruction at 730 p m., dancing from8-11 p.m.SUNDAY, MAY 23EPISCOPALIAN; Communion Service, Bond Chapel, 8:30-9:15 a m.PRESBYTERIAN: Breakfast Hike.ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL: Miss Ann Guthrie. 11 a m.YWCA: Tea for Miss Anne Guthrie. Ida Noyes Library, 3 pm.SONGFEST: Ida Noyes Library, 8-10:45 p.m.NOYES BOX; Cloister Club. Floor Show. 7-11 p.m.UNITARIAN CHANNING CLUB: Debates. "Candidates for Presidency in1948,” 57th at Woodlawn. light supper, 6 p.m.RADIO BROADCAST: University Round Table, WMAQ and NBC, 12:30-1 p.m.CARILLON RECITAL: Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 4:15 p.m. Frederick Mar¬riott, Carillonneur.VESPER SERVICE: Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 5 p.m.COLLEGIUM MUSICUM CONCERT: Leon Mandel Assembly Hall. 8:30 p.m.Siegmund Levarie, conductor. The program: Verdi, Ave Maria; Hassler,Missa Secunda; Handel. Concerto Gr jsso, G major. Opus 6, No. 1; ConcertoGrosso, A minor. Opus 6, No. 4.MONDAY, MAY 24PUBLIC LECTURE: (Univensity College) 'The Republican Party and theProgressive Era,’’ Walter Johnson. 19 S. LaSalle St., 7:30 p.m., 75c.CHAPEL HOUSE: Farewell tea for Elbert and Virginia Cole, Chapel House,3-5:30 p.m.HUMAN DEVELOPMENT SEMINAR: "Portal House—A Study in the Rehabili¬tation of Alcoholics," Jim Hamlin. Edwin Wright, Douglas Blocksma, NatRaskin, Judd Common Room, 4:30 p.m.EXHIBITION (Renaissance Society): Paintings, prints, drawings, typography,and Illustrations by Victor Hammer. Goodspeed 108. dally except Sunday,9 a m-5 p.m., through June 19.BOTANY CLUB: Botany 106, 4:30 p.m.. "Responses of Marchantia Polymorphato Size and Shape of Transplant, and to Some Growth Substances." PaulVoth. Associate Professor of Botany.JUNIOR MATHEMATICAL CLUB: Eckhart 206, 4:30 p m., "Real Fields." IsadoreSinger.TUESDAY, MAY 25CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION: Thwndike Hilton Chapel. 7:30 p m.DOCUMENTARY FILM: "The House on 92nd Street,” Soc. Sci. 122, 7:15 p m.,only, 35c.CAMPUS COMMITTEE AGAINST CONSCRIPTION: "The Military vs. theCapitol.” Prof. Charles Lyttle, Classics 10, 3:30 p m.PUBIJC LEITTURE: (University Colleee) "The Universe of the Many.” CharlesMorris, 19 S. LaSalle St., 8 p.m., 75c.COLLOQUIUM: (Institute for the Study of Metals), Eckhart 202. 4 p.m. "TheKinetics of Sulfur Reactions in Ferrous Metallurgy.” G. Derge, CarnegieInstitute of Technology.BEMINAR IN PHARMACOLOGY, BIOCHEMISTRY, AND PHYSIOLOGY: Abbott133, 4:30 p.m. "Studies on the Toxicity of DimethylaminobenzenediazoSodium Sulfonate and Its Inhibitory Action on Enzymatic Reactions."Roy G. Herrmann. Research Assistant in the Toxicity Laboratory and theDepartment of Pharmacology.JOINT MEETING OF THE POLITICAL SCIENCE AND INTERNATIONAL RE¬LATIONS CLUBS: Judd 126, 7:30 p.m. "Peace Through Negotiation?” It was announced today by Wm.Birenbaum, Director of the Forum,that Larry Bostow will act as di¬rector of the Forum during thesummer quarter during Biren-baum’s absence, Birenbaum willrepresent NSA in Europe duringthe summer months. The Collegium Musicum, underthe direction of Dr. Sieg^nundLevarie, is giving its final concertof the year at Mandel Hall onSunday at 8:30.The Forum’s summer programwill include the Speech Clinic, anextra curricular program of in¬struction in fundamentals ofpublic speaking; theory of debate;radio broadcasting, and the Fo¬rum’s Summer Quarter LectureSeries. All students interested inthe Speech Clinic, should registerfor the summer course in the Fo¬rum office before the end of thisquarter, during the next twoweeks. Registration will be limit¬ed. All students interested in in¬tercollegiate debate during theseason next autumn, and who willbe in school during the summer,should register in the Forum officeat once for the summer debateprogram.On Sunday, May 16, the Stu¬dent Forum began a new series ofradio broadcasts over Chicago’snewest FM station, W.O.A.K. Thenew series is unique, in that it isthe first program which combinesboth students and faculty in theroundtable pattern-broadcast.The new series can be heard at1 p.m,, right after the AdultRoundtable over NBC. The instrumental portion of theprogram consists of two ConcertlGross! by Handel. The singers willbe heard in an a capella Mass byHans Leo Hassler and a choralsetting of Ave Maria by Verdi.The latter work rather un¬usual. in that it consists of fourdifferent successive harmoniza¬tions of an unusual scalar forma¬tion. In its chromaticism the workdiffers considerably from most ofVerdi’s other compositions. A limited number of coliegraduates are being offered topportunity of being commissionias ]^signs in Naval aviation tlspring and of receiving fiigtraining, the Navy has announceIn order to provide full informtion to those who are interesteCommander R. L. Freide will vithe campus Thursday, May 27. ]will be at Cobb Hall, Room l]at 4 p.m.This is a career programwhich college men with degrcwho are between the ages ofand 25 will be taken into tNavy as commi.ssioned officeFlight training will be at Pen.scola, Florida. This will take frc18 to 24 months after which tofficer-pilots will join regulnaval aviation units, shorebasand on carriers. Minimum startijpay in $290 a month, it was statt‘^Thc Peaceable Kingdom'BY RANDALL THOMPSONPresented byThe Choirs of The Church of the Redeemer56th Street at BlackstoneSundoy, Moy 23, at 4:30 P. M.Tli^ Is lavite^;WEDNESDAY, MAY 26PUBLIC LECTURE: (University College) "A Behavior Theory—Charles Mor¬ris,” Bess Sondel, 19 S. LaSalle St.. 6:30 p.m.. 75c.PRESBYTERIAN: Dinner Meeting, "Christianity and the Social Order,"Chapel House. 6 p.m.CANTERBURY CLUB: Party, Chapel House, 4:30 p.m.COUNTRY DANCERS: Ida Noyes Dance Room, 7:30 p.m.PUBLIC LECrrURE: "T. S. Eliot: Irony as Faith,” Morton D. Zabel, Soc. S<M.122 , 7:30 p.m., 82c.CARILLON RECITAL: Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 4:30 p.m. FrederickMarriott.POLITICAL ECONOMY CLUB: Social Science 201. 7:30 p.m. "Economic Sig¬nificance of Base-Point Pricing in Steel and Cement.” Melvin G. deChazeau, Professor of Business Economics and Marketing.THURSDAY, MAY 27SOCIALIST CLUB; “Concentration Oamp Society," Jerzy Gllksman, Rosen-wald 2, 3:30 p.m.BACTERIOLOGY AND PARASITOLOGY CLUB; Ricketts North 1, 4:30 pm."The Effect of Streptomycin and Para-Aminosalicylic Acid on the TubercleBacillus,” Drs. Robert H. Ebert, Kirsten Vennesland, and Robert G. Bloch,Department of Medicine. ^ ,SEMINAR COWLES COMMISSION FOR RESEARCH IN ECONOMICS; LawCourt 7:45 p.m. "Investigations of Industrial Efficiency.” L. H. C. Flppett,Statistician to the British Cotton Industry Research Association; VisitingLecturer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.PSYCHOLOGY CLUB: Ida Noyes Hall. 8 p.m. "Reminiscence in Verbal Learn¬ing.” Claude Buxton, Associate Professor of Psychology. NorthwesternUi^verslty. A a FUTURERIGHT YOUNG MENF irst, let us tell you wlio we are. Merrill T<vneh. Pierce, Fenner & Beane arebrokers in securities aud coiiiiuodilies, as well as underwriters and distribu¬tors of security issues.We lliink it's pretty important what people do with the money they save —so iuiporlant that ihe job of helping them with their investments should behandled only hy men who are equipped for that work by character, intelligence,and thoroiifih training, llie same holds true for men who help move our greatconimodily crops to market. Fur qualified young men, we think there s a realopporl unity in I he investment and commodity business.Three years ago, we organized the first class in the Merrill Lynch TrainingSi’hool for approximately .30 carefully selected young men. hired I hem to goto school under top-flight teachers for six oionlhs. J hen they took jobs in variousof our 97 branch offices, most of them in or near their old home towns.The Training School was a .success. Six classes have now graduated, and aseventh is in session. Almost 200 men (and two women) have completed thecourse, and almost uniformly they have rolled up excellent selling records.Some of them have already advanced in the home or field oflk’es.BcH’aiise they have made good, we su*e organizing an EighthTraining School Class.FOR SALEWEBSTER AUTOMATICRECORD CHANGERModel With Speaker30Records: All BeethovenSymphonies, Mozort,Bach, Brahms, etc.Call or seeDO BERKOWITZRoom 435Barton Jndaon Have You SeenHYPNOTISMIN ACTION?Con You Be Hypnotized? DoYou Believe in Hypnotism?Whot Is This Stronge MentolPower?Learn All the Facts About ThisWeird Mental Power. See . . .On Our StageIn Person, Direetfrom Carnegie HallFREEMANThe HYPNOTISTEUROPEROtJlVD TRIP $280Sfreomskip Possoge AvoilobleFor Students Presenting on omozing sdu-cotionol, entertoining two-hour stoge demonstrotion.Hypnotizes only volunteers!Two Performonces OnlySummer 1948 MIDNIGHTUNIVERSITYTRAVEL CO.Horvord SquareCambridge, Matt. KEN THEATRE1225 E 47thAll Seats $1.00, Taz Inc.Open 11:45 P.M. In this class, beginning August 2 in New York City, we will givethe courae to the HS best men (or women) we can find.Theae people will be paid while they learn. The rates of pay arevaried on the basis of marital status and working (or military)experience. (Average for current class: $270 per month).On successful completion of the course, each of these peoplewill have a good job and, we hope, a good future.If you would like to he considered for admission to this course, we obviouslyhave to know a good deal about you. For instance, as a starter, we want the fol¬lowing information:1. Name, address, age, marital status2. Experience, working and military3. Educational record (degrees, courses of major interest, grade*^4. Extracurricular activities and interests5. Why do j'ou think you would be interested in a career in the securitiesbusiness?6. What do you consider would represent success when you havereached the halfway mark in your business career?If you would like to apply formally for admission to the Eighth MerrillLynch Training School Class, write down the answers to these questions, plus any¬thing else you’d lik^ to tell us about yourself, and bring them to me or mailthem to me before July 9th.HOMER P. HARGRAVE, PartnerBoard of Trode Building Chicogo 4Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & BeaneFriday> May 21, 1948 THE CHICAGO MAROON Poge 3Studs for Stassenstate views overDewey debateIn a prepared statement Issuedyesterday on the Stassen-Deweydebate, Pat Dilworth, vice chair¬man of the local Students forStassen chapter, stated, “The is¬sue of outlawing the CommunistParty in the United State* waslast Monday the subject ol arather surprising and somewhatdisappointing debate between Mr.Stassen and Governor Dewey, Ascolumnist M. P. Akers pointed outin the Sun, they debated the some¬what obscure outlawrey question,which is only one minor point onwhich they differ, while whollyneglecting the major issues. Andit was Governor Dewey who wasentirely responsible for so delim¬iting the discussion as to maketlie whole episode fruitless.**Later, in response to a questionon the position of Chicago Stu¬dents for Stassen on the outlawreyissue. Bill Langner, the chairman,’ said, “Each individual Student forStassen is responsible for his ownposition on this secondary issue.However, Students for Stassen as> an organization has actively sup-’ ported and wdll continue to sup¬port Harold E. Stassen and themajor points of his program. Cer¬tainly in any overall program theindividual is bound to vary atsome point. No candidate is thatperfect!’*Want death witnessesWitnesses to the death of HenryNatten.s on March 31 at 8 p.m..on the Midway between Universityand Ellis avenues are requested tocontact Sam Huntington, Wood-Uwn Hall. PI. 9693. A VC presents issuesin Palestine situationBy RUSSELL HOFFMANHarry Jerrison and Aaron Meged, students at the Uni¬versity, and Hisham Sharabi of Jaffa, presented the con¬flicting Zionist and Arabian views on the Palestine situationat a recently held debate sponsored by AVC.Mr. Jerrison presented the moral and spiritual argu¬ments for a Jewish homeland in Palestine. He emphasizedthat Palestine is the only hope for a source of strength andspiritual nourishment in sustain-TRAVELOG1XG€;AGETrunksPursesLeatherNoveltiesExpert RepairingOur Speciality1002 E. 63rd St.Chicago 37, III. Chinese students who con prove they hove lost more than 15 poundsthrough undernourishment ore eligible for supplementary feeding at thismilk station in Nanking, supported by WSSF.Freistadt gives views of leftistgroups for Communist ClubBy STUART BOYNTONLast Monday, in one of their weekly meetings, theCommunist Club held a discussion of “The Role of SocialDemocracy and Trotskyism.”Hans Freistadt, president of the group, portrayed SocialDemocrats as generally sincere reformers, aware of theevils of capitalism but hestitating to embrace revolutionaryMarxist doctrine because of their distrust of dogma, abhor-ence of violence, or their misplacedfaith in the existing democratic Trotskyist movement as a con-mechanism for social change. tinually warring and dividing or-As an example, he analyzed the ganization of malcontents, Frei-Social Democratic movement in stadt accused them of a kind ofGermany during the days of the intellectual fixation on the ob-Weimar Republic and pointed out stacles to achievement of world-that their main weakness was wide socialism, their main pointtheir unwillingness to make a de- of difference from communist ide-cisive break with the Junker mill- ology. They have shifted the ob-tary class and the industrial rul-' ject of their political action froming class and align themselves the all-important class struggle inwith the German movement.Not nearly so generous capitalist countries to the com-a role bating of all communist action on ing Judaism as a religion through¬out the world. Jerrison also point¬ed out that “if the Jews can havethe security involved in being as¬sociated with a progressive nation,their social status will be raised.”After these introductory re¬marks, the more concrete issues oflegality and rights associated withthe achievements of the Jews as apeople were presented. Aaron Me¬ged, who lived more than twentyyears in Palestine, showed thatthe efforts of the Jews haveWTOught astounding successes fromsemi-arid lands. He added that theArabs themselves have profitedgreatly in higher living standardsfrom Jewish colonization and in¬dustrial progress. Some of the spe¬cific Arab benefits are; a two-to-four times higher wage rate thanin the surrounding Arab-peoplednations, and the lowest malarialrate in the Middle East.It was emphatically pointed outthat the Jews were not asking norexpecting a state exclusive of Arabparticipation.Hisham Sharabi of Jaffa pre¬sented the Arab side of the issue.He observed that his purpose wasto gain “sympathy for the Arabsin a predominantly Zionist atmos¬phere,” and he based his case onthe Wilsonian doctrine of theright of self-determination. He ex¬plained that in the Balfour Dec¬ laration, w'hich promised the Jewsa national homeland in Palestine,the right of the self-determinationof the Arabs was ignored. As anecessary point in his case, Mr.Sharabi minimized the achieve¬ments of the Jews in helping tocreate an agricultural and indus¬trial state out of the late feudalPalestine. He maintained that hisminimizations were not a matterof ingratitude but a question againof the Arabs’ right to live as theywanted to.In the rebuttal, Mr. Meged ques¬tioned Mr. Sharabi’s right to spieakfor the Arab people in Palestine.Specifically, he asked the basisfor Mr. Sharabi’s implied assump¬tion that the Palestinian Arabswere against the position of theJews. Mr. Meged gave evidencethat the overwhelming majorityof the Arabs cooperated on friend¬ly terms with Jewish communities.To these questions, Mr. Sharabireplied in a very general manner.It might be added that Mr, Sha¬rabi’s solution to the plightof the thousands of Jews in Europewas an appeal to the Christianspirit of people in America, Can¬ada, Australia, and similar coun¬tries. But Mr. Sharabi repeatedlyfailed to answer the question; inwhat way the Arabs are harmedby the presence of the Jews inPalestine.was accorded to the Trotskyist the grounds that it represents aelement. Characterizing the entire gi’t^ater threat to their ideals thancapitalist oppression. As partialevidence, he adduced several state¬ments by members of the U.S.Chamber of Commerce that citedthe cooperation of certain “non-Stalinist Communist” groups inthe communist witch-hunt.ROOMS FOR RENTZBT HOUSEForSummer QuarterPhone MUS 98255749 Woodlowh CORE analyses US SupremeCourt decision on bias pactsIt was the Tiotskyist policy ofnon-support of the Wallace move¬ment that he scorned most heavily.By holding out for an utterly im¬possible third labor group theTrotskyist groups are showingtheir disregard for the real inter¬est of the masses, Friestadt as¬serted. The recent Supreme Court de¬cision on restrictive covenants wasanalyzed this week by Jack Food-en, new president of the Commit¬tee on Racial Equality.Speaking first of the importanceof the decision, Fooden said that“CORE believes students and oth¬ers should familiarize themselveswith this decision, since it will un¬doubtedly be of significance incombatting racism.”Fooden stressed that the Su-BEFORE YOU LEAVEGef Your SubscripHonsYour Last Chance to Save$1.25 on Liie $2.00 on TimeThe complete Periodical Unit at the Bookstorewill get subscriptions to oil magazinesHoliday—I year $5.IN)Esquire—Father’s Day Offer, I year 4.33Saturday Review—I year 6.00New York Times (Sunday) T>50New Republic—26 weeks 2.00(Rogulorly $6.00 for 1 yoor)News Week—Student Rate, i year 4.50The Writer—^^1 year 3.00University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue AWARDSFOR YOUNG WRITERS500 Qwords, prizes and literary fellowships for young writers in 1948. . . totaling over $1,000,000 . . . listed complete with donors, ad¬dresses, rules, prizes . . . onoiysis of each award with post winnersand false strings.... in the APRIL NEW WRITING MONTHLY NEWSLETTER, poperof the New Writing Foundation, the notional organization of youngwriters . . . 50c per issue . 7 . $2 per year.NEW WRITING NEWSLETTER: 316 EAST 61st ST., N. Y. C. 21, N. Y. preme Court had not found cove¬nants illegal, but only unenforce¬able in the courts. The decisionprobably applies to restrictions onreligious as well as racial groups,he added.Fooden pointed out that a“Woodlawn Citizens Committee”has been set up in the communityadjacent to U. of C, This commit¬tee is inciting racism by formingtightly organized block-by-blockgroups to prevent Negro “inva-'sion.” They are using cooperativeagreements, he said, despite the.fact that they are unenforceablein court.He suggested a threefold pro¬gram of action for concerned stu¬dents: “First, talk down racehatred; second, be friendly andcooperative to any Negro familiesthat move in near you; and third,join the campus Community Co¬operation Group, which will beworking on race relations in thearea near you soon.”FLY HOME:EXTEHD YOUR VACATION DAYS— BY —FLYING TO YOUR DESTINATIONSAMPLE FARES FROM CHICAGOOne WayMinneapolis 17.20Portland 90.38Seattle 80.90. Plus Tax Round T»ip30.90102.091.50.51Plus TaxFlights to: IVew York, San Franrisro, V.os YngclesObtain Our Rates on Full Passenger l.oadsFOR FURTHER INFORMATION:PHdNE PORTSMOUTH 4140INDEPENDENT AIR SERVICES6200 South CiceroCHICAGO MUNICIPAL AIRPORTTHE CHICAGO MAROONRege 4 Friday, May 21, 1948A job well done. Last December 31 campus organizations, including theMAROON, sponsored a two-hour walkout from classes pro¬testing racial discrimination in the University medicalschool and hospitals. This week the Joint Anti-Discrimina¬tion Committee which was formed at that time released anofficial University report revealing that race is not a criter¬ion for admission anymore.^ University spokesmen may still claim that there is notause-and-effect relation between these two events, but itis difficult to accept them as mere coincidences. What ap¬pears to be indicated is what the MAROON said when itoffered its support to the walkout, namely, that social actionbrings about social change. The process of creating, ofbringing about a change in existing conditions, involvesa rejection and tearing downl)f long-established customsand traditions. Racial discrimination did exist at the Uni¬versity of Chicago and by its very existence brought fortha wave of student protest.We can be proud today that admission procedures atthe U. of C. medical school and hospital no longer neces¬sitate such a protest. The University deserves a pat on theback for embarking on a nondiscrimination policy whichthe major portion of American colleges still do not havethe courage to adopt. Also deserving of commendation arethe Joint Anti-Discrimination Committee, which spear¬headed the campus drive for reVision of all racist policies,and the students who joined together in an active protestjnovement.The whole series of events reflects credit on the Chi¬cago Plan, too, we think, and gives the lie to Dixon Wecterand other critics, who claim that Midway students live inthe past and do nothing but contemplate their navels. Wedoubt whether there is another American campus whichcan point to the U. of C.’s record on discrimination in itspwn back yard. It was a job well done.Only one blot remains on the University’s slate, andthat is the evidence that Negro mothers being admitted toLying-In Hospital for pre-natal care are segregated. Wetrust that the students, through the Joint Anti-Discrimina¬tion Committee, will continue to press for the removal ofthis last blemish. .♦ 4c «1BJ council work an achievementA small group of people who comprise the StudentCouncil of Burton-Judson and their associates, by perse¬verance, hard work and intelligent action have raised theprestige and effectiveness of the Burton-Judson Councilto an unprecedented level.“. . . the students of the Men’s residence system, feel¬ing the need for better control and coordination of resi¬dence facilities and funds, better coordination of residenceactivities and a better system of communication betweenthe residents and the administration of the University ...”organized this B-J, body in the Spring of 1946. To theseaims the present body has driven successfully.The achievements of this council include presentationof weekly movies, dances, lectures and other social events,as well as intelligent discussion and action on issues ofstudent welfare ranging from resident health, nutrition,to pool tables and salty soup.Its accomplishments and manner of action has wonfor the B-J Council the respect of both the residents andthe administration for it has pointed and paved the roadwhich future Councils should follow to a full realization ofthe aims of Resident system.The Chicago MaroonACP Ail-Ameriemn, M945, 1947 A MINUTEWITHTHE EDITORSED ENGBERGEditorDAVID BRODERNOBLE STOCKTONManaging Editors ' JAMES E. BARNETTBusiness MenogerJACK MATHISROGER DAVISAssocMte Business ManagertDAVID S. CANTERCopy CoordinatorIssued weekly by the publisher, The Chicago Maroon, at the publieation•ffke, 5106 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Distributed free ofcharge, and subscriptions by mail, fl per quarter.Entry as second class matter applied for at the post office at Chieago, liUnols,under the Act of August M, 1912.EXECUTIVE EDITORS: Eileen Stone, Gerald Scherba, Assistant Copy Coordina¬tors; Harvey Frauenglass, Assistant Managing Editor; John Stone, Feature;Joan M. Brady, Ann Collar, Ted Finman, Lora Lee, Robert Schakne, GeorgeIf Sideris, News; R. Me Adams, Miriam Baraks. Political, Harold Harding, Sports;Milton R. Moskowitz, Louis R Silverman, Melvin Spat, Associate Editors.ASSOCIATE EXECUTIVE EDITORS: Evaline Wagner. Feature;' Mary Ann' Ash,Karl Bruce, Julius Lewis, Lew Lipsltt, Annie Bussell, Lee Marks, News;.Herbert Neuer, George I. Wilson. Political; Rex Reeve, SptH-ts.ASSISTANT EXECUTIVE EDITORS: Robert Albrlght.'David'Broyles Buddy Cohen,Dan Fox, Don Jameson, James F Jones. Joan Kapp, William Klutts, ChesterLuby, Leonard Newmark, George Worth, News; Barbara V. Blumtenthal,Betty Petersen, Political.DEPARTMENTAL EDITORS: .John Forwalter, Art; Beve Segal. Exchange; ChuckMarquis, Fraternities; Eugene DuFresne, Movie: Marilyn Koiber, Religious;Ann Mnrschak, Judith Schallman, Jane Sommer, Women’s Clubs; JoanGanzberg, Calendar; Sam Kaufman, Dormitories; Malmon Nasatir, Photog¬raphy; Norman Springer, Books; Don Snyder, Radio.BTAIFS: Art Dublnsky, Lee Frankel, Herb Halbrecht, Savel Kllachko, Russell Hoff¬man. Matt Holden, Devra Landau. Political; Curt Crawford, Bernard Kaplan-V Hal Kome, Feature; Andrew Foldl, James Goldman, Gerald Gains, Dan Ruten-berg, Martin Picker, .Music; Betty Jane Stearns, Drama; Arthur Aronson,Marc Goff, Carl Gylfe, Murray Harding, Sports; Lee Doppelt, Exchange; Regi-na’d Major, Ed Carus, Photography; Raymond Ulmer, Lawrence Kashdan,Jennie Jeneen, Jane Higgins. Regina Hutt, Burton Kanter, Fritz Heimann,Harry Kllb, Dirk Kitzmlller, Robert Blauner, A1 Kimmel. David Curry, YaleKramer News; Carl BurlinKame. John Keating, Research.BUSINESS STAFF: Ted Jayne, Circulation Manager; Bill Ballard, John Sharp,Advertlsinc Solicitors; Marion Peterson, Office Manager. By ED ENGBERGThe Dean of Activities, Mr.John Bergstresser, has found anew, all-new, way to circumventthe post office department.Inasmuch as our offices arelocated in the same building—the Reynolds Club—his Secre¬tary mailed a letter to the MA¬ROON without postage affixed.The letter was returned to theR.C. desk marked ‘insufficientpostage” and subsequentlydropped in our box. We imaginethat in a larger building suchas the War Department’s Pen¬tagon in Washington or theMerchandise Mart here in Chi¬cago, such a practice could bequite effectively utilized. Sinceour offices adjoin, however, itseems to us to be a bit super¬fluous.♦ ♦ • "Idea.s had dire con.sequences thisweek as the new ion acceleratorsupplanted the Campus Grill overat 57th and Ellis. Open for yearsas an all-around hangout andcoffee shop (described to us as“open when you want it”) it wasrun by one of those affable peoplenamed “Al”—right out of theMGM version of the average col¬legiate coke and stoke sandwich.shop. Al’s only comment was“never again.”♦ ♦ ♦The feature staff discoveredthat aex-habits-of-the-Ameri¬can-male Kinsey is in Chicagoat a downtown hotel. In an at¬tempt to be made subject mat¬ter, the staff found that Mr.Kinsey was interested only inmarried women during his stayin Chicago. An interview hasbeen arranged but will have tobe held off for the first issueof the summer quarter.* • ♦It was pointed out to us lastweek that the Student Assemblysessions have been suffering frompoor attendance of late. It seemsthat a small, tight group of as-semblyites are purporting to rep¬resent the entire student body.Those who are doing the com¬plaining are the same people whofail to take concerted action ontheir own hook to see that thesituation is changed. It must beassumed that everyone is quitehappy with their representationif no opposition can be effectivelysolidified. We have a dog-earededitorial file in the office marked“Student Apathy”—far be it forus to throw another clipping intothe pye. .* ♦ ♦ ^We have a letter from Burton-Judson that has all the earmarksof raving hysteria—going .so farin the opening sentence as to com¬pare the state of the MAROONwith whatever it was that hap¬pened in Czechoslovakia.We had thought that we hadkept the secret much better thanthat, but we may as well let thepublic in on what diH actuallyhappen.Last quarter, immediately aft¬er the elections, a group of wildeyed Mundt-bill bait completewith Red army uniformsmarched into the MAROON of¬fice armed to their false teeth.Milton Moskowitz, then Pre¬mier of the Woodlawn-HydePark battalion and Chief of theChicago bureau of PRAVDA,threatened immediate assassi¬nation of the Business Manager,Jimsky Barnettsky, unless thepublication was handed over tohim. Liaison was immediatelyestablished between the more'Cautious near-reactionary NewYork edition of the WORKERand a direct wire to you-know-where was set up in the Reyn¬olds Club basement. Threaten¬ing letters were sent to the ad¬ministration to intimidate them,and the coup was complete.Party membership of course, be¬came a complete prerequisite tojoining the staff.Infiltration was made into thePULSE Office and by the end ofthe quarter the Red-domiiialed(Continued on Poge 8) I Letters To The Editor(Editor’s Note.—The following letter was received this week bStudent Government from Illinois Representative Vail, who is a member of the House Un-Am#rican Activities Committee.)Miss Ijois E. Jacobs, PresidentStudent AssemblyUniversity of ChicagoChicago 37, IllinoisDear Miss Jacobs:Receipt of your telegram of the 6th is acknowledged, and in repl^you are advised that I was a member of the legislative subcommitteiol the Committee on Un-American Activities that drafted H.R. 5852the so-called Mundt Bill, entitled, “The Subversive Activities ControBill—1948.”The intent of the bill is to bring the activities of subversive individuals and organizations to the surface and to provide the legamachinery by which it is possible to cope with the insidious opera¬tions of foreign agents who seek to substitute for our Constitutionafoi m of Government an atheistic totalitariani.sm.If you had read the bill and had the capacity to understand it;provisions, you would readily realize that it violates no proper righior privilege.To the Editor:I would like to take this occa¬sion to denounce the undemo¬cratic practice of the MAROONin discriminating against thosegroups with whose political ideasmembers of the MAROON staffhappen to disagree. I am not nowreferring to the completely one-.sided division of space which fre¬quently results in the MAROONappearing as the midwest editionof the Worker. Rather I wish hereto vigorously protest the not-.so-subtle attempts to distort themeaning of articles by the use ofdeletions, misleading headlines,and inserted quotation marks.Two examples from an articlewhich I submitted and which waspublished tw’o weeks ago will il¬lustrate my point. It was an articleannouncing the appearance of theStudent Partisan, organ of thePolitics Club and the only studentpolitical magazine published onthe campus. As such, one wouldthink it merited a lengthy review.All that was permitted, however;was an announcement of its pub¬lication and a summary of its con¬tents. Among other articles I list¬ed that of Norman Martin, entitledCivil Liberties for Stalinists. Some¬body decided it was better to putthe word Stalinist in quotationmarks. The meaning thus impliedby this “slight” (my quotes—D.C.) change was that the conceptof Stalinist w'as a figment of Mar¬tin’s imagination, and not a validpolitical designation for those peo¬ple who support or act as theagents of Stalinist Russia. Yet theterm has been u.sed for a couple ofdecades now by politically edu¬cated persons as a legitimate des¬ignation for those people whosupport Stalin against hi.s internaland external opponents.Another even more flagrant ex¬ample is the following. In sum-maiizing the editorial statementof the Student Partisan I de¬scribed it as stating the revolurtionary socialist attitude towardthe question of war and p>eace.Again somebody “improved” (myquotes- D.C.) it by placing theterm revolutionary socialist inquotation marks — implying itsspurious use as a descriptive term.Such editorial revision, not inthe interests of correcting thespelling or improving the form,but clearly for the purpose of dis-bwting the meaning along linesdetermined by the prejudices ofsome people is not only crass dis¬loyalty towFard me and the Poli¬tics Club, but also ab.solutely im¬permissible from a journalisticpoint of view.Don Ck«iiow*th,RoKticGl Club”SUlinist’* should NOT beused without quotes. The Com¬munists are a legitimately con¬stituted group and are as en¬titled to be called by their prop¬er name as Chenoweth is to becalled a Trotskyist rather thana “T-Boy.” * ....His later accusation of “crassdisloyalty” is eminently correct.Wc never pretended to be loyalto either.Finally, the MAROON i^esentsbeing called the midwest edi¬tion of the Daily Worker. Wecome out weekly.Tbc Editor, endthe Political Editor Yours very truly,Richard B. Vail, M. C.To the Editor;I ihought the April I.ssue olPULSE was excellent.Alon WhitneyEditor of “Pulse."To the Editor;We of the girls* dorm.s heartilyenjoyed the article about the Uni,versity House System. We hopesome action will be taken on the.suggestions.Much more can be said, espe¬cially about the girls’ dorm.*^. Per¬haps tlie worst feature i.s thatthere is no rapport between thestaff and the students—they al¬most look at each other as mortalenemies. This may be due to thefact that the staff has had littleacquaintance with, and less per¬ception, of the college and thegirls wiio attend this college.Many are unsuited in personalityand interests to deal with the edu¬cational and emotional adjust¬ments an undergraduate studentmust make. In .several cases, theyhave hurt, lather than assisted,the grow th of the girls. Tlie ein-phasi.s .seems to have been placedon following the rules. Very fewactivities are provided. Most ofthe activities take place on Uie.small clique level.As for expecting .sympathy andunderstanding about the problemscollege girls encounter, we havelong since learned that this lifutile. We also object to the un¬fairness of many of the punish¬ments meted out. Most of us onl.vmeet the house heads when in theprocess of being punished, and theseverity of the reprimand .seem?to depend on personalities.Nomes Withheld by RequestTo the (Editor;Three weeks ago Howard Ka-min.sky in a Letter to the Kdilorwas openly “deeply disgusted ' withthe Hutchin’s program for ex¬changing professors with Frank¬furt University. Despite the factthat Kaminsky amalgamated theHutchins Plan wuth the govern¬ment policy of containment inEurope and took pride in exposingthe .subversive attempts of certaininfidels in the Theological Sc’hoolwho tried to raise money for Ger¬man students last quarter, noreply has been printed in theMAROON to challenge his claimthat he speaks for the ma.iorityof “our usual apathetic studentbody”. ^Mr. Kaminsky branded the Uni¬versity program as what he con¬sidered a futile attempt to reedu¬cate the “morally degenerate” and“fanatical group of Nazis” stu¬dents at Frankfurt University. Tothe problem of reorientating Ger¬man students despite their acci¬dent of birth which brought themintp an environment of almost fif¬teen years of persistent mentalseduction, this answer would seemto conclude it is impossible to re¬educate German students, there¬fore let them live in quarantine.It^ is .my opinion that only theperblind cannot see that in thecase of Germany even a modestattempt at introducing new anddifferent ideas into what Is admit¬tedly an intellectual vacuum 1*infinitely more desirable than Ka¬minsky's type of raci*mDon ButhnallFriday, May 21, 1948l^evamp SU Orientation3oard for better workAnnouncement was made this week of sweepingchanges in the program of the Orientation Department ofStudent Union by Chirman Evelyn Eigelbach.For many years the Orientation Board has introducedpntering students mainly to the activity of the extra-purricular side of campus life. It has now been realized thatthe big job of orientation is that of getting the student totinderstand the Chicago plan and<;rhere he fits into it. As a result|iext year’s program will place^reat emphasis on this scholasticOrientation.Understanding the purposes andmethods of the college is no easytask and cannot be accomplishedin a week or so by a few shortspeeches. Consequently, the Fallprogram will attempt to meet theproblem in many ways. (1) Bymeans of speeches and generalpublicity the importance of un¬ derstanding thar college will bestressed. (2) Orientation Depart¬ment members who live in thedormitories for th^*^ orientationperiod will have a comprehensionof the college broad enough to in¬form the entering student of theplan and to answer any questionthat he may have. More orientorsthan have been used in previousyears will be placed in the dorms.(3) Permanent dormitory person¬nel such as house lieads.Wedding CandidsATLantic 0606 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page $YWCA's Guthrie speaksat Rockefeller SundayAward YWCAprize to WongMiss Nancy Wong has been se¬lected to receive the Y.W.C.A.’sGeraldine Brown Gilkey Confer¬ence Fund Award for 1948, it wasannounced this week by Mrs. Vic¬tor Obenhaus, Chairman of theAward Committee.Miss Wong is the newly electedpresident of the University Y. W.C. A. The 1948 Award, of one hun¬dred dollars, will help* to sendNancy.to the YMCA-YWCA Piesi-dents’ School at the Pacific Schoolof Religion in Berkeley, California.The Gilkey Award was estab¬lished last May in honor of Mrs.Geraldine B. Gilkey, wife of theDean emeritus of RockefellerChapel, in recognition of her morethan forty years of active serviceIn the university Y.W.C.A.Lutherons finish quarterBefore the Lutheran Students’Annual Banquet tonight, the as¬sociation will hold its last meetingof the quarter at 5:45 at ChapelHouse.Following the supper, Rev.Granger Westberg of AugustanaHospital will speak. Reservationsfor the supper must be in by noontoday at Chapel House. Miss Anne Guthrie, of the For¬eign Division of the NationalBoard of the Y.W.C.A., will speakon “Twentieth Century Pioneers”at 11 a.m. Sunday in RockefellerMemorial Chapel.A graduate of Stanford Uni¬versity, Miss Guthrie spent fiveyears in South America as con¬tinental secretary, another fiveyears in Manila as an advisor,and five years in India, Burmaand Ceylon as national Y.W.C.A.execptive.At the present time Miss Guth¬rie is serving as an observer atUnited Nations for the ForeignDivision of the National Y.W.C.A.and 8US consultant on the Economicand Social Council of United Na¬tions for the World’s Y.W.C.A.In addition to delivering theSunday morning address at Rocke¬feller, Miss Guthrie will be enter¬tained at a tea at 4 p.m. in thelibrary of Ida Noyes Hall whereshe will give an informal talk onthe work of the World’s Y.W.C.A. Begin drive forHaganah aidA campus drive to collect uni¬forms for Haganah, Israel’s de¬fense force, is now under way.Collection stations have been set\up in the AVC office and at HillelFoundation. Veterans are urged toempty their duffle bags of khakia;fatigues, field jackets, blouses^O.D.’s, and boots to aid the Jew¬ish State’s defense forces.IZFA has also announced theestablishment of an all-Chicagoblood-bank for Haganah. A boothhas been set up at Cobb Hall,where students r iay volunteer todonate blood. Arrangements havobeen completed with Hadassah,sponsorer of the blood-bank, and*students volunteering to give bloodwill be notified by mail where and*when to report. The blood will boprocessed into plasma and shippedto the fighting fronts in Palestine,Hold post-comp C-Dance June 18Tom Parker and his band will on June 18th at 9 p.m.furnish the music for the season’s The post-comp dance will utl-last C-Dance in Ida Noyes lobby nze the patio with colored spotsPHI SIGMA DELTA PRESENTSThe 21st AnnualSTRAWBERRY FESTIVALBIG BA.MIi^TRAWBERRIKSSATURDAY, JUNE 19—9 to IChopter House—5625 Woodlown to add to the atmosphere.Formal dress is optional. fCANOE TRIPSinMinnesota-Canadian Border Wilder¬ness Lakes Region. We furnish every¬thing for your ranoe trip. Compieteoutfit with Gruman Ainminumcanoe for $3.50 a day each when twowill cost about $1.25 a day each,or more in party. Your choice foodMaps, information & reservationsWILDERNESSOUTFITTERSELY, MINN.Operators of the American PfonBASSWOOD LODGEMain lodge and ZZ sleeping cabinsall log construction, back in thewilderness, accessible by motorboat,only. Electric lights, central showereand toilets. Sand beaches, hiking,^canoeing, motorboating. Walleyed *orthern Pike, Lake Trout A Boss.}6o'//Qrise^^ncf shg ivrth th/s /^EOO^/It's "AIRIZAY" (Arise) —RCA Victor's new platterby Ray McKinley and his bandRAY MCKINLEY’S styling of theNew Orleans ditty, ^‘Airizay,’* is attractinglots of fans. If you ask Ray about it, he says:“I’v© found from long experience what style ofmusic we do best—just as I've learned fromexperience that Camels suit my *T-Zone' to a‘T.* **Try Camels! Learn for yourself why, withsmokers who have tried and compared.Camels ewe the “choice of experience."Amf here’s another great retard-^Moie peopk'ifisto ear hefott!^lige 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, Moy 21, 1^U.T. presents the exotic; Sidelights On Footlight;season lacks simplicityBy CHARLES KAHNIn reviewing The Flies three weeks ago I said some harsh words about the dramaticquality of the play and complained of a general attitude of indifference to dramatic ex¬cellence on the part of U. T. throughout the year. In following up this criticism, let usbriefly review past productions.The season opened, inauspiciously, with R. R. People have informed me that thisis a very interesting play to read. All I can say is that I think all who had experiencewill agree that it is not a very interesting play to watch.Concerning Displaced Persons I — z ;; TTT Tcannot speak, since I did not see consideration of first prin- gest a few playwrights whose workit. The reports concerning it have ciples. The U.T. is not an organ- illustrates dramatic excellence ingiven me no cause to regret my ization for public amusement nor this sense: Ibsen, fehaw, the Irishabsence.The Tempest is hardly of in¬ferior dramatic quality; yet thelast plays of Shakespeare are anotorious riddle in the history ofthe theatre, and The Tempest isthe most puzzling of them all.Though it is certainly more ap¬propriate to the abilities of anamateur theatre than the great¬est of the tragedies, it is hardly anexemplary choice."Lysisfratxi" is odd coseLysistrata is another odd case.Although I am partial to Greekplays, I must agree with the MA¬ROON reviewer that this one wasa flop. It is impossible to say howfar it was due to the performance,how far to the inherent difficultiesof producing a Greek comedy fora modern audience. In any case,choosing such a play stacks thecards against you from the be¬ginning.This, with The Flies, concludesthe season as formally announced,but it omits the single perform¬ance (on the night of the Wash¬ington Prom) of Dr. Faustus. JohnBtevens’ excellent rendering of themagnificent last scene was in myview the most worthwhile drama¬tic performance of the season. But should it be simply a series of ex¬ercises for students interested inacting. It need not cater to finan¬cial success in the fashion ofBroadway but it should not totallyignore its audience. The universityprovides an audience which is ex¬ceptionally cultivated, containingprobably a high percentage of peo¬ple capable of appreciating asignificant dramatic effect. Theeffect of dramatic excellence, be itremembered, is not the kind ofexcitement produced when some¬one sitting three seats away un¬expectedly shouts “Kill her” at theactors up front, but it resides in apowerful, almost magical enchant¬ment and rich personal involve¬ment in the human actions repre¬sented on the stage.To avoid ambiguity, let me sug- playwrights Synge and O’Casey,O’Neill, and Chekhov. Needless tosay, Shakespeare and the Greeksrepresent even more impressivedrama, but the formal andlinguistic difficulties interveningmake an effective performance amuch more hazardous affair forthese.Theatre needs dromotic bolonceIn short, U.T.’s season has con¬sisted entirely of tricks, adven¬tures and trial excursions. The op¬portunity to experiment withGrek and Elizabethan plays is thevaluable privilege of a universitytheatre, but if its activities art notto degenerate into one big game.It must balance these adventureswith more substantial dramaticmaterial than is represented byR.U.R. and The Flies. It seems as if The First Mrs.Fraser and High Button Shoes,the two new spring offerings toChicago’s waning theatrical sea¬son, are especially designed tobrighten the prospect of comps,term papers, and approachingquarterlies.Jane Cowl, who has chosen toreturn to the legitimate stage afteran absence of eleven years in St.John Ervine’s somewhat spinelesscomedy. The F’irst Mrs. Fraser, isas charming as ever. But it seemstoo bad, wonderful as it is to seeher act again, that she could nothave picked a more engaging pl^yin which to display her splendidcomedy technique.The plot of The First Mrs. Fra¬ser is very thin, and noticeablydated, and there’s no point inwatering down your enjoyment ofthe show by repeating it here.High Button Shoes, whichopened too late for review in thisissue, is, I understand, one ofthose shows that sends you homewhistling. According to Variety,the national company of thismusical comedy is “as sharp andsolid as if the outfit were headedinto New York instead of out.”The company, headed by EddiePoy, Jr., Audrey Meadows, andJack Whiting is reported to haveplenty of talent and esprit decorps. “Plenty of time has beenspent by Jerome Robbins in stag¬ing the dances, the split-timed Jone Cowlchase ballet going off at the opening as if the company had donit all season.”—Betty StearnsInternational Relations electsKarp, Hansen os officersIn the International RelationClub’s recent election the following persons were named to officeBasil Karp, President; Lars Arentz-Hansen, vice president; Marilyn Palman, secretary-treasureiThe faculty adviser of the cluis Hans Morganthau.*Have you Heard?what might have been a first rateproduction was inadequately cast,rehearsed and advertised, besidesthe unfavorable time for perform¬ance.Now. although good excuses andextenuating circumstances mightbe pleaded for each productiontaken separately, the season as awhole testifies to a serious lack oftaste and the absence of a respect¬able general policy. But if the U.T.Is not to remain in dramatic chaos.It must have a policy more intelli¬gent and unified than the attrac¬tion of science-fiction and Exis¬tentialism and the unrelated sug¬gestions of would-be student di¬rectors.M. T. ignores oudienceLet us, as the saying goes, rise to THE THEATRE TICKET SERVICE IS BACK!The THEATER TICKET SERVICE of the late H. O. Hoeppner, with his assistantof the past three years, Mr. Paul Nichols, os manager, is back!Offered os another friendly convenience by WOODWORTH'S BOOK STORE,you will once ogain be able to secure your theatre, concert, and sport reservationswith o minimum of effort and cost.Storage SpaceAvailableFor YourRADIOSRECORDSBOOKSAnd Other Valuables To those of you who have used this service before, we need only give the newlocution and telephone number. To those of you to whom this easy, economical wayof procuring tickets is new, we soy try us but once.THE CHARGE IS STILL THE SAME, TEN CENTS PER TICKETfor tickets ordered ond called for in person. In addition telephone ond moil orderservice is ovailoble.Reasonable RatesPeterson FireproofWarehouse1011 E. 55th St.Telephone BUTterfield 6711 So when you think of tickets, think of us! For whether you need informotionor wish to ploce your order. Remember,‘*WE ARE NO FURTHER AWAY THAN YOUR TELEPHONE”Two Blocks East of Mandel Hall Hours 8:00-6:00U.T1131-1133 E. 55th St.COMPLETE SELECTIONOF BEVERAGES Woodworth's Book StoreVARSITY THEATRE TICKET SERVICE1311 E. 57th St. Mus. 1677y. May 21/ 1948 THE CHICAGO MAROON Raga TTo arms! to arms!' cry literati'Review^ remains aloof from calumny,aesthetic through smoke and smotherBy A. N. STEPHANIDESWith the forthcoming Spring issue of the ChicagoReview, coterminant with the academic year, it might beinteresting to reconsider some charges brought against theReview earlier in the year in these pages which are germaneto the present issue. The charges generally are those ofdearth of student material and of the inappropriateness ofavant garde twiddlings in these doomed times. The lastcharge while not easily dismissedhas behind it a theory of a aes- duced in the past by the great andthetic which seeks to engage lit- near great will recognize its im-erature as valuable only as a portance. Gone are the coral reefssociological .force. That such a and the torn limbs. What is heretheory is antagonistic to good art is the trend in the aftermath: theis obvious but not generally cog- subjective experience, the psycho-nized by those who levy the logical Impact of a battle. Signifi-charge. There is no possible argu- cant? To some this will only seemment on that level of discourse, the product of literary snobbism.Needless to say there is little in To others, and not to veteransthe Chicago Review which can be alone, perhaps, this will be acalled a sociological force. The re- notable summing up of what wasmaining charge is answered em- once and still is, fully significant,pirically: there is no significant Neal Oxenhadler, a student, pre¬student material being produced sents three poems in translationin great quantities. Not enough to from the writings of Paul Eluardjustify a literary review four times and a critical preface which tellsa year. Yet here it is as much a something about the French sur-matter of taste. What is signifi- realist and his poetry. It is doubt-cant? There is some student ma- ful whether there has as yet beenterial in the present number, and written a more carefully consid-it is significant. And these de- ered evaluation of Eluard in Amer-serve concentrated attention from lean magazines,those who express vague wishes Comments to comethat the University of Chicago Mark Reinsberg, a former stu-would produce some worthy writ- ^ent, has two poems, Windows anders. Doors, which are good. GeorgeSome students write well Rhoades, another former student,R. A. Park, a student. Is repre- ^ short story. The Reconcilia-sented with a short poem, ‘In which should raise some com-Battle.” Anyone familiar with the while its literary merit iswar poetry which has been pro- questionable and is, it seems tome, in very bad taste.Significant issue? Good litera¬ture? Justifiable existence? Thereis maybe only one definite thingto be said of the latest ChicagoReview: it will create the usualamount of protest and fulmina-tlons.Reads Bible bestRonald James Gk>ldman, a Di¬vinity student in the Chicago The¬ological Seminary, has receivedthe Milo P. Jewett Prize for ex¬cellence in the reading of theScripture, Dean Robert Strozierannounced.^IIIIRFDT Every Night lac. Sun.wll U D b n I Matinee Saturday OnlyLIMITED ENGAGEMENTRODGERS and HAMMERSTEINpresentSiwBQisrPRICES: (Inc. tax) Every Eve. inc.Sunday except Sat.: f4<33, 3.71, 3.10,2.50, 1.85, 1.25; Sat. night: $4.94, 4.33,3.71, 3.10, 2.50, 1.85; Sat. Mats.: $3.71,3.10, 2.50, 1.85, 1.25.Nightly MatineesIIAnnId Inc. Sunday Saturday OnlyThe Funnieai Ptmy <m Ye«rsfRODGERS & HAMMERSTEINa AMocaNM wHk JOSHUA LOGANartMW*OoBv LovesA fhw by NORMAN KRASNAOineHd by MR. LOGANPRIORS: Eves., inc. Sun.: $1.25, $1.85,$2.50ft $3.10, $3.71; Mats., $1.25, $2.50;$3.10 (tax included). THISOPERA HOUSE • SUN.ONE EVENING ONLY AT 8:30 P.M.LionelHAMPTONKing of the Vibraharp andMaster of the DrumsIN PERSON—IN CONCERTAMERICA’S No. 1 BAND with WINNIBROWN and a galaxy of world famousinstrumentalists. — AL BENSON andJACKIE COOPER, masters of ceremony.Good seats now at box office and bymail. Prices $1.25, $1.85, $2.50, $3.10, $3.71(Tax incl.) For inf. phone FRA. 7800. ‘Pulse’ cover hides sinsBy GERALD M. SCHERBAWith so many shapely naked legs on the cover you want to like it, but even at thislevel of appeal the April issue of Pulse was a disappointment.The basic trouble with Pulse, however, goes deeper than a lack of sex appeal. Rather,Editor Whitney’s tribe has turned out a magazine edited and published solely for the Whit¬ney tribe—and those few individuals on campus who spend their time creeping the trailsbetween U. T. and the Reynolds *Club lounges. The universality of arette ad or to feature the high “Tuition Raise” by Ed Diamondappeal which is so weakly stabbed point of the issue. Charitably we provided a provocative runningat is lost because of a cloistered, want to believe that Pulse couldn’t account of the increase but addedhomogeneous staff. get the first; are sure they ignored not one fact that MAR(X)N read-Humor? ' the second. For to say the navel- ers did not already know. WithoutAs a humor magazine the Uni- staring doodling by Monica David, substantial proof that “. . . theversity can write Pulse off the entitled “The Vicious Circle” is the raise was agreed upon monthsbooks. The few good cartoons were finest in Pulse would be to slander ago.” and at least a statementplagiarized; the jokes were old and the good name of slick newsprint from the University’s business ad-in some cases crude. “Pulsations,” in these paper-scarce days. . ministration presenting their view-which is usually good for at least “Sense of Humor,” a disjointed, point. Diamond’s story must bea cup of the touted barrel-of- episodic short story about a movie bracketed with the rest of the one-laughs, produced barely a thimble- magnate, his nephew and an equa- sided introspective articles <ful of snickers. tion-scribbling physicist named Let's cleon house ■As a literary and artistic m^a- Dr. Nabla was written by Eugene If Pulse is to justify its exis-zine where budding writers plant Du Fresne—unfortunately. Per- tence as a college magazine andtheir best and await a good har- haps when read between layers of continue to revel in the glory ofvest. Pulse had a drought issue, smoke under a dim blue light a Reynolds Club office, it is timeHerb Gans, who finds conventional either the humor or the raison they did some house cleaning, orrules of grammar and punctuation d’etre becomes apparent, but un- just rebuilding. Their presenttoo stifling for his style, obviously der the devastating nakedness of staff of thinkers might well beexpects the Army to change radi- daylight the story not only lacks relagated to proof reading whilecally in the next few months. The ' unity, but fails to entertain or give a few healthy-minded campusitesGans-built service comes complete any other sensible reason for its with long shovel-type noses andwith generals talking politics to existence. even longer legs rounded up arecruits and top-secret plans being 'Pulse' gefs into poliiicol oef’ ' few well documented feature ar-shouted on the parade grounds. As a controversial organ Pulse tides. An occasional biographyStop fhot spread! took a beating at the hands of its complete with caricatures wouldIn conventional magazines the writers. Bvery political article ex- scarce be sneered at, nor would acenter two page spread is used pressed the single leftest point of concise debate on two sides of aeither to make money with a cig- view. controversial question.Salvage 'Pulse' or push 'Midway';Cire campus creative writingsBy NORMAN SPRINGERSome weeks ago an announcement in the MAROON told us of a plan to start a newliterary magazine, The Midway, on campus. The editors were going to do their best toconcentrate on student creative writing. We liked the idea of concentrating on whatcampus writers were doing, but we felt that just now, since Pulse was on campus, it.,would be a mistake to have another magazine. It seems to us that the job for peopleseriously interested in writing would be an all out effort to make Pulse a more represen¬tative and more exciting magazine.That the writers on campus are ———as thick as flies, may be an over- We think it is important for be an understanding of the peoplestatement, but it is close enough uew, young, developing writers to who are writing—what they areto the truth to make a point. It have a place to print their stuff, and where they come from. Theseems only natural that a campus a place where their material will writer-critics have to meet eachhave so many interested in writ- be read by more than a small on their own terms. There cannoting. A imiversity, as well as being group of people. There is too much be creative constructive criticisman intellectual center, is also a destructive criticism and cyni- when it is handed down withoutplace full of people undergoing cism that lurks among the bud- understanding and in the outwornsome of the most significant ding critics - writers on campus, phrases that have been hashedchanges in their lives. When peo- Too many times the budding critic, and rehashed for so long in class-pie start doing creative work it when he does condescend to read rooms. A well developed under-has to do with an attempt to a story by a fellow student, sounds standing of art needs to be trans¬understand constantly changing as if he is perched on a pedestal, lated into our everyday lives andreality. It is an attempt to bring and there, by grace of his last languages before we can effec-the world to some level of coher- course in Shakespeare or Henry tively construct with it.ence and comprehension. A whole James. We propose ... ’body of writing can be extremely Preserve wriHng life would like to propose thatvaluable in helping us evaluate This is not the way to culti- many of the serious writers asourselves, other people, and events vate and increase fine, thoughful Possible get together and work outAlik M A m3 ^ ^ 1.1 ^ ^ f A * O T^l O ^ A A A 1« A M mOPENING WED. EVE. MAY 19EVERY NIGHT INCLUDING SUNDAYMatinees Saturday onlySEATS NOW ON SALEMONTE fROSER and JOSEPH KIPNESS pr#ie»#Tho Season's payest Musical ComedyEDDIE FDY.\ JACK WHITING • AUDREY MEADOWSI MWTYMIlRm.fUeilNAIIlEr.lMIIRYFUE*MmI. < Irto V MU •*<* SMUir aNNBeak by BrodutMon thilpnad by byfltmEH uwstun ointn wm mh (mrOmc ani Slogfng b, OInthd by •JEROME ROBDINS* GEORGE ABBOTTPRICES: Evonings, Sunday thru Thursday $4*94,433, 3.71, 250, 1.85, 135,^Iday & ^turday Evas, $6.18, 5.57, 4.94, 3.71, 2.50, 1.85, 135.Mafinaas $3.71, 3.10, 2.50, IJ5. 135. (All pricas ineluda fax) ^908 AU MAIL OADERS Give Alteniote Dofet sDiid lacloie Stemped,Set^Addrested lavelepe. that surround us and sometimes writing,impale us. In order to do this there mustSURFTheatre German dialogue, English titles. Open 5 p.m,Die AfIMao praasats Oka Mrsl po«f*war CanaaaawBwoal nim la aotor fay lit Aafarfoaa PramhaaFLEDERMAUSJoka«i»i5t/iouMbatad am Uka worldtamtam Vlamnnaatmatto byWHh a datlaMul cost at Vhmnma aparatto fw'erHat a plan to make Pulse a live thing.We should like to suggest thatthey consider the building of awriters workshop around the mag¬azine—a plan to encourage writ¬ten, thought out criticism of stu¬dent writing and connected to thisa possible special page in Pulsereserved for correspondence hav¬ing to do with creative writingprinted.MAX BROOKCleaners - TailorshaunderersCOMPLETE INSURED STORAGE FACILITIESPrompt Call A Delivery Sferviee10l3&15Eo$t6l$tStre«» MIDwoy-7447SERVINe THE CAIUPVS for 30 YEARSWA8A$H ANORANDOlPH'RANieia! Friday, May 21. 194;pages THE CHICAGO MAROONHave you made up your mind on whatyoull do when you graduate this June? If not,consider the opportunity available to you in theAviation Cadets.Few jobs anywhere can match this offer.When you win your wings and a Second Lieu¬tenant’s commission, you’re paid as high as $336per month to start. The training you get beforeand after you’re commissioned is recognized as theworld s finest — and it equips you for a well-paidlifetime career in military or commercial aviation.You^re eligible for appointment to the Cadetsif you’re single, between 20 and years old,and have completed at least one-half the require-Taday’s MAROON election will'he one of the most crucial that hastaken place in fifty-five years ofpublication.The issues are no longer jour-pklistic—they have become politi¬cal. As such, they are important.tPive thousand copies of the MA-IROON are placed on the standsFriday morning. By Friday eve¬ning most of them are gone. Inrthe process of building the paperdnto an interesting and challeng¬ing one, the MAROON has as¬sumed a responsibility, the like of^hich it has never experienced.At times that responsibility haspeen abused, at other times it hasheen used effectively and con¬structively.Mr. Fritz Heimann, who took itupon himself to supply a “defi-niTyion” of the MAROON and apJlast at the house system in thelaniiiversaiy issue has abused hisre.sponsibility and has failed tojustify the faith the staff andmetits for a degree from an accredited college oruniversity (or pass an equivalent examination)•!Talk the program over with men in your classwho have been Aviation Cadets. And for fullidetails, ask at your i f-^rest U. S. Army and U. S.Air Force Recruiting Station. Why not drop intoday and discuss it?• 0. S. Army and 0. S. Air Forse Recruiting ServiceA minute with the editor ...(Continued from Poge 4)^ress was well on its way.The so-called elections werenothing more than a ruse as anystaff member can tell you that heliad specific orders to vote a cer¬tain way and not to nominate any•reactionary elements on the staffthat couldn't be immediatelyfoisted off the staff without vio¬lence.Tovarisch Engberg having left|he party due to the absence ofiJFE inaugurated “Party girls”this probably marks the last time■that a stoi*y will appear in the.MAROON under his by-line.The year has been eventful andthe lessons learned fruitful. Dueto the excellent work of a fineistaff, the paper has achieved aplace on the campus that it has‘rarely enjoyed in the past. It has;’been a vigorous paper while being^subjected to the same criticism,some well-founded, some simply'irrational, that all newspapers'undergo.The letter mentioned above re¬flects rather sadly upon the peopleendorsing it (the letter is un-fsigned so we must assume that the.author is a little sheepish about^his own ranting.) The staff has?been. and is now, open to anyone'who would care to work for the[paper and who wants a vote, equaliWith any and all staff members,in shaping editorial policy. ThetMAROON is more democratically^un now than it has ever been.Nothing is so irking as to see agroup of pompous, irresponsiblepeople sit back and launch theiricomiJaints from their ivory tow-»ers—^)e it at B-J or any otherjplace on the campus. The Reyn-k)lds Club isn’t so very far from(the Courts. If the students overithere are willing to put in the>time and effort that the regularstaff does, they’re welcome tocriticize and vote as much as theywant. Until then, our Letters tothe Editor columns remain open. editors who work regularly on thepaper had entrusted in him. His“definition” is not the one theMAROON subscribes to.The MAROON belongs to thestaff that runs it. It exercisesa news monop>oly and is uniqueas a campus activity. How¬ever, it does have certain obli¬gations to fulfill. Its obligationto the campus is to maintain itsjournalistic integrity. This meansdisinterested reporting of campusevents with space allocation basedon relative importance.That obligation does not pre¬clude the staff’s right to saywhatever it pleases in the edi¬torial columns. Whether they beused to comment on national orinternational affairs is the staff’sbusiness. I personally feel thatour obligation extends to a pres¬entation of those views which areopposed to the MAROON’s.The students on this campus arenot so homogenous as Mr. Hei¬mann would have us believe. Our“solidarity” exists only so far asthat we are a “community ofsc’nolars.” If Mr, Heimann feelshimself to be a loose string, wefeel no obligation to pull him to¬gether. Our obligation is to amuch larger community — theworld community of human be¬ings.We trust we won’t be subjectedagain to such a limited view ofthings as Mr. Heimann suggestsuntil, say, the 110th year of ouramazing existence. STUDENT UNIONEVENTS SU plans 2camping tripsBike TripA bus-bicycle trip to Lake Geneva is to be sponsored by StudentUnion on Memorial Day weekend. May 29-31. The group will meet at8:30 a.m. on Saturday, May 29, in front of Ida Noyes.Students should bring Saturday lunch, but the other meals willbe gi’oup-made from food bought en route. Each person must bringhis own sleeping bag or blanket roll, personal eating equipment, andbicycle. (Bicycles can be rented at several places near campus.) Therewill be a $5 deposit for food and bus or train fare. Sign up in theStudent Union office. Names are still being acceptedfor both the trips offered betweenquarters, SU announced today.The first trip, June 19 to 29, tothe Smokies Mountains still has afew open places. A $17 deposit iarequired when signing up. Travelwill be by bus and the group willcamp and cook in the open.Noyes BoxNext Sunday, from 7 to 11, the Noyes Box will feature HenryDeMichele and his sparkling arrangements at the piano keyboard.Dancing to recorded music will be supplemented by the featured artistplaying very danceable music.Song FestSunday evening, between 8 and 10:45, in the library of Ida Noyes,students gather to sing their favorite ballads just for fun, Songsheetsare distributed for everyone.Square DanceThe last Square Dance of the Spring Quarter will be held tomor¬row night in Ida Noyes Gym. At 7:30, instruction will begin and at8 g^im. the actual square dancing will begin. Refreshments will be soldduring the evening. Expert callers will be leading the dances.Naturo HikeSaturday morning, at 8:30. those interested in nature hiking willmeet at Ida Noyes to start on a trip to Wolf Lake area. All those plan¬ning to attend are asked to bring their lunch and a camera if possible.Splosk FortyA Splash Party for both men and women students, to be heldtonight from 7:45 to 9:45 in the Ida Noyes Pool. Jane Simmons, chair¬man of the Games Department, has promLsed lots of games andnovelty events with prizes going to the winners. The second trip to the RockyMountains is still in the planningstages. Students not planning onbeing in school this summer butwho would like to attend the tripbetween the Summer and Pallquarters can sign up now in theStudent Union office. This tripplans to include the Tetons, Yel¬lowstone, and Rocky MountainNational Parks.Encouragement for the tripscame to Student Union’s OutingDepartment from .students who.survived their previous campingtrip to Florida.SU plans picnicAll people who^have worked withStudent Union during the pastyear are being invited to a picnicat the Promontory, 55th Streetand the Lake, on Sunday, May 30.A nominal charge will be made forfood only, and the Student UnionBoard members will furnish th«work and additional equipment.WIN YOUR WINGSWITH THK AVIATION CAOSTSFor YourCorsageMITZIE'S FLOWERSHOP1300 E. 55rii ST.Midway 4020GREGG COLLEGEA Sdiael of BosinoM—Proforrog byCoWofO AAoa mml Woiuow4 MONTHINTENSIVE COURSESECRETARIAL TRAININO FOR COUEOBSTUOENTT'AND GRADUATESA thorough, intensiye coiyrse—starttozJune, October, Pebruaiy. Bui-letio A on requestSPECIAL COUNSELOR for 0.1. TRAIMMO•R^ular Day and Evening SchoolsThroughout the Year. CatalogPreoident, John Rptert_Gregg. S.C.D,. , - -ega. SDirector, Paul M. Pair, M./THE GREGG COLLEGEST «. WRieili SaMV.,948 riday. May 21, 1948 THE CHICAGO MAROON Rage 9516,500-It takes this number of men and womento operate the twenty-two Bell 'telephone Compa¬nies. Each operating company is responsible for fur¬nishing telephone service within its own territory. 26,000-The number of people who are employedin the Long Lines Department of the AmericanIblephone and Telegraph Company. It is their func¬tion to provide Long Distance and Overseas servicej—is the eosiesl of all! Don’t totethat bag and lift that luggage oilthe way home. Use the CollegeWoy—RAILWAY EXPRESS! iWe’ll pick up oil the heavy stuff ot your collegedorm and deliver it to your home. Chargesinclude pick-up and delivery in all citiesand principal towns, and valuationcoverage up to $50.00 or only 50? per poundover one hundred pounds.TRAVEL It/GMr BY TRAVELING l/GHT(Oh, yes—you can send your things home "charges collect”)CALL YOUR RAILWAY EXPRESS OFFICEPtedweeuy.9, toas ait isravelwillockyinitigg onbuttripPallthetripYel-itaiptripsLitingwho‘PingwithpastlicnicJtreety 30.le forJnionthelent. -‘hi Sigs throw aWcampus dance(s fraternities end spring quarterPhi Sigma Delta’s all-campus dance, the 21st annualStrawberry Festival, will highlight the end of the springquarter on Saturday night, June 19. Open air dancing toa well-known band from 9 to 1, and tables filled with freshstrawberries are expected to attract 500 couples, accordingto Daniel Strassburger, Strawberry Festival chairman.The Festival, which is in formal, will be held outdoorsin the rear of the Phi Sig house.with an alley blocked off by city 3o]on Cousins, scored third placethe dance floor, as it did last year. ^ amateur show over televi-Bids are $2.50 per couple and sion station WBKB, losing out tomay be purchased from any Phi two ten year old lasses.Sig or at the chapter house. Raininsurance will protect the frater- The Phi Kappa Psl house wasnity and its guests in case of bad .lammed to capacity Monday nightweather. as members of all the Midway. . fraternities assembled at an In-Frofcrnify Briefs ter-Fraternity smoker.Phi Gamma Delta’s Nasal Nine- The smoker inaugurated a newteenth choral group, directed by .series of I-P-sponsored events, de-signed by I-F president NicholasMeJas to further cement intrafra-TASTY FOOD?THAT'S OllR HOBBYHOBBY HOUSE53rd at Kenwood67th ond StoneyTOWaffles • SteaksCheeseburgers ternity relations.On Monday evening, ZBT in¬creased its ranks by one with theinitiation of Bernard Farber ofLexington, Ky,, a language in¬structor in the college, and a stu¬dent under the Committee on the'History of Culture.Phi Delta Theta fraternity add¬ed five new pledges to its rosterthis week. They are Jim Stevens,Bob Mack, Chuck Wharton, FredDophelde and John Sievers. Sigmas warblefor Inter-Club cupTwo hundred people filled IdaNoyes gym last Sunday to hearSigma club outsing Quadranglers,Mortar Boards, Tau Sigma Upsi-lons, Wyverns, and Delta Sigmasin the ninth annual Inter-ClubSing. Last year’s winners, theQuads, came in second; the Mor¬tar Boards, third.The contest was judged by thedirector of the Loyola Universitychoir, Mr. Goldthwaite of the Mu¬sic school, and Mr. Schroth, direc¬tor of the University choir. SolonCousins led the Phi Gam “NasalNineteen” In three selections. Fol¬lowing, the audience joined theclubs in “Wave the Flag,” “TellMe Why,” and “Alma Mater.”P. J, Murphy, winning her secrond cup for the Sigmas in threeyears, led the club in “Liebes-traum” and “Nola” with originalwords. The Quads were led byTrillian Anderson, the MortarBoards by M. J. Martin.Mortar Board plans formalMortar Board will hold itsSpring Formal at the Yacht Clubtomorrow night to the music ofStuart Clayton's band.Vincent throws picnicVincent House plans a picnictomorrow afternoon at 2, to beheld at the lake with refreshmentsand stuff.Mead House will subsidize tick¬ets to the Philadelphia SymphonyOrchestra concert at OrchestraHall on June 5th.you ought to know Lawyer, scholar, poet—Rago dreams of AristotleBy LEW LIPSITT, LEW CRANE and R. L.When Henry Rago arrives two minutes late to hisHumanities III class, harrassed and out-of-breath from therun from his car he berates the promise of “the contempla¬tive life” which brought him to the confines of a sympa¬thetically Aristotelian university. One of the most activeof the faculty members, a writer and poet—in constantdemand for benefit lectures, extemporaneous speeches, oras advisor to discussion groups andstudent publications, Mr. Rago hasrecently been appointed the heaaof the Humanities 3 course in thecollege. Committee meetings, con¬ferences, and his warm interest inhis students take up the rest ofhis time, precluding even a nostal¬gic retrospect at what might havebeen a thoughtful ivy-covered ca¬reer as an academician.Raga led versatile careerAway from the University ofChicago, Mr. Rago has done al¬most everything but teach. He wasa protege of Harriet Munroe’s, andpublished his earliest poems inPOETRY. He received his law de¬gree from DePaul University andpassed the Illinois bar—decided hewanted to study philosophy, turn¬ed around and took a Ph.D. inphilosophy at Notre Dame. He has Henry Ragobalanced his career as a scholar, a current issue < Winter.) of EPCX’H.lawyer, a poet, and now as a pro- translated Jacques Maritan slessor. He has also been editor and “Situation de la Poesie ’ for thereader for a publisher, and during Kenyon Review, and appears thisthe war he seiwed with counter- inonth in a REVIEW OF POLI-intelligence in the European thea- TICS with “A Free Man’s Cen¬ter, later as assistant military at- science,’ an essay on the politicaltache at the American embassy in philosophy of Ives Simon, recentParis. He brought home with him, lecturer at the University. His es-h*e says, many warm memories of say on Wallace Fowlie of the Ro-such literary giants as T. S. Eliot Languages Department,and Gertrude Stein, with whom he “Vision With No Landscape” washad close associations during the published in QUARTERLY RE-war years.Rago's poetic reputotion high VIEW OF LITERATURE last sum¬mer. He is particularly concernedMr. Rago’s reputation as one of with a literary problem he callsthe most important younger poets “aesthetic individualism,” whichis rapidly increasing. POETRY re- he discussed in his Ph.D. tliesiscently published his cycle of and which he says dates from hispoems, “The Metaphor,” and his childhood. His scholastic enthu-“’The Mad Girl” appears in the siams are medieval philosophy and“the technical and philosophicpredicament of modern literature.”Prof oiwoys readr for discussionWith a crowded career behindhim and ahead of him, ProfessorRago can be found nonetheless al¬most any afternoon in a cheerfuldiscussion with his studentsLEARN-NOWCHRISTIAN SCIENCECAN HELP YOUAttendChristian ScienceOrganization ot theUniversity of ChicagoInTHORNDIKE HILTONCHAPELTneisdayg May 257:30 P.M.At which you will heortottimonies of healingin Christian Science. TERESA DOLANDANCING SCHOOL1208 E. 63rd St (Nr. Woodlown)LEARN TO DANCE NOW!We can teach you to be a reallygood dancer Our years of experi¬ence is your guarantee. No frills—Just satisfying results. Let us helpyou now!PRIVATE LESSONSDAILY n A.M. TO 11 P.M.Call for Trial Lesson ✓Learn Waltz. Pox Trot. Rumba,Samba and Tango in group lessons,$1.00. Sun., Mon., Tues., Wed.. SatEvenings at 8:00.Phone Hyde Park 3080131,400—Thit numbers the employees of the West¬ern Electric Company who nvonufacture, purchaseand distribute equipment and suppliot for the entireBoll System. 6,000—That’s the number of people in Bell Tblo-phone Laboratories. Through research and develop¬ment they constantly improve this country's tele¬phone service -already the finest in the world.In all, there are some 682,000 men andwomen in the Bell System. As this coun¬try’s communications service is expandedand improved, opportunities will grow stillgreater. 'There's a future in'tele phony.2,100—Thai Vs-tlie number of people m the Ameri-con Ihlephone and Telegraph Company. Throughadvice and assistance, they coordinate the activitiesof the entire Bell System'. BELL IEI.EPHONE SYSTEM■L^ This is a tvolf. Spades: Lupus Hum^uhNiters increasing on every coUegpSl^ appeanmce aids deception of pre^.fliihu at ni^t. Meanly co-eds, DonUlwg^ • • •'ypm*r€ probably one yours^i ^This is a ^Manhattan'*' shirt. Wolf or ru9|u*ll go in hot pursuit.;. ii*s a heautyi"Wl ^Manhattan'* fits better . i ; looks ^tier ;; ; and can't shrink more dum l%iSee this style and many odiers at yourlocal dealer's how. 'THE MANHATTAN SHUT COMPANYCopr. )948, Th« Monhotton Stiirl Co'%mi sfaSfflTHE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, Moy 21, I 94WGUS signs off; willbe better next year Students for Health jiyn BaTTiett euds reignwant diet, exerciseOn May 15 radio station WGUSsigned off until orientation weekof the Autumn quarter. The sta¬tion, which had been broadcastingsince April 15, closed the seasonwith a special two hour recordedbroadcast of Othello, starring PaulRobeson. WGUS is a successfulreincarnation of the oft-tried Ra¬dio Midway of past years. Whenthe station resumes operation nextyear the university will see itsfirst full scale student broadcast¬ing.Yale Kramer, station manager,said in a statement to the MA¬ROON, “The month of trial broad¬casting may be regarded as suc¬cessful inasmuch as 1) It hasproved that radio can be operatedby students and has given thosewho worked this year a founda¬tion of experience for next yearsbroadcasting. 2) It has made theAdministration cognizant of theplace radio can take on the cam¬pus. 3) Lastly and most importantWGUS has performed its duty ofbringing service and entertainmentto the University community.”With the inception of the fallquarter, WGUS plans to have anexpanded program appealing to even a greater number of students.It hopes to be using the servicesof the Intercollegiate BroadcastingSystem which will give it a broad¬er approach than that defined bythe University’s limits.Student Activities bookto orient new studentsA Student Activities Handbookis in the process of being drawnup for publication by the StudentUnion Publicity Department. Thisbooklet will be mailed to the en¬tering students next fall to ac¬quaint them with the organiza¬tions on campus. Most of the or¬ganizations have been notified ofthe plan and have been requestedto supply information concerningtheir purpose, meetings, require¬ments for joining, and fall pro¬gram. Dedicated to the propositionthat “a healthy America dependsupon healthy Americans,” thenewly organized U. of C. chapterof Students for Health has pickedup over thirty members in the twodays of its existence on campus.The roster of the young organ¬ization now includes such variednames as Tarzan, Mai thus, EstherWilliams, Charles Atlas and DonQuixote.These individuals signed circu¬lated documents which stated theguiding principle of the group as“proper proportions of elementswhich comprise the good life” andoutlined two specific points foraction:“The basic nine-point diet de¬vised by the U. S. Army andadapted by the Patricia StevenModeling School; and some exer¬cise every day.” After seven quarters service as Business Manager (the MAROON and a total of ten quarters service on ttstaff of the paper, James E. Barnett is leaving the Universilof Chicago at the close of the present quarter. Todayissue is the last time he will appear on the’masthead.He leaves with a vote of thanks from the MAROOstaff as well as with an expression of gratitude and prahfrom the Dean of Students officefor the record he has compiled in brainstorms was the droppinghis position.Coming to school from the Uni¬versity of Oklahoma in 1945, Bar- MAROONS on the campus froan airplane.In July, 1946, he was elechnett immediately joined the MA- business manager of the papcROON staff as circulation man- taking over at a time when tlager. He filled this job for three MAROON’S books showed a delquarters and'gained a reputation of $1,211. In the following yeias a man of ideas. One of his he made a profit of $3,495.73 fiA business and editorial staff isnow being formed to publish thebooklet during the Summer quar¬ter. Anyone interested in workingon this project is invited to leavehis name and address in the Stu¬dent Union Office. Peoce discussionA round table discussion of themuch-debated problem of “PeaceThrough Negotiation” will be heldon Tuesday evening, May 25, at7:30 in Judd 126. Jim Barnett the paper, pulling it completeout of the red.The MAROON has never agagone into debt and it was througBarnett's initiative that the pullication came out twice a we(this past fall and was given awifree for the first time in the psper’s history. This move more thstripled circulation.For his work on the MAROOlast year Barnett was given sAward of Merit for being one <the 10 best college business maiagers in the nation.He is an assistant house he£at Burton-Judson and expectsgo into the business field uprleaving school.UMD OPEimillSATURDAY, MAY 22...Town and CountryMentis !§itore867 Easi 63rd Street(Near Drexel)JLMER ANGSMAN, JR., star holfback of theChicago Cordinole, will oppeor in person togreet you Soturdoy, May 22ndFeaturing:FREESouvenirs • MANHATTAN SHIRTS• DISNEY & LEE HATS• JOCKEY UNDERWEAR• B.V.D. SPORTSWEAR• LATEST IN CALIFORNIA SPORTSJACKETS AND SLACKSMANY VALUABLE PRIZESCLIP THIS COUPON AND DEPOSIT INSTORE — NOTHING TO BUYI TOWN AND COUNTRY MEN'S SHOP ^Z 8(7 Eas. 63rd Street I Oo I 10^ GRAND OPENING, SATURDAY, MAY 22, THRU SATURDAY, MAY 19 ' c3 I ■ -0o I name I 0^ I ADDRESS I ^I FREE DRAWING FOR PRIZES, SATURDAY, MAY 29. 4 P.M. I^ — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —' ‘''^ ^ ^0Friday, May 21, 1948 THE CHICAGO MAROON Poge 11Maroon tennis teamdrops finale to NUNorthwestern’s powerful tennis team defeated the var¬sity Maroons 7-2 Tuesday, in the last match of the season.The loss leaves the Chicago team with a season record ofseven wins in eleven attempts.Paul Jernberg was the only Maroon singles winner, thedoubles team of Jernberg and Kamaras taking the othervictory.Saturday last, Chet Murphy’sboys defeated Marquette Univer¬sity by a score of 8 to 1. The Chi¬cagoans won every singles matchand two of the doubles.The “B” team lost to NorthCentral last Monday, scoring onlytwo victories. Neufeld took one insingles, 7-5, 7-9, 6-1, and Bokmanscored the other by winning 6-2,8-6. The match also concludes the“B” season, leaving them with a2-2 season record.TYPI]\G .SERVICE• Thesis Popcrt• Generol TypingATI.AIMTIC 0747820 Eaat 50th StreetChlrago 15. Illinois Racqueteersundefeated;take JV titleThe JV tennis team completedan undefeated season by winningthe Private School League cham¬pionship last Saturday.Kenny Sparks scored a ma¬jor upset by beating teammateDick Foley and thereby winningthe P.S.L. singles championship.Foley, the number one man. wasundefeated in dual competition,while Sparks, playing in the num¬ber two position, lost once. Theirpoints, together with the addition¬al points gained by the secondplace doubles team, won the meetfor the Jayvees over Harvard,their strongest rivals, 20 to 11,Your "Wedding Highlights''Photogrophed byStephen Lewellyndu8 KIMBARK HYDE PARK 1448**Tell me, Hugh,does she go for Dentyne Chewing Gum?’**Surc (he gop* for Dentyne Chewing Gun,George — thet’e baric — that ewell, long-lasting Dentyne flavor rends her ar much aeit doer you or me. She liker the way Dentynehelps keep teeth white, too.*'Dentyne Gum~—Made Only hy Adame Maroon ihindadsmeet Marquetteto dose seasonThe U of C track team meetsMarquette University tomoiTOWfor the final meet in the Maroons’1948 outdoor track season. Al¬though Marquette beat us in theindoor season, the cindermen arecapable of scoring an upset.In a triangular meet with North¬western and Purdue, held in DycheStadium last Saturday, our twoformer conference cousins showedwhat they thought of deempha-sized sports in general and theU of C in particular, by buryingChicago under a landslide ofpoints. The final meet score stood:Purdue, 77; Northwestern, 57; andthe U of C, 17. High point manfor Chicago was Rqthenberg withsix, while the usually dependableJohnny Adams managed to col¬lect only three for the afternoon.If the Maroons come throughwith a victory in the Marquettemeet tomorrow, their outdoorseason record will be four winsagainst an equal number of losses.The outlook for next year’ssquad appears at this writing tobe very bright, with all of the im¬portant lettermen returning. JohnAdams, outstanding U of C dis¬tance man, has competed fouryears in cross country, but has oneyear of track eligibility remaining.Chicago golferslose to DeKalbThe U. of C.’s varsity golfers',winner of only one meet so farthis season, losl; another last Sat¬urday. The victor. Northern Illi¬nois Teacher’s College of DeKalb,triumphed by an 8^2-3 *2 margin.Bill Short was the only Maroonto win his match by a decisivemargin (3-0). Bill Esson account¬ed for the other V2 point by losing2^/2-Y2, while Neil Driscoll andDon Oawthrup were whitewashedby 3~0 scores.'The final meet of the Maroongolfing season will be held atWestgate golf course tomorrow.The foes will be Illinois Tech andWayne University.Number 93-94 Nine takes three,await final gamesChicago’s amazing Maroons ran up a three-gamC win¬ning streak during the past week, and are now threateningto extend the string of triumphs through to the end of theseason. Only two games remain on the agenda; one withDePauw tomorrow (which game, as any Maroon combatantwill tell you, “We WILL win”), and the last with St. Jo¬seph’s on May 24. There will also be an amicable contestwith some erstwhile Maroon ath-Chicago Latinhospitality aidsU letes who are now hors de com¬bat, and are know as alumni. ^Lockey scoffers seven hifs to winThe win-glutted week began Frl-nin/7 gad last when James Millikin Col-fll'llC lege bowed to our superior forces,. li. r .-v.- T . 7 to 4, Mel Lackey scattered sevenAs a result of Chicago Latin s ^Santini, Donahue, and Sharphospitality, the Junior Varsitynine broke a three game losing Chicagi; attack, eachstreak and emerged with theirsecond victory of the season lastFriday to the tune of 19-11. Mostof the JV scoring was due to 16walks received from three Latinhuiiers and 8 miscues by thehome team. collecting two hits.Borowitz wins second gameThe following day Illinois Nor¬mal paid us a visit, and tried hardto collect a win. The game wastied 5-all going into the ninth,Chicago loaded the bases with oneLatin scored six runs in the bot- gjjj Gray’s single andtom half of the opening frame, walks to pinch hitters Lackey anderasing the one-run lead the JV s stitt, whereupon little McKinney,had established, and resulting in Maroon catcher, came throughthe early departure of Hans with a blast over the left fielder’sFrench, Chicago’s starting pitcher, hg^d, scoring Gray with the gameThe Jay Vees managed to tie it buster. Gene Borowitz went all theup with two runs in the second way to chalk up his secondand three more in the third. The straight win.JV’s were held scoreless in the -phe third success was achievedfourth for the first and only time, Wednesday at the expense ofbut Latin pitching returned to Illinois Tech, 6 to 2. Leister, pitch-normal in the fifth when U High jng for the Techhawks, stifledcombined a walk and an error Chicago batters for five innings,with four hits for three runs. allowing only one hit during thatFrench’s successor. Gray, held span,the home team in check until in ^the fifth, when he walked fourmen and gave up a hit to another,^allowing Latin to tie up the score, three-room attractively fumisbeuThe Jay Vees won the ball game apartment m Detroit ^ exchange for a- t.1.^ furnished or unfurnished apartment mWith five run outbursts in the Chicago, call Xanzman, Rogers Parksixth and .seventh. Three bases on apartment 6.WANT ADSballs, an error, and thiee singles two male students desire transp>orta-accounted for the five in the tlon to Denver on or about twentiethJune. Share expenses, driving. CallSixth, while the runs iD- thE. sev- pAIrfax 7866, ask for Howard.entfi were seeded via four walksand thri*# Latin errors—witholft ■ -—w . midget radio,ana cMiin eirorb witnooi ^ $13.21. Birr. 4SK>y ^the aid of a hit. —_ „ „ DKIVIHQ LOS ANGLES June l3th. de-. - » . ,« . ? **’■* *’•'0 sharing pas.-engers. Referencee.» 3 .1 5—19 $ < g. Power, Tuxedo, N. Y.© 3 2 0—11 2 8 : !SEWING. MENDING, reasonable. HYDEPark 5976.ROOMS. Converted high grade apart¬ment building for male students only.Near campus. Hyde Park 3060.CHICAGO 1 2 3LATIN 6 0 0Art on the AmericonHorizon . , • $1.50The Red Door Book Shop1328 E. 57thn to 11 TYPING—For expert work and rapid•service call BUTterfleld 6990.WATCH REPAIRING for students.Prompt, honest work, guaranteed, by17. of C. student. Jim Boyack, 5748 Kim-baik, afternoons.FOR SALE; Lady’s new brown jodphur#and riding shoes, size 6to. Reasonable.SOU. 9252.“GRADUATING IN JUNE? Yale grad!coming to University of Chicago need*apartment July l.st. Write Vernon Rut-tan. 78 Lake PI., New Haven, Connecti¬cut."LlIVCOLX MERCURYIN HYDE PARKfSpecializing In Ford ProductsWE SERVICE AND REPAIRALL MAKES OF AUTOSSIMONIZEBODY AND FENDER WORKFactory Trained IftechanicsLAKE PARK MOTORS, me5601 HARPER AVE.S. TAUBER, PretMent E. KAPLAN, TreasurM ■t* m ■s^^lJPo9« 12 THE CHICAGO MAitOON^'Store Hours• 0:15 to 5:45 FrMay, May 21, 1i&aHickoryHickoryDock«aait^s 9 on yourfavorite campus clock• • • time for the wXtcklng hour whenblue-J^Aft-B^ttjfS and pig-tall Peggysblossom out to be radiantly beautifulClnderellas* Dance time•••prom time»again when everyone rates a big Ain extra-curricular activities!• ••it^s time on ourfamous Field% clockto win your date's heart andinfluence the stag line with abutcher rayon evening dress!The skirt is a completehcircle*••the waistline isnipped*••the bodice neatlytucked and moulded*\ See what a> *lovely vision you'll make in it! $25After Five. Shop—Sixth Floor, North,whatever the time. • •the place Is Field’s for all-time,yovng-time campvs fashions