ON CAMPUSPresident GreetsNewcomers .... Page 1Dupre OrganRecitals Pago 6Athletic FacilitesOpened Poge 8 IN THIS ISSUEInside Story ofConvention .... Poge 5UC StudentsJailed . Poge 1How My InterviewStarted Page 73] University of Chicago, July 2, 1948UC students protest police raidColwell meets campusites at Arrest Victims plan law suitsdance, reception tonightPresident Colwell will greet newstudents at an informal receptionfor summer session students to beheld tonight at Ida Noyes between8:30 and 9 o’clock.The reception will be followedby an Informal dance lasting tillmidnight. No dates will be re¬quired.Further opportunity for convivi¬ality will be afforded at the fiveStates Parties sponsored by Stu¬dent Union during the next twoweeks. The parties are open to allstudents and faculty members buta special effort is made to havepeople attend the parties of theirhome states.A party for the people from thestates represented by the Big Nineschools was held yesterday. Thenext such function will be a picnicfor students who live west of theRockies to be held next Wednes¬day evening in Ida Noyes Garden. The chairmen of this party, PatMalone and Roalda Jensen, haveannounced that reservations arenow being accepted at the mainoffice at Ida Noyes.Students from the other sideof the Mason-Pixen line are in¬vited to a party in Ida Noyestheatre and roof garden at 7 p.m.next Thursday. This party is be¬ing handled by Franie Carlin andJudy TSenedek.The point at 55th street will bethe scene of a picnic for studentsfrom the Northeast a week fromtoday. Reservations for these fes¬tivities must be made at the officein Ida Noyes by July 8. The finalparty In the series will be heldon July 14. for representatives ofthe Wheat Belt states. Refresh¬ments for all of the parties are inthe capable hands of Nancy Vogel¬sang. Miller plumbsnew draft lawEmmet C. Miller, registrar,has been appointed as the Uni¬versity official to handle allmatters and interpretationspertaining to the draft bill.Mr. Miller will issue a state¬ment shortly.Cancel UT's planson Leaf and BoughGeorge Blair, director of Uni¬versity Theatre, announced todaythat the production of JosephHayes’ prize winning drama. “Leafand Bough,’* has been cancelled.Mr. Blair gave no reason for thesudden cancellation. Had the pro¬duction been given the cast wouldhave included Shirley Moscov,Dawn Pfeiffer, William Alton.Summer.Seminar group beginsresearch in France, England A University coed and a member of the campus Stu¬dents for Wallace was one of 15 Hyde Park Young Progres¬sives who were hustled off to Chicago jails last Wednesdayevening following their arrest for alleged disorderly conduct.Barbara V. Blumenthal, the University students in¬volved in the arrest, charged that the. arrest was madeas the result of a complaint by a Real Estate agency imple¬mented by irresponsible police of-ficers. were locked up without being al-The case was thrown out of lowed to contact their attorneyscourt the following morning after or friends and were told that theCaptain Matt Murphy of the Ken- bond was set at $25 per personwood Police station had charged Plus “sales tax.’’ Richard F. Watt,that: “Those kids are a bunch of UC law professor, was one of theCommies.” Evidence to substan- attorneys who bailed out thetiate the disorderly conduct alle- group.gation was lacking, the neighbors The Progressive Party of Uli-haveing testified that there was no nois and the Civil Rights Congressdisturbance made. offered legal support for a falseThe arrest was made after three arrest suit to be brought againstdetectives from the Hyde Park the owners of the buliding.station had spotted copies of the The Sun-Times editorializedCHICAGO STAR lying about the against the Police action in yes-apartment. The papers were re- terday’s paper charging that themoved as “evidence” after Leroy arrest was a violation of civilS. Burwen who rents the apart- rights and represented the veryment at 5519 Kenwood Avenue, thing that we should strive hard-had been refused a request for a est to avoid in this country. Itreceipt for the papers. Uniformed was further asserted that the ac-police made the arrest without a tion was a direct violation of theWiv^rrant a short time afterwards. Constitutional rights of the stu-Boil plus "soke tox** poid dents involved and pointed outTwenty-six University® facultymembers and students sailed forEurope this month, climaxing sixmonths of preparations and ar¬rangements.Half of the group, who obtainedfunds for the seminar by solicita¬tions, will stay in England andhalf in Prance. Funds cover travelexpenses, the students coveringmost of their living expense's.fcome of the group studying inPrance will carry on their researchas a team. Robert B. Johnson, agraduate student in the Depart¬ment of Sociology, and Mr. andMrs. Lloyd B. Meadow, also gradu¬ate students, will work as a teamof three to make an intensive so¬ciological study of a small Frenchindustrial community. The proj¬ect will be carried on under theadvice of a member of the facultywho has directed similar commun¬ity studies in America. Also, Rich¬ard K. Bernstein, a senior in theCollege, who plans to enter theDivision of Humanities for gradu¬ate study next aucumn, and Mor¬ris Halle, who is a graduate stu¬dent in the Division of Humani¬ties, plan to work as a team tomake a study of the influence andeffect of the American ArmedForces upon the French language.Others studying in France are;Rita Blumenthal, a senior in theCollege ^ho will enter the Depart¬ment of Education for graduatestudy next next autumn. In Pranceshe plans to make a study of theFrench system of education withspecial reference to the re-or-ganization of public educationsince World War n.Frokcls in FronenBeverly Bronstein, a senior inthe College, who plans to enter thedivision of the Humanities forgraduate study next autumn. InFrance she hopes to make a studyot periodical and pamphlet litera¬ture of the Resistance Movementwith an effort made to evaluatethe achievement of this literaturem the light of its goal.Harry Gourevltcli is a senior inthe College who plans to enter theDivision of the Biological Sciencesfor work in psychology nextftutuiun. His sumn).er project is for the College Social ScienceHonor Credit. He will study theeffect of the war on French youthmovements, centering his researchon the Faulcons Rouges.Gerald Handel, a graduate stu¬dent in the Division of the Hu-MILTON HINDUSnomics, will use French sourcematerial for research on the eco¬nomic history of France in thelast two centuries.Lucy Nedzel, a candidate forthe Ph.D. degree in the Depart¬ment of Education, who has hadpractical experience with adulteducation programs in the UnitedStates, plans to survey the facili¬ties in England and France forprograms of adult education.To cover EuropeMarie Sachey is a candidate forth%PhD. degree in the Depart¬ment of History. She hopes to dothesis research in Prance, Switzer¬land, and possibly Austria on thethesis subject: The Pall of theAustrian Republic.Those studying in England are;Thomas R. Bennett, a graduatemanities, plans to make a study ofthe history of Jewish culture inPrance.Phillip Oxman, a graduate stu¬dent in the Department of Eco-•student in the Divinity School, who will work on a Ph.D. thesisresearch project on the philosophyof history. He has made arrange¬ments to study under ProfessorToynbee in England this summer.Arthur Bernstein, a graduatestudent in the Law School, whoplans to make a study of SocialSecurity Laws under the LaborGovernmtujit,Study British unionsJohn R. Coleman is a Canadiancitizen and veteran of the Cana¬dian Navy. A graduate student inthe Department of Economics, heexpects to return to full-time workon the staff of the Industrial Re¬lations Center next autumn. InEngland he plans to do thesis re¬search on Union Management Re¬lations in Great Britain.Mr. and Mrs. Gabriel Fackre,who are students in the DivinitySchool, plan to work together onthe general subject: “The Churchand Radical Economic Move¬ments.” Mr. Fackre will investigatereligious socialism and Mrs. Fackrewill study the church and theworker.Arnold Flamm, a graduate stu¬dent in the Law School, plans tomake a study of the TransportIndustry under the Labor Govern¬ment.Business, medicine studiedThomas Jenkins, a graduate stu¬dent in the D3partment of So¬ciology, will make a study ofNegro-White relations in an urbancenter.Gordon Johnson, a graduatestudent in the Department of Po¬litical Science, plans to make astudy of the Agriculture Act of1947.Sherwood Miller, past head ofcampus AVC and a senior in theMedical School, plans to make astudy of the effects of socializedmedicine on the training and clin¬ical practice of medical students.Ronal Reifler, a graduate stu¬dent of the School of Business,hopes to gather thesis material onthe post-war sources of capital forEnglish business.Child psychology tM post-warRoger Shapiro is a senior stu¬dent in the Medical School. He isgoing to attend the International.(CoiitiHuod wm Fof« B) Blumenthal, a MAROON staff that whether they were Commu-member, reported that the stu- nists or not is irrelevant,dents had been told^ to “Go to Compus leoders protestRussia” and that they were “just Concern over the matter wasa bunch of Commies” while en- expressed in statements made toroute to jail. She said that they (Continued on Page 3)Student Union plans outings,tours on activities schedule5000 enrolled insummer sessionEnrollment on campus for thesummer term dropped over elevenper cent over the same time lastyear, according to the figures ofEmmet C. Miller, Registrar.This decrease, reflecting a na¬tion-wide trend, does not affectthe Graduate Schools or the var¬ious Workshops organized by theUniversity, which show an almostnormal registration at this earlydate.Enrollment drops 11.8%Figures for the second day ofthe summer session gave the totalenrollment of 4,951 compared tolast year’s figure of 5,616, a dropof 11.8 per cent. Various explana¬tions are given for this change,such as the general decrease inveteran enrollment, discontinu¬ance of accelerated programs,plentiful job opportunities, and thehigh cost of living forcing stu¬dents to earn extra money.The increase in tuition wasnot blamed for the drop ex¬cept among regular students,since the raise was not publicizedoutside the campus. Also, low-tuition state universities show thesame percentage of decline in reg¬istration as the high-cost privateschools.Seven Werkskopt fleurltkSeven major Workshop groupsare organized for the term, ledin size by the Human Develop¬ment and Education and a newlyannounced addition, Workshop inInter-Cultural Education. The lat¬ter was designed to investigateproblems of racial minorities re- Student Union' the organizationwhich administers to the socialand cultural needs of the studentbody, has announced a broad pro¬gram of events for the summerquarter.The Noyes Box, the campusnon-alcoholic night club, will beopen each Sunday evening from8 to 11. Other events centering inIda Noyes during the quarter willbe bridge lessons and tournaments,roller skating, and a badmintontournament.Athletics and outings 'The more virile element oncampus will be appealed to bysuch events as golf outings, two-day bicycle rides, and weekendoutings to various remote points.Students previously unacquaint¬ed with the sights of Chicago it¬self will be interested in a seriesof tours to such places as the ArtInstitute, the steel mills a Gary,the studios of the National Broad¬casting Company, the GeneralMotors plant at LaGrange, andthe Grant Park Concerts.Further information about anyof SU’s activities can be obtainedat their office on the second floorof Ida Noyes or by calling exten-tion 1798.lated to education. Herman Q.Richey, director of the SummerSession, estimated that over 400teachers and advanced studentswill attend the workshops durinfthe summer.Housing for the influx of out-of-town students is more readilyavailable than last year, accord¬ing to the Housing Bureau, withsome of the regular girl’s collegadorms and Burton-Judson hand¬ling the overflow from privateresidences.( rHOM A SfllfS Of STATtMfNTS IT MOMIMENT TOBACCO NUtMIRS )-1 Che$terfield buys the beet mildtk" j ripe, sweet tobacco. They conshtentlg» pay the best prices to get the kind ^I tobacco they want.*"***king ChesterfieldsI more than 25 years. It's a good, mildcigarette with more real tobacco taste.roge 2 THE CHICAGO MAROONCalendar of EventsTODAY- Next Week onQuadranglesBy CYNTHIA HENDRY-JULY 2PRJSSIDKNTS RECEPTION: Ida Noyes. 8:30-9.30 p.m.DANCE: Ida Noyes, Informal, 9:30-12, no dates necessary.STUDENT UNION OUTING: To Michigan and Manistee National Forest, leavesIda Noyes 8 p.m. Pare, $9; focxi, $1 per day. Returns Monday evening.CONFERENCE ON READING: Mandel, Reynolds Club Theater, OrientalInstitute.GUIDANCE AND PERSONNEL CONFERENCE: Room 159, Belfield.BUS TOURS: Tour of Chicago, leaves Mandel at 1:30. Chicago at Night, leavesMandel at 7:30. Tickets at Information Office, Press Building.SATURDAY—JULY 3CONFERENCE ON READING: Mandel Hall, Reynolds Club Theater, OrientalInstitute.SUNDAY—JULY 4UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE: Rockefeller Chapel, 11 a m.RADIO BROADCAST: University Round Table, WMAQ and NBC, 12:30 p.m.UNIVERSITY FORUM BROADCAST (Student Forum): WOAK, FM 98.3 me.,3 pjn.CARILLON RECITAL: Rockfeller, 7:30 p.m.VIENNESE WALTZING: International House, 8 p.m., 15c.NOYES BOX: Ida Noyes Patio, 8-11 p.m.MONDAY—JULY 5“Open City,” “Coffee Pride of Ot^umbia,”Prof. Prit« Went,DOCUMENTARY FILMS:muda.” 8:30, 50cTUESDAY—JULY 6PUBLIC LECTURE: “Various Aspects of Plant Physiology.Botany Building. 3 p.m., admission free.PUBLIC LECTURE: (University College) Discussions on Community Responsl-I bllities of Institutions of Higher Learning, given by Institute for Admin-[ istrative Officers of Higher Institutions, Burton-Judson, 9:30 a.m. and2 p.m., admission free.ORGAN RECITAL: Marcel Dupre, Rockefeller Chapel, 8:30. Admission free.PUBLIC LECTURE: “Italian Portrait Medals of the Renaissance,” RenaissanceSociety, Classics. Room 10, 4:00.CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION MEETINGS: Hilton Chanel, 7:30PUBLIC LECTURE: “Chinese Culture.” Siang-Feng Ko, Soc. Sci. 122, 4:30 p.m.MATHEMATICS CLUB: Eckhart 206, 4:30 p.m.WEDNESDAY—JULY 7WESTMINSTER FELLOWSHIP: Presbyterian Tea. Chapel House. 4-5.STATES PARTIES: “West of the Rockies” picnic, Ida Noyes Garden, 5:30 pm.Make reservations at Ida Noyes Office by July 6. Small charge for supper,PUBLIC LECTURE: Discussions on Community Resisonslbilities of Institute- of Higher Learning, given by Institute for Aamlnistrative Officers ofHigher Institutions, Burton-Judson, 9:30 a.m. and 2 p.m., admission freeWBLIC LECTURE: “Radiations and Radioactive Substances in Biology andMedicine," Social Science, Room 122, 4:30 p.m.THE COUNTRY DANCERS: English and American Country Dances. Ida NoyesDance Room, 7:30.CONFERENCE ON ARITHMETIC: Belfield 1:'9. 10 a m.. 2 p.m.PUBLIC LECTURE: “New Factors in Plant Physiology,” F. W. Went, Botany106, 3 p.m.PUBLIC LECTURE: “Research Reports: Studies of Attitudes Toward Minori¬ties,” B. Bettelheim, Judd 126, 4:45 p.m.THURSDAY—JULY 8STUDENT UNION: Meeting for those Interested in Rocky Mountain trip, IdaNoyes. 8 p.m.STATES PARTY: Southern States Party, Ida Noyes Theatre and Roof Garden,7 p.m.PUBLIC LECTURE: “New Factors Jn Plant Physiology,” F. W. Went, Botany106, 3 p.m.PUBLIC LECTURE: "Church Architecture in Sweden Through the Ages,”A. Llndblom, Clrasics 10, 4:30 p.m.Forum to give instructionson public speaking, radioLarry Rostow, director of theStudent Forum during Bill Biren-baum’s absence, announced thatthe Forum ^ planning an ex¬panded summer program whichwill place special emphasis on in-Btruction in the fundamentals ofpublic speaking.An extra curricular activityopen to all students on campus,the speech clinic is designed to“facilitate and encourage the de¬velopment and communication ofIdeas by perfecting the student’sability to express himself logicallyknd effectively in conversation andbefore groups.”How to talk bockShort lectures on organizational technique and the method of ef¬fective delivery will open eachsession, but most of the time spentin meetings will be devoted topractice periods during which par¬ticipants will be given construc¬tive criticism by the clinic directorand other class members.The speech clinic pi^ovides thenecessary training for those whoplan to participate in the debateprogram next fall, or who wouldlike to participate in the paneldiscussions and radio broadcaststhat are sponsored by the Forum.Discussions and practice debateswith students from other schoolsin this area are being planned forthe closing sessions of the clinic.Rulien Typewriter ShopI.B.M. Electromoric 1 Vi yr. old. Dr D-VorakKeyboard. Excellent condition IVW(Some Model New, Costs $310.00)Late Model Underwood, 26-inch carriage—Like new124 S. Western Avenue CHEsopeake 3766Kosher !IIIi%IKOOKINCKateredBYMRS. KayMINIMUM OF 12 PEOPLE1418 Eost 61sf Street Phone MUS. 259C Comp registrotions closeJuly 10 tor oil studentsThe final date for registrationfor the summer comprehensiveexaminations has been set at July10.Students wishing to register maygo to Test Administration in Lex¬ington 5. Late registration fees arerequired if this deadline is notmet.Need Billings nurses“B«r- Volunteer workers are needed tofill interesting positions at Bill¬ings Hospital, Elizabeth Borkstromdirector of Volunteers announcedtoday.Jobs ranging from two hours totwo days a week are open to vol¬unteers. Especially needed are 25“Play Ladies” to read, talk, andplay games with the lonely chil¬dren for whom summer is verytedious.The X-Ray and physiotherapydepartments need volunteers tohelp move stietcher and wheelchair patients, and the librariancould use assistance in deliveringbooks to patients, and reading tothose who are too ill to hold abook.No formol training necessaryIf you are a former Red CrossNurse’s Aide, your services are indemand any morning from nineuntil 1:00 p. m.Mrs. Borkstrom piointed out thatno formal training is neces.sary.The volunteers are never used toreplace paid employees, but theyprovide the extra courtesy, hospi¬tality, and kindness which meansso much to patients. Their help isdeeply appreciated both for thepractical help given and for theadditional graciousness whichthey give to a large hospital. Friday, July 2, 1948Rev. J. B. Thompson preachesSunday on ^Levels of Loyalty*The Rev. John B, Thompson,dean of Rockefeller Memorial chapel at the University of Chi-Bcago, will present the July 4 Sun¬day sermon at the Midway Uni¬versity chapel at 11 a. m., Speaking before the summerschool students now attending theUniversity of Chicago, the Rev.Mr. Thompson will preach on“Levels of Loyalty.”Magna cum louJeThe Rev. Mr. Thompson re¬ceived his bachelor of divinity de¬gree magna cum laude from UnionTheological Seminary in NewYork in 1932, and as the highest-ranking student was awarded theSchoals fellowship for studyabroad.Before coming to the Universityof Chicago, Dean Thompson waspastor of the First PresbyterianChurch of Norman, Oklahoma,and associate professor of thephilosophy of religion at the Uni-ver.sity of Oklahoma.REV. J. B. THOMPSONCIO pickets UC for raiseLocal 24 of the United .Officeand Professional Workers ofAmerica—CIO picketed InglesideHall from 12 to 1 last Tuesday.The demonstration was held uponthe refusal of University authori¬ties to grant the union’s wagedemands. Fifteen signs carried bythe forty pickets emphasized thedemand for a 20c raise. Othersigns bore such phrases as “NewBuildings, Old Wages” "We want a living wage” How can we pay$1.20 a lb. for meat.” Accordingto^the union, their demands werebacked by the U. S. Bureau ofLabor Statistics, which, .accordingto them, shows that the Univer¬sity pays $10 a week less than theaverage wage. A leaflet distributedby the union also stated that theUniversity had ignored the de¬mand for a wage increa.se madeby the union."Smoking pleosuremeans Chesterfieldto me every time"duAt'STARRING IN“THE WALLS OF JERICHO"A 2«th CENTURY-FOX PIC1 URBopyright 1948, LccnT A Myim Tobacco GxNATION-WIDE SURVEY^ SHOWS THAT MORE COLLEGESTUDENTS SMOKE CHESTERFIELDS THAN ANY OTHER BRANDiJoy, July 2, 1948 1664758THE CHICAGO MAROON Pag^ S\unnecke leaves DC for'rittanica; 34 of faculty depart(Jew jobs have attracted manytiie University’s personnel, who/e left the campus permanent-or have taken short leaves.Vilbur C. Munnecke. vice pres-nt of tha University and secre-y of its board of trustees for; past four years, will becomeninistrative vice president ofcyclopaedia Britannica, Inc.,Munnecke has resigned from; university and took up his» duties yesterday,es to AustralioDon Patinkin, assistant profes-has been appointed associate)fessor of economics at the Urii-•sity of Illinois. Dr. Robert E.lallon. instructor in Philosophy,5 been appointed to organizei develop al future courses • init subject at Rensselaer Poly-hnic Institute in Troy. N. Yjfessor Avery O. Craven of theleiican History Department re-itly accepted the invitationallerican History Chair at theiversity of Sidney for two quar-s.rhomas B. Freeman, chairmanthe University of Chicago Can-Research Foundation fundsing campaign, took office as‘ chairman of the Citizens-ard of the University on Junem Bell leaves collegeDan Bell, instructor of Socialences in the College, left yes-day morning for New York,ere he will assume the post ofor editor of Fortune Magazine.‘. Bell has taken a six months’ve-of-absence from the Uni-si ty to take this job. Furthering their research workin far corners of the globe, nineUniversity of Chicago professor®will be abroad this spring andsummer.Miss Gertrude Smith, chairmanof the university's department ofGreek, will spend the summer atthe American School of ClassicalStudies at Athens, Greece. AlfredE. Emerson, professor of zoology,is conducting research in the Bel¬gian Congo. Thomas Park, anotherzoologist, will study and lecture inthe next six months at OxfordUniversity, professional congressesin Paris and Stockholm, and inLeiden, Holla? • Leland Horberg,assistant professor of zoology, isaccompanying an archaeologicalexpedition to the Yukon this sum¬mer. Robert Keohane, assistantprofessor of social sciences, is cur¬rently setting up a social studiesprogram in German schools.Accept foreign offersWalter Johnson, assistant pro¬fessor of history, will leave theChicago campus in late summer toassume a visiting professorshipat the University of Birmingham,England. Di*. C. Phillip Miller,professor of medicine, plans to.sail on June 5 for London wherhe will spend three months assenior scientist in the Office ofScience and Technology.Oriental Institute staff mem¬bers on the excavation projects inIraq and Iran, Robert Braidwoodand Donald McCown, will remainin the Near East until late sum¬mer. Police raid of Progressivemeeting held outrageous(CoMtinued from Roge 1)the MAROON by campus studentleaders. Carl Zerfoss acting chair¬man of the University AVC chap¬ter said “. . . this sort of violationof our basic civil rights has a longrecord in Chicago; this last caseis merely the most clear-cut andflagrant examle to date. AVChopes that the police and officialsinvolved will be prosecuted so thatsuch things will not happenagain.”“This was not only the use ofthe police by an individual break¬ing up an interracial gathering,but it is part of the timely assaultupon the Wallace movement dur¬ing its critical period of pjetition-ing to put Wallace and Taylor onthe Illinois ballot,” stated GeorgeS. Cooley, Chairman of the UCStudents For Wallace. “It is timefor the citizens of Chicago to callto account the ^controlling Dem¬ocratic machine and the politicalpolice force which maintains it,”Cooley concluded.Former UC students involvedLois Jacobs, Student Assemblypresident, stated “that such athing could happen here is al¬most unbelievable. Immediate andstern action should be taken bythe commissioner against the po¬licemen responsible for such aflagrantly fascistic move.”The arrested youths indicatedthat they would file lawsuits forfalse arrest against the city, thereal estate agency and against theLes Temps ModerneMagazine pHJt out by Sa»^re(French) Selected IssuesMiddle of The JourneyNew Leviafhan by Lionel Trillingby CollingswoodMl) DOOR ROOK SHOP1328 East 57th StreetFrom 11 to 11PHOTO NEEDS• CAMERS• FLASH• PAPER• FILMS• ENLARGERS• PROJECTORSSEE US FOR ALL OF YOURPHOTOGRAPHIC REQUIREMENTS4S Boar Fhola f'iaiNhingTYPEWRITERSWe Have a Complete Line of New Portable Typewritersfor Your InspectionUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUE By BARBARA V. BLUMENTHAL(Staff Member)When a group of fifteen HydePark Young Progressives met at5511 Kenwood last Wednesdaynight, we never dreamed that theFascistic principles of a real estateagency and some Chicago police¬men would land us in jail.The true facts are these:1. We were guilty of having aNegro girl at our meeting.2. Copies of the weekly “Chi¬cago Star” were found on thepremises.3. Although charged with dis¬orderly conduct by the janitor, acharge substantiated by the ar¬resting police officer, the groupfailed to annoy neighbors andtheir sleeping children next door.The neighbors stated that theywere not aware of any disturbance.Police found the group sittingaround drinking coffee.4. No warrant was issued forthe arrest of the group, but despitethis fact, they were herded intopolice wagons and taken to ttieindividuals involved. The Wallace-ites, Herbert Winter, Dave Tardy,Thomas Fineberg, Fred Babbin,Milton Marovich, Roy Burwen,Rudolph Wolfson, Arvada Lace-field, Christine Brooks, Mary RuthCasebeer, Mrs. Lois Berwen David,Isabel Marovich, Madge Rosen¬baum and Miss Blumenthal wererepresented by Leland Winter andLeonard Karlin of the Civil RightsCongress.THEATRES • CONCERTS • SPORTSFor Less ThoN Corfore . . . We Get Your Tickets!WOODWORTH'S BOOK STOREVARSITY THEATRE TICKET SERVICE1311 EAST 57TH STREET MUSEUM 16772 BLOCKS EAST OF MANDEL HALLI lElDEK’S THE emPES DREG STOREI <OPPOSITE BURTON & JUDSON)fI WELCOMES YOU!I WE FEATCKEAI • ALL LEADING TOILETRY LINESI •A COMPLETE DRUG SERVICEI1 VISIT THE COLLEGE ROOMSERVING FINE FOOD Hyde Park police station.At the station, our group waaseparated. We were told that wewould be booked shortly and thenallowed to call our lawyers andparents. We arrived at the policestation at around 10 o’clock. At11:30 we were still incommuni¬cado. Attorneys who had heard ofour plight w'ere forbidden to speakto us. When we were finally book¬ed, the charges of 1) disorderlyconduct and 2) “suspected Com¬munist meeting” were entered onthe ledger. At the trial the secondcharge failed to appear.Later,..when Prof. Richard Wattof the law school informed thepolice that people were on theirway to the station to post bail,the seven girls were hurriedlytransferred to the 11th Street jail.When the seven of us arrived atthe “central lockup,” we weresearched and put into a cell. Dur¬ing our stay at the Hyde Park sta¬tion and on the way downtown, wewere repeatedly insulted with“Why don’t you go back to Rus¬sia?” and “You kids are just abunch of Commies,” from the po¬licewomen and plain-clothesmenat the station.We were told that we would beallowed to call our parents after wewere booked. One of the girls waaexpected home at midnight by afather with a heart condition, yetshe was not permitted to contacthim.We remained downtown forabout an hour, when several menfrom the 5th Ward Progressiveparty arrived with bail. They weretold that bond was set at $25 perperson plus “sales tax” to be paidif they didn’t want us held over¬night, The “tax” was paid andwe were released.In court the next morning, ourtrial lasted all of five minutes.The case was dismissed,SQ Book Exchangestill openThe Student Book Exchange atIda Noyes, conducted by the UCStudent Assembly will be opentoday from 11 to 3. and next weekfrom Tuesday to Friday, inclusive.The exchange, under the direc¬tion of Jerry Green wald, wasfounded last quarter by StudentGovernment to enable studentsto obtain books at prices sub¬stantially lower than those nowbeing charged for new books andto dispose of books for which theyno longer have use.The exchange is located on th«second floor of Ida Noyes HalLLINCOLN MERCIJKYIN HYDE PARKSpecializing In Ford ProductsWE SERVICE A]>1D REPAIRALL MAKES OF ALTOSSIMONIZEBODY AND FENDER WORKFactory Trained mechanicsLAKE PARK MOTORS, in<5601 HARPER AVE.S. TAUBER, President E. KAPLAN, Treasurer277i)BB %‘F*>?{ t. < :'^W-^''y 1? • f': :M-r. s*^.;Fiii.^:.K-;'*;S£’- c*- e" '* '> "'■'.f■Si"i*“H-i-'#i:K-';$Y'0":ffC;'•rr - -J' " J I--’ i- f*. '■—" -- -r5ri-'‘*.i,.>J'5,v?‘fj.:.-;w-''..:• .•:•• ,-. • - = .’•■'"•,./•■•:• ■'.•'• v*'-' i»'-.^.-',“ • . ■ ,'u-.;- •-■• • .•'••' .•.,. -I-.- ’•■- ■:'?■-■ ’-'■ '•■• •‘V ■ ■'• ' ’?•' • •V';y ’ ■ v-fV,- /■••• - ;■.• ,.•.',. ■ ■: ■' ... -: ■ • .• •;,,. ••• - ',. ' .O':-"T.: ■•’ >'; 'T '• ,'-v'-"*'--v- ' •*'•■■' ■ '■, ® ^ ‘v f ^ , V \ " ' J, ,**■*' J * * - ' f"'*'" ' r*" 'x ' ' 'THi CHICAOO MAROON ftkksf, 3^if 2, 1948The MaroonACP AtMmerieuMg 1945, 1949, 1947DAVID S.^ CANTER JOHN H. MATHISEditor Business MonogerGERALD M. SCHERBA^ Managing EditorACP All-American, 1945, 1949, 1947Issued weekly by the publisher, The Chicago Maroon, at the publicationemlce, 57|6 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Distributed free ofcharge, and subscriptions by mail, fl per quarter.EXECUTIVE EDITORS: Miriam Raraks, Joan M. Brady, David Broyles, Art Dubin-sky, Joan Gansberg, Herb Halbrccht, Cynthia Hendry, Betty Jane Stearns,Andrew Foldi, Eugene Du Fresne, John Keating, Barbara Blumenthal, Rosa¬line Biason, A1 Whitney, Geraldine Byrne.Editorial OpinionThe Mat is OutThe MAROON welcomes the new summer students tothe campus, and to the many activities provided by theorganizations of the University. Never before have so manybeguilements offered themselves to lure the studentaway from his books during the hot summer days andnights. If the newcomer is athletically minded, there aresports fields, four gyms, and sports outings. The sight-seeris equally well provided for by a number of tours by theStudent Union.For the culturally minded, besides the regular facili¬ties provided by Greater Chicago (and this town bows onlyto one other city—^you know who—in such matters,) theUniversity offers concerts, plays, museums and exhibits;also, access to almost any class or seminar the student hastime to attend after taking in the aforementioned events.The educational program is the most outstanding fea¬ture of the new summer session. Never before so manyclasses, workshops, and seminars, embracing so variedmany fields of study, been offered at this time of the year.Workshops, a method of investigation and problem solvingthat this school happily pioneered, have been expandedtremendously to meet the flood of requests from all overthe country. No other single factor has helped to improvethe standards of American education as have these summercourse, whose influence has pervaded the national ‘littlered schoolhouse” for over forty years.Finally, the MARCX)N offers itself as one of the facili¬ties on campus to help the new student, no matter who heIs, where he or she comes from, or for what reason. Thefreedom of expression given to its staff by an honestly lib¬eral university may shock some of you who come frommore rule-conscious schools. But that freedom is used, asbest we can, which is all one can ask of any grant of free¬dom—to serve the community in the best way we knowhow to do. We offer all the news there is, features on schoollife and thought, a medium of self-expression to the wholeitudent body.We hope your stay at the University of Chicago willbe a most pleasant and profitable experience.Our police -state police\ Chicago’s “finest” has done it again.' Pouncing on a peaceful group of young people, among^om were University of Chicago students, the policelocked them in jail, denying the mtheir basic civil rights.Labor, too, has suffered from the gestapo tactics of thenotorious Captain Barnes and his “labor detail.”The Fernwood riots further show Chicago police neg¬ligence and inability to handle race hatred.When gangsters do violence to citizens, the “finest”Btand by helplessly.Youth, labor, minorities, the general public—all suffer.Mayor Kennelly bears responsiblity for failing to dosomething about such confusion, hysteria, and police-statetactics in our own back yard.“Defenders” of the public — bah! Letters To The EditorA coolition ticket'Dear Editor:Despite his manful renuncia¬tion, Eisenhower’s persistent popu¬larity in various polls indicate hemay be “drafted” for the presi¬dential candidacy — perhaps evenon the weak Democratic ticket,which could use bolstering.Dewey is popufar, tooDewey’s triumphant marchthrough the Republican Conven¬tion has “evoked” strong Farmer-Labor support. It’s not improbablethat he may win the support ofquite a few people.Not a few commentators havenoticed the possible confusioncaused by opponents so much likeeach other in political beliefs.I hove a suggestionShould these men run againsteach other, I offer the followingconciliatory suggestion for thesetroubled times, when the politicalarena is so rife with strife.Let both parties join in havingprinted a “coalition” poster, bear¬ing the picture of Dewey or Eisen¬hower — it doesn’t really matterwhom — with the solgan “Deweyand/or ruin” (or “Eisenhowerand/or ruin”). Such a sloganwould be agreeable to both parties.A single design could reduce print¬ing bills; and hot-headed partisansof either party would not pull theother party’s posters from fences,etc.—Williom FinKefsteinWindermere diseriminatssDear Editors:Recently, while making housingarrangements for Students forWallace National Planning Con¬ference, I had the unfortunate ex¬perience of going to the HotelWindermere East. After a briefconference on rates with thewoman in charge of group reser¬vations I was asked very sweetly ifthere were any Negroes in mygroup. The woman rushed on toexplain that of course the hoteldidn’t care but they had a greatnumber of residents, etc., etc., etc.(after all, some of my best friendsare hotel managers). We, as stu¬dents in this community can dovery little about this situation, butwe can take some “action.” Wecan stop patronizing the hotel. Wecan make sure that any groupswe have contact with know of thissituation. I hope this type of “ac¬tion” does not go against anyone’smetaphysical principles.—-Bru<e SoganImprove fhe droitTo the Editor:The proposed Selective ServiceBill now before the Congress ofthe United States, at this date,contains no provision for educa¬tional benefits to men who will bedrafted.Will interrupt educationMany of us in the 18-20 agegroup affected will have our col¬lege training interrupted for suchOn The Beam • • •Have you ever seen the UC Com¬mons employees display their CIObuttons? These workers belong toihe CIO Public Workers Local 568,covering the University mainte¬nance and restaurant departments.There are many students, work¬ing for the University, who aremembers of this union. They,eJong with many other membersof the community, are very con¬cerned over their security. Theydemonstrate this concern by join¬ing Local 568.The flood of new members intoliocal 568 is not just a whimsicalturn of fate. It can largely beattributed to the local’s PresidentMike McCarthy. A millwright atthe University power plant, Mikehas been a trade unionist for overten years.^Fighting Mike**The members of his local callhim “Fighting Mike.” He hasearned this title by the fightingapirit he displays in dealing withthe University management, andhis unswerving efforts to makethe local lead the field in wage,xetirement and other gains. He By DAVID S. CANTERhas been devoting his two-weekvacation in working full-time forhis union. From 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.,Mike tramps through the campustalking to members and non-mem¬bers, signing them up, taking uptheir grievances and giving themencouragement.“Fighting Mike McCarthy,” whoreally understands the workingconditions at the Universitystated: “After one quarter centuryof service. University workers havenothing to retire on, nothing tolook forward to in their old age.The wages are so pitifully smallthat the vast majority of peoplehave no savings and many haveto work at other outside jol^ tomake ends meet. This is the bestproof of the need for one strongfighting union on campus.”And according to the way mem¬bership cards are piling up, theway workers display their CIObuttons and talk union, is a goodindication that the membershipof Local 568 feel exactly the sameway.• ♦ • Yesterday Haberdasher Harrymade the headlines. This time,he came up with a runningmate: Eleanor. When Clare saidthat Harry would never pickEleanor because it was too in¬telligent a move to make, Harrydidn’t want to pass up a chanceto be be called intelligent. Maybehe ought to make Clare his per¬sonnel manager.* * «Freedom is in Chicago. Freedomfor those who with their pint-sized minds abuse those who tryto uphold their principles andideals. On the eve of IndependenceDay, fresh after the people’s de¬feat of the* Mundt-Nixon bill,fresh after the Hearstian smear ofa high school civic teacher back¬fired, came word of an attack ona growing people’s movement tosecure support for its program.The police raid on the Hyde ParkYouth For Wallace must not gounanswered. What will be a raidon a peaceful attack today willbe, if unanswered by Chicago citi¬zens, an attack on the rest of thecitizenry. service. We feel that we shouldreceive government aid to com¬plete the interrupted educationand furthers that such aid shouldbe extended to qualified men who,at present, are unable to affordthe cost of higher education.Our case is based on the factthat similar benefits were givento men enlisting or drafted intothe Armed Forces up to 15 monthsafter the cessation of hostilities.Money spent for legitimate edu¬cation Is a sound Investment inthe future of our country.Urge actionWe urge all interested studentsand citizens to contact their con¬gressmen at oncel We also requestinterested students or studentcommittees to contact us to assistin a nation-wide publicity pro¬gram.The Students Commiftee for Educo-ttonol Benefits, University ofConnecticut.William M. Forter, ChoirmanIs Douglas liberal?To the Editor:There are some students on thecamp\is who insist that liberalvoters should support the Demo¬cratic machine in Illinois becauseone of its candidates is Paul Doug¬las. I don’t want to go into thematter of whether or not Douglasis a true liberal in this letter butI would like to pose a qiycstionabout his party machine.I had a disheartening experi¬ence with the Democradc Partymachine. I was walking downSouth Parkway. I was orderly andminding my own business. I heardloud speakers on a parked soundtruck. The speakers were sup¬porters of Harry Truman for Presi¬dent and Paul Douglas for Sena¬tor. I walked further on down thePUBLIC street so as to hear moreclearly the speakers’ argumentsthat Truman was a great liberal.I was wearing a “WALLACE IN’48” button on my lapel. And Irepeat I WAS ORDERLY. Fourburley Democratic Party goons(hoodlums or gangsters W’ould be abetter term) jumped out of aparked car (the automobile wasclearly an official Democrat pub¬licity car), grabbed me,*forcefullyturned me around, roughly rushedme along toward from where Ihad come. They told me that ifI came back they would “fix” me.My question to these Paul Doug¬las touters is: Do you think that apolitical party that engages insuch police state practices is aparty ^that liberals and progres-sivej can vote for?—.“Buck” ForrisBishop callsMAROON funDear Editors:I find the MAROON very inter¬esting these days. The attempt tomake it both a newspaper and ajournal of opinion is fascinating—and must occasionally be baffling.In the old days, 40 years ago weeditors just went in for news; itwas simpler and cheaper and lessbbthersome—^but it wasn’t as muchfun!-^Bishop Bernard Iddings BellForm ifew commiMeeDear Students:As student leaders we are filledwith deep anxiety for a peace socostly yet so insecure. As studentleaders we feel a particular re¬sponsibility to keep a level head,to realize that war is not the an¬swer to the world’s problems, tocontinue the fight for a lastingpeace.Establish CISCThe current war hysteria makesit all the more urgent that we re¬double our efforts to promoteinternational understanding andfriendship. Therefore, a group ofstudent leaders have establishedthe Committee for InternationalStudent Cooperation.Letters ore printed as o computservice. The letters to the Editorcolumns ore open to oil Universitymembers to write on ony subjectthey choose.Due to spoce limttotions futureletters ore restricted to 150 words.THE EDITORS At the start, the Committeerecognized that the InternationalUnion of Students provides thesole means for cooperation amongstudents of all nations, particular,ly those of the United States andthe Soviet Union. Consequently,the Committee decided its firsttasks would be: ^OuMines definite program1. To provide American studentswith factual information about theInternational Union of Students;2. To establish the means bywhich American students couldavail themselves of the many sum¬mer travel opportunities arrangedby the lUS;3. To help broaden Americanstudent participation in the lUS.Asks sfudent supportIn carrying out this work wewelcome your moral and financialsupport. If, unfortunately, you feelunable to give such support, wewill be glad just tC' send you ourliterature. In either case it willbe necessary for you to fill out theenclosed card with your propermailing addresses and return itto us.Together, you and hundreds ofother student leaders can makeinternational student cooperationa reality and contribute mightilyto peace in our time. We believeyou will agree that is worth fight¬ing for!Russell Austin Hoyt PolinerRito Judd joyco RobertseZttrCLn A.Lee Marsh Wolter WotloceCommittee for Intemotionol StudentCooperotion23 West 26th Street, N.V.C,MAROON is no goodVery bluntly, the CHICAGOMARCX)N has that sparkle andpersonality missing—very decid¬edly. It’s like one big super-colos¬sal bulletin board with as muchiridividuality as the slats on apicket fence. What about an oc¬casional quip, or something? And,Northwestern U. isn’t quite as hadas you Ed’s make out. You mustbe very short on material to stoopto this name-calling.Morgoiith RofmonMeLove and kitsei^vPsych Depf disc rim inofesTo the Editor: 'Nice liberals like us, we don’tlike to think about nasty littleunions like the Hodcarriers andall, who charge exhorbitant en¬trance fees and demand exces¬sively long apprenticeships just inorder to keep down the number ofhod carriers and save the jobs forthe favored few. We get the heaveswhen we think of restrictive prac-tices-^ke that.And then we pick up theMAR(X>N and see that the psychdepartment of the University ofChicago is going to denmndEIGHT years of university train¬ing before anybody gets job rights,from now on. That’s $175 a quar¬ter, a minimum of 24 quarters—you figure it up. The hodcarriersare sissies compared to us.Keep out the riffroffUnderstand, we have only thenoblest of reasons. Only the verybest hodcarriers, upps, I meanpsychologists, for the public, afterall. We have a sacred duty to per¬form. Out of 1,000 applicants nextfall we shall select 25 to start.Such a nice round number, don’tyou think? And then we plan toput the heat on them plenty foreight years “weeding them out”and seeing to it that the ones whoremain are nice and soggy andpliable the way we like them.Naturally they will be fitted foronly the best positions. We can’tbe bothered training the riffraff,and twenty or so good ripe onesshould be plenty about eight yearsfrom now. It isn’t as though thepublic NEEDED psychologist!;—Edith M* Ldntx 'Don’t get us wrong, brother. Webelieve, in education for all, yessiree. We love the common manlike a brother, it’s just a matter ofnot having room for that kind onour campus. We know how thehodcarriers feel, got to keeD-UPthose wage rates somehow.THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5fiday, Svly 2, ^948v\acDougall is instrument to beat>aul Douglas in Senatorial raceBy JACK SIEGELIf there were ever any question about the aims of thehird party in Illinois, the candidacy of Curtis MacDougallor the Senate nnakes everything clear. The so-called “Pro-ressives” are not interested in electing their man or ineating Col. McCormick and his Washington stooge. Theyre out “to get” Paul Douglas. They are out to get Mr.)ouglas because they knowtruly liberal voice in the Unitedtales Senate and one thing theyon’t want is a rebirth of liberal-m in this nation,pposes dictatorships offt and rightThe scurrilous and libelous at-ick which has been launchedgainst Mr. Douglas would not or-inarily deserve the dignity of an[iswer. But it is of paramountnportance that the voters of Illi-ois realize the true issues beforelem.Paul Douglas is a life-longn e m y of totalitarianism. Helows dictatorship at first hand,iving spent time both in theiviet Union and in Mussolini’saly. He learned to abhor despot-m from whatever direction itime. He was warning his fellow-tizens of the Nazi danger andjhting for FDR’s foreign policythe same time that many of thelird party followers were picket-g the White House and de-luncing our late President as aar-monger,'csents program for peaceDouglas was in the forefront ofle fight for the New Deal on thecal scene. As far back as 1929,( embarked on a campaign whichsuited in the destruction of In¬n’s utility empire. He was aader in the fight for the Illinoisid-Age Pension Bill and, at thehest of Governor Horner, wrotee State Unemployment Insur-ice Act which became law in37. Elected to the city council1939, he conducted a one-man :hat his election would placecrusade against the city ma¬chines, which culminated in theDemocratic primaries of 1942. Hiscourageous battle won him the re¬spect and admiration ot the liberalelements of this nation.Reared in the Quaker faith andknowing war at first-hand fromhis four-year service in the Ma¬rine Corps, Paul Douglas is nowa leader in the fight for peace. Heproposes to strengthen the UnitedNations at its two weakest points:the abuse of the veto power andthe lack of an international policeforce. Because he feels that theindependence of Europe is depend¬ent on its economic recovery, heis a staunch supporter of the Mar¬shall plan. His domestic programincludes: effective action to checkthe rise in prices, a housing billserving the interests of the lowerand middle income groups, repealof the Taft-Hartley Law, and de¬struction of economic monopoly.Communists, Tribune favor BrooksThe Communists, who takecredit for organizing the thirdparty, are opposed to Paul Doug¬las because they know him to bea vigorous champion of humanfreedom. The non-Communist ele¬ments in the party, including Pro¬fessor MacDougall, are merelydupes through whom the Commieshope to accomplish their evil ends.They want America to be solddown the river to reaction becausethey know that Communism breedson reaction.Attention!U. of C.StudentsDo You Knowfhat you hare one of Chicogo's best known neigh¬borhood stores right at your own front door?The Star Department Store is headquortersfor over 250 well-known standard brands of mer¬chandise and has served its community well, foralmost half a century.open Monday and Thursday Nites Republicans stir disgustBy ART DUBINSKYHow long can the present two-party system last v/hen the convention method is usedto pick the candidates? Not very long, if the late Republican shindig is an example.Any observer who went down to Philadelphia without approaching the leading con¬tenders for promises of patronage, influence, or a seat in the Cabinet, left without a dozenpromises and without hope. In fact, he left with an almost mystic belief in the State con¬cept, since that entity has proven itself able to survive two or more such catastrophiesevery four years.The final result was satisfactoryto party hacks waiting eagerly atthe trough after 16 years of fa¬mine. Hundreds of hopeful am¬bassadors and thousands of pros¬pective assistant postmasters leftthe Philadelphia madhouse hap¬pily counting the spoils and think¬ing their time well-spent. Theyare alone. The independent voter,and even the regular Republican,was cheated of all right to self-expression.Psych warfare is urgedPsychological warfare and prom¬ises are the only weapons availableto the managers of the candidatesat a convention and, inevitably,both are worked to death longbefore the balloting begins. Bythat time, no thoughtful delegatehas left either concern for the wel¬fare of his country or belief inhis own sanity. Rumors picked upin hotel lobbies and bars are apoor substitute for rational dis¬cussion. Bandwagons are not is¬sues, stampedes do not expressconvictions, and convention land¬slides do not even pretend to bereal unanimity.All that really happened inPhiladelphia, discounting the vapid speeches, useless and bitter re¬criminations, the staged, stereo¬typed enthusiasm was this:Dewey’s three campaign managersmade more and better promises tomore favorite sons, delegationheads, and individual dejpgates.Among the rank and file assem¬bled from all over the country,there was universal recognitionthat Bob Taft was a better man,that Harold Stassen made a bet¬ter campaign and was personallymore acceptable, and that Van-denberg had a better grasp of for¬eign policy than the one Deweyeven pretended to espouse.New Democrats show stuffBut it is all over now exceptthe electioneering. When theDemocrats also go to Philadelphiaon July 12 to pick their versionof the “peoples cherce,” the lineswill be set for the final knock¬down, dragout fight in the great¬est battle of American democracy.Let the politically active studentson this campus take heart fromthe national scene when they be¬come depressed over charges of muddled thinking, sloganeering, orbase ulterior motives in their ac¬tivities, because their’s is nowherenear as bad as the Big Time.Random notes from areporter’s notebook:Sen. Bricker nominating Taft:“Colorful, energetic . . . dashing. . . snatched Labor’s liberty fromthe jaws of the New Deal . , ,stands on the record of the 80thCongress.” The demonstrationafter this nominating speech wasdominated by the^ greeting cardindustry’s slogans for Taft, whichhid the delegates. . . . broke upwith four or five verses of “I’mLooking Over a Four Leaf Clover”and “Onward Christian Soldiers.”Schoolmasters lecture alsoSometime around midnightWednesday, when the conventionwas just settling down to nomi¬nating speeches, a lady delegate,seconding somebody, came up withthis quote: “Since we women cannever be president, we can affordto be honest.”Douglas students honor UtleyIndependent Students for Paul Douglas held a receptionfor Clifton Utley, honorary chairman of the state group, onMonday, June 14, at the Sherman Hotel. Other guests in¬cluded Alderman Robert Merriam of the Fifth Ward andEmily Taft Douglas, former Congresswoman-at-large, fromIllinois.Members of the University of Chicago group accompany Sproule (Prexy of the Universityof California) nominating Warren. . . sounds like a schoolmasterlecturing delegates ... He makesit sound as if Warren really wantsthe nomination, which is opposedto what several California dele¬gates told me. Now Irene Dunnewaltzes up to say a few sweetwords for her dear Governor. Getsattention, too, even while dullyreading a very dull script.Mr. Douglas, who is Democraticcandidate for Senator, on histour of large factories in theChicago area. They have dis¬tributed literature during hisspeeches to the workers and havealso done office work at his down¬town headquarters.The U of C group, headedby Jack Siegel and Bert Rovens,is planning to organize precinctworkers for the November elec¬tion. Several campus meetings,to acquaint Summer Session stuTERESA DOLANDANCING SCHOOL1208 E. 63rd St (Nr. WoodlowniLEARN TO DANCE NOW!We can teach you to be a reallygood dancer Our years of experi¬ence is your guarantee. No frills—Just satisfying results. Let us helpyou now!PRIVATE LESSONSDAILY 11 A.M. TO 11 P.M.Call for Trial LessonLearn Waltz, Pox Trot, Rumba,Samba and Tango In group lessons,$1.00. Sun., Mon., Tues., Wed., Sat.Evenings at 8:00.Phone Hyde Park 3080 dents with Mr. Douglas and thecampaign issues, will also be held.A VC execs plansThe executive committee of theU. of C. chaptei of AVC has map¬ped out chapter activities for thesummer quarter.Principal emphasis will be plan¬ned on membership recruitmentand renewal of old memberships.Dues must be paid before Septem¬ber if the member is to be repre¬sented at the National Conventionthis year. Working jointly on thedrive are Karl Zerfoss, actingchairman of AVC, and membershipchairman Ruth Wedge.A carnival, to be held from July13 to 25 on 55th Street will be themain event this quarter. Booths,games, rides, and a raffle—thewinner of which will receive a new1949 Mercury 4-door sedan—willbe featured. Volunteers to ope..*atethe carnival are urged to contactJohn Keating or George Bl^k-wood in the AVC office. ^ “A dirty convention”At 2 a.m., the janitors begandrifting in, to stare impatientlyat the backs of the newspapermen,who were just as restless as thedelegates. The galleries were be¬ginning to empty. One of the jani¬tors declared loudly, to nobody inparticular, that this conventionwas the dirtiest ever, worse thanthe foundry, why it was almost asdirty as the Democrats in ’36.The Stassen parade is buildingup in the corridor outsid** . . ,balloons, farmers, flags, rattles . . *like New Year’s Eve, but dry, dry. . . Judd is giving Stassen a veryodd boost with a clean, practicalspeech: “You have been very kindin honoring us, but all the creditbelongs to father and mother . , ,God . , . education , , . countryGreof American apple pie ^... No obstacle is ^ great foran American upbringing . . . nowa very awkward drum majorette istwirling on the speaker’s rostrum,and a pretty blond is riding aroundin a rowboat . . . s5anbolizing theNavy, I suppose. ise. H O E S5 5 +h STWelcome!—UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOSTUDENTSCome In ond Take Advantageof Our 10% Discountto Students SHOEFITTING At 4:15 in the morning, withthe galleries and the press rowmostly empty, and the delegatesproperly groggy, they led up adeaf and blinded vet to nominateGen. MacArthur.I left.TRAVELOI\LUGGAGETrunksPursesLeatherNoveltiesExpert RepairingOur Speciality1002 E. 63rd St.Ckicogo 37, 111,THE CHICAGO MAROON Fridoy, July 2, 1948UC students awardedprizes for scholarship Communist Club expandsfor summer activityRobert M. Strozier, Dean ofStudents has announced to stu¬dents the awarding of prizes forexcellence in various fields. The The Communist Club plans anextensive program for the sum¬mer quarter. Most important willbe a discussion series on “Intro-The Presbyterian Westminster duction to Marxian EconomicPresbyfers give tea cept of National Sovereignty-Obsolete?” -Is itfollowing people received such Fellowship gives a tea from 4 to Analysis” to be presented everyAwards: Donald Joseph Goldman, 5 p. m. at the Chap)el House on other Thursday evening at 7:30 inthe Milo P. Jewett prize for excel- Wednesday, July 7. New students Social Science 107. Joseph Elbein,lencc in the reading of the Scrip- aie invited to attend this function Economics Major President of thetures; Mrs. Janet Elizabeth Pfeif- and other teas which will be pre- Communist Club, is a long-timefer, the Elizabeth S. Dixon award sented on alternate Wednesdays.. student of Marxian Political Econ-for outstanding work in the first The first supper meeting of the omy. The first discussion tookyear of professional education in Fellowship will be held on July 14 place yesterday,the School of Social Service Ad- at 5:45 p. m. at Chapel House. Another big attraction early thisministration; Joseph Robert Reservations should be made by quarter will be the first appear-Schwartz, the Elizabeth R. Nor- calling Chapel House by Monday, ance in over two years of Gilton prize in Chemistry; Edward ^2.A. Muir and Arvid Shulenberger, I t I Ithe John Billings Fiske Poetry RoUnO TsdIcpru», with honorable mention go- 1. 1 ffing to Robert A. Park, Neal Oxen- cllSCUSSeS JenerSOn Green, Chairman of the Commu¬nist Party of Illinois, who willspeak on July 9, 3:30 p.m. in LawSouth. He will speak on “The Con- Open meetingsContinuing its policy 01 havingregular open meetings at whichmembers of the campus may hearthe Communist i>osition and havea free discussion, the CommunistClub has planned a variety of top¬ics, and has invited several questsspeakers to appear at some ofthese. These meetings will takeplace every Monday afternoon, 3p.m., in Ida Noyes, Room A, thirdfloor.The first issue of “On Guard,”a quarterly Journal issued by theClub, will appear on Campus ina few weeks. Hans Freistadt isEditor of the publication.handler Jane Cadmus Parley, and ^ c. Round Table, presents DutrC COtlCeTtKe.U. StuartPeterwn: Armour H. discussion of “Thomas Jefferson ^Nelson, the David Blair McLaugh- the Declaration of Indepen-lin «rize for special skill and sense dence” Sunday at 12*30 p m DClCfTnr,v^.\Srr,rn?‘'?».n ' The first of a Series of fiveprose, Mary Jane Barnard, the The speakers will be Douglas Tuesday evenine organ recitals to^eodore Neff prise for excel- Adair, editor of the Quarterly, and be given by, Marcel Dupre, famouslence in the study of French t. V. Smith, UC professor of phil- prench orvinist and r.nmnoser atlanguage and Iterature. osophy. UPWA local issuestwelve^point programGreat Books to trainleaders this summerThe Great Books Foundation,whose chairman is ChancellorRobert M. Hutchins, announcesthe institution of courses for stu- UC students fight French organist and composer, atRockefeller Memorial Chapel onthe University of Chicago campus,wes held Tuesday.Mr. Dupre, who comes to theMidway derectly from his post atthe St. Sulpice Cathedral in Paris,is one of the world’s renownedBach players. He featured the SixGreat Leipzig Predules and Fuguesof Johann Sebastian Bach in theopening concert. The work con¬sists of Prelude and Fugue. CMajor; Prelude and Fugue, C.dents w'ho are interested in the Mundt-Nixon billfield of adult education. „ , ^The course, designed especially Three University of Chicago Minor; Prelude and Fugue, E.for summer students who are from students participated in a nation- Minor; Prelude and **•small towns or those cities which wide lobby in Washington to fight Major; Fantasy and ^gue,do not have training institutes for the Mundt-Nixon Bill during the ® Mmor; and Prelude and Fugue,Great Books leaders, will train week of June 1. W‘lf conduct classlexers and assist in the Organi- George Gaman, Harold Neiburg, in addition to playing the pub-zation of Great Books groups. In Gene Jacobs joined represen- lic concerts, Mr. Dupre will con-return for the leader training, the Natives of many groups, including duct a master class for advancedcandidates are expected to be will- Rights Congress, in at- organ students during his resi-ing to se^ up great books groups tempting to prevent the Bill from dence on campus from June 28in their conimunities. The only coming up on the Senate floor, through July 31.cost to participants in the discus- They met with Illinois Senators Bach’s “Orgelbuchlein,” con-sions is $9.60 which covers the B^-ooks and Lucas, both of whom sisting of 45 chorales, will be fea-cost of repairs of the 18 titles on ^gre non-committal at that time, tured in Mr. Dupre’s July 6 con-the first year list. “Howeveh”, said George Gaman. cert, music by Cesar Fra,nck inAutumn closes fvo5y.,*r.ix “The tremendous volume of letters July 13, music by Franz Liszt onGreat Books leader ttammg telegrams to Washington, July 20, and live compositionselasses aie schedu ® ' attacking the Bill for its threat to written by Mr. Dupre himself onSection I Monday and Thursday, 2,August 9, 12, lb. 9 . - ’ in the Senate Judiciary Com- Admission to all the concerts isSeptember 2, 9; Section II. Tues- thP nnhlic Local 568 of the United PublicWorkers of America (CIO), whichrepresents the guards and main¬tenance workers at the University,issued a twelve-point program onJune 30.Highlights of the union’s de¬mands are: a 2Qc hourly wage in¬crease, equal pay for equal workfor women, a retirement plan,three weeks vacation each year,(4 weeks for hazardous work), topsettlement of grievances, a guar¬anteed 40-hour week, abolition ofthe UC 5-year plan for wage in¬creases and many others. Want an oportment or a car(ha-ha)?Want term papers writtenfree of charge?Want examinations passedby campus protessionaJs?Lose $1,000 dollars andwant it back?YouMI Find It All inThe Chicago MAROONWant Ad ColumnsWANT ADSWILL EXCHANGE four room furnlshtMlor unfurnished apartment, with kitch¬en and bath. In New Haven near Yale(renting for $40 monthly, utilities notincluded) for similar accommodationsIn Chicago. Apartment wanted by Sep¬tember 15th. Write R. H. Dickerson,3366 Morrison Ave., Cincinnati 20, Ohio.TYPING—Expert. Especially skilled oncollege pafers. Call Butterfleld 6990.WATCH REPAIRING for students.Prompt honest work by U. of C. student.See Jim Boyack, 5746 Klmbark.V. Howard Talley toconduct new course SHARE HOME in Woodlawn area forthe summer—preferred, married coupleor two women students. Call Hyde Park2191.WORKING YOUR way through College?Manuscripts wanted for book tellinghow. Write to J. Walker. 910 N. 14thSt., Milwaukee, for details.The home study department ha-sannounced the introduction intoits curriculum of a new course inPrinciples of Strict Counterpioint.The course will be administeredby V. Howard Talley, assistantprofe.ssor of music, and is de¬signed for three groups of stu¬dents: students out of residence who need additional credits, ac¬complished musical performers orvocalists who wish to round outtheir training with musical the¬ory, and cultured amateur musi¬cians.^ The tuition fee for thecourse Is $35.00.day and Friday, August 10, 13, 17,23, 24, 27, September 3, 7, 10. Thesesections meet from 7:30 to 9:30p.m., a short session meeting from6:30 to 9:30 p.m. has been sched¬uled for August 16, 18, 20, 23, 25,27.Further information on these free and open to the public.Bei gstresser posts new regulationlist for UC Stu(dent organizationscourses may be obtained from theGreat Books Foundation, 58 E.South Water Street, Chicago 1, Ill.,Dearborn 5870.TYPEWRITERSFOR RENTtmm4sdiat€!L. M. MITCHELL1228 East 63rd St.At KimbarkHYDe Pork 1301 John L. Bergstresser, AssistantDean of Students and director ofactivities, released “RegulationsRelative to Student Organiza¬tions”, believing that “student or¬ganizations have a positive edu¬cational value.”“Any group of ten or more stu¬dents may receive University rec¬ognition as a student organiza¬tion, if the purposes of the organi¬zation are consistent with thepiloses of the University, arelegal, and in accord with ordina¬rily recognized standards of goodtaste,” the regulations state. Cop¬ies of the regulations may be ob¬tained in the Dean of Students’Office, Cobb 203, and ReynoldsClub 202, Mi.ss Sarah Ruth Cook, Assist¬ant Director of student activitiesand social adviser, stated that allparties of an all-University naturemust be approved by her office.All social affairs involving mixedgroups with the exception of thoseheld in University buildings mustalso be approved by Miss Cook’soffice. The names and addressesof chaperones, approved by theAssistant Director of Student ac¬tivities, are required at the timea social affair is registered. Cop¬ies of the “All Campus Recrea¬tional and Social Calendar” forthis summer are available at thebookstore. Information office, IdaNoyes Hall and the Reynolds Club,Friday, July 2, 1948 THE CHICAGO MAROON Rage 7ON THE SCREEN The first interviewrHE PURITAN- Directed by Jeff Musse, with Jean - LouisJarroult, Pierre Fresnoy. Based on the norel by Liam O'Flaherty.>ocumentory Film Group, Social Science 122, Tuesday, July 6,r-15 and 9:15. French, with English subtitles.rvn** of the most incisive de- ^ .^riotions of character to be pro- series includes The Puritan,luced by the French industry be- reviewed a^ve, a collection ofore the war, this unpretentiousconcerns itself with the mind Chickadee, on July 20; a col-Religious fanatic, a member of l^^tion of experimental art films,‘ VuflX society.” Forever «"<>» 0«projecting his own conflicts into ^^^ust 3, The Nuremberg Trials,he world about him. the Puritan August 10; ^d The Seventh Veil,hurders a girl that he considers *'*«'“* ™esc Aims wil be re-“be loose in morals. Conceiving "e*"* regularly in this column,his murder to be ‘‘divine re- The Film Study Group series,ribution,” his confidence in his entitled this quarter; From Cali-pwn God-like righteousness is «»»•» to Hitler, -presents five Ger-anashed when the Society fails to man films of extraordinary inter-ipprove. The resulting mental tur- est to the student. They cover thenoil makes it easy for the police history of Germany’s film industryo catch up with him. from the earliest times to Hitler’s. , heyday. The series will be shownJean-Louis Bariault ^ the Pur - international House Auditoriuman puts in a remaikable perform- Fridays, beginning July 16;ince. No^ recently ^r his role a^misison is by series ticket only.the hero in Lea Enfants de Cabinet of Or. Caligarl, The-aradia. this earlier performance Siegfried, and The Love ofE fully up to the standards of the included in the$1.25 ticket.The Communist Club plans to A study of a venerable journalistic stand-by;its sources, history and practice tracedBy MIRIAM BARAKSThe journalistic practice of ringing doorbells, lurking around corners, and torturingpoor secretaries in order to get Senator Blah’s opinion on a vital topic originated in1859. In that year The New York Herald sent a reporter to question philanthropist GerrittSmith, who had been connected with the John Brown raid at Harper’s Ferry. The re¬porter asked numerous questions. Mr. Smith revealed nothing whatsoever in a very inter¬esting manner, and the interview was born.Piom this sensational beginning,Jthe interviewing mania spread to marry the late Mr. Richardson have cared. After all, it was prob-throughout the country. Everybody and Mrs. McFarland. ably done to help the children,of any note, or anyone guilty of Greeley: It’s a damned lie! I Reporter (innocently): Whoseany crime or extraordinary act, never asked anybody to marry children? McFarland’s?was visited by representatives of anyone in my life. I’ve been too Greeley: No, Richardson’s. Theythe press. State houses and state busy. Besides, I didn’t even know need at least one legal parent. Iprisons were ransacked for no- ^be couple. Mrs. Calhoun did, how- think that for their sake Mrs. Mc-torious subjects. On the eve of the ever, and asked me to write to Rev- Parland should be called Mrs.Civil War, Confederate leaders erend Beecher, telling him that Richardson,were explaining away to the peo- sbe was a friend of mine. That’s Bod times set inpie through the interviewing me- I wrote. Nowadays, unfortunately, theredium. As soon as the first trans- Reporter: Then it is not true are no murders in newspaper of •Atlantic cable had been laid, some that^Mrs. Calhoun went as your fices and no Horace Greeleys tnater film.ilm plons for summerThe Documentary Film Group show La Marseillaise, a FrenchHill be fully active this quarter, epic treatment of the events ofHith a fiction and documentary 89, on July 14; further plans in-eries and the usual Film Study elude Crime et Chatiment for JulyW‘ries. The fiction and documen- 28 and a third film two weeksary series will be held in Social later. These films will be reviewedk-ience 122 on Tuesdays; single before their campus showings,admissions are thirty-five cents. —Eugene Rivard DuFresne enterprising soul achieved a world representative?scoop by interrogating Napoleon Greeley: CertainlyIII and having the article publish¬ed in America only forty-eight be interviewed. Instead, there areMrs. movie stars with exposed legs andpoliticians with seven-inch cigars.Good interviews, however, areoften entertaining and instruc¬tive. They provide excellent oppor-reporter from The New York Sun Greeley: Besides, what are all tunities for statesmen to com-not.Calhoun couldn’t represent me.Reporter: I am sure that no onehours later. But the climax to this could represent so wonderful acraze was capped when a brave you, sir. (Mutual bows.)went three doors to the left and ^be papers making such a row municate their ideas to the pub-LITERARY SERVICE1367 EAST 57TH STREET• TYPIMC;• IHIIHKOGRAPIIINO• EDITING• IVKITEKS^ KESEARCHReosonoble Rotes Phone MUS. 0036AFTER THE GAMEPAUSE FOR COKEnomm fiojnc# 4IITM/''Drrv ^ -WCOCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF CHICAGO, INC.© 1948, The Coco-Cola CoMpony interviewed Horace Greeley, edi-_ .. about? If it hadn’t happened in lie, dissipate erroneous impres-tor-in-chief of The New York ^be Tribune office, nobody would sions, and clarify state policies.Tribune and eloquent foe of allother publications.Greeley smarf cookieThe topic of the interview wasGreeley’s connection with a no- Hither and YonBy AL WHITNEY.The Utah Chronicle recent- day’s lesson whenface of a gargoyle and the pas- Belgrade campus. DuringSion of a paia^ium. Thank God intermission members of thethe sex^ fad IS still extent this side poiitburo will be hung in effigy.members of the Politics Clubof the University of Chicago areof the Mississippi.A University of Texas accounttorious scandal that had origin¬ated in, of all places, the sacredoffice of the Tribune. Albert D. The Utah Chronicle recent- day’s lesson when a student re-Richardson, a writer and a share- |y conducted a poll of its read- marks, “But sir, that isn’t whatholder in the Tribune, had been f. ,given a good start toward Heaven subject of ideal Ys on page . eby the revolver of Daniel Mc-Far- dates and mates. The follow- book is wrong!” intoned the prof,land, the cause being alleged im- jj.jp, •y^0j.0 named as the quali- student calmly tore the pageproper intimacy with Mrs, McFar- ^ fhP wpsfprn ^^ok. let it fall to theland. Just before Richardson’s de- aesiieO py ine western i .mise, he and Mrs. McFarland were men in a good wife: good man- ® settled back to listen m>married by the Rev. Henry Ward ager, good companion, good cook, fbe rest of the lecture,Beecher. The rumor has spread socially able to meet husband's Studenfs invited to roilythat the venerable Greeley him- friends and business associates, Blooded Yugo.slavianself had a.sked Dr. Beecher to per- trustworthy, loyal, helpful, kind,form the ceremony, and, anxious and thrifty. We always wondered Girls Club at the Uni¬te procure a self-stated barb where Boy Scouts went to college, versity of Belgrade will sponsor aagainst him. the Sun had sent one Now we know. Apparently the B dance next Friday night in theof its reporters over for an inter- hypothetical goddess can have the gymnasium of Ida Noyesovich Hallview. . - -Age of politenessReporter: It has been statedthat Mrs. Calhoun went to theReverend Henry Ward Beecherwith a letter written by you inwhich you asked Reverend Beecher ing professor was explaining the cordially invited to attend.Reproductions of English thea¬tres, rather than term papers wereassigned to University of Texasstudents who are taking a coursein the development of Englishdrama. At last American studentsare being liberated from over¬emphasis on theory. In the futurebusiness students will build modelsof banks, divinity students willmake churches, law students willfabricate ambulances, and chemis¬try majors will produce oil re¬fineries. We are transferring ourregistration to child developmenttomorrow morning.Bergstresser totalk to teachersJohn L. Bergstresser, assistantDean of Students and Director ofActivities addresses the Guidanceand Personnel Conference on thesubject of “Some Significant As-p«3Cts of the Client-centered Coun¬sellor Training Program at theUniversity of Chicago.” Mr. Berg¬stresser is chairman of the after¬noon session of the conff’rence,which will take place in BelfieldHall 159 at 2 p.m.The morning session of the con¬ference, whose general topic is“Preparation and Certification ofCounsellors,” meets in Belfield 159at 9:30 a.m. Speakers at this ses¬sion are William E. Scott, chair¬man, Lester Bartlett, Nancy E.Wimmer and Thoman E. Kennedy.Following Mr. Bergstresser’s talkat the aftemon session, the con¬ference will hear addresses byDonald L. Grummon, John M.Butler and Nathaniel J.' Raskin.ISBELL'SChicogo's Most’CELEBRATEDRESTAURANTS1435 E. 51st Street940 Rush Street590 Diversey Pkwy.1063 Bryn Mawr Ave.UNIVERSITY LIQUOR STORE1131-33 East 55th StreetFor Hot Summer DaysTry ATALL COOLCOLLINSHige 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON Fridoy; July 2, 1948Metcalf announces continuedcomplete recreational facilities Schedule radiation lecturesThe complete athletic facilities of the university will remain open throughout thesummer quarter. T. Nelson Metcalf, Physical Education head announced here today.Facilities for men at Bartlett Gym and for women at Ida Noyes are immediatelyavailable for all studeijts and faculty members six days a week.Sto99 left open —In addition to the swimmingpool where life saving classes willbe taught, Bartlett Gym offers' facilities for tumbling, basketball,gsnnnastics and weight lifting.Stagg Field, which will be opendaily for track, golf, horseshoes,tennis, lawn bowling, baseball,softball, squash and handball, isexpected to be left open after theusual 7 p. m. closing time ifenough students request it.J. Kyle Anderson, Assistant Di¬rector of Athletics emphasized thefact that all athletic instruction isgiven without charge to registeredstudents. Anderson also openedregistration in an informal varsitybaseball team formed to play twi¬light games on campus.Itfo Noyes actiritiesAt Ida Noyes, classes in swim¬ming, tennis and golf have beenscheduled for registered womenStudents. Dancing and bowlingclasses are open to both men andwomen.Edith Ballweber women’s Ath¬letic Director pointed out that thefield in back of Ida Noyes is avail¬able for golf, picnics and broquet.Miss Ballweber mentioned thatthere are table tennis, billiard andcard tables in Ida Noyes at alltines. Paddles, balls and cards areavailable in the check room of IdaNoyes.Further information on athlet¬ics may be obtained from the of¬fice on the first floor of BartlettOym.Schedule women's tennisRegistration is now open for theWomen’s Singles and Doubles Ten¬nis Tournament, Zelda Leslie, ofthe Women’s Physical EducationDepartment, announced here to¬day.The tournament will begin onJuly 7. Summer quarter institutes, lectures,conferences listed by administrationA diversified program of insti¬tutes, conferences, and public lec¬tures for the summer quarter wasannounced this week by the ad¬ministration.An Institute for AdministrativeOfficers of Higher Institutions willbe held in Judson Lounge on July6 and 7 under the chairmanshipof Professor Ralph Tyler, chair¬man of the department of educa¬tion. The Institute for the study Fritz W. Went, professor ofplant physiology at the CaliforniaInstitute of Technilogy, will de¬liver 15 guest lectures dealingwith various aspects of plant phy¬siology at the University of Chica¬go this summer.Professors Went’s lectures willbe held at 3 p. m. Tuesdays, Wed¬nesdays, and Thursday, June 29through July 29, In the Botanybuilding (inside quadrangles at57th street and University ave.).of the History of Culture will of¬fer a series of eight lec -.ures in The XT<f f cr*Ji nnJ h t>n AHumanism of the Renaissance * J-••'C-from July 6 through August 24. larUirP<t tPftrUpYQThe first lecture will be held in CoClassics 10, succeeding ones in So¬cial Science 122. In connectionwith the fiftieth anniversary ofthe school of Business a Manage¬ment Institute for Smaller Busi¬ness will be held August 2 through7.T. V. Smith seriesThe Spiritual I life of ModemMen is the title of a series of lec¬tures to be delivered by Professor social work on July 10 and 11 anda conference for teachers of thesocial sciences in secondary schools Some of the topics which he willand junior colleges from July 21 discuss in the series include:thmugh 23.j , auxin, the plant growth hormone,Details of these and other, simi- ^ ^ ^lar events may be found in' the and utilization of sugar.Calendar of Public lectures, Insti- phototropism, and physiologicaltutes, and Conferences which is ecology.available at the information of- ^ ^ book.Phytohor-fice in the Press Building. and articles in professionalHerold C. Hunt, Superintendentof the Chicago public schools, willspeak on “Understandings, Atti¬tudes, “The Qualities of an Effec¬tive Teacher of Reading” underthe general topic of “Basic In¬struction in Reading in Elemen¬tary and High Schools” at theAnnual Conference on reading inMandel Hall at 1:45 p. m. today. mones,journals, Prof. Went is also amember of the Botanical Societyof America, the American Societyof Plant Physiology, Western So¬ciety of Naturalists, NationalAcademy of Sciences, and SigmaChi. Before joining the CaliforniaInstitute of Technology staff in1930, he served as an assistant atthe University of Utrecht in Hol¬land, and botanist with theBotanical Gardens in Java. Six lectures on radiations andradio-active substances in " biolo¬gy and medicine, the first publiclecture series of its kind on thecampus of the University of Chi¬cago, will be featured at the Mid¬way university during July andthe first two weeks of August.To be presented by radiation au¬thorities who were associated withwartime research, the lectures willbe held at 4:30 p. m. WednesdaysJuly 7 through August 11. Lec¬tures will be presented in theSocial Science building (1126 East59 th street), room 122.Raymond E. Zirkle, botanistwho has specialized in the effectof radiations on living organisms,will present the opening addresson “Significance of Radiosub¬stances and High Energy Radia¬tions in Biology and Medicine.” Amember of the Institute for Radio-biology and Biophysics, one of thethree institutes at the universitywhich were outgrowths of the uni¬versity’s work on the atomic bomb,Zirkle first became associated withthe university when he Joined theMetallurgical Laboratory staff in1942.Admission to the Went lectureswill be free and open to the pub¬lic._ „ ii- * 4.1. -3 4. 4. 4. morning general session,T V. Smith M the department of 9.30 ^philosophy. The lectures will be ..Diagnosis and Reteaching inheld on Thursdays at 4 p.m.m So- b^sIc Reading Instruction” bySWIMMIHGSCHEDULEBARTLETT GYMMen OnlyGENERAL SWIMMING12-1 p.m., 4-6 p.m. Mon.-Fri.IDA NOYESWOMEN ONLY12-1 p.m., 4-6 p.m. Mon.-FrI.MIXED7:30 - 9 p.m.. Wed. - FrI,3:30 - 5 p.m. Sun. cial Science 122 beginning July 15.The department of education willoffer a series of seven research re¬ports on various subjects at 4:45p.m. Wednesdays in Judd 126 be¬ginning July 7.There will be a conferer.ce fordeans and directors of schools ofSummer Seminor(Continued from Page 1)Clinical Congress of Medical Stu¬dents. He will also seek to arrangefor observation in British hospi¬tals.Dorothy Stock, a graduate stu¬dent in the Department of Psy¬chology, plans to make a study ofpost-war conditions affecting chil-dren in England.Maurice Williams, a graduatestudent in the Department of In¬ternational Relations, plans towrite his thesis for his M.A. Daisy M. Jones, and “Understand¬ings, Attitudes and Skills in In¬terpreting What Is Read” by A.Setrl Artley.GREGG COLLEGEA School of iusinoM—Preforrod byCollogo Mon and Womon4 MONTHINTENSIVE COURSESECRETARIAL TRAINING FOR COLLEGESTUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough, inteosive course—startiozJune, October, February. Bul¬letin A on requestSPEOAL COUNSELOR for 0.1. TRAINING•RMular Day and Evening SchoolsTnroughout the Year. Catalog•President, John Robert Gregg. S.C.D.Director, Paul M. Pair, M.A,THE GREGG COLLEGEST S. W.bMh A—., CMmc. 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