University of Ckicogo, November 9, 1948 31 Pepsi Cola stops scholarships;several dozen here untouchedAbrupt suspension of further awards in the Pepsi-ColaScholarship program was confirmed to the Chicago MA¬ROON today by UC officials.The move will not affect 490 imdergraduates and 26graduate students, including several dozen at UC, whoalready hold Pepsi-Cola Scholarships, second only to theRhodes scholarsnips in their benefits to highly selectedstudents.But more than 100 new grantsalready announced for 1948<’49will not be made, and there is noindication when, if ever, they willbe resumed.Compony withholds fundsNo explanation was given whenthe company, which also sponsorsAVC protests alleged end offreedom at Roosevelt Collegea nationally famous art competi-Leaflets asking “What has happened to Democracy at Roosevelt College?” and signed notified Director John m.by the chapter of AVC were distributed in front of Roosevelt College Monday of last week stainaker of the program’s Palobv AVC executive board member Jack Geigeer. The leaflet protested proposed changes in ^Roosevelt S faculty constitution. Pepsi-Cola company beganGeiger, obtained approval of his action and authorization to continue from the AVC its venture in education four yearsexecutive committee in their regular meeting the evening of that day. Campaigning was ago, awarding each year two schoi-continued Wednesday with leaflets from which the following quotations were drawn: arships in each state and three inT T«i states with dual school systems“GRAND LARCENY .Is the Students. It is alsoadministration stealing Roosevelt law suits charginglibel were threatened at the meeting.College from the liberals? . . .What about their amendment tothe faculty constitution? ... DeanLeys said: ‘If we don’t get rid ofthem (liberals) with this ammend-ment, we’ll find another way.’ ...Is this true? . . . Academic Free¬dom Project, Civil Liberties Com¬mittee, AVC, 116.”TORCH describes omendmentThe TORCH, Roosevelt Collegenewspaper, described the amend¬ment to which Geiger objected, inan article appearing yesterday. In¬troduced over two and a half weeksago, it would create a facultysenate with the representativescarrying on many of the functionsnow conducted by the entire fac¬ulty. Opposition centers aroundvoting procedure and the arrange¬ment of representation, both ofwhich are felt to centralize powerin the college’s administration anddepartment heads.A quick reaction by the UC andRoosevelt College faculties neces¬sitated a meeting of the AVC execThursday night, the proceedingsof which are secret at this time.The action violated a UC rulingprohibiting participation in suchactivities without APPi^oval from Roosevelt students unfavorableReaction among the studentbody at Roosevelt was generallyunfavorable according to theTORCH. The Roosevelt chapter of! SA calls Alex Pope to presidency;supports Olivet and UPW fightsAt its first organizationaL meeting of the term lastThursday, the newly elected Student Assembly unani¬mously chose Alexander Pope to succeed Bernard Milleras President.In the ensuing elections, Ronald Moss was elected vice-president; Anne Russell, secretary, and Benno Rothschild,treasurer.Committee chairmen chosenThe committee chairmen postswere filled by: Ted Wiley, Student . j 1* 1 fNeeds; Marvin Mindes, Finance; SttiClCTltl (tlClTl tWarner Bloomberg, Civil Liberties;Herbert Vetter, NSA; JackPublicity; Bernard Miller. FBI picks upDenies;r,® stu- register in draftJACK GEIGERAVC issued a statement denyingall responsibility.Geiger said that precedent forhis action was abundant in formercases where action was taken inAVC’s name without the approvalof the exec board if the situationwas urgent.The matter wUl be brought be¬fore the entire chapter at theirregular meeting Thursday night.Hutchins recalls U^s deficitdays. in talk on financeThe test of a university is the extent to which it is acenter of independent thought, Robert Maynard Hutchins,chancellor of the University of Chicago, declared last Thurs¬day at the Chicago Club.Speaking before the Citizens Board of the Universityon “A Business without A Balance Sheet,” Mr. Hutchimsaid that because univiersities are not ii^ business, theirfinancial statements are merely ^arehistorical records of the amountthat has been paid in for the sup¬port of work and retained in theform of capital funds and land,building and equipment.Discusses deficits“The University of Chicago roseto glory in a burst of deficits,”Chancellor Hutchins said. ‘‘In itscase, it was found financial pro¬cedure for the excellence of theuniversity’s work commanded sup¬port that would not have beenforthcoming without a demonstra- other hand, some of the leadingmen should be kept together andsome private initiative could beretained in a scientific area thatwas bound to be of the utmostimportance to the whole world. dent-Faculty Relations; JaneSommers, Social, and Ralph Korp,Elections.Members of the Election Com¬mittee, also elective offices, areJohn Huffer, Dave Miller, andFrank Logan. ^Is SA legolThe first concern of the new SAwas, paradoxically, its own legal-ity.JThe many irregularities of thegeneral election were discussedand referred to the'Elections Cwn-mittee for further study. The opin¬ion of the Assembly was that en¬forceable rules and sufficientmanpower in future electionswould solve most of the problems.The Assembly also passed reso¬lutions expressing support for thestudents of Olivet College in theirfight for academic freedom andturging the University to negotiateimmediately with Local 568, UPW-CIO.Utley will speakon past electionsClifton Utley, noted news anal¬yst, will speak at Ida Noyes librarytonight at 7:30 on “The Meaningof the Election for Parties andIssues.”The meeting is sponsored by theGraduate Political Science Club. Greg Votaw, a 20-year-old stu¬dent in the history department,was arrested last Friday at hisresidence by the FBI for failure toregister for the draft.^ Born and raised a Quaker,Greg’s feelings about the draft are“probably most basically religious.Being opposed to murder, I am alsoopposed to organized murder andits means.” Therefore, he felt thathe could not register.Released on $500 cash bondposted by Milton Mayer, formerlyof the University faculty, Greg ex- for Negroes, on the basis of com¬petitive objective examinationamong high school seniors.Each scholarship covers a periodof four years, providing full tuitionand travel costs to any school ofthe holder’s choice, plus $25 amonth in cash.Mony choose ChicogoNo strings are attached to thascholarships, which are adminis¬tered by a board of nationallyknown educators, including thepresidents of Princeton, Cornell,Kansas State, Fordham, Tulane,North Carolina, I. I. T., Radcliffe,and Howard.An unusually heavy number ofthe Scholars choose the U. of C.,with only Harvard getting more inproportion to size and location.Last year, for the first time, agraduate fellowship program wasinstituted with considerable fan¬fare. The three-year fellowshipsprovide $1,500 a year.CARE extendsdrive for studentsnot in residenceThursday and Friday, the CAREdrive for November will be extend¬ed to include all students not re¬siding in the dormitories. Collec¬tion jars will be placed in cafe¬terias and other convenient places,and will be there for these twodays only. The CARE committeehopes for a minimum of twenty-five cents from each person.The packages bought from thecollection will be sent to needystudents in the “little UC” area ofFrankfurt. Under the CARE plan,tax and tariff free packages, al¬ready made up and stored inEurope, can be sent to a specificperson, or even to a particulartype of person, such as “ a one-armed postman in France,” or “astudent in Hamburg with tuber¬culosis.” Delivery is guaranteed.pects to be arraigned in Federal • and a sign^ed receipt is returned toCourt in several weeks. the sender of the package.AIMS presses goalsdespite AMA attackBy MIRIAM BARAKSImprovement of medical education has always been aparamount objective of the Association of Internes andMedical Students. Many local chapters have curriculumcommittees, which have surveyed their schools and workedwith their deans in modifying the school program and inimproving library facilities and ward rounds. Probably themost popular activity is supple-menting the curricula with speciallectures and films on medical sub¬jects.Consideration of the financialand health aspects of medical edu¬cation has beep a necessary task.o Delegates from the campus chapter of the United World aims campaigns continuously fortion of what' the'^univeTsrtrcDiad Federalists will go to the national convention at Minneapolis better housing and food for in- ^g"communisrtendencies TTr^dldo if it had that support. instructed not to vote for any motion which would set up a ternes, and for improved medical yoc^ting the overthrow of the U.S.“The university that never does world government excluding the Soviet Union. The senti- services for students, with par- government by force . . . favoringanything until it has the money in ment of the membership was that a partial w’orld federa-hand to do it will seldom do any- tion was neither right nor practical, and that Russians par-thing,” he continued. ticipation was essential for the successful functioning ofTrustees storted Institutes . ii i f a world governmentZ IZVd A^thor Will tell life in The .MS Torn Farr. DonLevine, and Bob Mack, were alsoUWF chooses delegates; willoppose exclusion of USSR At the 1948 national conventionof, the American Medical Associa¬tion, a resolution was introducedcalling for an investigation ofAIMS. The resolution accusedAIMS, together with a non-ex¬istent “Association of Internation¬al Medical Students,” of “exhibit-for Nuclear Studies, the Institute /*^nnr\clor the Study of Metals, and the tOrCed-labOr CampSInstitute of Radiobiology and Bio¬physics when it had no money topay for them.Institutes necessoryThe Institutes were urgent, Hut¬chins pointed out, because it wasnecessary to decide “whether theleading nuclear and metallurgicalscientists who had worked An theManhatten Project should be dis¬persed—that would have set backthe advance of science by manyyears — whether the governmentshould monopolize the peacetimedevelopment of a tremendous newscientific field, or whether, on the Jerzy Gliksman, anti-Commu-nist author of Tell the West, willtell about his two years’ experiencein Russia forced labor camps at ameeting of the Politics Club to beheld Thursday at 3:30 in Rosen-wald 2.Mr. Gliksman has a long recordof activity in the Socialist move¬ment, having served as a councilorin the pre-war city government ofWarsaw, representing the JewishSocialist Party. He also served aslabor attorney for the GeneralJewish Workers Party (the“Bund”). urged to favor any motion provid¬ing that delegates to a proposedworld assembly be elected fromthe nations at large by directpopular vote. The chapter agreedthat its primary task is selling theidea of world government to thepeople and then attacking theproblem of finding a form of worldgovernment acceptable to all na¬tions.The UWF national conventionwill meet from November 11through November 14 at Minneap¬olis. The UC chapter has pledgeditself to raise $100 for the work ofthe national council. ticular emphasis on periodic chestX-rays and annual routine physi¬cal examinations.Medico! care o rightSince the great cost of a medicaleducation tends to prevent thetraining of meritorious studentsfrom low income families, AIMS ^ I J •urges the passage of legislation Cooper leads seriesproviding loans and scholarshipson child personalitystrikes which are upsetting toproper medical education . . . andhaving communistic affiliations.”The University of Chicago chap¬ter of AIMS recently Issued a(Continued on poge 2)loans andto needy students. Several AIMSchapters have reduced the cost ofinstruments through cooperativebuying and have benefitted fromused book exchanges.While not favoring any specificbills for health insurance, AIMShas called for careful Congres¬sional consideration of such meas¬ures. The organization emphasizesthat “the American people havethe right to adequate medicalcare,” and “a national health pro-plication in a democratic society.” This afternoon at 4:30 in Judd112 the Human Development De¬partment will present the sixth inits current series of seminars en¬titled “Factor Analysis of the Per¬sonality Studies of Midwest Chil¬dren”. Ruth I. Cooper, instructorin Human Development will leadthe seminar. 'The public is invitedto both the seminar and to thetea which will precede it in Judd126 at 3:45.Pag* 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON . / Tvesdoy, Noremb^ 9, 194$Citation of merit awardedto thirteen UC professorsThirteen UC scientists were awarded citations for theirwar work here at a reception last Tuesday in the home ofChancellor Hutchins.Admiral Cary Jones, commandant of the Ninth NavalDistrict, and Lt. Gen. Stephen J. Chamberlin, commandinggeneral of the Fifth Army, presented Presidential certifi¬cates of merit “for outstanding fidelity and meritoriousconduct during World War II” toLawrence M. Graves, professor ofmathematics, for work on thepanel of applied mathematics ofthe National Defense ResearchCommittee, and Andrew W. Law-son, associate professor of physicsIn the Institute for the Study of“Sauon.'”' Vacation ski tripCertificates of oppreciotion // J JReceiving certificates of appre- OjfCTCCl StUClCTltSciation were four scientists of the ''professor and chairman of the de¬partment of bacteriology andparasitology; Paul A. Weiss, pro¬fessor of zoology, and Frank H.Westheimer, associate professor ofchemistry.wartime Toxicity Laboratory; Dr.Franklin B. McLean, professor ofpathological physiology and firstdirector of the Laboratory; Dr.William H. Bloom, professor of an¬atomy and member of the Insti¬tute of Radiobiology and Biophys¬ics; William L. Doyle, associateprofessor of anatomy and seconddirector of the Laboratory, andDr. Eugene M. K. Geiling, dis¬tinguished service professor andchairman of the department ofpharmacology.Others receiving certificates ofappreciation were Charles S. Bar¬rett, professor of physics in theInstitute for the Study of Metals;Dr. E. S. Gusman Barron, associateprofessor of biochemistry; WilliamBurrows, professor of bacteriology;William D. Neff, assistant profes-Bor of psychology; Dr. William H.Taliaferro, distinguished serviceTHE NATION'SNo. 1HIT TUNE AAAKERRESTAURANTWABASHA RANDOLPHaltrace!^*'You Call Evtrybody Dorlin''^ Fomeand his famousTShum Mytim-ORCHESTRApinsHKARIOUS FLOOR SHOWhafuringNO Admission | CIrargeMinimum r* toG>ver J StudentsON FRIDAY—COLLEGE N1TE8' tOCAi AND LONG DISTAMCl HAUUNG•60 YtARS Of DmiDABLtStAYKt TO THS SOUTHSIDt^ •ASK fOK ntK ESTIMATC55th and ELLIS AVENUECHICAGO 15, ILLINOISButterfield 8-6711[ DAVID L SUTTON, Pres. A ski ti'ip to the Rockies for thetwo-week Christmas vacation willbe sponsored by the SU OutingDepartment. The destination. Em¬pire, Colorado, is in the heart ofthe Rockies ski country. Berthoudand Loveland passes and ArapahoeBasin, within eight miles of Em¬pire, also offer skiing grounds.Transportation, lodging andfood costs for this trip total about$65. Only a limited number cango on the tour. Reservations ac¬companied by a $10 deposit will beaccepted^on or after Wednesday,Nov. 10, in the SU office in IdaNoyes Hall. SU group will debaferole of student in UCThe “new” Student Powwow,creation of Student Union’s Spe¬cial Events Department, will belaunched today with an informaldiscussion entitled, “What partshould students play in governingthemselves and deciding Univer¬sity policy?”Glen Walker, who arranged forthe discussion, particularly in¬vites dormitory residents, mem¬bers of the Student Assembly, andall students and faculty memberswho have definite ideas on thesubject or want to know whatothers feel about the controversialtopic.Today’s Powwow will be held inthe North Reception Room on thesecond floor of Ida Noyes Hall. Itwill start at 3:30 and last until 5.AIMS fights . . .(CofiTinued from poge 1)statement to its members replyingto these charges. The statementpointed out that AIMS has neveradvocated either strikes or theoverthrow of the government byforce and violence. It further ex¬plained that AIMS supports nopolitical party or doctrine andthat no political party supportsAIMS.Proud of progromAs to the “communist tend¬encies” allegedly being exhibited,the statement simply pointed toMoreDelicious food, super Sodasand Sundaes\aPA—^—jesCozy booths, forlornly occupied by thebest-looking, most intelligent he-men onthe campus.XcPM A MTHEWHIFFLETREEOn the Midwoy1425 East SOth StreetOpposite Internotionol House Calendar of eventsTODAY — NOVEMBER 9PUBLIC LECTURE: Speaker, George Haines IV, Social Sciences 122, 4:50 pn-,PUBLIC LECTURE: (Program of Education and Research in Plannlni?rspeaker, Jaquellne Tyrwhitt, Swift IOC, 4:30 p.m.HUMAN DEVELOPMENT SEMINAR. Speaker, Ruth I, Cooper, JuUd ]2e4:30 p.m. ,CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION: Meeting, Thorndike Hilton Chape;7:30 p.m. 'HILLEL FOUNDATION: Polk Dance group, 5715 Woodlawn Avenue, 7:30 pje.WEDNESDAY — NOVEMBER 10ZOOLOGY CLUB: Speaker, Dr. George Gomori, Zoology 14, 4:30 p.m.PUBLIC LECTURE: University College, Downtown Center, speaker, Clarence BOdell. 19 South LaSalle Street. 6:30 p.m.PUBLIC LECTURE: Speaker, Louis Gottschalk, Social Sciences 122, 7:30 pm.CANTERBURY CLUB: Discussion. East Lounge, Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30 p.mHILLEL FOUNDATION: Hillel Choral Group, Max Jonowski, director. 5715Woodlawn Avenue, 4 p.m.PUBLIC LECTURE: Speaker, Horace Kallen, 5715 Woodlawn Ave., 8 p.m,THURSDAY — NOVEMBER 11BACTERIOLOGY AND PARASITOLOGY CLUB: Speakers. Stewart A. Koserand George J. Kasai. Ricketts North 1, 4:30 p.m.PSYCHOLOGY CLUB: Speaker, Harry P. Harlow, Law North, 4:30 p.m.BUSINESS CLUB: Speakers. Julian H. Collins, Robert Knight, and Marshall D.Ketchum, Haskell Common Room, 7:30 p.m. ^COMMITTEE TO DEFEND ACADEMIC FRBOEDOM: Speaker, Dr.-Anton J. Carl¬son, Swift 106, 4:30 p.m.POLITICS CLUB: Speaker, Jerzy Ollksman, author of "Tell the West," Rosen-wald 2, 3:30 pjn.the AIMS program. It wonderedwhether the AMA was opposed tobetter living and learning con¬ditions for medical students, thefight against discrimination, freediscussion of methods for the ex¬tension of medical care, better un¬derstanding of the social obliga¬tions of physicians, and studenthealth service plans. “This is how we feel; this iswhat we stand for,” said NormanGraff, chairman of the campusAIMS chapter. “We hope that allthe medical students at the Uni-versity of Chicago and internes atBillings Hospital will attend our01 ganization’s meetings and par¬ticipate in our work and activ*ities.”GARRICK MUSIC SHOPS“If It’s reemriifd — fcare tt”Victor presentsVocaf V^asterpieceSSCHUBERT—Die Winterriese—(Eleven Songs) $|r50Lotte Lehmann—Soprano—With Piano.. •,.. wMUSIC OF THE RENAISSANCE—Mox $ J75Tenor—With Lute Accompaniment.,,, ■SONG RECITAL—Lotte Lehmann—Soprano—With Piano Songs by Schubert, Brahms, Wolf, $^00Schumann', Franz, Jensen, Marx, Pfitzner.,,, IVERDI—REQUIUM—Gigli, Tenor—Pinza,Bass—Coniglio, Soprano—Stignani, Mezzo.Chorus an(J Orchestra of Rome Royal Opera.Tullio Serofin. Conciuctor,. '13 50FLAGSTAD IN SONG—Kirsten Flogstad,Soprano—Songs by Grieg, Beethoven, Alnoes, $^00Charles OITALIAN SONGS OF THE 17th and 18th $J75CENTURY—Ezio Pinza, Basso ^EARLY CHORAL MUSIC— $IJ00Trapp Family Choir WAlso complete selection of standard symphonic oncioperatic recordings. We have the largest collection ofjazz recoids on the South Side.• CCOMS MUSICICICVISIOM^ CAWflMSMPlURCfS753 OL 63r6 ST., CNICA60 21, lUWEafwortB 6-00S5Tuesday, NorawAer 9,194S THE CHICAGO MAROON r«9e IChamberlin holds banquet; Bettors finis; H. A. Millis memorialLevi tells of investigations scholars probe will be fellowshipsThe first after-dinner lecturer on Chamberlin House’slong schedule of such meetings with distinguished facultymembers, Prof. Edward H. Levi of the Law School spoke ata house dinner Wednesday evening on the past and currentgovernment loyalty investigations.Following a dinner served in one of Burton-Judson’sprivate dining rooms, Levi gaproceedings and tactics these In¬vestigations have employed sincebefore the war.Levi is a former special assistantattorney-general, an aide to Thur¬man Arnold, and a law member ofthe Truman and other congres¬sional investigating committees.Describing himself as an ex-New Dealer who believes in com¬petitive enterprise, Levi defendedthe traditional revolutionary rightof the American people which, hestated, the founding fathers wroteinto the Constitution. He deridedthe “back-fence gossip” tactics ofgathering ''evidence” for the loy¬alty hearings.The lecture was followed by alively question period.Chamberlin’s next dinner lec¬turer will be Prof. Rexford G.Tugwell. Progressive Party leader,who will give an ‘‘Election PostMortem.” e an informal accbunt of theBritish regionalplanner to talkMiss Jaqueline Tyrwhitt willdiscuss “Postwar Trends in Eng¬land in Planning and New TownsDevelopment” this afternoon from4:30 to 5:30 in Swift 106.Miss Tyrwhitt has been directorof research of the Association forPlanning and Regional Recon¬struction in London, and untilrecently held the position of di¬rector of studies at the School ofPlanning in London. She is nowlecturing at New York’s School forSocial Research.'The lecture, open to the cam¬pus, is under the sponsorship ofthe Planning Department. Thereis no admission charge.ISBELL’SChicogo's MostCELEBRATEDRESTAURANTS1435 E. 5ls» Streer940 Rush Street590 Diversey Pkwy.1063 Bryn Mowr Ave. queer wagersThe weekend brought slow,lingering death to the great elec¬tion miracle as the chief topic ofthunderstruck campus conversa¬tion. But as historians stepped for-ward to claim the corpse, theymade it quite clear that the gab-fest was really just getting started.All agreed that Mr. Truman’samazing assault on the sanity ofpoll takers and political scientistswould be subject to intensive studyby future 'scholars. There theagreement ended.Reactions ranged from “disgust”at the electorate’s “gullibility topeanut oratory” to the view heldby Bessie Louise Pierce of the his¬tory department that the Trumanvictory indicated a great increasein the number of independentlythinking voters crossing tradition¬al party lines.Emphasizing that this was littlemore than a guess. Miss Pierce at¬tributed any such “promising’’ de¬velopment to better education ofthe average man, education to adegree Which she said could nothave been dreamed of even 50years ago. By HERB HALBRECHTHarry A. Millis, former head of the department ofnomics, died on June 25, but the university, the manymer associates and students of Dr. Millis, and the memberaof his faculty are determined to keep his memory alive.As Economics department chairman from 1926 to 1938,and later as senior consultant to the Industrial RelationsCenter, he was primarily a teacher and a research man, buthis advice was sought by a gover-Campus AVC meets;discusses UPW dealThe American Veterans’ Com¬mittee will hold its next regularmembership meeting, Nov. 11, inRosenwald 2 at 7:30 p.m., it wasannounced yesterday. Included onthe agenda is a report on the sta¬tus of United Public Workers, Lo¬cal 568, a campus employees’ un¬ion.Sherwood Miller, chairman ofthe group, announced the appoint¬ment of three committee chair¬men. Ruth Wedge has been des¬ignated Membership Chairman,Dale Milnes, Funds Raising Chair¬man, and Howard Maclay, Pi'o-gram Chairman.WOODWORTH'SAltvmys Ready to Serve Promptly —BOOKS - SCHOOL SUPPLIESTYPEWRITERS - FOUNTAIN PENS►►►►►►►►►►►►►►►►La — RENTAL LIBRARY —1311 E 57TH STREET• 2 Blocks Eost Mowdel Holl •O^M Eveninfs —> Mondoy, Wednestloy ond FrMoy nor and two presidents.As Chairman of the National La«bor Relations Board during thewar years, and as a member ofmany other governmental investi¬gating and administrative bodies,he took an active role in the writ¬ing of social policy and the admin¬istration of social legislation. Ajjan arbitrator of labor disputes. Dr,Millis had a reputation unparallel¬ed in many industries.Active in establishing the Ag¬ricultural Economic Foundation,and author of the “Economics ofLabor” series, he was one of thecountry’s most outstanding teach¬ers of industrial relations.It is as a tribute to this manthat the university is raising fundsfor several Han-y A. Millis Fellow¬ships in Industrial Relations.These fellowships are to be award¬ed annually to outstanding grad¬uate students of industrial rela¬tions. Prof. Harbison, one of thedirectors of the Industrial Rela¬tions Center, feels that “theseshould be among the best indus¬trial relations fellowships in thecounti-y; accordingly, we plan totrain some of the best men.”Each fellowship will amount toabout $1,500 per year. The num¬ber of fellowships available will,of course, depend upon the fundsraised. The plan is to raise $15,000for each of the ten-year fellow-ships.Wach will lead talkAn open discussion on the sub¬ject, “Is Chi’istianity the Final Re¬ligion?” led by Dr. Joachim Wach,professor of the history of reli¬gions, will be held by the Canter¬bury club Wednesday evening at7:30 in the East lounge of IdaNoyes Hall.camelNO THROAT IRRITATIONDUE TO SMOKING CAMELS!• Yes, Camels are so mild that a nationwide 30-daytest of hundreds of smokers revealed not one singlecase of throat irritation due to smoking Camels!The people in this test — both men and women —smoked Camels exclusively for 30 consecutive days.Smoked an average of one to two packages ofCamels a day. Each week their throats were ex¬amined by noted throat specialists—a total of 2470exacting examinations. From COast tO COastythese throat specialists reported11 lii'iWli'l1^ 4Page 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON Taetdoy, November 9,1948EditorialTo the ranks of philosophers of education and ardentdefenders of Americanism we can today add the name ofMr. Gene Kessler, sports columnist for the SUN-TIMES.Mr. Kessler qualifies for both distinctions by virtue of onerhetorical question which appeared in his column of No¬vember 2: “ . . . isn’t it better to use universities as foot¬ball factories instead of laboratories for communism, ashappened when a university dropped the sport?”Kessler’s query is the latest and least sophisticated* ofa number of attacks on academic freedom. The ThomasCommittee, making threatening gestures at Columbia, waspromptly told off by Eisenhower. The Administration ofOlivet College, attempting to diunp a distinguished teacher,met and meets firm student resistance. Apparently the timehas come for us al, Chicago to reaffirm the principles of afree university.To Kessler, and men of his ilk, the facts of a recognizedCommunist club, a recognized Students for Wallace, thepresence of a few Communists on the faculty, and the in-elusion of Marx in College reading lists are enough to con¬demn UC to their particular Purgatory. To others — apolo¬gists for liberty — Chicago’s record is to be defended bypointing out that Communism on campus is not reallyserious enough to worry about.Both these groups miss the point. Chicago must beJudged on the principles that guide its policy. These prin¬ciples are two:1—^An insistence that a student be given freedom ofInquiry; a belief that intelligent choice can result only fromthe consideration of all alternatives; a conviction that arbi¬trary exclusion of certain philosophies impedes education;a determination to present all viewpoints and let the studentform his own judgments.2—^An equal inisistence on the rights of citizens totranslate their political convictions into political actionsthrough any legal channel; a belief in the desirability ofaction based on principles; an understanding of the edu¬cational value of testing theoretical conclusions in practicalsituations.The first of these principles explains the presence ofMarx — and Mill, and Hobbes, and Jefferson — on reading” lists. The second explains the recognition of the CommunistClub — and the Socialists, arid the Young Republican —on campus. The first is the basis of freedom of thought;the second, of freedom of action. Both are indispensableto a free society. Both, thank God, are exercised here.The principles must stand or fall on their own worth.The fact that they produce so many students of one beliefand so many of another is irrelevant to the considerationof their merit. Freedom of thought and action is not to bevalued for the results it produces. Its worth derives fromthe fact that it is the only basis on which the collectiveIntelligence of the community can be brought to bear onthe problems of the day. To believe this is to believe in theability of human reason to solve human problems. No faint¬hearted foe of academic free¬dom, be he Congrei^ionalbigot or snide sportswriter,can possibly subscribe to thisfaith. No great imiversity canexist without it.NOW OPENWOODtAWNPLASCHOOLFIRST PRESBYTERIANCHURCH,6400 Kimbark Ave.Supervised pkiy with trainedguidance for children 3 to 5.9-12 A.M. Mon. thru Fri.Phone DOrchester 3-9009Non-SectorianTronsportotion LettersSees red on odHow hard up is the MAROONfor advertising? The half-pagedisplay of hammer-and-sickle-ismon October 22 was more than Icould take.Perhaps there are some whothink that there is a correlationbetween this paper’s name andits policy, but I am not amongthem. Certainly this advertise¬ment was not solicited or en¬couraged. But why wasn’t itdiscouraged? The normal Amer¬ican newspaper would never ac¬cept such a thing.Had it been a Republican,Democratic, etc., advertisement,my ire would not have beenroused. Therefore I am a bigot.But tell me, did this newspapersolicit contributions to the Ger-man-American Bund during WorldWar n?—UltravioletDeplores SA sanctionThe action of the Student As¬sembly in approving two resolu¬tions at its first meeting lastThursday comes as a disappoint¬ment to those of us who hadhoped that this year’s Assemblywould represent “the first steptowards a vital, significant Stu¬dent Government and not the dy¬ing gasp of a failing experiment.We refer to the resolutions sup-*porting the Committee to DefendAcademic Freedom in the Olivetcampaign and supporting the posi¬tion of Local 568, UPW, in itscontentions with the University.Our primary objection is to thehigh-handed and reckless mannerin which the President of the As¬sembly, in violation of his own by¬laws, prohibited any discussion ofthe measures except by those who ipresented the resolutions for con¬sideration.We also object to the resolutionendorsing the position of theUnited Public Workers of America.Despite our sympathy with the un¬ion, we feel that the merits of theunion’s case are totally irrelevantto the aims of Student Govern¬ment.We feel that the ISL is con¬tradicting its own statement ofaims, which reads “. . . it Is thepurpose of the Student Assemblyto center its attention on prob¬lems of immediate concerr; tothe students of this university.”We are convinced that this ac¬tion to aid the UPW-CIO was ofQuestionable importance andthat it had no relation to theaims of student government. Assuch, it should never have been Issued twice weekly by the publisher. The Chicago Maroon, at the publicationoffice, 570S South University Avenue, Chicago 37, 'Illinois. Telephones: EditorialOffice. Midway 3-0800, Ext. 351; Business and Advertising Offices, Midway 3-0800Ext. 1577. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions by mail, |2 per quarter’^ per year. ’DAVID BRODER JOHN H. MATHISEditor Business ManagerGERALD M. SCHERBA JACK MCCARTHY — ED ENGBERGManaging Editor Assistant Business ManagersEXECPTIVE EDITORS: Ann Collar, Robert McAdams, Miriam BaraksASSISTANT EXECUTIVE EDITORS: Buddy Cohen, Harold Harding.PAGE EDITORS: Wilma Vodak, Dick DeHaan, Nicholas Camp, George WilsonJames Ford, Laura Lee. Gerry Childers. *COPY EDITORS: Barbara Blumenthal, Jean Jordan, Dirk Kltzmlller, June MarksPRODUCTION STAFF: Edythe Sackrlson, Mary Udell, Shlrlie MacMlllen. BobAlbright, Nancy McClung, Nanni Kahn, Cmarles Adams, Nancy GoldsteinJohn Glen. Jim Kleffen, Bill Klutts. 'FEATURES: John Stone, Editor; Evallne Wagner, Assistant Editor; James Gold¬man, Martin Picker, W. Dieter Kober, miii^c; Chuck Kahn, Bert Simon, Rob¬ert Nassau, Eugene DuFresne, Chick Callenbah, Walter H. Guenther, Dramaand Movies; John Forwalter, Nonny Novlak, Mira Lee Kahn, Art; Eli Obler 'Audney Hlndon, Literature; Howard Bressler, Leonard Wolfe. General. 'NEWS-FEATURES: Louis Silverman. Editor; Adaleen Burnette, Ann FlnklesteinDavid Kliot, Marilyn Kolber, Herb Neuer, Annie Russell, John Slotls, AlanWhitney.SPORTS: Rex Reeve, Editor; Marc Goff, Assistant Editor; Dave Heiberg. DonSmith, BUI Watts.POLITICAL: David Broyles, Editor; Stewart Boynton, Buck Farris, Ted Finman,Walt Freeman, Jack Ralph, Rc^er Weiss, Frank Woodman.NEWS STAFF: Joan Gansberg, George Sideris, Editors; Mary Ann Ash, BobBlauner, Len Borman, Alvin Bumstein, Joan Busch, Solly Dahl. Lee Doppelt,Robert Freeman, Elaine Goldman. Herbert Halbrecht, Paula nass, BarbaraHorwltz, David Kahn, Burton Kantor, Pat King, Susan Levine, John Lovjoy,Len McDermott, Coral Matthews, Robert Meehan, George Moeri, WilliamPittman, Sheldon Samuels. Jane Sommer, John Van Tlem, Herb Vetter,Clement Walbert, Ray WUkins, Gerald Wiim, LeRoy WolUns, Frank Wood,Bob Work.OFFICE MANAGER: Joan Lonergan.PUBLIC RELATIONS: Leonard Pearson. Director.BUSINESS STAFF: Barbara Evans, Office Manager; Babs Casper, Ralph Fertig,Co-advertising Managers; Alfred West, Subscription Manager; Judy Scball-. man. Promotion Manager; Pat Bilze, Charles Rosen, Advertising Department;John Sharp, Exchange Manager.PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF: Bill Schwab. Editor; Robert Brumberg, Alan Fern,Lewis Golan, Jack Elsek, Ray Johnson, BUI PhUllps.presented—let alone rammedthrough the assembly withoutany semblance of debate.We hope that such practices willnot continue; and as ISL mem¬bers in the Assembly we intend toadhere to the program on whichwe were elected.<—Thomas S. GephardtDavid B. Miller Tennis finals setThe all - Uriiversity tennisdoubles tournament moved intothe finals last week after a recordnumber of defaults and delays.Coffin and Scudder will opposeGtoldman and Goldenson this weekin the match to pick the UCdoubles champions.Tvo thingsCollege msLn, shouH know! v'\SAVE MONEYCIGARETTESCHESTERFIELD, CAMELSLUCKY STRIKE, PHILLIP MORRISOLD GOLD, PALL MALLRALEIGH, TAREYTONPer CartonPremium Brands Slightly HigherAdd 8c Per Carton for Shippingond Hondling, Zone No. 5Minimum Order — Five CartonsEnclose Your Card tor Gift WrappingGuaranteed DeUveryOperating Under Delaware StateLicense No. 3998Send Check or Money Order OnlyDept. 549ALLISON TOBACCO CO.Post Office Box 1006Wilmington, Delaware ^CLU'SIVew WHERE CAMPUS STYLESARE CREATED //TOWN and COUNTRYMEN'S SHOP. 867 L 63rd SlG/i/cago ‘>3h} IThis is a cheer leader*All-American Sweater Giri, Expertat pass defense. T (rrifie) formation*The formation of a ** Manhattan''* shirtis terrific, too*% This is a ''Manhattan" Burt. Alsoleads cheers. Popular button-down collarfits and looks just right. Fabricresidual shrinkage 1% or less.In white, stripes and scUd-colored oxfords.CAMPUS FAVORITEOTaetdar, Norewfcer 9, 1949 THE CHICAGO MAROOMMtdccdiy takes first place, hutWestern Michigan takes meetThe Maroon cross country squad outscored WesternMichigan’s harrier’s 44-16 in a meet held in WashingtonPark last Saturday morning. Unfortunately for Chicago,tbe team with the lowest number of points wins.Ken Mulcahy, star Maroon distance man, took firstplace. Ken covered the three-mile ^course in 16:22, his best time to Dodcl Still forfeitsdate. After a few minutes and kll College house intramural swim,the Western Michigan team.had mers splashed through secondpassed, other Chicago runners be- round of competition with Doddgan arriving. Otstot and Thomp- still forfeiting. In the Judsonson were among the first ten to league, Vincent beat Mead, 30-26.the finish line. Salisbury beat Coulter 31-26. Four teams now leadfield in seventh roundof fraternity touchball to endUC downs Morton 1-0soccer seasonFour teams dominate intra-fraternity touchball as the teamsfinished seventh round play andmoved into the eighth round. TheDelta Upsilon “A”s broke the tiefor first place in League n by de¬feating the Phi Kappa Psi “A”s,28-18.League I’s lead is shared by PsiUpsilon “A” and Alpha Delta Phi“B,” each team having three winsand no losses.More independeiil exports smoke Lucky Strike reguknlythen the next 2 leading brands combined fAn impartial poll covering aR the Southern tobacco markets revealsthe smoking preference of the men who really know tobacco—auction¬eers, buyers and warehousemen. Mora ^ those independentexperts smoke Lucky Strike regularly than the next twolending brands combined.copw., THs AnnncAN tooaoco oonPAMT Chicago’s soccer team closed its season Saturday witha 1-0 victory over Morton Junior College. The Maroons, whoheld control of the ball for most of the game, won on DougBichard’s goal in the second quarter. The teams met onMorton’s field, which recent rains had made muddy andslippery. Neither team could get any speed in its kicking,and passing accuracy was limited by the constant wet ball,Saturday’s victory was cweet re¬venge for UC’s hooters for the 1-0 yx j 1 l •defeat they suffered at the hands J y uOOtCTS Sfylltof Morton on October 23, and con- ^firmed pre-season predictions that faun mrtfr*hPcthey would win every return en- LttoL LivU TiiCtLCrLc^ogagement. Coach Alvar Hermann,son said Monday that the Maroonsare probably the best soccer teamin the Middle West.”Lineup for SoHirdoy's gome:Goalkeeper: CarrollFullbacks: Bloomberg, VaughanHalfbacks: ....Atkinson, Rocky, ZieglerRight Outside: BovbjergRight Inside: O’BrienCenter BichardLeft Inside: SearsLeft Outside: NeubergLetter awards will be announcedin two or three weeks following anathletic staff meeting. The JV soccer team ended itsseason by splitting its last twogames, defeating defending statechampion Morton 1-0, and fallingbefore Lake Forrest 3-1.Captain James Webster scoredin the first half of the Oak Parkgame after receiving a pass fromPete Kundstadter.The Jayvees drew the first bloodin the Lake Forrest game whencenter A1 Gottschalk scored infront of the goal.Mathews beats Salisbury;3 houses tied in touchballMathews 19-0 rout of Salisbury Thursday threw thecollege house touchball race into a three team play-off.Mathews, Manly and Chamberlin ended the regular seasonin a three way tie for first place with eight wins and oneloss apiece. In the drawing for the play-off Manly drew abye, and will play the winner of Tuesday’s Chamberlin-Mathews game.Sparked by the brilliant work ofHYDE PARK THEATRE53rd and Loke ParkTakes Pride inBringing to YouThe World Famous ItalianFUm"SHOE SHINE”A Movie of Greet ArtisticBeouty end ProfoundHumonityComplete English TitleStarting Friday, Nor. 12 John Scandalius, Mathews hadlittle trouble beating Salisbury, ateam which previously had playedthem to a hard fought tie. Thecombination of Carl Rosenburg'spassing and Scandalius’ catchingracked up all three Mathewstouchdowns and the one extrapoint scored. ICarl Golden, Salisbury’s passer,was so hurried by Mathews’ hard-charging line that he had troublegetting his passes off, and evenmore in spotting receivers.LUCKY STRIKE MEANS FINE TOBACCOSo round, so firm, so fully pocked — so free and easy on the drow **THE SENATOR WAS INDISCREET’’William Powell — Ella RainesThunday, November 117 and 9:15 Social Science 122 ' 35c♦ ♦Persondli^^" ♦CHRISTMAS CARDSNORCROSS . . •AMERICA’S BEST LOVED GREETING CARDS.Many designs to choose from within a wide price range.CRESTWICK ...These cards have been chosen for theirrefreshing originality and fine quality.MASTERPIECE LINE J . •25 for $2.50 with imprinted name.Individual or assorted designs.Janes Art Studio, New York.RROWNIE . . .Clever drawings truly tirpical of the season.Names imprinted or plain.RANK CRAFT . . .A complete line of modern cards at a priceyou can afford. Imprinted <h* plaimAETRENTIC METROPOLITANMVSEVM OF ART CAROSBookmarks • Christmas Cords • Gift CordsCopies of mony fomous prints ond pointingsTHE UHlVERSiTY OF CHSCAOOBOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenuo, Chicago 37, Illinoisfaie 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON TMtd^r, NovwiAm'9. I94gSea Fever reaches Miami Footlights and Kleighghtsafter near disaster on reef Film creates dramatic highDuring all of Jack Schultz’s long journey, Chicagonever seemed more remote than when the Sea Fever, forcedfrom the Bahama Channel by eighty-mile per hour winds,plowed towards the foam of a coral reef. The sharp barriercould easily have ripped apart the thin-hulled canoe, cast¬ing its lone occupant in the boiling sea.Going deep in the water the craft met the coral with aheavy thud and then with a weirdhop cleared the reef. The bowspritwas smashed, the sails were split,and Jack was exhausted as hebeached the boat on his smallrefuge.Only 200 yards in diameter, theIsland was inhabited by a familyof turtle fishermen. The men inthe group repaired the bowspritwhile the sails were mended by thewomen and girls. The young ad¬venturer had a pleasant interludefrom his arduous travels. Turtle-meat was a succulent dish whencompared to raw flying fish.When the dug-out was sea¬worthy, Jack departed from theunnamed island, landing next onthe north coast of Cuba. From herehe set out for Miami 400 milesaway. This last leg of the journeywas relatively uneventful. Oncewhen he was momentarily unsureof his position, a tanker crossedhis bow. Using his shotgun. Jackfired three shots ihto the air. Thetanker paid no attention to hissignal, so enraging Jack that hefired the next blast at the snobbishvessel.One morning the strong beam ofthe Florida Reef light glimmeredahead. Jack could safely look backon a journey that now nearedcompletion.It was a journey filled withcolor; brilliant gold and blues ofthe screeching Macaw and the dullscarlet of hands bloody from pad¬dling. Moments of blinding fearwhen, in the black pitch of night. the small craft heeled over untilher mast touched the Atlantic,and moments of exhilarting men¬tal clarity found in solitude.In late September, Jack sailedinto the Miami harbour. He hadtraveled 6000 miles in 14 months,over the Andes, down the Nappoand Amazon, across the Atlanticand Carribean, through four coun¬tries and the possessions of manyothers, and now he approached theU. S. Custom dock. Jack hailed aman, a government launch pilotstanding on the edge of the pier,and asked for directions for enter¬ing the country. The man lookedat the 17-foot sail canoe with itslone occupant and asked, “Whatthe hell do you want to know for?You haven’t been any place.”—-EloresSSA club meetsA special report on the Student-Faculty Committee will highlightSSA club’s Town Hall meeting atIda Noyes sun parlor, 3rd floor,tonight at 7:30. “Rope,” directed by Alfred Hitchcock, with James Stewart, John Dall, and FarleyGranger.Employing the single set quality of the stage, with the dramatic technique of movielighting, color, sound and camera attention, “Rope” achieves a rare high among recentHollywood productions. The entire action of the movie, accelerated into a two-hour pe¬riod, occurs in a well-to-do-apartment within the extent of one afternoon and evening.Effective use of technicolor, lighting, and musical simplicity ^t the technical stage fordramatic action involving a murder case, a psychological study of characters, and a con¬temptible philosophy of superior-inferior beings.As indicated above, the manner ->,| « •III* 11*of presentation produces an in- ter of Rupert, played by James i^lUO Will rlCClT i^OllltlStensely gripping and suspense- Stewart, had set an underlying Julien ColUns, president of thepacked film. Technicolor is used in justification for the murder com- Investment Bankers Association ofa novel and laudable manner to mitted, then renounces his Ideas Inearmark the gradual lapse in time the split second ol realizing the swnsored by the^touSby effecting a change in color bitter result of his words carried club this quarter,hues, noted through the living in action. His renunciation seems Robert Knight, vice - presidentroom windows. Lighting, too, be- too well prepared and thought and treasurer of the Walgreencomes an agent added to the emo- through, considering its sudden Company will speak with Collinstional overtones of the acting, as spontaneity in the picture. F^na^e*^*'^^*'^^^^^ ^does the use of music. The latter, Chorocter contrasthowever is used sparingly and ^he psychological study of the Ca J awith good reason, for silence itself , , SflJnPni^ m;iV Cinnadds an impact to the dramaUc “'"•derers. one a sadist with OlUUeillb may Signeffectiveness. a malicious sense of humor, and f I * J tThe subject matter of “Rope,” the other a sensitive musician who 'O' nSyriU© lOmOrrOWcombining as it does an attempt regrets his part in the crime, is a Tomorrow is the last day to signat the perfect crime, a philosophi- good contrast of individuals in a For the Student Union Hayridecal basis for the crime and the situation. All considered, Tickets forpsychological effect on the crim- the Hayride and food are $1.35inal, presents a diversity of pur- wrapped m a fine tickets for the chartered buspose which is not fully united im- garment of film entertainment. which leaves Ida Noyes at 6:45der critical analysis. The charac- __Len Borman Fiiday evening are 60 cents.They said,^^You can’t do it!^^More facts about Du Pout— IJsteu to '^Cavalcadeof America” Monday Nights, NBC Coast to CoastHie University oF Chicagoive Broder hos the ''^<*9®maroon octiyitie*.... and in razor bladesPALHOLLOW OROUNOAas the 'BdCr’5 waysLast longer • Smoother shaving • Keeneredges • More economical • Uniformly perfect4for1104or25fHOLIDAYAn Adventure in( Good Smoking But Du Pont scientistsdeveloped a synthetic rubberwith superior properties”S^thetic rubber is an impossibiUtyat any price!” declared a noted Euro¬pean scientist a number of years ago.And most people were inclined toagree because for more thana centurychemists had been unable to dupli¬cate natural rubber.Du Pont scientists knew that allrubber had bad qualities as well asgood. “Why struggle to duplicate itsfaults?” they asked. “Why not finda new chemical compound with allthe good qualities of rubber, butnone of the bad?”They took as their starting pointa discovery by Dr. J. A. Nieuwlandof Notre Dame in connection withthe polymerization of acetylene. Bymodifying this process, they mademonovinyl acetylene. Adding hydro¬gen chloride, they made a new chem¬ical compound called chloroprene—a thin, clear liquid at low tempera¬tures. Like isoprene, it pol3rmerizedto form a rubber-like substance. Butthe new material, now known as neo¬prene, required no sulfur for vulcani¬zation and was superior to rubberunder many service conditions.Today neoprene production Ismeasured in millions of pounds a year, even though it is priced higherthan natural rubber. Hardly an in¬dustry is not now using it, for suchgood reasons as these: neoprene prod¬ucts resist deterioration by oils andgreases. They stand up under expo¬sure to direct sunlight. Their agingand flame-retarding properties alsoare superior to those of rubber.Three types of Du Pont researchModern research' involves time,money, manpower. To develop neo;prene, for example, took six years oflaboratory study, a research and de¬velopment expenditure of millions ofdollars, plus the work of skilled re¬search chemists, physicists,engineers,and other scientists.At Du Pont, research is continuous.Some of it is designed to develop newproducts or processes; some to im¬prove existing products or processes;and the balance is fundamental re¬search to uncover basic facts withoutregard to immediate commercial use.Each of ten manufacturing depart¬ments hasits own research staff and isoperated much like a separate com¬pany. In addition, the Chemical andEngineering Departments, which arenot engaged in manufacturing oper¬ations, conduct research in the in¬terests of the Company as a whole.A typical Du Pont research teamBETTER THINGS FOR BETTER LIVINGc . . THnOUGH CHEMISTOY—:—^WImH yo« wont to know abMtIto Post md the College Gradeote“The Du Pont Company andthe College Graduate”—newlyrevised, fully illustrated—de¬scribes opportunities for menand women in research, produc¬tion, sales and many other fields.Explains how individual abilityis recognized and rewarded im-der the group system of opera¬tion. For your free copy, ad¬dress: 2521 Nemours Building^Wilmington 98, DeLV L_ y Th« ntw rttRorch man has frequent contactwith experiertced supervisors. Here M. Hayek,Ph. D., Indiana *47, discusses data obtainedin an experiment with F. B. Downing, left, amember of research supervision, and M, B,Sturgis, a research group hauU Noopran*, usetbin wire, cable and hose jack¬ets, resists abrasion, oil, heat, and sunlight.N«epr«n« gIov*< and protective clothing resistdeterioration by chemicals, greases and oils.Milling and compoonBlnq neoprene in the rub¬ber experimental laboratory,may include physicists, chemists,chemical and mechanical engineers,each of whom brings specialized train¬ing to bear on a specific phase of thesubject. The man who joins one ofthese teams finds himself associatedwith some of the ablest minds in theprofession and receives the oppor¬tunity and friendly support neededto make fullest use of his capabilities.StHdent UntoA FilmIDA NOYES THEATRE“TOPPERRETURNSRoland Young, Carole LandisBillie BurkeNov. 1 1 6:30 and 8:15■U.U.s.f*T.OrCHofwmbew 9, %94SSociety honorstwo initiatesLowden Win go of StudentForum and Bill Grey, basketballletterman, were initiated into Owland Serpent this week. At the^ame meeting Charles Whitmorewas elected Secretary-Treasurer ofthe organization.Owl and Serpent Is the divl-gional honor society, selecting itsmembership for their ^achieve¬ments in extra-curricular activi¬ties. Its 18 members are bound bya secret ritual to silence on thenames of all their officers exceptthe Secretary-Treasurer. Membersare usually selected once a year,but the two recently initiated werethought worthy for prior entrance. THE OIICAGO MAROON Rogc 7Medic lauds UCgroup practiceDr. Benjamin Miller’s new book.You and Your Doctor, hails theUniversity of Chicago Clinics aspioneer developers of group medi¬cine.The.volume, recently publishedby McGraw-Hill, ranks the quad¬rangle medical centers with theRoss-Loos Clinic in Los Angeles,Henry Kaiser’s West Coast Per-manente Foundation, and theMayo Clinic. The author pleadsfor extension of their “efficient”and “logical” method of practiceas specialists in groups ratherthan as isolated individuals. European students seek friends;ask intellectual letter exchangeMany students from other countries have written to the University asking fornames of American students with whom they could correspond. The MAROON willprint a series of articles on these letters, to facilitate the setting up of such corre¬spondence between students, and also because it feels that the letters provide valuableinformation about student life and thought in other countries.Philosophically-minded UC students who casually spout Aristotelian and Platonicdoctrines and who are in passionate rapport with John Stuart Mill, might do well to crosscreeds with representatives of oth- Chancellor Hutchins’ widespread Frankfurt, refers to Mr. Hutchins’fame was illustrated by the large speech at the paulskirche celebra-numbers of foreign students who tion. He stated that becauseRESERVE YOUR SEATS NOW!MENS THANKS6IVING EVE. NOVEMIER 24ATickets on sale through January 16thA I ARTHUR RANK •ENTERPRISEaurence yyuvierPRESENTSHrKBDBn IBWUXIAM SHAKESm^JREA Tmo CiStt Film mnJ^r Ammmmm0mmmmt of PiUpfo Dm! GimJimmA Umimmrmml-lnimrm^iionmt RmlmmmmSPONSORED BY THE THEATRE CUtlDAlt .SEAtSlESERVED•AUIAN a ICATZAPOLLOTHEATER74 W.RandolpliHChico gaAA. 6.^300 AAAII, ORDERS FlUED PROAAPTLYPtrformmmemsttotiWRM dMiy It 2:30: EvMhigs al f:30Extra matiiiaa Sats. and Suna. at 5:30. Exirt Thawhaiivim boUday Mata. Nov. 25-26 at 5:30'mCB (AM tmMhKimMbait ORlifaad Fiaatllta.;U#:laar Maix.$i:it. lalMayStJI^ M aod haal Man. $1.11; laar Man. $1 Jl, MoMy $1J6* Mafca cMcfca or nonay ordera payaMo laApollo thaalar. 74 W. Randolph St. Chkate.jhaaca indicala firal choica of data aad aNamato.Ceclaaa aalf-addraaaad, ataMpod aavalopa. er hot beds of dialectic.German atudent inifiofea ideoAlexander Bunge, a 17 year oldGerman student of Braubach,wrote to President Colwell in thehope of finding American stu¬dents with whom he could ex¬change ideas on that subject. Hehas decided that “mankind suf¬fers from a deep psychical need,from mechanistical materialism,from a lack of faith in God, andfrom a great feeling of insecurity.”.Keenly interested in politicalscience, history and sociology, hefeels that “Democracy supportsthose men who are their unrea¬son’s slaves. I, being a rationalist,believe that the world can only bearranged by some autocratic rul¬ing men who are disinterested, be¬lieve in God, and have a profoundknowledge of the human soul andpsychical capacity. . . . My in¬terpretation of tile course of his¬tory is: the security of human ex¬istence diminishes in equal meas¬ure as the cognitions of science inthe material world make progress.”Wor acfs as catalystLiving in what is now theFrench zone of Germany, Alex¬ander was totally bombed out dur¬ing the last war, and he felt thefull implications of poverty. It wasthis crisis which started his “med¬itating about the reasons of allthese troubles come over mankindand questioning myself as to whatails our present generation andwhere are the reasons for the badtimes.” mentioned his Frankfurt^speech inwriting to the University. Onesuch student, Ida Rottman ofAugsberg, said that she had readhis speech "with admiration andjoy. I must confess that I wassurprised,” she continued,” to findthat there are Americans like you—with a soul—and that you havecome to Frankfurt, the town of■poets and thinkers to talk aboutthe problems of our time in sucha delicate way, without hatred oregotism. One has the feeling thata very good friend is speaking. Iwish your speech would be ap¬preciated by all. If it were, wewould have a better world.”Hutchins influences choiceAnother student, writing fromIll \ww.$WEt?meXHoMONeyW* Hutchins is the Chancellor of suchan important university, he mightbe able to advise him of some stu¬dent who would be interested inexchanging stamps.All the students who wrote tothe University expressed the hopethat-American students would cor¬respond with them. Many of themare stamp collectors, some aremusicians, and all of them are in¬terested in finding out how Amer¬icans live, especially on the cam¬pus.The names and addresses of thestudents whose letters are men¬tioned in this series may be ob¬tained from Dean Bergstresser’soffice, or the MAROON.—Barbara V. Btuinenfhal66 U. T.AnnouncesItalian SpaghettiServedSunday Nitesto SLucky you —here’s “Lucky Stripes”COACHThe ^NIGHTHAWK",. I a.m. Nightly..Only 4 hrs. 10 min.-NEW YORKCOMPARE... you'll go by AIRfFore TiflMFASTEST RAIL PUUMAN $44.10 16 keorsFASTEST RAIL COACH $27.30 17 hoursTHE *NIGHTHAWK* $29.60 4hrs.Wmia.(All farm* Maa federal fax) plus taxONE WAYFOR RESERVED SEAY TICKETSs144 South Clark St« The PalmerHouse, Stevens HotelPHONEt DEARBORN 2-5711#r Your Travel Agent/ AtRUMiSiXMfXICA'S SCCONO OtOCST AlltlNC . . . SffVINO 70 CITIfS DAHY in the u ide-spread,short point Van Edenwith**Comfort Contour^'collar)mmStep right up, gentlemen! You can’t losewhen you choose Van Elden, a number thattravels in the best of circles. You’llfind it on smart new ’'Lucky Stripes”—in Sanforized fabrics, with Van Heusenmagic sewmanship! Van Eden in’’Lucky Stripes,” $3.95 and $4.95.In white broadcloth, $3.50 and $3.95«You*U find college men^scollar favorites inVan Heusenthe world’s smartestPHUliPS-JONES CORP.,N.T.l,N.Y. shirtsI HEUSEM** I* A TRADE MARR RECISTEREO IN THE U.’•. PATENT OFFICE1DNm * THE CHICAGO MAROOH TiM«4qr, N«rMnfc*r9,194SWant AdsTo Place Ad Call Midway 3-0800. Ext. 1577 1934 DODO*—factory-new motor, drlyenless than 1000 miles; many new or re¬conditioned parts; body In excellentshape, sealed beam headlights, heater.Call Plaza 2-4595. WANTED— 3or 4 rocMn apartment, nearU of C. Will redecorate, for rent con¬sideration. No children or pets. Now at¬tending the University. Write Box 4.the Chicago Maroon. U of C. 1159 E. 5eth St., 5-ri:'coTopQuick sale by owner. No agent. Eoultv$12,000. Assm’t. $42.00 month. WriU WP. Lawton, Princeton. Illinois.FOR SALE: Zenith Transoceanic port¬able radio; standard and short wayebands; operates (m battery or 110 voltsAC-DC; In excellent condition; price$60 without battery. Call Dr. Martin.WA 2-MlO; Monday-n’lday, 9-4. DAYTIME (CLASSES In pottery Mondayand Wednesday afternoon, Friday morn¬ing. $8 for eight lessons. Firing extra.HTde Park 3-7773. Studio 5644V2 HarperAve. YOUNG COUPLE would like 4 room apt.near the University; will pay $50.00 to$100.00 per month. Write Box 25, theChicago Maroon. BEAUTIFUL ROOM for male student.Double bed, spacious, c<xnfortable. 57thand I^rchester. Call BU 8-5606 after7:00 p.m. $8 per week.VOR SALS by owner: 7-room brickhouse, steam heat, good condition. 6513Woodlawn Ave. Midway 3-1067. UNIVERSITY VETERANS GraduateHouse again offera Its large light singleand double rooms. BomeUke atmosphere.Kitchen privileges. OA 4-9615. SEWING, alterations, hems, etc., reason¬able rates. Edna Warlnner, 5623 Dor¬chester. MU 4-4680. FRANKLIN BABY Grand piano, beauti¬ful tone, excellent condition, 300 dollars.Call Livingston 8-0143. NICELY FURNISHED room, refinedhome near University with klchen privi-leges.\ single or couple In exchange forcompanionship for young lady. PhonePlaza 2-8530.LOST: Thursday on Midway. Boulsvac4watch. Reward. Logan. 525 B-J. FOR SALE—Walnut dining room table,6 chairs, $25. DO. 3-6715. HOUSE FOB SALE in Beverly Bills7 ro(xns, 4 bedrooms, l^li baths imlmediate occupancy, $16,500. Phone’BUi.tbp 5-0338.TYPEWRITERSFOR RENTimmediate Dellverff^ M. MITCHELL1228 East 63rd St.At KimborkHYDe Pork 1301 For YourCorsageMITZIE’S FLOWERSHOP1301 E. 55tli ST.Midway 3-4020 THE ALBUMPM0T06RAPHERWedding Candids1171 EostSSthMidway 3-4433 THEATRES — CONCERTS SrORTSTICKETSFAST LOW-COST SERVICEFOR LESS THAN CAR FAREOrder in Person — Order by PboneMUseum 4-1677VARSITY TICKET SERVICEWOODWORTH’S BOOK STORE.1311 E. 57th, Chicago 37. III.\ 2 Blocks Eost of Mondel Helly©ur:s lyi ildeki'^CHESTERFIELD isbtfildiiig another big,new factory for ussmokers who like theMILDER cigarette...Ifs Mf dgavtte.RADIO’S FAVORITE SONSTAR OP CHBSTBRPIBLD’SARTHUR GODFREY TIMET .1 wish I could take you in my Navionplane over the big, new factory Chesterfieldis building at Durham, N, C. IVs a honey. Itwill help supply the everr increasing demandfor the MILDER cigarette,** '194A Lccm A Mriu Tom«oo Co,