Conformists and Obscurantists besiege America has refuted religious creedsWorld culture maintains Norman Corwin to favor materialism, states WallaceBy BOB FREEMAN By JUNE MARKS“One of the most useful functions of the artist is to fill in blind spots; to “The people of the United States today have rejected the completelycontribute lights so as to lift the seige of culture ...” religious fundamentals in favor of a newly popular and non-ChristianThese words formed the essence of Norman Corwin’s lecture on the doctrine of force and crass materialism,” Henry Wallace told a near ca-“Siege of Culture,” given Thursday, April 28, to a near-capacity audience pacity audience in Mandel Hall last Friday. Accompanied by Michele Giua,in Mandel Hall. Mr. Corwin, celebrated radio writer, producer, and director, Left Socialist member of the Italian Senate, and H. Lester Hutchinson,was a recipient of the Wendell Willkie One World Award and holds a grant Labor Party member of the British Parliament, Wallace made his firstfrom the American Academy of Arts and Letters. appearance in Chicago or on any college campus since the Novemberelections.“If America is going to besaved,” the Progressive Partyleader continued, “it will be by thegrace of the Protestant consciencebeing aroused.”“The dinger is on fhe right"Wallace further declared thatalthough he doesn’t always con^*done everything the Communist*do in their country, the danger inthe U.S. doesn’t come from the“group that may have preachedor might preach violence.” Instead,he explained, it comes from thoseon the right who “use the antl^Communist crusa4e in the sameessential way as Hitler^nd Mus^solini used it—as a cloak underwhich to assault the liberties ofthe great masses of the people.**The speaker warned that the neo-fascists iii the ^U.S. are alreadyengaged in this type of violence.Decrying the “fake liberals who,culture into two distinct factions, of University officials were made in various interviews with Niebuhr, Union Theological because they felt strongly aboutCorwin defined culture as acondition, resource, and ag¬gregate of human experience.He lamented the fact that theworks of philosophers, artists, andwriters can be distorted by poli¬ticians, commercial interests, andeven critics, whom he comparedto “legless men who teach run¬ning.” Citing certain political andeconomic elements wrestling forthe control of culture, he asked,“Where does one find oneselfIn regard to Hearst, Luce, orMcCormick?” On the other hand,he charged T. S. Eliot and thephilosophy of Existentialism ascontributing to conservatism and“parlor reaction.” and defined theti lie free culture as one in whichAll works of art and science arefree to circulate everywhere. ^Disgusted with strict conformity University of Chicago, May 6, 1949 31Editorial... Loss of balanceBook A of power causesBOOK prices-a secrersTeai. HiebuhrFacts have a way of speaking for themselves, and every “Christianity cannot stopCorwin divided the besiegers of statement in this column is factual. The quoted statements declared Dr. ReinholdMAROON Staff members. The statements on book prices Seminary philosopher, in his Gil-and costs come from the current files of the University Pouticai'Press by way of Mitchell Taibleson, a member of theMAROON staff and an employee of the Press. Our readers 'may draw their own conclusions from the facts; .theMAROON will suspend its editorial judgihent on the situa¬tion and invite the University to present facts—if it can—contradicting our present suspicion of a wholesale secrethighjacking on Syllabus prices.In the Autumn Quarter, Mr. William T. Couch, direc¬tor of the University Press, referred a MAROON reporterto Miss Myra Iwagama who said that increases in syllabusthe music of such composers as prices were due to the rising costs of labor, paper, and roy-Shostakovich and' Prokofief, and cities. She refused our reporter access to the r^ords and dideven, extends to the singing o nirkt oflppr lipi* sinv fip’iires ■ *Paul Robeson. He deplored this not oner net any concieie ngures.form of censorship, maintaining 1,476 copies of the Social Science 3 Syllabus, Selectedthat it may be^^efui as apph^ed to Readings, 14th Edition, were printed at a total cost ofcopies of that Syllabus have been sold, bringThe first andcalled “Conformists,do not really understand true cul¬ture. They include rabble-rousers,old-guard Republicans, and reac¬tionary columnists and commen¬tators. Corwin expressed a genuinedisgust for strict conformity. Hestated that during the recent warthe public, although indirectly,was made hostile to all things Ger¬man, and that certain radio sta¬tions were even reluctant to airthe music of Beethoven. Now, hecontinued, the same trend is to¬wards all things Russian, towards the denial of civil liberties in Rus¬sia, engaged in red baiting andconsorting with the right as ameans of getting elected,” Wal¬lace predicted that these “desert¬ers will live to see the day whenthey will bitterly regret the parfethey have taken in the anti-Com-munist crusade.”U. S. follows GermonyAlthough he declared that w*still have time to save ourselves,Wallace warned that there is anominous possibility that the U.S.is now far along the road that ledGermany to ultimate catastrophe.Identifying himself as a “pro-^eissive capitalist,” the speakeraffirmed ' that Communism andCapitalism can make the adjust¬ments necessary to living peace¬ably in the world together. Herecommended a strong United Na¬tions, where the points of differ¬ence. between the U.S. and Rus¬sia could be settled, and addedthat “the sooner we talk businessa cultural point of view. The “ra¬dio research” man tells the crea¬tor “what the people like,” andthus the creator is enslaved bytiiese ratings which perpetuallyadhere to conformity. Since thereare no rating systems for litera¬ture, music, or philosophy, why,(Continued on Poge 16)Pupils* parentsThe first Parents’ Weekend,held last Friday, Saturday,and Sunday to acquaint thefamilies of first and second year (Continued on Poge 71 Preceding Wallace on the pro¬gram was H. Lester Hutchinson,who decried the uncivilized atti-(Continued on Page 6)plunging necklines or the lengthof movie ing in total receipts of $3,383.05. The cost per volume wasalserted^that it may lead to “au- $1.68; the Press sold it tO the Bookstore for $4.42, 12.5 per day evening In Rockefeller Chapel.thoritarianism of the worst sort.” cent of which it paid to the College Editorial Fund as a According to Dr. Niebuhr, warCorwin severely indicted the royalty; the Bookstore sold it to the students for $5.50. The an institution iri itself, but to Russia, the bkter forthe u!s7rating system employed in radio. Press’ markup was 98 per cent. ^ breakdown of the balance of Hutchinson decries atomic thinkingfVvat u u rtPflriiv from t' ^ power. Power is the final argu- ~ 'and declared that t y April 25, Mr. Couch told a MAROON reporter that ment in any dispute. Justice ishe did not fix policy on syllabi. “Dean Ward fixes the policy merely the balance of poweron College syllabi,” he said. “We are performing a serviceat cost.”496 copies of the Natural Science I Selected Readings,4th Edition, were printed at a total cost of $1,247.00. 274copies have been sold, bringing in total receipts of $1,492.43.The cost per volume was $2.51; the Press sold it to the Book¬store for $5.45; the Bookstore sold it to the students for$6.75. The Press’ markup was 117 per cent.On April 26, Dean Ward’s office referred a MAROONreporter to a Mrs. Perry, “the editor of College syllabi.” regalia at the Quadrangle Club Revels Wednesday night in1 T T/^ Mrs. Perry told the reporter, “I put the books together and Mandel Hall. Mr. Hutchins, the last star to appear in a ver-CtTC StXO^W^Tt Ly negotiate with the Press ... I tell them how many copies we itable galaxy of faculty talent, rendered with a delicacyneed . . . They print it and fix the price on the book.” She which offered an artistic contrast to his costume the Rosestated that she dealt with Miss Iwagami, but had no knowledge of the Press’* policy and no hand in deciding the price.304 copies of the Social Science 200 Syllabus, 3rd Edi¬tion, were printed at a total cost of $180.77. 277 copies have ^students with the College way of bringing in total receipts of $443.20. The cost per applaud at intervals, but ratherlife was a complete success, ac- ' o o _ . x Packed house cheersHutchins in musical' Enthusiastic students cheered, and many rose to theirfeet, as their Chancellor stood before them in full footballcording to Harker Rhodes, SUPromotion Department Chairman.The program planned by StudentUnion and the University Devel¬opment Office drew over 40 par¬ents and included a variety show,a student art exhibition, a modelclass, and a baseball game.Mr. Colwell, President of theCollege, began the Parents’ Week¬end with a keynote address enti¬tled “A Parent Looks at the Col¬lege.”The high point of the weekendwas the steak fry Saturday night.About a hundred parents and stu¬dents were fed steak sandwichescooked over a charcoal fire in thecircle.Mr. Wilson of the DevelopmentOffice announced that another Bowl Blues, a touching ditty concerning the sad fate of hisfavorite sport. of the foot-lights from his super-The audience—a full house, fiuous but oh - so - professional -of course—did not laugh and looking head mirror.volume was $0.59; the Press sold it to the Bookstore for expressed its .delight throughout club-mates, whom they$1.60; the Bookstore sold it to the students for $2.00. The performance, tittering and rescued from financial oblivion byPress’ markUD was 171 per cent. chuckling only in order to rest the masterful coup of admitting_ «. , . 1%/rAn^^-k.Y i. the more exhausting horse- the ladies to membership, wereOn the afternoon of April 26, a MAROON reporter laughs and hysterics called out by equally amusing. A plagiaristcalled Press Director Couch, related what Mrs. Perry had the mad-cap antics of “all the Shakespeare and his malaproptold him, and asked again for an appointment. Mr. Couch Calvert men ^f di^inction since Romeo (Arite Scott and Ed Hil-told him, “I see no reason why I should discuss with any¬body the price of the syllabi.” Beelzebub.” Said Dean Strozier ton) were foils for the’more staidbackstage. “This is a wonderful persons of Dr. Samuel Johnsonaudience. They’ll laugh at any- “pf dictionary fame” (John Lau)500 copies of Program Studies in Human Development thing.” ' and Saint Thomas Aquinas (Hen.were printed at a total cost of $205.94. 230 copies have been Opens with invasion ry Everett), cuff zoii as Michelsold, bringing in total receipts of $276.91. The cost per VOl- The review, titled “You’re in the Angelo offered a friendly dittyume was $0.41; the Press sold it to the Bookstore for $1.20; Styx, Professor!”, opened with the questioning the claim to sanctiyinvasion of the Elysian Club by of said Thomas, who had nevertwo UC intellectuals, Dr. J. Sig- even heard of the University ofgismund Id, psychiatrist (Bob Chicago or Robert Hutchins. (Ex-Strozier) and Professor Fillmore plained Confucius, “That’s whereBias, historian (Bill Urry), who students go to UT to get fried.the Bookstore sold it to the students for $1.50. The Press’markup was 192 per cent. vOn April 28, a MAROON reporter called James A. Cun¬ningham, Vice-President in Charge of Business Affairs. Mr.Cunningham said that “syllabi are sold on a cost basis with Charon (Al Dahlberg) profe^ors go ^ class to get hard.... ........ «eTto"Parents’ Weekend is scheduled for P®** handhng charges. Wh^ asked if tlm meant qj. scintillating _ in medico also displayed the artistic talent*the third week of October next that a book costing the Press one dollar was sola to the whites, completed his dazzling ap- associated with his name in paintsfall. Bookstore for one dollar, he said “Yes.” ' pearance by reflecting the glory (Coniinuod on Poge 12)r THE CHICAGO MAROON FrMay, May 6, >94^Comptroller says UCfacing difficult problemBy BILL KLUTTSUniversity Comptroller Harvey C. Daines, who believesthat the U. of C. “is facing the most difficult financial prob¬lem of its history, with the possible exception of the firstte^ years,” has documented that assertion with 120 pages of s*cientific”achievements, it^ wasof complex charts and statistical tables in the recently announced by Argonne Nationalprinted Comptroller’s Report for fiscal 1947-48. Laboratory last week.Costs continue to outrun income, and Daines considers growing radioactiveIt “imi^ible” to pa^s themon to Studente and clmic pa- instruction and re-tients. He is hopeful that the search were boosted 29%, up $5,-administration will be able to find 173,021 to $23,034,398.16. Argonne grows atomic matterThe production of radioac¬tive organic matter in whichthe carbon atoms of ordinarycarbohydrate molecules are re¬placed by radioactive carbon-14,is the addition to its growing listsome better solution.Fewer students paid more feeslast year. Registrations on theQuadrangles were 13,834, down4.1 per cent from 1946-7, buthigher tuition fees brought in$4,187,660.42, an increase of $210(-828.37. Slightly higher incomefrom application fees, examina¬tion fees. Home Study, and thenursery, orthogenic, and labora¬tory schools boosted total studentfees to $5,119,311.91, up $235,-222.82. University College’s incomewavered as its flood of veteransbegan to abate.S^Hdent impdct softenedStudent aid, however, was in¬creased, as promised at the timeof the tuition hike, rising $112,116to $759,317. Student payments alsorose less (4.8%) than income fromother sources — endowments(8.7%), gifts (13.4%), patients(17.5%), reserves (386.2%) andother (40.8%).These increases pulled total in¬come up 22.5% to $31,378,603.67.Expenditures, however, leaped25.4% to $31,586,455.01, creating adeficit of $207,851.The deficit was kept as smallas it was only be diverting into‘‘income” more than a million dol¬lars of special gifts received inprevious years, three-quarters ofwhich had been serving as endow¬ment.Biggest yeor yetThe stresses of inflation andreal estate tax increases hit theuniversity in its biggest fiscalyear since the boom period of1944-45, when it handled govern¬ment appropriations of over $20,-000,000. Government contracts lastyear paid the U. of C. $10,583,176.Not counting such irregular ac¬tivities, net expenditure on regu¬lar budget, like all major items ofincome and expense, topped allprecedent.From this outlay, the U. of C.did more than meet rising upkeepColumbia L. P.Record Player AttachmentRegularly 29.95NowWith Purchose of 10 ColumbiaLong Ploying RecordsWe Will Hook-up Player toYour RadioFREEWith Purchase of 3Columbia 12-Inch RecordsRADIO CENTER1514 E. 51sf St.DRexel 3-6111—11 to 7 How divisions sharedThe physical sciences got morethan half the total allotted to di¬visions :Phy. Sci $10,633,552.70Bi. Sci 6,162,233.70Soc. Sci 1,329,153.04Humanities .... 759,944.83The College got $642,890.93. Theprofessional schools and extensiongroups were each allotted under aquarter of a million dollars.Of special interest to many willbe the income figures of “auxil¬iary enterprises,” activities andprojects of a business nature op¬erated for service to students andfaculty.” As a whole, these enter¬prises’ profit rose $138,855, butthe rise of only 3.5% over lastyear was the lowest in all sourcesof ‘ university income.Bookstore profits upBookstore profits, spurred by$284,034 in government sales, rose carbohydrates for the first timeactually boils down to this com¬plicated but mundane-looking ap¬paratus set up in a former green¬house on the old Freund estate,now the “isotope farm” of theArgonne DuPage County site.Mr. William Chorney is shownadjusting the equipment used forgrowing radioactive algae. By in¬troducing lactic acid into a flaskcontaining radioactive barium car¬bonate, as Chorney is about to do,radioactive CO-2 is released, andthis is pumped into the culturemedium of algae. Through theprocess of photosynthesis, the al¬gae itself becomes radioactive. Theoxygen is removed from the sys¬tem by a titanium compound.By such methods as raising miceon a diet of this algae, a greatmany radioactive substances canbe obtained without going throughthe tedious processes of organicchemistry.1,700 raise funds1,700 workers are serving in the1949 UC Alumni Foundation cam- Dr. William Chorney of Argonne shown here in former greenhouse, newhome for growing rodioocfive corbohydrofes.from $38,990 to $52,884 last.year, paign to raise $350,000, John F.'The U. of C. Press, however, re¬placed its 1946-47 contribution of$58,753 with $16,189 in red ink.Income from Commons and resi¬dence halls fell off from $41,867(Continued on Poge 5) Dille, foundation chairman, an¬nounced recently. The gift willbe presented to Ernest CadmanColwell on Alumni day, June 11,when he will make his annualreport to the board.To Win Success...You must have some dependableFinancial Plan (small thoLighit may be)For Exomple:Beginning atage 20If You Live — You Deposit$18.18 per yecKYou Receive*$1,000 at age 65If you do not live to completeyour investment ...Your Wife, Mother or SisterReceives:A. $50 every Christmas for 25 years, orB, $1,000 immediate cashWe also have low cost contracts whichpay hospital and doctor's bills ifyou are injured by accident — premiumsas low as $12.00 annually.llireet II. C. Cantpu^i Hepr€\%«iiiatioiiCall MIflwaj 3-OaOO —Exl. 1577REDFIELD ASSOCIATESc/o Chicago Maroon Office, Reynolds Club5706 University Ave., Chicago 37''Please send information on your (1.) Low-Cost Ac¬cident and Sickness policies. (2.) Life Insurance.(3.) Insured Investment Contracts. (4.) AutomobileInsurance. (5.) Fire Insurance for clothing andhousehold furnishings.NAMEADDRESS ‘‘TheEve” \U/MARILYN KOLBERWith the approach of warmerweather, “The Eye” thought youmight welcome a few ideas onwhere to buy your summer togsand trimmings. Don’t forget, whenyou shop, be sure to mention "TheEye” to the man across thecounter if his advertisements haveappeared in this column.In style for both beach andschool wear are the multi-colorKedettes on display at Leo’s BootStore. 1324 E.55th St. Com-p 1 e t c withrubber soles,these crea¬tions pricedat $3.95 and$4.95 promiseto wear likeFe. Manufac¬tured by thesame out-standing namein sportswear for the feet. At$2.95 and $3.45 are gym shoes inwhite or navy blue for fellows andgirls alike.You won’t have trouble withmis-fits if you visit the Under-lovely Department of the YoungCalifornia Shop, 1437 E. 53rd St.,when you decideto buy new brasand panti-gir¬dles. Managed bya graduate cor-‘ setierre who re¬fuses to sell theafore mentionedarticles without afitting, the department now has alastex bra that no activity mindedgal will want to do without. Injunior and regular sizes, withtaped seams and adjustable shoul¬der straps this lightweight gar¬ment comes in blue, white, nude,and black and at only $3.50, isperfect for the new plunging neck¬line garments. mIf you’re getting a degree thisyear, you’ll want to have some¬thing to remind you of the mo¬mentous oc¬casion. Tosure youwon’t be re¬fused becauseof crowdedschedules,make yourappointmentas early as possible at The Album,1171 E. 55th St., where caps andgowns are available for all exceptthose receiving their Doctorates.For that last minute purchaseof a Mother’s Day gift pay a visitto Scott’s Jewelry, 854 E. 63rd St.,if you want some¬thing different inpins, pendants, orearrings in sets orseparately. A 10 percent discount willbe given to studentson these plexi-glass,hand made, attrac¬tive articles pricedfrom $2.50 to $5.95as well as pearls, compacts,costume jewelry. andShade your eyes this summerwith sun-glasses that are guar¬anteed not to harm them. At theN.S.A. Card honoring Nelson Op¬tical Co., 1138 E. 63rd St., are Ray-Ban and Calo-bar eye-shad¬ers that areground per¬fectly with nopower, or ac-cording toyour personal prescription. Wellframed in solid colors or multi¬color plastics, they are priced at$2.50 and up.Pace the campus in the latestof nylon socks being featured bythe Neumode Hosiery Store, 1033E. 63rd St., Fashioned for fellow.s,these long-wearing footpreserve rswith feet ofmercerizedcotton, bodiesof all nylon,and elastictops, come insizes 10-13 in asolid colors and are priced at only$.55 the pair. large variety otFriday, May 6, 1949 THE.CHICAGO MAROON Page 3Jordan protests orthodoxy, resigns,affirms Liberalism, Republicanism“I am still a Republican!” announced Jean Jordanfollowing his resignation from the Student Republican clubTuesday. Suspended from the club until fall quarter by avote of the members on an indictment by C. Harker Rhodes,Jordan permanently resigned his membership.In a statement following the indictment, Jordan con¬demned the club’s withdrawal from the All Campus Com¬mittee against the Broyles ,Bills and the passage of a question. . . , it is no^4. longer an organization to which arecent constitution^amend- honorablyment, introduced by Don Pheristhat all applicants for membership Mills, Coser talkat May Day fetein the club shall submit applica- belong/Jordan’s indictmenttions in writing and a simple ma- ^alsely gave the impre^ionjority of those members present represented the Club inshall be required to vote for the testimony before tl^ Broylesapplicant before he can become Committee and on other occa-a member. He charged that this sions.amendment, “changed the Club Previous to the “trial,” the Clubinto an exclusive group restricted elections raised C. Harker Rhodesto extreme rightists whose ortho- to the presidency over Dick dedoxy even the Chicago Tribune Haan by a 12-5 vote.^ Look First to^ Lowers tor Records^ . From Bach to Billie Holiday^ ON COLUMBIA LONG-PLAYING RECORDS ISL wins again;sweeps election—Pope is high manThe Independent Students’League gained its secondsweeping victory of the year a discussion of “Perspectives of the American LaborNSA^iectons “Alexander Socialist Movements” highlighted the Politics club’ssfuln“embirp“es“de?ft: May Day party, for which over one hundred studentstopped his running mates by re- jammed the home Of Instructors C. Wright Mills and Lewiscalf ““ Coser last Friday nightThe other five delegates will be Saul Mendelson, editor of Student Partisan, led off witKcharged J®an Jordan, 665 votes; Annie general presentation Of the Independent Socialist view-Russel, 657 votes; Suzette Aldon, ®653 vo’tes: Herb Vetter. 634 votes! CiutUtlP PXtensiveand Joyce Dannen, 622 votes. velopment of an independentThe six alternates eiect^, also ^^jYnmpr hmcrriim labor party as the indispensa-members of the ISL slate, are SliTilTneT prUgrUlflSheldon Pollack, 594 votes; Frank / II ^ J ^ItOgan, 590 votes; Harold Liscjner, JOT CClL Sttd'CtCtttS1217 EAST 55th PL 2-4361# :'omimxf/Latest, Smartest Idea in Dance MusicIComplete Programs of Hits by the Bands ThatMade Them Famous—on a single LP RecordIYour all-time favorites—6 to 8 great full-lengthhits by each band on one LP Record that plays upto 25 minutes! And never such marvelousfidelity of tone on popular records! Only$2.85 each. (Fed. tax inch)ffS (T^^eccyv&f IIJUST OUTIMOtf TO COME.-WATCH FOR THEMHARRY JAMESFRANKIE CARLEXAVIER CUGAT •LES BROWN • • GENE KRUPA• DUKE ELLINGTONBENNY GOODMANWOODY HERMANCLAUDE THORNHILLYour Dmalor hat thorn today!TmW* Marh "Columhta'* and (jjt tne U. S fdt. Of. 575 votes; Gerhard Weinberg, 574votes; Peggy Pepper, 564 votes,and Patrick Foley, 547 votes.UC lauds alumni& open every evening ble next step in this country, andtied up the efforts of socialists, . , , , , , . , here with the efforts of those in-Eight hundred Md^enty. dependent socialists in Europ.£g““;sf«tL“sr£ T’rz " ““presented in this summer session™J, c ™..... .»“2,".'.’^first Howard Taylor Ricketts o®7”}„iv oq^ term development of America’s eco-award for 1949. The award, estab- August l-Seot 3 ' nomic and strategic position as alished as a nati^al h^or for ^he summer program is geared world imperialist power,” andtheTate whL'RSts died of *<>■• a de'^eeliift^typhus in Mexico City While Study, working ^^wajd a degree ^d the helping those in Westerning the disease, was given to Dr. nroffvams A who seek to develop anseries of courses and workshops Independent Western Union capa-sell Wilder 07. questions of current import- ble of counterbalancing the twoance are included. big imperialist powers.”Applicants for admission may Cowr emphoriKd shiftsecure application forms from the Lewis Coser laid great emphasisoffice of the entrance counselor qjj ^he shift in the center of grav-in the Administration Building, j^y jqj. socialists from Europe toroom 203. the United States. He said thatm . the peoples of Western Europe feelEpiscopslions oloct hosas themselves to be helpless pawns.The Canterbury club elected ^t the mercy of the two giants,Elias Chandler president last and that the socialist movementWednesday, succeeding Ray Holly, cannot look to Europe for guid-Betty Sawyer was selected vice- ance or base itself mainly on thopresident, Ann Casselberry secre- problems of Europe,tary. and Arto Brown treasurerA new eonstUution was adopted ir^ the U.S. toat the same meeting. ^world. Therefore socialists heremust bend every effort to the task"ARISTOTLE—that mas¬ter of arts, had been buta dunce without wine;and what we ascribe tohis parts, is but due to thejuice of the vine.''— ANON.Wine and Wisdom, 1710JIMMY'S55th and WoodlawnISBELL’SBESTMBiT1435 E. 51st STREETLOUIVGE ADJOINING of breaking out of their politicalisolation and of giving a socialistperspective to the'American labofmovement.”Mills states viewsC. Wright Mills asserted thatour country symbolized the sue-cessful application of manipula¬tion in place of coercion as ameans of maintaining the statusquo. He explained the variousforms that this manipulation took,particularly the use of the newly-developed media of mass com¬munication, and developed theidea that “socialists and the labormovement must not in turn at¬tempt to manipulate human pup¬pets but must develop the spirit offree inquiry and the habit of in¬dependent thought among thepeople.”Exeluisiwe Factory DealerCARS Paris andTRCCKS Accessories— IN HYDE PARK —More Students Ride InFORDS Than In Any Other CarBe sure to place your order nowfor early delivery of yournew FORDService and Repairs on All Mokesof^Cors in Our extensive, com¬pletely equipped shop. Body and Fender WorkEngine Repair and AdjustmentSimonizinig — LubricationRITZ EEmiL MOTORS, Inc.5518 S. Lake Park Avenue PLaza 2-8880Nge 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON Fndoy, Moy 6, 1949THE 30-DAyMILDNESS TEST WONME OVER. RUSS.CAMELS ARE SO MILD!IT'S CAMELSFOR ME. PAT —FOR TASTE ANDMILDNESS ! Styled in the Mor¬gan manner. ’'Foreverand Ever" is dance-tempt¬ing. Russ likes smooth musicand mild cigarettes. ’'Camels’*—says Russ-"they’re my idea ofa mild, fine-lasting smoke!”For Smoothness and Styling — ''Forever And Ever"— A NiW OECCA DISCRuss Morgan and his lovelyvocalist. Pat Laird, talk over theCamel Mildness TestR. J. Reynoldi Tobacco Co., Winiton-Salem.N.C. In a recent coast-to-coast test of hun¬dreds of men and women who smokedCamels, and only Camels, for 30 days, notedthroat specialists, making weekly examinations, reportedNOT ONE SINGLE CASEOF THROAT IRRITATIONdue to smokingCAMELS'CoT^LUiTL cntyfp^^P^ (xdtniYCLtlOKX ^ SU©rs attend convention\J I I'll’ I I'J KA'X^I ll'l'l l' Eight UC campusites con- The only serious, non-technlcalfor radio and United NationsBy ANN COLLAR‘‘Radio, for all its shortcomings, has a greater sense of public responsibility than thepress,” said Norman Corwin last Friday while discussing his work for the United Nations.“Radio will broadcast facts that the newspapers do not print.”Corwin, who is chief of the UN’s Special Projects Commission, described the Commis¬sion’s function as that of a Jack of ail trades. Their final goal is to keep the world informedof the UN’s activities in all fields.“We have no station of our own,” Corwin said. “We are more concerned with ourservice function than ^with the curse of listener ratings.” with cited the University of’Chicagoactual broadcasting.” All such ratings as a guide, Corwin Roundtable. ‘‘Efforts should bemade to see that local concerts aswell as local ball games are giventime on the air.”committee meetings are re- said that a program with only acorded and edited. ‘‘We want tokeep people informed of the high¬ly romantic work the UN is doing.”Prujeett ore varied*‘At the request of the nationalgovernments such widely diversi¬fied projects as solving agriculturaldertaken. The success of the lat¬ter was made possible only by thecooperation of Russia and theUnited States in contributingmedical supplies.” million listeners might go off theair.Regrets polorityCorwin added that he regretted ^ >^11the ‘‘cultural polarity” of commer- Emeritus Club returnscial radio. ‘‘With the exception ofthe field of sports there are no ^ir. Qiom fH/. PTOgrams of roglonal interest, members of the UC ‘‘EmeritusQiT/t fiaViVina^a phnWa ^nly two Centers of tal- Club” will return to Alma MaterAmazon and fighting a choleraepidemic in Egypt have been un- *“rk must go to ehher New York presentationrr HoZwo^’- of ’’y Presidentor noiiywooa. Colwell on June 11, the AlumniHe would like to see more re- Association reported this week,gional organization of radio. As an The Emeritus Club constitutes allexample of what universities can UC graduates of over 50 years ago,do to remedy this situation he or approximately 700.Reports of all these activities•re compiled into the Special Proj¬ects Commission’s news releases."It is important” Corwin added,"that people know the successesand need of cooperational work.”Most countries, including Russia,take these informational releases.Writes of 'globulfsts'Corwin, himself, is working ona documentary about the worldcitizen. “It will concern all peo¬ple, past and present, who thinkin world terms, for example, BenFranklin and Wendell Willkie.”Corwin stated that he ‘‘finds thework much more satisfactoiy tn'-uicommerical radio. It is pure radio,none of our objectives are ever»ung.”Refuses contractHe added that he had n^t, re¬newed his contract with CBS, butwas still working for them on afreelance basis."Commercial radio suffers from NIGHTLY INC. SUNDAYMATINEE SATURDAYSBLACKSTONE^HILARITY ROLLED FREELY ...Chicago was roused from footlight doldrums by a racysatire with 400 laughs.”Charles Finston, HERALD-AMERICANi^PiklcufcL presents4 a new comedy 0$^JACK KIRKLAND ^ WBased on PAT FRANKS 'BedtSelle^^^DELIGUTFtJL COi»fE»¥”Roy Topper, HERALD-AMERICANPRICES: EVERY NIGHT; Orch., $3.80; 1st Bole., $3.10, $2.50; 2ndBole., $1.85, $1.25; MATINEES; Orch., $2.50; 1st Bole., $1.85; 2ndBale., $1.25. (All Tax Included)MAIL ORDERS ACCEPTED—Enclose Stamped, Self-Addressed Envelope Eight UC campusites con¬stituted the third largestdelegation last week to the26th annual convention of theAssociation of College Unions inColorado Springs, Colorado. The280 delegates, half faculty andhalf students, represented 94schools spread all over the coun¬try.Most of the sessions dealt withthe policies and theories of workin extracurricular activities, in¬cluding food and service manage¬ment, planning of student unionbuildings, directing of social ac¬tivities such as dances and out¬ings, financial support of unions,and general administrative pro¬cedure. The only serious, non-technicalproblem which arose was whethercontrol of i student union shouldbe maintained on an elective basi.sor on an appointive basis, the as¬sumption of the latter being thatthis would insure competent choiceof personnel and competent lead¬ership. Because of the extremediversity of organization, no twostudent unions in the country be¬ing alike, no decision was reachedon the question.Those who attended were: NellEastbum, Staff Advisor; JaneSimmons, president of SU; Mi¬chael Weinberg, past president;Seymour Schwartz, James Oates.James Kleffen, Janet Meyers andElizabeth Hough.Good QUEEN LIZZIEwould’ve had ’em in a tizzy.«•if she’d worn aSOLDSee Them at Marshall Fields • Carson Pirie Scoff • WieboldtsFill beiklet; “WAIOIOBE TRICKS”. Writiiitdy Bo«d, Inc., Dipt. K. 1375 IrMifif, RiwTork IIFridoy, May 6, 1949 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5,VAW.VdWiV.iiV.*^^^^V«%%%VASV.VAW.V.VA%VARROW BASQUESHIRTS M.50 UPGive your torso a bigbreak this summerwith a few Arrowbasque shirts.Perfect for golf,tennis, or basquingIn the sun.See your Arrowdealer todaylARROWSHIRTS and TIISUNDERWEAR.* HANDKIRCHIEFS » SPORTS SHIRTSdWVWWWWmW In Superior WildernessQuetico Lake RegionComplete eatfltting serTie*fS.50 a daj with Gram*man aluminum canoea.Food, your choice—extra.Basswood Lake Lodire ^on Mian. • Canadian J jpBorder. Main Lodca siand 20 logr cabins.Modern bath roomfacilities. Amcri-can Plan ratesSS.OO and up.iHUOERiftssDoAd goes Dada . . . Morris comments on situationin Chinese, Indian strugglesBy FRANK WOOD“Of ten potential battles I saw shaping up between Chinese Nationalist forces and theChinese Communists, only two actually materialized,” Dr. Charles W. Morris, lecturerin philosophy, told the MAROON in an interview early this week.Dr. Morris, an expert in semantics and a student of comparative religions, has justreturned from a six-month trip to the Orient under the auspices of the University and theRockefeller Foundation.Income fromCommons, dormsshrinks: DainesJoseph Axelrod, resident heod of Linn House, crosses cigarettes with hiswife os they dance flonked by Jim Setiliff lending Morilyn Goodstein, ond Bar¬bara Sunshine hiding her foce behind Dick Thierouit's shoulder. They oreattending Le Goite Dodd which whirled through Judson Library lost Fridayevening. Entry 100's onnuol costume baH, decorated by John Dunceith andinspired by John David, drew thirty couples ond ten stogs,f Fan! Relaxation! Sightseeing!i Continuing his description of the Nationalist-Communist “battles,” Dr. Morris ex¬plained that after both sides Indian people are no longer will-had drawn up their line of ing to accept capitalistic controlbattle they would make a of the government, socialism willdeal, the side with the greatest Provide at least one alternative tostrength being the victor. The communism,victorious general, who would East and West misview each otherj r B then accept any members of the Dr. Morris also expressed con-to $14,600. These figures exclude '““fluered army into his forces cern at the lack of understandingWoodlawn Hall, whose income fell that so wished, might even accept between' Far Eastern people andoff from $14,548 to $7,878. the losing leader as a general in ourselves. “Most of the East'sIncome changes in the auxil- j^jg army. Those who do not join ideas of our country are based onlaries were erratic. Midway prop- allowed to do as thev nlease motion pictures,” he said, furthererties’ income doubled from $18,- f fpointing out that most motion000, while income from student Moiris commented that it is pictures displayed there are sec-apartments was down about 25% not uncommon to see hordes of pnd rate. “One good example oflast year. men in Nationalist uniforms wan- my point,” Dr. Morris continued,Even a handful of university about the streets of Com- “ig exemplified by a question Iowned residences for astronomers munist dominated cities unmo- x^as asked in India after a lectureat placid Yerkes Observatory have lasted,their ups and downs, to judge U.S. stand correct, 1 had given.' ‘Are all young Ameri¬cans degenerates?’ a young IndianESCORTED BUS TOURSi Tulip Festival-Holland, Mich., May21-22^ Old-world pageontry, costurrres, donees, parades amid a setting ofbeoutiful tulips combined with the scenic beauty and vocation activitiesof nearby Sougotuck, Michigon. Time to roam; stoy at Hotel Casa¬blanca; inexpensive varied meols. Enjoyable drive via luxury-liner air-conditioned bus. Leave Chicago Saturdoy morning, May 21 — returnSunday evening, Moy 22.Price includes transportafien and hotel accommodotions $9.95 inc. taxMemorial Day Week-end atI Saugatuck, Mich. . . . May 28-29-30Complete lake resort facilities; boating, cycling. Dune-hiking, shuffle-board, sun-bathing, tennis, golf, etc. Visit famed art colony; stoy otHotel Casablanca; Inexpensive varied meals; Planned activities andPrivate exploring. Leave Chicogo Saturday morning, May 28 — returnMonday evening. May 30.Price includes transportation ond hotel accommodations $12.95 inc. taxFor information and reservationsVarsity Ticket ServiceWOOnWORTH’S BOOK STORE1311 EAST 57th MUseum 4-16772 blocks eost of Mondcl noil Rather Fly Thon Ride a TrainLook This OverAuthorized Charter ServiceFare to N. Y S32.91 by DC-3Fare to N. Y S31.40 by coachTax IncludedFor information on this andother flights call MI 3-3810from the stark totals of two June Morris believes that with30ths. regard to China “the stand taken “These misconceptions are notTheir 1946 - 47 income w a s jjy Qp2; state Department is essen- entirely one sided,” the professor$1,644. Last year saw a relatively tially correct. The best thing this added. “The popular Americanastronomical plummeting to minus country can do now is stand by idea of the East seems to be oneuntil things are settled, then be of mysticism and passivity. I be-one of the first to recognize and lieve this to be false. The factsmaintain good relations with the are, there is a great deal of simi-new government.” He further ex- larity between the ideals of theplained that in China today there Far East, particularly China, andis no real alternative to Commu- those of our own country.”nism since there is no middle-of- While in the Orient, Dr. Morristhe-road party, and the people conducted a survey analyzing thehave lost faith in the Kuomin- values placed on life ideals bytang. - students in Neaf and Far EasternIn India Dr. Morris saw a much universities. Among the countriesdifferent political picture. Pandit he visited were China, Japan,Nehru’s present government is Burma, India, Pakistan, Syria andfinding it difficult to meet the Lebanon. Earlier, Dr. Morris con-needs of the people, and is try- ducted a similar study in thising to organize capital to pro- country which was published inmote industry. Indian capitalists his latest book. The Open Shelf.are asking certain concessionsfrom the government, one of themost important being a promise T vt/Tyi cof non-nationalization of certainindustries. Many of the Indianpeople are dissatisfied with thisdeal. They realize however, that . , ♦ .they must accept these conces- StCtTKlplUg StOVySsions for the present at least, andare biding their time. Departmental lib r a r i a n sThis is similar to the conditions have no illusions about thein China some time ago. A major maturity Of U. of C. students,difference however. Dr. Morris ex- They’re accustomed to keepinpplained, is the existence of a fair- them supplied with everythinply strong Socialist party in India, from ink, paper clips, and rubberAs a result of this, when and if bands to scratch paper, extra pen-Columbia L. P.Record Ployer AttachmentRegularly 29.95Ho.With Purchase of 10 ColumbioLong Ploying RecordsWe Will Hook-up Player toYour RadioFREEWith Purchose of 3Columbia 12-Inch RecordsRADIO CENTER1514 E. 51st St.DRexel 3-6111—11 to 7a situation arises in which theBooks for Every Tasteand Every BudgetThe Law of Love and the Law of Violence AOOby Count Leo Tolstoy 0Tolstoy's analysis of religious and philosaphical principlesInsight ond Outlookby Arthur Koestler UAn exciting new book on ethics, aesthetics and creative thinking.An Outline of Psychoanalysis AOOby Sigmund Freud dm •Prairie Avenue OOOby Arthur Meeker. VPoint of No Return 050by John P. Marquond wThis latest of Mr. Marquand's numerous books is beinghailed by critics as his greatest.The Situation in Asia 9^^by Lattimer Owen . £iA timely book written by an expert in far-Eastern affairs.Plug a large selection ot ehildren*s hookstor all age groupsUniverisit^ of ChicagoBookstore5802 Ellis Avenue cils, and change for the telephone—when thev c’on’t borrow the li¬brarian’s phone for purely socialcalls.That neither the ingenuitythe students nor the patience ofthe librarians has yet been ex¬hausted, how’ever, is borne out byan incident which a reporter wit¬nessed last week:A librarian returned to a busydesk to find a young gentlemanin full possession, stamping largestacks of the newssheet “In Fact”with his own rubber stamp, thelibrarian’s stamp pad.The fellow looked up, smiledsweetly, and murmured softly, “Ishan’t be long.”The librarian, muttering quiet¬ly, tiptoed away.ELY,. MINNESOTAPage 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON Fridoy, Moy 6, 1949Wallace speaks...'Kext on our |>ro9roin it • Ucturcr who will tpeek on Hi« i«tignifico»t books!f" (Continued from Poge 1)tude the world is taking toward young intellectuals must lead thethe settlement of its problems. “It fight against those who would de¬ls as absurd to talk about atomic stroy true intellectualism and lib-energy in terms of the atomic eralism.”bomb as it would be to discuss Describing Italy’s poverty re¬electricity in terms of the electric suiting from the bitter miserieschair,” the British Parliament and oppression under fascism, themember told the audience. ' Italian Senator declared that itCondemning the Atlantic Pact “confuses and amazes me thatfor dividing the world into two political leaders fail to understandarmed camps and two economic that technological improvementsunits, Hutchinson claimed that" cannot win wars or destroy the“we can’t maintain prosperity by ideas of man.”putting capital into arms, which A$$oils “wor poet*'must ultimately lead to disaster. oiua described the attempt ofThe only market for weapons of Western powers to destroy andestruction is war. ideology in Eastern Europe which,Assoils foreign policy according to him, is a “livingHutchinson, also decried the thing,” as doomed to failure. TheBritish Labor Party for becoming speaker explained that in his“part and parcel of the Conserva- estimation the “Marshall Plantive foreign policy.” served as a prelude to the NorthIn reply to a question from the Atlantic ‘war’ pact, and has ledaudience, Hutchinson commented Italy to reject her peacetime in-that the “average working man in dustries in favor of war produc-England has a higher regard for tion.”Henry Wallace than any other liv- The meeting, sponsored by theing American.” UC chapter of the Young Progres-“Intellecfuols must leod": Giu« sives of America, marked one ofMichaele Giua, speaking in Ital. the first stops of a nationwideian with the aid of an interpreter, pieace tour being conducted bytold his UC audience that “the Wallace, Hutchinson, and Giua.Luckies’ fine tobacco picks you up when you’relow • • • calms you down when you’re tense—putsyou on the Lucky level! That’s why it’s so importantto remember that Lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco —mild, ripe, light tobacco. No wonder more independ¬ent tobacco experts—auctioneers, buyers and ware¬housemen—smoke Luckies regularly than the next twoleading brands combined! Get a carton of Luckies today!^tike Ateana Kne TbAaceoSo round, so firm, so fully packed — so free and easy on the drawkCCO COUPAN*¥A<c^AEIAiECIllOlifiMt tmiPenguins, PelicansHaynesGlass 50MotframPhysical Basis ofPersonality 40CoppardAdam and Eveand Pinch Me. . ..40MaitvellFilm 50RichardsModernArchitecture 40LawrenceSons andLovers 60LawrenceThe Rainbow 60RiceRussianArt 60StebbingThinking toSome Purpose .. ..40FarringtonGreek ScienceVol. I 40Vol. II 40HomerThe Odyssey 60atTHE REDDOORBOOKSHOP1328 East 57th StreetCHICAGO 37, ILLINOIS11 to 11Friday, May 6, 1949 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Niebuhr talks ...(Continued from Poge 1)against power. Injustice in theworld come from lack of equalitybetween these concentrations ofpower."Group loyalty is selfishness"Dr. Niebuhr denounced the col¬lectivist concept and stated thatorganizations are always moreselfish than individuals. Loyaltyto a group, he said, is merely anextreme form of selfishness; forexample, an American citizen maydo a just and charitable act frompersonal kindness, but the Ameri¬can government cannot. When agovernment does something good,such as U. S. activity under theMarshall Plan, it does so for abad reason.Political impotence tracedThe political impotence of reli¬gion in the face of the moral am¬biguity of politics was attributed by Dr. Niebuhr to three sources:1. Withdrawal—as exhibited bythe man who finds it difficult todeal in the real world with a pureconscience and says, “Let the dirtypoliticians have the state, we’llkeep the church and family pure.”2. Sentiment—as in the manwho says, “If we preach better,people will grasp Christian prin¬ciples and they won’t need poli¬tics.”3. Hypocrisy—as in the manwho says, “I’ll continue as I havebeen doing, only now I’ll do it formorally pure restsons.”Against these errors, Dr. Nie¬buhr sets up his counter-concept,that we must realize the per¬manent and inevitable existenceof war, power, and evil, not as theresult of bad leaders or bad socialinstitutions, but because we areall guilty of moral fault.Issued twice weekly by the publisher. The Chicago Maroon, at the publicationoffice, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: EditorialOffice, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 351; Business and Advertising Offices, Midway 3-0800,Ext. 1577. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions by mail, per quarter,|3 per year. DAVID BRODER, Editor-in-ChiefROBERT Me. ADAMS, Managing EditorDAY EDITOR: Louis R. SilvermanCOPY EDITORS: Ann Collar, Lora LeeNEWS EDITOR: Walt Freeman POLITICS EDITOR: June MarksFEATURE EDITORS: John Stone POLL DIRECTOR: Al BursteinEvy Wogner PUBLICITY DIRECTOR: Mike DanielsSPORTS EDITOR: Ben ChapmanNEWS STAFFREPORTERS John Lovejoy, Dick DeHaan, Mary Roberts, Marker Rhodes, DonPhares, Bob Mayer, Bill Klutts, Dave Kliott, Adaleen Burnette, Jim Ford,/Henry Larson, Henry Larson.CUBS: Nonny Kahn, Nancy McClung, Ralph Fertig, Dave Pollard, Neville Ross,Reid Ross, Bob Freeman.PHOTOGRAPHER: Dick Brumberg.POLITICS STAFFREPORTERS: Frank Wood, George Sideris, Miriam Baraks, Al Klmmel, CharlesGarvin, Buck Fanis, Jean Jordan, Haitrfd Harding, Mitch Tableson.FEATURE STAFFWRITERS: James Goldman, Martin Picker, Bob Nassau, Eugene DuFresne, EliOboler, John Dunceith, Charles Kahn.CARTOONIST: Stan Placek.PUBLIC RELATIONS STAFFDick Bloch, Jane Rosenblum, Ronnie Moss, Bill CoUan, Lowell Slff.SPORTS STAFFREPORTERS: Dave Heiberg, Jack Spillman, Ken Koenig.PRODUCTION STAFFeorge Wilson, Lee Doppelt, Paula Haas, Chester Luby.POLL STAFFConsUntine Mexilson, RiU Brown, Gloria Siegel, Noel Arents'^n, Margie Pennl-man, Sheldon Landy. BUSINESS STAFFSALESMEN: Babs Casper, MarUyn Kolber, William Howell, Morris Brown, JohnKeating, Joe GUby, Rex Reeve, Phil McIntyre, Victor Lownes.CIRCULATION: Alfred West.ADVERTISING BUSINESS SPECIALMANAGER ADVISER PROJECTSJohn T. McGiveran Jomes E. Bomot^ William W. BurtonASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGER OFFICE MANAGERThomos C. W. Roberts W. S. M, JonesNICHOLAS CAMP, Business Manager Want AdsHIGH GRADE ROOMS for universitystudents. Accommodations for men orwomen at Ingleside Manor, 5125 Ingle-side. MU 4-9407.EXPRESS AND LIGHT HAULING. Will¬ing and courteous service, reasonablerates. Bordone, PL 2-9453.SEWING, ALTERATIONS. Mrs. EdnaWarriner. 5625 Dorchester. MU 4-4680.FOR SALE: 1947 25-ft. NEW MOONTRAILER, refrigerator, gas. Excellentcondition. Space available, fenced playarea, good transportation. Must sacrifice.H. Dean, Blue Island TraUer Park, 13667S. Western Ave. VISITING PROF, wishes to sublet fur¬nished apartment summer quarter, oc¬cupying as early as June 10. Call MU4-1019 between 6-7 p.m.TYPING MY HOME. Expert.Call MU 4-9545.FOR RENT—Beautifully furnished largeairy room near 47th and Drexel. Goodtransportation. OA 4-8172.FOR SALE — L. C. SMITH standardtypewriter. Phone PLaza 2-8534.EXPERIENCED TUTORING IN GER¬MAN. Call Anita Schroeder, BU 8-9742.FOR SALE: Dining room chairs, Euro¬pean hand carved walnut with tooledleather seats and backs. Small, graceful,excellent condition. Sacrifice, $30 each.Call PLaza 2-5328.TYPEWRITERS FOR RENT. $2.50 permonth. Livingston 8-3877.FURNITURE FOR 5 ROOMS, wUl sacri¬fice for $250. FAlrfax 4-2870, privateparty, 3 to 10 p.m.APARTMENT WANTED for SummerQuarter by young married couple. Con¬tact Mr. Yuan, 378 International House.WILL SUBLET 4-room furnished apart¬ment during summer months, 54th Placeand Woodlawn. Under $90 a month.Phone MI 3-3683, evenings.SALE Household goods from couch tocookbook. Muhl, 5708 Maryland. SUMMER BIKE TRIP to Alabama. Wantpartner, Walter Lobman. Lawson YMCA.WILL SUBLET apartment for summerto 4 students, preferable graduates. CallMU 4-4480,MARRIED COUPLE wants 2. 3 or 4 roomfurnished apartment near U, of C. frommid-June until Sept. C. D. Clark, PL2-9685, 6208 Drexel Ave,ONE LARGE ROOM with two closets.Call HYde Park 3-8460.GI STUDENT, 26, is starved for theaffection of a sweet, understanding,home-loving girl. Write Box 13, Maroon.J. Paul Sheedy* Switched to Wildroot Cream-OilBecause He Flunked The Finger-Nail TestNO cock-of-the-walk was poor, sad, seedy Sheedy when hefound loose dandruff on his comb. Now that he’s a Wildrooter,he has something to crow about and so will you. WildrootCream-Oil gives you neat, well-groomed hair all day longwithout a trace of oil or grease. Makes it easy to keep thatfavorite chick in your coupe forever I It relieves annoyingdryness and removes so much loose, ugly dandruff that youreally have to scratch to find it I Peck on down to your favoritedrug counter and bring back a hen full of non-alcoholicWildroot Cream-Oil containing Lanolin. Always ask yourbarber for a professional application! And set on this thought—Wildroot Cream-Oil is again and again the choice of menwho put good grooming first.if. of 327 Burroughs Dr., Snyder, N. Y.Wildroot Company, Inc., Buffalo 11, N. Y.GROSLEY ON MICHIGANStation Wogon Delivered $1,060(In Chicago) 2430 S. MichiganVI. 2-1342DOWNTOWN MOTORSALES125 S. WabashDE. 2-3962SayVow CAN Afford a NEW CarWhen ICs aCROSLEY Convertible or Sedan Delivered $1,025(In Chicago)The New Crosley is Priced at Less than an 8 - 10 Year-Old Used Gar — AND USED!-NEW GROSLEY-YOU CAN AFFORD THE UPKEEPON YOUR NEW CROSLEYYOU CAN HAVE SPARKLING COLORSELECTIONSYOU CAN HAVE SUPER¬MANEUVERABILITYYOU CAN HAVE CROSLEY QUALITIESAT A PRICE YOU CAN PAY! The New Crosley performance gives you 35-50 mileson one gallon of ordinary gosoline. Two quarts ofoil lasts 1,000 miles.The New Crosley is yours in o variety of beautifulcolors.The New Crosley eases into that left over PARKINGSPACE. The New Crosley turns in a radius of 15feet. The New Crosley (25 in. narrower than othercars) weaves through traffic. The New Crosley withits wider tires skims over the Spring Mud.The New Crosley has a 20 gauge steel body, plasticcooted, corrosion f preventing passages, cast ironengine block, o fuel saving 7.8-1 compression ratio.BUY THE NEW CROSLEY FOR ECONOMY — BEAUTY — PERFORMANCE — QUALITY America’sIn anybody's book, one of themit Joseph H. Axelrod. Said TIMElast yoor:Joseph H. Axelrod, 31, was one ofthe first New Englanders to have atelephone in his automobile. He neededit. As boss of six textile mills in fourcities in Massachusetts and RhodeIsland, plump, hustling Joe Axelrodmade the rounds every day, and heliked to keep in touch. Last week, JoeJ. R. KELLY, Woonsocket, Rhode IslandJoe AxelrodA car telephone is needed.Axelrod added a fifth city (Provi¬dence) to his tour, a seventh plant(the Damar Wool Combing Co.) tohis holdings. Even for a young manwho likes to keep moving, Axelrod hadmoved far. In years he had par¬layed $5,500 into an integrated textile .empire worth $16 million.Joe started to work in 1938, whenhe was just out of the University ofPennsylvania. To his $500 savings, hisfather, James, a textile jobber, added$5,000. With the money, they formedAiredale Worsted Mills, Inc. with Joeas president. They rented a loft in aWoonsocket (R.I.) mill, bought somesecondhand machinery, hired twoworkers and started weaving worstedfabrics.The Team. Joe made the goods; hisfather sold them. Selling was no trickwhen war came; the trick was produc¬tion. Joe turned it by picking up thenewest textile machines, applying thenewest techniques, and plowing allprofits back into more plants. Joe’saim was integration—enough plants tohandle wool virtually from the sheep’sback to finished cloth. In 1942 Aire¬dale Worsted Mills, Inc. was healthyinough to take over Woonsocket’sBernon. In the next three years theAxelrods wove the Jeffrey FinishingCo,, Woonsocket’s Lippitt Worsted ''Mills and Dorlexa Dyeing & Finish¬ing Co. and Pawtucket’s CrowaManufacturing Co. into their em¬pire. Last spring they got control ofNew Bedford’s old, famed WamsuttaMills (sheetings, broadcloths, spe¬cialty fabrics). Joe and his dad, whois treasurer, now have 3,150 men &women (including Wamsutta) w^ork-ing for them, and with last week’sbuy, they reached Joe’s goal of in¬tegration.Successful Business¬man Axelrod readsTIME each week —asdo more than 1,500,-000 other U.S. college graduates whofind in TIME the news they can't of-ford to miss.To enter YOUR subscription to thoWeekly Newsmagoxine, see any ofTIME'S representotives ol Universityof Chicogo — University of ChicagoBookstore—I ntemetionol House BookSkop Woodworth's BookstoreNT»ge 8 fHE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, Moy 6, 1949I3C P*rk Av«. NEW YORK 17 SO MurlboKMith Si, BOSTON It»1 E.Siip«rKK St,CHICAGO 11 155 An««ll St, PROVIDENCE I Wk«n sIm'kHitf yiM liewM-for ^Bff fTBtenwfy Omwb bat mmtHe...bi9lher,fheit you Hie VHMUB/r: So. Ohm voutself alkE/CT! Just cheer up...Iight-up...en OLD OOLO...iureTVBfT instead of the TH&dMBHT!Art and ArtistsCritic finds no artin Goethe collectionThe Renaissance Society of the University has arrangedan exhibition in honor of Johann von Gk)ethe including“manuscripts, prints, fine editions and other documentsillustrating his work, life and time.”Whatever the virtues of this collection, they do notinclude art, with the exception of three lithographs bvEugene Delacroix, two of which are bad and called art onlybecause so famous an artist „1 . j.j TT opportunity to delight vonas Delacroix did them. How- Each picture by Berdick showsever, you might visit the ex- delicacy and refined taste that ishibition to see Delacroix’s droll ^’^^r^shing after having recently“Faust and Mephisto Galloping on ^yanr^vdn^the Night of the Sabbath” in ^ven her' few failures are inwhich a credulous and eager Faust good taste; they are uninterestingrides a galloping steed and a without being flops with whichcrafty and vicious Mephisto rides ^^rtists like to hit the public. Hera spectre-like steed away from a design in^ ^ ^ William Blake s art, the simplicitvthreatening dawn. Rousseau’s art, but it suggestsHowever, at the Little Gallery it in so modest a manner thaton 57th Street is some art work the work remains original,by Vera Berdick which deserves —John DunccithKATHARINE GIBBS Chicago ttadowfa know (M Goldsalways blunt the 8lin#i and asrows ofoutrageous fortune. Old Golds are so mildand mellow—so rich and smooth-^^ymake even good days turn out that muchbetter. So for pleasure—and nothing elsebut—why don’t you treat yourself toOld Golds... Uxkty?Carccr-mindcd girls from 209colleges enrolled last year forGibbs secretarial training.Write College Course Dean forplacement report booklet,“Gibbs Girls at Work.” Review reachescampus MondayThe new issue of the ChicagoReview now on the presses willcontain an article on Architectur¬al Form by Percival and PaulGoodman, author of Communitas,poems by Harvey Shapiro, ClellonThe Music StandSixteenth century composerscome out well at UC concertBy JAMES GOLDMANThe experiment worked. Musicology came through. Holmes and Philip Murray, andSunday’s performance by the Collegium Musicum, Sieg- Arnold Bergstraesser,mund Levarie conductor, of three vocal works by Joaquin “ “ ampufsSe Monda":des Pres must be labeled an undeniable success. addition to the above men-To music traditionally sung by voices alone were added tioned contributors the review willa trombone, a bassoon, two violas, flute and oboe and percus- also contain an authoritative studysion. There were several consequences of the addition. First, of the literary background of Fin-the polyphonic construction negans Wake, and two chaptersnf thP miisip was made much restraint for my f^om Maria Josephsen’s forthcom-clears much ^a^er t^fol- and i„g book. Professor Bergstraesser'sClearer, muen easier 10 101 successfully sentimental and review of Goethe. Wisdom andlow and comprehend. Secondly, should be done accordingly. Thework, which sounds almost exact¬ly like everything of Pergolesi’swhich I have heard, is a lovelyone.I save for last the most charm¬ing moment of the program, theMozart Horn Duets, K.487. Thiswork is delightful, admirably suit¬ed to the instrument, of just theright length and damnably diffi-the use of instruments of a dryand nasal quality gave to the pre¬dominately choral sound that par¬ticular coloring which is so ap¬propriate to the music of the 16thcentury. The instruments weregiven just the right degree ofprominence and, .much to my sur¬prise, blended easily into theeound of the voices.Percussion instruments distroctingThe case for the percussion in¬struments is somewhat proble¬matical. Their presence was rath- //. .er distracting, several reasons for I Continued on Poge 16)■which can be advanced. First ofall, we simply are not accustomedto triangles, castanets and drumsIn this sort of music. With fur¬ther experience the disturbanceshould be dissipated. Secondly,the drums themselves were nothappily chosen. Not only was theirsound somewhat unsatisfactorybut they possessed a definite pitch,a pitch much better omitted fromthe harmonies of the chorus.The program in Mandel Hallopened with A. Scarlatti’s Sonataa Quatro. The conducting of thiswork fell below standard. Theslowness of the allegros made themusic sound ponderous ratherthan vigorous. The final move¬ment was played with no audibledynamic variety.Solve Regina too restroinedThe Salve Regina of Pergolesi !which followed was performed 1Columbia L P.Record Ployer AttachmentReoularfy 29.95H., *3’*With Purchose ot 10 ColumbiaLong Ploying RecordsWe Will Hook-up PUyer toYour RadioFREEWith Purchase of 3Columbia 12-Inch RecordsRADIO CENTER1514 E. 51st St.DRexel 3-6111 —11 to 7 Experience, is timely in view ofthe coming Bicentennial of thatauthor. Mr. Crane brings his criti¬cal faculties to bear on HowardNemerov’s first novel The Melo-dramatists, a satire of sex andpsychoanalysis.Two young artists will be rep¬resented in the pages of the Re¬view in reproductions of Persecu¬tion by George Tanner and Balicult to play. Helen Kotas gave a Goddess by Elmer Kline,remarkable performance and Reid The Review’s second issue of thePoole, working with the easier of year will maintain the same styl¬istic and price policy.CAMPUS CRISESTkk.t. ovoilobta now ««oetommoa®"®"*SUMMER 1949 For altou insteadofaTREMMEWUNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO..Harvard Sq., Cambridge, MassFridoy, May 6, 1949 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 9,Books and ReadingLibrary history pleases allFOUNDATIONS OF THE PUBLIC LIBRARY. The origins of the public library movementin New England, 1629-1855. By Jesse H. Shera. Chicago, University of Chicago Press,1949* $5.00.Most books which are end-products of doctoral theses seem to be written by a combina¬tion of Mr. Gradgrind and Mr. Dryasdust. Mr. Shera’s contribution to the notable seriesof University of Chicago Studies in Library Science is a happy exception to this rule. Hereis a work of genuine research without ostentation or technical, specialized jargon.On sever^ bases this book demise inglorious — but the books the early public libraries, Mr.deserves W oe reaa widely, lo were there.” There are no wide- Shera’s studies in the source ma-begin with, it is an unique ranging generalizations based on terials lead us on to a very co-and pioneering piece of scholar- pinpoints of fact, but rather a gently expressed final chapter onship, wise in concept and rich in clear, logical assemblage of un- “Causal factors in public libraryexecution. Its style throughout deniable evidence to buttress a development.” The American pub¬is as felicitous as this typical ex- number of very interesting con- lie library, as a social agency iscerpt, from a description of Bos- elusions. seen to be mainly the result ofton’s first public library: “Its in- From New England backgrounds “historical scholarship and theception may have been fortuitous, to colonial beginnings, from the urge to preservation, the power ofits maintenance indifferent, its social and circulating libraries to national and local pride, thegrowing belief in the importanceI of universal education, the in-1 creasing concern with vocational! problems, and the contribution ofI religion — these, aided by eco-jnomic ability and encouraged bythe example of Europe . , , ”Whether you are interested inmass communications, in sociol¬ogy, in history, in research per se— or just in a fascinatingly writ¬ten, humanized story of the originof an important American socialagency, “Foundations of the Pub-(Continued on Pogc 12) Footlights and KleiglightsFilm takes strongstand on alligators‘Louisiana Story,written and directed by RobertFlaherty; music composed by Virgil Thompson. Now at theWorld Playhouse.Robert Flaherty is justly regarded as one of the origin¬ators of the documentary film. He contributed many essen¬tial elements to its theory and practice at the earliest stageof its development. His greatest creative works, Nanook ofthe North and Moana are in¬effaceable monuments to thisman. It is with the greatestsorrow, therefore, that one views much of, but it is to be understoodThe Louisiana Story. The fine pol- by ^11 that oil wells have no in-ish remains, but form and sub- Huence on the unspoiled nativesper’s son in the swamps are alliga¬tors and raccoons, in that order.A wildcat oil well is also madestance have disappeared.There is a school of beyond providing them with sufifi-critical cient dividends to buy rifles forFreddy Froshwill never learn,His travelsare a mess— ^Loaded downwith luggageWhich should goRAILWAY EXPRESS thought which holds that a work their children to use on the omni¬can be criticized only from the present alligators. Flaherty is notstandpoint of its creator’s in ten- fond of alligators; indeed, as onetions. Judge the bitterness, then, critic has remarked, he “takes aof a critic who considers this the strong stand against alligators.”mildest of critical views, on dis- "senHmentol sludge”covering that the most recent work The plot is typical Hollywoodof the great director fails to meet “semi - documentary,” i.e., senti-even this standard. Flaherty mental sludge: Boy meets Rac-writes: “A story must come out coon. Alligator eats Raccoon. Dedi-of the life of a people. I try to cated to the high and lofty prin-“Ride a BikeFor Fun and Heaith”Group ond PartiesAccomodatedA-1BIKE SHOP1332 E. 54 St. Ml. 3-3836 make my Alms a revelation of acountry, and of the people who livein it . . . There is a kernel ofgreatness in all peoples.”Describes Louisiona life .Flaherty plainly states his in¬tention in this film to describe the ciple of “He shouldn’t oughta donethat,” and nobly inspired by thepresence of a derrick in the neigh¬borhood, the boy kills the alliga¬tor by spitting on its bait. Boy spitson derrick. Well comes in. Rac¬coon returns from the dead, al-life of the Louisiana swamplands though the miraculous spittle isand the manner in which a Cajun not in evidence, ... So much forboy is molded by this environment, content.Flaherty spent three months in se¬lecting a boy to fit the role and As to form; if the critic choosesto equate form with technical•,**»**EXPRESSNATION-WIDE RAIL.AIR SERVICE• vvVW VVW\ VVVWWWX'WWWVWV'V^^^ VWWVVVW^lightweight sport shirts...washablewonders! MYSTERIOUS LITTLE MANPOPS UP ALL OYER TOWNDetectives can’t explain the mys¬tery of a little man dressed irred, with lather all over his face,who has been ^pping up in localbathrooms while men are shav¬ing. He hands the shaver a PalHollow Ground Razor Blade, anddisappears. He does no harm; infact, the men report that Pal isthe best blade they've ever used.Yesterday he showed up in thisoffice and left a note reading;“Pal Hollow Ground is the slick¬est, quickest blade going. They’rein all good stores — you still get4 for 10^, 10 for 25<f^, 21 for 49<',44 for 98?“ — Double or SingleEdge.” Strange case, isn't it?finally discovered Joseph Boud- polish, the film is indeed rich. Thereaux, the son of an impoverished photography is magnificent, albeitsharecropper. ('The phrase “im- quite thoroughly in love with itself,poverished sharecropper” seems a The photographic editing is excel-bit redundant.) lent, at least when every sequenceAccording to The Louisiana is regarded in isolation from theStory, the principal factors affect- ^’^st of the film, and the true artisting and molding the life of a crop- edited the sound track de¬serves highest commendation. Butwhen more broadly viewed, it isseen that the form suffers fromthe lack of content.The film is disjointed and fre¬quently ineffective because of theincorrect development of episodesin their relation to one another.Typical of this is the entire bodyof Thomson’s music. While fre¬quently effective in individual se¬quences, the music loses its effec¬tiveness when, for the fifth time,a triumphal theme announces ashot of a derrick.Thompson has been well knownfor many years as an artist w'hoknows his art without knowingwhat it is for; devoting his crea¬tive energies to a Geber’s bebopof trivial and meaningless sym¬bols. It is unfortunate that Fla¬herty, past master of a supposedlymore “concrete” art, should havetaken the same degradative path.—Eugene Rivord DuFresne1.' ' ■Van Heusen sport shirts arc washable wonders! They lovewater, and you know what that means—more service, betterlooks, no dry cleaning bills! Colors are fast—sizes stay right.Smart new models with short or long sleeves, in cottons,ravons and blends . . . sheers and breezeweights. Tailoredwith Van Heusen magic sewmanship to please you and yourcampus queen. Stock up now for summer. $3.25 and up. LINCOLN MEIICITIIVIN HYDE PARKSpecializing In Ford ProductsWE SERVICE AND REPAIRALL IRAKES OF ALTOSSIMONIZERODY AND FENDER WORKFactory Trained jnechauiesVan Heusenthe world’s smartestPHILLIPS-JONES CORP., NEW YORK 1, N. Y LAKE PARK MOTORS, me5601 HARPER AVE.S. TAUBER, President E. KAPLAN, TreasurerPoge 10 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, Moy 6, 19UC student is topsin U. S. volleyballBy JACK SPILLMANFor most Americans, such a sport as volleyball justdoesn’t rate. It is looked upon as a pastime for athleticfemales. As far as most are concerned, volleyball is in thesame category as croquet. But at least one person on theUC campus has opinions on the subject which are incompat¬ible with the prevailing attitude. The chap we had in mindis Bill Stratton, who not only holds the number two sloton the varsity tennis squad, ity, Bin holds the distinguishedbut was also chosen as a number two spot on the Maroonmember of the 1948 U. S.Olympic volleyball team.Although negotiations to in¬clude volleyball in internationalcompetition didn’t materialize lastyear, the U.S. team accepted for¬eign invitations to tour the Con¬tinent and engaged in twenty-onecontests with outstanding Euro¬pean squads. This U.S. team, ofwhich Stratton is a member, wontwenty of these contests, losing tennis team.Stratton first entered the uni¬versity in ’41 and stayed longenough to complete the Collegeprogram. The war interrupted hisfurther academic plans until ’46,w’hen he was able to return. Nowhe is preparing to take a bachelorof science degree in physics.* * *Ed. Note: Speaking of volley¬ball, Manly defeated Snell to takeonly to a superlative Czech team, College House Championship;Mathews was third and MeadVolleyball has gained wide¬spread popularity throughout Eu¬rope and will undoubtedly meritOlympic consideration in ’52. Hugecrowds assembled everywhere towatch the visiting Americans. In¬terest was especially keen in theBalkans: at Prague, ten thousandspectators jammed the outdoorarena.Stratton hails from Portland,Oregon, and first became inter¬ested in volleyball while attend¬ing high school there. He has beenaffiliated with the North Ave.y.M.C.A. of Chicago and has pro¬vided materially to that team’snational championship status of’41, ’42. ’44, ’45, and ’47. Whenlocal volleyball interest has beensufficiently vigorous to warrantthe establishment of a team. Billhas served both as a player andcoach. UC volleyball squads haveappeared intermittently for thepast three years and have salvagedvictories from all comers. In ad¬dition to all this volleyball activ-tOCAi AMO LONG OiSTAMCt HAULING•60 YiAMS Of DlMMOABltSMVfCE TO THt SOUTHSIDt•ASK fos nm uTtmATt55th and ELLIS AVENUECHICAGO 15, ILLINOISButterfield 8-6711DAVID L SUTTON, Prei.TERESA DOLANDANCING SCHOOL1208 E. 63d St. (Nr. Woodlown)Let us make you a good dancer Inless time and at less cost. Thousandsof good dancers testify to our 35years of leadership. Our experiencela your gain.PRIVATE LESSONS. Strictly Private,Progress Quick, Sure and Pleosont.No Embarossment. Let Us Help You.BEGINNERS GROUP LESSONSMon., Wed., & Fri. Evngs., 8:00-11:0012 LESSONS—810.00Single 81'00HYde Park 3-3080GREGG C0U.EGEA School of SusinoM—Proforrod byColloge Men and Women4 MONTHINTENSIVE COUNSESECRETARIAL TRAINING FOR COLLEGESTUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough, intensive course—startingJune, October, Februarr. Bul¬letin A on request•IPECIAL COUNSELOR for 0.1. TRAINiNG•Regular Day and Evening SchoolsThroughout the Year. Catalog•tMrector, Paul M, Pair, M.A.THE GREGG COLLEGE87 S. WabMh Av*., 8, IWmI* fourth. Alpha Delta Phi defeatedPhi Kappa Psi for the FraternityChampionship; Phi Gamma Deltawas third and the DU’s fourth. Tennis men chalkwins four, fiveover last weekThe varsity tennis teamchalked up victories four andfive this week at the expenseof Bradley University and IllinoisTech. On Saturday they edgedthe Bradley netmen, 4-3, and onTuesday blasted Illinois tech, 6-3.Chet Murphy’s undefeated rack-etteers had previously whippedNorth' Central (twice) and Mar¬quette.In the Bradley matches playedat Peoria, the singles winners wereBarry Hirschwald, Maynard Louis,Irv Robinson, and Bud Shapiro.Bradley’s Bob Orr downed the UCnumber two man. Bill Stratton.The local doubles entries ofHirschwald-Stratton, and Louis-Robinson were both defeated.In the Illinois Tech matches atthe varsity court, the UC singleswinners were Hirschwald, Louis,Robinson, Shapiro, and Rudolph.Stratton was defeated by IllinoisTech’s Hall.UC doubles combines won onematch while dropping two. Strat¬ton - Hirschwald defeated Buck-staber-Taxman, Hall-Zeitlen wonover Louls-Robinson, and Vana-Skipper edged Rudolph-Shapiro. UC^s Meta Elste *foils^ foesto win another championshiBy DAVE HELBERGMeta Elste, Chicago’s all-around woman gymnast, dall right for herself at the National AAU meet which’w;held last Saturday at Navy Pier. She walked away with tlnational free exercise crown by performing an interpret!'foil routine to Tango music. This performance was geneally felt to be the most artistic routine in the event. Bithat was not all. The 25 year old Mrs. Elste also was secoron the parallel bars, the fly- laurels. She’s all the more deteing rings, the side horse, and mined to win the title of ias all-around athlete of the 'meet.However, winning champion¬ships is nothing new to Mrs. Elste.Starting in 1940, she hsLs won ninestraight Central AAU champion¬ships. In 1943, the graceful per¬former placed second, and wonthe national parallel bar title in1947. Mrs. Elste played an impor¬tant part in the Olympic games atLondon last summer. It waslargely through her skill that theAmerican gymnastics team placedthird in a field of eight.The graceful little lady Is notcontent to rest on her hard won AMERICANBIJIS LINES6270 Stony IslandFriendly Bus Service EverywhereCharter Buses for AUOccasionsG. Schwob, Campus Rep.MUseum 4-3287F. J. Taft, Mgr.FAirfax 4-9392us C A P E « S Johnny VeUGHTS DOLORES WITH VEftnCINOUSVISTAS OFMAPSODIC RECOGNITION/DOLORES THERE’SNO CIOAIUrTre KANGOV6RWHEN >OU SWITCH TOPNIUP MORRIS/ WHY,NOT GIVE THEM ATRIAL? PLEASE DQDOUy/ PHIUPMORRIS IS THE OA/eaOAR-^ ETTE PROVED DEFINITEtyLESS IRRITATING/ r(0p^t40woNRS DOLORES, THAT DIVINE SOWNMAKES >OU UKE THE BREATHOF SPRING itself* AND YOULOOK SO HAPPy„n THAT HANDSOME Aa-AMERJCANfootball star certainly FINOSNEPENTHE IN OUR DOLORES/fff-aLNlli< *WONDER/PHILIP MORRIS[AND THAT SETTING HAVE[metamorphosedHER COMPLETELY/ CONGRATULATE JOHNNY!THANKS TO HIM ITS NO ICIGARBTTE HANSOYBRFOR ME ANY MORE/Use These Words with Tonguenn-Cheek!(Plan to use ONE every week!)DESICCATED (dess-ik-o-ted)-dried-vp.GORGON (gor-gon)—a mythical the-monttcrwith cnaket for hair.METAMORPHOSED (met-oh-mor-fazad)transformed.NEPENTHE (nee-pe^-the)—o potion to ban¬ish pain or misery.NO CIGARETTE HANGOVER - no staUsmokod-owt taste; no tight dry feeling inyour throat duo to smoking.RHAPSODIC (rap.s<fd-ik)-charged with omo-tion, usuolly of delight.SHARD (chard)—o brol^en piece or fragment.VfRTIGINOUS (vur-tl|-ln*v*)’-9lddy, dizsy.NO aeiuiEnE hanooverwhen you smokePHIIIP MORRISPROVED DEFINITELY LESS IRRITATINGthan any other leading brand!Friday, May 6, 1949 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 11Tracksters trek to Terre Haute;outscore four in field of thirteenLast Saturday the Maroon track team journeyed toTerre Haute, Indiana, and competed in the Rose PolytechInvitational Relays. Suffering from innumerable injuries,the UC thinclads were able to chalk up but 14 points foreighth place in the team standings. Points were picked upin the pole vault, javelin, and 220 yard low hurdles.Jack Christopher cleared 13 feet on his first jump towin easily. However, on his i ^ •will j, r i. XJC’s Ken Hayes hurled the jav-first attempt to clear 13 feet g*. second on6 inches, he came down strad- ^J^^t event. The winning distancedling the bar which was quite was a husky toss of 182’.thick and unyielding. The result- Fisher won his heat in the 220ing contusions made it impossible yard low hurdles in 26.7 to qualifyfor him to continue, A doctor ex- for the finals. Repeating with onlyamined him and indicated that 35 minutes rest, he ran 25.6 tothe injury, though painful, was place third. The winning time wasnot serious and that Jack should 25.1.be able to compete in the Wash¬ington and Oberlin meet this Sat- win twourday at St. Louis, Missouri. A1cleared 12’ for fourth Maroons odd two to victory list;defeat IIT and North CentralBy Ken KoenigRallying for four runs in the home eighth, the Maroons whipped Illinois Tech, 7-6,Monday afternoon. The Tech game, coupled with Saturday’s 10-2 conquest of North Cen¬tral, ran the Maroon record to five straight wins and 10 victories in the last eleven starts.The big eighth overcame a Tech lead built on five runs in the first and one in thethird. The Maroons had grabbed two in the first and one in the sixth prior to the finalblast. Tech right-hander Bob Lieser started his own downfall by walking Mankowski.Jimmy hustled to third when Govorchin slapped a grounder through second base. Sharp’shit to right center scored.,,,.,,. , , , ,, , . . ,, .,° bunt behind the mound and a sac- at the plate to retire the side.Mankowski and sent Govor- ^ continued wuth another Totals: Chicago, 7-8-3; IT, 6-10-1chin to third. Sharp took bunt, a fielder’s choice, a hit bats- Chicago AB R HRBIthird as McKinney drove a single man and a Texas League single. Geocaris, 2b 2to right. On the throw to third, Bass, however, hit into a fast twin Panos, rf 5McKinney headed for second. He Geocaris to Row- Gray, cf 4Meyenngplace.SPANISH - FRENCHRUSSIAN - CHINESEALL LANGUAGESConversotion, Grammar, SpanishShorthand. English for foreign born.Motive, graduoted, experiencedteachers. Day ond evening. Officehours 10-4 P. M.FERNANDEZ SCHOOL64 E. Lake St., AN. 3-3865 The following are the results ofthe last three golf meets:Friday, 29 April—At Naperville:Chicago 15, North Central 3.Saturday, 30 April—At Cog Hill:Chicago 6V2, Lake Forest bVz.Monday, 1 May—At Silver Lake;Chicago 4, Northern Ill. College ofOptometry 17.Snell plots strategySnell Hall, which has been dra¬matically unsuccessful in regularsoftball league competition, hasscheduled a series of games withthe girls of Hitchcock Hall at therequest of Resident Head Bill Bi-renbaum. “We’ll have a winner,one way or another,’’ Bill said.Tvb things everycollege mart should knoyf!This is a draftee. fTonders ifhell enjoy private life. ThinksManual of Arms is a Mexican notvLHates to give up school ties—**Manhattan^'** of 'courMe,This is a ^ManhattaiC^ Necktie.Right dress for civilians . . . brings co-etUto aUention. Full complement ofbroad bold stripes^ and gay figures. land, and McKinney’s snap throw Rowland, lb 4was called out, but Sharp streaked third picked off Maatman to Mankowski, If 1home on the play with the tying end the inning, Govorchin, 3b 4run. Borowitz, who won his sev- In the Chicago half of the first. Sharp, ss 4enth game of the season, poked a a walk to Geocaris, plus singles McKinney, c 2blooper which dropped just out of by Rowland and Govorchin with Borowitz, p 3the second baseman’s reach to a pair of fielder’s choices, netted the North Central game. Billput the deciding marker on first, two runs; but Tech made the Gray handcuffed the lads fromHowever, Geocaris' smash to left score 6-2 in the third on an error Naperville while his mates rakedwas flagged by Haughey for the and singles by Melgaard and three enemy pitchers for 14 hits,second out. Borowitz stole second Lieser. 'and Harry Panos came through wni scores Q9vinThe Maroons scored their thirdwith a base hit to right. He wasout trying to stretch it into a • ..u • 4.1, ri-- n jdouble, but Borowitz had scored run m the sixth. McKinney walkedthe all-important run.The dream beginsThe nightmare in the Tech firstinning began'with a pass, a pop- with one down. After two wereout, Geocaris tripled across thetrack in left to score McKinney.When Geocaris tried to stretchthree bases into four, he was outGRADUATE SCHOOL OF0leal tMclniini^l’tqfwnCOMMERCIAL • RESIDENTIAL • INDUSTRIALINTENSIVE ONE^YEAR DAY PROGRAMProfessional careers throughout America are open toyoung men and women in banking, business and govern¬ment in the real estate fields of appraising, management,mortgage lending, brokerage and home building.Enrolment limited to graduate* of approved college*.Co-educational. Cla**e* admitted in September only.15 Commonwealth Avenue * Bo.«ton * COpleySPALDINGTIMINGLITTLE BILLJOHKSIONWEIGHEDOMLYlEOias.BUT HISPOREHAHOWMS CALLEDtUCBESTlM. TKE6AUECHAMPIONSHIPTENNIS TWINSilie Wright & Ditson and itttwin the Spalding Tennis Balllead the field in official adop*tionsifor Major Tournaments,including the U.S. Davis Cupand National Championships.SPALVfmsets Ttte Mce /a' seoars UC ond Notre Dame will renew aboseboll rivalry doting bock to 1897when they meet ot Stogg Field onSoturdoy afterncon. The two teamshove not met since 1943 when HieIrish took a 21-1 victory. Notre Domeolso holds o wide edge in wins with18 triumphs, 5 losses and 1 tie. Ac¬cording to the Athletic Dept., theMaroon nine boosts the strongestpitching staff in over 20 years, so theIrish will hove to work for this one.After collecting a run in the sec¬ond on Gray’s double and Govor-chin’s single: one in the third ona walk to Panos, Flaherty’s singleand Brown’s boot of Rowland’sgrounder: and two in the fourthon hits by Govorchin, Sharp andGeocaris: the UCer’s put togethera six-run eighth to score the restof their runs. The eighth includedtwo errors, and hits by Gray, Man¬kowski, Govorchin, Sharp andMcKinney.Totals: Chicago 10-14-1; NC, 2-7-3Box Score: Chicago AB R H RBIGeocaris, 2b 5 0 1 2Panos, cf 3 1 2 1Golan, cf 1 1 0 0Flaherty, rf 5 0 1 0Packer, rf 0 0 0 0Rowland, lb ....^.. 0 0 0 1Gray, p 4 2 3 1Mankowski, If 4 1 1 0Koenig, If 0 0 0 0Govorchin, 3b 4 2 3 1Sharp, ss 3 2 2 3McKinney, c 4 1 1 1Columbia L. P.Record Ployer AltachmentRegularly 29.95NowWith Purchase of 10 ColumbiaLong Playing RecordsWe Will Hook-up Player toYour RadioFREEWith Purchose of 3Columbia 12-Inch RecordsRADIO CENTER1514 E. 51tt St.DRexel 3-6111—11 to 7HOlU TO CO lOTOPoliticsA Procfical ondEnterfoining GuideBy HUGH D. SCOTT, Jr.Member of Congress ondNotional Politicol LeoderThis manual on practical polictics cov¬ers everything from getting started as award heeler to the intricacies of legisla¬tive protocol — including:BREAKING IN • WORKING UPDO’S AND DON’TSFACTORS THAT COUNTPUBLIC RELATIONSSPEECHMAKINGWOMEN IN POLITICS • ILLUSTRATED$2.75 ot All BookstoresTHE JOHN DAY COMPANYSoles Office: 2 W. 45th St., N. Y. 19THE CHICAGO MAROON Fridoy, Moy 6, 1949Page 12Dr. Heimann talks onrole of religion todayThe social sciences have failed to recognize the co¬hesive force of society as consisting simply of the religiousforce of love, according to Dr. Eduard Heimann, professorin the graduate school of the New School for Social Researchin New York City. This was the theme of Dr. Heimann'slecture entitled “Determinism and Freedom in Social Lifeand Theory’’ delivered April 25 in Mandel Hall. Dr. Heimannbased his lecture on a studyhe made of social life andtheory in Europe and NorthAmerica.Love transcends individualIt was noted by Dr. Heimannthat neither capitalism nor com¬munism recognizes “the force oflove which transcends the individ¬ual and binds him to the commu¬nity.” Capitalistic theory, as de¬veloped by Adam Smith and Ri¬cardo, arose as a protest againsttheology and is un-Christian andunreal in asserting that therecould be a society in which theindividual could be supreme. Com¬munism, on the other hand, runssociety “like a big machine, andso there is no freedom for theindividual parts.” With its foun¬dation of collectivism and eco¬nomic determinism. Communismloses sight of the individual. Draft boards keeptab on travelersAll student-tourists should keeptheir local draft boards informedof their whereabouts on theirtravels this summer, the IllinoisState Headquarters of the Selec¬tive Service System announcedlast week. Students travelingabroad must mail their localboau’ds the following information:Date of departure, approximateitinerary, and date of expectedreturn. There is no printed form.The law requires _ those olderthan 26 to register as well as thosebetween 18 and 26. Those whobecome 18 while abroad must reg¬ister at any board within 5 daysof return to this country. Phi Gamma Delta^sletter wins free bustrip in UC contestThe winning letter in theall-campus bus trip contestwas submitted by Phi GammaDelta, judges announcedThursday. The trip in anAmerican Bus Lines charterbus, donated by Mr. F. J.Taft of 6270 Stony Islandwill be taken next Christmas.The letter reads:“For the past two years PhiGamma Delta and the Quadrang-ler club have cooperated in pro¬viding a free Christmas party forabout 35 undeprvileged childrenfrom the University Settlement.The children, seven to 10 yearsof age, are brought to the chapterhouse where they consume largequantities of cake, candy, and icecream and then receive toys fromthe hands of Santa Claus.We expect to continue this asa traditional holiday gift, but ofcourse the financial burden isgreat. Not the least of our ex¬penses is transporting the chil¬dren to the campus and back tothe settlement. We therefore hopethat Phi 'Gamma Delta can winthe charter bus trip so that wemay devote the money saved toadd to the completeness of thechildren’s party.” Faculty shines in show...(Continued from Page 1)ing a mustache on the king-sizedVenus de Milo upstage.Could be Dewey?Arthur Brues portrayed a YoungMan in Blue Serge suit who borestriking resemblance to a certaintwo-time candidate for the presi¬dency, supported vocally and acro¬batically by Louis Gottschalk asunsuccessful pollster Henry Trot.The invasion of the women washeaded by a pert Calonice (AvisCoates) and a portly Xanthippe(Dorothy Hartshorne) who ex¬pressed their triumph in a songand dance of not-to-be-exceededvigor and versatility. Mrs. Harts¬horne in a Freudian patter songattempted (in vain) to dissuadeher young friend from a psycho¬analytic flirtation with the lecher¬ous Dr. Id.Joe does switchThe Biological Sciences’ JoeMullin impersonated a buxomSalome, whose last veil revealednot herself but Samson in a lionskin, and freed in the process twohelium-filled balloons whichbobbed to the ceiling with en¬chanting nonchalance. Wife AlmaMullin had her provocative roleto play too: as a recalcitrant Cleo¬patra, she rebelled against Xan¬ thippe in a torchy song, and ledthe frustrated women in restoringcontact with the banished men.Production Manager CarrollRussell also tripped a light fan¬tastic as the Virgin Queen Eliza¬beth. Author Jim Cate partici¬pated as a Confucius whose equa-namity remained undisturbed un.til the final curtain call, when inresisting the eager hands thatdrew him forward he lost his bal¬ance and sat down rather sud¬denly.An innovation, yet!The review, originally producedfor the inner circle of QuadraigleClub members alone, was present¬ed to the general public for thefirst time in its history. Proceedsfrom the affair, sponsored by SU,w^ere giyen to the University Set¬tlement.Books..., (Continued from Poge 9)lie Library” is for you. With JesseShera and Sidney Ditzion (1947author of a history of the publiclibrary movement in New Englandand the Middle States from 1850to 1900), American public librar-ianship has found its first mod¬ern historians.—ili M. ObolerOur position, today, is such that“we find ourselves in between thetwo extremes and living on theshortcomings of both.” The socialsciences, complains Dr. Heimann,are not attempting to fill this gap,for “society is characterized in away which is inconceivable toscientific logic.”Religion is foundation of societyBut social scientists, he claims,must recognize that religion withits teachings of love is “the foun¬dation on which society is built.Until this is acomplished, the so¬cial sciences will remain furtiveand misleading dogmas.”Dr. Heimann has taught in theGerman universities of Cologne,Freiburg and Hamburg beforecoming to the U. S. in 1933. Heis the author of three books: Com¬munism, Fascism or Democracy?,History of Economic Doctrines,and Freedom and Order. TheThomas Foundation, under whoseauspices he spoke, sponsors lec¬tures dealing with the changingproblems of religion, ethics, andmodem thought.DIZZY !GILLESPIETh*BLUE NOTEMADISON AT DEARBORN- SUNDAYS 4 00PM'Practically perfect."—TIMESurFDMrkoraTodoy bI 4:20, t:H, 10:00 for olTEN UNIVERSITIES TO BENEFIT BY GRANTSFOR UNRESTRICTED FUNDAMENTAL RESEARCH,With a view to stock-piling basicknowledge, the Du Pont Companyhas annoimced a program of grants-in-aid for the college year 1949-50 to10 universities for unrestricteduse in the field of fundamental re¬search in chemistry#The grants-in-aid of $10,000 eachare to be used for research that hasno immediate commercial goal. Theuniversities themselves are to selectthe projects in which the grants willbe employed, and results of the re¬search are to be freely available forpublication.HOW FUNDS WILL BE USEDDu PonPs purpose in offering thegrants is to help insure the flow ofDr. W«nd«ll M. Stanloy, at University of Califunia,is Chairman of the Department of Biochemistryin Berkeley and in the Medical School at San Fran¬cisco; Director of the Virus Laboratory. Bachelor’sdegree at Earlham (College, 1926; MB. at Illinois,1927 and Ph.D. in Organic Chendstry, 1929. Hon¬orary Doctor’s degrees from five prominent .^neri-can universities and the University of Paris. Hasreceived more than 10 medals and awards for dis-linguished work in chemistry and biochemistry; co¬recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1946.Du Pont fellow at Illinois in 1928*29.Dr. Carl S. Marvel, Professor of Organic Chemistryat the University of Illinois since 1930, receivedhis A.B. at Illinois Wesleyan University in 1915;A.M. at Illinois, 1916 and Ph.D. in Organic Chem¬istry, 1920; Se.D. (honorary) at Illinois Wesleyan,1946. President American Chemical Society, 1945;Director 1944-46. Has received numerous bofiOCI fundamental knowledge in scienceup)on which the future industrial de¬velopment of our country is so de¬pendent. It is intended that the fundsbe utilized for such expenses as em¬ploying additional research personnelor lightening the teaching load of aprofessor who is eminently capableof research of a high order. Theymay also, be expended for the pur¬pose of obtaining supplies, appara¬tus or equipment.GRANTS ARE EXPERIMENTALThis program of grants-in-aid islargely experimental. However, it isDu Font’s hope, should the programwork out satisfactorily, to continueeach grant for a period of five years.such as the Nichols Medal and memorial lecture¬ships at outstanding universities. Du Pont fellowat Illinois in 1919-20. Consxiltant on Organic Chem¬istry to the Du Pont Company at present.J. Frederic Walker is a Research Supervisor onformaldehyde products in the ElectrochemicalaDepartment. Trained at Maasachusetts Instituteof Technology. Awarded Bachelor’s degree in Chem¬istry, 1925; Master’s degree 1928, Ph.D. in OrganicChemistry, 1929. Author: "Formaldehyde Chem¬istry,” "Organic Chemistry of Sodium,” "Historyof Chemistry.” Du Pont fellow in 1926-27.Frank S. Fawcett is now doing synthetic organicresearch ?rith Du Font’s Chemical Department,Received Bachdor*s degree in Chemistry, FurmanUniversity, 1940; Master’s degree, Pennsylvania,1944; PfauD. in Organic Chemistry, MassachusettsInstitute of Tedmology, 1948. Du Pont fellow atM.I.T. in academic year 1947-48. 77 DU PONT FELLOWSHIPS*MADE AVAILABLETO GRADUATE STUDENTSAgain in the academic year 1949-50,the Du Pont Company is awardingpost-graduate and post-doctorate fel¬lowships to universities throughoutthe country.This is a continuation of the com¬pany’s 30-year-old plan to encourageadvanced studies in the fields of chem¬istry, physics, metallurgy, and engi¬neering.It is hoped that the plan will con¬tinue to help maintain the flow oftechnically trained men and womenwho will go into teaching and researchwork at the universities and into tech¬nical positions in industry. Some ofNWhat Fellowships ProvideEach post-graduate fellowshipprovides $1,200 for a singleperson or $1,800 for a marriedperson, together with an awardof $1,000 to the university to¬wards tuition and fees. Eachpost-doctoral fellowship pro¬vides $3,000 for the recipientand $1,500 to the university.V____ /them, as in’ past years, may come towork for Du Pont when they finishtheir studies, but there is no obligationto do so; fellowship holders are free toenter any field of activity they choose.The students and their researchsubjects will be selected by authori¬ties of the 47 universities participating.In this year’s progranj, 45 of the post¬graduate fellowships are in chemistry,4 in physics, 15 in chemical engineer¬ing, 5 in mechanical engineering and 2in metallurgy. There will be 6 post¬doctoral fellowships as an incentive tothose who would prefer to remain inacademic work in order to obtain addi¬tional advanced training in chemistry.*The University of Chicago porticipotes inthe Du Pont Compony Fellowship Plon.BETTER THINGS FOR BETTER IIVINOt i i THkOUGH CHlMiSTBYEntertaming, informative’—Listen to ^'Cavalcade ofAmerica’* Monday Nights, NBC Coast to CoastFriJoy. May 6, 1949 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 13Skunk liyens SU outingTwo Student Union-spon¬sored outings last weekendturned out very satisfactorily;twenty students made a one-dayhike to Argonne forest, while threemore intrepid souls went on anovernight hike to the Sand Dunes.Unlike the last Dunes tripthree weeks ago, this expeditionwas blessed with fine weather.The campers happened to meet agroup of botanists from the Uni¬versity, and were lectured upon the finer points of ecology.The outing also met a skunkwho tri^ to strike up acquaint¬ances. However, upon confrontingeach other, the skunk departed asrapidly as did the campers.The Outing Department plansa picnic for Sunday, May 8, atthe 55th St. Promontory, and aone-day hike is scheduled for Sat¬urday, May 14, destination as yetundecided.U. T.55that University History binding,says Thompson“What do we children ofthis scientific day have incommon with ancient sym¬bolism?” questioned John B.Thompson, dean of RockefellerChapel, Sunday morning at theUniversity religious service.The community of worship.Dean Thompson asserted, isformed by the individual’s givingup his self-occupation arid identi¬fying himself with a historicaltradition, a vital mystic feeling,a common religious continuity ina social w'hole. •“We of the rational backgroundfeel uncomfortable in the pres¬ence of profound worship. Wecome here to listen to the visitingoracle rather than to worshipGod,” he stated. In reiteratingthat concern with logical attri¬butes of God, or the ethical ac¬tions of religion, are less import¬ant than the common worship ofGod, Thompson emphasized thesocial character of the church.“The church is a society whichhas a history celebrating the con¬tinuity between ordinary humanexperience and the idea of God—we in His order. He in ours, andin Him are all souls interconnect¬ed,” he concluded. New method tells ageof archeological findsAnthropology and chemistry have joined forces in pro¬ducing a new method of determining the ages of ancientruins and other material. The new method is based uponthe measurement with a Geiger counter of the radioactivityof carbon in archaeological specimens.It has been found that materials of the present time,such as wood and human flesh, have a radioactivity ratingof 14 as compared with 7.9 pre-Inca civilizations. Dr. Libbyof the oldest dated objects, said that the radioactivity methodsuch as tools from the pyra- is not yet perfected but looks verymids of Zoser and Sneferu of 4700 promising.years ago.Events moy be datedDr. Willard Libby, Dr. James A hindrance to the method’saccuracy might lie in the fact thatthe carbon atoms in living mattermay differ in some significant wayAi’nold, and Mr. E. C. Anderson from those in non-living material,are working on the project and The best materials for this process.Iiave expressed the hope of estab- l^^s been found, are charcoal.for graduateUK Pll«»ril OF ITKSMART STYI.IMC:,” saj/S hisMOTHER. *‘He wants an Elgin, . . an<i this Elgin is the band^Uftnest man’s watch Tve ever seen. ***HE\S SURE TO APPREITATETHE TALtlE OF THAT MAirV-SPRI^'t*.*’ snys his FATHER.**New, better, the Dura PowerMainspring is exactly the kind ofthing that appeals to Bill,** J/./.ZSon of Mr. and Mrs. RobieL. Mitchell, of Garden City,New York, Bill is majoringin Civil Engineering, is Chair¬man of the Budget Committee,and Treasurer of the InstituteCommittee.27^'JEWELSELIMINATES 997 Of, ALLREPAIRS DUE TO STEELMAINSPRING EAILURESILord and Lady Elginsart priced from $67.^0to $3,000, Elgin DeLuxe from $47.30 to$67.30. Other Elgins This year it will be an Elgin for thousands of graduates. Forduding'^pidela/lr^ HiiiiiBlSlH these new Elgins are truly style leaders ... thrillingly distinc¬tive. And only an Elgin has the DuraPower Mainspring thateliminates 99% of watch repairs due to steel mainspring failures.For a top graduation gift, suggest that you’d like an Elgin; ; . an Elgin with the DuraPower symbol on tbc dial.The genius of America to wear on your wrist lishing actual dates of such im¬portant events as the recession ofthe ice sheets and fiourishings ofUC profs add toBook of the Year cloth, wood, ivory and shells.Enthusiosm greets experimentsKenneth Orr of the Anthro¬pology Department, in estimatingthe importance of this new methodo J J ^ field, stated, “The methodl^rVylO OUvJ Iv-/ of dating by use of Carbon 14promises to be extremely valuablefor dating cultures in the earlierportions of new world history.Considering the extreme impor-Seven UC men are among tance of chronology to archaeologythe contributors to the 1949 in reconstructing prehistory, theBrittanica Book of the Year, enthusiasm with which the carbonit was announced this week by experiments have been viewedWalter Yust, editor-in-chief of the highly understandable.”Encyclopedia Brittannica publica¬tions.They are: Quincy Wright, pro¬fessor of international law; Wil¬liam Morganstern, director of pub¬lic relations; Martin Hanke, asso¬ciate professor of old world pre¬history; Samuel Soskin and Rach- no respecters of spring or themiel Levine, professorial lecturers fairer sex, it seems. A rovingin the department of physiology, MAROON reporter happened toand W. W. Morgan, professor of catch an ear in a conversationastronomy at the Yerkes Observ- in cobb Hall between classes theother day, when a cute young coedThe Brittanica Book of the Year confided in a low yell to a bosomis the annual summary of the pre- companion: “I don’t mind votingceding year’s major events and for him, but when he tries to telldiscoveries published by the En- me what to do after he’s elected,cyclopedia Brittannica, Inc. that’s going too far!”Accuse politicianof coercing coedBudding UC politicians areHefmtfhment And MoviesGo Hand-In-HandSOTTIED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY RYCOCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF CHICAGO. INC.C' 1949, Th« Coco-Cola Companyfog« 14 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, May 6, 1949tiSw silence the DrioH?***^**®'twns and discovSJH^^ wven-•cientists." *”** Kuasian'MacArthur regime blind toeconomic, cultural reality'; Eby Said he, “I absolutely can notunderstand our timidity with re¬spect to the use of propogandaand democratic indoctrination inJapan.” The Communists are wayahead of us in this respect ac¬cording to him, and he estimatesone out of every six returned Jap- many. In submitting this sue,gested revision the commissionwas confronted with the firm op,position of the Japanese educa,tional vested interests, in Eby’sterms “a monopoly of the intel,lectually elite,” which felt that todestroy the present method ofBy LARRY TRAVIS^ “The only man I ever knew who can get into his trousers without wrinkling them”— Tnese'^w^ veterans to havrcom- wHting the Japanese languageIn this manner Kermit Eby, former educational advisor to the military government in munist leanings largely because of would weaken Japanese cultureJapan, and now professor in the Social Science Division, characterized General Douglas Communist propaganda to which and tradition.MacArthur. Eby discussed “Education in MacArthur’s Japan” before a luncheon meeting they were subjected before return- The second suggestion was toof the U. C. United Nations Association Wednesday. ' ing home from Manchuria. ameliorate the imperial rescript“I rather liked the Republican proposal last fall to bring MacArthur back to the states report suggested two main system whereby worship of theand run him for President,” Eby said. “And it would have been a good idea if they wouldhave brought back the new His second recommendation was nomic stability all plans for de-Japanese constitution also.Eby considers the new con¬stitution ineffective and paradox¬ical.Eby odvises MacArthurEby served on the commissionto advise General MacArthur onthe reconstruction of education inJapan. He is the former Educa¬tion and Research Director of theCIO.Professor Eby is critical of pres¬ent American policy towards Japanand of the MacArthur administra¬tion for being blind to basic eco¬nomic, psychological,, and culturalrealities. “We too often assume,”said be, “that we can change thecultural pattern of a people bywriting a report. We underesti¬mate the power of a culture 1600years old, the rigidity of the fam¬ily system, the impact of Shinto¬ism.”Exclusion act importontHis recommendations for im¬provement of policy towards Japanare three-fold: First, we must pro¬ject our ideals of democracy andbrotherhood in our treatment ofthe yellow race. “In my opinion,”said Eby, “the greatest single fac¬tor in the Japanese attitude ofhostility towards Americans is theExclusion Act which forbids Jap¬anese immigrants from enteringthe United States.”As long as we continue to lookupon Japanese as undesirables wecan not expect them to look withfavor upon our attempts to super¬impose our culture and values andpolitical organization upon theirs.This American attitude of arro¬gance and superiority was a pow¬erful weapon in the hands of Japmilitarists, Eby pointed out, to usein instigating the fanatical hatemanifested by their soldiers dur¬ing the war.IM/^r TO EARN,$9000 A YEAR?\ :Then here’s your chance toenter a business offering anopportunity for unlimitedearnings . . . plus the satisfac¬tion of rendering a worthwhilecommunity service. Many ofour representatives earn $4,000to $9,000 a year, and more!To find out more about theimportunities offered to you ina life insurance filing career,send for our free booklet,“The Career For Me?” whichincludes a preliminary test tohelp determine your aptitude.If your score is favorable, ourManager in or near yourcommunity will explain ourexcellent on-the-job trainingcourse and the famous MutualLifetime Compensation Plan,which provides liberal com¬missions, service fees and asubstantial retirement incomeat 65.THE MUTUAl LIFEINSURANCE COMPANY of NEW YORK34 N«*mh SltMl 6|Al IHm iotk S. N. VFIRST IN AMERICAFOR FREE BOOKUET "THX CAREER FORMF.T”—ADDRESS DEPT. 7NAME-ADDRESS.CITT with respect to Japanese economicstability. “Our Utopian dreamsare meaningless and useless,” hesaid, “unless men have jobs, foodand houses.”Eby paraphrases MacArthur assaying, “I don’t know what's hap¬pening in the rest of Asia; therest of Asia is not my responsibil¬ity. I am interested in Japanwhere we are going to fill thepresent economic and spiritualvacuum with our Christian de¬mocracy before it is filled bysomething else. We are going tobuild out of Japan a bulwark ofWestern Civilization.”Eby continued by saying that hedoesn’t know exactly what theGeneral means, for without eco- mocratization will be ineffective,and Japan will never be economic¬ally stable until its trade with themainland of Asia can be recov¬ered. Otherwise, says Eby, we willhave to continue the subsidizationof the Japanese economy indefi¬nitely. He holds the economic sit¬uation in Japan partially respon¬sible for the Communist gains inthe last election.Must hove contoct with democracyHis third recommendation wasthat we bring the Japanese intocontact with our democratic in¬stitutions—by literature, by bring¬ing Japanese leaders to this coun¬try for firsthand observation andexperience, and by our politicalorganization in Japan. revisions of the Japanese educa- ^ delineal descendant^ .. of the gods is inculcated into chil,tional system. First was the ro- from the time they first be-manizing of the Japanese alpha- gin school. The present systembet. The present Japanese alpha- has an almost unbelievably power-bet does not adapt well to com- ful hold on the minds of Japanesemunication of anything but thesimplest of ideas unless one knowsupwards of 50,000 characters, Ebyexplained, and only the very welleducated are acquainted with that children, Eby said, resulting in aregimentation and restriction ofthought, and a fanatical loyaltyto the emperor and the imagineddestiny of the Japanese race.PRICES THAT MEET STUDEMT BUDGETSOpen 6 Q.m. — Gtoses 1 a.m.Breakfasts, Brunches, Lunches, Supper and SnacksSUNDAY DiNNERS A SPECiALTYJIFFY GRILL 6346 KimbarkThe better we producethe better we live! We note *“^°"o^the W(i\\ vour students w ^t'** y oAmiration Cayf morefor tte tf„ny “ietTbout ifMey better uP^nced tell them that \ unlimited—advancement » pleases andtunity to work wherehere a man ca P'®®ft^gain coUec-» right ‘O organise and hargsystem, wrth , ^g__the same sy . ^** bieher than youre- can owntimes mgne*^ . people caiDon't mention tha businesses . . •^gs and mana^ * c„,dertakings.and invest money .v»out the AmericanDon'threathe^Sies-and mpre-iSu^^t-y-^r'-ofUfe- • . costs and raising wages.-kee^ hours. „yofthewith shor ^ye tom ^people,Xn other w • y^g^ppens whegoverning th build a n baa^-rd^Serent from -y theever seen. . perfect—wof prices and ^ somethingtlmys changes theP.S. AWiut ^;;Cthebut what /'^P^ours or o'^^r'M^benefits ofWhich Vop'e d^V '^ygphone,diiced for m^• such inventiOT^ central ^ ffboradio. farmplumbing an ^ systemworld knows that Iapproved for the PUBLIC POLICY COMMITTEE of The Advertising Council by:EVANS CLARK, Executive DirectorTwentieth Century Fund PAUL G. HOFFMAN, Formerly President,Studebaker Corporation BORIS SHISHKIN. Economist.American Federation of LaborPublished in the Public Interest by:THE PURE OIL COMPANYGtntral Offices, ChicagoJ.Friday,May6TheMAROONstaffwillmeetintheMAROONofficeat3:30p.m.foradiscussionofelectionIssues.GammaDelta,theLutheranstudentorranization,willhearProf.AlfredBichselofValpariso,Indiana,discuss*‘MusicoftheReformation”at8p.m.intheChapelHouse.X•*•ASquareDancewillbesponsoredbytheStudentUnionFolkProgramsDe¬partmentatIdaNoyesHall,from8to11:30pm.Admission35cents.•*•TheRogerWilliamsFellowshippre¬sentsaFellowshipRetreatunderthegeneraltopicofChristianlivinginanun-ChristianworldwithdiscussionsonwhatChristianityisitself,andhowitisapplicabletopolitics,education,andeconomics.TransportationwillleavetheHydeParkBaptistChurchforDruceLakeCamp,DruceLake,Illinois,wheretheRetreatwillbeheld,at3and6p.m.ThegroupwillreturntoChicagoSun¬daymorning.Achargewillbemadeof$4.00perperson..*••TheAVCAll-CampusBeerBust,fea¬turingfreebeer,ginger-ale,andaLatinAmericandancetroupewithBillPrice’sband,willbeheldtonightattheADPHouse,5747University,at9o’clock.Ticketsareavailablefor75centsintheAVCofficeandCobbHall.•*•TrolsYilles—TroisMondes:Paris,London,NewYork,w'illbethethemeofalecturebyProf.JeanCanu,sponsoredbyLeCercleFrancaisthisafternoonat4o’clockattheInternationalHouse.«••TheFirstAnniversaryoftheStateofIsraelwillbecelebratedtonightattheHillelFoundation.Beginningat8:30,Prof.RotenstreichoftheHebrewUni¬versityinJerusalemwillspeakon“TheMeaningoftheStateofIsrael.”•••DivisionofBiologicalScienceConfer¬encesheldtodayarethePediatricPsy¬chiatryDiagnosticStaffConference,1p.m.,M-137;NewbornInfantConfer¬ence1pm.atDonaDeLeeHall,BillingsM-137,andtheClinicalPathologicalConference,4:30p.m.,Pathology117.*••Handel’sOnera“JuliusCaesar,”thelastinaseriesofuniversityconcerts,willbegiveninMandelHallat8:30.TheorchestrawillbeconductedbySiegmundLevarie;DonaldGrammwillsingthetitlerole,andEleanoreWarnerwillsingtheroleofCleopatra.Admis¬sion$1.50.•••LexMillionwillbeshownInSS122at7:15and9:15byDocumentaryFilm.Admissionbyseason’sticketonly.••*•J-VTennisTeamplaysSennHighontheVarsityCourtsat3:30.*«•J-VBaseballTeammeetsChicagoLatinSchoolat4onNorthField.*«*MathematicalBiologyClubmeetsat4:30at5741Drexel.Friday,May6,1949THECHICAGOMAROONPage15Cti.^*UeiSaturday,May7■■ks'-AMedicalandSurgicalChestCon¬ferencewillbeheldinM-4Classroomat11a.m.ApartywillbegivenbySocialServ¬iceAdministrationstudentsforallUCstudentsat5410S.Dorchester,at8p.m.**<0“FetePigalle,”thefinalpre-compC-DancewillbeheldinIdaNoyesfrom9to12.StudentUnion,thespon¬soringorganization,hasannouncedthatEddieJamesandhisorchestrawillfur¬nishthemusic.Ticketsareavailableatthedoor.*•«InternationalSocietyforGeneralSe¬manticswillholdameetingintheEastLoungeofIdaNoyesat2p.m.Thereisnoadmissioncharge.♦♦•VarsityTennisTeamfacesIowaat2ontheVarsityCourts.Sunday,May8HillelishavingitsSpringQuarterOpenHouseat8p.m.Everyoneisin¬vited.The9thAnnualInterclubSingwillbeheldinIdaNoyesat3p.m.Refresh¬mentswillbeserved.Everyoneisin¬vited.*••InterchurchCouncilissp>onsoringabreakfastat9:15inChapelHouse,5810WoodlawnAve.AdiscussionoftheGospelofLukewillfollow.Admissionis20cents.•••“JudaismandtheModernMind”isthetitleofCharlesFeldstein’sspeechwhichwillbegivenintheFirstUni¬tarianChurchon57thandWoodlawnAve.at6p.m.ChanningClubisthesponsoringorganization.•••TheAnnualSpringFollies,whichcon¬sistsofastudent-talentshow,refresh¬ments,anddancing,willbegivenbytheHumanDevelopmentStudentOr¬ganizationat7:30p.m.inIdaNoyesTheatre.TicketsareonsaleintheHu¬manDevelopmentoffice.*••AUniversityForumbroadcastfea¬turingMrs.HelenH.Perlman,WilliamSchreiter,andElizabethGovaninadiscussionofthetopic“MoneyandMentalHygiene”isbeingpresentedbyStudentForumoverRadioStationWOAKat4p.m.•••TheNoyesBox,sponsoredbyStudentUnion,isbeingheldfrom8to11withacontinuationofdoorprize.s.Admissionlormenis25cents.TheUniversityofChicagoChoirwilloogiveitsannualspringconcertat8to¬nightand-tomorrownightinRockefel¬lerChapel.«*#AForeignDinnersponsoredbySUisopentoanyonewhoinquiresattheSUoffice.*»«Rev.JackMcMichael,ExecutiveSec¬retary,MethodistCommissiononSocialAction,givesthesermonatthe11o’clockserviceatRockefellerChapel.*•T1FrederickMarriottplaysacarillonqrecitalat4atRockefellerChapel.Monday,May9Registrationinadvanceforthesum*merquarterforcollegeresidencestu¬dentsbeginstodayandendsJune10,TherewillbeameetingoftheentireMAROONstaffat3:30inRosenwald2fortheelectionofofficersandthecon¬siderationofconstitutionalamendments.•«4.^ZFAissponsoringaLoxandBagelSupperat5050S.Drexelat5:30.Elec¬tionofofficersistofollowthesupper.Admissionis75cents.OQ**«Inter-FraternityCouncilisgivingafreebeer-bustinthePhiKappaPsiHouse.Allfraternitymenareinvited.**«“HowIsCollegeEducationSlantedTowardtheClassViewpointofBigBusiness?”isthetopicofdiscussionatameetingsponsoredbytheCommunistClubat3:30intheIdaNoyesAlumnaeRoom,•«•“LosMillionesDeChaflan”isthe^nameofafilmtobegivenbyInterna¬tionalHouseintheInternationalHouseOTheatreat8.Admissionis35cents.•••r-“CorinthintheTimeofSt.Paul”is^thesubjectofalecturetobegivenbyOscarT.BroneeroftheAmericanSchoolofClassicalStudiesinAthens.Thislecture,sponsoredbytheUCNewTestamentClub,willbegiveninCom¬monroom.SwiftHallat7:30.Thereisnoadmissioncharge.•••TouroftheLoop,sponsoredbySU,leavesfromIdaNoyesat2.•#*\ExhibitionofartworkconnectedwiththelifeofJohannGoetheison'displayooinGoodspeed108from9to5today•andeverydaythisweek.a9•J-VTrackTeamfacesSouthShoreandStelnmetzat3:30onStaggField.R.L.Meier,ResearchAssociate,speakson“BiochemicalTransformationofAlgaeRequiredforHumanNutri¬tion”attheInstituteofRadiobiologyandBiophysicsat6at6200Drexel.“PlantRespiration—theLastSteptoReactionwithAtmosphericOxygen”isthesubjectofDr.E.S.GusmanBarron,AssociateProfessorofBiochemistry,whoisfeaturedatameetingoftheBotanyClubinBotany106at4:30,a♦in“LaborPolicy1949”willbediscussedbyCharlesO.Gregory,FrederickH.Harbison,andRobertBucheleatameetingofthePoliticalEconomyClubinLawSouthat7:45.RobertF.Winch,AssociateProfes¬sorofSociologyatNortwestern,willaddresstheSocietyforSocialResearchon“SomeDataBearingontheOedipusHypothesis”inSS302at8,«»«“TheTraditionofChristianExperi¬ence”willbediscussedbyWilliamHamiltonNes,DeanofNashotahHouse,inSS122at8:15underthesponsor¬shipoftheEpiscopalChurchCouncil.Tuesday,May10AscholarshipfortheAmericanRedCrossNationalAquaticSchool,tobeconductedatCampOwasippenearWhitehall,Michigan,fromJune12toJune22,willbegrantedtoaUCunder¬graduate.Applicantswillmeetat10:30inroom203,Reynolds.Transportationwillbefurnishedtothecamp.PlansfortheSmokyMountainCamp¬ingTrip,leavingJune17andreturningJune27,willbediscussedatameetingsponsoredbytheSUOutingDepart¬mentat8p.m.inIdaNoyes.Depositsof$25towardthetotal$40costofthetripwillbetakenatthistime.«••“W’hatCanWeLearnFromHistoryAboutHandlingDepressions?”isthesubjectunderdiscussionbyMr.GeorgeP’robst,oftheSocialScienceIstaff,andagroupofstudentsontheStudentForum-RadioMidwayat8:30p.m.inBurtonLounge.•••'“Neo-NaturalizationandSocialism”isthetopicofaspeechtobepresentedtotheReligiousSocialistClubbyProf.DanielDayWilliamsat10p.m.inMeadvilleHouse,57thandWoodlawn.Mr.WilliamsistheProfessorofCon¬structiveTheologyintheFederatedTheologicalSchools.TheChristianScienceOrganizationwillholditsregularweeklymeetinginThorndikeHiltonChapelat7:30p.m.Allarewelcome.«9«Children’sRepublic,TheChristmasSlippers,andToHearYourBanjoPlay,arethethreemovies-tobeshowninSS122at7:15.Rev.JosephHaroutunian,ProfessorofSystematicTheology,McCormickSeminary,speaksataworshipserviceinBondChapelat10:30A.M.VarsityTennisTeammeetsLakeFor¬estat2ontheVarsityCourts.***“JobOpportunitiesforHumanDe¬velopmentStudents”willbediscussedbyJ.CarsonMcGuire,InstructorinHu¬manDevelopment,ataHumanDe¬velopmentSeminarinIdaNoyesat3:30.Wednesday,May11EntrancerequirementsforadmissiontotheLawSchoolwillbediscussedwithCollegestudentsbyDeanKatzoftheLawSchoolthisafternoonat4:30inBurtonLounge.Mr.AlexElson,ofElson&Cotton,willspeakat2p.m.inLawNorthonthesubjectofFutureDevelopmentinLegalPractice,inconnectionwithaseriesoflecturesonlegalethicsponsoredbytheStudentDivisionoftheNationalLawyersGuild.••*TheGraduateHistoryClubwillhearArnoldBergstraesser,AssociateProfes¬sorofGermanCulturalHistory,speakon“TheUseofSociologyfortheStudyofHistory”inIdaNoyesEastLounge,at7:45p.m,••«WilsonW.Wyatt,formerNHAad¬ministrator,willspeakon“PoliticsandGovernmentBythePeople”fortheWalgreenFoundationat4:30p.m.inSocialSciences122.***TheGoldenAge:AthensandItsFes¬tivals—anillustratedlectureoftheseries.ReligioninGreekCivilization,willbegiventonightbyProf.FrancisR.WaltoninSocialSciences122at7:30p.m.«#•Prof.RichardP.McKeonspeaksthisafternoonon“MoralEndsandPoliticalInstitutions,”inconnectionwiththelectureseries.CultureandWorldCom¬munity,at4:30p.m.inRosenwald2,Thursday,May12ThePsychologyClubwillhearRay•mondB.Cattell,researchprofessorattheUniversityofIllinois,speakon‘"rheDimensionsofCulturePatterns,aSo¬cial-PsychologicalApproach”at4:30p.m.inLawNorth.BridgeTournamentsponsoredbytheStudentUnionGamesDepartment,willbeheldfrom7to10thiseveningatIdaNoyesHall.EntrantsarerequestedtosignuponthebulletinboardoutsidetheSUoffice,thirdfloor,IdaNoyes.*•*WilsonW.Wyatt,formerNHAad¬ministrator,willdiscussWorldPeaceThroughGovernmentalProcess,alec¬tureoftheWalgreenFoundationseriesat4:30,inSocialScience122.•••“StatisticalTreatmentofNon-LinearEconometricModels”isthetitleofHer¬manRubin’stalktotheCowlesCom¬missionforResearchinLawCourtat7:45.«•«FrederickMarriottgivesanorganre¬citalat12:45atRockefellerChapel.*•*J-VTennisTeammeetsHarvardSchoolat3:30ontheVarsityCourts.«*•“MedicalAspectsofAging”isDr.Ed¬wardJ.Steiglitz’ssubjectatameetingsponsoredbytheCommitteeonHumanDevelopmentatJudd126at4:30.Dr.Steiglitzwillbepresentat4:00tomeetinterestedpersons.«**FrederickMarriottgivesancarillonrecitalat4:30atRockefellerChapel.•**PreliminarytryoutsfortheMiloF.JewettPrizeforBibleReadingswillbeheldinBondChapelat4:30.•**CountryDancersmeetat7:30inIdaNoyes.••*NoticesofAllCampusEventsfortheRestoftheQuarterShouldBeTurnedinat3:00Wednesday,MAY11forPublicationintheLastMAROONoftheQuarterMAY13Fage 16T THE CHICAGO MAROONCorwin speaks...(Continued from Pose 1)he asked, must they hamper radioas a cultural medium?He further stated that publicopinion ix>lls are useless, and asan example gave the results ofa “poll" taken on the question ofincest: 45 per cent in favor; 35per cent opposed; 20 per cent noopinion. He denounced superfluousadvertising when he spoke of“cheese that brings drama . , .rubber tires that bring religion.”Pegler irks himThe final members of the “con¬formist" group include the ex¬ponents of no culture at all, andCorwin offered Westbrook Pegleras the classic example. Pegler, inone of his more profound moods,advanced the theory that singingand acting are not really arts at all; that singing Is merely “soundsfrom the neck," and that actinginvolves nothing more than cer¬tain movements and speecheswhich have been patiently re¬hearsed. In an article about Ein¬stein, Pegler maintained thatwhatever Einstein contributed tothe store of human knowledge, hecontributed “because he couldn’thelp it."Corwin remarked that to an ex¬tent both the American and Rus¬sian governments are acting theparts of conformists in suppress¬ing culture. However, he was opti¬mistic as to the future of culturein America: “. . . the core of un¬daunted arftsts . . . will not beintimidated;" they are supportedby the sensible American public.He added that the theatre is still free, and that books are yet thefreest of all. Pressures againstculture always seem to increase intimes of political strife or crisis,he observed.lncompreh«nsibies bother himThe other group which besiegesculture Corwin termed “Obscuran¬tists,** or the Incomprehensibles.This is the smaller group, but themost diverting, and seemed to irkCorwin more than the other. Itincludes men of undisputed tal¬ent who prefer to deal with ab¬stractions; men who have inten¬tions of idealogical meaning, butwho only succeed in obscuring cul¬ture. As examples of this category,Corwin offered T. S. Eliot, Ber¬nard De Voto, E. E. Cummings,Karl Shapiro, and Stuart Chase.Whatever the people are for theyare against, said Corwin, and arenever for anything but each other.They have their private “ivorytower;" two of them recently got together and voted an award toa third.____De Voto and Chase, he contin¬ued, are rigid semanticists. Theyare sticklers for exactness inwords, and this exactness doesnothing but hide culture behind acloudy semantic smoke screen. Healso objected to the “super-refinedbookishness" of T. S. Eliot andsaid that scholars usually decidethat Eliot has written a greatwork because they worked so hardto decipher it. Corwin also pro¬tested the tortuous writing ofShapiro and the visual imageryof (Ximmings. The writings of allthese men, he declared, is so ab¬stract and obscure that the “vul¬gar, sweating proletariat" cannotunderstand them, ^ind he con¬sidered Whitman, Masters, andSandberg to be the true poets ofthe people. Friday, Moy 6, 1949In conclusion, Corwin observedthat we tend to forget the causeseffects, and parallels of historyConcert...(ContinHed from Poge 8)the two parts, was more than sat,isfactory.Progrom tostofully pionnedThe program, as a whole, waivery tastefully planned and, over,looking a few shortcomings inperformance, altogether enjoy,able.—Jomes GoldmoiiFLY BY DC-3'XLUB LINER''Authorized Charter ServiceOne-third Below Airline RatesL. A.—10 hours $80 <^0FLORIDA—6 hours 45 ooPORTLAND—10 hours 8119DALLAS—5 hours 37 72Tax included on all pticesFor Informotion Coll Ml. 3-38)0Tops with the Top Stars in Hollywood and with Colleges too—Cftes»erf/e/(fsatisfyiK»« tight ufknow Iami!! *tilder.' '"y idea of aWhen^l>tsterfieldy'f under.Smoke"For me there’s only onecigarette that’s really Milderand that’s CHESTERFIELD /#STARRING IN''ONE LAST FLING"A WARNEK SROS. PRODUCTIONCopyright 1949. LiVitrf it My(r$ Toraooo Ca