University of Chicago, November 4, 1949 31Globe-trotter watchedi-Nehru victory Eligibility rulestightened up byCl Bill changes Elect four UC*ers inUWF national meetBy LARRY SHERMANThe third annual General Assembly of the UnitedWorld Federalists was called to order in the main ballroomof Cleveland’s Hotel Hollenden on Friday, Oct. 28, and wasconcluded Sunday, Oct. 30.Among the members of the delegation from UC wereDon Levine, chairman of the group, Dick Fireman, MaryColeman, Pete Lederer, Anna Wright, Arlon Tussing, DonO’Brien, Howard Lord, FrankLogan, Bob Albright, Walter to what the assistant mayor ofPintner, Dave Cummings, Cleveland described in his welcom-and Larry Sherman. ing address as “teaching the worldThree members of the delegation that none of us can live alone.”were elected to the student coun- Alan Cranston, new president ofcil, and another, Anna Wright, UWF, reviewed the progress of hisr 1* Effective Nov. 1, the regular GITo Pillllips Talbot, visiting assistant professor in pol^ Bill (Public Law 346) was amend- was elected to the executive coun- inception in 1946. He noted thattical science at the UC, India is a second home and ed by the new Public Law 226 cil of UWF. organization has made since itsJawaharlal Nehru is a close acquaintance. , passed by the Slst congress. The UC delegation fought to ill the last session of CongressAs a correspondent in India for the foreign service of Vets who have completed or dis- liberalize the existing statement there were 105 representatives andthe Chicago Daily News from early 1946 to 1948, Talbot continued GI Bill courses and wish of beliefs and purposes of the na- 22 senators who went on record to\^as a first-hand witness of the negotiations that preceded to study in other fields must ob- tionwise organization by changing say that the objective of the peo-indeoendence and of the formative stages of the self-gov- tain permission from the VA. the essence of UWF’s present pie of America is to become partprninff Indian and Pakistani ^ veteran applying for a certi- policy of seeking world govern- ot a world federation.nations Urdu and went into the villages ficate of eligibility must specify ment with limited powers to striv- Student confabs held*. f f Pt northern India. There he made the name of the course and the ing for government with powers The student groups held sepa-Before returning to t n e study of basic agricultural prob- school. ‘ adequate to assure peace. rate student assembly meetingsUnited States, he traveled exten- jems and familiarized himself with The law states that the vet must Their stand was opposed by throughout the convention. Dele-sively within India and Pakistan, problems and principles in the take courses which directly apply most of the adult delegations and gates elected to the student coun-concluding his assignment with a gocial structure of India. to his vocation. Recreational and was defeated by a stand-up vote, cil were pledged to work for great-rapid survey of Indonesia, Indo- . “frill” courses will not be permit- 158 college chapters er student autonomy in the move-China, Siam, and Burma. En route^ veterans under Public Law The UC chapter is one of the ment for world government.thpZw wee 158 college and 83 high school TJC delegates worked on com-n whirh ® Veteran wishes to transfer chapters in the nationwide group, mittees on resolutions, by-laws,wim tne navai reserve, m wiuc school to another, he Its members, along with the more, and nominations, and were instru-he was commissionea at Man a obtain a supplementary cer- than 40,000 members of UWF in mental in reporting several billssept., 1941, he waicn^ tne eno - tificate of eligibility. the United States, are dedicated out onto the assembly floor formous increase in the movement of . debateAmerican armaments through In¬dia and into China. He served ato j. 1. 1 a tSingapore, then as liaison officer Seventeen new prots electedin Bombay, and finally as assistant a #naval attache in Chungking until1945, with the rank of Lieutenant-Commander._ -rr^*rIn Chungking, he learned Chi- Seventeen UC faculty members, including the dean JSL StJUCCt)S>!Tn^°itnHvinI°^p^rh^np^ of the divlslon of social sciences, Ralph W. Tyler,* were aguage. Prior to rejoining the Chi- to the council, supreme academic body of the Uni-cago Daily News foreign service as versity, Chancellor Robert M. Hutchms announced yes-India correspondent, he was on terday.The council of the Senate, which consists of 51 electedmembers, serving three-year terms, is chosen by the Haresystem of proportionate rep-resentation. Everett C. Olson, associate profes-to council of UC Senate Many of the delegates to theconvention were noted for theirwork outside of UWF. Included(ContiiiH«<l on Page 12)^duty in the office of the chief ofnaval operations.Met NehruDL-ii* T Talbot met Nehru on several oc-r ' piiiiiipt Toibof casions before his assignment ashome, he visited and reported on correspondent in India. Their firstconditions in Palestine. meeting occurred ^hen Talbot was SA electionwith 55 victorsThe Student Assembly electionsheld last Thursday and Fridayshowed an overwhelming victoryfor the Independent Student’sThe newly elected profes- sor of vertebrate paleontology, sec-sors include: Dr. Emmet B. Bay, retary of the department of geol-Vlsited India studying in India in 1939 and professor of medicine and secre- ogy, and associate dean of the di- League. A total of 1363 votes wereTalbot first viewed India in 1939, Nehru was a political leader in the tary of the department of medi- ^'ision of physical sciences. cast. Fifty five of ISL’s candidateswhen he entered a Moslem Uni- United Provinces. cine; Konrad E. Bloch, associate Others named were elected with 9 from the ranksversity under a lellowshlp of the- While stationed in Bombay, professor of biophysics and mem- Also Robert Redfleld nrofessor ^ Assembly Reformi Institute of Current World Af- Talbot witnessed the All-India P^o^^^sor oi oiopnysics ana mem Also Robert Redfield, professor coalition, and only one indepen-fairs, to which he had been elected Congress meeting of Aug. 8, 1942, institute of radio- of anthropology; Richard B. Rich- dent candidate,because of outstanding news re- when Nehru and Mahatma Gandhi biology and biophysics; Weldon ter, professor of neurology; Joseph BULLETINporting for the Chicago Daily made their memorable speeches G. Brown, professor of chemistry; j. Schwab, associate professor Frank Logan, fourth year col-News. The previous year he had urging the British to quit India. Helen L. Koch, professor of child qj education associatje pro- student, was elected presistudied at the School of Oriental As a consequence, many Indian psychology and coordinator of the . . cPionpCc anHand African Studies, University of leaders were arrested at dawn the nursery schools; Maynard C. oioiogicai sciences anaLondon, where he first contacted next morning. Ki'ueger, associate professor of chairman of the natural sciencesthe Urdu language. Arranged Nehru visit economics in the College; Edward staff in the college; Malcolm P.In India, studying first at a Mos- Later, in the Chicago Daily News h. Levi, professor of law; Richard Sharp, professor of law; Milton B.lem university and later at a foreign service, he had many con- p, McKeon, distinguished service ginger associate professor andHindu university, he mastered (Continued on Poge 12) . professor of Greek and philosophy;Pro-UN policy to be soughtat AVC confab byUC chapter chairman of the social sciencesstaff in the College; W. Allen Wal¬lis, professor of statistics and busi¬ness economics; John A. Wilson,professor of Egyptology and asso¬ciate director of the Oriental In¬stitute; and Napier Wilt, chair-UC delegates to the fourth AVC national convention, which will be held in Chi¬cago Thanksgiving week end, were instructed by vote of a chapter meeting Wednesdayto support a positive alternative to present American foreign policy based on strengthen¬ing the UN.The resolution’s preamble stated, '‘As veterans of World War II, we feel it our dutyto challenge any foreign policy which threatens — however unconsciously — to lead in¬evitably to World War III. While military pacts,- billions spent on armaments, andeconomic plans designed to pQgg^ggions to the UN trusteeship Gerhard Weinberg, area councilbuy off whole coupcil, the colonies to be emanci- delegates; Jack Whorton, civil lib-and wiii possible and ad- gj-^jgg chairman; Ruth Wedge, do-they have not in the past and wiii ministered in the interim, wherenot now prevent war. necessary, by the UN, and trans- m e s 11 c affairs chairman, and*“Instead, by increasing the ten- recovery functions of Leonard Wigon, veterans affairsSion in what is refqjred to as a ^j^g Marshall Plan to appropriafe chairman.‘cold war,’ they put nations in agencies, which would also Poley announced appointment ofsituat^ns where they dare ^not carry out plans for developing the George Cooley as program chair-back down for fear of losing na- resources and raising the living man. Bob Sullivant as secretariattional honor’ and, by forcing all standards of Asia and Africa. chairman, and George Ogawa asnations to choose sides at once, i>eiegates chosen fund-raising chairman at the man of the department of English. ^^i^^’sciences^^Rifben^^saposnikthey insure a global eonflict once convention, in Wednesday meeting.order of votes received, are Jean Discrimination survey The 1949 council election was Richard piano.iwn”’ rh^Lni'“Evans ‘^at the the fifth election under the Uni-HLriirrmn*; inruinp luruiubiuti wx Sharp, CharlottB, Evans, ^a civil liberties Committee is invcsti- versity s organization plan voted cooiey, Jean Moskowitz, oerhard wein-uTp™i“ “f at reaT500,000 «°l”‘‘Skh"Hv^r"anrSer- " discrimination in the Uni- by ‘he^board of trustees in D^em-TPniPv Rnhprt feuiivani, ana u^er ycrsity hospitals and medical ber, 1945, which provided for a Kahn, Merrill Freed, Irene Goidbiatt.school as well as problems of senate of 450 members and a coun- DePorte.^^Hw^^i'DeutSfh,®an'd b.^RewNew chapter officers, chosen at inter-group relations in the Hyde cil of 51. ro«.tion of all atomic stockpiles, plants, the same Oct. 20 election when Park-Woodlawn area, with special The council has all legislative sh?rS5^n ^S“S?Jd"coif mch”ardequipment, and information; delegates were selectd, are, Pat- reference to recent attacks on powers in academic matters af- wiiyiiam’ Dronerger, James schroeterlgradual and nearly complete dis- rick Foley, chairman; Jean P. Jor- members of the University com- fee ting the University except those **■*.armament of all national armed dan, vice-chairman; Morton Med- munity. He said proposals for ac- matters reserved to the board of ministration, Charles Garvin and Rubyforces under UN supervision; im- nick, secretary; Jo(3 Callender, tion will be presented to the next .trustees, the chancellor, the pre- ^ ° h®mediaUi sunender of all colonial treasurer; Walter Hoffman and meeting. sident, or other ruling bodies. Oavw’ ciaxton. an4 ao^rt caiiaKMidnight specialMartially minded spookswheeled a decrepit cannon intoposition on the Midway, Hal¬loween. Authorities hint thatthe deed was in honor of anold UC tradition, strongly inti¬mating supernatural forces.A cryptic “I hate Aristotleand football” was gilded uponthe muzzle of the weapon, “Li¬bido” was splashed upon thebarrel, and “YPA” and “ISL”adorned the shield. The Ameri¬can Society for Psychical Re¬search has promised to investi¬gate. dent of student assembly *lastnight at the assembly’s firstmeeting. Robert Jacobs becamethe vice-president. Vivian Mar-garis won the secretaryship byacclamation. Robert Calananwas elected treasurer.Also chosen by the assemblywere the following committeechairmen: Don Phares, elec¬tions; Louis Silverman, studentneeds; William Burton, financial; Jean Jordan, civil liberties;Merrill Freed,J»iSA; Larry Sher¬man, publicity; Hugh Lane, stu¬dent-faculty relations; andLionel Blumberg, activities co¬ordination.Haskel Deutsch, Gerry Steiner,and Alfred Palfig were electedto the elections committee.Those elected from the college weroAnn Wright, Jason Appel, Donald Arndt,Louis Silverman, Alyce Kahn, PatriciaBllzi, Robert Jacobs, Frank Logan, DavidKliot, David Straus. Jean Jordan, EarlDordal, Ellis Shaffer, Peter Dugal, MaryRoberts, James Gardin, Robert Mayer,Jay Kisloff, James Weil, Donald Phares,Mark Bucholz, and David Tingley. Theyare listed according to their rank lathe election results.From the theological schools, HenryCampbell, Oliver Pickett, and JeromeSteiner were elected. From the medicalschool, there were two candidates: Har¬old Llchner and Bob Gordon. The lawschool will be represented by KennethSears, Alfred Palfi and Pat Foley. Fiombiological sciences, Blnah Schor, Cle¬ment Balanoff, Arpad Balia, Werneran ‘incident’ occurs.”UN police forceSpecific proposals in tjie in¬structions include formation of amen; internationalization of stra- weinberetegic air bases throughout the weinoerg.World' immediate intemationaliza-THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, Novamber 4, 19492Guidance group offershelping hand to gradsThe office of vocational guidance and placement an¬nounces the opening of its registration for men and womenwho expect to receive degrees this year, and who will beinterested in securing permanent positions in teaching,business, or industry after graduation.Beginning shortly, officials of business and industrialcompanies will be visiting the quadrangles to interview andselect students for employ-^ ment following their gradua- dents who are graduating thistion. The companies which coming December, March, or Junecarry on such a program of college and who will be seeking employ-recruitment are leaders in their ment at that time to register atparticular fields and offer un- once in Room 305, Administrationusual opportunities to the college Building. Students interested in Three UC*ers 6 pre-ceps offer alternatiyediscuss role of to specialists during winterinterns at UNgraduate.There is no formalized recruit¬ teaching positions should see MissMathews. Men and women inter-cruitment program for teachers, ^ business or industrial po¬sitions should see Mr. Calvin orMiss Orr, respectively.although office interviews areoften conducted. Early registra¬tion is imperative, as sets of cre-denUals must be organized for C^DcttlCe rCCCtlls ^20^S*'each registrant and mailed toschool officials to serve as recom- on the night of Nov. 12, themendations for teaching vacan- second all-campus dance will becies. These vacancies are re- held at Ida Noyes HallrOrchestrajng dates for the positions. music. A fashionThe Office of Vocational Quid- show from the “Roaring Tweu^Ance and Placement urges all stu- ties” will also be presented.LYL rally protests verdictof NY trail; witness speaksAn audience of nearly 100 at an LYL all-campus protestrally in Kent 106 Wednesday evening heard one of the de¬fense witnesses in the recently concluded Communist trialin New York. The 11 Communist leaders have been con¬victed of “conspiring to teach and advocate the violent over¬throw of the U. S. Grovernment. ...”The speaker was Geraldine Lightfoot, Negro Communistleader in Chicago. The rallywas sponsored by the Labor and then came up with theseYouth League. > trumped-up charges.”Mrs. Lightfoot related her ex- She implored our generation notperience on the witness stand dur- respond to the dangering which most * questions asked, ^ . p , . bail, and the jailing of the law-yers. “My generation failed to fullyjected to by the prosecutor and understand the fight to lift thesustained J^e J^ge as if by embargo on Loyalist Spain andto stop the sale of scrap iron tocord showed that the other defense Japan ”witnesses were not allowed torefute hundreds of previous an¬swers by prosecution witnesses.She said the judge persistentlythreatened and tried to intimi¬date the defense witnesses.Theresa Ehrlich, an attorney forthe Civil Rights Congress, wasthe other main speaker at therally.Miss Ehrlich declared that “thedefendents have been convicted ofbeing Communists and for noovCTt acts, whatsoever.” “A GrandJury spent 11 months seekinggrounds on which to indict them Opportunities and adven¬tures of UN internship werediscussed by three ex-internsat a UN tea in the library of IdaNoyes last Tuesday afternoon.Entrance into the internshipprogram, which is held in NewYork, may be accomplished byapplying to the State department(or the native government in casesof foreign students), by applyingto the University that the studentis attending, or by obtaining ascholarship from the Rotary Club.Eligible entrants must have a min¬imum of two years of college andbe between 20 pnd 30 years of age.The project of the UN secre¬tariat, which is the permanentset-up of offices, is to familiarizeinterested students with interna¬tional affairs and with the func¬tions of the UN by offering shortterm employment. Attending in¬terns are given special room andfood rates and percentage reduc¬tions on book prices.The three students who led thediscussion were Kristin Moe ofNorway, Kyaw Htun of Burma,and Irwin Baskind.• Miss Moe, during her 1948 in¬ternship, assisted in the analysisof payments, reports by nationswith the aim of standardizing in¬ternational reports.Baskind, who first went to workfor the UN in 1947, volunteeredhis services to UN under an east¬ern college program in January,1948.TREAT YOURSELF TOHEINE’S BLENDTHE PIPE TOBACCO WITH AM.A.* DEGREE!* Mildly AromaticMeiNe’SQLCNoiJ7Uc|.Uuil PIPE TOBACCO-f UTIIPP fOIACCO CO« 41 PtmmM, I. C«NI.LINCOLN MERCURYIN HYDE PARKSpecializing In Ford ProductsWE SERVICE AND REPAIRALL MAKES OF ALTOSSIMONIZEBODY AND FENDER WORKFactory Trained MechanicsLAKE PARK MOTORS, inc5601 HARPER AVE.S. TAUBER, President E. KAPLAN, Treosurer As an experiment in encouraging independent workof special interest to students in advanced college courses,a number of preceptorial classes in humanities 3; socialsciences 3, natural sciences 3, physical sciences, history,and O.I.I. will be presented during the winter and springquarters.In eacji of these classes, approximately fifteen studentswill be enrolled. In mostcases, the materials chosen attempt to answer further ques-for the preceptorial will be tions addressed to materials notdifferent from those assigned and : ^ nreceotorial student.;studied in the regular sections of assigned preceptorial students.the parent course, but the funda- The preceptorials will not be re¬mental concepts and kinds of stricted to superior students. Anyproblems taken up in the parent student who plans to take thecourse wUl determine the treat- June, 1950, comprehensive exami-ment which the materials of the nation in humanities 3, social sci-preceptorials will receive. ences 3, natural sciences 3, physi**Typically, the preceptorials will cal sciences, history or 0.1.1., maymeet for one two-hour period each apply at the appropriate staff of-week during the winter quarter. Ace for membership in a precep-Elarly in the'spring quarter, classes torial. Applications will be receivedwill end, and preceptorial students during the week beginning onwill devote most of the spring Monday, Nov. 7.quarter to the writing of bachelor’sessays on topics emerging from thework of the winter quarter.These essays will be presentedby the preceptorial students aspart of the comprehensive* exam¬ination for the parent course. Theremainder of the examination willconsist of questions testing thestudents’ attainment of the majorobjectives of the parent course.Students in regular sections will PETER SPENGLER SELBYInstructor of GermanLessons 25 min. each ^1 • vUI also buy and sell used books onmusic, scores andRECORDS(LdfiH Only)DIAL, and DepandO-N S-E-L-B-YNormal 7-3529€225 ELLIS(Advertisement)aAofifiina at• by Lynn“Excuse me, is this seat taken.”“Lynn! Didn't you recognize me? Have a chair.”“Why Nat, I didn't know you frequented the 'C' shopbetween morning classes!"“I usually don't come here but with the weather havingturned cold this way, I thought a cup of coffee would do thetrick of warming me up."“Gosh, I'm still trying to decide between those two wind-breakers I was telling you about — after I left you last weekI realized I made a mistake in those prices. It should havebeen $25 for the quilt lined jacket and $19.95 for the jacketwith regular material lining. In the long run I think it'll becheaper for me to buy the better quality, quilted version.”“That darn clock keeps reminding me that it's almosttime for lecture. Maybe Til see you here sometime next week.So long for now, Nat."“See you — I'll probably have my new jacket from Bernsby then after shopping at the popular 63rd & Kimbark corner.”AMERICA’S\tt WINfmmintia WINr^sllf «DtMAKiH ssnw!DtHiAKtn lst*llWINOtHAKiUShowtrodr**!lik* 4 diicli‘»witll••PdCifvl This Jacket LeadsA Rugged Life . • •And Loves HIWhitman^t finest combed cot¬ton or 50% blended wool gab¬ardine. Resists wind, water,weather. Self-lengthening Ex-tendo sleeve. Bellows patchpockets with slash. The qualitytells you:a mNDBRBAKERf %•V si 995Fiflf suf sleeveeed M-swiii«beeki 1233 DCDkIC STOREe.ssrd DCnn0 formenr Y V TLuncheon from SSeDinners from 75cIt foot H|2lfo'^25«' ^]0i „fcK»^,d blow-roio'*,till give*Friday/ Novamber 4, 1^9 THE CHICAGO MAROON Pata 3College enrollment jumps as MAROON Weizsacker seeseditor Monday _ .to replace Berlin modern conceptsUniversity registration dropsEnrollment in the first two years of the College of theUniversity of Chicago showed a three per cent increasewhile the total university enrollment declined 7.8 per centfor the autumn quarter, Ernest C. Miller, university regis¬trar, announced Monday.The total university enrollment on the Midway quad¬rangles and the downtown center is 8,963.The college has a total en-rollment of 2,261. Four hun- 1,692 students regfistered. Otherdred and twelve students are autumn enrollment include; bio-registered in the first two years logical sciences 774, humanitiesof the College.Veterans, representing 37 788, physical sciences 769, schoolper of business 422, federated theo-cent of the university enrollment, logical schools 260, law school 300,number 3,357 on the quadrangles, graduate library school 71, andThe division of social sciences the school of social service ad-had the largest enrollment, with ministration 229.FISCHER'SRESTAURANT The editor-in-chief and execu¬tive editor will leave the staff ofthe Chicago MAROON after theeditorial election Monday.Editor Lawrence H. Berlin wasappointed by the University ad¬ministration last spring when thestaff failed to reach a decision inits regular election. Executive Edi¬tor Louis R. Silverman was amongthe candidates at that time.Berlin, a graduate student in in¬ternational relations, was editor ofthe MAROON in the faU of 1947.While in the army he was attached1148 East 63rd24TH YEAR■iiyiiwiwwnimiiiillLy.yni.uin.UMUW.iWJ.i.U.W.qiW.^^ i.i. .j.jllWiii"—la dethstsniBkiifdIII#**UK£ thisPalHoIto*^ O.uolB'"*'*gfound I;''*0 jo'"'-'"' *Croy>ground lik*barber*MlPatronize MAROON Advertisers Election MondayElection for editor-in-chiefof the Chicago MAROON willbe held in the MAROON officeMonday at‘3:30 p.m., The new editor will servethrough the summer of 1950.All press-card bearing s.taffmembers are required to attendthis meeting. By DONNA FUDERERShould the modern scientist conttoue his research evenif he knows that the result to mankind will be ultimatelydisastrous?In a series of eight lectures entitled “The Modem Con¬cept of Nature,” Carl F. Von Weizsacker, Alexander Whitevisiting professor, is attempting to answer this and otherrelated matters concerning the natural sciences. The lec¬tures, sponsored by the com-mittee on social thought, are Atom's si*ebeing given every Mondaynight to Dec. 5 at 8 p.m. in JuddHall 136.Professor Von Weizsacker di¬vided the eight talks into threebroad topics — the successes of The professor opened his thirdlecture discussing the infinitelysmall size of the atom.How do we know of the exist¬ence of atoms? he asked. Watercombines in the exact ratio ofWANTED:Campus RapresentaKveYoung womon to represent ond sellChristmas Toiletries and otherGift Items directly to StudentsStraight CommissionExcellent opportunity forextra money. ApNyReadersCampus Drug Store60l’h and EllisAbsorbent filters In Medico pipes and holdershave 66 baffles that stop Rakes and slugs...obsorb juices ... reduce tongue bite ..,give you the utmost in smoking pleasure.MEDICO V. F. Q. (VERY FINE QUALITY)Specially selected imported briar Pipes.Wide variety of shapes. With 10 filters... ZAlso Frank Medico **Standard'*.. •America’s Outshsnding Dollar (f1) PJp%Prank Madlco Cigarette Holders IJ & %2MEDICOFILTERED SMOKINGt. M. Frenfc a Ce.. lee. • Fllrti Aynme, Near Yit tR science, the difficulties in the way |;^q volumes of hydrogen to oneof these successes, and, finally,philosophical reflections on thenature of science. A series of dis¬cussion seminars is planned inaddition to the lectures.Science indispensableLife as we know it today would volume of oxygen, while the ratioremains constant under all con¬ditions. This phenomenon is ex¬plained by the electron theory ofthe atom. He explained that an¬other demonstration of the exist¬ence of atoms is the Wilson cloudto public relations in Vienna, andduring the 1946-47 school year wasassistant editor of the Daily Ulini,newspaper of the University ofIllinois. In 1948 he was telegrapheditor of the Cliicago Journal ofCommerce.Silverman, a fourth-year collegestudent, joined the staff as a re¬porter in the fall of 1947. Duringhis two ye'ars on the paper heserved as a news-feature editor,assistant to the editor, and execu¬tive editor.Mentioned as a candidate in thecoming editorial elections. Silver-man resigned in order to seek re¬munerative employment.Berlin had taken the editorshipfor the first five issues of theMAROON with the understandingthat he would not seek the postagain. be impossible without science, the chamber, in which the individualprofessor stated in his introduc- atom ionizes the tiny droplets oftory remarks at the first lecture, ^ir, condensing the water to leaveAs science has improved the life a path.of man it has also made war andits' accompanying factors morehorrible.Weizsacker posed the question*.If scientific truths shall be usedto destroy the very peoples whobelieve in them, shall we con¬tinue to search for them? This, he After explaining the method ofmeasuring the diameter of anatom by Laue in 1912, Weizsackerturned to the discussion of theinternal structure of the atom,according to the Rutherford-Bohrmodel.From these particles, funda-stated, is the dilemma of the mod- mental to nature, every phenom-ern scientist. enon on earth can be explained.In his second lecture, Wiezs»cker Atomic or particle physics can ex-discussed the age of the universe plain and provide a common basisas computed by the half-lives of i)oth physics and chemistry.radioactive minerals. The theoriesof heat and light and the concep¬tions of time and space were in¬vestigated in the light of modernscience.Officers elected,program plannedby dorm womenThe Women’s Inter-DormitoryCouncil is sponsoring an openhouse in Foster-Kelly lounge to¬night. It begins at eight-thirtyp.m. In the spring quarter thecouncil will sponsor the SecondAnnual Inter-Dorm Formal. Theyalso plan a tea for the collegefaculty in the near future. Thisorganization was formed last yearto corordinate and sponsor activi¬ties among the college women’sdormitories.The newly elected officers forthe year are as follows:President, Carol Waldman fromFoster; Vice-President, Pat Flom history, remarking that the twofrom Beecher; Secretary, Bonnie form one single reality, and amongFleischer from Gates. the failures, of sciences can beMiss Margaret Fox, who is the counted the fact that no onenewly appointed assistant to the single feature of this combinedDirector of the Dormitory system, reality has been adequately ex-is faculty advisor to the group. plained by any science.The number of electrons and pro¬tons in an atom determines itschemical characteristics. Thetheory of heat in physics is basedon these particles. All approachesto nature that the human organ¬ism is provided with—taste, feel,smell, touch, the sense of heatand cold—can be understood bythe particles in atomic physics.This understanding, the profes¬sor said, can be counted amongthe successes of science.Life comprehensible?Can we say, however, that lifeitself has been understood? hjewent on to ask. Birth, growth,propagation, death — all are ex¬periences common to all humansand define life. It is true that bi¬ology is the science that dealswith living matter, but it cannotexplain the relation between thebody and the soul, that thingwhich differentiates a human be¬ing from an animal.Weizsacker concluded his thirdlecture with remarks concerningthe close connection of life andLook First ToLowes .... ^ jFor*Long Playing RecordsvoxCETERACONCERT HALLVocal and Chamber Music In The Great Traditionvix:HAYDN The SeasonsBARTOK Piano Concerto No. 2PURCELL Abdelazzar SuiteSTRAVINSKY Violin Concerto^ etc., etc.I2I7E. 55TH PL 2-3631. Open Evory EveningIPas*,4 THE CHICAGO MAROON........ . •Issued once weekly by the publisher, The Chicairo Maroon, at the publicationoffice, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: EditorialOffice, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 2056; Business and Advertising Offices, Midway0-800, Ext. 2055. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions by mail, fl perquarter, |3 per year.LAWRENCE H. BERLINEditor-in-CkiefLOUIS R. SILVERMANExecutive EditorDIRK W. KITZMILLERNews EditorROBERT NASSAUFeofure Editor NICHOLAS CAMPAdvertising MonogerJOHN A. CHAPMANSports EditorM. EVALINE WAGNERCopy EditorDAVID HELBERGPublic Relotions DirectorJAMES E. BARNETTBusiness Adviser By ANN C. COLLAR/Protagoras, the left-handgargoyle on the Hull Courtgate, and I were discussingthe student body. At least Iwas discussing the studentbody; Protagoras claimedthat no such animal existed.*Tn the food old days, whenStags: had to go down to theHyde Park police station andASSOCIATE EDITORS: Bud Cohen, Anne O. Finkelstein, Jean P. Jordan, KenKoenig, Alan D. Kimmel, David Kliot, Henry W. Larson, George W, Sideris,Jack Spillman, Frank Wood.EDITORIAL STAFF: Adaleen Burnett, Ann C. Collar, Dick DeHaan, Buck Farris,John Forwalter, Charles Garvin, James Goldman, Jerry Harris, Marilyn B.Kolber, Robert J. Mayer, Marilyn Mueller, Tom Necheles, Donald M. Phares,Martin Picker, Charles Rosen, Neville Ross, D. Reid Ross, Raymond L. Wilkins,LeRoy Wolins, Edward A. Wolpert. bail the boys out after the teamwon the conference champion¬ship, it was different. We hada group where everybody thoughtand acted the same way. That’sa student body. Today you haveLetters to the editor... what you choose to call a(humph) community of schol-NSA action balkedThe UC delegation to therecent NSA Congress believesthat it has a responsibility toreport the information below toUC students so they can decidewhat they wish done in NSA. Wefind it difficult to understand theposition taken by the MAROONin refusing to publish an accountof these events either in the formof a straight news story or as anews report with comment signedby the UC delegation or its chair¬man, who had been designatedto cover the Congress and whohad turned in an article on thesepoints with comment (the latter,of course, being at the discretionof the editor to print or reject).We have been given a series ofreasons and excuses: (1> mate¬rial too controversial, (2) dead is¬sue, (3) misunderstanding, (4) in¬formation not by MARCJON re¬porter.MAROON held monopolyWhat seems a most serious prob¬lem is that the MARCMDN is le¬gally constituted by the Univer¬sity as the single news mass me¬dium but does, not assume thecommunity responsibility whichsuch a monopoly should bear. Ifrecognized student organizationswere allowed the facilities of dis¬tribution at UC for legally pre¬scribed and limited pamphleteer¬ing, the power of the MAROONstaff would not be a serious prob¬lem. Hence the publication of thisletter in the MAROON leaves thelarger issue unsolved.The following are some of thevital facts which we think shouldbe known. The only large inter¬school group at the Congress thatwas consistently and effectivelyorganized was the joint Commit¬tee for Student Action, a caucuswhich drew together most of the200 Catholic students there. AYPA caucus was so small sus to benegligible and the SDA caucus sointernally divided on controversialissues that it accomplished little.Conference in WashingtonJCSA leaders had a 3-day con¬ference in Washington, D. C., be¬fore the Congress, and these werewell prepared. While there weresome Catholic students who wouldhave liked to supplement the 3-day preparation with additionalformal caucuses at the Congress,there were other Catholic studentswho were as clearly opposed as weto the existence of the Catholicbloc.Most of the Congress work isdone in commissions and commit¬tees. When federal aid to educa¬tion came up, the commssioin oneducational problems endorsed theprinciple of federal aid for suchauxiliary benefits as transporta¬tion, nonreligious textbooks, freelunches, and health benefits. Onhigher education, when the na¬tional executive committee whichhad a Catholic majority met lastDecember, it passed a resolutionproposing that federal aid be ex¬tended to private institutions forcapital outlay provided that nofunds be used for “facilities ex¬clusively and specifically for sec¬tarian purposes” — e.g., chapels.This issue was not brought to theCongress floor because of the sharp tensions in committee, Cath¬olics declaring such aid to be fairsince they pay taxes, and liberalsholding that such aid would un¬questionably be unconstitutional.“Rights” vs. “privileges”On student rights. Catholic stu¬dents wanted to differentiate“lights” and “privileges.” Itemspresently in the Bill of Rights,such as establishing student gov¬ernments and issuing regular pub¬lications free of censorship, were“privileges” or “contractualrights.” After a confused 2V2 hoursof floor debate, the matter wastabled until the 1950 Congress. Onacademic freedom JCSA arguedthat Communists are “fundamen¬tally dishonest” and consequentlyare not to be trusted to teachyouth; also, they would not op¬pose “Broyles Bills” and “Investi¬gations,” declaring these “too spe¬cific” for adequate investigation.On the most controversial issuebefore the Congress — the Inter¬national Union of Students—theposition maintained by JCSA wasthat Catholics, in view of the re¬cent papal encyclical, must as amatter of faith vote against co¬operation with lUS, even on suchnon-political projects as exchangeof students and information, andmust refuse to attempt a reformof the Communist-controlled or¬ganization.Solution neededThe formation of blocs in pastnational student organizations haspromoted their eventual self-de¬struction. On the other hand,everyone knows that the only wayeffectively to oppose a bloc is tobe part of another^bloc. The lim¬itation of sharp blocs in NSA canonly be accomplished with full andfree discussion of the subject, how¬ever controversial it may be.Suzette Aldon, Joyce Dannen,Merrill Freed, Jean Jordan,Harold Lischner, Frank Lo-*gan, Alexander Pope, HerbertVetter.SC reform soughtSince the interest in StudentGovernment is so negligible thatmany of the seat^ were won bydefault, I would like to make somesuggestions to remedy this situa¬tion.First, there should be a home¬room system established to bringstudents together socially and in¬tellectually in the University com¬munity. These homerooms wouldelect one or two delegates each to •the campus council.Second, all students, regardlessof residence should be permittedto run in the SG elections. Theentering freshman still has faithin many things, even in SG. Ifhe has the faith, interest, andtime, why not let him do the work?Third, by-elections should beheld, if 20 per cent or more ofelected SG members drop out. Thisso that SG may not be stacked"by any group, but shall be repre¬sentative of the students as well asget some fresh blood from thatbody every so often.Fourth, SG should re-evaluateitself: its purpose, functions, abil¬ity to meet student needs; and findout what those needs are!Ivon Uenri'Laiimer ars!”“What’s the difference?” I asked.“The difference, my poor child,is that all you have now is sev¬eral totally unrelated groupsliving on the same campus.”“Name the groups, please,” Iasked, certain that I had himthere. But of course I should haveknown better. Protagoras alwayshas an answer. He began in a verysuperior tone; in fact, he soundedjust like a sociologist.“First you have the studentswho are motivated by intellec¬tual drives. Of these there aretwo distinct groups, the scien¬tists and the metaphysicians.The scientists are the kids wholive in the laboratory. They eat,sleep, and think nothing butbotany, genetics, or what haveyou. If you want to knowwhether you are talking to ascientist or not, you can per¬form a very simple test. Justmention Will Shakespeare: ifhe looks blank, he’s a scientist.“The metaphysician, on theother hand, never deals in tangi¬bles and is happiest in the FourthCentury B.C. The college studentwho just enjoys the glory of beinga metaphysician goes into the hu¬manities division. Those who areactually interested in the formu¬lation of definition try for thecommittee on social thought.“Secondly we have the stu¬dents with non-intellectualgoals. They fall into three cate¬gories: the socialites, the spe¬cialists, and the prima-donnas.The socialites want to be seenat the most parties with the bestpeople. The specialists^ act be¬cause they like to act or writestories because they like to writestories.“The prima - donnas, however,are a more complex case. They liketo run things in general, but theyalways justify their position in re¬lation to the cosmos. They neveraccept a position without meditat¬ing on Ends and Means.“So you see,” Protagoras con¬cluded, “it isn’t at all like itwas when everybody had schoolspirit.”Personally I’m not so sure itisn’t better now, but then whoam I to argue with Protagoras?SDA holds firstdinner meetingOver forty SDA members at¬tended the initial Sunday eveningdinner meeting, held last week.Beginning this week end, one suchdinner will be held scheduled everytwo weeks.At the next meeting, William C.Bradbury, of the social sciences 3staff, will speak on “liberals andtheir organizations.”Another SDA project is the po¬litical action school. This will meeton Thursday at 4 p.m. in Swift 208.Lecturers for the school include:Paul Berger, secretary to RobertMerriani, fifth ward alderman;Eleanor Peterson, secretary to theIndependent Voters of -Illinois; andBob Knapp, of the IVI’s board ofdirectors. '' '' v • ' Friday, November 4; I949It's really no different from any other university!nne Boleyn would have kept her spouseSee T»»ein of M-rsboll Fields # Carson Pirie S<‘o»f •Fru losUtt: “VAMIOK TUCKS", frill Jutf loM. tec.. lipL K. 1S7S Krialwif, Ntw YMt IIMEALS AT HALF PRICE!Whiffle TreePoy only $2.00 a month, to defroy our overheodWith the Discount Card:Pure Beef ^ ^Homburgers I hvHot Plote ^ ) Cc‘ Specials s 1# Vah Sondwiches«23‘etc. - i^c.The Whiffle Tree1425 Eost 60th StreetOpposite International Housej)’ /* 4YOUNG PROGRESSIVES OF AMERICAUniuerdittj^ oj C^Lica^o C^Lapter5706 Uniyersity Avenue Chicago 37, IllinoisAn Open Letter To The Administration Of The University Of Chicago:The widespread pattern of anti-Negro discrimination inAmerica today, and especially its reflection on our campus,becomes increasingly alarming. Af the University there is onesituation which is particularly grave — which affects personallythousands of yOung Negro men and women: look about usanywhere on campus and the probability is that we see onlywhite students. Why are there so few Negro students at theUniversity of Chicago?•The question is one demanding serious attention. Althoughthe University's main function is in providing education whichall young people need, relatively few Negro students deriveadvantage. As a result, "the public is denied the manifold socialand economic benefits that the talented individual might other¬wise contribute to society." (Report of President's Committeeon Civil Rights.) Probably the worst record is that of theSchool of Medicine, where In eight years only two Negroeshave been admitted.Chancellor Hutchins has said, "Education for democracy can¬not be achieved while religious and racial discrimination ispracticed." But the scarcity of Negro students on campusindicates that the University has not yet begun to take a boldstand in breaking the disgraceful Jim Crow monotone whichcharacterizes Northern colleges and universities. In the 1055Northern schools there are only 7000 Negro students; andmost of these are in Roosevelt College (more than ](D00), thefour New York City colleges, and Wayne University. If ourUniversity falls to take a lead in wiping out this Jim Crowpicture by the example it can set. It will be at least tacitlyabetting the perpetuation of this picture. In a democraticsociety, the role of education "is that of critic and leader aswell as servant; its task is not merely to meet the demands ofthe present, but to alter those demands if necessary, so as tokeep them always suited to democratic Ideals." (Report of thePresident's Committee on Higher Education.) In the past theUniversity has seen occasion to act in accord with this precept;in its early pioneer role in admitting wornen as students; in itscounter-attack against the Broyles investigation. The same freshapproach Is in order for the problem under discussion here.We have long been concerned about discrimination in severalareas at the U. of C. and have actively opposed it. In theUniversity Clinics, where there is only a token admittance of Nov. 4, 1949Negro patients and where Negro mothers are segregated; inthe student housing service, where entirely separate listingsof rooms are kept for Negro and white students; in the cur¬riculum itself, where the history of the American Negro ismisrepresented in a derogatory manner, and where the leadingNegro writers are not covered in American literature courses—in all these, it is known that Negroes are accorded inferiortreatment, and In all these the University Administration hasjurisdiction.When the small Negro enrollment at the University is viewedin the light of these practices, serious implications as to theresponsibility of the Administration appear. We chose to makethis an open letter because w^ feel that the entire Universitycommunity has a basic interest in the question presented, andthat most members of this community will share our concern.We ask that an interview with Chancellor Hutchins be granted,not only for the undersigned, but for other student leaderswho share our concern, so that the problem raised here maybe discussed.It is incumbent upon the University to give in this matterthe kind of leadership which is commensurate with its positionIn other aspects of American education.Respectfully,Young Progressives of AmericaUniversity of Chicago ChapterBy the Executive Committee:Chester Davis-Co-Chairman Frank RosenCo-Chairman' Ted FinmanExecutive Secretaryf.Ruth TregaySecretaryKarl WeichingerTreasurerSue Heifetz xChairman, MembersKip CommitteeSidney J. SocolarChairman, Negro Rights Comrnitteey. is clear that there is muchtion, based on prejudice, in ad-f students to private colleges,i schools, and graduate schools,urate statistical data is almoste to obtain, this is difficult toBut competent observers areit exi.-tence of this Condition isIn many of our modernis neverJ. ... In many oi ..al institutions . .. there is nevera a token enrollment of Ne-—Report of the President'sCommittee on Civil Rights 7’en per cent of the American populationis Negro. Yet in 1947 only 75,000 col¬lege and university students, or 3.1 per ^ -cent of the total number, were Negroes. ^Of these, about 90 per cent attended the1^ 106 Jim Crow schools in the South. The77 medical schools in the country gradu¬ated 5826 doctors in 1946. Of these only I154 were'Negroes and all but 20 of thesewere graduated from Howard and Me-harry, the two Negro medical schools./from member* of YPA. You caii help this project »nd similar onesm,, ^ The claims of the Open Letter as to knowndiscrimination in certain areas of the U.of C. have been documented. YFA wel¬comes your comments on the Open Letter.If you agree that the problem raised isone which merits further attention, con¬tact YPA at once.YOU SMOUiOl^en you smokeEverybody talks about PLEASURE, but'only ONE cigarette has really done something about it.That cigarette is Philip Morris! 'Remember: less irritation means more pleasure.And Philip Morris is the ONE cigarette proveddefinitely less irritating, definitely milder^o than any other leading brand.NO OTHER CIGARETTECAN MAKE THAT STATEMENT.YOWLL Bi GLAD TOMORROW-^YOU SMOKiD PHILIP MORRIS TODAY! SPORTSQuad!-nai\a£lnaBy JOHN A. CHAPMANLast month the football field at 83rd and Yale wasrededicated “Walter Eckersall Field” in honor of the lateMaroon grid star who died in 1930.1 'Eckersall, a 143-lb. marvel who combined skill, spee'd,and headwork, held down the signal calling post on AmosStagg’s ’03, ’04, ’05, and ’06 teams, and was a Walter CampAll-AmeriCan selection during his last three years on theMidway.An uncanny toe brought Wally his greatest fame. He twice kickedfive field goals in* a game—against Illinois in ’05, and Nebraska in ’06.In 1903 he beat Wisconsin alpiost single-handed with three field goals,and the headlines blazed “Eckersall 15, Wisconsin 6.” (In those daysthe field goal counted five points.)Very.seldom did Eckersall miss a tackle or a block, but when hedid he usually compensated with his lightning speed and quick think¬ing. In one particular case Wally missed a tackle within the Maroonforty yard line, but scrambled to his feet in time to catch up withand drop the speedy ball carrier before he could hit pay dirt. Im¬possible? Perhaps for football players of present day calibre, but notfor the astounding Eckersall.Clark Shaaghnessy’s 'Rams chalked up their sixth consecu-tive win Sunday, ,by. edging a determined Chicago Bear eleven,27-24, at Los Angeles. It looks as though ex-DC Coach Clark hashis boys within shooting range of Conference honors.• • •There are some people who smile and others who burst rightout laughing when the University of Chicago is mentioned in thesame breath W’ith sports. The reason for this behavior can be tracedback to the dropping of football in 1939 and the complete with¬drawal from the Big Ten in 1^946,However, while in the Big Ten Conference, Maroon teams coppedmany championships. They did exceedingly well in most sports, butexcelled in fencing, tennis, and gymnastics.Pehcing finds UC and Illinoii^ tied with eight’ titles apiece, fol¬lowed by Ohio State University with three. In tennis the Maroonshave 20'- diadems; Illinois, nine; Michigan, seven; and North¬western, six. In 1946 Chicago had as many gymnastic championshipsas all the other teams pgut together.(Next week Quad-rangling will discuss the Chicago role in BigTen football .basketball, baseball, track, indoor and outdoor, andgolf.)• • • • .Ten years ago~Virginia Cavaliers handed the Maroons theirthird straight trouncing, 47-0.Twenty years ago—The Siaggmen humbled .the PrincetonTigers, 15-7, in an intersectional upset.Thirty years ago—“The Fightin* Illini” shaded the Maroons,10-0, to end UC’s victory string at three. In previous games Chi- 'cago had rung up 180 points while holding the opposition scoreless.This week UC Is slated to meet Subnormal State to continue arivalry started eight years ago. Last year the game was climaxed bya slugfest between Subnormal’s coach. Graceless George, and our_own “Perilous Plato” Aristotle, after UC’s 101-0 victory. The mightyMaroons, better known as the Chancellor’s Champions, haven’t losta game in ten years.At half time Miss Cpnsuello Freudian will be crowned “The Girl'We’d Most Like to Take to the Next UC Football Game.” Miss Freud¬ian was this week’s unanimous choice.I • • •At ^ huskftkfifJouiitmatCtm tAnfinoJ^^No chafingcenter aea/nIf you have d deop seated conviction that something Iscreeping up on you, your trouble is iil-fitting shorts/For real comfort below decks, see your Arrow dealer forArrow shorts and you'll have the best seot in the house I$1.25 upARROW SHIRTSS; TIK ^ UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTS™ftW^\WVWWWWVW»JAV^%VVWW%WiVVWV.WAftA%V^VWVWWyVWWtfW^V.W.VWWVV%VA%WiVtgmmmcfKFriday/ NDvambar 4/ 1949 »' "" '* ~ I '■! I Ml r ' ■» ■ IJIWChamberlin, Psi 0By JOHN HARNISHFEGER Final standings in the oollegeChamberlin house wrested the house intramural touchball league.. „ ■ , and the number of points award-touchball crown from Manly house 0jj jqj. position.by crushing the ex-champs, 18-0, Chamberlin ‘I... 119on the Midway last Tuesday in Manly 112the finals of the BJ league touch- Salisbury 105ball playoff. The high-scoringChamberlin machine averaged 25points n game as it steamrollered Mathews !!..!!!!]!!!!!!* 77all opposition to finish the season Vincent 70undefeated. Coulter 63Mead 56Salisbury gave Chamberlin its Woodlawn 49toughest game of the campaign Current standings in the frater-before bowing,-18-12, in a semi- nity league (two games left tofinal match. Second place Manlywon its way into the final berth p^j upsilon .7 0opposite Chamberlin by defeating Delta Upsilon 6 1Dodd, 12-6. Alpha Delta Phi 5 2Psi Upsilon Is in undisputed pos- ***** Gamma Delta .... 5 2session of the fraternity leagueleadership after bumping DeltaUpsilon out of a tie for the lead ♦ ♦VJ Iwith a score of 27-13. Tied forthird place with two games re¬maining to be played in the frater¬nity league are Alpha Delta Phiand Phi Gamma Delta, each withfive wins and two losses. Psi Up-.silon leads the fraternity “B”league after three victories andno defeats.UC hooters lose^ A fast-moving Wheaton soccersquad, well versed in the art ofcontrolling the ball, handed theMaroon hooters their ^secondstraight defeat Saturday, by a3-0 score.Scheduled for this week-end isa trip to Purdue; the Boilermak¬ers previously defeated Wheaton,2-1. More heartening inferences‘can be drawil from comparativescores regarding Morton. Purdueshut out Mortoh, 3-0, while theMaroons compiled a 3-1 advantage.Thincladscop2nd at meetNed Merriam’s harriers copped-Second place in the triangularmeet with Navy Pier’s Illinois andLoyola last Saturday, at the Wash¬ington Park course. The results*gave Illinois, 64; UC, 40; andLoyola, 19.Connardy of Loyola came inArst, covering the three-milecourse in 16:04. Ken Mulcahy, theMaroon ace, finished third in16:20; Thomas, sixth, 17:00; Rob¬erts and Otstot, ninth and tenth,17:04; and Aldana, twelfth, 17:33.A total of twenty-one runnersstarted the race. THE CHICAGO MAROON TtriumphDelta Kappa Epsilon.. 4 3Phi Kappa Psi 3 4Phi Sigma Delta 2 5Zeta Beta Tau *.2 • 5Beta Theta Pi 1 6Sigma Chi 0 7V-Ball tryoutsThe women’s physical educationdepartment has allnounced thedates of the tryouts for the varsityvolleyball team which will competein the University of Illinois Toiir-nament at Navy Pier. 'Tryouts willbe held Wednesday, November 9,and Tuesday, November 15, at4:30 p.m. in Ida Noyes Gym. Eightplayers and four substitutes willbe chosen.*»Coor dinationThis lovely quintet is part of the touring Danish g3nnnastic ‘group which will make its Chicago debut tomorrow evening at8:00 p.m. in the field house.... and, girls, the men are pretty too.The thirty-two young men and women comprising the groupwill present a varied program including Danish folk dances,rythmical gymnastics, tumbling, and hi-jinks on assorted appar¬atus. The team has been televised by N.B.C., filmed by Fox Movie¬tone, and featured in LIFE. N.Y.U. raved: *‘We can recommendthis exhibition in highest terms.'*Tickets, now on sale at Bartlett Gym, are 50 cents forstudents and $1;50 to the public.Purdue trips girl puckstersI Maroon hockey lassies wereeliminated by Purdue, 4-0, lastSaturday, in a tournament withI^rdue and Blinois. Despite theirpreparatory four-- week practicesession, the Chicagoans were nomatch for the lady boilermakers.The team, including June Camp¬bell (captain), Janet Bezark, JudyKenyon, Betty Cope, Valerie Traut, Helen Harvey, Janet Howar, ToniPennington, Penny Witte, JaneMcWilliam, Jo-Ann McWilliams,and Davice Greenblatt, was ac¬companied by Miss Martha Klooof the physical education depart¬ment.Future scheduled games includeFaulkner High school, Nov. 10, andtentative games with DeKalb andWright Junior College.IttUHARDY gWM yov wore of ovorylhingtMoro STYU ... Smort tooking ombouod plugblold ropo ttikhing. Rich Bfown Loolhor.I COMFORT... Coty fooling biochor loea^(oomy (quoro-foo moccotin.I WEAR . . . Hoffy, kmgor wooringgofluino Noollto tolot^ floxibi*FOR JUST MAHL OAOmNlilOFROMmriBMHON or OMUL MTAl COOMOAIION20 N. DEARBORN ST. STOCKWIDTH □ M.O. n CHECK □RANIS □ SIZR P C.O.D.PAhftOXtgwv JSTATE.lAOt fjd/Sum PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETFor the best seat in the houseask us fm ARROW SHORTS!Here's why:1. No chafing center seam—extra room in crotch, f2. Generous cut and fine material—will wear longer.3. Choice of several models—oxford or broadcloth. $1.25up. Arrow undershirts.. .85^ up. 'T' shifts... $1 up.Tjyi:f:ojifsARROW UNIVtKSITY STYLES wjwwwPage 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON FrS<lay, Navember 4, 1The Music StandFootlights and Klieglightsw|lOVfVfMO^eo MUDoi jQ con9«®“‘‘y® leport®^ •Camels'fe y examinaUons, P® ^|^||»V5! TICKETSMain floor seatsfor the near-sfghted richTICKETSBalcony seatsfor the far-sighted poorFriendly Service •<— Nominal ChargeVARSITY TICKET SERVICEOnly 2 Blocks East of Mandel HallWOODWORTH^S BOOK STORE1311 Eosf 57th Phone Orders: MU 4-1677THEATRESCONCERTSSPORTS THEATRESCONCERTSSPORTSActors and apes tickle ribsTelling you a week late that youshouldn’t have missed UniversityTheater’s production of Too ManyThumbs is certainly a poor way tostart this week’s column. But sincethis was a campus production,some comments even at this latedate may not be amiss.Too Many Thumbs, despitemany excellences, is not really agood play — “clever” is still theword for it. Robert Hivnor has cre¬ated a very ingenious central situ¬ation for his comedy-fantasy, buthas allowed himself to bcf side¬tracked by too many ramifications.At times it’s hard to tell just whatline he is taking Comedy or cynicism?The element of fantasy — achimpanzee that is undergoing theevolutionary experience of man—is always present, but whetherHivnor is using this idea forcomedy, satire, irony, cynicism, ora semi-serious expounding of somedoctrine of his own is never clearlyindicated.On the credit side are excellentdialogue, neatly contrived andconstructed situations, and lots ofmovement with dramatic andcomic interest. The first act is oneof the best I’ve ever read or wit-%nessed. Too bad the other two actsaren’t as well done. All in all, it’s a play that deserved a presenta¬tion, and UT is to be congratulatedfor doing a fine job.Production goodThe production itself was on thewhole very good. The set was ofthe high quality we have come toexpect of UT.George Blair’s direction must becredited with the pace of the ac¬tion and the general air of briskassurance with which the com¬pany performed. In the matter ofcomic timing, however, he shouldhave schooled his people a gooddeal more thoroughly. Never once,if memorv serves, did any of the(Continued on Page 10) Collegium, quartetto lure music loverOOWN BY CEIL CHAflMNJEWEU BY riEIB OC WIH The Collegium Musicum will open this year’s seof free concerts on Sunday, Nov. 6, at 8:30 p.m. in MaiHall. This organization specializes in rarely heard vocalinstrumental works, primarily of earlier times. Tirecrepeating the phrase so often they no longer inscribeperformance in the U.S.” (or at least “in Chicago”) athe items on their printed programs. But, of course, ththe case with virtually every —work performed.The vocal and instrumen¬tal compositions to be heard rangefrom the 15th to the 20th centur- audience for its role as perfoiThe cantata will then be repewith the audience singing itsfrom special song sheets. Thies. While contemporary works ap- Quite a new twist in audiencepear infrequently on Collegium ticipation.programs, those that do are usuallyrelated to renaissance or Baroqueforms and styles. Such a work willbe the major presentation Sunday:Paul Hindemith’s Cantata, “In the motet, “Exultate Deo” by APraise of Music,” to a text by Mar- sandro Scarlatti,tin Luther. Written in 1928 andrevised in 1943, it was designed tobe played and sung by amateurs,and includes no specified instru¬mentation beyond voices andstrings. Other vocal works on thegram include the motet,Maria” by Josquin dez PreHuguenot psalm by Sweelick;Tutii chorusesAccording to the composer’s di¬rections, the opening and closingchoruses may be sung by everyonepresent, including “listeners.” Afirst hearing of the work and ashort rehearsal will prepare theFREETo Students & FacultyDISCOUNT CARDS l,onore<rby leading wholesalers andretailers. Nationally adver¬tised > brands.FM for $32$60 Wrist Watehes for$29.0520r< ANDo UPELECTRICAL: FM, AM rodios,record players, LP, RP records,clocks, hoofers, shovers, heofingpods, irons, kitchen opplioncet.FURNITURE: office, dining room,bedroom, kitchen, rugs, pionos,upholstery.AUTOMOTIVE: Tires, botteries,onti-freeze, hooters, seot covers,radios.JEWELRY—Luggoge, ComorosConsumer’sBuying ServiceWrite, Coll or SeeChas. Rosen77 BURTON - JUDSONMidway 3-6000 Loewenguth QuartetInstrumental pieces to be hinclude Mozart’s Serenataturna, K. 239^ written for theusual combination of two vieviola, and double-bass, againsorchestra of strings and tim]Also on the program is the £No. 1 by Mathew Locke, a prcessor of Purcell in England,work harks back to Renaissidances for consorts of viols, asas the 17th century suite.Tonight the Loewenguth Qitet of Paris will play in MaHall at 8:30 p.m. as the seconthe fall series of University Ccerts. The program will consisstring quartets by Haydn, S<bert, and Honegger. This seriialmost entirely sold out forquarter.Martin PickForeign studyapplications stillbeing acceptedRobert M. Strozier, deanstudents, reports that sinceweek’s MAROON announcenrconcerning the F^ilbright Bill,office has been flooded withquests for application blanks.Students interested in obtaira foreign scholarship underPulbright Act may still do soapplying at Administration :All applications must be proce;by the University faculty Fulbricommittee, so contestants sheavoid delay in making applicatThe members of the commiiare Robert M. Strozier, chairnRobert A. Horn, Norman MackSheldon Tefft, Nancy Upp, iMerle Coulter. All contestantsgraduate study will apply and iister with the executive secretto the University Pulbright ccmittee, William Birenbaum, iwill be interviewed to determwhether they meet the generalquirements.Additional information onSmlth-Mundt Bill, which proyifor student exchange, or the Fbright Bill may be obtainedAdministration 201.Friday, Novemfcer 4, 1949 THE CHICAGO MAROON Pa$e 9Books and Reading The PaletteNew editionsof old favoriteskind to pursesStudent income being solimited, we heartily applaudthe flood of reprints now onthe market. Each publisherseems to be rushing to getout some kind of inexpensiveseries, and the choice of vol¬umes is not at all bad. The Har-brace Modern Classics, for in¬stance, offer much promise at$1.75 per.In this series already publishedare St. Exupery’s Wind, Sand andStars; Milton Steinberg’s classicBasic Judaism; and an abridgedversian of Lincoln Steffen’s Auto¬biography. The main change inthis last volume seems to be theomission of the author’s experi¬ences in and ideas about Europe,the Russian Revolution, and theItalian Fascist accession.Porter storiesKatherine Ann Porter’s collec¬tion of short stories. FloweringJudas, is also out in this edition.Unless you want similar bindingson the shelf, buy Porter in Mod¬ern Library and save 50 cents.Growing increasingly popularwith campus intellectuals are theBritish Penguins. These volumesare often original printings, andhigh quality material is consist¬ently issued. Top on the list ofPenguins to be published soon isThe Symphony by Ralph Hillwhich, from what we have seen,would certainly appeal to the seri¬ous student of this form. It con¬tains much valuable analysis in¬cluding snatches from the scoresof each opus discussed.More to comeNew Directions will soon pub¬lish at $1.50 The Selected Writingsof Maude Hutchins. This samehouse is issuing A Commentary onGoethe’s Faust by D. J. Enright.Only space prohibits our an¬nouncing in detail the SchockenLibrary (Hebrew and Yiddishtranslations), the Pantheon NoyelLibrary (lots of James), theBritish Holiday Library (Sitwell onthe list), the English NovelistsSeries and the Russian LiteratureLibrary.ART AND LIFE IN AMERICA.Oliver W. Larkin. Rinehart.1949. $7.95.In this beautifully-designed vol¬ume, the chairman of the depart¬ment of art at Smith College por¬trays the history of this countryin terms of its creative art andartists.Treating the fields of painting,sculpture, architecture, and theminor crafts as a composite whole,Mr. Larkin divides the social andartistic past of America into fivedistinctive eras, and with the aidof 417 illustrations essays to showhow the developing tenets ofAmerican democracy were ex¬pressed hi the aesthetic works ofits people.Thanks to Mr. Larkin’s artistic,historical, and literary erudition,his work is both a penetratingnarrative and a first-rate surveyof the visual-plastic arts of Amer¬ica.—Charles Garvin. Artist's newgenrereflects a realityAt the Little Galleries on 57th Street during November,is an exciting show of twelve oils by Byron Goto, winnerof the Art Institute Traveling Scholarship in 1946. Accom¬panying the oils is a new show of the fine ceramics of Ger¬trude and Otto Natzler. •Three of the Natzler pieces are the peers of those in theArt Institute collection. All the pieces are turned thin-wear with high-fired glazes.Among the glazes are a large or surrealistic distortions of hu-bowl in the usual Natzler dullblack, some crackle glazes, andone of what Otto has created andcalled a lava glaze.Goto, along with Woeffler, andother Chicago artists, appears tobe painting in a new genre. Each P^^cted as pallic symbols or asuses a characteristic, personal unresolved points of astyle, yet there is a marked af- chaotic reality is an open ques-man shapes. The presence ofstrikingly hard, jutting protuber¬ances from the main body of theobjects seems to be frequent.Whether these are to be inter-finity that is more than samesource material or influence. Us¬ing Goto’s paintings as models,the genre may be typed as: rang-representational, Parisian guashesand two - dimensionalThis paiting’No._J2,” But the objects are onlyslightly human, slightly “real,”slightly like anything in our fa¬miliar world. They are objectswhich come into being out of theartist’s mind, perhaps consciouslycontrolled insofar as color andunified design are concerned, butnot modeled on any consciously sharp edges. This goes with ,theknown thing.present in that there is an object,but it is past time as a productof the artist’s mind and person-terpretation. The observer is calledon to do some creating of his ownin order to be satisified with thepainting, like the torture of alistener waiting for a minor thirdto be resolved.Projetitions portray?The objects of the painting maycontain colors in tension, havingshape affinities with abstractions.tOCAl AMD lOMO DUTAMCt HAULIMO•60 YiAKS Of OmNDABUSatVKM TO THt SOUTHSIDt•ASM FOB na SSTiMATS55th and ELLIS AVENUECHICAGO 15, ILLINOISButterfield 8-6711DAVID L SUTTON. Pr«8. POLITICS AND WONLD AFFAIRSFROM THE CIVIL WAR THR0U6H THE COLD WARAbe Lincoln of Pigeon Creek 3.00by mutarn E. WilemtAn interesting and appealing novel of young Lincoln.Lincoln Finds the General—2 vols. 12.50by Kenneth P. WWiamitA military study of the Civil War, destined to be occloimedos the greatest yet.Hey wood Brounby Dale KramerThe story of a great liberal newspaperman. 3.50Roosevelt and the Russians 4.00bff Edward R, StetilnlusThe complete story of the Yalta Conference, vividly por-*troyed by one of the few eyewitnesses.The Americas 3.00by Lawrence DugganA State Department expert tells a • story of co-operatioriamong the nations of the Americas.27 Rasters of Politics in a PersonalPerspective 3.50bff Raymond MoleyA skillful evaluation of outstanding political figures of the20th century.Leap to Freedom 3.00by Ohsana KasenMnaHere Is the complete story of Mme. Kasenkina's life.University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE Apartments for RentOn Drexel Boulevard, near 51 si- Street. One 4-room andone five-room, completely modern. Private baths, Pull¬man kitchens. Suitable for business or professional menand their families.T. W. CHAMPION & CO.355 East 61st Street PLaza 2-4900Newman's RestaurantDelicious Sandwiches40c Special LunchesFull Dinners from 15c(seven days a week, 6 to 9)“Fine Food For Less”1449 E. 57tion. They are like barbed wire—symbols.This leads us to note that inthese paintings there is usually aing from amorphous to sculptur- main body or pbject, perhaps mul-ally concrete objects, semi - ab- tiple, upon which numerous smallstract or surrealistically distort- shapes cluster. These tend to giveed, and subject to infinite inter- the pictures a cluttered appear-pretation.‘No. 2* is first ance. But if this is the new real¬ity of existence, then this chaotico*» lo for**' taking shape is the artistsGotos No. 2 is the beginningof his development, strikingly dil. f® * h?®;,ferent from his last year’s show of ing elements, but depicted in allits complexity. The artist has'burned from ideal world to theS would insist that the element ofbecoming is the strongest of thesefeelings.-Spots serveThe use of disk-like forms withtension spots of color in themgives an eerie feeling of fixed,staring eyes, grasping claws and U.TDe Luxe Hamburgers 20c55th at Universitybarbed - wire projections alongThis is one of the interesting with deep holes that perforate thethings about the new genre, it is object in the painting, and oc¬casionally seem to poke holes inthe canvas. That these make good“projection” plates is obvious. Butality, and future time in that the one must run the risk in order toobject which is coming into being attemijt an understanding of thedemands of the observer an in- painting. coHegd mm'ihotdd Icffw!The holes serve the same pur¬pose as the usual “horizon-line”in these paintings. They indicatedepth and penetration of objects.Sometimes it is the infinite (iepthof some surrealist paintings andsometimes it is a depth tliat youfeel ends at a flat wall. Goto hasa strong sense of depth and space(Continued on Page 10)This is an English major*Goes from bed to verse.Glows when Johnson waxes poetic.Thinks Ogden Nash is funny huiknows John Greenleaf is Whittier,ml z'd These **Manhattan^ Repp'tiesopen a new chapter in smart fall styUngiAnd best of aU, the stripings arein your own Ahna Mater odors,CAMPUS FAVORITETHE MANHATTAN SHIRT COMPANYCopr. 1949, Th* ManhaHan Shirt Co.>r«9« 10 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, Navambar 4, 1949Footlights..(Continued from Pos^ 8)fictors wait for a laugh—a dirtytrick to play on the author. Alsoin this category must be numberedthose players, notably Earle Lud-gln, who marred otherwise goodJobs by swallowing or mumblingtnafty of their lines.lAciing first-raieAlmost without exception theActing was first-rate. FrancisM^eaver, as the fourth and finalEdition of the rapidly evolving titlecharacter, turned in the finest per¬formance of the evening and thebest job of acting I’ve seen inthree years of attending UT pro¬ductions. The almost lyrical qual¬ity of his delivery and the vigorand precision of his movementsadded up to a performance that was not simply professional in cali¬ber. More than that: it was artis¬tic.In a less demanding role, Eu¬gene Anderson exhibited a delight¬ful naturalness—a rare thing onany -stage—that gave his comicrole a charm and roundness ofcharacterization that hadn’t beenentirely written,in. It was a caseof an actor improving a play. JohnStevens and Ann Sweet both didvery well. Stevens improved stead¬ily after a scmewhat weak begin¬ning. The various “Thumbs,” Rog¬er Kouach, Jack Clayton, and Hen-i-y Goppett, deserve considerableibpplause and liberal applicationsof liniment to their obviouslyaching backs.—Robert Nassau The Palette ♦.(Continued from Poge 9)around his objects in his paint¬ings. Even those pictures whichare full of objects have a sense ofcalm because of the feeling ofspace in them.Technically, Goto uses bright“interest” colors to advantage inhis “No. 6.” His “No’s. 6; 7, 8”are all cleaner in composition, be¬cause more fully modeled and con¬trastingly colored. His “ No. 4”is quite warm, using the jarringcontrast between ortmge and ablue-red for effect. “No. 10” ismuch simpler than the rest, rest¬ful in color, simple and calm.Gota’s “No. 12” is the mostcomplex of the group. It is “busy”in every area. But the “business”derives from a different conceptof painting tban that which is ♦concerned with unity and balancedcomposition. It is but a slice oflife cut thin, in which we see amore nuclear stage of developmentthan is represented by the moreconcrete objects. Textures acquiregreater interest, imagination isstreched to a breaking point.—John Fol^alterNEED MONEY?Sell CONCORD — Amer-ica's only national studentmonthly. An ideal maga¬zine serving studentneeds.Write: CONCORD, 166 W. WathingtoNChicago, III.Call: STate 1-0615 MODEL CAMERA SHOPGrand OpeningSaturday, November 5th1331 East 55th StreetGREGG COLLEGEA School of SocinoM—ProforroM byCoMogo Mon cmM Wooomi4 MONTHINTINSIVI COURtISIOtETARIAl TRAMMO POR COUEOfSTUOfNTS AND ORADUAmA thoroun^ iatciiGiTC oourac—stutiogJttoc, October, Febnuur. Bol*Ictin A oa rcqoMl•tPKIAL COUNSnOR for O.L TtAMINO•lUfler Dejr cod ETCoinc School*liiroughout the Yeer. Cecelog•tXnctor. reel M. Pair, RA.THE GREGG COLLEGE97 O. WahMli Ave.. Clll—oa 9. IWwIaSMOKE MT CIGARETTEMILDER CHESTERFIELDSTARRIHG INiMR. SOFT TOUCHA COlUMgfA PICTURE//V AMBR/CA's cohecfs' W/r// r//f TOP M£N /// SPORTSW/TR TRf ROUYWOOD STARSM/im/Eey're TOPS/fn4»y, MovtmMr 1949 THE CHICAGO MAROON Pa9« 11Vm ^nielFriday, Nov. 4Newborn Conference is the firstof three coiiferences to be heldtoday by the division of biological,sciences. It will meet in Dora LeeHall, from 1:00 to 1:30 p.m. At3:30, Billings P-117 will be thekte of the Pediatric Clinical Con¬ference, and at 4:30 p.m. theClinical Pathological Conferencewill meet in Pathology 117.* • •Election of Officers of NAACPwill be held today at 3:30 p m. inRosenwald 27.* • *“Grand Illusion,” a French Mov¬ie with English .^subtitles will bepresented by the YPA at 3:45,7:15, and 9:15 p.m. today. Thefilm, directed by Jean Renoir andA*./ring Erik von Stronheim, willbe shown in Rosenwald 2. Admis¬sion is 35 cents.• • •“Rorschach with Children” willbe the topic of a lecture by Dr.Samuel J. Beck, to be given atthe Human Development Seminarat 4:30 p.m. in Judd 126. Admis¬sion free. This will follow a tea,to be held at 3:45 in the CommonsRoom, Judd 112.• • •Joshua Lcderberg, University ofWisconsin, will deliver the thirdIx)uis A. Slottin memorial lecturein Kent 106 at 4:30 p.m. today.His subject will be “Sexual Re¬production and Genetic Recom¬bination in Bacteria.” No admis¬sion fee.* * *Student and youth movements>11 India and Pakistan will bediscussed by a Harvard Ph. D. atthe YPA meeting in Ida Noyes4 at 6:30 pm. tonight.* 0 *“Naked City” will be presentedin the Judson lounge by the B. J.Council at 7:00 and 9:00 p.m..Admission is 10 cents.A Halloween party featuring old^shioned costumes and refresh¬ments will be the attraction atthe Calvert Club tonight. Ghostsmay arrive any time after 7:30.I^m. Admission free.* * *The Hillel Fireside will featureRabbi David Graubart, who willsj^eak on “Education (Torah) Asa Way of Life” at 8:30 p.m. to¬night. The lecture will follow Sab¬bath Services, which will be helds'!: 7:45 p.m.Saturday, Nov* 5iThe Medical and Surgical ChestConference will meet at 10:00 a.m.in M-4 Classroom. The conferenceis under the auspicies of the divi¬sion of biological sciences.I ♦ ♦ •^ Ida Noyes will be the site of asquare dance, another in the seriesof SU folk programs, at 8:00 p.m.Admission charge, 35 cents.Sunday, Nov. 6JSreakfast at 9:15 a.m., followedby a discussion of Hosea continuedfrom last week will be the prd-gram at Chapel House this morn¬ing. Breakfast costs 20 cents.* ♦ *IThe Indiana Dunes will be thedestination of an SU outing whichwill leave at 9:30 a.m. and returnat. 5:30 p.m. Only charge is thatof rail fare. Additional informa¬tion may be obtained at Ida Noyes.• • •The Reverend John B. ThomsonWill preach at 11:00 a.m. morningworship services at RockfellerMemorial Chapel.* * *Chamber music including musici>y Brahms, Milhaud, and Mozartwill be presented by SU in IdaNoyes at 4:00 p.m. today. Admis-,i>ion free. By GARY A. STEINER' “Class Consciousness in Amer¬ica” is the title of the lecture tobe presented to SYL at 4:00 p.m.in the north lounge of Ida Noyes.The speaker will be Lewis Coser.Refreshments will be served. Noadmission charge.4 4 f* The University of ChicagoRound Table will present RobertJ. Havighurst and John A. Schind¬ler discussing “How to Live 100Years Happily.” Broadcast time is12:30 p.m. over NBC.* \* *Frederick L. Marriot, chapel or¬ganist and carillonneur, will playa carillon rbcital in RockfellerChapel from 4:30 to 5:00 p.m.Admission free.0 0 0The Roger Williams Fellowshipwill eat and meet at the HydePark Babtist Church. Supper is35 cents, and begins at 6:00 p.m.* * *A “popcorn parley” consisting ofpopcorn, stunts, songs, and cideris planned by the Methodist Stu¬dent League. Things will beginpopping at 7:00 p.m. in the eastlounge of Ida Noyes Hall. Admis¬sion. 10 cents.• * *Chapel House hosts YoungFriends’ supper and meeting at6:00 p.m. Supper will cost 50 cents. The film series, “Grief,” “SomePsychological Implication of Be¬havior,” “La Maternelle,” and“Mechanisms of Cell Division” willbe presented at 3:30 p.m. in JuddHall 126. Sponsoring organiza¬tions are the Human DevelopmentStudent Organization, and thePsychology Club. Charge 14 cents.* #Second women’s tryouts for UCAquatic Club at 4:30 in Ida Noyes.For qualifications see Monday’sannouncement.* * *The Young Democrats will holdan organizational meeting at 4:30p.m. in Classics 10.* * *Joachim Wach will speak on/’Universals in Religion” at 4:30p.m. in Breasted Hall. A discussionwill follow the lecture. The pro¬gram will be sponsored by YWCA.Admission free.* * •United Student Fellowship willleave Chapel House at 8 p.m. on atour to the Paul Dunbark Com¬munity Center where they will“work on” same.* * *Canterbury Club will present alecture entitled “European Chris¬tian Students in 1949.” The talkwill be given by Joachim Wachat the Brent House from 7:30 to9 p.m.A Lecture, “The. AppetitesMan,” dealing largely with sex \y cdttCSday, NoV* 9morals on our campus, will bedelivered by Dr. Sebastian de Gra-zia at the meeting of the Chan-ning Club. The lecture begins at7:00 p.m., preceded by a supper at6:00 p.m., for 35 cents. Meetingplace is the First UnitarianChurch.* * *Noyes Box will feature datelessdancing to Stu Clayton’s orches¬tra. Men, 35 cents; women,,5 cents.Monday, Nov. 7Hillel Foundation will sponsoran afternoon music hour featur¬ing recorded music from 3 to 5p.m.* * *Women’s tryouts for the UCAquatic Club will be held between4:30 and 5 p.m. in Ida Noyes. Toqualify, candidates should be ableto swim a quarter mile crawling,and in the back, breast, and sidestrokes.* * *LYL will meet at 7:30 p.m. inSocial Science 122.0 0 0“To Live in Peace,” Italianmovie with English subtitles, isthe current in the Monday nightseries sponsored by InternationalHouse and presented there. Timeis 8 p.m.; the price, 55 cents.Tuesday, Nov. 8“Recent Political Trends inGermany” will, be discussed byHeinz Sauermann, professor ofFrankfurt University, at the UNAmeeting, 12:45 in the Ida Noyessun parlor. A luncheon proceeds,beginning at 12:15. Charge forlunch is 50 cents.Cantors Group of Hillel willmeet at 2:30 p.m. to study chant¬ing of Sabbath and Festival Serv¬ices.« * *YPA will present “Zoya,” a Rus¬sian movie with English subtitles.Showings will be in Social Sci¬ences 122 at 3:45, 7:15, and 9:15p.m. Admission is 35 cents. Classified AdsSTUDENT RADIO repair service. Bringyour radio to Stan Bristol, ReynoldsClub Information desk between 12 ;30and 1:30, Monday through Friday. Sub-stantiaUy reduced rates and satisfactionguaranteed.TUTORING IN mathematics throughcalculus and mechanics by an experi¬enced teacher. HY 3-1459, 5614 Ingleslde,2nd floor.SEWING ALTERATIONS, hems. etc.Reasonable rates. Edna Watlnner, 5623Dorchester. MU 4-4680.EXPRESS AND light hauling, willingand courteous service, reasonable rates.Bordone, PL 2-9453.HIGH GRADE rooms for university stu¬dents. Accommodations for men qrwomen at Ingleslde Manor. 5125 Ingle¬slde. MU 4-9407. ATTENTION—^Two qtHet people, largolight twin bedroom, kitchen privileges.$12 per week. Call after 7:00 p.m. 6112University, PL 2-7528, Curtiss.LADY’S WATCH LOST. Thursday, Oct.20. Reward. CaU HY 3-5706.EXPERT MATHEMATICS toutor. CallFA 4-5548, Lincoln Turner, MS.SLEEPING ROOM, and kitchenette ac¬commodations for 1 or 2. Good atmo¬sphere. Park Beach Hotel, 5327 Cornell.FOR RENT—Small furnished apartmentfor two male students; also single room.MI 3-3807.NICE LARGE, clean,‘light room. Twinbeds. HY 3-2339.TYPING—Expert. Familiar with collegerequirements. BU 8-6990.YOU CAN rent an electric refrigeratorfor $5 per month. PU 5-8824.Men will try-out for UC AquaticClub in Bartlett Gym between11:30 and 1:30 today. Same stand¬ards as listed under Monday.* * *“Marx’s Concept of Class” willbe the subject of a lecture givenfor the Politics Club by MurrayWax at 3:30 p.m. in Rosenwald28. Admission is free. • ,Collegium Musicum will present Newcomers are welcomed to theSiegmund Levarie, conducting. Maccabean Festival Chorus atProgram begins at 8:30 p.m. in Hillel at 4 p.m.Mandel Hall, admission free. * * *Frederick L. Merriot will playa carillon recital in RockefellerChapel from 4:30 to 5 p.m.« * *A supper and discussion of Jac¬ques Maritain is. planned by theWestminster Fellowship. Supperwill be at 5:45 in Chapel House.The charge is 65 cents.0 0 0“Stagecoach” and a short willbe presented 'by UWF in Rosen¬wald 2 at 7 and 9:15 p.m. Admis¬sion is 40 cents.“A Tree Grows in Brooklyn”will be shown by SU in Ida Noyesat 7 and 9:30 p.m. Charge is35 cents.* * *English and American folkdances will be the essence of theCountry Dancers’ meeting at 7:30p.m.4t * *“The Role of the College Dormi¬tories in the College Plan” will bediscussed on Radio Midway underthe auspices of the OrientationBoard at 8:30 pm.Thursday, Nov. 10“The Christian Look at theFamily in Society” will be thetopic of discussion following sup¬per at 6 p.m. at Chapel House.The Methodist Student League issponsoring the event. Supper is50 cents.* * «“Religion and Science”* will bediscussed by Ralph W. Gerard inBreasted Hall at 4:30. A discus¬sion will follow the lecture, whichis sponsored by the YWCA. JUST RECEIVEDOver 1500 publishers re¬mainders, formerly sellingfrom $2.50 to $5.50. Nowselling for one low price of98 cents.iTNiVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue EAMLETwith 0Laurence OlivierHyde Park TheaterSpecial Student Rate 74c6:20 Show Only — Mondoy thruFridoy.53rd and Lake ParkReasonable Rates! FINE FOOD!• All Cereals • • • 15e• Z Eggs, Toast, Batter, Potatoes, Coffee • • • 34e• 3 Wheatcakes aad Coffee • • • 28e• Waffle and Coffee • • • 30eAny of Above with Horn, Soutoae or Bocon, 15c• FRIED^ SHRIMPS• CHICKEN A LA KING• ROAST BEEFJIFFY LANE6246 KIMBARKfagt 12 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday^ NoYember 4, 194<UWF • • • Talbot • •(Confiniied from Page 1)jyinong them were Mortimer Adler,Norman Cousins, Edgar Mowrer,Clifton Fadiman, and Raymond3wing.Reiiiher recieves ovationWalter Reulher, president of theUnited Auto Workers, appeared onthe speakers’ stand for a visit withthe chairman. -He was given astanding ovation.by the delegatesand was prevailed upon to speakto the convention.He said that people must some¬day strive toward a higher moral¬ity than the one founded on loy¬alty along sovereign lines. Sum¬ming up the views of the delegateswho had come from every sectionof the country to this conventionwith the one objective of worldgovernment al^their ufiifying force,he said that it is an. urgent neces¬sity for us “to learn to translatethe physical progress” we havemade in the last century “into hu¬man progress for happiness.” (Continuod from Pogo-t)tacts with Nehru and developed aclose friendship with the Indianleader and his family. ‘ He haswatched with personal interestNehru’s struggle against Britishrule, his frequent imprisonments,and his final triumph as leader ofa free nation. Last week he spentmuch of his time arranging Neh¬ru’s program in Chicago.Talbot came to the University inOct., 1948, on leave of absencefrom the Chicago Daily News. Hereoeived his journalistic trainingat the University of Illinois, fromwhich he was graduated with hon¬ors in 1936 as bachelor of arts andbachelor of science. The same yearhe entered newspaper work as areporter for the New’s.Marilyn KolberWhen the weather man predictsthunder showers you needn’t wor¬ry about having your coiffeurruined if awater repel¬lent Craven-ette scarffrom Harlan’sDepartmentStore. 1333 E.55th St , isK m 0 n g your. possessions.W Made of puresilk and Com¬ing in a vari¬ety of dainti¬ly coloredpatterns, these scarves at only$1.98 sacrifice no beauty for thehead protection they offer. Har¬lan’s also gives you an oppor¬tunity to share in the latest NewYork fad by putting pure silkcomplementary tri - colored neckbahds at your disposal for amere $1.Hear ye! Hear ye! Tomorrowthe Grand Opening of the ModelCamera Shop will take place at1331 E. 55th St. “The Eye” gettinga sneak preview of the materialsto be stocked learned that Ansco,Eastman, Ko¬dak, Argus,Weston, andView m asterreels as w'ellas movieequipment byBell & Howell,and Revere,—will be fea-^*^tured. Able tofill needs thfitp r e V i 0 u slynecessitated atrip down¬town, the storewill fill re-Questsfor ^movie and still films of all sizesand kinds, cameras and acces¬sories, and render such servicesas quality oversize developing,home movie rentals, repairs, cam¬era trade-ins, etc. As a specialservice, Mr. Martin Marx, pro¬prietor of the store and veteranof twelve years in photographyand camera sales, will be on handto give counsel and tips on allphases of still and movie photog¬raphy. He has contributed to variousperiodicals, including ForeignPolicy Reports, Middle East Jour¬nal, Atlantic Magazine, and WorldPolitics.Take a squinte at “The Eye”each week if you need any help¬ful hints on where to buy thelatest fashions. Any additionaltips you may pick up while perus¬ing the column are by courtesy of“The Eye,” given with the hopesthat you realize the endeavor o(your snooper is to make “TheEye” act as YOUR personal shop¬ping service. Please understandthat “The Eye” does not chooseto snoop in every neighborhoodstore so that by mentioning thecolumn to merchants whose ar¬ticles hare appeared, you willmake them aware of the fact thatyou value this distinction as muchas they. “Clothes make the man” so besure that your slacks are suitedto you by choosing them at BernsStore for Men, corner- 63j:d &Kimbark, 1233 E. 63rd St. To as¬sure you of an individual fit, thestore’s huge collection includesshorts, regulars,an6 longs in all . » „ _sizes from 27-60.In a multitudeof colors, slackswith pleated orplain fronts arestyled in gabar¬dines, tweeds,Glen plaids,hound’s tooth.flannels, andcoverts. Made tosatisfy the moststyle - consciousdresser, slackvariations withthe new off-setpocket, California hand - stitchedseams, high waisted belts, and thelatest hidden zippered pocket in¬vention are among these itemswhose purchase prices range from$5.95 to $27.50.Although an apple a day usedto be the best method .for keepingthe doctor away, the saf-te-gardvaporizer found by “The Eye” atthe Kim Rexall Pharmacy, 5500 S.Kimbark, is proving to be a moreeffective measure. Instrumental inpreventing infec-. tion caused bygerms, viruses,and bacteria, thisnew discovery,uncovered anddeveloped by theU. of C. goes to^ work in vaporform, stoppingthe spread ofmost respiratoryinfections. Safe and simple to use,the vaporizer is unnoticable whenattached to any electric lamp lightbulb but invisibly acts as your pro¬tector when guests call for an eve¬ning of television or cunasta, whensickness has attacked a memberof the family, or the common coldthreatens all dorm dwellers. Takeadvantage of the $2.50 offer ofvaporizer unit complete with 40pad refills being made by the KimRexall Pharmacy which givesFREE delivery of all drug andtoilet articles and may be reachedby calling DOrchester 3-0643, 3-0644, or 3-5252.Why be a square? Jive athome or in your dorm to the latrest jaz.z and pop records nowavailable at the Woodlawn Radio& Televisio» Co., 1204 E. 63rd St.On plastic, non-breakable 10 inch-ers are Mercury’s newest releasesof FrankieLaine doingMule Trainand Now ThatI N e e d You,each discpriced at only79 cents. Alsoby Mercury isthe recent Vol¬ume 10, three record album releaseof Norman Grantz’ Jazz at thePhilharmonic, priced at $4.20. Forthose who like music with theircocktails, a $3.60 Cocktail Capersalbum put out by Capitol withsuch songs as I've Got You UnderMy Skin, Dark Eyes, etc., done bythe Art Van Damme quintette hasthree records to be heard for theasking. Young Democrats ;organize anewThe UC chapter of the YoungDemocrats will 'hold an organiza¬tional meeting in Classics 10 at4:30 p.m. Tuesday, November 8,the temporary executive commit¬tee stated, adding that MortimerJ. Adler, UC professor of philoso¬phy, was the sponsor of the newgroup.The purpose of the club is two¬fold, Jack Seigel, temporary co-chairman, explained. First, pre¬cinct organizations will be set upin anticipation of the 1950 pri¬mary and election, local UC stu¬dents will be channeled into theirhome ward organizations, and out-of-state students, interested in en¬tering Democratic politics, will be¬come acquainted with each other. 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