VPictured obove are left, Robinnight about 7:30 p.m. broughtnine fire companies to therescue. Engine companies.83, 6h 6P,4^\ Tri^^Qks 37, 16;Squad S, and me ms'uranc^^E^trolrushed to the scene, followed byAVC out oafter four long yearsUniversity of Chicago, December 2, 1949 31UC 'Poles' are 'spark plugs' of »^ ^ Beauties vieIntercollegiate UNESCO confab for honors asAmid hisses, cat-calls, and snapping flash-bulbs, the UC “Polish” delegates stalkedout of the Intercollegiate UNESCO Conference at the University of Illinois last Saturday. ▼ wlThe conference was sponsored by the International Affairs Commission of the Illi¬nois Region, NSA, for the purpose of familiarizing students with the operation ofUNESCO and for formulating specific means of student implementatioh of its program.The UC delegation, headed by Mary Roberts, “sparked” the entire conference, ac-cordng to Dr. George Stoddard, chairman of the U. S. National Commission for UNESCOand president of the U. ofIllinois.Dr. Stoddard commendedthe UC delegation for addingtouch of realism to the conferenceand presenting the Polish positionwith such heat and determinism(economic, that is>.At the first plenary session onFriday, delegates listened to Dr.Stoddard, Mrs. Quincy Wright,chairman of the Chicago Councilon Foreign Relations, and CharlesA. Thompson, executive secretaryof the U. S. National Commis¬sion for UNESCO. “At least we’ve got money now”—that was the onething on which delegates to the fourth national AVC coi\-vention, held at Chicago’s Congress Hotel Nov. 24-27, couldunanimously agree.The' financial problems which had beset the liberalveterans’ organization throughout its first five hectic yearshave been solved by the donation of $50,000 to the groupby Mrs. Anita McCormickBlaine. She announced thegift at the AVC banquet thenight of Nov. 25, stating that itwas a memorial to her son, Em¬mons Blaine Jr., who was killedin World War I. $4,500 was alsocontributed by members presentat the banquet.DAVE HELBERG . Membership declinesPistols, bombs, and chewing other problems, such as the or-gum must be checked at the doors ganizatioh’s decline in member-of Cobb and Mandel Halls today, ship, its internal struggles, and itsas the battle to determine who failure to obtain a Congressionalwill be Miss University of Chicago charter remain unsolved.from 9 a.m this morning Michael Straight of New York,4 p.m. this afternoon. Republic andMeanwhile, final preparations new national chairman of AVC,are being completed for the pres- and William R. Ming Jr.. UC lawentation of the Queen, which will professor and assistant attorneytake place tomorrow night in Ida general of Illinois, newly electedNoyes at the all-campus C-Dance vice-chairman, expressed o p t i -entitled Coronation Ball, to be mism. It is their opinion that theheld in honoi of Miss U. of C. membership will now’ increase andThe MAROON, which is spon- that internal strife will be endedsoring the contest, has tried to by the resignation of adherents ofeliminate the inequities of previ- minority viewpoints,ous contests which limited nom- Delegates scoffDelegates divideThe delegates then divided intofour commissions, in order to dis¬cuss and evaluate the four areasof UNESCO’s program: tensionsconducive to war, educational re¬lief and reconstruction, universi¬ties bureau, and exchange of per¬sons. UC members of these com¬missions w'ere Karl Hill. JerrySteiner, Merrill Freed, and BobJacobs, all members of StudentGovernment.At the general plenary sessionon Saturday evening, when com¬mission reports were received, JoseDuis Reyes-Navarro, d^egate fromthe U. of Wisconsin (representingSweden), was elected chairman.Karl Hill succeeded in bringingto the plenary floor a report fromthe tensions commission whichcentered the economic factor asthe most important in effectingdisharmony between nations. Aftera hectic floor fight, most of thisreport was tabled.On all other questions, Polandrefused to be forced into a com¬promise position, and most resolu¬tions passed were favorable to itspolicy.However, during the report ofthe exchange of persons commis¬sion, an amendment moved by BobJacobs was ruled out of order bythe chair. The Polish delegates,convinced that this ruling was un¬fair, one-sided, and discrimina-(Continued on Page 10)Allison blastsatom secrecySamuel K. Allison and ThorfinHogness, nuclear scientists at UC,have asserted before the AmericanPhysical Society that secrecy pro¬visions surrounding atomic re¬search in the United States aredetrimental to development ofatomic energy. ^Allison, director of the institutefor nuclear studies, disclosed in atalk before the American PhysicalSociety that engineers for theCommonwealth Edison companyare going to school once a week tostudy the application of atomicenergy for the production of use¬ful power. Because of a secrecypolicy, Allison revealed in an in¬terview, he has not been able totell the engineers anything “veryvital.”Hogness, who heads the Uni¬versity’s nuclear research, told thenational convention of the Amer¬ican Veterans Committee that“extreme” secrecy would tend tocause-the United States to lag inenergy development. In the past,he said, secrecy over “little purelyscientific details” might have beenjustified to delay .soviet develop¬ment, but it is no longer vital. inations to closed groups, and re¬stricted voting. Nominations havebeen received from every type of(Continued on Poge 10) Opposition delegates, most ofwhom said they intended to re¬main active in AVC, scoffed at theprediction that the victory for theright-wing IP caucus, which hasdominated AVC throughout itshistory, would result in a member¬ship increase. They pointed outthat the IPs had won at the 1947and 1948 conventions and thateach time the membership drop¬ped to about a third of previousA rubbish fire on the sixth strength in the following year,floor of Billings Hospital in The principal fight at the con-the dog kennel, Wednesday the quietest in avc’s his¬tory, came over nominations pro¬cedures. A constitutional amend¬ment providing for proportionalrepresentation, passed by the 1948convention according to the first. (Continued on Page 11)Small fire bringsfiremen, hose, axesto Billings sceneSabbath broken aspool cue dents skullBy A. POINDEXTERLast Sunday afternoon the B-J game room furnishedthe setting for a two-man free-for-all which eventuallyevolved in a potential scrap between some 50 people. Theinitial argument was between a B-Jer and an outsider whois not a member of our community of scholars.Tom Seidman, a resident pool player, and some invad¬ing west-sider exchanged naughty phrases last Saturdaynight, and when the same ;—^two met again in the game pronto in the prowl car androom, this time on Sunday, the ‘eyeball” fight be¬tween about 50 fePows to a finis.It is not expected that the west-sider will.press battery charges forthe blow from the pool cue.Hillel schedulesthings let loose.Seidman clouted the “visitor”over the head with a cue stick andproceeded to push the advantage.The visitor, though he resented therude treatment, didn’t stay to de¬fend himself, but hastily departedand summoned aid, in the foYm j • 1 f u.* 1of “outside” football players, from J CtVlSll tCStlVClLthe Midway.John Wilkinson, resident head RoCKCfcllCTof B-J, hustled out to see what *the “score was” when he heard The thirteenth annualthe kiokity-kioc of football cleats Maccabean Festival sponsor-in B-J halls and was in time to ed by the B’nai B’rith Hillelstop the fight by awarding a tech- Foundation will be held atnical knockout to the “invaders.” Rockefeller MemorialPerhaps it should have been de- chapel at the University OfGlared ^ Chicago on Sunday, Dec. 4th,irson said that there were about o.qn nmeight outsiders in the scrap and ' - xu tonly two college men, Seidman The festival is part of the Jew-and an associate member of B-J. ^®1^ holiday of Hanukkah which several UC students, and spentseveral minutes attempting to lo¬cate the trouble.According to Division MarshalLyons, of the Fifth Division, therubbish fire did veiy little actualdamage but caused considerablealarm among the dogs.Requires full equipmentAny hospital fire is a 4-11 fireand invariably demands the ut¬most effort by the Chicago FireDepartment. For this reason sosmall a fire was sufficient to fill59th Street with fire equipment,flashing lights, searchlights, andmany firemen equipped with axes,hose, and poles.No information was availableon the person who turned in thealarm.Excitement over in 5 minutesAfter five minutes of consider¬able excitement most of the en¬gines left, leaving the DivisionMarshal and one truck behind. Maritain talkson man, state“Man and the State” will be thetheme of a series of six lecturesto be given by Jacques Maritain,a leading Catholic philosopher, inMandel Hall.Maritain will discuss such topicsas “Rights of Man,” “Church andState,” and “Problems of WorldGovernment.”The Charles Walgreen Founda¬tion is sponsoring the lectures,v/hich will be given from Dec. 5to Dec. 13, starting at 4:30 p.m.Maritain is French Ambassadorto the Holy See. He has writtenseveral books on philosophy andhas lectured in many Europeancities. The Ambassador is nowprofessor of philosophy at Prince¬ton University.Past to carry the colors forvalor, a B-J “welcoming commit¬tee” soon formed and scurried out commemorates the historical tri¬umph in 162 BC of the Jewisharmy organized by Judas Macca-lee soon lormea aiiu seuincu Syrian conquerorsonto the Midway and proceeded After the long-to set UP a barrage of insulting hard-won victory,stares at the .intruders groupedthere. The intruders, not to be bul¬lied, sent back their share of meanlooks.The campus police were notifiedby Wilkinson, and that efficient Judas Maccabeus drove the paganw’orshippers from the temple atJerusalem and rededicated it tothe Jewish faith.The program this Sunday willorganization relayed a quick mes- consist mainly of musical pre¬sage to city police. sentations of the combined choirsOfficers Walt Lane and Matt of the KAM temple and the HillelRyan of South Park police showed Foundation. of the Oxford Union Society, who will meet UC deboters Curtis Craw¬ford ond Merrill Freed in Mandel Hall next Thursday at 8:00 p.m. in obenefit debate, proceeds of which ore to go to Compus Chest. Day is ograduate of St. Edmonds Holl ond a veteran of the Enlisted Royol Artillery.He is studying low and is o member of the English Liberal Party. Johnson-Smith is from Lincoln College and a former coptoin of the Royol Artillery.He is on ordenf supporter of the British Lobor Government and is studyingtho '^Mndorn Grants'' Of OXfard. Titkdtt for Ike dohote ore on sole doilyin Monde! Corridor.Fagc 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, •Deeraiber 2, I945Shoein' HossesWith JIM REID Opus arrives to bring* Lightning knocked a hole inthe top of Cousin Dave’s silo lastweek, and Dave rigged up a barrelhoist to haul repair stuff to thetgp and then he pulled up lots ofbricks and mortar. dorm talent to campus Here’s the keyto relaxation**After he climbed up and patchedthe hole, he had lots of bricksleft over, so he loaded them allin the hoist and climbed down anduntied the rope at the bottom.He hadn’t figm-ed the barrel wouldbe heavier than him, but it was,and when the barrel started down,he started up. By the time hethought to let go, he says, hefigured it. was safer to hang on.Well, when he was half way up,the barrel was half way down andit slammed him on the shoulder—but he hung on. Now when thebarrel liit ground, the bottombusted out and then my cousinwas heavier than the barrel, sothen he started down. This tripthe barrel socked him on theother shoulder.I guess when Dave hit bottomhe must of lost his presence ofmind, ’cause he let go of the ropeand the barrel dropped on him. The literary staff of the dormitory planning commit¬tee is proceeding with its arrangements to publish Opus, anew campus magazine, in February, 1950.The literary group is working in the humanities sectionof the planning committee and has been at work on theproject since the formulation of this year’s. committee inOctober.First issue in JanuaryOpus will represent thebest literary and art workwhich comes in from residents ofthe dorms; the literary commit¬tee will be accepting contributionsof short stories, essays, poetry,sketches, and cartoons until Janu¬ary 9, 1950, when the first issuewill go to press.Editors of the proposed ventureare Mort Schagrin. who heads thegroup; Larry Sherman, and JoyEdinger.Contributions should be mailedbefore the deadline (and duringthis quarter if it is possible) toOpus Editor Mort Schagi in, Room812, Burton-Judson Courts.Quotable misquote; All workand no jack makes play a dull joy.I heard a “theater engineer”iay the other day that the aver-ige seat spread of a man is 19nches and of a woman, 20 inches.Those figures” must not includehe cigar chewing exec’s. The literary staff'meets everyTuesday afternoon at 4:30 p.m.on the second floor of BurtonLounge, where it reads over thelatest contributions and passesalong the most notable of thewritings to the editors, whose Jobit is to select the best works fromamong the contributions and pre¬pare final copy for publication. Mozart operacomingMozart’s opera “Cosi FanTutte” will be presented by theNew Lyric Stage of New Yorkand the Chicago SymphonyOrchestra in Mandel Hall onFebruary 17-19. The three per¬formances, sponsored by theRenaissance Society, will beconducted by Siegmund Le-varie.Students interested in ob¬taining tickets • can get themthrough the mail from theRenaissance Society at 1810East S9th Street or the uni¬versity concert office at 5892Woodlawn Avenue. UC stu(3ents will have achance to flee from the ex¬cessive intellectualismabounding on this campus bycatching a bus for the FloridaKeys on Dec. 17.The trip, which will takeplace during the two weeks‘be¬tween the autumn and winterquarters, will be ^onsored by theStudent Union outing department.The expenses will amount to $47per i>erson for transportation ona chartered bus and about $1 aday for food. The camp site willbe located on a little island, namedLignum Vitae, about a mile anda half off the main line of theFlorida Keys.The excui’sion has been highlyrecommended by students whohave gone on such trips in thepast. Further information can beobtained from the Student Unionoffice on the 3rd floor of IdaNoyes. aiay Safe .... callBAM SERVICEOIL HEATEB REPAIBS•• atiSn, 3-2315THERE IS NOTHINGBETTER ! .w w I ■ br I I *V O U c n I yFRIED CHICKEN vcu'I'r o>eCHICKEN FEASTat iSBELL'S9 4 0 RUSHl) /€ jcy '*^35 E S• c'Course tohelp study* * *If you have (pardon me) inten¬tions of pursuing the world’s old¬est profession, the odds will bein your favor if you practice inNevada. Arizona, Arkansas, Ten¬nessee, Kentucky, South Carolina,and Virginia. Only these statesRFill recognize your shingle. Leaves for ParisVoice overheard in my roominglOuse: How should I know whosehey are? I just found ’em behindhe bed.Talk louderMr. Kennelly <5uincy Wright, UC professor ofinternational law and head of thc^new Committee on the Hanis^Foundation, left last Monday forEurope, where he will act as con¬sultant for the United NationsEconomic, Social, and CulturalOrganization’s (UNESCO) “ten¬sions project”Wright will continue on thisproject in Paxis through Decem¬ber, when he will return to NewYork c:ity to preside at the annualmeeting of the American PoliticalScience Association.Wright is stopping over in Lon¬don on his way to Paris. Therethe Royal Institute of Interna¬tional Affairs is giving a dinnerin his honor. A two-session course on im¬proving study and readinghabits is being offered by theUniversity College at 19South LaSalle Street for a $1fee for registration and ma¬terials.The class will be addressed byexperts on adult education fromthe University College and theIllinois Institute of Technologyand will cover means of increas¬ing reading speed and comprehen¬sion, techniques of elfective study,and the purposes and problems ofadult education.Now that the smoke andlust of battle has clearedTom the 56th and PeoriaStreets area, leaders of vari-)us organizations interestedn suppressing racial hatredire taking steps to preventuture riots in which racist ele-nents temporarily gain an upperland.The chairman of the CHiicagolivision of the American Civilliberties Union, Edgar Bernhard,las reviewed the causes and faultsconnected with the Peoria Streetviolence in a five-page letter toilayor Kennelly dated Nov. 21.The letter called for a censure>f the police captain who failedio quell the rioters. Bernhard re-ninded the mayor in the letterliat similar incidents, that mightlave grown to menacing propor-ions, were effectively suppressed>y prompt and adequate action.Bernhard called on Mayor Ken-lelly to take a definite publicstand in line with his duty to pro-sect the rights of citizens regard-ess of race, religion, or ethnicirigin to rent, buy, live, and traveln any pEirt of the city. Legal eaglesat moot court The class will meet for twohours at 6:30 4?.m. on both Decem¬ber 13 and 16. Registration for thecourse may be made at the Uhi-versity College downtown ofiBce.19 South LaSalle Street, from 9:30a.m. to 8 p.m. on weekdays ano9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturdays.The registration may be alsocompleted by mail. Be sure to en¬close $1.Three UC law school students,Herbert C. Ephriam, Arnold M.Chutkow, and Cornelius W. Gil-1am, are representing UC in aninter - law school competitionwhich ended today.For the moot court competition,sponsored by the Association ofthe Bar of the City of New York,students frwn 17'law schools areparticipating in arguments on acase involving constitutionalrights.Ephraim and Chutkow, bothsecond-year students, are gradu¬ates of the UC College. Gillam, asenior, received his undergraduatedegree at Csirleton College.The Chicago students arguedfor the rei^ndent in the firstelimination round yesterday. Theyare accompanied by Donald W.Brown, dean of students in thelaw school. Williams explainsUC plan at dinnerThe college and its educationalpolicy will be explained by LynnA. Williams, Jr., vice-president ofthe University of CJhicago. beforea dinner meeting of high schoolprincipals, counselors, and UCalumni at the Columbia Club onDec. 7.GREGG COLLEGEA ScImoI mi BmtkiBBt Pr940rrmd byMm mmd W44 MONTHINTENSIVE COURSESKSfeTARIAl TIUUMNQ FOt COLLfOfSTUDorrs and o«aouatesA dioroosii, iateoaiwe coarse—startiacJane. October. Fcbmary. Bol*lettn A oa reqaestIfEOAL COUNSaOR far G.I. TRAININOReinilar Day and Erening SchoolsThrouebout the Year. Cataloct>ircctor, Paul M. Pair. M.A.THE GREGG COLLEGES7 S. WabaGh A««.. CMcago 3, lUineis Williams will explain the pur¬poses and results of accepting stu¬dents at any time after theirsophomore year of high schoolfor a four-year program of gen¬eral education. Williams will havesomething to say about the col¬lege curriculum and the systemof entrance and placement tests.Williams was appointed to the 'central administration of the Uni¬versity in 1947 and has been verjactive in the progrEim of the non-profit Great Bo<^ Foundation.TRY OUR.FAMOUSSTEAK FOR TWOMORTON’SServing fren 12Hyde Parkis Lemdiny Restaurant5347 Lake ParkFor RoservatioMi«: Plaza 2-9088 FU u KHOnly *48 75 RosnmI Triy, Inc. Tm• 2 FREf MEALS • FREE Transportation to airportLeaves Friday Afternoon Dec. 14 from Chicago MunicipalLeaves Monday Afternoon Jan. 2 from La Guard!a FieldFor Inlormjfion, Write Box R, Maroon, HO OBLIGATIONChristmas—shopwith your sfiMlcnl’ discount cordatNELLE STEPHENSLadies Specialty Shop(Atteatian ME]V • • • let oar Persmial SMiappiBgService hel|i yam seleet that i^jreeial gift)1452 E. 53rd MUseum 4-1574SOME DATES WONT WAIT!So better travel Home ond back onDEPENDABLE RAIL SCHEDULES*Moro fvn. Too, traveling with the gang. Lots of room ioroam about and visit. Mouth-watering meals in the diner.Yes, it’s part of vacation to go by train!From School? From Homo:SAVE 2t% on new Grat^L Tick¬ets, good on most coach trainseast of Chicago or St. Louis, sndnorth ot the Potomac and OhioRivers, and west of New YorkCity, Parties of 25 or more leavingschool together for sasoe destina¬tion may participate in this ar¬rangement. So gather yrtur groupnow. If not all go to same /knmldestination, inck farthest point towhich you can travel together...and get Group Tickets that far.Then get individual round-tripsbeyond. Return tr^ may be asadein^vidually in tinie for reopeningof school. Ask ticket agent or near¬est railroad passenger represent¬ative to help organize a group.Each member saves 28% of round-trip fare on Group Tickets. COLLiai SPECIAL, tickets arsavailable at your home town ticketoMce anywhere in the U. S. Onceoefa or PullinAn, they give yonnB tbc cash saving sad stop-orcrprivileges of a regular roand-tripticket with longer return limke..Get a College Special back tosriiool after Christmas... it willstill take you home for Spring orSensmsr vacationtFor Fun—For Comfort—For DependcibtlityGO BT TRAIN!Eastern RailroadsFriday# December 2, 1949 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3ChicagoRe CompusLiteraryMagazineOn saleMon. & Tues.V Dec. 5 Gr 6—Mandel Corn1 Cobb HallSoc. Sciencee And all bookstoresw 40 pages Gibson talks onMid-East cultureRalph Gibson, formerly on theUC law school staff, will speakDec. 7 before the Lawson discus¬sion group, which meets at theLawson YMCA, 30 West ChicagoAvenue, every Wednesday at 7:30p.m. The group is making a studyof world affairs.Gibson will speak on “The Cul¬ture of the Middle East.” Heserved six years with the BritishArmy in Persia, Palestine, andNorth Africa during the latestwar.Young adults (aged 18 to 35)were invited by the group to at¬tend. Debaters clash Pay your tuition on timein divers talks or pay through the nose2nil SECTION NOW FILLING!S.G. BUS TO N.Y.C.ONLY ’28 Round Trip Including TaxTickets on Sale: Mandel Corridor, M-F, 11:30-1:30Deadline Dec. 6 ... if they last 'til thenNewman^s RestaurantDelicious Sandwiches40c Special LunchesFull Dinners from 75c(seven days a week, 6 to 9) •‘Tine Food For Less^’1449 E, 57I FLY HOME FOR CHRISTMAS IS STUDENT CHARTED RATESI NEW YORK $ 50.00i DENVER 60.00* MIAMI 70.00 I% LOS ANGELES 125.00 |9 All Fore. ROUND TRIP Inc. Tax |i Coll FLYING CARPET TOURS BU 8-0263 $S SKvmixicicic’CKiciciMWvnpovcmwwiMiMwwtcvionwicm’ClRictciMX'cIt's not too early for your Christmas Portrait, atPHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETII LOOK FIRST TOLOWES . . .Sensational!iMIli MeRixliiti-Statio-*79REMOVES STATIC-CAUSED CRACKLING NOISE AND DUST AT- -TRACTION ON VINYLITE, LONG-PLAYING AND ALL OTHER ;PLASTIC RECORDS.Each 4 ounces. Treats approximately 150-180 records! sgUsed by radio stations for max.n''um noise-free reproductions—YOU ^TOO con now achieve the some . . . GET IT TODAY AT1217 E. 55th—PL 2-3631 ^yiz,. In the most debate-cram¬med week of its whole quar¬terly schedule, the StudentForum met Navy Pier, Mun¬delein, and Bradley oratorsthis week. In addition theyhave appeared in the tourna¬ments of Knox College and' IowaUniversity.On Monday, William Day andRoy Greenaway went to Navy Pier.On the same day Navy Pier sent ateam here to battle Herb 'Caplanand Jay Freidman.On Tuesday, in a debate withMundelein, William McMillan,Daniel Nelson, Herb Gaplan, andJay Freidman comprised the af¬firmative team on the question ofsocialization of the U. S. basicindustries. Paul Townsend, GeorgeBeall, Adaleen Burnette, and R.Joseph DeHaan made up the nega¬tive team.On Wednesday, David Mullinand McMillan for the affirmativeand Curtis Crawford and MerrilFreed for the negative contesteda Bradley University team.This weekend, Caplan, Freid¬man, Burnette, and DeHaan willtravel to Galesburg to participatein the Knox College tournament.Dave Ladd, president of the^orum, will accompany the Mul¬lin - McMillan team (affirmative)and the Crawford - Greenawayteam (negative) to Iowa City forthe Iowa University tournament.6 charactersneeded nowfor UT comedyTryouts for roles in theBeaux Stratagem by GeorgeFarquhar, which is the nextproduction of the UniversityTheater, will be held on thethird floor of the ReynoldsClub on Dec. 5 and 6 from 4to 5 and from 7 to 8 p.m.Mark Ashin, instructor on theCollege English staff, who is di¬recting the revival of the engagingcomedy, announced that he islooking for student actors who canportray the following parts: afrustrated wife; a coquettish inn¬keeper’s daughter who aspires togreat things; a cheery rogue ofa landlord; a cynical, immoralgallant; an opinionated and ob¬stinate drunkard; an Irish priestwith a French accent.Since rehearsals for the playwill start at the beginning of thewinter quarter, they will not in¬terfere with quarterlies or Christ¬mas vacation. The production willprobably be given the last weekend of January.Hittitologist joins stafjHans G. Guterbock, one of theworld’s outstanding researchers inthe field of Hittitology, has beenappointed visiting professor at theOriental Institute of the Univer¬sity of Chicago, President ErnestC. Colwell announced today. Tuition payments for the winter quarter must be madeor arranged for by Jan. 4. After that date a late paymentfee of $5 will be assessed. To facilitate payment the bursar’soffice will be open from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Jan. 3 and 4.Class cards, envelopes, and instructions for payment oftuition have been mailed to students by the office of theregistrar.Students who have not se¬cured I.D. cards are remindedthat they are necessary totake comprehensive examinationsand to transact business at thebursar’s office. I. D. cards securedAfter looking at the University’s during the autumn quarter needbill for heat, light, and power, the validation for the winter quarter.Office of the Business Manager The cards may be validated at thehas sent out a touching appeal for time of payment of tuition. If pay-student co-operation to cut the ment is by mail, the ID cardsexpenses. should be enclosed; they will beThe bill comes to three quarters returned, valiated, in two days,of a million bucks per year Students who have not yet se-Ways to aid in the Great Effort: <.„red ID cards should have their1) Confine your use of elec- pictures taken in the bursar’s of-trical appliances to the non-peak ^ce jan. 5 or 6. Alter that timeBusiness mgr.sends out appealto cut expensesperiods: before 9:30 a.m., between a late lee of $2 will be required.11:45 a.m. and 2 p.m., and after5 p.m. This is particularly neces¬sary on dark, gloomy days, when Play Beethovetl. Bucheveryone turns on the lights.2) Turn off all your new- The Collegium Musicum, con-fangled modern conveniences ducted by Siegmund Levarie, willwhen they are not needed. be heard again on, Dec. 11 at3) Report to the Buildings and 8:30 p.m. in Mandel Hall. TheyGrounds staff members any evi- will perform the Bach cantatasdences of waste, such things as Nos. 150 and 64, and Beethoven’sabsence of windows and walls. Octet for Wind Instruments inand overflowing hot-water pipes. Eb, Op. 103. Admission, as always,is free.Machine scaresmincing politicosPhi Gamma Delta has frameda counter-brief to the brief drawnup by Alpha Delta Phi and haspresented it to the I-F Council.But the Council slammed theheavy doors of secrecy at theirmeeting last Monday afternoonand pledged the MAROON report¬er to silence.Shy Jerry Greenwald, presidentof I-F Council, insists on handlingthe issue with gloved hands andrefuses to release any statementsconcerning the brief even thougha majority of the fraternities havegiven a verbal approval to thecounter-brief sentiments.The Council voted against pub¬lication of the Phi Gam brief—and now even some Alpha Deltsseem to regret the release statingtheir “independent notions.” Thereis something about a linotype ma¬chine that terrorizes these frater¬nity boys.OOPS ...The story in the Nov. 26 is¬sue of the MAROON on thespeech of Ring Lardner, Jr.,made on campus failed to men¬tion that AVC and Political,Forum, as well as the NationalLawyers Guild, sponsored theaddress.It also failed to indicate thatLardner*s statement, “In orderto preserve our democracy weare willing to make the su¬preme sacrifice of democracyitself,” was the attitude of Re¬presentative Rankin and other“un - American” investigators.The quotation was not, as somereaders might have believed,an expression of Lardner’s ownviewpoint.open Every Evening ^ FISCHER'SRESTAURANT1148 East 63rd ', 24TH YEARLuncheon from 55cDinners from 75c i Fulbright teachers^competition opensCompetition for appoint¬ments as teachers in elemen¬tary and secondary schoolsin countries covert by theFulbright Act is now open.Applicants should have abachelor’s, preferably a mas¬ter’s degree be between the agesof 25 and 50; have at least threeyears of teaching experience.Two such positions are availablein each of the following countries:Belgiujn, Luxembourg, Burma, andNew Zealand. There are three jobsin the Netherlands, fourteen inthe Philippines, and a limitednumber in Prance and the UnitedKingdom.Persons interested in the workshould write to the Division of In¬ternational Educational Relations,Office of Education, Federal Se¬curity Agency, Washington 25,D. C.SDA fightsdiscriminationUC’s Students for DemocraticAction are working on a four-point program to fight discrimina¬tion throughout Chicago in adrive which began when theyjoined the Chicago Council onRacial and Religious Discrimina¬tion.SDA’s proposed program fol¬lows:1) Procure full documentationon local and campus incidents andreport the facts to the Council.2) Do research in issues in¬volving discrimination, and fightfor the establishment of a FairEmployment Practices Commis¬sion.3) Plead for the co-operation ofcampus groups interested in al¬leviating the tense' local condi¬tions.4) Shanghai as many studentsas possible to do “volunteer” workin the Council’s downtown office.THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, December 2, I949Issued once weekly by the publisher. The Chicago Maroon, at the publication•flicc, S706 South University Avenue, Chicae:o 37. Illinois. Telephones: EditorialOffice, Midway 3>0800, Eat. 2056; Business and Advertising Offices, Midway•-M0, Eat. 2055. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions by mail, $1 pergiwarter, g3 per year.M. EVALINE WAGNEREditor-in-ChiefFRANK WOODManaging EditorROBERT NASSAUFeature EditorNICHOLAS CAMPAdvertising ManagerJAMES E.Business VIVIAN WOODCopy EditorDAVID HELBERGPublic Relations DirectorJOHN A. CHAPMANSports Co-editorBUD COHENSports Co-EditorBARNETTAdviserASSOCIATE EDITORS: Mary Doty, Anne O. Finkelstein, Charles Gaullin, Su¬zanne Harris, Ken Koenig, Alan D. Kimmel, Kave Kliot, Henry W. Larson,James Reid, Gary Steiner, Paul Wilson, Fumi Yamamoto.BDITORIAL STAFF: Aaron .\sher, Sheila Briskin, Adaleen Burnett, Herbert L.Caplan, Jean Clemons. Ann Collar, Dick Dehaan, Thelma Destefano, PeterDugan, Buck Farris, John Forwalter, Donna Fuderer, Charles Garvin, JaniesGoldman, John Harnlshfeger, Drexel Hardin, Jerry Harris. Marilyn Kolber,Mildred Lamberty, Nan Lawson, Goldie Lipschutz, Ruth Lund^n, Terry Luns¬ford. Janet Lux, Peggy Lynn, Dick McConnell, Art McKinney. Gloria Michels,Marilyn Mueller, Charles C. Nash, Tom Necheles, Bruce Novograd, John“ O'Connor, Paul Phillipson, Martin Picker, Neville Ross, Reid Ross, DavidRuben, Bernie Sachs, Morton Schagrin, Gilbert Schlectman, Sid Sisk, LarrySherman, Robert J. Sickels, James Stewart, Lisa Stoneman, Dave Storey,Raymond L. Wilkins, Charles Williamson, Leroy Wollns, Edward Wolpert.PUBLIC RELATIONS STAFF: Joy Edinger, Thomas G. Kern, William Loengood,Joan Levey, Joan Palovick, F. Valerie Sayers.EditorialThe wiseWe congratulate Alpha Delta Phi on finally realizingtheir position on campus. The gentlemen at 5747"Universityhave done what few have endeavored. They have acceptedthe fact that they must adjust themselves to the Univer¬sity’s totems and taboos.Some fraternity boys feel that the old traditions arein danger of being lost forever. The spirit of fraternity life'as defined by Country Club U is in danger of being lostforever. They may suffer the same fate as football.This reminds us of a discussion about school spirit atUC. Resolved: UC students have a loyalty to these ivy-covered walls, not because they are ivy-covered, but becausethey house a means of fulfilling the students’ objectives,namely an education.“Spirit” at UC should not be compared with that ofour neighbors to the north.There is no need to hang our heads in shame whenfraternities don’t advocate green beanies, an extensivesocial life and a we-must-stick-together attitude. Thereare, as the Alpha Belts have realized, “other things in life.”Thanks for reminding some of our fellows that such is thecase. LettersMore tearsYour editorial “Threats” ap¬pearing in the Nov. 26 issue is ^piece of incompetent journalismand incompetent thinking. .You neglect to state “the Pacts,”this time with a clear purpose,leading the uninformed reader toa mistaken understanding of whyten members of the ISL desertedthe SA meeting of Nov. 16. If youever looked at the returns fromthe last campus election, youwould find that the ISL won asubstantial majority of Assemblyseats. If you ever consulted theSA secretary, it might have im¬pressed you that the opposition tothe ISL, composed of membersof opposition parties, come un¬constitutionally seated, some ISLrenegades.If you had troubled to find thisout, you would have been forcedto the peculiar but correct con¬clusion that the delegates presentin support of the ISL platform,with which the majority of thecampus agrees, constituted a min¬ority.Your editorial states that . . .“the decision of the majority mustbe defined and made the policyof the Assembly.” Presumably youmeant “majority of members pres¬ent. What I am inclii;ed to be¬lieve you hold, therefore, is thatthe triumph of a minority opin¬ion over a majority opinion of thecampus is just, if it happens thatthe majority to be ill-represented.The problem of suppressing aminority opinion from being ex¬pressed is, of course, irrelevant.In your repudiation of republi¬can principles there is couchedthe familiar totalitarian touch. Ifyou hold to totalitarian politics,you might have the courage tosay so.James L. iVeilOdditiesA wordCareful reading of the contents of this week’s lettersrevealed that there was something rotten in the state ofSA and or the MAROON. Just exactly what was causingthe spoilage was only darkly hinted at.We contend that the problem arises from the fact thatSA is filled with experienced candidates and apatheticassembly men.Many of us are still mending the torn button holesacquired during the elections. The enthusiasim of thevarious candidates was most encouraging. However, nowthat they have gotten the job for which they petitionedthe rigors of politics have proved too exhausting.Take a vitamin pill, men, and buckle down to govern¬ing.Attention all organizationsAll items for the calendar should be turned in onthe calendar blanks available for this purpose in theMAROON office. They will gladly be supplied uponrequest. Blanks, properly filled out, should be depositedin the “NEWS” basket by 3:30 p.m. of the Wednesdaypreceding publication.For any information regarding this column, callGary Steiner, RA 8-9344. • Please send my two pals andmyself tickets^and press passes ofthe Philosophy Bowl game for ourcollection. Lots of luck.Maj. Michael KovahySunshine leagueI wish to commend the MA¬ROON on its forthright handlingof the recent walkout in the Stu¬dent Assembly. This technique ofbreaking quorum hits at the coreof representative student govern¬ment and must be exposed when¬ever it is used. Although some ofthe MAROON statements appearnot to be precisely accurate, thequick public rebuke of either apa¬thy or walkouts is most desirable.No matter how controversial anissue, it is always subordinate tothe maintenance of the democraticprocess of decision making. I per¬sonally think it clearly unwise forus not to have sent an observerto the YPA initiated conferenceon academic freedom. The threatfrom the right overwhelminglyoutweights the danger of anythreat from such an organizationas YPA, and those students whodeliberately walked out of the SGmeeting apparently tend so greatlyto fear any form of cooperationon specific issues where this mayinvolve some Communists thatthey are in grave danger of in¬directly contributing to the growth(Cqntinued on Page 11)Classified AdsOG POUND. Tan and white cockerlaniel puppy. Thursday morning onIdway. Call Edlaen. Butterfield 8-9346.YOU CAN RENT an electric refrigeratorfor $5 per month. PU 5-8824.TYPING—expert. Familiar with collegexequirements. BU 8-6900.HIGH GRADE ROOM8 for universityztudents. Accommodations for men andwomen 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, Hems, etc.Reasonable rAtss. Edna. W^irinner. .^23Dorchester.. By appointment only. MU4-4680. TUTORING IN MATHEMATICS throughcalculus and mechanics by an experi¬enced teacher, HY 3-1459. 5614 Ingle¬side, 2nd fioor.STUDENT RADIO REPAIR service.Bring your radio to Sten Bristol, Rey¬nolds Club information desk, between12:30 and 1:30, Monday thru Friday.Substantially reduced rates and satis¬faction guaranteed.LOST: Pink, shell rimmed glasses. Atfootball game. Finder please call MU4-2391.WILL EXECUTE DESIGN of your ownImagination on hand painted tie orblouse. Excellent personalized gift with¬out fear of dpulication. Pure silk tie$7.00; blouse, $8 to $15 (plus blousecost). George Culp, 6025 Dorchester,PL 2-9479, after 7 p.m.WANTED: One or two men. Help driveSan Diego with couple. *41 Plymouth,good condition. No charges ,at all.-Leave Immediately after December 16.Alex Miller, PL 2-2223. FOR SALE; Set of Encyclopedia AmeIcana. 1948 edition. Like new conditio:Priced to sell. Call KE 9-4937, eveningATTRACTIVE large light twin bedroom.Kitchen privileges. Suitable for 1 or2 students. Call PL 2-7528 before 11a.m. or after 7 p.m.ROOM FOR RENT, kitchen privilegefor woman student or couple. MI 3-lMFOR SALE; A very fine tuxedo, 2 vest3 shirts, tie. Dark Gray 2 pants sulsize 38. Brown coat and pants. Da:gray overcoat. REgent 4-5565.FOR SALE: Portable Singer sewing machine. Complete with carrying casiCall WEntworth 6-5242.VACANCIES AVAILABLE, WoodlawiWomen's Co-Operative 5711 WoodlawrNOW! $21.25 per month. Co-operativliving, kitchen prlvllleges. MU 4-951(Personnel chairman.DON’T TURN DOWN A pATE! Let mtype that paper for ALWAYS accurat—rea.sonable rates.* *FA 4-0308. • • • Another viewpointI wont my boy to be normol.For Christmas FL lOne WoyPrice Tox Totol Round Trip(tox incl.)New York orPhilodelphio . . . . . $24.95 $ 3.75 $28.70 $ ^4.52Los Angeles,Son Francisco,Son Diego, andPhoenix 11.85 90.85 172.62Atlonto 3.68 28.1.8 53.54Miami 44.50 6.58 51.18 97.24-• Pilots and aircroft licensed ond opproved by the Civil AeronauticsAdministration,• Snacks served in flight.• Fast flights. Non-stop for New York ond Atlonto flights.• Doily flights throughout the end of December.FREE TICKET DELIVERY.Sri'IIEIVT TIIAVEL ,4iEKVI4 E1540 E. 57th Street MUseum 4-5730The SILVER and GOLD«M MOWMOMT NfWWAfW• »> ,»« >.«»,>«,»< >«»«»«■» mt •(Li, 1W* Again . . . Editors^ ^siness MonogeI Selected F • IM 6» I4trsMeeting the gang to discu.ss a quiz—a date with thecampus queen—or just killing time between classes—Owen’s Sandwich Shop at the University of Colo¬rado in Roulder is one of the favorite places foi arendezvous. At the Owen’s Sandwich Shop, as ;ncollege off-campus haunts everywhere, a frosty bottleof Coca-Cola is always on hand for the pause thatrefreshes—Coke belongs.BOniED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY 8YCOCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF CHICAGO. INC.© 1949, Th« Cwtc Cola ComiponyofMati, Deemmhf 2, Ifff THE CHICAGO MAtOOM Eage 5; of FEPC biUHarris Committeeto head trust fundFunctions of the Committee on international Relationsare being divided between that committee and a new one tobe callea the Committee on the Harris Foundation, it wasannounced this week by the dean of the division of socialsciences.Previously, the Committee on International Relationshad charge of both the administration of the trust fundof the Harris Foundation andthe supervision of the studiesof students in international Trelations. Now it will serve onlyin the latter capacity.The Harris Foundation Istrust fund set up in 1923 to pro-mote “the understanding by campaign for the maisAmeilcan citizens of other peo- contacting pf congressmenpies.” Under this foundation, in- over the Christmas holidaysstitutes in which distinguished on the issue of civil rightsscholars, administrators, and pub- legislation was brought for-licists participate are organized ward at yesterday’s meetingannually. of the UC NAACP.Professor Quincy Wright, who Emphasis was i^rged on the pas-was previously chairman of the sage of FEPC at the next session^ of Congress, this being the keyCom ttee on te national Rela- qj ^ national drive spear-tions, has been named chairman headed by the NAACP to culmin-of the new committee. Chancellor ate in a mass movement on Wash-Robert Hutchins has been named ington Jan. ^5-17.honorary chairman. Students were urged to press forProfessor Bert Hoselitz will consideration of the bill in theserve as Director of Studies of theCommitte on International Rela¬tions.Foreign serviceoffered CanucksThe Office of the Dean of Stu¬dents has been asked by the Cana¬dian Department of External Af¬fairs to cooperate in notifyingCanadian students on the Quad¬rangles of the opening of competi¬tion for the recruitment of For¬eign Service Officers.Canadians between the ages of ning to charter buses for Univer- UC sends 25abroad to studyTwenty - five UC studentswill be among 500 fromAmerican colleges studyingabroad this year under theFulbright Act. The oppor¬tunities for foreign studywere awarded in keen com¬petition involved 6,000 students.The UC students and the coun¬tries where they will be studyingare listed below:France—Charles Kahn, Herbert-Lust, Peter Sele, Luther Allen,John Hirschfield; Italy—Lewis Bi.lancio, James Enfel, Herbert Gold-stone, Morton Heilig, Carl Oden-kirchen, Hal Wilmeth; Greece—Michael Jameson;United Kingdom—Paula Brown,Lloyd Pallers, Norwood Hanson,William Letwin, Edwin Munger,Robert Pickus, Leo Cagan, DavidaWolff son; Norway—Allen Adams,Mary Newlin Allee, Alfred Grif¬fin; Netherlands — Norman Mar¬tin, Mark Reinsberg.\ Fall discussion Talks on DP*sHerold C. Hunt, superintendentof Chicago public schools, willspeak at the annual fall meetingof the University of Chicago lab¬oratory and nursery schools par¬ents’ association Friday, Novem¬ber 30. "Hunt will discuss “The RelationBetween the Private LaboratorySchool and the Public School Sys¬tem,” at the 8 o’clock meeting inroom 126 of Charles Hubbard JuddHall (5835 Kimbark avenue). Mrs.Alex Elson, president of the 700-famiiy organization, will preside. Clarence E. Pickett, nationalexecutive secretary of the Ameri¬can Friends Service Committee,spoke here Tuesday on. “Displacedpersons from War areas.” Picketthas recently returned from south¬ern Palestine, where he headed aFriends commission^ investigatingthe plight of Arab refugees forthe United Nations.An ordained minister, Picketthas held his present post fortwenty years, and was, for a time,director of the United States com¬mission for the care of Europeanchildren.first days of the session to preventa successful filibuster and to getthe bill passed in its present formwithout the teeth being removedby scrapping provisions for en¬forcement.If you’d like information on therecords of congressmen and theNAACP legislative program aNAACP spokesman said, go toReynolds Club 302 at the followingtimes:Tuesday, 10:30 a.m.-2 p.m.;Wednesday, 2:30-4:30 p.m.; Thurs¬day 10:30 am.-2 p.m.; Friday,9:30 ajn.-12 noon.The UC NAACP chapter is plan- Sorry ..,The story on the Student As.sembly walk-out contained sev¬eral errors and omitted certainpoints. The meeting was sup¬posed to adjourn at If pum.When the walkout occurred themeeting was 45 minutes over¬time. The seats were vacatedbefore the meeting was ad¬journed.Frank Logan did not say thatmost of the people who left didso because of previous migage-ments, nor did he »y that therewas no risk in sending an ob¬server to the YPA-called Con¬ference on Academic Freedom.President Logan * a n d Vice-President Jacobs were both op¬posed to the walkout.23 and 35 are eligible. Studentsof history, economics, law. orpolitical science are considered es¬pecially qualified. The competi¬tion closes on December 10. Ap¬plication blanks may be securedfrom the office of the CanadianConsul General in Chicago or bywriting to the Canadian CivilService Commission in Ottawa.Further details on the competitionmay be secured from Mr. Blren-baum in the Dean of StudentsOffice.Hayek heads for UCFriedrich A. Hayek, interna¬tionally-known economist whoseUniversity of Chicago Press book.The Road to Serfdom, was a 1945best-seller, will be a visiting pro¬fessor at UC during the winterquarter. Chancellor Robert M.Hutcliins announced today. sity and other Chicago partici¬pants in next month’s Washing¬ton mobilization.19 Shoppingdoys till XmasExhibitkHi of CeromicsbyGertrudandOttoNatzlerthrough December, atTME UTTLE GALLERY1328 E. 57th St.1:00-5:30 P.M. iOCAt AMD 10M6 OttrAMCS MAMIMO#§0 ySAftS Of DMMDAttfSBIViOi fO IMi fOtflMMDf•AST #Off fMf fSfIMAff55th and ELLIS AVENJECHICAGO 15, ILLINOISDAVID L. SUTTON, Pres.fUtterfieid 8-6711MAMFlUJDDioMmri«MKM ev OMUL MM*. COiraiAI«MZO N. DEAtBOaN ST. STOCK NoIMDTH O M.a O GMEOC □ffm □ aa □ co.e.QMAMtoirviiAit Mmvvi vf< rua vatTaui Marilyn KolberAs your snooping problem solver,"The Eye” has done her Christrhassnooping early in order to give youadvance “Eye-deas” ond gift sugges¬tions.Sheer beauties for either gift orpersonal purposes are the recent 60gauge - 15 denier discoveries in nylonhohery been shownat Horlaa't De-partmeat Store, 1 333E. 55th St. Stampedwith the Good House¬keeping seal of oc-ceptance, these legflatterers, strength¬ened by a new twistthread processing(womise to wear bet¬ter than 45 gauge-30 denier while atthe same time, looksheerer than 54gauge. Bearing theGlen Raven name,they are priced at$1.95 the pair.In their lounging hours your dad,brother, or uncle will remember yourholiday thoughtfulness if they receivea box containing a robe from ErieQoHimg, 887 E. 63rd St. For the style-cxsnscious, self-color satintrimmed cordu¬roy robes i^blue and dubon-net ore avoil-pble at a rea¬sonable $12.95while beginningot the sameprice ore greenblye, and du-bonnet flannelsin both two-toneond solid colors.In the higher $25 bracket, all woolBotony relaxation conducers deserveyour consideration as do the regularbrocaded, silk-lined satins in dubonnetand blue in a varying price-range.Please the shutter-bug fan on yourChristmas list with a emtmera fromthe Model Com-ero Sho^, 1331E. 55th St. Be¬sides these scenecapturers whichbegin at $2.75,the shop stocksa supply of ex¬posure meters,enlargers, de¬veloping kits,and color filmfor holiday pictures. Also availablefor your observation ore the thirddimension Stereo-Reolist camera andhandicraft toys for youngsters.Music will inspire both admirationond compliments for your good tasteif it's given in the form of regularor 45 r.p.m recordings from the Wood-iown Radio and Television Co., 1204E. 63rd St. In addition to the squaredonee and popular dance band oltuimsthat one particularly suitable for teen¬age Christmas offerings, the moretimely bolidoyseoson nibumsand singles areavailable. Re-corded for\:RCA Victor by ^name groupsand soloistsore Christmascarol 45 r.p.m.albums |>rioedfrom $2.42 to$5.51 whilethe some num¬bers ore alsoprocurable inthe 78 edi¬tions. The waxdisc supply ofthe store ranges onywhere from theBozo sets to satisfy the musical crav¬ings of the younger element to thelong hair diet supplied by symphonicwaxings. Ail you'll need is knowledge ofyour mole favorite's foot size if youwont to present himwith a practical,long wearing gift.Being featured byNeumode Hosiery,1033 E. 63rd St.,ore 100 per centspun Nylon socks formen tl^t ore guar¬anteed againstshrinkoge. Coming in¬shades of white,groy, brown, huntergreen, light green, yellow, r»ovy, lightblue, black, and tan, these wosh weltsconr*e in sizes 10-13 and are pricedat only $1 per pair.If your intent is to impress eitherman or woman with your good taste ingift selecting, clinchthe situation bychoosing a Lo Crossmonicure set fromthe University Lug¬gage Shop, 1110 E.63rd St, Enclosed insnapped or zipperedoil leather coses orecombinations of cu¬ticle nippers, cuticlepushers, noil files,ond tweezers in avariety of versions which begin at$2.98.Give that pure personalized touchto gifts by making them copies ofyour smiling selfos snapped byThe Album,1171 55th /^ #St. As a special ■ ^offer for “Eye”readers only.size versionswill be yours for only $15 upon n>€n-tion of "The Eye.” This offer, goodonly until December tenth, affords youa chance to have your final photos intime for your Christmos vocation re¬turn home.Be early in taking advantage ofthe wide selection of Christmas Cordsand gift wroppiNgs put at your dis¬posal by T. R. Wolf’s, 1401 E. 55thSt. Featuring a complete line of Hall¬mark cards in single, box cards, celo-pocks, ond Christmos riote selections.WOK//the store also has the gift wrappingnecessities of ribbon, gift seals, togs,and enclosures. Christmas.decorationsfor the home os well os Christmasgift novelties for all age groups arecarried.Be sure yqur clothes measure upto your individual standards by piv^k-ing them fromthe highly styledcasual and holi¬day creations ondisplay at. TheStudio, 1640 E.53 rd St. Designedfor campus wearis a two - tonecombination in acordfiroy and ray¬on gabardinecosuol tfxit with/f detailed sepa-^ rote skirt is omoz-ingly low priced****-Tr^ at $8.75. Includ¬ed in the casualcategory ore Jersey skirts starting ot$10.95 and Tina-Leser origirtal jerseytops to complement them. AfternoonOlid holiday dresses boast of theirexclusiveness in sizes from 8-20 and7-15 within a price range of $10.75-$89.95. For your convenience,store offers on o]terotion service anda kiy-ewey pl«N for customers.THE CHICAGO MAROONTERESA DOLAN DANCING SCHOOL1208 E. 63rd St. (Near Woodlown)Fall Adult Classes Now Open — BefInners and AdvancedWaltz, Fox Trot, Rhumba, etc. 10 Lessons $10.00J01]\ NOW — PHIVATE LESSONSEasy - Quirk - Sure - ElfirlentDAILY 11 A.M. to 11 P.M. Ph. HYde Park 3-3080Wbsn you smoke^rand.DON’T INHALE,o differ"**j 1 Po exoctiy1 HotiM Hurtigh your \ morrisyou shouib m MORWS*.YOU KNOWYOU’LL BE GLAD TOMORROW-YOU SMOKED PHILIP MORRIS TODAY!Everybody talks about PLEASURE, butonly ONE cigarette has really done something about it.That cigarette is Philip Morris!Remember: less irtitation means more pleasure.And Philip Morris is the ONE cigarette proveddefinitely less irritating, definitely milder,than any other leading brand,NO OTHER CIGARETTECAN MAKE THAT STATEMENT, Friday, Dacambcr 2, 1949UC drops openerto St. Joe, 50-30St. Joe’s fast-moving, sharp-shooting hoopsters, spear¬headed dy Jack Dwyer and Bill Krodel, forward and centerwho scored 15 and 13 points, respectively, spoiled the Ma¬roon’s opener, 50-30, Monday night at Rensselaer, Ind.“Van” Van Der Weyden was high for the Chicagoans with10 counters.Wasting no time, the hosts jumped off to a command¬ing 14-2 advantage in thefirst period. The Maroonscame to life in the secondquarter, and by intermission hadclosed the gap to seven points,21-14. But the St. Joe lads edgedaway in the bird quarter to lead^ 35-19 and outscored UC, 15-11, inthe fourth to ice the contest.The Norgren-men will go aftertheir first victory when the home. schedule opens with games againstCarleton Friday and Saturdaynights at the Field House.Paced by Prank’Schlaffer, high-scoring forward and captain ofthe squad, the Carls will be hardto beat. They boast several accu¬rate shots and a clever playmakerin Lou Rogers, a 5' 10" junior.Coach Joe Platt shouldn’t be toworried about better last season’s11-10 record since he only lostthree lettermen through gradua¬tion and injuries.The Maroons, with a 1948-49record of 10-8, will have four menof last year’s starting line-up in'action this year and should bet¬ter their record. In addition tothe returning lettermen, the ca^jershave several newcomers of whomgood things are expected.Foothallers meet;eat, elect officersA meeting of the Maroon Foot¬ball club, attended by 40 members,was held at the Phi Gam houselast night. The meeting consistedmainly of elections and a discus¬sion of policy.At the meeting, A1 Bruggemeyerwas elected president, and A1 Rappwas elected vice-president. DonBostwick and Bruno PaszineUlwere elected secretary and treas¬urer respectively..Before the meeting the mem¬bers were treated to a dinner do¬nated by the alumni and chapterof Phi Gamma Delts, and heardspeeches by Armand D c n i a n ,treasurer of the Phi Gam alumni,and Nicho>as Melas, president ofthe house.Mr. Donias said: “The dinnerwas given in recognition of theefforts oPthe Maroon^ football clubin organizing the two footballteams which played in the now-famous Philosophy Bowl.’’. Melas ‘Said that the hou.se fa¬cilities and i^rsonnel v.’ill alwaysbe'at their disposal.The club announced that it Isorganizing a recruiting drive fornext quarter. The next meeting,tentatively scheduled for the firstweek in next quarter.FRANK SCHLAFFERSwimmers goto quad meetThe varsity swimming team,undefeated Chicago intercollegi¬ate champions last year, will en¬ter a full team in a quadrangularmeet held' at North Central Col¬lege on Saturday afternoon andevening, according to Coach Wil¬liam Moyle. Sixteen first-stringvarsity swimmers, including LouRiver, Chicago inter - collegiatechampion in the 50-yard swim,and Elmer Walsh, Chicago inter¬collegiate champion in the 220-and 440-yard swims, will raceagainst swimmers from Illinois atNavy Pier, Loyola, and NorthCentral.1949-1950 schedule follows:Date Opponent3at., December 3—Quadrangular Meet(Chicago, Navy Pier, Loyola, NorthCentral)rhurs., December 8—GUSTAVUS ADOL¬PHUS COLLEGEPrl., December 9—GEORGE WILLIAMSCOLLEGE (practice meet)3at., January 7—WASHINGTON UNI¬VERSITY3at., January 4—at DePauw UniversityWed., January 18—LOYOLA UNIVER¬SITYPrl., January 2(^NAVY PIERJan. 27. 28—ST. LOUIS UNIVERSITYPri., February 10—DETROIT UNIVER¬SITYFri., February 17—ILLINOIS TECHSat., February 18—Beloit CollegeSat., February 25—DE PAUL UNIVER¬SITYFri., Sat., March 3-4—CHICAGO INTER¬COLLEGIATE CHAMPIONSHIPSPrl., Sat., March 10-11—Central Collegi¬ate Championships.Home games are in capitals.TIF-Orr TO A FLORIDA HOLIDAYWHITE HALUsANNUAL PALM BEACHDoiv’t miss this sparklingparty combining Christmaswith New Year festivitiesat the World’s Most Beau>tiful Resort Hotel. Never adull moment... tennis, golf,swimming, boating... danc-,ing nightly under the stars.Gorgeous food! Best of all,SPECIAL LOW RATES for col-A. M. soNNAftEND URRY BORSTEN Icge-agers. Suggest it to thefr*8id«nf Gtfwrol Manager family , « , COme OU down IFor rafts and rtstrrations addrtss WhIhhafI, Palm Beocfi, Florida.Formal Favorite»SaturdayKnights!Step out in style with VanHeusen’s famous dress-upshirts! With black tie, it’sVan Tux with French cuffs,.. white pique front...and attached collar in twolow-setting collar models—popular new wide-spreadand regular. And withwhite lie, it’s Van Dress—with neckband and stiffbosom. As perfectly tail¬ored as they are hand¬some. $5.95 each.•*the world’s smartest” U UJ.PH i’l LI PS.JONES coar.. NEW YORK (•leiNE'S BLENDc7ncU|:Kint pipe TOBACCO"Wliata miracle you hide -in 3 Christmas watch r'Page 7Selected by the FasbiomAcademy eJNew York at*‘AlUAmericam Best-DressedWomam",.,ELIZABETH TAYLORis co-starred in Metro-Goldwyn-Marer's *“CONSPIRATOR”Lord and Lady Elgins are priced fromt.67.50 to $5,000. Elgin De Luxe from$47.50 to $67.50. Other Elgins from$29J5. All prices include Federal Tax.*SfUAe of "filgUoy” meUl. Patent pendinchat Christmas gift watch . . . Elgin is the onehat will make you most happy. For Elgin style won thejold Medal Award of the Fashion Academy. And only Elginlas the miracle DuraPower Mainspring. No other watch inhe. world has such dependable power for accurate timekeeping!ust pass the word around with the family that jewelers aretow featuring Elgins in a wide range of prices.. The genius of America to wear on your wristTHE CHICAGO MAROONSPORTSQuad! - nanc^inaBy BUD COHENWe were sitting around the office last week, talkingabout the “Gtood Old Days,” reminiscing about how fine itwould be if all the people that we-knew-when would returnto campus for one grand and glorious week end. Then theroof fell in. Someone mentioned that the old boiler room,and one of the few traditions left here, namely MandelCorridor, would be closed at 12 midnight every evening.Immediately we ran to investigate. Sunday evening,that very pretty girl who works for us on the staff joinedus sitting in the corridor, and together we waited to seeif the rumor were true. Sure enough, at twelve on the dot,one of those little men in blue, sporting his brand newflashlight, entered and instructed us to leave (although invery polite terms.)We argued with him for several minutes, but all wecould get out of him was, “Beat it before I run you in.” Wepleaded long and hard for the poor freezing couples thatused to have a haven when Jimmie’s closed and who nowwould be thrown out into the cold and would be at themercy of the elements.The staff has decided to make Mandel Corridor itsproject for the year and we would appreciate any help fromthe outside.In parting we would like to ask the people who au¬thorized this affair, ‘‘What’s the matter, boys, got nosporting blood?” Sharpshooters markup opening victoriesThe UC rifle team added two more victories to itscredit, winning over the Standard Oil team, 914-797, and theAT&M team, 893-588. In its first intercollegiate match *ofthe year, the varsity defeated the Illinois Institute of Tech¬nology squad, 1362-1333. High-scorers for Chicago in thesemeets were Alyce Kahn, John Wainhause, Bob Sloan, BobBrackett, John Karcher, and Bill Androskey.The Whites compete withmost of the schools in theWestern Conference, the nextBig Ten Tournament being sched¬uled for May at the University ofIllinois. Postal matches andshoulder to shoulder shoots ^rethe forms of competition used inthese meets. In the former, theteam shoots at home, sending theresults to their opponents. Shoul¬der to shoulder shoots involvematching skills together on onerange. Scores are made on skillshown in prone, sitting, kneeling,and off-hand (standing) positions.Elementary and advancedgroups meet every Tuesday andThursday-from 7 to 10 p.m., andMonday and Thursday from 1:30to 4 p.m. on a four-point, 50-footrange in the Field House. Riflesand ammunition are provided bythe Univeraaty. Any persons inter¬ested in joining are advised tocontact Prank Karcher, coach, orBob Sloan during range hours. UC lifter takes secondUC student Marc Levine an¬nexed second place in the 148-pound class Sunday at the Cen¬tral AAU novice weightliftingmeet at Central YMCA.Levine and Gordon Thurow,divisional -students, representedthe University weightlifting team. MEN WHO KNOWDEMAND HEINE'S BLENDThe Smoking Toboeco with onM.D.’” Degree!«Miid? Definitely!fUTlItf TORACCO CO« 49 trviNMt, 9. f.. CalN.Fritliy, Ditmhw 2, 1949said ELiXABETH TAYLORwhen she learnedof the DuraPower Mainspringin ELGINS thatare so beautiful they wonthe Fashion Academy Award!Cloak and Dagger Department: The members of Math¬ews house, in a frenzy of inspiration, decided to pull a fastone when nominating a candidate for Miss UC. The mensubmitted pulchritudinous pictures snatched from a pin¬up board and created a costume for jjne of their associates.A big scoop for the MAROON was in the making.However, the MAROON’S public relations director,Dave Halberg, decided to have relations with this particularpart of the public. His research revealed that one LynnNelson wasn’t registered in this Hall of Learning. Spurredon by this temporary set-back, he began third-degreeingseveral members of Mathews house. The plot was exposed.Uncle Dave Filberg rose in all of his majesty (5 ft., 9 in.)and decreed that Lynn Nelson was ineligible.Point of information: the pictures submitted werethose of Janet Leigh. When last seen Hezzberg was seenhitchtng to L.A. on Route 66, (shades of Bing Crosby). Aids for Humor Writers(Help You Reach R.cher Markets)"COMEDY WORLD"Gag-Riled Journal of Humor Business25c per month, $2 50 per year"How to Write Your Own Jokes"by Walter Bn* mm—$1.00"Rodio Comedy: How to Write It"by Art Henley4 volumes combined—$S, $1 eachSend Check or Cash—No C O. D.SPJilClALWrite for info'mation about ourhumor analysis serviceNATIONAL LAUGHENTERPRISES62 W. 46Hi St. New York 16, N.Y.So long, NedNed Merriam, at present trackcoach and a member of thephysical education departmentof the University for the past31 years, has just announcedthat he is leaving at the end ofthe quarter. Merriam came tothe University in 1905 as astudent and returned in 1928to coach the track and fieldteams.The whole staff says goodbye,and good luck.THE CHICAGO MAROON FrMay, D6C<ifctr 2, I94<WWJWmVmWtWmWmWmWm^WmVmWAVmWl^mW^Arrow Gordon Oxfords \With these button-down and spread-collar Oxfordsgo the value and quality that hove made Arrow"America's favorite college shirts."We have Arrow Oxfords on-hand now, why notdrop in for a fresh supply? They come in whitesor solid colors. $3.95..-JWVAVA ARROW UNIVERSITY STYLES wmwjMy-V.WAV-WAVWWA'ARROWOXFORDS$3.95Kindly Notice the Collar!It's one of Arrow's campus favorites, the wide-spredd"Sussex" in fine Gordon Oxford fabric.Arrow's smartly styled and longwearing Oxfords are also availablein button-down and regular collars.White and solid colors. See yourArrow dealer!ARROW SHIRTSTIES • UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTS Fooflights and Klieglighfs The Palette'Caesar sneak previewed East and Wesipromises fair performance meet in ‘art ofwater coloristSeated Wednesday in an audience composed of U. Highstudents—no invidious comparisons, please—we witnesseda number of key scenes from Julius Caesar, the U.T. production which opens tonight at 8:30 in Mandel Hall. Thisis as close as we were able to come in following our an¬nounced plan of trying to give you pre-performance reviewson the University Theater shows. Admittedly, such a piece¬meal performance is nothing to 'base any sort of thoroughgoing being Edward Asner as Brutus,criticism on. but what we did see Joel Farber as Cassius, and Johngave us a fairly strong hint on Tarburton as Anthony. Mr. Asnerhow things are going to go when has come quite a way from histhe child becomes a man. earlier performances but he still* tLet it be known at the outset suffers from the effects of whatthat, any illusions you may have seems to be U.T.’s occupationalentertained to the contrary, this disease, poor enunciation. Messrs,production is not going to drive all Farber and Tarburton do muchother versions off the boards. It better on this score, though thedoes, however, promise to be in- latter’s voice projects with a flat-teresting. Jules Gordon, the di- ness that robs his lines of muchrector, is faced with an extremely . .. . hAmifvdifficult job in trying to give beauty,movement to a play in which much Despite the generally unfavor-of the action takes placo- in long able tone of all the above, wepassages of dialogue. It didn’t think the show will be rather good,look as if he’d been too successful; jjj closing, however, we warn Mr.the excerpts we saw had a very Gordon to be very careful or he’llstatic quality. The stylized set, g^in the dubious honor of havingthough handsome, shoukin t be of produced U.T.’s biggest theatricalmuch help on this either. soporific since the AgammemnonWe didn’t see the whole cast in of a couple of seasons back,action, the main ones functioning —Robert NassauYoung artists cut LP plattersplay unfamiliar classic musicThe presence of young and relatively unknown artistsrecording under the Allegro banner is both gratifying andrefreshing. Three recent releases by this company have incommon fine and perceptive performances, good recording,and very few grooves and much blank space per record.It is only after some thought (and careful listening) thatone decides that the defect is outweighed by the virtues.Schubert’s Sonata for Vi- ^ Showing at Little Galleries1328 East 57th street, durinithe month of December, wiibe the watercolors of AtsushKikuchi.Kikuchi’s style is a synthesis of Eastern and Westeritraditions in watercolor. His worldone in Japan has the delicattouch and mystical vagueness omist paintings. His compositioiand perspective, however, a rWestern. In such pictures as 55tland Dorchester he is completel:the city-bred eye, using brighcolor like flame in the windowalong the street.Makes use of contrastsKikuchi can be simple to thpoint of severity: his Late Autumiis a complete, full picture, yeseems to have been painted witlless than a dozen strokes. He caibe fulsome in his treatment, tooHis Izu, Japan is full of movementfrom the deep blue-green toneof the water to the yellow-greeiforeground, and far in the distance to the hills.His use of the Eastern motif oshadowy distant hills, some hovering on evanescence, contrasts wonderfully the concrete trees in thforeground of Japan. That he caibe subtle as well as bold in colocomes out by contrasting Near LMont with the 55th street sceneolin and piano in A major delightfully projected by Rogers.(Opus 162), while not a very range of feeling running the Tops in water-colorsKikuchi is one of the severeartists who have emerged morfully into public notice since thinnovation of the 57th Street ArFairs. He should some day rahamong those few water-coloristwhose style makes their mediucrank with oils.- —John Forwaltergamut from the seriousness ofimportant work, has enough charmand singing melody to make itsprevious neglect unjust. Fredell Mozart’s Abendempfindung andLack plays the far-from-easy vio- Haydn’s Das Leben ist ein Traumlin part in the tender cantablle to the playfulness of Warnungstyle asked for by the music, while and the Englisches Matrosenliedpianist Leonid Hambro shares the by the same two masters. All eightwork with her in a like manner, songs are sung and recorded withTheir sensitive ensemble playing eighteenth century clarity. WOAK callsmidnite fansis given good recording on one10-inch LP record (AL-22).More 10-inchcrs Two of the seldom heard harpsi¬chord suites of Handel are playedby Fernando Valenti on anotherAlso on a 10-inch LP record is Allegro 10-inch LP (AL-23). Thethe second of these Allegro re- suites. No. 2 in F major and No.leases—Haydn and Mozart Songs 11 in D minor, are well played(AL-13). Earl Rogers’ pleasant with the fortunate absence of non-tenor voice is accompanied. by musical noises which have beenEmilia Mitrani’s discreet (a bit heard on some recent harpsichordloo much so) piano. Pour songs records.each of these composers are . —Aaron Asher Here, at last, is a break foGarroway-haters. PM S t a t i o iWOAK is concocting a one-houprogram ,(12:00-1:00 a.m.) made border from stpdent requests. So-what’ll you have? Music? Chatter? Both? Or just somethiniloud enough to keep you awak(but quiet enough not to interferwith your—uh—study? Rush youtyped program ideas to RoberNassau, in care of the MAROONLINCOLN MERCURYIN HYDE PARKSpecializing In Ford ProductsWE SERVICE AND REPAIRALL MAKES OF ACTOSSIMONIZE .RODY AND FENDER WORKFactory Trained MechanicsLAKE PARK MOTORS,5601 HARPER AVE.S. TAUBER, President E. KAPLAN, TreasurerFREE DISCOUNT CARDS15 -50% OFFElectrkef Ap^iances Men's ClotHingJewelery Automotive Accessories Furniture"Through CBS, You Buy More for Less"Consumer’s Buying ServiceWrite, Coll or Soe Ciios. Rosen, 77 Burton Judson, Ml 3-6000Friday* December 2, 1949 THE CHICAGO MAROON Pa^e 9“*'■* s%o«*sAT SiSee Then* of Morsholl Fields • Corson Pine Scot# # Wieboldtsrm iNkItt: ‘HAIBRtK TUCKS", frill laCf Uwi lie., Iipt R. 1375 Broidwir, Rfw tirt IIPocahontas lost her chance with John-Had no blouse to don!Yes, Camels are SO MILD that in a coast-to-coast lest ofhundreds of men and women who smoked Camels—and onlyCamels-^ for 30 consecutive days, noted throat specialists,making weekly examinations, reported(Jm ongy fiMUjlt GoAt 0^^Mioku^ OomAlGOWN BY JO COPELANDJEWELS BY TRABEBT AND HOEFFER-MAUBOUSSIN(mohm «/Ao-The Music Stand Books and ReadingBlind organistgives recitalat RockefellerFamous French organist,Andre Marchal, in his recitalat the chapel last Tuesday,proved that a careful per¬former can master the moreblatant faults of the Rocke¬feller organ.By chnsistently choosing thelightest stops for lyric or contra¬puntal sections and by playing ata slow enough tempo to avoid dis-.•?olving all tones into a homogene¬ous, reverberating noise, he wasable to project Baroque delicacy,Bachian strength, ana moderncolor without doing violence to themusic.Good playing of ornamentsTwo French Baroque pieces byGrigny and Dandrieu were pri¬marily interesting for their wealthof ornamentation. Not the leastaccomplishment of this giftedblind organist is his ability to playornaments clearly and expres¬sively.Typical of his treatment of theseworks was his choice of the mosttransparent stops for lyric orna¬mented passages. Only the solemnchordal sections of such a work asLouis Couperin’s Chaconne wereallowed to sound on the massivepipes so favored by lesser musi¬cians.Bach is high pointThe high point of the programwas Bach’s Prelude and Fugue inB minor. The nobility and expres¬sion of this work was conveyedwithout resorting to coloristic oroverpowering effects. There vf.sadequate contrast and impressivetreatment of fantasia pa.ssages,but the pqlyphony was never ob¬scured.Mr. Marchal offered also a setof improvised variations on theLutheran chorale, Fine Feste Burg.The improvisations w’ere scholarly,polished, and always predictable.Bach to BeethovenThe pfogram as a whole did notpresent much music that was in¬teresting in itself. Indeed, onlythe Bach Prelude and Fugueseemed of more than passing im¬portance. This is especially unfor¬tunate in view of Mr. Marchal'soutstanding ability as an organist.The final University Concert ofthis quarter brings ’cellist QaborRejto and pianist Adolph Bailerto Mandel Hall next Friday. Theprogram will consist entirely ofBeethoven works.—Martin Picker New book explainsDeWey*s philosophyTHE AND WISDOM OF JOHN DEWEY. Edited by A. H. Johnson.The Beacon Press. 1949. $2.00.John Dewey being considered a rather important per¬son hereabouts, we sent for this book despite our prejudicesagainst the Wit and Wisdom series. These volumes are allprefaced with a discussion of the general philosophy ofa man, followed by his gems of wisdom arranged Bartlett-like in quotations somewhat out of context.Professor A. H. Johnson, editor of the work, has erasedsome of our objections, how- "z—n —7;—:—rr—ever, by including an excel- ^rLtnforcondSglent introduction outlining ,3 jacLs in practical^rts.some of Dewey s id^. This participate in creating aprovides a c^text into which the ^rorld in which the springs ofreader can place the quotes. thinking will be clear and ever-Editor praises Dewey flowing "Johnson’s essay includes brief * —Charles Garvin VACATION IN FLORIDA!S.U. ALL EXPENSE CAMPING TRIPONLY »65Sign up S.U. office, Ida Noyes, M-W-F, 4:30 - 5:15Inckicling Tronsportofionond MealsTHEATRESSPORTSCONCERTS TICKETSFRIEIVDLY SERVICE—NOMEVAL CHARGEOnly'2 Blocks East of Mandel HallVARSITY TICKET OFFICEWOODWORTH’S BOOK STORE1311 East 57th Phone Orders MUseum 4-1677VOTE FORMISS UC TODAY explanations of Dewey’s theoriesof education, philosophy, sociology,esthetics and religion, togetherw’ith a biographical sketch. As isto be expected, much of this sec¬tion is in the nature of a eulogy.Of special interest to us is theeditor’s reiteration in many placesof Dewey’s ideas of the relation oftheory and practice, an ever re¬curring problem because of thenature of our institution. The stu¬dent long acquainted with Deweywill enjoy rereading statementssuch as the following in the sec¬tion, “Thinking.”“To praise thinking above ac¬tion because there is so much ill-considered action in the world isto help maintain the kind of worldin whiclv action occurs for narrowand transient purposes. To seekReview to goon sale soonThe university’s literary mag¬azine, Chicago Review, will makeits first appearance this year onMonday, December 5. Now in itsfomth year of publication, theReview has undergone a completereorganization recently, includinga return to regular magazine for¬mat and its old price of 40 cents.The forthcoming issue will con¬tain three short stories, an articleby Marianne Moore on ThomasHardy’s poetry, five poems, ar¬ticles on Finnigans Wake and onthe General Semantics movement,and book reviews. The UC stu¬dent material in the current is¬sue includes a short story byRalph Pomeroy and poetry byZygmund Gongleski, Joseph Lob-enthal Jr., and Jules Zanger.Although the Review publisheswriters from all over the countryand trys to avoid a “regional” out¬look, it is particularly interestedin receiving top - flight studentmaterial.Page 10 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, December 2, 19V BRIGHTEN EPTHOSE GIFTS...with colorful wrapping, intune with the holiday spirit.We have in stock a gayassortment of ChristmasWrapping Papers, Ribbonsand seals.SEE THEM AT OURGIFT COUNTERThe booh store also offersfree ffift wrapping servicefor all items purchased inthe storeUof CBOOKSTORE5802 ElKs Ave. Queens . . .(Continued from Poge 1)organization, from men’s andwomen’s dorms to political andeducational clubs. All students areinvited to vote.The third all-campus C-Danceto be sponsored by Student Unionthis quarter, will be a gala affairreplete with everything includingdoor prizes, which will be awardedto the 400th, 500th, and 600thpersons to arrive.Miss University of Chicago willbe led to the stage to the accom¬paniment of a drum and buglecorps, specially selected for theoccasion. The dance will last from9 p.m. until 1 a.m. Saturday, theprice—75 cents. As an added at¬traction, a prominent visitor toChicago will act as master ofceremonies and will crown theQueen. The contestants for the titleand their sponsoring organiza¬tions are: Patti Bilzi, Mortar¬board; Alice Blake, VincentHouse; Shirley Breslow, GatesHail; Sheila Briskin, MeadeHouse; Adaleen Burnette, WAA;Clair Coren, Tau Sigma Upsilon;Diane Danielson, Acro-theatre;Chair Davidson, Nu Pi Sigma;Suzzy Haggerty, Green Hall; JeanJohnson, Foster Hall; AnshuyaJoshi, Hindustan Students’ As¬sociation; Marilyn Kolber, DeltaSigma; Noreen Novick, IZFA;Joan Palovick, SDA; Toni Pen¬nington, Channing Club; JanetRobin, Wyvern; Martha Ross,Kelly;Natasha Sobotka, Young Demo¬crats; Florence Stoneman, YoungRepublicans; Valerie Traut, AVC;Diane Walz, Political Forum ;Nancy Wong. Ywr\’, SandraZimberoff, Linn House. UNESCO ...(Continued from Poge 1)tory, appealed the ruling to theassembly.When the appeal was lost, Ja¬cobs rose to his feet shouting: “Ifthis is UNESCO’s idea of democ¬racy, Poland is leaving!!’’ And thePolish delegation walked out ofthe hall.The delegates returned to a ban¬quet the following day with a songcomposed especially for the occa¬sion:(Tune: Battle Hymn of the Republic)Mine eyes have seen the ending of thetension committee report.They have driven out us Marxists andall others of our sort,But to each and all we give a heartycommunistic snort,For the masses will prevail.Chorus:Dialectical materialism (three times) For the masses will prevail.We left the filthy capitalistic meetlhall last night.As they laid upon the table every s<blance of the right.But soon they will be cringing ’nethe proletarian might.For the masses will prevail.(Chorus)The position of member nati(was dropped at the last plemsession S.unday, and student impmentation of UNESCO’s prognon campus communities was dcussed. The executive board, coposed of members representing irespective member nations in iexecutive board of UNESCO pner (of which Poland is one) gja general evaluation of the c(ference.eye restI LIKE CHESTERFIELDTHEY'RE BRATO."Copjrrtpu 1^49, Ljccm ft Myiu Tomcoo Co. ^ .STARRING INCmCAGO DEADLINEA PARAMOUNT PICTURE/ /A/ /IA7FA/CAS CO/I£G£S. mr// THF TOP M£N //V SPOPTSmm r/i£ HouYwooD stapsFriday# Decamber 2, 1949 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page IfPlacement service aids students1i A vital student need is 'beingserved by the Office of VocationalGuidance and Placement here oncampus. This office has three dif¬ferent and important functions inhelping the student. They are:(1) vocational guidance. (2)placement of graduates in full¬time positions in teaching andbusiness, and (3) placement ofstudents in part-time jobs.The average student will prob¬ably have his first contact withthis office in vocational guidance.Tliis program provides interviews,standardized tests, evaluation ofresults of the tests together withthe data of personal history, andcounseling#. This service is open tostudents and any individuals notconnected with the Universitywho wish this type of guidance. Itis helpful also to employers for advice in the selection of person¬nel. There is a fee connected withthis guidance service. The place¬ment services of the office areavailable to both students andemployers without charge.Connects students with jobsOnce in school, many studentsfind it necessary to find part-time work to supplement their in¬come or savings. This office makesthe contact between the employerand the student looking for work.Solicitation for job openings ismade through personal contactwith employers, through newspa,-per advertisements, through let¬ters, and through special types ofpublicity activity.In spite of these efforts that arebeing made to secure part-timework, the students applying out-AVC(Continued from Page 1)tally, had been declared def.eatedafter a recount.Delegates who claimed their bal¬lots had been changed went tocourt and obtained a court ordercertifying the original tally, rec¬ognizing the impossibility of elect¬ing convention delegates by PR inview of the time the order was is¬sued, but ordering that membersat large of the National PlanningCommittee be chosen by PR. Sincethis would have resulted in theelection of non-IP members ofNPC, a convention rule was pro¬posed by which all candidates mustbe approved by a majority of thenominations committee, on whicheach chapter had a delegate.This rule, admittedly intendedto circumvent PR, was passed bya smashing majority. Thereafterthe opposition appeared resignedto losing on every issue.Two caucusesTwo caucuses were formed bydelegates opposed to the IP lead¬ership. The anti-IP caucus, com¬posed of J,he old Progressive cau¬cus and some former members ofthe Build AVC caucus, was headedby Jack Oordon, chairman of theSoutheast region, who ran against Straight for national chairman.Some dissident anti-IPs, mostlyformer Build AVCers, formed theGrass Roots caucus, whose chiefstrength was the Minnesota andRhode Island delegations Threemembers of the new NPC, includ¬ing two regional chairmen, wereassociated with the Grass Rootscaucus but received IP support.Lyle Gumm of Chicago waselected chairman of the East Cen¬tral region. Two other Chicago¬ans, Harry S e 11 e r y and BobSchwartz, were elected membersat large of NPC.The UC delegation was headedby Jean Jordan, chapter vice-chairman. Other delegates wereMalcolm Sharp, Cliarlotta Evans,Walter Hoffman, Leonard Wigon,Pat Foley,* Bob Suilivant, GethardWeinberg, and Ruth Wedge. Chap¬ter representatives on conventioncommittees were Weinberg, inter¬national affairs; Foley, domesticaffairs; Wigon, veterans' affairs,and Hoffman, nominations.Workshop sessions, which hadbeen held at previous AVC con¬ventions. were not held this year.Except for the banquet, the con¬vention was devoted entirely toplenaiy and committee sessionsand the inevitable caucuses.Principal speaker at the ban¬quet was Thorfin Hogness, direc¬tor of the UC Institute of Radio-biology and Biophysics, who at¬tacked the program of atomic se¬crecy as retarding research. number the number of job avail¬able. Nevertheless, students areadvised to register with this of¬fice because they may possess aspecial skill or may be able to fittheir school schedules into an un¬usual work program.Seeks jobs for graduatesThe Office of Vocational Guid¬ance and Placement also fulfillsa function which every studentwill be forced to face on his grad¬uation—that of findings the full¬time employment for which hehas been preparing at school. Thisoffice makes contacts with firmsrecruiting college graduates sothat those firms visit the campusto interview prospective employ¬ees. In addition to this, jobs arefound through advertising andpublicizing in newspapers and byletters to specific firms and per¬sons employing college people.Letters. #.(Continued from Page 4)of native totalitarian tendencies,e.g.; Broyles.As a spokesman for the Inde¬pendent Student League, let memention that our policy is that:‘TSL is opposed to any walkoutsfrom SG meetings when these aredesigned to break a quorum andprevent a decision by the Assem¬bly. The intentional breaking ofa quorum in a representative as¬sembly is an undemocratic sub¬stitute for responsible leadershipwhen done by the majority andan equally undemocratic substi¬tute for constructive oppositionwhen done by the minority.”—Herbert Vetter, PresidentPolite requestMay I, through the courtesy ofyour newspaper, direct an inquiryto your readers?I am a stamp collector and haverecently be^vn a special collec¬tion of Uniied States stamps. Iam wondering whether, amongyour student readers, there mightbe any who woQld be interestedin an exchange of stamps withthis part of the wwld and whomight thus help me to improvemy American collection. I .shall bev%ry glad to send them Australianstamps, and others of Pacificcountries or from Europe, in ex¬change.—-H. W. ArndtCapital’s SensationalTravel Bargain I7/tf NI6HTHAWKRtrcaachLOW-COST 4-ENGINE SERVICENEW Y0RK...$29««Loovo 1:00 o.in. Only 4 hn. 5 min. (Rail Coocfi; $27.30, 16 hrt. 25 min.)WASHINGTON .$24»> PITTSBURGH .Leave 1:00 a.m. Only 2 hrs. 10 min.(Rail Coach: $14.10, 0 houniLeove 12:15 a.m. Only 4 hrs. 5 min.(Rail Coach: $23.03, IS hrt. 40 min.)CLEVEUND . . DETROIT .... $8’^Leave 12:15 a.m. Only 1 hr. 17 min.(Rail Coach: $8.34, 5 hoars)Leave 12:15 a.m. Only 2 hrs. 16 min.(Rail Coach: $10.28, 5 hrs. 35 min.)This it the Original 'Nighihawlc" Aircoaeh...UNtXCEllED in Experience, Reliahility, PopularityCapital carries MORE Airceach passengers than any other oirline in the U. S. A.(AM fort plus federal taxiAiMinitsPOR RESERVED SEAT TICKETS: 144'S. Clark St. A Stevens■ Hease. PHONE: DEarbom 2-S~'~or your travel agent.Hotel 8l The Palmer FLY HOME FOR CHRISTDtAS- HR AMEimANY DAY from Dec. 15 thrv Jon. 5 • FrecT^nocks en route• 4 Engine DC-4 Skymaster Planes • Stewordess on eoch plone • Free$50,000 insurance policy (Lloyds) on each ticket • Non-stop flightsXo N. Y. Lv. Chi —11:30 a.m. $28.70 1-way(La Guardia) 4 HR. Lt. N.Y. — 8:00 p.m. $54Ji2 R. T. ALLTo Los Angeles Lt. Chi —11:59 p.m. $90X5 1-way FARESSan Francisco 10 HR. Lt. Calif. —9:00 p.m. $172.61 R. T. INCLUDETo Miami Lt. Chi —11:00 a m. $51.17 1-way TAX(DC-3 Planes) 7 HR. Lv. Miami—11.00 a.m. $97.22 R. T.Call or see: JAMES LESSLY—241 B-J SiExt. 2648 or3-6000PORTRAITSANDWEDDING'CANDIDSBy^J^aroid Gutliman1508 E. Hyde Pork Blvd.ATI an tic 5-dS06W Tvo -things Gf&cfCollege rnsLYir should knoir!t^ This is a prom trotter. AU she needtfor a tveekend is a hop, sip, and a chump.Thinks colleges are halls of yearning.Usually dances to meet the baud... but goeswild about '^Manhattan's'^ WildUfe ties-%. These are ^Manhattan'^ Wildlife ties.Hottest thing under a collar thisfalL ,Bright colors, gay prints—made to tie right, resist wrinkles.CAMPUS FAVORITETHE MANHATTAN SHIRT COMPANYCopr. 1949, TTie Manhotlon Shirt Co. t ■>: .■'I.'^‘rPage 12 THE CHICAGO MAROONFriday^ Dec. 2 Gary steiner Monday, Dec. 5Newborn Conference meets from1:00 to 1:30 p.m.^n Dora DeLeeHall. At 3:30 p.m., Pediatric Clin¬ical Conference convenes in Bil¬lings P-117, and at 4:30 p.m. inPathology 117, the Clinical Patb.-ological Conference gathers fortheir meeting. The second and third perform¬ances of “Julius Caesar” by UTare at 3i30 and 8:30 p.m. in Mart-del Hall. Matinee price is 35 cents;evening, 70 cents. Jacques Maritain, professor ofphilosophy, Princeton, will deliverthe first of the series of six lec¬tures on “Man and the State” at4:30 p.m. in Mandel Hall.An Open House will be givenby YWCA in the east lounge ofIda Noyes from 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.today.* * * “Coronation Ball” will finish theSU schedule of C-Dances for thequarter in grand style when MissUC of 1949 is officially crowned.Jim Barclay’s, orchestra will pre¬side at theT royal affair from 9:00p.m. to 12:00 a.m. in Ida Noyes.Admission is 75 cents. Tuesday, Dec. 6A Hockey-Volleyball Tea will befeatured as members of WAA meetin Ida Noyes at 3:30 p.m. today. \ * . *“The Roosevelt Story” will bepresented by SDA in Social Science122 at 4:00, 7:15. and 9:00 p.m.Admission is 40 cents. “Dance La Belle,” InternationalHouse’s quarterly dance, will beheld at IH Assembly Hall from9:00 p.m. to 12:00 a.m. Extraattraction is a genuine Frenchvariety show. The $1.00 admissioncharge includes corsage and re¬freshments. Dress optional. “Function of the Ear in Health,”and “Errors of Refraction” arethe current in the Human Devel¬opment Film Series. Tliey will beshown in Judd 126 at 3:30 p.m.Admission is 14 cents for all non¬members.Jacques Maritain presents thesecond of the Walgreen Founda¬tion lectures oh “Men and theStates” at 4:30 in Mandel Hall.Admission free.A “Research Report on Studiesin Frustration Tolerance” will.bepresented to the Human Develop¬ment Seminar in Judd 126 at 4:30p.m. This will follow tea in Judd112 at 3:45 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 4Morning worship services, withThe Rev. John B. Thomsonpreaching, begin at'11:00 a.m. inRockfeller Memorial Chapel. Student Union will hold an openmeeting in the SU office of IdaNoyes at 7:00 p.m. tonight.YPA presents YP night featur¬ing food, records, singing, cards,and a lecture on Greece by aGreek student. Festivities begin at6:15 p.m.; in Ida Noyes. Admis¬sion free. ^* * *“Winged Victory” will be shownat 7:00 and 9:00 p.m, by the B-JCouncil in the Judson Lounge. Thecharge is 10 cents. “ACTH and Cortisone: A NewEra in Medicine” will be discussedon the University of ChicagoRoundtable broadcast on NBC at12:30 p.m. (CST) A testimonial meeting on Chris¬tian Science will be held by theChristian Science Organization inThorndike-Hilton Chapel at 7:30p.m. Public invited.A dance and refreshments makeup the Vincent House program tobe held in the Judson Libraryimmediately following the B-Jmovie. Admission is 20 cents.“Julius Caesar” will be the Uni¬versity Theater production when,the Mandel Hall curtain goes upat 8:30 p.m. tonight. Seats are75 cents. A carillon recital will be playedby Frederick L. Marriott from 4:00to 4:30 p.m. in Rockfeller Chapel.Admission free.« • *“Julius Caesar” makes his lasttwo appearances on the UT Man-del Hall stage at 3:30 and 8:30p.m. Matinee, 35 cents; evening,70 cents.* • *A symposium, “Social Signifi¬cance of the Kinsey Report,” willbe held by SYL at 4:00 p.m. inIda Noyes. Admission is free. Wednesday, Dec. 7A carillon recital will be playedby Frederick L. Marriott in Rocke¬feller Chapel from 4:30 to 5 p.m.Admission free.A classical record concert willbe presented by YPA in Ida Noyesat 6:30 p.m. Admission free.“Rembrandt” will be shown onthe Rosenwald 2 screen at 7:00end 9:15 pTm. by UWF. Admissionis 40 cents.NAACP Fall Get-together Partybegins at 8:30 p.m. at 5552 S,Ellis Ave. Admission is 30 cents.* • « Election of officers at 5:00 p.m.will precede a 35 cent ChanningClub supper. A discussion on“Religion and the Schools” willfollow.Saturday, Dec. 3Medical and Surgical ChestConference will convene in M-4Classroom at 10:00 a.m.* * .Acrotheater performs at theHyde Park YMCA at 7:30 and9:30 p.m. tonight. Admission foradults is 70^ cents; for children,25 cents. Sunday Night Supper followedby singing and recreation is onthe YWCA roster for 6:00 p.m.at Chapel House. The charge is60 cents.* * •Noyes Box, the last dance onthe campus this quarter, will againfeature Stu Clayton’s orchestra.Dateless dancing will last from8:00 to ll;00 p.m. Admission formen is 35 cents, for women, 5cents. “The Role of Labor in the Com¬munity” is the topic of a discus¬sion to be led by A. A. Liverlightwhen AVC meets at 7:30 p.m. inClassics 17. There is no admissioncharge.Thursday, Dec. 8UC Swimmers will meet Gusta-vus Adolphus College in Bartlettpool at 3:30.The third Jacques Maritain lec¬ture on “Man and the State” willbe given in Mandel Hall at 4:30p.m. Admission free.Give Books For ChristmasFOR THE CHILDRENGive Your Child's TalenfEvery Chance to Crow• YOUR CHILD IS AN ARTISTby Arthur Zaidenberg. A notedpointer shows you how to encour-oge ond develop your child's or-tistic obiiity. Dozens of how-to-do-it drawings ond reproductions,and advice about moteriols ondtechniques. Over 100 illustrotions,mony in full color. Sturdily bound.Lorge size $3.95 FOR MOTHERJEHISII COOKERY 3.00by Leah LeonardTraditional recipes from manynations gathered into one col¬lection.THE LOVE LETTERS OFMARK TWA1!V 5.00by Dixon WeeterAn intimate glimpse into theprivate life of a great writer.EIVCYCLOPEDICCOOKBOOK 4.05Everything the beginning house¬keeper needs to know about buy¬ing and serving foods. FOR FATHER , .A TREASURY OF GREATREPORTING 5.00175 masterpieces of eyewitnessjournalism.THE COMPLETE SHER¬LOCK HOLMES 2.95All the Holmes novels plus 56shorter works.T9IE AUTOBIOGRAPHYOF WILL ROGERS 3.00Selections from Will Rogers'newspaper column and from ar¬ticles he wrote.ESQUIRE’S HANDBOOKFOR HOSTS 3.50The perfect gift for every man.FOR THE WHOLE FAMILYII¥ OUR IMAGE 10.0026 selections from the Old Testament rearrangedf and presented in a startling new dramatic form.MY AM^RICAIY HERITAGE 3.00An unusually good collection of stories for.everyone in the family. *We also have in stock a complete selection ofbeautiful art portfolios, priced from SI to SlOUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUE Friday, December 2, I94<STUDENTS&FACULTY:S|00GreasingCas |Re|t.| 23'*'^ Less 1c DiscountEthyl 24Less 1c DiscountOIL CHAIYGE9eService CallsMUseum 4-9106 Permolube $170Quaker State ... 1Isa-Vis $165Palorine . ... ... 1UNIVERSITYSuper Service Station5601 Cottage GroveHe never dreamed he’d save so muchgoing home by GREYHOUND:Low Fares Like These to Ail America!Destination OneWay(*) RoundTrip(*) Destination OneWay(*) RoundTrip(*Baltimore .$13.45 $24.25 Mpis.-St. Poul 7.30 13.15Boston 31.90 Muskegon 4.2015.30 7.6CBuffalo . 9.45 17.05 New York City 27.55Cincinnoti . 5.55 10.00 Phiiodelphio 14.50 26. KClevelond . 6.30 11.35 Pittsburgh 8.55 15.40Detroit 9.85 Rochester, N. Y. ,,, 10.85 19.55Duluth 8.50 15.30 St. Louis, Mo 4.95 8.95Grond Rapids, Mich. 4.00 7.20 Syracuse 11.70 21.KIndionopolis . 3.55 6.40 Toledo, 0 4.30 7.75Madison, Wis 4.45 Washington, D. C. . . 13.75 24.75(*) Plus Federal TaxIMPORTANT!John Stocks Travel Service5801 ELLIS AVE.(Administration Bldg.)Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext. 3496Mr. R. B. Meyer, Greyhound Passenger Representative will be at theobove address on Dec. 9th and Dec. 12th, 1949, to ossist you in yourtronsportotion orrongements.OTHER CONVENIENT DEPOTS12th & Wobosh — Phone WAbosh 2-7700170 North Stote St. — Phone WAbosh 2-77176302 Stony Island — Phone HYde Pork 3-51697834 Stony Islond — Phone REgent 4-7410Pine, Modern Coaches — Frequent Well-Timed Schedules