University of Chicago, January 20, 195C 31 SG power to make rules*‘SG is ready to make the next step,** stated Frank Loganin an exclusive interview with the MARCXJN. The next stephas been outlined in a series of proposals which, if passed,would give SG the power to charter campus organizations^and to make the rules regulating the organizations. Astudent-faculty court would be established to try and pun¬ish offenders.Students return from journeyto Washington full of hopeBy HENRY LARSONFor those students of the UC delegation who were new to the workings of a pressuregroup, it was a highly educational if not exciting experience to play a part in the mobil¬ization and gathering of 3,500 delegates representing 33 states in Washington, D. C., lastweekend, pressing for passage of federal civil rights legislation.-The UC delegation of about40 students represented the NAACP chapter at the UC.The mass civil rights mobilization was a gathering of the delegates of about 70 or¬ganizations such as NAACP, Jewish war veterans, many unions, and fraternities. TheUC group joined with 65 arrival and pressure of theother persons in a three-bus 3500 delegates may well havecaravan from Chicago to turned the tide of battle.Washington, D. C. Once in Wash- There was some complaint aboutIngtoii, more citizens from Illinois the methods and policy of thebanded with them forming a total higher echelons of NAACP, thestate delegation of 250. The awe main sponsoring organization of^ _inspired by this large number was the mobilization. Outright efforts Campus Chest Fund drivelo.st when the Maryland and New were made to exclude persons of last Wednesday over 1,000York delegation arrived with 700 “communistic tendencies.* C r e - volunteer student workers begandentials and registration were re- a 16-day experiment which willfused to 400 persons because of determine the effectiveness of thethis past four months’ planningfew weeks when congress acts The young people attending the Tl^ University of Chicago Cam-lew wecKs wnen cong^ss acis . ^ ^ ^ . whirh the UC PUsXJhest is an organization rep-on the Fair Employment Practices moDUization 01 wnicn tne uu interested chari-bill. The delegates spent two days delegation was a substantial part ^ erouns on camnus It is ameeting with and calling their objected to the tactics and atti- groups on campus. It is ameeting witn ana calling ineir NA4CP streamlined effort designed tosenators and representatives to roae 01 tne same lew 01 isAAur . o^arA nf thA nAAd andaccount leadership who believed “youth ^ “ k,should be followers — guided bv y®^ responsibility, and to enableThere are three steps which you to discharge that responsibil-must be overcome if FEPC is to b^the excTus^^^^ i^y efficiently and effectively. Itb6 law. First, the defeat of Rep. ^00^ from the « » “““«<» bringing to-Cox-s resolution to restore the ^ a reaction to this atti-“bottle-up" system whereby the ° comLtte^ of fund-raising personnel and re¬rules committee of the Senate l^e inree-bus delegation of which ““rces of aU of the participaUngwould be very likely to pigeon-hole three bus delegation or wnicn groups.anv lAfyuiaHnn fhm mairtt-utr /%f hi about a third wcre UC studcuts . ,any legislation the majority of its Stress 'Reflex fivmg'12 members might not like, viz— elected itself &s a permanent com- addition to its being a unl-FEE>C. Second, the recognition of a ficd effort, the Chest is unique inMichigan Rep. Lesinski bv Speak- coallUon already established j,er Sam Rayburn when he seeks Jor clorer cooperation among the youth. At last...unified funddrixe hits UCWith the opening of the A brief, containing the pro¬posals and the main argu¬ments, has been drawn up bythe SG executive council. The'statement is being presented toDeans Strozier and Bergstresserand W. Birenbaum, assistant tothe Deans, at a meeting this aft¬ernoon. On Thursday, Jan. 26,the general assembly will vote onthe proposals.Wont SG Chartering PowersThe first article proposes thatSG have the power to charter stu¬dent organizations. Exceptions tothe rule—organizations which aresubsidized by th.e University to theextent of 50 per cent or more oftheir budget and organi2;ationswhich are an integral part of thehousing system.In order to carry out the char¬tering functions, a permanentcommittee on organization will beestablished. This committee con¬sists of a voting group of five stu¬dents and two administration rep¬resentatives and a maximum ofand 1500 respectively.The success of the “march” on“Wa-siiington will be determined ina Dorm openingsThe University House Systemannounced this week that itwill accept applications forpositions on its staff for theacademic year 1950-1951. Jobsinclude resident head, assistanthead, and junior assistant head.Resident heads are providedwith furnished suites and meals.Assistants get room and meals,and junior assistants room only.Applicatidn fm-ms are avail¬able at the Dean’s Office, Ad¬ministration Building 301. Thedeadline is Feb. 10. four non-voting faculty and adkministration members.Embryos must petitioNUnder the proposed plan, em¬bryonic organizations submit theirapplications stating purpose, of¬ficers, sponsor, and membershipto the organizations committee.The committee then recommendsaction to the assembly. The finsddecision is made by SG by a ma¬jority /vote.The present system stipulatesthat new organizations presenttheir application to John L. Berg¬stresser, assistant dean of stu¬dents. If the application complieswith student regulations and “rec¬ognized standards of good taste,•Strozier and Bergstresser grantthe new group a charter.Students will form courtThe organizations committee Isdesigned to act as a warning sig¬nal if groups violate regulations.However, if words prove insuf¬ficient, article two provides for astudent - faculty court with theDean of Students acting as chiefjustice.The court will hear all casesreferred to it by the Assembly.After due deliberation, the courtmay acquit, put an organizationon probation with set terms, andsuspend or revoke a charter. Thephrase “set terms” means, amongother things, that suspension orprobation must be for a definiteperiod of time, not to exceed theremainder of the academic year.The future of the plan dependsprimarily on the Administration’sblessing. If they are properlyanointed, the SG exec plans to setup a series of constitutionalamendments which the studentbody will vote on at spring quar¬ter elections.the floor to present the FEPC billo» Jan. 23rd when the House goesInto session. And last, the finalvote by congress on the FEPC billitself.It is difficult to guess whetherFEPC will pass or not. With so 4 to Mademoiselle attempting for the first time tohave every student on campuspersonally contacted during 'thedrive which ends Feb. 3.The Chest also had as educa¬tional program closely linked withthe fund drive. The purpose ofthis program is to substituteFour UC girls have been ap¬pointed to the staff of Mademoi-manv indirect orocedural wavs of selle magazine. They are Ann Col- '‘thought-stimulated action’ forkilling thrSn o^ stamU irfor lar. former MAROON copy edi- the “Reflex giving” which so oftenan eternity, it will depend on the tor, Rozanne Glass, Freda Gould, accompanies a fund drive. 'Thathonesty and integrity of our sena- ^ oinh T nnriPAn C^est wants to solicit fundstors and representatives. ‘ , on the basis that the donor isIf the FEPC should be passed aware of the needs that exist andmuJh of success should ^ is gloving not because he feels hecredited to the efforts of this civil magazine calls this battalion their ought to but because he wants to.rights mobilization. The propi- College Board.Student forum goes all outin tourneys and seminars Seven organizations to benefitParticipating in the Chest areCARE, Community Fund, HillelFund, and WSSF. Proceeds of theChest will be apportioned to theabove four campus organizationsas well as to Foster Parents, Inc.,Provident Hospital, and DisplacedA busy Week for Student Forum will be climaxed this eve- ^^students interested in securingning when two teams consisting of Fred White, Stanley further information about theDurka, Dick McConnell, and Roy Greenaway debate Notre drive may obtain such at th©Dame at South Bend, Ind. Subject for the debate will be campus chest office or at thethe nationalization of the basic non-agricultural industries, booths which will be set up inTuesday Ted Wiley and Merrill Freed debated the Uni- Mandei and Cobb,versity of Wisconsin at Madison, while White, Durka, Me- ^^Connell and Greenaway de- . UOUglaS <WantSWalgreen series Russia includedresumed again Nash s 'Nixie' debut;competitors spy agogaBY JIM r >Owner of the most charming spy of the week: Stude-baker. Studebaker’s man swore on a stack of dictionariesthat his operations were entirely spontaneous and unau¬thorized, but there he was Wednesday, Jan. 11, at the intro¬ductory showing' of the “Nixie” (NXI for Nash, experi¬mental, and international), the potential little car of to¬morrow.T^ Nixie (whose lacquered Valletta speaks fluent French andfinish can withstand con tin- J^aiian, but no English,ued exposure to highly con- prom the remarks that this re¬centrated alcoholic vapors) made porter heard, most of the observ-its Chicago debut ii\ ^he ers rated the car with considerableHotel surrounded and beautified gyg appeal and much purse ap-by piles of brown bottles, cans of ($950.$!,OOO). The car Usterno, and stacks _ of seashore roomy enough for two large peo-smelling hors ’d’ouvres pie, but all vigorous activitieshere atbated KalamazooChicago.Wednesday evening HermanFiner continued the series of Stu¬dent Forum seminars by dealing A proposed extension of the At¬lantic Pact to include Russia andRalph Bunche, UN special coun- the rest of the world wUl be thewith the problem of freedom in selor, will be the Walgreen Foun- subject of a lecture to be given bythe planned economy. dation’s spring quarter lecturer. Senator Paul H. Douglas underNext Wednesday Milton Fried- subject will be “Man, Democ- the auspices of the International_ .1, t . 4.W Sind Peace.** Another speak- House Council on Sunday, Janu-an will leau a discussion on the g,. ^j^g series is Hans Morgen- ary 22. The meeting, which is openconcentration in American indus- thau, of the political science de- to the public, will be held in thetry. partment, who will talk on the International House Assembly( The U. of C. has accepted In- Foreign Policy of the U.S.'* Hall at 3:30 p.m.quartcr’s series was can- Senator Douglas is the Demo-vitations to the St. Thomas tour- ggjjg^ because of the death of Jo- cratic senator from Illinois and isnament at St. Paul on March 2, 3. seph A. Schumpeter, scheduled to a UC economics professor on leave.and 4, the Georgetown tourna- speak on “American Institutions of absence.ment at Washington on March 23, Economic Progress.’* The Douglas, who has been termed.91 on HaFvard professor died at his a “maverick” by Time magazine24. and 2b. and to the Big Ten Connecticut the day be- In a recent biographical sketch,toui nament at Bloomington, Ind., fQj.g ^ present his first dubs bts proposed pact the “Uni-«n March 31. lecture. versal Defense Pact.** I looked over the shoulder of such as wrestling within its con-Darwin Bell (the man drawing the fines must be postponed till a moreStudebaker pay check — an ex- appropriate place can be foundUC’er) who was as thorough and (gee Nash advertisements). Alsounblushing as a census-taker. His unpopular with young lovers willnotes pointed out that the car has be the “floor” style gear shift (thisroom for only two people, no glove type of gear shift used to be re¬compartment (that’s a place where sponsible for many broken ribs),you find every thing except gloves), as for “JB Jr.,” he will beis short and maneuverable enough pleased with the 35-50 miles perto appeal to women drivers in gallon of gas. And the modest 60-traffic and for easy parking, and 70 miles per hour should be satis-with suitable camouflage would be factory—indeed, if the fire is outdandy for lovers to out-maneuver before you get there at that speed,.the city cops in the local parks. it probably wasn’t worth seeingSince the car’s power plant came anyway,from Italy, Professor Valletta, If they call you “Flash,” you’llpresident of the Fiat company in like the convertible the best. IfItaly, was a guest at the showing. you’‘re the conservative type, theIn Italy, Fiat is as important' as style can be a coupe or roadster.GMC and US Steel combined are Stop! Don’t reach for yourhere in the States. A couple of pocketbook yet. The car is onlyhigh-spirited guests walked up to designed—not tooled. Mr. GallupValletta, leaned close with a busi- was busy, and so the company isness-like air of confidence, plucked making its own survey before conv-the floating designs from the air, pleting production plans. 'and carried on 15 minutes of Nash motors insists that the carclever repartee. After thev left, will be complete with engine, rearValletta’s “guide” told me that axle, and is guaranteed to back up.Fage 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, January 20, 1950^l£jl**sJ***"* C«f^^Piri«iScc^'‘'aVWi*boldti*hMidtt: ‘HANINE TllCU’k WriU lily kMl, Im . Nyt P. f379 Inuhrif. Rf« Ttrfc tl <SCI, contestoffers cash nose .and go . on; stopvandv^really^tm '•• .»«■”. . think. 4t-might giveYDs Otl^ prmuries "^^n^nk'irnmnlng low.■ '»; “ S cV*Mr^d’i?ttve T„ field, dfei.,' of the .anth'ro^logx;.Civiiian be'fen3e>r^g the war,and discoveries ‘in^.cthe -^^sciences^^ »v ess -S^SfuSW AM-ct^tActoday ^ITopic for/discussiorfMjrthe.ppen ," meeting of the^'Young^ DemocratsPolitically inclined students in *will concern ‘primary e'^ecf,Kns^ J^CCL^t^Ti S .mpears.thei Collegea chancpin the 1950the PoliticalThe,the originor functioning"'^ddea a «r,t prIze,of *150. a Vsecpndt pnize of $.75 andprize of $25 are offered. The com- *<v.xvaaov, The^ title iridicates the'^-booklet•petition is. open tp all ^ students > . • aims' to evaluate .ourrent't^trends".Ih the College of the Uniyersity Student-S>tedG?l Plcttp ~ ' 'of Chicago ,w^o are registered dur- ' ‘ 'ing both thP winter and . spring UC students, "^who^haye jilwaysquarters of " 1950, excluding, only been on the. receiving-enp^ of the very, .r^eadaWe.those who have won ”pri^s in Socratic approach ih,.discussions, "earlier years. . , nowJudgment of the papers will bpbased on the evidence they give d^.tioriof the waiter’s ability to formulate coPrsesand to distinguish the several ele-ments of the problem, to ^sess^ niqufes6ie relevant evidence,, to, appraiseal'ternatiye" solutions, and to or-ganize and present data and con-elusions clearly and cogently. * Students in^rested in woi-.xiie,.The official announcement with ® the%^magazine .are* asked" to;, ^me oinciai announcement, witn . ,, nVactlre 'sessions, and i Vv,ii /studied;b€ available at the Administra-tion Building, Room 3. Students ^jolihwho wish to enter the competition g^^feust-file their applications in the shoui¥Administration Building between sou%h Water-^fSet?*’Jan. 24 and Mar. 3. ?Applicants mu.st also makp. \Yith- Sauermannledds class:f\r «irnri>mpnr- mnif’nrinor r, > i.i.s? v. ^ l''fihr^Twa7nnrniirnri'E«'nlC5^ j,v^^^i^^^SS''^:|i^^feiy-^|^pm^J,an^ '/2¥ tON%fMrj^ff/d1eal|^tlStheTbasicipfd^S’ ■■ .'-./'.Si .■Friday, January^20, 1950 THE CHICAGO MAROON Paga 9Luther Adams givesWestminster lectureNo queen forIC formal tonightInterclub Council will give theirannual shindig at the ShorelandHotel tonight, sincopation will be Professor Luther Adams delivered the second of a seriessupplied by Eddy James and his of lectures on moral problems in America to the Westmin-band. ster Fellowship last Wednesday evening. He pointed outThe dance has two notable fea- ^^0 differences between ethical ideas and the prevailingtures. First, there will be no queen, competitive morals in our society.The series was initiated by Professor James H. Nicholsking, or other honorary person¬start untu ten, only an hour be- spoke on the birth Protestant ethics and their his-fore the guests leave the cocktail torical development. Theparties for the dance. next lecture will be given This will be followed on Peb.^ 15Arrangements have been made Feb. 1 by Dr. Heinz Kohut, ^ith a talk by Prof. David Riess-by IC’s social chairman, Barbara Medical School, on “Psy- subject will be “The Con-Kenyon. chology and Individual Ethics.** Individual Ethicsand Group Standards.’* The finalmeeting on March 1 will be apanel discussion on all of the sub¬jects treated in the series.It's not too early for your Christmas Portrait, atPHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREET**Take cigarettei, for instance. It has been recognized bp'eminent nose and throat specialists that there fg a differenceamong cigarettes^ There*s NO CIGARETTE HANGOVERwhen^ you smoke Philip Morris because they have beenproved definitely less irritating, definitely milderthan any other leading brand. Now, to defineNO CIGARETTE HANGOVER in the fulU'^t sense of the term. •In short, Phiup Morris is America*! FinestCigarette. Try *em . •. find out for yourself.PHILIP MORRIS Maroon andSQ will heartales of woeIf you’ve lost your bosom buddy,or if you can’t afford a be^ tocry in (to), the MAROON and SGare ready to punch your card andlisten to your sad, original tale.A “gripe box,’*-the first of alitter, is on the information deskin the Reynolds Club. Any com¬plaint, or suggestion, about theUniversity policy or service, SG,or any aspect of student life issuitable material for contribution.It will be kept confidential—all“donators’* are requested to signtheir name and address and phonenumber so that, if necessary, ad¬ditional information may be ob¬tained.If present plans are OK’d, sim¬ilar boxes will soon appear inCobb hall, SS 122, and B-J.With a favorable reaction fromthe students, meaning lots ofcomplaints and suggestions, per¬manent boxes of a heavier con¬struction will soon replace thosealready designed.Procrastination on your partwill kill the whole thing now—sowrite out your “gripes’’ pronto.Maroons dropsecond in rowThe Maroons suffered theirfifth defeat in their last sevengames when the Redbirds ofNorth Central rode handily to a63-50 advantage Wednesday nightat Naperville. North Central ledat the half 39-29.For Chicago, Karish, who net¬ted 13, and Georcaris, who hit for10, were high. Weldy and Lalinskyled the winners with 22 and 13points, respectively. The teamsmeet Tuesday, Feb. 21, here, for areturn game. Travel office aidsstudent wanderersA foreign travel information office has recently openedits doors to aid UC students and faculty members who wantto travel abroad this summer. The office, located in Rey¬nolds 304, is sponsored by the commission for internationalaffairs of ^the NS A committee of Student Government.Hours are 12:30-2:30 p.m. on Monday, Wednesday, andFriday, and 4:00-5:00 p.m. on Tuesday-and Thursday.In charge of the office is “Wim Heyneker, a Dutch stu- type of program offered. Underdent now studying at UC. this plan, Americans have aHeyneker has a long and active chance to help their fellow stu-record in the field of international dents in other lands by doing ac-student exchange. Two years ago tual work on the rebuilding of fac-he served as U. S. representative tories, by getting in the harvests,with the Dutch Office for Foreign and by helping out with other re-Student Relations, and last year he construction projects,worked in NSA’s International Another opportunity offered toAffairs Office in Cambridge, Mass. U. S. students is the seminar, givenEmphasises intemolionol progrom by various Europe^The NSA travel office here on conducted in English. ThesecaSus wm Place sSfeiL eTpha- ^vaHoH MQA ®sting subjects, and give Ameri-4 X x* 1 iTo.- can students a chance to studyinternational program. This pro- ^ ^ 7gram has been developed in co- “ethods and implemen^ions otoperation with' foreign National »»Bher educationUnions of Students of which NSAis the U. S. equivalent. Tentative arrangements havebeen made to send 800 students toStudents will have the choice of Europe during the summer of 1950.a great variety of foreign travel Costs for the 10-week trip willplans. One of the most popular is ^^^8® from $400 to $700. Studentsthe study tour in which students combine visits to about anyvisit museums, factories, and his- European country, and time sched-torical spots, hear lectures on cur- such that the studentsrent problems, and meet students bave some time to visit friendsof the country they are visiting in travel around on their own. Th©discussion meetings and informal Programs are organized and con-social gatherings. ducted entirely by students. HiisVf«k cmp. cl.<.p«rt souto, xt- V- X Africa, and Latin America will b©Work camps are the cheapest included in the program.Orientotion progroirsThe travel office can also sup¬ply information on programs olother organizations, and on coun¬tries you may plan to visit, aswell as on inexpensive transpor¬tation and how to obtain it.Chicago (50)B F P0Gray,fKarish,fTuck,fGeocarls,gHansen,cDickinan,gBoise,g N.C. (63)BWeldy,f 10Evans,! 1Hoffman,cSpevak,gLalinsky,gBergerBraun,g F P2 3Register club changesAll student organizations arereminded that if there has been achange of officers or membershipin their organization, they shouldsend full particulars to DeanBergstresser’s office in Resmolds202.TYPEWRITERNEED REPAIR?TAKE IT TOU OF CBOOKSTORE Croup returnsfrom sunshineIt was a waterlogged, foot¬sore, calloused, and sun¬burned group that returnedfrom Lower Matecumbe, Florida,to the frigid UC campus Jan. 2,but all were in agreement thattheir encounter with mother na¬ture was most enjoyable.The group did not have to con¬tend with a water shortage. Itwas possible to touch the AtlanticOcean with one hand and at thesame time touch the Gulf of Mex¬ico with the other. Those whodidn’t care to venture into thesalt water had only to wait a fewminutes, and they could swim inthe rain. ^The group worked up appetitesfor peanut butter sandwiches byplaying volleyball. A net washoisted over the abandoned high¬way which served as the frontyard. The hard blowing ocean galegave additional zest to the game,while the severe environmentalconditions of the surrounding un¬derbrush made retrieving the balla difficult task.On to MiamiThen came the revolution. Thecampers washed, shaved, put ontheir clothes, and went to Miami.They pounded the pavements, ategood food, inspected the fishingboats, ate good food, went to Mi¬ami Beach via the picturesqueVenetian Causeway, ate good food,combed the ocean front by'^'alk-ing through the luxurious hotellobbies, and ate good food.Don’t get the wrong idea. ’Thefood at camp was really good.That is—if you like sanded vealchops and salt water soup. Evendormitory food tasted good afterthat. 'When some of the group tiredof the role of campers, they be¬came beachcombers and hitch¬hikers. Along the beautiful coralbeaches of the Keys, they foundcolorful shells of all shr.pes andsizes. They had to be quick ifthey wanted to pick up a shell fora souvenir, otherwise a hermitcrab would walk up,' get in theshell, and crawl away with itWhen the final day of vacationarrived the group broke camp andagain boarded their bus. Every¬one agreed that we could havedone with a little more Floridasunshine, but on the whole, thetrip was a huge success. The staff hopes to conduct orien¬tation programs for students whoare going to the same area bjholding meetings with foreign stu¬dents on campus, showing movie©and distributing literature.Davey speaksto Beacon clubJohn Davey, dean of stu¬dents in the College, thisSunday opens a series of dis¬cussions of r^igion and the mod¬ern world when he discusses “TheCollege Student Faces Religion**at the meeting of Beacon Club, nnewly recognized student organi¬zation.^ Following Dean Davey in theseries will be Professor Kermit ESiyon “Modern Religion and Organ¬ized Labor,’’ President WallaceRobbins on “The Idea of Faithand the Fact of Faith,’’ Dr. LeslieT. Pennington on “Psychiatry andReligion,’’ and Professor AlbertHayes on “Religion and the Arts.**The meetings will be held in JohnWoolman Hall of- the First Uni¬tarian Church, 57th at Woodlawn.Beacon Club, according to itsrecently elected president, CrisRaible, is a free religious fellow¬ship intended primarily for firstand second year college studentswhich welcomes equally Christiansand non-Christians, sk^tics andnon-believers.The basic principles of the clubinclude full freedom of inquiry inreligion, discipleship to advancingtruth, human brotherhood un¬divided by color, class or nation,and allegiance to the cause of aunited world community. HerbertVetter is adviser of the new group.^Cellist gives premiereLeopold Teraspulsky, 27-year-old winner of a New York Phil¬harmonic Symphony scholarship,is giving his Chicago premiereconcert at Orchestra Hall at 8:30p.m.UC students will receive a 50pe» cent ^reduction on tickets,which are $1,25, $1.90, $2.50, and$3.70, tax included.Page ^ THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, January 20, 195CEditorial Letters to the editor...Epistle ♦ . . darkeningIssued once weekly by the publisher. The Chicacro Maroon, at the publicationoffice, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37. Illinois. Telephones: EditorialOffice, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 2056; Business and Advertising Offices, Midwayt-800. Ext. 2055. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions by mail, fl peromnrter, |3 per year.M. EVALINE WAGNEREditor-In-Chief BUD COHENFroduction ManagerMARY DOTYNews Editor VIVIAN WOODCopy EditorROBERT NASSAUFeature Editor DAVID HELBERGPublic Relations DirectorKEN KOENIGSports Editor NICHOLAS CAMPAdvertising ManagerJAMES E. BARNETTBusiness Adviser •AMOCIATB EDITORS: Anne O. Finkelstein. Charier Gaulkin, Ken Koenig,Dave Kliot, Henry W. Larson, James Reid, Jack Spillman, Paul Wilson, CarolYamamoto.■DITORIAL STAFF: Aaron Asher, Howard Bowen, Sheila Briskin, Adaleen Bur-^ nett, Herbert L. Caplan,. Jean Clemons, Ann Collar, Dick Dehaan, Thelma, Destefano, Peter Dugal, Buck Farris, John Forwalter, Donna Fuderer, CharlesGarvin, James Goldman, John Harnishfeger, Drexel Hardin, Jerry Harris,Jean Jordan, Marilyn Kolber, Mildred Lamberty, Nan Lawson, Goldie Lip-schutz, Ruth Lundeen, Terry Lunsford, Janet Lux, Peggy Lynn, Dick Mc¬Connell, Art McKinney, Gloria Michels, Marilyn Mueller, Charles C. Nash,Tom Necheles, Bruce Novograd, John O’Connor, Paul Phillipson, MartinPicker, Neville Ross, Reid Ross, David Ruben, Bernie Sachs, Morton Schagrin,Gilbert Schlectman, Sid Sisk, Larry Sherman, Robert J. Sickels, James Stew¬art, Lisa Stoneman, Dave Storey, Raymond L. Wilkins, Charles Williamson,Leroy Wolins, Edward Wolpert, Frank Wood.PUBLIC RELATIONS STAFF: Joy Edinger, Thomas G. Kern, William Loengood,Paul Taxey, I. Valerie Sayers.Editorial**If under a spirited and intelligent leadership realproblems that face the University of'Chicago studentbody . . . are dealt with honestly and directly, the 'Stu¬dent Government will succeed.”The above quotation is from a MAROON editorial ofJanuary 1947. It was written a few months before the con¬stitution of the Student Assembly was ratified, and for threeyears it has been the measure by which Student Govern¬ment has been judged. However, the standard of actionfixed in 1947 has become in 1950 the description of SGaccomplishment.The Student Assembly has dealt and is dealing hon¬estly and directly with the real problems of the studentbody. It has achieved smooth internal organization. Itsmembership has displayed both interest and activity in mostareas of student concern such as student health, tuition,the curriculum, and academic freedom. The book exchange,low-cost transport, the symphony forum, foreign traveloffice, movie calendar, and other activities have made it anImportant service organization. SG’s activities night andhandbook and the activities information center demon¬strate the assembly’s interest in the overall integration ofthe student body.Expectedly student interest has risen accordingly. Thenumber of non-a&embly SG workers has increased. Morestudents are seeking seats in the assembly, and the votingportion of the electorate has risen to 20 per cent.It may seem odd to point to this 20 per cent turnoutwith pride, but considering the limitations upon SG author¬ity it is amazing. Most of the campus’s politicoswould consider it a “fate worsethan ...” to look “eastward” forguidance. However, they will profitif the surreptiously glance at theactivities of the UC Young Pro¬gressives of America.After comparing this organiza¬tion with their own pet politicalgroup their first emotion mightbe one of envy. Since the latesummer YPA has reversed thepost-election slide in its member¬ship. The youth group’s bank ac¬count is in robust health, the in¬terest and work of its membersis running high, it has an ade¬quate amount of leadership andfor all its organizational meritits political virility is unimpaired.The YP’s have taken standspromptly if not correctly on na¬tional issues and have vigorouslyif not always wisely acted on localand campus problems.Meanwhile the Politics Clubthis quarter has at last shownsigns of awakening from its sum¬mer siesta and the NAACP marchon Washington makes its startfrom a near halt. The CommunistClub which never made muchnoise is even quieter than usual.Its half-brother,* the Labor YouthLeague seemingly designed foraction hasn’t.The Taft-liberal and righterYoung Republican Club emergedfrom its hibernation only to runa candidate for the Miss U of Ctitle. To the surprise of all whoclaimed to know, the gleamingbutton of the Truman-liberal andletter Students For DemocraticAction once climbing to its zenithhas tarnished and sunk below thelapel.If these campus leaders were tolook carefully at/the YP successthey will find a new approachbehind it. Basically it is combin¬ing political activity with a socialwhirl.This type of organizationalstructure recognizes that studentsjoin campus groups to satisfy theirspecial interests and their gre¬garious instincts. By having a beerbust before attempting to bust theevils of the nation they have madeYPA a satisfying extra-curricularactivity.Dances, picnics, hikes, moviesand bowling sessions have addedto the treasury, hiked membershipand in the end increased thepolitical consciousness of the cam¬pus.The last result mentioned isthe most important function pe¬culiar to student political organ¬izations.We want to see SDA, the YoungRepublican’s and LYL and therest make a strong comeback thisquarter. The best hope for theirressurection lies in interested stu¬dents employing the dual approachbeing used by YPA. In the last MAROON, CharlesGarvin reviews The God ThatFailed. He states, “it is an inter¬esting commentary that with thepossible exception of Silone nonethat I know of are making con¬tributions to liberal action today.Wright’s trip to France is astrange finis to his travels.” Gar¬vin is referring to the six authorsof the book.Item—Silone has been one ofthe leaders of Italian socialismsince the liberation. He is todayon the central committee of theUnitary Socialist Party and*edits a weekly newspaper. Item—Louis Fischer is on the NewYork State Committee of theLiberal Party. Perhaps thatdoesn’t fit Garvin’s definition of“liberal action.” Item—I don’tknow what’s strange aboutWright traveling to France, butin France he was active as asupporter and speaker for the *Rassemblement DemocratiqueRevolutionnaire, and also forthe Congress of Peoples AgainstImperialism, which includes allthe African independence move¬ments. Item—Andre Gide, dur¬ing the past two years, has beenone of the participants in abroad committee that has cam¬paigned against the Frenchwar in Indo China. He is alsoone of the sponsors of the Fed¬eration of Spanish Political De¬portees and Internees whichdoes valuable antifascist reliefwork. Item — Stephen Spenderis also one of the directors ofthe above Spanish relief organi¬sation.Moral — Obscure MAROON re¬porters should not make rashstatements about people who havegone through a lot more thanthey have. It would even be a goodidea if they knew what they weretalking about when they revieweda book.Saul Mendelson Mr. Mendelson seenis to havemade a point when he impliesmy definition of ’liberal action*is different from his own.Doesn’t Koestler, the sixth au¬thor, fit into Mendelson’s defini¬tion? That there IS a differenceof opinion on ’liberal action’is evident and that Mr. Mendel¬son’s vindictiveness doesn’t qua¬lify under my definition of ‘in-telligent ‘ political criticism isalso obvious.”The enlighteningEditor’s note: the “obscureMAROON reporter” was availablefor the following quote.“Vindictive against those whodiffer in any way from his posi¬tion and denying the right ofcritics to criticize unless they’have gone through’ something. The MAROON of January i:reports that the UC delegation uthe Civil Rights Mobilization accuses Senator Paul H. Douglas o“straying far from the path ocivil rights.” There is no attempto substantiate this false an(malicious statement. The grou]is either misinformed or ha.s fallen prey to the type of vicioucanard which was so futile during the last election.No one who knows of Sen.Douglas’ long record in thefight for the underdog, or re¬calls his gallant leadership inthe Civil Rights struggle againstthe Dixiecrats on the floor ofthe Democratic Convention, cantake seriously such statements.In the Senate Dougla.s foughtagainst an amendment to thehousing bill because he thoughthousing for Negroes and W’hiteswas more important than fall-. ing into the trap laid by theDixiecrats’ reactionary Republi¬can allies. He has fought forFEPC but has refused to de¬scend to the type of demagoeue-ery with which the “profession¬al liberal” has postponed suchmuch needed legislation for solong.Let those who believe in civi!rights concentrate on the defealof' the unholy alliance of Dixie¬crats and reactionary Republi¬cans, and the election of mor<men like Paul Douglas, ratheithan sniping at a man who ha!done so much for the commorcause.Jack M. SiegelFormer Chairman, Unlversitsof Chicago IndependentStudents for Paul H.Douglas\ TERESA DOLAN DANCING SCHOOL1208 E. 63rii S». (Neor Woodlown)Fail Adult Classes Now Open ~ Beginners and AdvancedWaltz, Fox Trot, Rhumba, etc. 10 Lessons flO.OOJOIN NOW — PHIVATE LESSONSEa.qy - N^airk • Sure - EffirirntDAILY 11 A.M. to 11 P.M. Ph. HYde Park 3-3080Look at this narrow range of responsibility andyou will find the reasons behind the conclusion thatSG has not succeeded in the broadest sense. Though ithas functioned admirably in the areas allotted to it,the assembly has not achieved any great heights as astudent GOVERNMENT. Safety FirstThe student body prosaically accepts the accomplish¬ments, services and competence of its assembly. Both assem¬bly members and their constituents deserve a larger sharein handling affairs that concern them primarily.In general it seems time that the area of Student Gov¬ernment responsibility be enlarged. The student body musthave some measure of democratic control over their ownactivities if SG is to achieve real success.The MAROON Classified AdsTHE EASTERLING STERLING COM¬PANY Is looking lor Intelligent men orwomen with cars to sell sterling silver¬ware by appointment. Average earn¬ings are $125 a week. For details checkNovember, 1949, FORTUNE Magazine.Bor more Information and interview•all Lee Bdelberg, PLaza 2-1919 between12 and 3 p.m. SEWING ALTERATIONS. Hems. etc.Reasonable rates. Edna Warinner, 5623DorcHester. By appointment only. Mu¬seum 4-4680,EXPRESS AND LIGHT HAULING. Will¬ing and courteous service, reasonablerates. Bordone. PLaza 2-9453. •RADIO REPAIR SERVICE—Bring radioto Stan Bristol, Reynolds Club Infor¬mation desk, between 12:30 and 1:30Monday through Friday. HIGH GRADE ROOMS for Universitystudents. Accommodations for men andwomen at Ingleslde Manor, 5125 Ingle-side. MUseum 4-9407.TYPEWRITERS for rent, $2.50 permonth, Livingston 8-3877.106 DERNIER CREPE MULTICOLORKOU6ES — size 34 only — $4.95 — sendcheck or money order — Money backKtrantee If returned In 10 days. BAR¬RA TELL BLOUSES, 5522 Ellis, Chi¬cago 37, Illinois. EXPERT MATHEMATICS tutor. CallFAlrfax 4-5548, Lincoln Turner, MS.WANTED — WOMAN STUDENT. Ex¬change for room and board. Light dutiesfor cheerful seml-lnvalld. Beautiful8. side apartment hotel. OA. 4-1105.WHY BUY ICE’ Rent an elifetiic refrtg-ceator. $4 to $5.50 per month. PUUman$-$824. DOUBLE ROOM—Suitable for coulpe,single; kitchen privileges, reasonable.MI. 3-2956, call Mis. Llph, evenings, 850,Ex. 57. With the recent announcementin the Chicago Tribune of theMissile Whistle, a warning deviceallowing Tribune Tower workersto seek basement shelter fromatom raids. University of Chicagofaculty and students have becomecognizant for the first time of theimminence of atom warfare,J. S. Millspaugh, a studeht inthe College, has advanced a similarsafety plan for the University,which has its theoretical basis ina chance discovery of the Bikiniunderwater atom test. In theBikini blast, a hamster which hadfallen into a flask of heavy waterwas the sole survivor of the USSUtah. The Millspaugh Plan pro¬poses to have the University swim¬ming pools flooded with heavywater the instant our campuswarning is sounded. Immediatelyall students, trained to drop workat the sound of the strains of“Nearer My God to Thee” ringingfrom Mitchell Tower, would repairto the pools—men to Bartlett, girlsto Ida Noyes, and residents of B-Jto Sunny Gym—and remain intheir asylum until danger is past.The MAROON, on behalf of theUniversity community, appeals toour Chancellor for prompt en¬dorsement of the Millspaugh Plan.(Submitted as an editorial forthe Maroon issue of Jan. 20).Frid*y. January 20, 1950 THE CHICAGO MAROONCoach Moyle's experiencepiles up 1950 swim victoryBy JACK SPILLMANThe man who is in a large part responsible for'the phenomenal success of the ram¬paging Maroon swimmers is smiling, congenial Bill Moyle. And, who, indeed wouldn’t behappy with the thought of a swimming team which has, at this printing, compiled a seven¬teen-link victory chain and is showing no signs of slowing.Coach Moyle has been affiliated with the University since 1946;“ prior to that time hedirected or participated in such sports as football, tennis, track, gymnastics, hockey, box¬ing, skiiing, and, of course, swimming.Moyle first engaged in ath- year stretch with a group known UC^Arc rliinicletics as a high school student as the Wisconsin All-Stars.in Lacrosse, Wis., where he Golden Glove*' *tor DoPaUW andwas awarded three letters in foot- ‘ He entered the graduate divisionball, four in track .and four in at the University of Iowa in 1934 'AvtoncJswimming. In addition, at the age and emerged with a master’s de-of sixteen he defeated the national gree a year later. Being a gradu- The Chicago swimmers made itboys’ ski champion in an invita- ate student and hence ineligible seventeen in a row as theytional meet. for intercollegiate athletics at knocked over DePauw University,Wisconsin chomp Moyle’s achievements “were 57-27, at Greencastle last Satur-Remaining in La Crosse. Coach to a U. of L welterweight day. The Maroons took first inMoyle did his undergraduate work boxmk.crown and a Golden Gloves every event except the diving, inat Wisconsin State; he majored, championship. Two years later, he which ^th the Chicago diversto no one's surprise, in physical recalled as an assistant swim- appeared a little rusty. SPORTSeducation. Before graduating in ^ boxing Chicago breaststrokers,1932, he had earned ten athletic coach in which capacity he re- Ralph Apton and Ashton Krug,letters, had captained both the ^ , again provided the best race oftrack and swimming teams, was From 1938 to 1942 Moyle was the meet when they held neck-the Wisconsin State College wel- director of physical education, and-neck for the entire 200 yardsterweight boxing champ, and had head swimming and tennis coach, and ended with Apton just touch-been runner-up in Midwest diving and freshman football coach at ^^6 Krug out. The River brothers,competition. Bradley, ’ Peoria, Ill. During the Captain Lou and George, also fin-# 11 war “Captain” Moyle directed the ished 1-2, in the 100-yard freeAfter briefly coaching football ^ education program for style. As usual, the distance men,and track at State and swimming veterans of Rago and Walsh, and the back-at La Crosse Centra^ High, Moyle j„. stroker, Ralph, finished wellstallations. ahead of their opposition.- a iir This afternoon the team has aTn’iw” use offered him the “eet with the University of Illi-posltion of head tennis coach. TheTrojan tennis squad under Moyle * summariescaptured the National Intercol- Chicago 57; dc Pauw 27cinclfx; doubles and team 300-yard Medley Relay: 1. Chicagolegi.ye singles, aouoies ana leam Krug, G. River); 2. De Pauw.trophies as well as the Pacific Time, 3:io.o.Coast championship. It was at this ^^/y**^**2. Stewart ID); 3. Cooper (D). Time,2:27.0.00-yard Tree Style: 1. L. River (C);2. Cummings (D); 3. Leonard (D). Time,;31.S.Diving: 1. Snyder (D); 2. Nery (C);3. Yodh (C), Points. 91.4.100-yard Free Style: 1. L. River (C);played semi-pro football for a two-Psychotheropy ispoinful . . ;Relieve tensionot Jimmy'sJIMMY’S1172 E. 55FIIEPROOFWAREHOHSE,UMl i IMM MSTANE MOVINSTORAGE FAaUTIES FOR BOOKS,RECORD PLAYERS, RADIOS, TRUNKSOR A CAR LOAD OF FURNITURE.ASI FOI FKE CSTIMATC55th and ELLIS AVENUEALL PHONES BUtterfielO 8-6711OAVIO L. SUTTON. PRES. Billiard tourneyThe annual UC billiard andpoint that Moyle accepted theposition he now holds.Mrs. Bill Moyle Is a former di¬rector of women’s athletics fromNebraska State, and although it issomewhat early to tell, the four 2^0^-River (C); 3. Cummings (D). Time,Moyle youngsters, ages 3 to 10, will ‘ 156-yard Back stroke; 1. Ralph (C);likely conform to the pattern. Time,2G6-yard Breast Stroke: 1. Apton (C);2. Krug (C); 3. McCrory (D). Time,2:39.5.440-yard Free Style; 1. Rago (C); 2.Swanson (C); 3. Cooper (D). Time,5:28.9.400-yard Relay: 1. Chicago (Walsh,pocket billiard tournament to O. River, Olasser, L. River); 2. De Pauw.choose the intercollegiate team '^**"*« 3:50.7.will be played next Wednesdaynight, under the sponsorship ofStudent Union and the ReynoldsClub. Matches will be played onthe Reynolds Club tables A fif¬teen cent entry fee is required,and entries will be accepted aslate as Wednesday evening.Last year’s w'inner of the bil¬liard tournament. Gale Wirtz,went on to win the midwesternintercollegiate and a free trip toColumbus, Ohio where he com¬peted in the National Intercol¬legiate tournament. Wirtz is ex¬pected to compete again this year. Attention all would-be sportswriters, disgruntled athletes,and any such characters whomight be lurking in the vicin¬ity: the MAROON Sports staffis now engrossed in a majorattempt at reorganization.Positions for several men and/or women, with or without ex¬perience, are wide open. Call atthe MAROON office, preferablyat 3:30 p.m. in the afternoon,or phone Koenig at BE. 8-6759.Arch Ward makes good money;get in on the ground floor. Quad! - nanqhnaBy KEN KOENIGWe see where the Navy Pier edition of the Fightingmini is about to be possessed of a football team. Implica¬tion of this grandoise event, to hear the members of theMaroon Football Club tell it, runs along the familiar line,If they can do it..Sounds plausible, almost. The gameis undoubtedly a tremendous sport. However, as playedtoday, too many other things go along with it. Footballat old Chi might be a great idea, but not on the now tra¬ditional semi-pro basis. Could UC have the one without theother? The question will in all probability never have tobe answered.. ,January may be a ridiculous time to discuss baseball,but not so to Kyle Anderson’s charges. With anotherspring trip in the offing, the daily 12:30 practice sessionsin the Fieldhouse have already become serious business. ‘This year’s unit shapes upon paper as one of the mosttalented in Maroon annals. ‘‘Mischa” Borowitz, the DonNewcombe of the lower classes, heads the mound staff.Captain “Moe” Lackey, the man who’s lost more threehitters than anybody, will be ready with his tantalizingslow stuff and fast ball change of pace. They’ll be throw¬ing to a veteran backstop too. “Mighty Mite” McKinney,the Hoopeston Flash figures on hitting .450 this year, aswell as putting his customary damper on any and alltraffic down to second base.' The schedule to date includes Notre Dame and West¬ern Michigan for the second year in a row. In ’49, theIrish whipped the Maroons twice, but this season couldeasily see a reversal. Nobody’s forgetting that 1-0 loss tothe Kalamazoo boys either. DePauw, St. Joe, and IndianaState Teachers are also on the partially completed list.Last spring’s Maroon outfit won 13 of 21 games. The in¬formal summer team, paced by Mike Flaherty, Chicago’s“old pro,” took nine of ten.♦ ♦ ♦Speaking of Basketball, we haven’t made any mentionof the Varisty “B’” five as yet. Might be just as well sincethe lads haven’t won any games thus far, but maybe alittle recognition would help. The squad is gradually pro¬gressing, with guards, Frank Higgins and “Sleepy Jim**Raby, and center, Wally Cisowski, doing most of the scoi'-ing; that first win is expected soon. ^♦ ♦ ♦The Varsity game with Wheaton, Monday night, hadat least one humorous side. Dave Dickman, sharp-shoot¬ing guard who is rumored to be in the seeing-eye classwithout his specs, lost a lens while he was husSfng downthe floor. The referees were apparently too engrossed tonotice his desperate signals for time out. Wheaton jockeyedabout 20 points in the ensuing confusion.By the by, the Maroons tussle Knox tomorrow night.The basket-men deserve all out support—more than they’*been getting. Something in the nature of larger attendanceand more enthusiasm would do.Announcing The Opening OfTHE GREAT LAKESPUBLISHING CO.With Offices and Plant at1223 L 55th St. MUsenm 4-5095^IOFFSET and LETTERPRESS PRINTINGARTWORK - EMBOSSED POSTERSSpecial Law V. af C. PricesWANTED:Experienced Students For Part time WorkTYPISTS — HAND TYPESETTERS — ARTISTSReport for liederrietr immediately! Tumblers upsetby WolverinesMichigan’s Wolverines wreckedthe 1950 debut of the Maroongymnasts by grabbing a 55^^-40*72victory last Saturday in Bartlett.Walt Seelos was top man forUC as he snared firsts on theside horse and parallel bars, whileGordy Thurow assessed a win inthe horizontal bar event. For thevisitors, Tom Tillman scored adouble first, and Ed Buchanan,Big Ten trampoline champ, dom¬inated his specialty.The Maroons travel to Colum¬bus for a match with Ohio Statetomorrow, when they’ll be point¬ing to even up their slate.TYPEWRITERNEED REPAIR?TAKE IT TOU OF CBOOKSTORE Gagers' hopesdashed 60-36Wheaton’s Crusaders proved toostrong for Nels Norgren’s Maroonbasketballers in the second andfinal clash ^ of the season Satur¬day on the winner’s home floor.The tally found the Maroon onthe short side of a 60-36 count.It was a bitterly disappointingcontest on all counts to the Chi¬cagoans. Two weeks ago the UCersgot off to a dismal beginning inthe first meeting between the twoclubs, then staged a brilliant rallywhich fell short in the final twominutes.Hopes had run high for a vic¬tory in the return match. Whea¬ton’s smooth offense, however,was in high gear from start tofinish, and their tight defensekept the Maroons away from theboards, especially in the secondhalf.Going into the North Centralgame Wednesday the Chicago rec¬ord stood at six wins and fivelosses, with double victories overNavy Pier and Carleton and singlewins against Teachers’ Collegeand Illinois Tech. Remaininggames include a pair with Knox,two with Coe, and one each withNorth Central and I.I.T. Thus, theHoopsters still stand a goodchance of bettering 1948-49’s rec¬ord of 10-8. The first Knox en¬counter is scheduled for tomorrowevening at the Fieldhouse. Maroon duelersvictors in openerIn their initial contest of the1950 season last Saturday, Ma¬roon duelers disposed of North¬western University to the tune of16-11 at Bartlett gym. Two localperformances of note were thoseof Carter Colwell, who was un¬defeated in the foil, and MikeHoyl, who won his three sabermatches.The unexpected happened whenteam captain and number twofencer in the midwest, John West-ler, was defeated by his Wildcatopponent. Tomorrow, Alvar Hei-manson’s men trek out to Madi¬son for an interlude with Wis¬consin’s Badgers.Invite offered tofootball fanaticsA football film featuring theChicago Cards will highlight thenext meeting of the Maroon Foot¬ball Club at 7:45 Tuesday in IdaNoyes. The/ organization, startedby A1 Bruggemeyer, and now wellknown to the campus, has beengoing strong through the wintermonths. .Plans for spring practice .ses¬sions are already in the formativestage and will be discussed atlength Tuesday night. Brugge¬meyer extended an invitation toattend to “anyone and everyoneinterested” in the aims of theclub.Friday, January 20, 1950THE CHICAGO MAROON ^^ ^C'1\mriE ISIMD*The dry wit, the earth y homor,the sense of real peopledoin9 reol things, ore the su*perior ingredients of thissuperior film. The Music StandTwo concerts open Bach seriesLast Friday, the first of the University concerts commemorating the 200th anniver¬sary of the death or Johann Sebastian Bach presented a group of cantatas by the Ger¬man Baroque master. Baritone Martial Singher and soprano Andzia Kuzak were accom¬panied by a group of instrumentalists including the Roosevelt College Quartet, with Sieg-mund Levarie conducting the performance.The three cantatas performed gave us a glimpse of < the many facets of Bach’s style,though all were similar in form. The soprano -^Wedding Cantata is lyrical and even senti¬mental, in an Italianate Scar- ”latti or Handelian manner. was uneven. Martial Singher’sSwrF-otaatoaN.AND MVISiONStudents showing their identifica*tion cards at the box office will beadmitted for 50c any week day, Mon¬day through Friday. On Saturdays,Sundays and Holidoys 'till 5 P» M. The baritone cantata, I Ask voice is resonant and well-con-for No More, reveals the depth ofBach’s religious feeling, transmit¬ted to the powerful emotionallanguage of the music. The Peas¬ant Cantata is satirical and, forBach, “modern.” It is kin to theopera buifa of Pergolesi and thedance tunes of Telemann.Sounding the soloisHThe quality of the performances trolled, though his lower registeris weak. Andzia Kuzak has a voicetoo light, too wavering, and in¬sufficiently agile, especially for thefloridity of the Wedding Cantata.Levarie’s conducting lacked therhythmic feeling essential toBach’s music. This was especiallytrue with regard to the two solocantatas, but th» dance character¬istics of the Peasant Cantata en¬ couraged a livelier and more em¬phatic treatment.Rockefeller orgon turns boroqueFitting in with the Bach festivalthis quarter, Fenner Douglass gavean organ recital of Bach at Rocke¬feller chapeT last Tuesday.For the first half of his pro¬gram, which included the D minorConcerto after Vivaldi, the an¬dante from the Sonata IV, and theFugue in G major, he attemptedto make the chapel organ soundlike a Baroque organ. While theattempt was praiseworthy, and theresult closer to the proper soundfor Bach than we have heard be¬fore on that organ (even by Mare-chal), the effect was negated bythe shrill, ugly tone created bymodern wind pressure.Straightforword playingOn the other hand, the secondhalf of Douglass’ program, includ¬ing the Prelude and Fugue in E-fiat and a group of chorale-preludes, was given over generallyto the heavier stops of the organ.While the tone itself was moresuited to the instrument, the mu¬sic often was lost in the volumeof sound.Douglass played straightfor¬wardly, at a moderate pace, andwithout exciting much'interest.Symphony orchestra performsThe UC Symphony orchestra, onSunday, Jan. 22, at 8:30 in Man-del Hall, will perform Cimarosa’sOverture to Penelope, Kauder’sSecond Symphony, and Bee¬thoven’s Fourth Piano Concerto,with Ernst Levy as soloist. Admis¬sion is free.—Martin PickerSinger wantedCollegium Musicum announc¬es it has an opening for a basssinger — sex unspecified — whocan read music reasonably well.Applicants are asked to get intouch with Siegmund Levarie,the organization's conductor. Turntable TalkSon supervisesrecording ofBartok worksVictor’s decision to beginmaking LP records indicatesthat mass indignation is stilla potent force in this increasinglystrait^jacketed land of ours. Allhigh-pressure campaigns to forcethe little medium-speed dough¬nuts down the collective throat ofthe supposedly undiscriminatingpublic failed for the simple rea¬son that all other companies wererecording better music in a bet¬ter fashion.An inherent cynicism and theflabbiness of Victor’s recent cata¬logues makes this reviewer doubtthat March 1 will bring anythingmore than a pot-pourri from thelatest Jose Iturbi movie. We shallbe gratified to be wrong.Sziegafi on Columbio LPThe Sonata in F minor Op. 80,which Prokofiev completed in 1946has just been recorded by JosephSzigeti with Joseph Levine ac¬companying the violinist at thekeyboard. The turnover hasLeonid Hambro as Szigeti’s part¬ner in a performance of the samecomposer’s earlier Violin Sonatain D.Both works are thoughtfullyprojected and only the recorded-in - the - next - county sound ofHambro’s piano gives any causefor nose upturning. Nevertheless,Columbia deserves commendationfor the tasteful coupling of thesecomplementary wor^ on LP rec¬ord ML-4257.New Bortok recordingsMr. Hambro’s piano gets bettertreatment at the hands of PeterBartok, who is doing a public serv¬ice in personally supervising therecording of his father’s worksthat have been hitherto unrecord¬ed. .Remarkably realistic pianoreproduction is given his playingof the Out of Doors Suite and theImprovisations Op. 20 — (BartokRecording Studio, BRS-002).On hearing the aforementionedsuite the most hidebound musicalreactionary cannot fail to be im¬pressed by the intensity of theNight Music, the hectic dynamismof the Chase, and the whimsy ofMusettes.—Aaron AsherThe PaletteExhibit modem designsWITH SMOKERS WHO KMOW,,rirS(/amels jorMildiness:Yes, Camels are SO MILD that in a coast-to-cotbt testof hundreds of men and women who smoked Camels—and only Camels—for 30 consecutive days, noted throatspecialists, making weekly examinations, reportedNOT ONE SINGLE CASE OF THROATIRRITATION DUE TO SMOKING CAMELSI Showing at the Goodspeed Gal¬leries on campus until Jan. 21,the Renaissance Society presentsan exhibition of photographs,architectural renderings, and plansby the architects, William kndGeorge Fred Keck. Those wholike incisive modern housing witha certain finish and sophisticationwill enjoy seeing the work of theKecks.Since the Kecks designed the“House of Tomorrow” for the 1933World’s Fair in Chicago, and the“Crystal House” for the fair ofthe following year, their name hasbeen one to reckon with in thefield of modem housing. Whetherdesigning small homes, prefabri¬cated houses in the low cost field,apartment houses, or store fronts,the Keck lines are distinguishable.The almost exttravagent use ofhugh areas of plate glass, a propersensitivity to materials and tex¬tures, box-like horizontal and per¬pendicular lines, unadorned slabsof siding, cantilevered roofs andTYPEWRITERSFOR SALEOR RENTU OF CBOOKSTORE open-faced skins of plywood andglass over internal steel skeletonof steel; all these make up the artof architecture for the Kecks.Two houses in this neighborhoodwere designed by the Kecks, eachwithin three blocks of the Uni¬versity. One, an apartment build¬ing on University Avenue between55th and 56th, was built someyears ago. It is a brick, four storied,building, with glass-fronted rooms,which are conceited by large alu¬minum “Venetian” blinds. Theother, still under construction, isan L-shaped building on Wood-lawn, on the west side of thestreet between 55th and 56th. Thelatter is characterized by project¬ing stair-wells, which serve thefunction of increased lighting andadd an interruption to what wouldotherwise be another bald, “in¬stitutional” front building.The prefab house 'which theKecks designed for the Greencompany of Rockford, is theiranswer to the housing problem.Incorporating a maximum of light,by means of glass-fronted rooms,with a minimum of privacy—theunits are separated only by a par¬tition projecting from the mainmass of the building—this seriesof housing units would undoubt¬edly use a minimum of materialwith the simplest of mass-produc¬tion assembly line. Still, somewould dislike its similarity to ailiatch box, for on a street of suchunits, there would be no varietyof line to distract one from thehorizontal monotony.—John ForwalterFriday, Jamiary 20, 1950 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page fFootlights and Klieglights Books and ReadingHebrew poet tidedpresent day IsaiahAdjured by a number of friends ideals at the outset are undeniablyto see and comment on Fame Is genuine; he identifies himselfthe Spur as quickly as possible, wholly with the working class,we’ve been feeling remisS as all with his own antecedents. An Too little is known in this country about the post-get-out because we haven’t yet educated idealist in power; this Biblical Hebrew poets. The poetry of the Bible is muchhad time to catch it. We lost a hw a fine Greek ring to it. But— read, yet it is not generally realized that since Biblical'hC nnp days thc Jcws havc produccd many extraordinary poets, atfore our problem was solved by, one fault. His ideals have no real ipocf two of thp vprv firct rant Ona ic +v«othe appearance of a deus ex ma- grounds in experience. GREGG COLLEGEA S«hodl of lusinots—Proforrod by/Collogo Mon ond Womoa ^4 MONTH 4INTENSIVE COUHSBJSECRETARIAL TRAINING FOR COUEOf’STUDENTS AND GRADUATES |A tfaqrouc^ intensi^ coorse-^soudaslJoflc. October, Febnuuy. Bol*Ictin A on reqocxc Achina, in the person of Mr. Eu- His view of the external world Other is the great modem, ChaimJudah ha-Levi.Nachman Bialik.Bialik was born in Russiagene Du Fresne, who volunteered is Marxian; his picture of himselfthe desired review. Using such Carlyean. And, as a self-imaginedmaterial is contrary to our usual “working class hero,” his record in 1873 and lived in erindine *“ !?***■ ? he writes:KA4«*nooAl ^ Onofi iliAii i.liv mmifli Ahof to poverty during childhood.' SPEOAt COUNSaOR fer 0.4 TRAMMG•Rcgi^ D«r and Ercoioc Sdioolsliitoushout the Year. Catalos% jor * • 4.^^ mractor. Faul M. Ptir. MJU \THE 6RE6G COLLEGIJM7 S. Wall—li Ava., CMcaca S. Illlwla 4practice, but it seems to be in a is consistently onegood cause so we’re allowing it Caught in the flowthis once. This does not, howfever, revolutionary slogans, he uncon- Early he became imbued with thenecessarily constitute endorse- sciously serves as an agent pro- ^^^^^^^-LTalmudic tradition,^ment by the sponsor. vacteur during a coal strike; the l^f®rest which was to last a life-First, though, we’d like to take facts brought home, he becomes “®J®*^terestingly enough, he didcare of a couple of items that a conscious “pie-card’* and ends secular subjects un-have been hanging fire. Late with a title scorned in his youth youth. He leftthough we may be, we particularly to weigh against the sacrifice of , „ f v? “Middle age and settledwant to get in few licks on Pinky, his wife, his friends, and his ideals. ^ Palestine, where he died.Darryl F. Zanuck’s contribution —Eugene Rivard Du Fresne The modern prophefto film, studies of race problems. Bialik’s collected Hebrew poemsJust to say, “Pinky’s stinky” one not very fat volume. Yetwouldn’t be fair, for the acting is AllSalllail lt#pwrTa there is a breadth, a grandeur, agood — sometimes very good, the ^ofessor Davd^Riesman spoke dignity about them, an almostdirection is assured and every- ^ Miltonic heroism that is conspicu-thing movM smoothly. There s j ^ opening of the Channtag lacking in modem poetry,only one thing wrong. It's phoney on Attack and The very narrowness of ghettoCounter-Attack in Modem Reli- life, its cultural monism, providesas hellDespite occasional flashes ofunderstanding and honesty, the Open then thy mouth, oh.prophet of the end of days.And if the world is with thee,speak.Though it be bitter as deatl^though it be very death.Speak!And why should we feardeath, when his angel ridesour backAnd his bit is clamped in our' mouth.And with the cry of redemp¬tion on our lips to theneighing of wild joy.We go prancing unto thegrave?It is wrong to conceive of Bialikgion. His subject was “Freud: Bialik with his tremendous power, as merely the poet of wrath. In hisu 1 4- ^ Religion as Neurosis.” Those who Whereas the modern English poetr,. 'fowded the entrance but could thrashes about for a diversity ofthe social and moral problems ^ ^ returned to fill the cultures in which to express him-hall Tuesday night. self, Bialik confines himself to the • tThe second in what promises to anger and sublimity of the pro- -vnieiem knrt **ti*1” *be a popular lecture series will phetlc tradition. He thrashes outgiven this Monday night in at the pettiness and emptiness ofit TrnLtt 1®®- Professor James Luther modem life with the wrath of thethe decision is strongly coloredwhich should give the film itsforce are conveniently shuntedaside for the sake of the actionline. 'The heroine is ollowed to Songs of the People we see hisdeep compassion and love for thewith modern man is not that he isnot Prince Hamlet, nor wasby the carefully arranged clrcum- Ji^ugion "in Capitaiist”cultoe.”' stoirete“f an‘’'fctotf is'^eU meant to be. b^t^fno*^^stances. 'The characters are spor¬adically versimilar but they’reoften hampered by impossible dia¬logue. For this type of picturewe’ll still take Home of the Brave.As you know. University Thea¬ter’s doing George Farquhar’s de¬lightful Restoration comedy. TheBeaux* Stratagem, in Mandel Jan.27, 28, 29, We don’t know how theacting will be, but, having fol- ^ combination of royal dispen- approval of Toscanini for Misslowed up George Blair’s enthusi- sation by Toscanini and blood, Randall’s appearance with theastic tip, we can tell you that the sweat, and tears has prevented company in Chicago.'Cosi' performs withToscanini soprano —Lowrence Meir FriedmanUCer^s at meetingsThe only foreigners at the con¬ference of the Guadalajara Medi¬cal Society, which ended Friday,were four UC surgeons and physi¬cians.In Mexico for the holidays wereLester R. Dragstedt and Williamshow ii going to have the finest a major catastrophe for the Ren- Thus, with Toscanini's blessing, Suto^bbsteWcrind ranecolOCT'«ts y.T. has put up durlng^r F.'n iutU V7ac“t l^hL “fiu “SwnX (M^’.long tour of duty here. If the «os- Tutte ™iauf Dleasu?! be william E. Adams), anesthesiol-tumes, which we haven’t seen, are maae possioie a unique pleasure heard next month in Mandel Hall.as colorful and imaginative as ^or campus music lovers. we have, furthermore, the addedAlice Martini’s sets, the show will Mozart’s Cosi was originally assurance that the opera will notbe worth attending whether the planned to star soprano Theresa be presented anywhere else byactors can be heard or not. Randall as Fiordiligi. Miss Ran- this company this season.And now for Mr. Du Fresne. dall was a winner of the Metro- Cosi will be given three per-^ Robert Nassau politan Opera auditions last year, formances, on February 17, 18,Fame Is the Spur is a film that and was heard as the Priestess and 19. Production and singerspulls no punches. There are just Toscanini’s radio version of are of the New Lyric Stage, Newenough of the Tartuffe stripe in Aida. York. The orchestra will consistany assemblage of educated hu- Toscanini chose her again this members of the Chicago Sym-man creatures to constitute a year, for his coming production of PJ'ony, and Siegmund Levarie willnear majority of those who will Falstaff. This necessitated Miss conduct. Tickets are $1.50, $2.70,have their favorite shibboleth^ Randall’s leaving the New Lyric $3.90, ahd are available bydissected and will be given the lie Stage group, since Toscanini is a from the Renaissance Societyby a film that is indubitably a strenuous rehearsal taskmaster, or directly at the Concert Office,work of art so masterfully made The director of .the New Lyric Woodlawn.that it can be contradicted about Stage put Brenda Miller in MissAS easily as Macbeth. Randall’s place as Fiordiligi, butThe basic method used is Arist- only a few weeks ago Miss Millerotelian tragedy. The central char- was injured in an automobile ac-acter, Hamar Radshaw (one of cident. The opera company, leftthe best personations of Michael one soprano short for Cosi, offeredRedgrave’s career, by the way) to substitute Don Pasquale.hails from the British working The Renaissance Society, know-class. Self-educated.to a mastery ing that Donizetti is*not an ade-of language, he rises in the politi- quate substitute <for Mozart, bycal world, using the Labor Party dint of long-distance telephoneAS a ladder into Parliament. His calls and telegrams acquired the GIFTDEP.4RTMENTSUGGESTIONSFOR THEWELL-DRESSED MANOur gift department now hasin stock ... a large selectionof Swank Jewelry.TIE PINSMONEY CLIPSKEY CHAINSCUFF LINKSIn mony novel designs. Priced from$|S0 $2^0SEE OUR NEW LINE OFFOUNTAIN PENSFeoturing the Weorever 3 - colorboll-point pen. Writes red, blueor green. Colors con be chongedinstontly. $400Only 1'UNIVERSITYOF CHICAGOHOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue—Martin Picker SECOND HAND BOOKS20,000 VOLUMESAll Subjects Moderate PricesCLARK and CLARKROOKSELLERS1204 E. 55 St. Between Woodlown & KimborkOpen Every Evening Until 9 P. M.JAN.20-26 StudentsAdmitted for60c Tox Incl.AtAll PerformoncesONLY (CITY) ENGAGEMENTTWO PERFORMANCES DAILY-b30-S.30..iiSMii.M»wTie THEATRE CUILD presenaLAURENCEOLIVIERin trUliam Shakespeare's LINCOLN ~ MERCURYIN HYDE PARKSpecializing In Ford ProductsWE SERVICE AND REPAIRALL MAKES OF AUTOSSIMONIZERODY AND'fENDER WORKFactory Trained Mechanics«« HENRY V 99In TechnicolorIWLBAVSO TWRU UNITB* ABTIRT*CARNEGIE THEATRERush & Ook */ LAKE PARK MOTORS, me5601 HARPER AVE.S. TAUBER, President E. KAPLAN, Treasurer \THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, ianuary 20, 195^y (^/CUftfu/^ ^ 'Si==T'Friday, Jan. 20Chicago Symphony Orchestra tickets#or the concert of Jan. 27 will be on#*le in the Mandel corridor from 10;30i^m. to 4:30 p.m. today.* • **^olotoT TS. Marshall*' will be dls-•lissed by Dr. Ladlslas Reitzer in theeirn parlor of Ida Noyes followingluncheon. The UNA affair begins at12:13 p.m.* * «“The Rtrte and Place of Values’* is tobe determined by Bert F. Hoselitz atthe Human Development Seminarwhich meets at 4:30 p.m. in Judd 126today.• • ♦“Another Part of the Forest” willhave two showings in the JudsonLounge when the B-J Council presentstlie film at 7 and 9:15 p.m. Admissiontrill be 10 cents.• • •“Intolerance,” by J. W. Griffith, theffist in the Documentary Film Group’sWinter Film Study Series: Five Great^Directors, will be shown in Social Sci¬ence 122 at 7:15 and 9:15 p.m. Seriestickets, the only means of admission,•re $1.50, Including tax. The Bible Study Group of ICF meetsat 7:30 p.m. in the'East Lounge of IdaNoyes to discuss St. Matthew.• • • •“Hormones in the Ga.stro-IntestinalSystem” will be explained to all Inter¬ested by Dr. Andrew C. Ivy in BillingsP-117 at 8 p.m. Sponsoring organiza¬tion Is AIMS.* * *Hillel Fireside will feature Louis Gott-shalk speaking on “The Jew and I” at8:30 p.m.Sunday, Jan. 22“The Place of Law and Love in Chris¬tian Life” will be Reinhold Niebuhr’ssermon at the 11 a.m. morning wor¬ship services In Rockefeller Chapel. Theservices are open to the public.* 0 *Senator Paul H. Douglas will lectureon ‘‘The Universal Defense Pact” in theIH Assembly Hall, when the Interna¬tional House Council presents the“most promising Senator” at 3:30 p.m.Discussing “The College Student FacesReligion,” Dean John Davey opens theBeacon Club discussion series entitled: “Religion and the Modern World” at4 p.m. in Woolman Hall of the FirstUnitarian Church.• « *“Freud: Religion as Neurosis,” a paneldiscussion with Prof. David Rlesman,will be the main attraction when theChannlng Club convenes in the FirstUnitarian Church tonight. Supper willbe at 6 a.m., followed by the discus¬sion at 7 p.m. Added attraction will bea square dance at 8 p.m. Supper willcost 45 cents.♦ * ♦Young Friends will hold an informaldiscussion of Senator Douglas’ speechat 8 p.m. in Chapel House.Monday, Jan* 23Hillel Monday Afternoon Music Hourwill feature recorded music and teaaround the samovar at 3:30 p.m.* * «Interfaith Staff will drink tea todayat 4:30 p.m. in Chapel House.* * *“Marx; Religion in Capitalist Cul¬ture,” a William Ellery Channing lec¬ture, will be given by James LutherAdams in James Breasted Hall atA discussion, “Can a Christian Par¬ ticipate in a War?” Is scheduled forChapel House at 7:30 p.m.0 0 0Four Charlie Chaplin films and Mar¬riage of Figaro excerpts make up thefilm program at International Housetonight. Admls.slon to the programwhich begins at 8 p.m. Is 46 cents.Tuesday, Jan* 24IZFA, 4 p.m. Ida Noyes, discussion of“Concepts of Zionism.”0 0 0A talk on morals, “In Defen.se of Rea¬son.” by C. Stecchlnl Is planned forKelly Hall at 7:30 p.m. tonight.* 0 *“Under Western Eyes,” a Frenchmovie with English sub-titles, 'will bepresented in Social Science 122 at 7:15and 9:15 p.m. by the DocumentaryFilm Group. Admission will be 35 cents.0*0“The Church’s Millions” is to be thetopic of Rev. Wood Carper when headdresses the Canterbury Club at 7:30p.m. In Brent House.Wednesday, Jan* 25Westminster Fellowship will meet for tea tfll Chapel House at 4:30 p.m. tod>* * * ,“Ten Nights in a Barroom.” modersound version, rivals “Lost Weekendwhen it appears on the Social Scienc122 screen at 7:15 and 9:15 p.m. througthe courtesy of Political Forum, Admi<slon Is 40 cents.• * *Natural Rights in the Greek andbrew Traditions,” a Hillel public lecturbegins at 8 p.m.« • «MAROON Production Day, ReynoldClub. 201, If you can write come ui3:30 p.m.Thursday, Jan. 26“Faith and Christ” will be dlscasseby the Methodist Student League following supper at 6 p.m. in Chap^House. Supper will be 50 cents.« • •Inauguration of thf Republic of Indiwill be celebrated In the Assembly Halof International House at 7:45 p.m. bthe Hindustan Students Association.* « *The second all-Beethoven record concert at Hillel begins at 8 p.m. tonightAdmission free.✓Famous Marquette Alumnus, says:^^Chesterfielcis are Milder. At the end ofa long day at the studios, no matter howmany Tve smoked, Chesterfields leavea clean, fresh taste in my mouth. lt*s theonly cigarette Tve found that does that.’*COii£G£SfWimm£ TOP M£AfM SPMFS-wimm£iiOiiYi¥oop sfapsMi/ffJf/7iey}0 WPS/and Universities throughoutthe country CHESTERFfElD iscigarette^ STARRING IN"JOHNNY ONE EYE"A BENEDICT BOGEAUS PRODUCTIONRELEASED THRU UNITED ARTISTSBy Recent National Survey