UNIVERSITY OP CHICAGO, FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 1911'Uk/ INDICATIONS POINT TOyiaORY FOR MERRIAMElection Situation at 11thHour Leads to Prediction■ Professor Will be MayorStudents are DisfranchisedHarrison Election Bd. OustsUni. Votes and Gives Voteto First Ward BumsMaking his campaign on a plat¬form of honesty, decency, and ef¬ficiency in public office. AssociateProfessor Charles E. Merriam goesbefore the voters of Chicago todayas the Republican candidate forthe office of Mayor. His whirlwindcampaign, in which he placedsquarely ^fore the public the is¬sue of decency and ability, as op¬posed to graft and mediocrity inpublic office, has been replete withsensations, and its close, his man¬agers predict his election by anoverwhelming majority.Student vote oustedThe greatest sensation of thecampaign is the decision of theMERRIAMpartisan board of election commis¬sioners, by which the residents ofthe student dormitories of the Uni¬versity are disfranchised, while anexception to the ruling extendsthe franchise to hundreds of“Hinky Dink’s” lodging househenchmen. The ruling requiredthat all who failed to appear inresponse to a “suspect notice” thattheir right to vote had been chal¬lenged, should be disfranchised ex¬cept those whose names appearedon lodging house affidavits. Theeffect of the decisions is to barthose residents of the dormitorieswho were away because of vaca¬tion when they received noticeswhile those whose names appearedon affidavits sworn to by lodginghouse keepers over a month agoare given the right to vote, al¬though they may never have beenin the city.. Students man ^ polls *I The Merriam forces, aroused bythe unfair decision of the electioncommissioners, will fight the illegalvote at the polls, and many Uni¬versity students and instructorswill act as challengers in the First,Eighteenth, and Nineteenth wardsin an effort to block the operationsof “Flying Squadrons” of repeat¬ers captained by the ward heelersof .“Hinky Dink” and the “Bath¬house.” Hundreds will serve asworkers and challengers in otherwards of the city. DEDICATION POSTPONEDBECAUSE OF ACCIDENTLibrary Will be Dedicated inOct., Account of TowerDestructionCause of Collapse UnknownBuilding Iron Frame-Work toLift Crane from Top—FearFall of West WallOn account of the collapse ofthe West tower of the HarperMemorial Library last Wednesday,the dedication exercises^plannedfor next June are to be postponeduntil the completion of the towerin October.The contract between the Uni¬versity and Wells Brothers whichstated that the library should becompleted in time for the Convo¬cation exercises in June is broken.This sudden and unaccountabledisaster will not only prove a fi¬nancial loss of $50,000 to the con¬tractors but also will greatly in¬convenience the University in theplans to move the various scatteredlibraries to the new library beforethe fall quarter.Uncertainty as to cause“Although there can be no defi¬nite cause assigned to the acci¬dent.” said Foreman Purvis ofWells Brothers yesterday, “the dy¬namite story is plausible. We areworking carefully on all the theor¬ies concerning the cause and itwould be out of the question tojump at a conclusion haphaz¬ardly.”The dynamite explosion in Wis¬consin several weeks ago coupledwith the varying changes ofweather is said to have affectedthe wet cement in the South towerand caused the floors to sink andthe walls to crack. It is also statedthat if the beams in the sevenfloors had been steel instead ofconcrete only one floor would havefallen.Scaffold to take crane offA huge iron scaffold is beingerected to remove the iron cranewhich is balanced on the westwall of the tower. Also woodenscaffolding has been constructedfor the removal of unsafe an Scracked standing walls.The authorities of the Univer¬sity and the contractors are con¬gratulating themselves not onljupon the absence of loss of lifebut also upon the occurrence ofthe collapse before the buildingwas put in use and heavily loadedwith books and furniture; thusavoiding probable great fatalities.LUCKY WORKERSTHANKFUL“It was a miracle!”declares bewilderedworkman“It was a miracle we all weren’tkilled,” one workman declaredwhile discussing the fall of HarperTower. “Sure and I thought Iwould never get off the girders intime. Men were leaping off thetower like jack rabbits. I’ve neverseen anything like it.”Wiping the foam from his lipsa crane operator told your re¬porter, “Who would have believedit? Sure and I won’t put somethings past some people, but Inever expected Harper Tower todo this. Why I have given the bestyears of my life to this Job.”“I knelt on the shifting floorand tried to pray,” one workmaninterrupted. “The building wasmoving like a thing aliv^. I don’tknow how I ever escaped. Some¬one way up high must have heldout His hand and protected me.I never want to go through a thinglike that again.”A collection is being taken upfor the workman who unfortunate¬ly broke his ankle in the collapse.Any one who is interested in thisnoble cause please leave donationsat the MAROON office. * t N6E0 YHAT CEWeKT FOR M'< NEW SA4)oH,6oYS.NQ6O0Y NEEDS A LiBRhRY tN AN etecTlON VeAR ANYWAY.^''EditorialThe MAROON wholeheartedly condemns the practiceswhich caused the tragic fall of Harper West Tower. Weare not surprised. In a city such as ours, run by graftand machine politics, such doings are norm.al and not theleast shocking. To be candid, we are surprised that it didnot fall down sooner. An antiquated building code coupledwith building commissioners of dubious qualifications andmerit make it altogether too simple for inferior and skimpedmaterials to play their deadly role.This is but another facet to the problem raised by therecent shirtwaist fire in New York. Due to an old buildingcode and complete lack of enforcement of fire laws by thecity officials one hundred fifty people went to a fiery death.Laws must be enforced and owners r.nd operators whowillfully endanger both life and property by their actionsmust be prosecuted. New York is planning to remedy thesituation although we do look askance upon their state¬ments until some definite action is taken. Talk is cheapand don’t you think that they don’t know it.Imagine how many innocent people might have losttheir lives if this tower had toppled after it was completed.Think of the cries and screams of the tortured peopletrapped in the fallen building. Remember, you parents,YOUR children might have been trapped in the wreckage.A CATASTROPHE such as this could have been averted ifwe had only realized the danger.Machine politics has struck close to home. The dam¬age to property can be repaired but the loss to our selfrespect is irreparable. The tower will rise again but willwe? Our own Professor Merriam campaigns upon a cleanupticket and such a thing like this has to happen. It isDEPLORABLE. How can we talk of driving macliine poli¬tics out of Chicago when such machinations are going onbehind our back? GREEDY, CONNIVING men work to de¬stroy the little we have accomplished. Even this liberalcampus is not exempt this foul disease. IT IS ABOUTTIME WE CAME TO OUR SENSES.When such dirty dealings happen in our own back¬yard the MAROON can only hang its head and blush withshame. In the midst of a hard fought Mayoralty campaignsuch as this one we can only hope that this tragedy willnot provide the opposition with too many brickbats. Weare cynical and harsh, as all college students, but stillwe hope for a brighter future where the University ofChicago and the city it nestles in will lead the countryand even the world to better times through enlightenedcitizenship.ALERT MAROON PHOTOGRAPHER SNAPS DESPERATEWORKMAN tlQHTING HIS WAY OUT OF DEATH TRAP. HARPER’S TOWERFALLS TO RUINSeven Floors of MemorialBuilding Plunge 1X3Feet to EarthMiracle Saves Workmen25 of Them in StructureEscape Death by Leapingto Main BuildingWith just one sound of warning—a long drawn out, ripping “Cra-a-ack!”—seven floors of the almostcompleted west tower of the newHarper Memorial building at theUniversity of Chicago yesterdayafternoon suddenly reeled fromtheir position and, telescoping eachother, plunged 113 feet into thebasement.There were between twenty-fiveand thirty carpenters and laborersin the tower when it sudednly col¬lapsed. By some miracle of fleet¬ness of foot only one of them washurt. He is John Ingrain, 2047 W.67th Place, who sustained a brokenankle.Tower now a tangled ruinLast night the interior of thetower was a heaped up, tangledmass of twisted steel, splinteredbeams, and shattered masonry.'There were hundreds of tons of it.It will take weeks to clear awaythe debris.“I don’t know how we got out,”one workman said, “I wouldn’thave believed it if I hadn’t beenthere.”“I heard a long grating crackand somebody yelled to beat it,”another said, “We all jumped forthe doorways leading into the cen¬ter of the building. In two secondsthe inside of the tower didn’t haveany floors. The one we had beenstanding on was in the basementwith three others on top it and asmany under it.”“Like toothpicks in a potato”“Look at those beams,” a car¬penter pointing at the pile ofplanks, tile, twisted steel, rein¬forcement rods, and broken con¬crete said, “they are sticking upthere like toothpicks in a potato.”The beams are of concrete, acouple of feet thick and weighingtons.Supt. C. C. Anderson of WellsBrothers the builders, is unableto explain the accident.“There it is,” he said, “Look atit. The wind blew it down for allI know.”The tower was 113 feet high atthe time of the accident. A cranewas being put in place in order tohoist the Gothic spires whichwould bring the height to 138 feet.The steel arm of the crane now isneatly balanced on the west wall.Jagged hole in the wallExcept for a ragged V-shapednotch forty feet deep and fifty orsixty feet wide to the south of thetower still stand. The west has ajagged hole where stood the deli¬cate stone tracery of a Gothicwindow. Within the section o2 thebuilding affected all is shambles.The library is being built inmemory of the late William RaineyHarper, president of the Univer¬sity of Chicago. It was to cost$600,000, with $100,000 for furni¬ture and $200,000 as a mainte¬nance fund.The greater portion was givenby John D. Rockefeller but stu¬dents, alumni, and members of thefaculty contributed a large sum.Esoterics convenediscuss Christeat wellLast Sunday the Esoteric Clubheld a meeting and light Lentenluncheon. During the meetingChristian Spirit and Brotherhoodwas discussed at length. Cake andcookies were served with a goodtime had by all. The memberswish to say that they hope Marywill soon be well again.Faf« 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday. Marcli 31^ 1950Bill of Rights offeredfor mass assimilationUniversity of Chicago, March ’31, 1950 31 In another of a series of public-spirited gestures, theMARCX)N prints this week the controversial, widely-dis¬cussed SG Bill of Rights, hoping to evoke some interestin it.The Bill is a twelve-barreled blast against administra¬tion powers.Directions for use: READ CAREFULLY, THINK OVERCALMLY, THEN COME TOUC students arrested, triedin anti'discrimination case THE PROPER CONCLU- ment of the student as an indi-SION. Mark answer-space A vidual and to the fulfillment ofif the statement is true, space B his responsibilities as a citizen ofif it is false. NOW BEGIN.So that all may eventually be that society:1. The right of every person tosaid and done, hearings will be considered for admission to theheld on April 3 and 4 in Law University of Chicago or any ofSouth, at 7:30 p.m. its divisions on the basis of aca-IARDY curouAKi Student Bill of Rights demic ability, without regard forA .. 1 ..XT !• In order to preserve and guar- or inquiry into the applicant’sAn attempt by 11 students eight of them from UC, to buck the anti-Negro policy the students of the Uni- race, coIot, national origin, reli.of the Trianon ballroom on 62nd Street and Cottage Grove, ended in the group’s arrest versity of Chicago those condi- gious creed, or political beliefsfor one night and the leveling of charges which might lead to further imprisonment tions indispensibie to the full 2. The right of students to aand fines. ‘ achievement of the objectives of clear and concise statement, be-The students were refused admittance to the Trianon on Saturday evening, March higher education in a free, demo- fore entering the University, of11, because three of them were Negroes. They were greeted at the door by a crew of cratic society, the University of their contractual rights, obiiga-eight bouncers, one of the group said in an interview with the MAROON, and were Chicago holds the following rights tions, and reponsibiiities pertain-forcefully, ejected from the essential to the complete develop- jng to educational and extra-cur-- '^ If’ ricular activities, and UniversityBusiness doesnt' wantballroom, A police wagon Consults mayor's commission,was waiting for them, and when the students divulgedtook them to the nearest jail their plans to try to enter the ball-(64th street and Har p0r room, they were told by Vice-Avenue). president Moore of the AragonCorporation of thethat the discrimin- to be let alone: HayekStudents out o« bnil^e eight UCers who were ar- jy immediate action wasrested and charged with refusal to 3. The right of every student toconduct research freely and topublish, discuss, and exchange. . any findings or recommendations,hp Onw ^‘Discrctionary powers of government, agencies whic > whether individually or in as-iv an/t.haf prHnn necessarity lead to unpredictable government action and sociation with local, national, ormake it impossible for business to plan effectively its own international groups.disperse, unlawful assembly, and'J-^aV lie haTreconsid- affairs must be opposed,” Freidrich A. Hayek, internation- 4. The right of every student toattempting to incite riot were: g^ed and had decided there would ally-known British economist and visiting professor at exercise his full rights as a citi-Mary Coleman, Bob Albright, Guy no co-operation with the stu- UC, said recently. forming and participatingPotter, Dick Schwartz, Susan group and no lifting of racial Hayek spoke to 210 members Of the Executive Program campus, local, national, or in-Schwarts. Helen Hassler, Carl distinctions nnH ^ ternational organizations for in-Cooley, and Jack Fooden. mup in fnnrh with fhp » Go^mment and tellectual, religious, social, politi-Bail was set for «250 each but it Busmess, in the second lec- emment being limited in Its action cal economic or cultural pur-isaii was set lor eacn, out It Mayor’s Commission on Human QPriP<? nn hv riearlv defined rules which are ’ economic, or ciuiurai pur-was later changed to $150 for each wpiotions and were warned that CiJD S series on by Clearly denned rules Which are poses, and to publish and dis-of the men and $75 for each of the entrance nrolecT^^ ^n- “ business. The announced in advance and by re- tribute his views,women. At about 4 a.m. Sunday a le^us wauM of the^rer^e composed of executives ducing discretionary decisions to 5. The righte of students to en-bondsman was procured by the f*™ wo?” 1 ThI leading Chicago busi- a minimum. gage freely in off-campus acUv-group and they wereThe American Civil LibertiesIon subsequently supplied tnem tempts by the students,with a lawyer for their defense for . . .the trial, which begins Tuesday. group was also watched byNot first attempt several plainclothesmen, whomThe attempt to get into the they had notified in advance ofTrianon was not the first for the each of the attempts. One of thegroup. Several of them had tried policemen. Lieutenant Williamto enter the Saturday before, Hennessy, it was reported, wasMar. 4, and also on Saturday friendly to them, but said that heevening, Feb. 25. Both times, didn’t approve of their methods,however, they were refused en- He and his men showed up in uni¬trance because of the Negroes in form on the night they were putthe group. Neither time was any in jail and arrested them afterof them arrested. their ejection from the ballroom.Several members of the group The eight UCers were reallysaid that negotiations with the bounced out, a member of thepresident and vice - president of group said. One of them was heldthe Aragon Ballroom Corporation, by four men—one on each armwhich owns the Trianon and other and one on each leg—and thrownballrooms in Chicago and in other out. The others were no more cor-cities, had preceded the three at- dially received, it was said,tempts to get into the ballroom. The charges against them, ifThe negotiations failed, however, proven, each hold penalties, andAndrew Karzas, president of the one of them holds a prison sen- c • k a uAragon Corporation maintained tence. The group’s case is now be- Freidneh A. Hayekthat the Trianon was private club ing prepared by the ACLU lawyer ^^hich is sponsored by the UC▼ the government will do under given community, state, and nation,circumstances.” e. The right to maintain a dem*Is it wise or unwise? ocratic Student Government.“We must not assume, however. ^ The right of recognized stu-that the existing legal rules are ^^^t organizations to use the Uni-the best ones. Devices such as the versity’s name subject to the reg-present law of patents or of cor- ujayong respect to off-cam- ,porations are not necessarily the activitieswisest and the best of their kind. e. The right of students and 'and it may be ’.veil to change them, recognized student organizationsA change in the legal struc- ^4;^ campus facilities, providedture, even if it upsets traditional the facilities are used for the pur-rights of busmess. must not be pose contracted, subject only todecried as interference.’ The only legulations as are required •question can be .whether they are tor scheduling meeting times and ,wise or unwise.” place? I“With division of responsibility. 9, The right of students and 'no one is in a position to plan recognized student organization.? ■adequately. The so-called planned to invite and hear speakers ofeconomy is for this reason an their choice on subjects of theireconomy in which it is much less choice ipossible than in a free economy 39. The right to establish andfw anyone to plan his own affairs jgsue publications free of any cen-*effectively.” . (Continued on Poge 3)and had a restricted membership, for the April 4 trial.SQ begins stickercampaign Saturday School of Business and UniversityCollege. The program, now in itsseventh year, is designed for thosealready in executive positions. 'Need cleorcut policy“The choice cannot be betweencomplete inactivity of the govern- NS A holds HumanRelations conferenceA human relations conference, sponsored by the Na-ment and detailed control. Busi- tional Students Association and attended by delegatescolleges in six midwcstem states, was held on thealone. The real question is what campus March 24, 25, and 26.C” on a field of red highlights desfraWef°^^^^^^^ activities are Purpose of the conference was “to discuss the prob-“it is essential that a clear prin- concerned With the living and working together ofcipie be stated by which legitimate pcoplG of different races, religions, and nationalities.” Angovernment action and ‘interven- attempt was made to deviseA big white footballthe sticker prepared by a group of UC organizations fornon-discriminating stores in the University area.The campaign begins on Saturday.The sticker is the product of two year«! of discussion tion’ in the undesirable sense can concrete programs in human Gearing, Lou Silverman, andand research by campus leaders who sought a way to make be distinguished. The essential re- relations that could be im- Ftank Logan,it clear to student consumers that the .st:;res they were quirement is that responsibility for plemented on the campuses of After welcoming addresses bypatronizing were dealing ' ~ decisions is clearly settled and all participating schools. Richard Medalie and Merrillfairly with members of all have agreed to put them in their ^tlUonto^Sake owHeSaSns “‘^T^^TO'd 11*“raops and reliff nni window a.i a sicn for students t-™-™ ™ -- «v.vgates included Latimer, who is executive directorrac^ana reng.om. wmaow as a sign lo stuae is. and plans on all questions of busi- Joyce Dannen, Merrill Freed, Jean of the Chicago Civil LibertiesThe Civil Liberties Committee To make sure that the cam- njsg policy.” Jordan, Hank Latimer, Zeno Thig- Committee spoke Latimer askedof Student Goverr^ent h^ been paig„ ™ns smoothly and effec- ^ pen, Gerhardt Weinberg. Fred STTtuTnts to consider sTchworkmg on the problem ail quar- lively. Dr. Herbert Thelen of the -Government a’tion must be . _ questions as whether publicter and has Dynamics Laborato^ of eiearly predictable,” Hayek said. Anril Id ic NS A schools should release their stu-Church Couned, by other religious the University will hold a training -This can be achieved only by gov- ■» dents during school hours for re¬groups, and by mterested mdi- session for sticker campaign cap- DCtitiOfl ClG3<iliri6 *•'*viduals.Periodic checkupsStores on 55th, 57th, and 61stStreets from Ellis Avenue to the tains tonight in Blaine hall.Look for the “C“ signVolunteers who have been go-IC station will soon be sporting s^res in the Uni-versity area since the opening ofthe sticker in the windows as a nuarter have been im-sign of fair dealing with students. winter quarter have Deen imOnce the system has been put upon storekeepers thein effect, there will be periodic Posting the stickers tocheckups by individuals from the f^eir windows. Student businessUC chapter of NAACP to insure is expected to pick up in the placesthe continued non-discrimination “'ey know to be aiding in theof stores in the neighborhood. campaign to avoid embarrassmentCampaign coptoin. trained ^or any minority group.Early with tjip Po.qtprs identifying thp “r?” andstickers have so far been success- what it stands for are going up onlul. Several stores on 61st Street campus next week. Shoein’HOSSESWith JIM REIDTo those who haven’t likedthe column—I’m sorry. Tothose who have read it and.enjoyed it, to those who have0 f f er e d suggestions, myhumble thanks.There Is no more.Thirty. ligious instruction. He urged thedelegates to participate in democ-Petitions for candidacy for elec- racy “if they want the moraltion to the National Students As- right to complain about condi-sociation Congress may now be tions,”obtained in the Dean of Students Conferees in panel discussions ‘ 'office (Reynolds 202) or the Stu- The conferees were divided intodent Government office (Reynolds panel groups to discuss “student-301). to-student,” “student - to - schoolThe deadline for filing these pe- administration,” and “student-to-titions is April 14, and the election community” relations,will be held April 26 and 27. All Dolores Cheslo and Pat Safford#students Interested in NSA ac- Rockford College, were co-chair-tivities are urged by Don Phares, men of the conference. Joyceelections committee chairman, to Dannen, UC, wan in charge ofobtain the petitions and run for housing for the out-of-town dele-delegates. gates.•I-frMar# Mareli 11# 1950 THE CHICAGO MAROONCoop appealscase to high courtf' United Co-operative Projects voted to appeal theHowarth House zoning case to the IllinoL^ Supreme Court.The decision was made in a lively meeting at WhitmanI House, 5721 Kenwood Avenue, on Monday night.This action followed an unfavorable decision handedj down in the First District Appellate Court on March 8.’ The opinion of the court stated, “We infer.. . . thati though, defendant's use ^^* might fall within the defini- the property can be utilized eco-tion of Family Residence, the nomically; the time is cominguse is not Ipso facto permitted.. when vacancy will be the onlyalternative.Bill of Rights ...(Continued from Poge 2)Climax of fo«r-yaor bottiaAppeal of the Howarth caserepresents the climax of fouryears of litigation which beganwhen the house was purchased inMarch, 1946. The basis of the suitu^s that Howarth s 30-^d mem- pj. other pressure aimed atbership did not constitute “tarndy eontrolling editorial policy, withresidence” even though they ^nd removal ofshared expenses and res^nsibil- editorial staffs reserved solely toSingle kitchen. organizations sponsoring thesepublications. In cases, however,Uve told toe Marwn, ‘^e suit ^ publication enjoys a mon-w^as initiated by the OaWand- , university facilities andKenwood Pro^rty Owners ^i- ,minces, students have the rightation, ostensibly to uphold the to toe expression of points of viewzoning law but actuaUy l^aure ^ „^it„s,toe Howarth memtershlp includ- p^^jded the expression so pro-ed Negros.” The situation in the ^ safeguard demo-neighborhof^ has chai«^ some- „atically formulated and admin-what since toe United States Su- j addition, the recogniz-preme Court ruled against restrictive covenants in 1949. A fewNegro families have moved intothe neighborhood, and the Prop- oontrolerty Owners Association, since be¬come the Oakland-Kenwood Plan¬ning Association, is now “main- ing authority may properly insiston adequate safeguards for demo¬cratic terms of membership andntrol.11. The right of recognized stu¬dent organizations to enjoy Uni-taining standards” in which fewer versity recognit. ' in all cases ex-and fewer of the neighbors believe. where the stated purposesAtttft fM on members policies of the organizationUnited Co - operative Projects ^ conflict with the statedhas met the cost of the case by purposes and policies of the Uni-,assessing a legal fee of one dollar versity. Recognition shall not bea month on all its 90 members in '^sed as a lever to: 1) control thethe three houses. Whitman, Wood- purposes ^or programs of the or-lawn, and Howarth. To date more ganization; 2) force it to mergethan $2,000 has been spent, and if with other organizations or pub-UCP loses, the total costs may run lications on the campus againstas high as $4,000. The Association the wishes df its membership; S)has raised $4,000 to fight the case, dictate its form of organizationThe Howarth mansion is a 20- or procedure, except as in Ar-room affair of the later “Gilded tide 10..Age,” and the cost of upkeep and 12. The right of equal opportu-opeiation is prohibitive for a nity to enjoy these rights withoutsingle family. Many of the mem- regard to race, color, sex, nationalbers feel that co-operative living origin, religious creed, or politicalis one of the very few ways that bteliefs.• (• c THE DON-DEECOTTON SHOP Abner and Kbrshak battlerfor Democratic nominationBy HENRY W. LARSONThe regular Democratic organization in this district is being challenged by acombination of groups making a threatening bid for power. The result is a bitingcampaign for state senator from the fifth senatorial district within the Democraticparty for their own prima]^ election on April 11.Although this district is not cinched for the Democrats, that party has been vic¬torious in most past elections. This makes the primary election within that party veryimportant. "Cp) A e Indepen- ocratic organization this revolt »$\3J--/irjL dent Voters of Illinois are the primaries is unnecessary slnctthe main forces behind the the platforms are so much alike.17/T-fV support of CIO's candidate, Wil- it is also inexcusably wasteful atX CAwI loughby Abner. The repilar Dem- ^ when all resources shouldRejuvenated by its work on the Marshall Korshak ^ united against the real enemy.Willoughby Abner campaign, UC pio^orms identicol The CIO and the IVI havestudents for Democratic Action is inasmuch as the platforms of chosen to support Abner in pro-presenting a seven-week program ^jQth candidates are identical, the fee*, oeainst what thev consider aseries on the Fair Deal. SDA is issues in the camnaign concern what they consider asponsoring discussions on regional individual abUities of the can- ^ ^ naming ofdevelopment. Point Four, and didates and the tactics of the rival Democratic candidate. Theycivil rights. Teams have signed up organizations. As a result the sit- claim added insult when the Dem-to debate public housing and the uation has reduced itself to a cer- ocratic organization named whatTaft-Hartley Act. tain amount of mud-slinging.Next Thursday’s public housing The platform which both candi-debate will have' Democratic Al- dates claim to support, consistsderman Robert Merriam opposing of: revision of the Illinois salesRepublican Alderman Alban Web- tax, increased relief and unem-er. The pair are expected to raise ployment benefits, FEPC, rentthe issue of the Chicago City control, housing projects, and fkeir charges that Korshak is dis-Council housing scandal which support of Governor Adlai Stev- incompetent. For thehas split the Council right down enson’s program. charge they have offered nothe middle. Kor.h.k .ecu-. Ab.., Abnentes are clever^The Fair Deal program, held Korshak accuses Abner of nar- ®^I^t®lizing on the unconscio^every Thursday at 3:30 p.m. in row-mindedness in thinking that disdain and abhorrerwe University.Classics 10, will also feature TVA he alone has squatter’s rights on P®0Pl® sre said to ns-ye tk®Expert Herman Pritchett; Chi- liberalism. Abner retorts that intellectualcago’s number one labor lawyer, Korshak neither understands nor deficiency.Leon Despres; Bert Hoselitz, who is sincere about the liberal pro- Marshall Korshak is 40 yearscasts a suspicious eye on Tru- gram which he espouses. Abner is old and has attended the Univer-man’s Point Four program; and Negro and Korshak White; both sity of Wisconsin and schools inBob Ming, national vice-president sides have unfortunately accused Chicago. He worked his wayof AVC. the other of appealing to racism through school and is a graduateThe SDA series will wind up on in their respective racial areas in of the Chicago Kent College ofMay 11 with an overall look at this district. Law. Korshak served underthe Fair Deal. According to the regular Dem- Thomas J. Courtney as AssistantStates Attorney in charge of pro¬bate court and tax matters fr(Hn1939 to 1947. He is a member ofthe Chicago, Illinois, and Amer¬ican Bar Associations; the Dec¬alogue Society of Lawyers; andthe City Club of Chicago. He wasone of the founders of the Amer-^ .. icau Boys Commonwealth. He isFour prizes in English, winners to be announced at active in B’nai B’rith and hasJune convocation, are being offered this spring. participated in the work of theThe Menn Foundation will award prizes of $1,000 and Anti-Defamation League of that$500 in each of two categories: story writing and play organization. He is also on thewriting. Story writing includes long or short novels and koard of the Chicagoshort-stories. Plays may be one-act or lonsjer. This contest ^reeord^ Committee.^ open to studente between twenty and'twenty-five who Abner is educationreceivea tne oacneior s ne-, - covsxrai raiafan nnAmc political director of this tri-gree of the College m De- 5^?®'foUte $100 prTi «*e united Autocember of 1949 or who ex- The contestant ror tms 5100 prizemust submit his entry to the Eng- they call “an incompetent politi¬cal hack” for the candidacy forstate senator.Abner charges dishonestyThe Abnerites are emphasizingFour prixes'rewardlocal English literatipect to do so this June. Manu- Workers’ union. Through this po¬sition he has had experience in^ in ^ lish Office, Wieboldt 205, by /u nTt 7 V 7 1scripts must be in the Office of ^ working with the Illinois legisla-1349 E. 55th St.I EASTER BLOUSES, SKIRTS aail ACCESSORIESDrmp in mmd Brouse AroundOpen Late Mon. Cr Thurs. Eve. the Dean of Students by Mdrch27.College onlyThe David McLaughlin Prize forthe writing of prose is awardedeach year to a college student fora critical essay on some subject MayCoution!All entries to the above con¬tests must be submitted undera pseudonym, and accompaniedby the contestant’s real name ina sealed envelope. ture. Abner is active in IVI,NAACP, the American Civil Lib¬erties Union, and in various com¬munity service projects like theCommunity Fund. He is 30 yearsold, has also worked his waythrough school, and is a graduateDIRECT FROmAUDREY BALLERLeeCollinsDonEwellBookerWashingtonBEE HIVE53fh & Harper X X. X.- X .X. X, The Florence James Adams xx,_ T/^v.rx Tvyrox.cVxon tox.,relattag to toe humanities or the poetry reading contest offers first Schoolsociai sciences. The essay, between second prizes of $50 and $25,1,500 and 3,000 words^must be in respectively. This contest is openthe Office of the Dean of Students to all University students with atby May 1. The award is $60. least two quarters of residence. Ida demons debateThis Sunday, at 8 o’clock. TheStudents for Korshak will WPoetry, for any University student,, poetry reading contest must regis-has no limitation as to length, ter by April 10 in the English Of- Noyes hoU°™he*n^Smes wUl^tosubject, or to form, which may be flee. ^ ® Principles wUl beStudents ...SAVE 20% —30%ATMETROPOLELAUNDRY— Exclusiv'e Cash and Carry —All Family and Bachelor Cleaning and Laundry Services3 DAY SERVICE1219-21-23 EAST 55»h STREET Charles Skyles, candidate for re-election as Representative in theGeneral Assembly, and MarshallKorshak, candidate for the Demo¬cratic nomination as State Sena¬tor. The topic of discussion willbe the respective platforms of thecandidates.6 titles• sortre: la mort dans Tame• claudel et gide: correspondance• de beauvoir: le deuxieme sexe• van gogh: lettres a son freretheo• denney: conneticut river• gilson: being ond somephilosophersthe reddoorIS28 e. 57thPLaza 2-644511 to 110fMnf, Marcli 31« 1950^Issued once weekly by the publisher. The Chicago Maroon, at the publication•ffice. 5706 South University Avenue. Chicago 37. Illinois. Telephones: EditorialOffice. Midway 3-0800, Ext. 2056; Business and Advertising Offices, Midway•-800, Ext. 2055. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions by mall, fl perg[uaiter, |3 per year.M. EVALINE WAGNEREditor-in-ChiefCHARLES GARVINNews EditorROBERT NASSAUFeature EditorKEN KOENIGSports Editor BUD COHENProduction ManagerVIVIAN WOOD_ ^Copy EditorTHOMAS KERNPublic Relations DirectorGENE SWANTZBusiness ManagerJAMES E. BARNETTBusiness AdvisorASSOCIATE EDITORS: Sheila Briskin, Peter Dugal, Anne Finkelstein, CharlesGaulkin, David Kliot, Tom Necheles, Robert Sickels, Gary Steiner, Barry Wil¬son, Carol Yamamoto.EDITORIAL STAFF: Aaron Asher, Adaleen Burnett, Herbert L. Caplan, MaryDoty, Buck Farris, Donna Fuderer, Ed Giesbert, Marc Goff, James Goldman,Rita Harmes, John Harnishfeger, Drexel Hardin, Jerry Harris, Jean Jordan,' Daniel Joseph, Darwin P. Kal, Kirk Kitzmiller, Marilyn Kolber, Henry Lar¬son, Mildred Lamberty, Goldie Lipchutz, Janet Lux, Ruth Lundeen, TerryLunsford, Peggy Lynn, Marilyn Mueller, Dick McConnell, Charles Nash, NoreenNovick, Bruce Novograd, Frederick Paris, Paul Phillipson, Martin Picker, ReidRoss, Neville Ross, David Ruben, Bernie Sachs, Marlene Saxe, F. Valerie Sayers,Morton Schagrin, Gilbert Schlectman, Larry Sherman, Louis Silverman. JackSpillman, James Stewart. Dave Storey, Raymond Wilkins, LeRoy Wolins,Edward Wolpert, Frank Wood.PUBLIC RELATIONS STAFF: Joy Edinger, Joan Levery, William Loengood, PaulTaxey, Burt W^asserman, Ralph WinderBUSINESS STAFF: Ralph Apton, Roslyn Cedetlund, Bob Davenport, Elmer Walsh. By BUD COHENThus spake Protagoras:The question of whether or notit is proper for a newspaper suchas the MAROON to come out edi¬torially in favor of some candidatefor political office has been de¬bated many time and for the pastfew years the subject was closed.A recent editorial in the MA¬ROON, however, has reopened thesubject.The MAROON is a special news¬paper. It is a monopoly paper. Itserves an audience vastly differ¬ent from that of any other paper.It is a weekly. It is in a metropoli¬tan city where both the nationaland international news needs areserved by large dailies of everypolitical tinge. Therefore, for theMAROON to report news thatdoes not directly relate to thecampus would be both foolish andredundant. Aside from all theseobjections, the paper has severespace limitations. The MAROONshould limit Itself to reporting andIn the interests of good government the MAROON commenting only on subjects thatindorses Willoughby Abner in the Democratic Primary for ^ definite bearing on cam-state senator. Compromise candidate, Marshall Korshak,does not even seem to be dependable for even a machine Right now my critics are prob-politician. The question is not that of campaign planks, ahjy saymg that this view is tpi-it is one of sincerity and that of clear action. Who do you “ ° ^think will dp the better job? We think that Willoughby “Lws Ld Xortei commentAbl^er will, if given the chance, are two different and distinctthings. News is factual reporting,but editorial comment is a defi¬nite commitment to a cause. TheMAROON, as a strictly campusorgan should not be tied down toany organization or movement,political or otherwise, off campus,but it should report the facts ifthat group affecte the campus di¬rectly. The story in this issueabout the candidates for nomina¬tion in the Fifth Senatorial dis¬trict Democratic organisation isthe right way to acquaint thecampus of the issues and not edi¬torials as have been run in thisand the last issues. The MARCXDNhas committed itself to a causethat it had no right to.No man^s landLetters ... UCers arriveTen UC students have been^ ^ J elected to the Beta chapter of PhiK^O^Op WCtYttC’Ct Beta Kappa, highest nationalhon-I write this in order to ask a or society of the arts and sciences.Question as well as to make a re- Also, Owl and Serpent, men’sgraduate honor society, has an-Question: Why is there no UC nounced three new initial 3S.Ck)-operative Bookstore? Elected to Phi Beta Kappa are:If there is some exhaustive tech- David I. Cheifitz, Sherry G. Good-Bical explanation which might man, Harry M. Markowitz, Jaysatisfy the curiosity, I presumethe matter must end there; butif there is not any argument suf¬ficient to justify it—then—Request: Why not form a com¬mit ^e to investigate the possibil¬ity of (a) converting the presentUC Bookstore into a Co-op, or (b) Orear, James M. Shellow, Ben¬jamin H. Spargo, Marguerite F.Belknap, Sydenham Cryst, DonaldGlotzer, and Larzer Ziff.Elected to Owl and Serpent are:Clyde S. Bomgardner, Merrill A.Freed, and Herbert F. Vetter.establish such an organization In- Bomgardner was recently chosendependently?If Harvard and Yale (both ofwhich have famous organizationsof this nature, that are in all wayssuperior to our present setup) seefit to support Co-ops, it appearsmore than slightly difficult tojustify the lack of sensible econ¬omizing around here.—Morris Phiiipson Man of the Year by UC students.Freed and Vetter have been activein student government and NSA. Midwoy Shoe RepairInvisible Half SolesShoes Dyed and Refinished24-Hour Service1017 E. 61stPhone HYde Pork 3-4286OOPS...The Ad run in the lost issue "AQuart with Your Quortcrlie." wosput in by o Maroon error and doesnot represent the sympothies ofJIMMY'S SHEAFFER - PARKERWATERMART PE]%SWESTCLOX - TEEECRROIV - G.E.CLOCKS^Swanh • • • CorrectGenCs Accessories *J. H. WATSONHYDE PARK’S LEADIHG JEWELER1200 E. 55th Street^ounfCJ'h . 3nc>STORE FOR WOMENUnderiovelies :: Cosuol Cottage1437 EAST 53rd STREETPhone: MUseum 4-0100AND FOR THAT PHOTOGRAPHIN YOUR EASTER: OUTFITMm PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREETMidway 3 4433 TO EUROPE IN 1950{All-inclusive budget tours for college students — ampleeducational and recreational activities — congenial Englishspeaking local counselors.by chartered plane $520 and npby 'boat $020 and up24 to 115 days — frequent departures betweenMay 29 and July 24Also credit-carrying summer sessions abroad andvarious tours to Latin America'Write for free bulietin:ASSOCIATION FOR ACADEMICTRAVEL ABROAD, INC.(A non-profit orgonisotion)42 Broodway, New York 4, New YorkU.T.De Luxe Hamburgers 20c55th at UniversitySnn^willCampus Clothing ClassicNOW MOTHPROOFEDfor the life of the garment regard¬less of the number of dry cleaningsSO VERSATILEyou can wear it everywhereSO SERVICEABLEit is the greatest valuein its price rangeTHE BASIC SUITthat belongs in everycollege man’s wardrobeSmart single and double-breasted two and three-piecemodels. Newest spring stylesand colors. NOW ONLYHarmonizing and contrastingSurritwill SlacksBUSINESSSPOBTSWEABWEEK-ENDINGfVENINGSee Surretwill In Chicogo atMANDEL BROS. INC.rHi If INC.# 275 Sevonth Avonuo, Now York 1, KY.fMvf, Mweh SI, .1950 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5CSet it at theU of CBookstore5802 Ellis Ave.Reinforcement elmost invisible,wofer Hiin, yet POWERFUL.Rthel CrittVnivertity, Mkiitiippt(0»hrd)The Rebel Grill is one of the favor¬ite on-the-campus haunts of studentsat the University of Mississippi.That’s because the Rebel Grill is afriendly place, always full of thebusy atmosphere of college life.There is always plenty of ice-coldCoca-Cola, too. For here, as in col¬lege gathering spots everywhere—Coke belongs.Ask for it either way ... bothtrade-marks mean the same thing,•OTTltD UNDW AUTHOWTY OP THE COCA-COLA COMPANY lYCOCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF CHICAGO- INC. '1950, Til# Cnra-roiri Cnmpamy LINCOLN MERCIIRY- IN HYDE PARKSpecializing In Ford ProductsWE SERVICE AND REPAIRALL MAKES OF ALTOSSIMONIZERODY AND FENDER WORKFactory Trained MechanicsLAKE PARK MOTORS, inc5601 HARPER AVE.S. TAUBER, President E. KAPLAN, TreosurerThe University of Chicago trackteam, already boasting one of thefiner college relay teams in thispart of the country, showered ad¬ditional glory upon itself by com¬ing up with a very impressive firstplace in the Matched College MileRelay event of the Chicago Relaysheld at the Chicago Stadium onMarch 18th.Competing against men fromLoyola, De Paul, and Wheaton,the fleet-footed Chicagoans.Thomas, Cotton, Mundstock, andKillough held the upper hand forthe greater part of the event.Thomas, after getting off to apoor start, took over the lead andgave Cotton the jump in the sec¬ond leg. Cotton and Mundstockheld the lead. Killough, after be¬ing passed at the start of the lastlap, made* his bid for the lead atthe far turn and successfully re¬gained the lead.In the Illinois Tech Relays, theUniversity of Chicago placed third. SPORTSStart Yoar New Termwith the laexpensiveSTRONGLEAFREINFORCED FILLERSNo more tom pogesto potekNo more time wasted inrewriting tom loose leotskeets Qrapefruit squadreturns from SouthBy KEN KOENIGHampered by a total lack of outdoor practice beforethe Arkansas spring* training trips, Kyle Anderson’s dia¬mond men grabbed two of six games on last week’s journeyto the Southland. The record includes a double loss toArkansas Teachers, a single to Tech and to State, and onewin over each, of the latter.The Maroons waited until the ninth inning of theopener with Tech before ral- "lying for four runs By this initial frame. \time they were five runs in A mighly surgeBehind three runs, the Ander-arrears. Gene Borowitz having son men surged ahead to stay withexperienced two difficult innings, a four run uprising in the fifth.At that, Joe Golan advanced as Roessell walked and Govorchinfar as third with the tying run singled. McKinney forced Roessellbefore a fine catch by Tech left hut Geocaris walked to load ’emfielder of Jack Bateman’s low fly np. A Rowland single throughdoubled Golan off third and ended the second baseman’s legs broughtthe game.Ckoin reoctionThe action had stai t^d at the in two and Casey’s hit sent homethe remaining two.The Maroons tacked on two in¬beginning of the frame when Jim surance runs in the top of theGeorcaris led off with a 400 foot seventh. Govorchin walked withhomer to left. Two more runs down and Rowland with twocame across when Sherry Rowland ^way, also walked. Gootch rodepoked a single over second and Casey’s single to left, andJohn Casey’s smash to left center Rowland counted on the front endcarried for the second round trip- of a delayed double steal. ^per of the inning. Gray walked Wro«g things, wrong timeswent to third on pinch hitter Gol- in Wednesday’s contest, thean’s single after one out and Chicagoans outbid Teacher’s 16 toscored as Brown was booting Bo- eight but erred four times at in-roWitz’s grounder. Then came the opportune moments while Windlegame ending the twin killing. and Borowitz were giving out tooTuesday’s game saw Ia)u Ham- many passes, so dropped the gameilton breeze past the Teclisters 11-10. Hamilton, the second ofexcept for the fourth inning in three pitchers, turned in an ex-which the hosts, pushed across all cellent relief job. The followingfour of their runs. A walk, two day, Jaynes held the Maroons tosingles, a double and Roberts’ three runs and four nits as thehomer turned the trick. The Ma- Bears took an 8-3 victory,loons had taken an early leaa on Hamilton’ stopped State in an-Govorchin’s single, McKinney’s other 7-4 win, his second of thesacrifice and Geocaris’ base knock trip, on Friday afternoon.UC relayerstake laurelsat StadiumWomen's Inter-dorm Councilpresents* its onnuolINTER-DORM FORMALSHORELAND HOTELFRIDAY, APRIL 14Tommy Parker’s orchestraTickers on sale — Women's Dormsand Reynolds Club 203Formal (optional for men) $1.80 tax included. i<i<i' iii<iiiSELLING OUT!^ Books one-half price or lenMost Items 10c to 50cjUl Subjects and Select FictionACME BOOK SHOP831 East 61st St.Open daily 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. CANOE TRIPSinto Quetieo • SuperiorOnly $4.00 - $4.50 per DayFor Canoe, Complete Camp Equip¬ment and Food. For Booklet andMap Write:BILL N. ROMCanoe Country OutfittersEly, Minn.DR. Ein. HELSOHIAND ASSOCIATES |1138 E. 63rd HY 3-5352OPTOMEtRISTS and OPTICIANS—o—• Discounts to NSA purchase card holders• Eye examination and glasses• Rapid and accurate optical repairingLIGHT WEIGHTSPECIALISTFeaturingSCHWINN - RALEIGH -HUMBER . DAWES -HERCULES -ARMSTRONGLIGHT-WEIGHTBICYCLESRALEIGH SPORT TOURIST68Now OnlyWitk 3 SpeedtPayment Plan AvailableAll Americon parts ore interckongeableCome in and ride one beforeyou buy oneIf you ore plonning on overseas Hosteltrip orrongements con be mode to poyfor your Roieigh Cycle at the Englishprice ot our store ond receive deliveryot CMiy ’English port. The soving isopproximotely $25.00.ART'S CYCLE and HOBBY SHOP815 East 75th Street Chicago 19TRiangle 4-4100..Hours: 9 to 6 —« Mon. fir Thurs. 9 to 9SPECIFICATIONS: FRAME:21", 23". Entirely brazed-up.WHEELS: 26" x I’/i". RaleighPatent Dual Purpose rims.Stainless Steel Spokes. TIRES:Dunlop. GEAR: Sturmey-Archer 3-speed (AW), Trigger“Plick” control. PEDALS;Rubber. HANDLEBAR: NorthRoad Raised, adjustable stem.BRAKES: Raleigh front andrear Caliper. GEARCASE: Ra¬leigh Ollbath. SADDLEDBrooks’ B.66 best Butt Leather,finest quality, or Terry’s finestquality Spring Seat. FINISH;Black enamel on Spra-bonder-ized rust-proof surface. Usualbright parts Raleigh-ChromeSlated. FITTINGS: Tools, klt-ag. inflator, reflector.ITHE CHICAGO MAKOON Friday, Maiclb 31, I95QFootlights and Klieglights Books and Reading"All is not lost:" critic Puerto Ricun futuremovie moguls wise up }yut not dullFor reasons best known to tiiemselves-and presum- ' Economic Future by Harvey S. Perloffably their bankers—American film-makers for the past rviinaim S»4 75year or so have been laboring mightily and bringing forth said without equivocation that this is asome offspring that were anyt^g but mice And even a ^o^hwhlle book. For while, as Professor Perloff would be"• '"T's"!!: iSuisrihS'S......lent uouDie leaiures. has superlative performances by hnmp thp need for vuinovahtutv ofPerhaps the finest picture in rtuifio rt-onri <2ir nainh ^ ^ ® ^ ^ mentioning the vulneiability oftown at this writing is The Heir- Havilland and Sir R^a ph planned social action to the read- ^he Puerto Rican economy to de-ess” and the most overrated is Ricbard^n, with Miriam Hop- and provide the author with pressions because of dependencekins pressing them hard on some plentiful raw material on which to on trade with the U.S., he neglectsof the turns. Were it not for the demonstrate the techniques of to mention that a successful planmiscasting of Montgomery Clift, ^_p:o_g„Q„ojnic Dlannine for Puerto Rico would have tothis picture might have rated the ®ocio economic pianmngadjective “great.” The film builds Baby business boomingits power slowdy but surely in the Considering the facts presented,■ Henry James fashion but, Puerto Rico’s future cannot beuOOQ ©X^niDlT excellent cast and said to be very bright. With over^j 1 •4-4-1 perceptive direction and photog- two million people living thereThere is a good little ex- raphy, it lacks a certain spark. A now, far too many for the basicThe PaletteArtists dabexhibit (Continued on Page 7)MTZIE’SFlower ShopEASTERFLOWERS= All phonet Ml 3-4020S 1301 E. 55tli St.Telegroph Delivery Service KIMBARK. THEITIIE .6240 KIMBARK AVENUEPUSH BACK SEATS“FLOATINC COMFORT”Doors Open 12:30Show Starts at 12:45FRIDAY - SATURDAYOonny Koye“The Inspector General”“Hevada Trail”“South Sea Sinner”Fonrtli Episode“Radar Patrol vs.Spy King”5 CARTOONSFirst Show Only SoturdoyDoors Opon ot 12:30No Advonco in AdmissionSUNDAY - MONDAYHope ond Crosby“Road to Rio”“Panther Island”“Silver Butte”TUESDAY . WEDNESDAY“On the Town”“Captain China”hibit by student artists of the better leading man might well resources and current technology.Burton-Judson studios on have made the difference. Puerto Rico has the highest ratenow in the Reynolds Club lounge. According to its publicity, ten of natural population increase inThe work, a variety of subjects scripts of A the KM were written the world (31.3 per thousand inrendered in several media, .styles, and destroyed in an effort for per- 1947). Industrial resources are al¬and techniques,- is distinguished fection. Well, for our money, they most non-existent, wages law, un-for ite imaginativeness, and for its stopped tearing a little too soon, employment chronic, ranging fromsoundness and spontaneity of ex- Not only are several loose story over 10 per cent of the labor forceccution. story ends left flapping in the po- in good times to 25 per cent inTo decide which are the most litical hot air but the whole think depressions.notable of these drawings and suffers from a lack of focus. It’s in the face of the facts he haspaintings is difficult: they all never clear whether we are to be compiled. Professor Perloff waversmerit much more than a passing primarily concerned with Willie between a seemingly uncalled-forglance. Marguerite Lennon’s small. Stark or the people around him. optimism in describing the “bat-well-composed oil-on-paper of a The acting was sometimes more tie of production” to industrializescene in an urban Chinese quarter than a little self-conscious and, the island, create an ineffectualis refreshing; the artist’s skillful good as he was, Broderick Craw- 8,000 jobs, labor productivity, ahandling of space-and-oolor rela- ford was scarcely convincing in battle in which the workers aretionships within the painting has the early scenes as a self-made supposed to speed up in the faceproduced its quality of airiness. backwoods politician. As a picture of heavy unemployment in orderAbstracf but ortful^ of certain aspects of the Ameri- to attract industries owned mostlyLouis Winaisky s decorative ab- can electorate and some of its on the mainland and granted taxstract designs, both in ciayoii and leaders, A the KM had some mo- exemptions and subsidies in thein water color, are inventive and ments of power and excitement. form of factory buildings and pub-well-structured. Mr. Winaisky’s intruder in the Dust, is an inter- lie utilities paid for out of thesefaithfulness to the demands cf his esting film which doesn’t seem to same workers’ taxes, and therespective media is reflected in jjg aware of all its possibilities, prophet - of - doom approach inthe greater subtlety of color and Again there is a lack of focus, plus dealing with population problems,treatment of his deslgi^ in water some intrusive, and perhaps even Plons in obsfroctcolor. He has on ^ a little offensive, comic business Among the planning techniqueswater-color of a railroad yard at inserted for no good reason. The which will interest the averageevening whose bare suggestive- fijjjj savers between being a sus- reader are author’s use of hypo-.ness and vivid blues set its lonely pense movie and a socio-psycho- thetical economic models to for-, logical study and we can’t clear mulate alternative courses of eco-A line drawing of a woman s matter up for you Piuch nomic development and the ap-head in ink and water color, by either. There is much good acting plication of social priorities whichDamaris Hendry, is rather remin- ij^ however, and some very he strongly urges be used in theiscent in its technique, of Picasso truthful photography. allocation of resources by the gov-in one of his less turbulent hu- eomplicoies ernment (whose past and presentfigure drawings by Despite a bit too much Milton policy of applying them to ameli-Jackie Wilson are notable for the caniffish dialogue and an occa- orative measures rather thanspareness, fluidity, and vigor of sionaKair of slickness. Battle- long-term development projectstheir style; more aca^mic ones, j,|.aand remains in our mind as he condemns).skillfuxly an we’ve Yet subtly the book itself takes Student Union and Campus Chest Present:INDUSTRY SINGSWith the AssMkciation of Commerce'and Industry Clee Cluh8:30 TUESDAY, APRIL 4, AT MANDEL HALLTickets Now on Sale at Box Office$1.50 Orchestra $1.20 Balcony, tax incl.Third Progrmm mf the Settlement Serieaever seen. Even though most ofconvincingly done.^ actoFs vere familiar and youThe drawings and pamiings , feither unsigned or whose signa- could guess what their roles weretures. unfortunately, are obs..ured mo^'re ?f t?e BatUe‘of thefitill-hfe of ^ Bulge and the life of the infantrybottle done in the expre^ omstic James Whitmore was the bigvein, a framed a -over p ^ \ star as far as we were concerned,of faces —done in fingei-pau his portrayal of the sergeant grow-which reminds you of an ancient .e,.. f. TERESA DOLAIVDANCING SCHOOLLearn to Dance NowPrivate or Class LessonsOpen Daily, 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.1208 E. 63rd St.Phono: HYdo Pork 3-308CMayan bas-relief; a painting,framed in pale green, of a wom¬an’s head done in bright 3^elIow,vermilion, and dark greens andblues, to which, without stretching the imagination to its break ing steadily until by the end it wasthe most memorable thing in thefilm.Incidentally, while patting Hol¬lywood on the back, we’d also liketo give a hand to theaters like theine-polnt, you might attribute, if Picadiily. which during the pastyou cared to. a quality of hard has booked some doublebrightness characteristic of By- hills that represented a terrificzantine paintings; and a painting entertainment bargain. Let’s hope(which, happily, we discovered to “ore theater managers fall inbe a self-portrait by Jane Perry) -Hne. N.B.—Don’t miss The Quietwhose formal excellence resides in One which is showing on campusIts successful handling of light today and tomorrow,and shadow.Both in itself and insofar as itindicates the present condition ofArt at the University of Cliicago,this exhibition is indeed cheering.More!. Sylvio Kottsel Flowers ForAll OccasionsBERNIE BAUMPhone DO 3-0225-^Robert NossouEXCIiUSIVECLEANERS331 E. 57tliSt. Ml 3-0602442 E. 57tli St. Ml 3-0608We Operate Our OtenPlant5319 Hyde Pork Blvd.HY 3-3157 WARNER BROS.HAMILTONSTARTS FRIDAY, MARCH 31 •— THEATER2150 E. 71 St ST.FOR ONE WEEKj. ARTHUR RANK prosonts \ ^tIETA KMSS MM \\GYNT * PRICE • WARNER inEASY MONEYA fioin»bw8i|li Fictiri • Ai Et|li liti FHm IoImiiUniversity Students and Faculty—Obtain Your HamiltonTheatre Discount Tickets at the ^ateon Office or atThe Reynolds Club Desk HOW MUCH DO YOU KNOWABOUTCHRISTIAN SCIENCE?yon are invited to attend aFREE LECTUREentitled“Christian Science: The LawOf Liberty”By Adair Hickman, C.S.B., of New York CityMember of the Board of Lectureship of the MotherChurch, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, inBoston, MassachusettsIn Rosenwald HoH, Room 258th ond University AvenueWEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, ’504:30 P.M.Given Under Auspices of Christian Science Organizationat the University of Chicago!%«■!\hii»r> March 31, 1350 THE CHICAGO MAROON Fa9« TINTRODUCINGHELEN MONSER — NEW OWNEROF STYLIST BEAUTY SALONFormerly of Wilmington HojelExpert In All Lines of Beauty CultureSpeciol on Cold Woves — Tues. fir Wed.$8.50 — Including Hoir CutOpen 9-6Phone MU 4-91791026 East 55th StreetFLY.Y. TO ]•PARIS ’360(Round Trip)ALL CHARTER FLIGHTS GUARANTEEDRound Trip Flights to:Rome:$460 London: $360 Madrid: $360^ SPECIAL ARRANGEMENTS FOR GROUPSWrite or PhoneINTERNATIONAL YOUTH, Inc.ISO BROADWAYNew York T, New York WOrth 2-5348To ossure postage write immediately Books . . .(Continued from Page 6)solve the depression problem, andwould have to be on an interna¬tional scale.Ignores notionolismPuerto Rican nationalism andits suppression is ignored as is allpossibility of a revolutionary solu¬tion to either satisfy that nation¬alism or end the cyclical economiccrisis problem.Here there is sharp contrast tothe admission of the necessity andinevitability of revolutionarychange in a recent book on thebackward countries of Asia (writ¬ten in broad generalities ratherthan the excellent detail of thework under consideration), Situa¬tion in Asia by Owen Lattimore.But then, look what happened tohim.—LeRoy Wolins By TOM NECHELESiOCAi AMO LONG DISTANCe HAULINQ•60 YIAAS Of OmtOABUSBtVKt TO IHt SOUTHSIDt•ASK fOK ntf tSTIMATB55th and ELLIS AVENUECHICAGO 1 5 , ILLINOISDAVID L. SUTTON, Pres.Butterfield 8-6711Laurel KleinRaremory ShermanNan RossiterSheilo MillerNoreen NovickBess HauseAgnes YowSheila Briskin ★*★★*★★★★★★★★★★★★ Who will she he on this campus?Cast your ballot today for“MISS FASHION PLATE OF 1950”What excitemeiifl Revlon Is sponsoring a con- She must excel on 4 counts:test to determine which girl is fairest of them • Beauty and Charm Friday^ March 31Dance in the Reynolds Club NorthLounge from 3 to 5 p.m. A<lmlssion isfree.• • •Dr. William Kerr speaks on “The HolySpirit" at 7:30 p.m. In the East Loungeof Ida Noyes. The event is sponsoredby the Inter-Varsity Christian Fellow¬ship. Admission Is free.* • •“What Is Jewish Art?" is the subjectof a talk by Victor Perlmutter at theHillel Fireside at Hillel at 8:30 p.m.Admission is free.« * •Jacob Lateiner, pianist, will play se¬lections from Beethoven, Schubert,Berg, and Brahms, in his first UC con¬cert at 8:30 p.m. in Mandel Hall. Tick¬ets at the University Concert office,5801 Woodlawn Avenue.Saturday, April 1Trip to Van Gogh exhibit led by MissJune Lukosh, a Chicago artist, fromIda Noyes at 12 noon. Admission is free.* 4 *Sunday, April 2“What Is Unitarianism?" Is the sub¬ject of a talk by Herbert Vetter in theClub Room of the First UnitarianChurch at 57th and Woodlawn at 4 p.m.Admission is free.“Literature and the Destiny of Man"Is the subject of a talk by ProfessorAlbert Hayes at 7 p.m. in the John Wool-man Hall In the First Unitarian Churchat 57th and Woodlawn. Supper at 6 p.m.(45c). Social activities at 8:30 p.m. S^n-sored by the Channing Club.• • 0“Religion and the College Student" isthe topic of a talk by Dean CharlesGREGG COLLEGEA Sdiool of iusInaM—IH'afarrad byCoHogo Man and Womon4 MONTHINTENSIVE COURSESECRETARIAL TRAINING FOR COLLEGESTUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough, intensive course—startioRJane, October. February. Bul¬letin A on request•SKOAL COUNSELOR for 6.1. TRAINING•Regular Day and Evening SchoolsThroughout the Year. Catalog•Director, Paul M. Pair, M.A.THE GREGG COLLEGES7 S. Wabash Ava., Chicago 3, Illinois Gilkey at the Hyde Park Baptist Churchat 7 p.m. Supper at 6 p.m. is 50c. Theevent is sponsored by the Charles GilkeyFoundation.s s aSeder In honor of Passoyer will be ob¬served at Hillel at 7:30 p.m. Admissionis by reservation.WUMP is the tiUe of the Noyes Boxat 8 p.m. in Ida Noyes. Men, 25c; others5c.a a •Monday, April 3Art exhibit of original drawings byIsaac Lichtenstein opens today at Hillel.Open at 1:30 p.m. Admission is free.a « aTuesday, April 4Testimonial meeting of the ChristianScience organization at 7:30 p.m. in theThorndike Hilton Chapel. Admission isfree.a a a“The Challenge to Reason" is thetopic of a talk by Karl Popper in Breas¬ted Hall at 4 p.m. Admission is free^The Chicago Association of Commerceand Industry Glee Club will sing inMandel Hall at 8:30 p.m., the third ina series of five benefit shows for theUC Settlement House. Sponsored byStudent Union and Campus Chest.Tickets at $1.20 and $1.50 available inthe box office in Mandel corridor.a a aWed*sday, April 5“The Importance of Voting in thePrimary” is the subject of a talk byBernard Epton, a candidate for Con¬gress from this district, at 4 p.m. inSocial Sciences 122. Sponsored by theStudent Republican Club. Admission lifree.a a a“Grapes of Wrath” in the movie formmakes its appearance at 7:15 and 9:30p.m. in Rosenwald 2 through the cour¬tesy of SDA. Admission Is 40c.a a aThursday, April 6“What Remains Valid in Marxism?" isthe subject of a symposium sponsoredby the Politics Club at 3:30 p.m. inHaskell 108. Admission is free.a a a, “Public Housing: Has Free EnterpriseFailed?" is the subject of a discussionbetween Alderman R. Merriam andAlderman A. Weber at 3:30 p.m. in Clas¬sics 10. Sponsored by SDA. AdmissionIs free.a a •“The Task of Social Philosophy" isthe topic of a discussion by Karl Pop¬per in Breasted Hall at 4 p.m.a a a“Cage of Nightingales" is a moviesponsored by SU In Social Sciences 122at 7 and 9:30 p.m. Admisison is 45c.all on your campus.You elect Revlon's MISS FASHION PLATE of1950! And you give her a chance to win theGrand Prize...a glamorous trip to Bermudaby Pan American Clipper plus an expensefree week at the famous"Castle Harbour" Hotel IAnd 7 other thrilling prizes:an RCA-Victor "Globetrotter" portable radio;a Lane "18th Century" Hope Chest;an Amelia Earhart party case in "Revlon Red"leather;a silver-plated lighter, cigarette urn and trayset by Ronson;a necklace, bracelet and earring setbyTrifari;a year's supply of Berkshire's nylon stockings;a Wittnauer wrist watch;and, of course, a full year's supply of Revloncosmetics!You know the winner I Your campus teemswith candidates for "MISS FASHION PLATEof 1950". That's why Revlon asked yourCampus Boord of Selection to pre-select 10girls. Look over their names...and decidewho deserves to win the title "MISS FASHIONPLATE of 1950" on your campus—and possiblyfrom coast to coast I • Fashion Knowledge and Dress• Personal Grooming• Personality and PoiseWhat more natural sponsor than Revlon?Isn't It |ust like Revlon, foremost name in cos¬metics, to dream up a contest to choose theloveliest girl on your campus? Revlon namedthis exciting contest after its own product"FASHION PLATE"...the one and only creamwafer face make-up In the world! BecauseRevlon believes that the most beautiful womenhave skin that lights up and glows... skintouched with the magic of FASHION PLATE.Important: The candidate you select will com¬pete against candidates selected by othercolleges and universities from seaboard toseaboard! Watch the papers In May for theannouncement of the Grand Prize VVinner...the girl who'll win the free trip to Bermuda!The girl who wins on your campus—whetheror not she's national "MISS FASHION PLATEof 1950"—will win a year's free supply ofRevlon cosmetics!Make sure the best girl wins! Cast your ballottoday! A panel of beauty authorities is wait¬ing to judge your candidate.Ballot^Contest closes midnight,April 15! Clip ballot-drop it in ballot box inthis newspaper office.Watch newspaper fprannouncement ofether ballet boxlocations on campus. ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★A trip to Bermuda by Pan-American ClipperGRAND PRIZEr ,plus an expense-free week at the famous "Castle Harbour".I nominate. -for ."MISS FASHIONPLATE of 1950", a contest sponsored by Revlon Products Corp.Your — — —All hnllnt< bftcome the prooerty of Revlon Products Corporation. READINGS FOR EASTEIFOR ADULTS:A selec. list especially recommended for Lenten reading by prominentCotholic ond Protestont clergymen.THE VATICAN — BEHIND THE SCENES IN THEHOLT CITY 4.00by Ann CarnahweSEEDS OF CONTEMPLATION 3.00by Thomas MertonRELIGIOUS ART 4.50by Emile MaleCHRISTIANITY AND CIVILIZATION 2.50by Emil BrunnerALBERT SCHWEITZER: GENIUS IN THEJUNGLE 2.75by Joseph GollombSIGNS OF HOPE 1.00by Elton TruebloodFOR CHILDREIV:An interesting ossortment of books witfi pop-up bunnyspictures, eoch containing on eosy-to-reod text. ond goyTHE WHITE BUNNY AND HIS MAGIC NOSE. 1.00FUSSBUNNY .60THE EGG TREE 2.00THE GOLDEN EGG BOOK a. Eo»er classic ...UNIVERSITY OF CHICA 1.00GOBOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUEfage 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, March 31, I950STUDENT AND FACULTY FLIGHTSto EUROPERound trip fromCHICAGO ‘$395NEW YORK $355%Student Tours to All Pads of the WorldStudent Travel Service'1540 K Si. 57, 111When soles on certoin books dropbelow the point where publisherscon secure o fair return on coto-loging ond warehousing costs, the ibooks ore often sold to whoie-solers ot o sm.jll froction of theregular prices. These books orethen offered through the trode otprices which ore from 50 to S0%less thon the estoblished retoilprices.Currently obout 1500 titles oreovoiloble. They represent books inevery field of interest.Typicnt of currentofferinfin areLilian Bowes Lyon: COLLECTEDPOEMS. Published at ^2.75.Now 25cRobert Graves: KING JESUS. Anovel published at $3.00.Now 49cJ. A. T. Lloyd: FYODOR DOS¬TOEVSKY. A psychological studyand detailed account of the strangeturbulent life of the great Russiannovelist. Published at $3.50.Now 79cVINCENT VAN GOGH: Drawings,Pastels, Studies, Ed. by Dr. W.Munsterberger. 100 Reproductions,8 in color. Published ot $5.00.Now $2.49Major Car/sott, Maf/otra,Tramay BceeaHtre, (J.$./(frfom(Thig Space Reserved torHolliday’s DeLuxeSHOE SERVICE Keep it simpleMiss Goldie Chung'sRESTAURAIVTHOME COOKEDAmericon ond Chinese DishotSpecials Every DayChop Snoy toTake Home After their Friday Bebop sessionat the end of last quarter theReynolds Club Student Commit¬tee has decided to lie low andjust have a simple record dancethis Friday. No young gentlemenwill prance about with bass fiddlesnor will a blast of syncopatingmusic echo through the lounges.“Our new policy is dance musicfor the masses,” says Barry Wil¬son, chairman. “We intend to givethe students what they want.” Channing Club lectures onmodern culture start Sunday Coyernment mentrek to IndianaChanning Club opens a new series of programs duringthe month of April on “Religious Dimensions of Contem¬porary Culture.” The first lecture-disfcussion in the series,“Literature and the Destiny of Man,” will be given Sun¬day by Professor Albert Hayes.The idea underlying the series is the assumption thatculture, which pertains to patterns of meanmg and theirrelationships, has either implicitly1445 E. 60th StreetPhone: PLaza 2-9606 Patronize MAROONAdvertisersFOR FINEDRY CLEANING AND LAUNDRYCALLMAX BROOK1013-15 E. 61 sf StreetMidway 3-7447WE HAVE COMPLETE STORAGE FACILITIES FOR YOUR FURS ANDOUT OF SEASON GARMENTS or explicitly some dimension thatis religious in the sense that itrefers to some ultimate meaningof existence.Soviet culture to be discussedWithin this context LeonardMeyer on April 16 will speak on“Degradation and Depth in Mod¬ern Music” and on April 23 Pro¬fessor Reitzer will discuss “TheReligious Quality of Soviet Cul-GREEN BRIAR HOTELROOMSRalPK start at:$2.75 daily—$12 weeklyPrivate Both ond Shower6220 Greenwood PL 2-4800 ture.”No matter how vigorously per¬sons may condemn Soviet cul¬ture as atheistic and irreligious,the assumption underlying theChanning Club series is that thereis no atheism but only differenttypes of ultimate concern or ulti¬mate meaning.Frank Knight to speokThe series will conclude with asession on “Positivism vs. Reli¬gion” with Professor Frank Knightas the speaker.All programs will take place atJohn Woolman Hall, First Unitar¬ian Church, 57th at Woodlawn.Programs begin at 7 pjn. Theywill be preceded by super at 6 p.m.(45 cents) and followed by a socialprogram at 8:30 p.m. Six went to Indiana Universitylast week end to discuss studentgovernments. After three days of iconcentrated study, they returned,in the words of one of the dele¬gates, “convinced that B-J is %shack, compared to the Indianadormitories.” \While most of the competingcolleges were concerned over lackof attendance at athletic event.s.UC’s delegates were obsessed with *the apathy toward political or¬ganizations that grips this campus.The problem was not solved, ac¬cording to unusually reliable ..sources. *' Alex Campbell, former assistantUS attorney general, spoke on the“Responsibilities of the Student as «a Citizen,” warning of the terribledangers of communism. He re-1vealed in gory detail how brilliant \men like Alger Hiss get involvedin subversion.UC’ers at the rally were: VivianMangaris, Bob Jacobs, Frank Lo- -gan, Louis Silverman, Dave Straus, ’Roger Woodworth, and Alex Pope.PUBLISHERS’REMAINDERSJames Thomas Flexner: FIRSTFLOWERS OF OUR WILDERNESS.American Painting. Ulus, with 162reproductions in color and blackond white. Published at $10.00.Now $2.98We stock oil important remoinders.Catalogs and post cord onnounce-ments of new remainders ore sentour customers freqently. We shallbe glad to odd your name to ourmailing list.CLARK AND CLARK,BOOK.^ELLEII.^1204 East 55th StreetHours 10 A.M. to 9 P.M.Bom in Red Oak, Iowa, Roy graduatedfrom Thomas Jefferson High School atCouncil Bluffs. He was ready to enter theUniversity when war changed his mind. He went to work at Consolidated Vulteein San Diego, building PBY’s and B-24’s.But it wasn’t long until he had put in hisapplication for Aviation Cadet training.Roy completed 125 combat missions, lead¬ing many of them, supporting the invasionand the advances on into Germany. WonAir Medal, D.F.C., many other decora¬tions. Promoted to Captain, then to Major. Back home, he married the lovely Armynurse from Lowell, Massachusetts, whomhe had met at Cannes, France. After thehoneymoon, he returned to finish hisstudies at the University of Iowa. CadetCarlsonwonhis wings in April, 1943,was assigned to P-47 "Thunderbolts” withthe 368th Fighter Group in En^^land, tobreak ground for the Normandy mvasion.Major Cf^Ison is now Chief of Operations,2471st Air Force Reserve Training Cen¬ter, at O’Hare International Airport, nearClucago. Has two husky sons, a fine job,a great career still ahead of him!If you are single, between the ages of 20 and 2614^with at least two years of college, consider the manycareer opportunities as a pilot or navigator In theU. S. Air Force. Procurement Teams are visiting manycolleges and universities to explain these careeropportunities. Watch for them. You may also get fulldetails at your nearest Air Force Base or U. S. Armyand U. S. Air Force Recruiting Station, or by writing tothe Chief of Staff, U. S. Air Force, Att: Aviation CadetBranch, Washington 25, D. C.U. S. AIR FORCEONLY THE BEST CAN BE AVIATION CADETS! iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiih^ NAUSEA[WUMP^ BOXBB MUSIC BY VICTOBY