University of Chicago, April 21, 1950 ^ini 31Bundle gives lowdown on peace, U NCalls human consensus Believes in internationalReporter wrihistory of MaxBy BARRY WILSONDon’t weep forlornly in that corner of the coffee shop, lit¬tle man. Some tiay you’ll grow up to be rich and famous likeMax Schulman and they’ll let you sell books and lecture iathe Reynolds Club. In fact, clad only in a blue suit, tie andtails, “Sloppy Maxie” gave a Perelmanesque dissertation on“Why not to be a writer,” last Friday.Gibbering intelelctuals left the lounge with copies of hi*new book tucked eroticallykey to world peace organization like UNBy ANN COLLAR under their arms. More thanthat, they <;arried away withthem an impression of meetinfand talking to one of the men ofour age, a man wise with wisdombeyond his thirty-odd years andendowed with that quality of aready quip and remaiic to fit anyplot situation.Born in St. Paul, educated inschool, and making money, Shul-“World Government will not come by world revolution,” man didn’t “Sleep Till Noon” atand that is the road of human said Ralph J. Bunche, UN mediator in the Palestine dis- ^ SiStv" nictarespute and acting assistant secretary-general of the UN “ publicity pictures and(“There is one road to ^ace,” exclaimed Ralph Bunchlast Friday at the last of his Walgreen Foundation lecturesin Rockefeller Chapel,understanding.” journey from his hotel to our fairBunche spoke of the importance of human relations to Trusteeship Council, m an mterview with the MAROON campus, speaking from his widepeace. In what he called a serjnon rather then simply a Thursday. knowledge of the university of' lecture, he painted the complicated picture of equality, “I. personally, believe in an international organization,” Chicago which consisted of hit.. . ^ .—1 Bunche added. “This means that the more authority the walk from the Bookstore to Rey-UN has, the better will be the r; r—t-tttworld we live in. But theaction and sheer survival. -“The most valuable re-sources of any country are its ATXtA'IHIf Copeople,** and, Bunche explained,its people are of all races andmany faiths.OMpera** aaad for pooco“We need peace desperately,but the world has always neededpeace.. Today the question is notitsimply peace or war as it has been'4n the past, it is now a questionof survival — of civilization andmankind. Time is short, frighten¬ingly short.’*“It is ourselves that we mustfear more then the A-bomb or theH-bomb. It is in men’s perversities,false self - righteousness, and hisapathy that the real danger is tobe found.“But, we must never lose faithin man’s potential power for good,and we must never lose hope formankind.’’RecepHoii for BniickoFriday evening, l^nche attend¬ed a reception in his honor at theInternational House, where hefaced an hour of questions onIsrael, Russia, and the U.N.Bunche, a professor in politicalscience at Howard, is presently amember of the UN trusteeship de¬partment. He is a noted authorityon non-self-governing territories. Saturday niteThomas Mann, German novel¬ist and Nobel prize winner, willgive the 176th William VaughnMoody lecture Saturday, April 22,at 8:30 p.m. in Rockefeller Memo¬rial Chapel.Mann, whose first novel, Bud-denbrooks, brought him criticalacclaim at the age of 27. is con¬sidered the greatest living expo¬nent of the German school of writ¬ing. Deprived of his German citi¬zenship in 1933 because of hisanti-Nazi writings, he lived inSwitzerland before coming to theUnited States in 1938.His many works, which formu¬late his ^lief that democracyrests on the essential dignity ofman and that the economic wel¬fare of the many must not be sac¬rificed to that of the few, includeDeath in Venice, The Magic Moun¬tain, Mario and the Magician, anda series of volumes on the life ofJoseph. His Doctor Faustus waspublished last year.The Moody lecture is open tothe public without charge. ^^Ue thcsc things happen; anycracks in our democracy are tools’’ ’in the hands of the enemy.be a process of evolution.“As the UN proves its worth tothe peoples of the world, they willgive it increased authority. Evennow member nations have sacri¬ficed some of their sovereignty.Feels ne conflict“As a working member of theUN,’’ Bunche continued, “I feelno conflict between internationalinterests and my loyalties as aU.S. citizen. This ii^ a problem thatdoes not arise for those of us wholive in democracies since criticismof foreign policy is part of our freetradition.“The U.S. has a position of un¬paralleled responsibility in theUN; we must sell democracy. Wemust remember that the UN af¬fects the conditions of our dailylives as much as rent control legis¬lation. and that what we do ascitizens affects the U.S. positionin the’ UN. Here in the U.S. welive in a goldfish bowl.’’Reports embarrass delegotes *Bunche pointed out that “everytime our actions do not squarewith our professions there is aquestion mark. U.S. members areconstantly embaiTassed by news- a community to see that equality“Actually it is a matter of self-interest for the majority group inis insured for all groups. Vfher-ever there is social conflict thecommunity pays out of its pocket-book, and both groups suffer. Forinstance, where we have dualschool stystems the money setaside for education is not econom.ically employed.Can't offard sacial conflict“Social conflict,’’ Bunche added,“is a luxury, a luxury we can illafford in these times. Our govern¬ment reflects the wishes of thepeople, but they must learn towish for the right things. We havecome a long way in our domesticthinking but we must learn tothink intelligently about foreignpolicy.’’When asked for his opinion onthe East-West conflict, Bunchereplied, “I see no possibility of theCold War becoming a Hot War,but there must be a minimum ofgood will on both sides beforepeace can be reached. Neither theEast nor the West has made anall-out effort to settle their dif-paper reports of social conflict, ferences.’’ nolds Club, Mr. Schulman coiwtends that we have the most uni*fied'and prettiest campus he hatseen.Intellectuals did not faze himone bit. Beating them aside withhis bullwhip he strode resolutelyinto the Reynolds Club, picked upa pen, dropped his sword (know¬ing power relationships) and wroteout autographs for those thatbought his books.Tiring of this juvenile occupa¬tion he forced his way into thelounge and launched into a bril¬liant expose of the evils inherentin the publishing system. Thoughhis newest book seems to havebeen released, he spoke bitterlyabout the rough road to fortuneas a writer, interspersing manyconvulsive stories and ribald com¬ments. We wish we had been there.The house was so packed thatthree sardines and your reporterwere denied admittance.That night, Max, as we in thenews world so fondly call him, wasto play poker with Nelson Algren,so after a few photos, he bid us afond adieu and we weepinglywatched him stride away.There is not much more to besaid about that day. The heroicswere few, people admirably con¬trolling their emotions.■ ■ ^ ^ m ^ paper reports oi sociaUC NSAers capture j ^ *four regional offices Stii^nt Qovernmentagree on ovj powers stauteUC won both offices and victories on issues at the con¬vention of the Illinois Region of NS A, held last weekend atthe Maryland hotel.Merrill Freed was reelected regional chairman; Lou Sil¬verman was elected public relations director; Zeno Thigpen, (See Page 10 for Speciol NSA Supplement)Final agreement on the Student Government Powers Statute and Student Bill ofStudent Life chairman, and Dave Straus, purchase card Rights was reached last Monday in a joint conference of SG’s executive board withdirector.Other regional officers are Deans Strozier and Bergstresser.This agreement marks the end of almost four months of negotiation and debate onTom James, Illinois, vice - chair- ^^iv^mah Dav^d documents. They will now go before the student body in a special referendum onman* Fran Snrapiifk. Rockford. ^ . * - - A 1 rJ OO ^ V ^ V C? A ^1 CVman; Fran Sprague, Rockford, secretary; Mary Belle Collins, St.Xavier, treasurer; Jackie Smith,De Paul, International Affairschairman; Joan Gealy, Loyola,Educational Problems chairman,and Lynn Montgomery, Instituteof Design, Social and Culturalchairman.Program decisions for the com¬ing year were made. UC studentsheading specific projects are Jean Straus, Zeno Thigpen, Gerhard April 27 and 28 in conjunction with NSA elections.Weinberg, and Roger Woodworth. The NSA elections are being held to select twelve delegates to the third nationalconvention this summer. Six *delegates and six alternates minority viewpoints,’’ said silver-will make up the UC delega- man, “no outside agency shouldtion. force an editor to follow this pol-If the Bill of Rights and SG j^y pj-eedom of the press shouldPower Statute are passed by the include freedom to make mis-referendum, they will go into ef- »»Mann peace pleato sound SundaySU holds firstspring C danceSweater Swing, the firstfeet as soon as approved by thePeace will be the overwhelming intellectual endeavor University Administration.Jordan” with the* speakers bureau of the University this week, with Thomas Mann setting Frank Logan, SG prexy, praisedand Dave Strauss with an inves- the keynote at 4 p.m. in Rockefeller Chapel. In addition the co-operative attitude showntigation of campus attitudes to- to the famed German anti-fascist, addresses on “Peace” i>y Dean’s office througimutward loyalty oaths. jjg delivered by Dr. Leslie Pennington, a Unitarian months-iong series of confer-Re.soiutions opposed the Smith minister; Robert Havighurst, secretary of the Committee L a trpHuman Development; and George Watson, chairman LT for stUint ..ized action against the Broyles "Umen^t" O^R(K)SevSf Col- Represented will be ScoUand, Government.” “ "Since spring quarter C-Dance, WiUBills or Similar legislation if they Roosevelt CO j^^^gsia, France. Japan. Greece, the be held Saturday evening,are introduced in the next ses- lege Ukraine. Azerbaijan, and various ^ tLn ev^ before the April 22. in Ida Noyes Hall. So getSion of the legislature. However, a Actually the first event of the aspects of American culture. The students than ever before tneresolution condemning the week-will be the Dean John B admission price is $1. this being J ng of things, get yourMundt-Ferguson Bill was tabled. Thompson’s sermon, “On Peace, ^^ly money-raising affair of concern in ite goy- date and we 11 see who can weara resolution opposing compulsory delivered in the Chapel at 11 a.m. week. a sweater best.’*ROTC was defeated, and the reso- Sunday. "African Evening" Ty^<yclr> ’ Music will be supplied by Harrylution on federal aid to education Festivol of Peace at IH Real probing into the structure conciuaea ixigan. Q^hestra and a couole atadopted would permit direct aid International House will witness of pea».o and how to build it will On the last day of SG consid- u f # ’ 4.as well as auxiliary services for the cultural highlight of the week be carried on daily in a series of eration. Louis Silverman success- cnoice skits from the studen^non-public schools. Wednesday with the presentation all-student and faculty-led stu- fully moved an amendment to Ef^uity production Simply thtUC was represented at the con- of the Festival of Peace, a multi- dent panels and seminars. point ten in the Student Bill of ®®st will provide entertainment,vention by Donald Arndt. Man- national medley of dances and “African Evening,’’ a demonstra- Rights. The Silverman amend- C-Dances are all-campus eventsfred Brust, Otto Feinstein, Mer- songs narrated by Studs Terkel. tion and discussion of African ment deleted reference to the right sponsored by the Student Unionrill Freed. Charles Garvin, Wim stage and television director and music and culture by Dr. Richard of minority expression. “Although dance department. AdmissionHeyneker, Jean P. Jordan, Harold producer. iContmued on Poge 12) its good journalism to include charge ut 75 cents per person.Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, April 21, 1950Lab school helps kidssolve their small problems UC student hits Tyler keynotes .NSAconlab ^tomorrow mornlimelight as orator National Student Association^The Student Forum hit the win column again this ^ discussed inaan?’more adequately their contemporary problems, and .in so Roy Greenaway, college student and member of the ®ii”canipus conference tomono\y^doing, to make such preparation as is possible to solve the championship UC Big Ten champion debate team, reached Dean Ralph w. Tyler will gi||nhfproblems they will meet in the future,” said its director, the finals of the Chicago Area Eighth Annual Hearst News- keynote address at 10:00 aji.By GEORGE JONESThe Lab school is here ‘‘to help boys and girls to solveWarren C. Weyfert, in a Maroon interview. Originally the paper Contest for Orators, . Kent 106. ^brain-child of John Dewey, the progressive system of educa- y Having successfully weathered competition from such Following the address, ti^lion of learning by doing is the fundamental basis for the schools as Notre Dame, Wheaton and Illinois, Greenaway sembiy will divide into worklivopl,/name ‘‘Laboratory School.” mb • will compete in finals at Or- chaired by students withA great many of the geni- ferentiating icharacteristics. The FlOWCrS/HICOIISCchestra Hall on May 4 againstuses in the College and the littie heiiions, nearly soo strong. . .. p, ■ ; . , two speakers from Northwest- ® hunTn reifc;division are products of this in- have a wide range of I.Q.’s,.aver- hail BUdOha ern and Nebraska Wesleyan Uni- problems, student governmf^l'Smoke slowly rising from the versities. Greenaway is assured a.... of of loost »75. and. il he Wsmall incense bowl and a brilliant the Area, will enter the education. ■productsstitution. Contrary to prevalent aging well above normal..^ ’prejudice, however, not all (only UC in minioture^the rest coming from normal often carried on under the guid-, array of flowers dominated the higher national eliminations lead- Maynard Kreug^ Hansmiddle-class homes, flats,,,and ance of members of the University scene last Saturday in Mandel ing to the national championship.penthouses. ,, :V. ...... .. faculty, and the staff itself in- Hall. It was the annual celebra- ^ Top prize in the contest is $1,000, sMore tkon book leorning . “ formally explores and evaluates tion of Wesak Day, commemorat- in addition to prizes won along ^ ^ aiscu^ipn^vWeyfert continued, “I want to new materials and methods of in- ing the birth of Buddha and the the elimination route. The topic ^point out the attitude which exists struction, as well as school or- beginning of spring. ^ ^ ‘ , for this year’s contest is the life bavei. rio|;and is growing steadily in our ganizaUon and administration. . to emphasize the quiet and and career of James Madison. registered^rough student organil*^•chool, that the responsibility of In many respects, the Labora- restfulness with which man should .Student, Forum will offer thisthe school is far more extensive tory School is a miniature Univer- live, the Reverend G. M. Kubose summer a Speech Clinic for stu- J ^than that merely of getting across sity of Chicago: a school for re-:of the Chicago Buddhist Church dents desirous of basic speech ^ ^ " .'i: ;to youngsters in some fashion a search, teaching;' and demonstra- spoke on “What Buddha Would skills. The class will meet weekly ' ^1,decent amount of .‘book learning’; tion, .with no football. . Say Tcday.” Sunder Joshi, lec-, for two hours at a time to be ar- 2:30 and 4:30 p.m. Mon^^aJyJthe attitude that the school must ^ t - ^ ^ " turer and UC alumnus, spoke on ranged at the. convenience of the through Friday. fbe willing and able to help young, ; ' the parallel,of Buddha and , mod-, registrants. Registration wiU be , ; The debate squad will meet -impeople with practically all of the , , i^r' ern psychology. / ; limited to twenty. Priority will be ,the Student F\)rum office tomorVproblems and needs confronting^^ . The, resignation of Ned ,Polsky,,^- Allowing: the religious, service ^ given to those, students^planning, row at 10:30 a.m. to plan for%ihcitthem in the^. prcwess. of growing, editor, and Jules .Zanger, business^ there^yras a program of Eastern j^to continue in Student Forum ac-; summer and next year. The meet-”®P-** t - % manager, and a . recent turnover dance, song and orchestral recita-'\ivities of'debate and discussion ing will open with a debate,again.stThe Lab School is not a private in personnel, has left the Chicago-:tion." Instruments such as the In-"^^ during the next school year. Those ’ Pepperdine College of'LosInstitution set up specifically to Review with several vacancies in dian. flute, the si tar (an elongated - f ^ v» m ♦ f n ij “Angeles.. All those interested in^experiment and gather data on a its editorial and- business staffs.? guitar withT exceptional versatil-'-' reste s ou a contact av a, ^^ying out for the debate team^for!special group of children with su- The position of business manager ity), and a'Japanese version of the director of the Student the summer and the 1950-5,L sea-perior intellect or any other difr- is open for a qualified applicant.:,^sitar werej^represented.; , „Forum, ,in Reynolds 303 .between son should attend this meetihp;^m 0^ *DipirHOUSANDS; r ,'-■■'fe"-:; }-•ARE PROVING CHESTERFIELDSfsrCIGARETTE FORYOU TO SMOKE^jge 3•riday# April 21# 1950New *Anvil*firstissue goes on saleThe first issue of Anvil and Student Partisan, resulting“from the merger of the publication of the Politics Club andthe New York Student Federation Against War, is now out.Featured is an article by Professor Bert ,Hoselitz on,*‘The Concept of Modern Imperialism.** Irving Howe, liter¬ary critic and author who has spoken on the campus anumber of times, contributes a piece entitled, “Celine:Pisintegration of a Novelist.” PromParis, one of the leaders of the socialism that appearedSpanish emigration, Juan An- jjj j^st Anvil.^drad^ writM on “^anco Spain ipjjg jggyg ^iso contains a thor-and Power Politics. report of the recent Confer-Of special interest to Chicago ence on Democracy in Educationstudents is a case study of Senator in New York, which brought to-^Paul Douglas by A1 Mimsey, as gether 350 delegates from New'well as a letter from Mary Cole- York campuses to organize in de-man and Arlon Tussing criticizingthe debate between world federal-I ^ — — — - ^FIRST ISSUE ON NEWSSTANDSMOWlTIm b«t iMNWor Olid corlooMfrom coltogo portodkobV long ogo, ood lodoylConMat Hio wadorgrodoolo work oftmaiAWIO tP.MARQOMIOKOBERTIENCHLEY ROIERT SHERWOODourrAS wauAMi.oo.woll Of bool coHogo homor lodoy.(Shidofitt oro tnvbtd lo swbmil iIoHm, Icortoom, IgM vono, porodiw. Poymonf Iupon ooMptonco. /SET A COPY Ti»AY>2S« fense of academic freedom. In ad¬dition there is an article onGeorge Orwell, editorials, reviewsand poetry. The magazine is onsale at the bookstore.'Lawyers'to danceThe law school will hold itsspring dance in the Grand Ball¬room of the Shoreland Hotel Fri¬day, April 28. Howard Adar’sorchestra will provide the musicfor this annual affair.Highlight of the evening will beanother Jerry Sandweiss skit satir¬izing the faculty, the curriculum,Etnd the law school in general.SEtndweiss, who has written anddirected toe skits for the lastthree years, has combined songsfrom ‘‘Kiss Me Kate” and GrandOpera for his final hilarious effortbefore graduating in June.PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREET THE CHICAGO MAROONCouncil plansBJ actiyitiesAt an election meeting on April9, toe B-J Council elected its of¬ficers and planned its spring quar¬ter program. Officers elected forthe quarter are: Anton W. De-Porte (300 entry) — chairman;James Weil (600)—treasurer; andJerome Gross (40.0) — secretary.Committee chairmen are MikeBlume (100)—social; Guy Bassett(200)—services and facilities; EdFisk (500) — publicity;, EmanuelSavas (700)—athletic; and BruceNovqgrad (800)—^movies.Activities planned for the springquarter include a continuation ofthe Friday night movie series, withthe special attraction of 13 chap¬ters of “Gene Autry and the Phan¬tom Empire”; a special Sundaynight series of foreign or other¬wise outstanding pictures; a se¬ries of concerts on Sunday after¬noons in Judson lounge; a num¬ber of speakers from toe faculty;and a dance oil Friday, 'April 28,from 9 pjn. to 12:30 a.m. in theBurton Dining Room, featuringEddie James and his orchestra.An innovation this quarter isthe dinner to be given by theCouncil about toe sixth week, atwhich awards will be presentedto those ten r^idents of the Courtwho, in the judgment of a staffcommittee, have done most for toepromotion of all-Court activitiesduring the year.Students* postersnow have spaceA temporary bulletin board forMandel Corridor, to replace thelate cross-walk signs, will be readysoon for student organizationposters.The rules governing use of theboard will be similar to those ofthe cross-walk signs. Poster sizehas been set at 22 by 26 inches,horizontally*. Miss Saunders, Rey¬nolds 203, will assign bulletinspace.NOT REALLYLet's Look At The Record!1. Where did those oppositioii vote* come from on the Mundt-Ferguson Bill resolution? The ISL2. Where did those opposition votes come from on the Peoria St. riots resolution? The ISL3. Where did those opposition votes come from on the Smith Amendment Resolution? The ISL4. Where did those opposition votes come from on the. Sticker Campaign? The iiSL5. Who defeoted UC porticipotion in NAACP Mobilization to Woshington? '... .The ISL6. Who tobled the originol Mundt-Ferguson Bill resolution for weeks? The ISL7. Who WALKED OUT on the issue of a deiegote to the Academic Freedom Conference? The ISLTHE BEST!Now Here's The Real Record!1. Who's responsible for the success of the Purchase Card System? An NPSL Candidate! (Garvin)2. Who's responsible for the success of the DP Student Aid? An NPSL Candidate! (Brust)3.' Who's responsible for the success of the Window-Sticker Campaign?. .NPSL Chmn. & Cand.I (Jordan)4. Who's responsible for the success of the Foreign Student Program? An NPSL Candidate! (Brust)5. Who's responsible for the success of the Campus Chest? NPSL Treasurer! (Pickett)6. Who's responsible for the success of the Symphony Forum? NPSL Member! (Silk)7. Who's responsible for the success of the Student Bk. Exchange? An NPSL Candidate! (Kohn)8. Who PROPOSED all the resolutions the ISL Cloims Credit For? The NPSL!9. Who' PROPOSED o vigorous Student Bill of Rights? The NPSL Collectively!These Candidates Have Pledged!I. We are opposed to the continued domination of a selt-seeking political machine.II. We believe that NSA and S elections should be conducted on the basis of genuine issues, not of affilia¬tion with national partisan political organizations.Ill We believe that NSA and Student Government should concern themselves, subject td the limits of theireffcrtlveness and in accordance with the opinions of their constituencies, with ALL issues affecting the welfareof the students they represent, not exclusively with problems affecting “students qua students.” We do notbelieve “students qua students” can be separated from students as human beings and citizens.Manfred Brust: Chmn DP Student AW Pgm. former NSA reg deleg. 1948, 49. 50. former co-chmn NSA Comm SG,former publicity chmn SG. former civil liberties chmn SG, now NSA comm SG. Bio Scl Division. -George Cooley: Soc actlv chmn InterChurch, Pgm chmn AVC. Civ lib Comm, Editor “New Populist”, West¬minster Fellowship, NAACP, participated In founding convention NSA, S.G., Soc Scl Division.Chet Davis: S.G. member of student faculty. Delta Gamma, NAACP. College.Otto Feinstein: Member NSA comm SG, NSA reg deleg. Exec Secy ACPWC, former deleg Inter-Amer StudentConf, College. * _Charles Garvin: NSA purchase card director. News Editor MAROON, Chmn resources materials NSA Campusworkshop. Deleg NSA founding convention, SSA.Fred Gearing: President NAACP, participated NSA Human Relations Inst, Chmn NSA workshop on HumanRelations, Soc Scl Division.Everett Gendler: President Hlllel, Humanities.Jean P Jordan* President NPSL. Civil Lib chmn SG, rt49-50 NSA deleg Reg, Chmn Human Relations SpkrsBureau Ill Reg NSA President Political Forum, Vice chmn AVC, former Community Project Chmn NAACP,Act Chmn Interchurch Council, Steering comm Hyde Park-Kenwood Community conf.MAROON, Canterbury club, former B-J Council, UWF, Steering committee All-campus anti-Broyles committee, Col-ififf ft vision ‘David Kahn: Fireside Chmn Hlllel, former member Book Exchange SO, Law school.Warren Lehman: Work Projects Comm Campus chest. Vice President Calvert Club, College.Vivian Margaris: Secretary of Student Government, former member Interdoim council, former soc chmn GatesHall, Df^leeate SG conference, Soc Scl Division.Adele Rodbard: Social Chairman Hlllel, University Theater, Soc Scl Division. UC prof sets censusoff to flying startBy D. REID ROSSThat the 1950 Census got off to such a fine start we canin all modesty say is due to the superb organizationahplan-ning 'of Profe^or Philip M. Hauser, a shining light of theUniversity of Chicago. However, we might also mentionin passing that at least a half dozen of those 140,000 query¬ing census takers were students working their ways throughthe University of Chicago. This is the tale of one of thosetoilers, trudging, tramping, ^and trembling as he did for landlord was consequentlyall those many hours. give assistance to_ _ , / the census-taker and was asked toConclusions about the human supply among other things inf or-race are all too frequently drawn nation as to how much rent hisby its totellectual and political immigrant tenants paid. Havingleaders in the social vacuum of been extremely co-operative andthe proverbial ivy tower or in the amiable up to this point, the land-smoke-nlled aldermanic chamber, lord became quite visibly upsetCensus takers, however, closely in when asked to provide the renttouch with people and their prob- information. Assured, however,lems, never seem to feel as com- that it would not be revealed topelled to poke their noses through rent'control officials he reluctantlyand voice their opinions about the agreed to supply the required fig-mass of facts and figures they ures. However, to assure himselfspend their days recording. • that the rentals "he was chargingDraws a lesson would not be told to the authori-For example, after spending ties he attempted to slip a ten-over two weeks finding, describing, dollar bribe into the census-taker’sand counting 1700 people who live hands . . . with a sly wink,in one square block, a census-tak- Poison Ivy?er begins to wonder if perhaps One^ learns of the habits ofaldermen and real estate board many a citizen that aren’t rele-members should be required by R^tod to the pages of a treatise onlaw to take the census themselves, American character, or rea-Especialy does this thought dwell sonable facsimile thereof. Maritalon his mind when, as it hapoened, tension, as an example, is quitehe counted six adults and 21 chil- frequently revealed in variousdren living in three rooms and ways to the census-taker. One getssharing their tiny kitchen with ^ke impression that the averagestill other families. American home isn’t quite the neatSuh-sub divisions ^Hd clean vine-covered cottage orAnd there is the never-to-be- the peaceful sanctuary that theforgotten experience of learning folkways and mores of the daywhat it costs innocent people to would have it. Rather it is fre-have others break the law Many quently more akin to a filthy,old apartment buildings have in musty-smelling trap, electric withrecent years been cut up into tension and hostility, and a socialsmaller units to £u:commcdate threat to all of us. And ba moremore families. One such building, accurate unemployment figures arenow containing six times as many revealed, perhaps by this census,units as it was originally built there may come somewhat of anfor, was found to be occupied awakening to the reality of a sicklargely by recently arrived Cen- society, too culturally advanced totral American immigrants who concern itself with basic necessl-spoke very little English. . ties.Textile DepartmentNorth CarolinaState Collet*Here, in the Textile Department ofNorth Carolina State College, thereis always a friendly crowd of stu¬dents. And, as in colleges every¬where, ice-cold Coca-Cola helpsmake thes*e get-to-gethers some¬thing to remember. With the collegecrowd at North Carolina State aswith every crowd — Coke belongs.Ask for it either way ... bothtrade-marks mean the same thing.BOTTLED UNDBt AUTHOIUTY OP THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BYNON-PARTISAN STUDENTS LEAGUE COCA-COLA BOTTUNC CO. OF CHICAGO, INC^ Q 1950, Th< Coco-Colo Companyf jg« 4 THE CHICAGO MAROONIssued once weekly by the publisher, The Chicaro Maroon, at. the publicationoffice, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37. Illinois. Telephones: EditorialOffice, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1012; Business and Advertising Offices, Midway3-0800, Ext. 1011. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions by mail, $1 perquarter. $3 per yearM. EVALINE WAGNER suD COHENEditor-in-Chief Production ManagerCHARLES GARVINNews Editor VIVIAN WOODCopy EditorROBERT NASSAUFeature Editor THOMAS KERNPublic Relations DirectorKEN KOENIG GENE SWANTZSports Editor , Business ManagerJAMES E. BARNETTBusiness AdvisorASSOCIATE EDITORS: Sheila Briskin, Peter Dugal, Anne Finkelstein, CharlesGaulkin, David Kliot, Robert Sickels, Gary Steiner, Barry Wilson, CarolYamamoto.KD1TORI.4L STAFF: Aaron Asher, Adaleen Burnett, Herbert L. Caplan, MaryDoty, Buck Farris, Donna Fuderer, Ed Giesbert, Marc Goff, James Goldman,John Harnishfeger, Jerry Harris, Jean Jordan, Daniel Joseph, Darwin P. Kal,Kirk Kitzmiller, Henry Larson, Mildred Lamberty, Goldie Lipschultz, RuthLundeen, Marilyn Mueller, Dick McConnell, Bruce Novograd, FrederickParis, Paul Phillipson, Martin Picker, Reid Ross, Neville Ross, David Ruben,Bernie Sachs, Marlene Saxe, Morton Schagrin, Gilbert Schlectman, LarrySherman, Louis Silverman, Jack Spillman, Dave Storey, LeRoy Wolins,Edward W’olpert, Frank W’ood, Rita Harmos, George Jones, Hillel Black, WalterGerash, Arietta Smith, Louise Latsis, Vincent W'ilson, Simon Frome, SuzanneUhrmann, Bob Blatiner, Bill Goldberg, Bill Strode, Fred Winsberg.PUBLIC RELATIONS STAFF: Joy Edinger, ^oan Levery, William Loengood, PaulTaxey, Burt W'asserman, Ralph WinderBUSINESS STAFF: Ralph Apton, Roslyn Cederlund, Bob Davenport, Elmer Walsh,Use discretionPolitics, all is politics—don’t put away your pencilsyet—NSA elections are coming up next Thursday, the 27th.As usual THE MAROON would like to be against ma¬chine politics. But let there be no mistake; any groupwhich organizes to put its candidates in office is a machine.There are three “machines” scrapping in this election.Good men and true can be found on all sides. Look atwhat each group and individual has accomplished. Lookcarefully at the qualifications of each candidate. Make upyour mind and VOTE.Guest in the houseUC apathy recently ensnared Erich Hartmann, one ofthe 19 German students. Last April '?, his coat was takenfrom the racks outside the Commons. Aside from its utili¬tarian purposes, this coat was his first purchase of clothingin America.Erich’s case is only one of the many thefts that couldhave been prevented by a check-room in the Reynolds Club.However, checking facilities are being held up until Mete-ology moves out of the basernent. The weathermen werescheduled to leave early in 1946.Here’s your hat . . .With reservationsWe heartily endorse the statute of powers written byStudent Government in consultation with the Dean of Stu¬dents. It is a long, much-needed step toward a real>StudentGovernment.A bill of rights to protect individuals and present andprospective student organizations is an essential concom-mitant of the powers which SG will now wield. The bill ofrights offered is by no means perfect, and we will proposein the future our well-considered judgment as 4o whatimproving amendments are in order. Meanwhile, we urgeadoption of the bill as it stands as a worthwhile beginning.So vote yes. ^ Letters...Signed hut not so'An open letter to Jeon JordonDuring the first three weeks ofthe current ^.pring quarter, youasked for my name in support ofthe Non-Partisan Students Leagueof which you are the president.I told you that I would supportyour independent political pro¬gram in principle, but due to otherpressing matters, would be un¬able to support you actively. Isigned on your request what Ithought at the time was a com¬plete statement of your program,and of the issues involved ih theforthcoming NSA election. In lastweek’s MAROON, your organiza¬tion presented, under the title,“End Machine Rule on Campus,”this statement. In addition, youpresented thiee preliminary para¬graphs of a polemical attack onthe present Independent StudentsLeague, which paragraphs werenot included in the document Isigned. I herewith state that Iuncatagorically disagree with theanalysis contained in the afore¬mentioned paragraphs, with eachand every single sentence.In addition, I disagree withthe statements which you ap-pendaged to the end of yourprogram after I signed it, to theeffect that the NPSL originatedthis program. As a member ofthe ISL, I never could havesigned this statement because Iknow that your program is asubstantial replica, point forpoint except for two, of the ISLprogram presented during thespring quarter, 1949, one yearago.Therefore I wish to make itabsolutely clear that I withdrawmy name from support of theNon-Partisan Students League.Joyce DonnenNACP to -urgeUN lobby groupProposals for the 'NAACP to setup a national secretariat to lobbyin the UN for the freedom of colo¬nial peoples and to change thename of the organization fromNational Association for the Ad¬vancement of Colored People toNational Association for the Ad¬vancement of Colored Peopleswere approved this week by thelocal chapter’s executive board.The proposals grew out of aprivate session with the UN’s Dr.Ralph Bundle held during his lec¬ture series here.HOLLIDAY'S DeLUXESHOE SERVICEM07 .EAST 6!st STREET 'At Dorcheste/ Ave.iWHILE YOUWAIT 4© NOrm«l 7-8717"It Must Bt Den* Right"5 UC professorsgo to QermanyFive UC professors sailed lastFriday from New York City en-route to the University of Frank¬fort, where UC maintains a con¬tingent of its faculty to help re¬establish co-operation betweenhigher education in Germany andthe United States.The fifth group is to be sent tothe German university on a two-year appropriation set up by UCand the Rockefeller Foundation,the five will remain in Germanyfor four months.Opportunity in BusinessThere are never enough Gibbs-trainedsecretaries to meet the persistent demand.H'ritf College Courje Dean Jor catalogKatharine Gihhs230 Paik Avr. NEW YORK 17 33 Plymouth St, MONTCLAIRM L Supcfioi St, CHICAGO 11 155 Anitll St, PROVIDENCE 6Ki Mattboiuugti ^L, OUSIUN lb "Ophelio thou art noLfor me ...I see no on thee!"SOLOSee Them ot Marshall Field • Carson-Pirie-Scott • Wieboldt'sivrfy B*ndl, Inc., Dtfif. S, 1375 Br«cdway, Now York 18, N. Y. Friday, April 21, 1950TERESA DOLAIVDAMCING SCHOOLLearn to Dance NowPrivate or Class LessonsOpeM Daily, 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.1208 E. 63rd St.Phone: HYde.Pork 3-3080 Sp*iid hif'i hoppiM) hour* in on aUno«ph*r«M •OM ond well bmitq, biqh in Um troimuil PorononTh« lit*ndlin«M ol a horn*. th« oomron oi on Inn -•or Bowlywcd* only Senimptioua. abundant mooUtanoUat* iHini 11:00) lof ouUin oppMitm.All out Uvt in colta9M (automaticallybootod, with bath). Opon all yooi RatM imcluda mools. Monlion dalM If you with outbolptui “Th,** Honeymoon Plant," otiioi loldott _ _THE FARM OH THE HILU Swttwalor. P-n.Tl»anirBox No. 2206"t-.”FOR "LONG HAIRS" ONLY . . .violin; Horszowski, piano)<7K 45 tfai JLawe!i% 1217 E. 55th St. PLaza 2-4361• ^ ^BACH: Unaccompanied Violin Sonatas and Partitas(Alexander Schneider)MOZART: Divertimento No. 15 for string and Horns,K287 (Tosca nini)BEETHOVEN: Violin Sonata No. 7 in C Minor (Szigeti, rIKODALY: Psalmus Hungaricus (Dallas Symphony, Dorati,with choruses)SCHUBERT: Songs for Male Chorus* (Shaw Chorale)LONG DISTANCE MOVINGLOW RATES - Bonded - Insured612 No. Michigan Avo.superior 7-3484Hou much lovelier can a girl look? She'*s your“MISS FASHION PUTE OF 1950"FLORENCE STONEMANHere she is! TTie girl you chose as Revlon’s“Mi.ss Fashion Plateof 1930”. She’s just won a year’s supply of Revlon cosmetics FREE!And she’s the girl wlio has a chance to become “Miss FashionPlate of 1950” for the whole United States! She’ll competein this Revlon-sponsored contest with candidates from collegesand universities from coast to coast for the (hand Prize...a glamorous trip to Bermuda by Pan American Clipper,including an expense-free week at the famous ''Castle Harbour**...and seven other thrilling prizes: an RCA-Victorportable radio; a Lane Hope Chest; an Amelia Farhart PartyCase in “Revlon Red ’ leather; a necklace, bracelet andearring set by Trifai i; a silver-plated lighter, cigarette urnand tray set by Ronson; a year’s supply of Berkshirenylon stockings; a Wittnauer wrist watch!You all know a winner because you picked a winner!She’s another lovely example of why so many girls and women...to look their loveliest...always look to Revlon./ '.VFriday, April 21, 1950 THE CHICAGO MAROON“MED ” STUDENTSWe have a complet'e line of suppliesfor Students, Interns, and Physicians«Mahe us your headquarters for:Otoscopes and OphthalmoscopesBaum A Tyces SphygmomanometersStethescopesLaboratory Coats« Laboratory SuppliesCentury Surgical Supply Co.6351 Cottage Grove Avenue Phone HYde Park 3-1511FOR THE CAMERA FANThese two precision comeros combine profession-ol features with simplicity of operation . . .making them popular with omoteur and pro¬fessional alike.Only three extremely simple adjustments ... andyou're ready to toke any type of photo.KODAK PONY 135 CAMERA*Dses 35 mm. film ... 20 or 36 exposureroll . . . block-ond-white ond Kodochrome*f4.5 Kodok Anoston Lens^Shutter speeds up to 1/200 second* Built in synchronization for flash lompsPRICf: *34^-*KODAK PONY 828 CAMERA*Uses size 828 film ... 8 exposures forblack-and-white and Kodochrome film^ ^f4.5 Lumenized Kodok Anoston Lens* Kodak flash 200 shutter with four speedsPRICE: ^39’*Sm Our Complete Selection ofMany Other Types of Cameras and EquipmentUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUE ... I thought so2>car 2>,tcn^uBy HILLEL BLACKMix a little rain, some fog, a delicate whiff of the stock-yards, and Chicagoans will know that spring is in the air.Although the city was drenched by a spring rain thatcleansed the Tribune Tower and drained the sewage systemwith equal impartiality, the April weather was offset by aslam bang primary campaign. The Republican party inChicago ran a dead man for office. What is even more re¬markable, he received 29,698 'TtTTTI wind, the Incense Snifters League. * is about to get deodorized. ISL hasRepresentative Ralph E. spent so much of its time inhalingChurch decided to make his con- its own scent that it has not raisedtribution to society and popped a stink on one important issue,off one month ago. One of the Not only is ISL being threatenedRepresentative’s rare qualities was by a bro'^d coalition from withouthis ability to hew to the line of but also by internal dissension,the Republican Party. Although One evening while reciting thedefinitely dead and at last decent- catechism: I caucas, You caucas,ly buried, his mates who ran the Let’s all caucas, two of the moreRepublican machine could not influential members of the Leagueforsake him. stumbled over a body—it was oneWhether the 13th District is to of their own members. His glar-be represented by a ghost or by a iog reaction made him lean so farRepublican in the general election to the right that he was lyingis up to the Republican Commit- down. A nip ajid tuck floor fightteemen. ensued over what to do with theAfter nosing around campus it body. The Incense Snifters Leagueseems that something is in the had taken one snifter too many.ARROW is your ticket tothe Best SeatIn TheHouse!shorts up -shirts ^1.00 upOne way to be sure of complete comfortbelow decks is to buy ARROW shorts!Made without creeping center seam,they’re full cut — plenty roomy! Idealteamed with Arrow T-shirts!ARROWSHIRTS & TIESUNOiRWEAR • HANOI^^IEFS • SPORTS SHIRTS COMFORT WHERE COMFORT COUNTSI• FULL CUT• FINE FABRICS• NO ANNOYING CENTER SEAMARROW SHORTSshorts n.25 up t-shirts upYes—you can count on Arrow shorts for deep-seated comfort! No center seam—so there's nobinding. They're designed to keep you com¬fortable! Sanforized (shrinkage less than 1%).Pick up a supply of Arrow shorts and T-shirtsNOW!oILyttomsFOR ARROW UNIVtRSITY STYUS Protagoras-By BUD COHENWith two quotations reminis¬cent of ArUiur Koestler, the“World’s Greatest Newspaper’*opened its current episode of “Lit¬tle Orphink Annie.” It seems thatDaddy Warbucks, who many peo¬ple think is our own dear Colonelin disguise, has just escaped froma labor camp in you know where,run by a person, whose nationalityis not disclosed, named Ivan. Al¬ready, though he has been outonly a few weeks, by dint of per¬sonal sacrifice and fortitude, andthe free enterprise system, he hasamassed another fortune.Daddy, reclining in leisure inhis hundred room mansion on histhousand acre estate, guarded byarmed men behind every tree, isdreaming of the good old days,when men were men and Darwinruled the economic thinking ofthe world.The only conflict in that littleepistle seems to be whether An¬nie’s eyes or Daddy’s diamondstud will shine brightest. The en¬tire piece seems to be a pseudo-Socratic dialogue written by onewho has had little or no contactwith Plato.Annie, playing the stooge, opensthe dialogue with the astoundingrevelation that they are in a pal¬ace, as if every Free-enterpriseAmerican didn’t live in a palace,Warbuck’s answer was a long andimpassioned appeal for a returnto the days of the oily John D. orthe steely Carnegie.“Those were the days,” sayethDaddy, “when our great railroadswere built, our vast land becamerich farms and great cities, thou¬sands of schools and fine collegeswere founded, and endowed! Andeverywhere churches were builtwhere our people worshiped inpeace and in prosperity. It wasa golden age with equal oppor¬tunity for all.”To this we need not comment.Warbucks, the great individual¬ist, whose stud, if not his logic,sparkles brighter with every panel,implied that every idea which didnot agree with his was fostered bythat arch villain of all villains...government. Any law, such as so¬cial security and a graduated in¬come tax, would have had to beinspired by his enemy Ivan, whosestate has still not been mentioned.At this point Annie astoundsthe reader with the startling rev¬elation, “No wonder Ivan hatesyou so much.”We don’t wonder either.BARGAINSBOOKThornton WilderTHE IDES OF MARCHPub. price $2.75Our price 49cJohn W. CampbellTHE ATOMIC STORYA 297-page history of atomic re¬search.Pub. price $2.75Our price 98cJean~Paul SarteTHE CHIPS ARE DOWHPub. price $2.75Our price 98eCHESS REVIEWAHHUAL—Vol. 14Edited by I. A, Horowitzand Kenneth HarhnessPub. at S5.00Our price $1.49CAMILLE PISSARO’SLETTERS TO HIS SOHLUCIEHEdited by John HetealdThe most important source mate¬rial on the history of impression¬ism.Pub. .at $6.50Our price $2.49These prices ore for new copiesof the regular trade editions.CLARK a.d CLARKBOOKSELLERS1204 East 55th Street10 A.M. to 9 P.M.THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, April 21, 1950UC0rS drop two^ Qrace to headbeat Bradley 6-3 SPALDINGBy KEN KOENIGMaroon week-end travels resulted in a 12-3 loss toIllinois Normal, Friday, and a 6-2 beating at Notre Dame,Tuesday, but included a 6-3 victory over Bradley on Satur¬day as lou Hamilton won his fourth straight.Going into today’s contest with Wheaton, the Maroons•hold a 4-6 record. They return home tomorrow at 1 .a.m.to play Wheaton again.Against Bradley, the Chi- — 7— ——cagoans grabbed the edge in scored while Charley Windle wassecond and led ideating out a roller to third,all the way. Howland was safe onthird baseman Hill’s error. Sherryadvanced on Casey’s sacrifice andcounted on Bill Gray’s single.It was 2-0 in the third when The Braves got back into thegame with two runs in the sev¬enth on two hits and a walk, theMaroons rallied for three more inthe eighth. Geocaris singled andGovorchin reached first during casey walked. Gray got his thirdMallory s boot ^d raced the rest base hit and Golan doubled toof the way on Geocaris towering make im the tetaidouble to left center.Slick base running by Grayadded another run in the fourth.Bill got life on the opponents’ make up the total.Bradley scored once in theeighth, but the Maroons’ secondof three twin killings preventedfurther damage.Provide centerto aid studentsBy ED WOLPERTThe University, as many know, and as more do not, runsa Counselling Center to aid unguided and misguided stu¬dents. It was established in October, 1945, under the leader¬ship of Carl R. Rodgers. Located at 5737 Drexel, the center’shours are 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. on weekdays, and 8:30 a.m.to 12:30 p.m. on Saturdays.The Counselling Center is mainly concerned with per¬sonal problems, but the cen- Alonzo G. Grace, former direc¬tor of educational and culturalrelations for the military govern¬ment in Germany and professorof education at the University ofChicago, has been-appointed chair¬man of the department of edu¬cation.His appointment in the depart¬ment made famous by Col. Fran¬cis W, Parker, John Dewey, andCharles H. Judd is effective im¬mediately. Grace succeeds RalphW. Tyler, who resigned in 1948 tobecome dean of the division ofsocial sciences.Grace, an international leaderin the field of education, servedas director of study for the armedservice education and training pro¬gram from 1946 to 1948CANOE TRIPSinto Quetico - SuperiorOnly $4.00 - $4.50 per DoyFor Canoe, Complete Camp Equip¬ment and Food. For Booklet andMap Write:BILL N. ROMCanoe Country OutfittersEly, Minn. AH,JUSTSO<IT SEEMED SUCH AWA41E/AS LOyO A9UAP “IRE tCE©UCWEt, not idBRINGCIIAMPAGNEter’s serviceany problemis flexible andwill be dis¬cussed. Related problems are tak¬en up by the Bureau of VocationalGuidance, individual Universityadvisors^ and religious counsellors.Students may utilize the Cpun-selling Center whenever they feelthe need to talk over any personalproblem. The staff of the centeremphasizes that a student needn’tbe “abnormal” to use the Center’sfacilities.Instead of providing set answersfor the client’s problems, the Cen¬ter deals with the client’s emo¬tional attitudes toward his prob¬lems and toward himself. That is,the focus of the center’s efforts isnot to find specific solutions tospecific complaints, but rather toprovide the kind of atmosphereand relationship in which theclient may explore himself moredeeply and, through a new under¬standing of his aims and needs,may resolve his specific problemshimself.The counsellors provided toguide the client are usually psy¬chologists or students of humandevelopment, and have had con-siriofqijie training and experience.Usually an interview lasts about45 minutes. The average numberof interviews per case is twelve,spread out for as long a period asthe client wishes. Many students,however, find that fewer inter¬views are necessary.The student may rest assured that his case will remain in com¬plete , anonymity. 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The Styl*lin« De Luxe 4-Door SedanSEE YOUR lOCAL CHEVROLETConveniently listed under ''Automobiles^^ in your local classified tel^hone directoryFricUy, April 21, 1950 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Announcingstudent ShipsIt's still possible to seeEurope this SummerDormitory (25 Berth)$135 one wayTourist Cobins (4 Berth)$140 one way0. S. CANBERRA (Greek Line)Montreol to Cherboitrg andSouthhompton — 9 DaysDeport MONTREALMay 31 • June 26 - July 22Deport SOUTHAMPTONand CHERBOURG forMONTREALAug. 3 - Aug. 29 - Sept. 24Departures on other dates'availableLimited Space — Act PromptlyYOUTH ARGOSY, Inc.366 Broodwoy Worth, 2-0162New York 13, New YorkI SPORTSJVs come outsidein St. Ignatius meetThe Junior Varsity’s track meet against Mt. Carmel forlast Friday was postponed until next Tuesday because ofcold weather. This afternoon’s meet against St. Ignatiuswill be their first chance on the cinders this year.St. Ignatius, the almost traditional winner of the CityCatholic League championship should provide a capablecontestant for our junior trasckmen. The JVs have becomemonotonously victorious in silverman and Chris Drake,the indoor season with wins The JV regulars are better thanagainst such teams as Austin,the City Public School champion.Eve. Der, .dmit. .eom is ,..d frd dashes and the 220 yardlow hurdles, was undefeated dur-In face of such a record CoachDerr, a persistent user of the “Cry- hurdle events,ing Towel, modestly admits that pj^j| 'wyatt. in the 440 yard run outdoor season last Saturday, by trouncing Illinois Techhis team is a bit stronger than last undefeated this winter. 94 to 37. This was by far the Maroon’s most decisive victoryyears In compensation for the distance men the JVs have of the year.loss of several men that mig t consistent point getters as The winning teams in most of the events were far fromVarsity thincladstake IIT, 94-37The U. of C.’s track team won the opening meet of theirLight Weight SpecialistFeaturingSCHWINN • RALEIGH .HUMBER ■ DAWES •HERCULES -ARMSTRONGLIGHT-WEIGHTBICYCLESRALEIGN SPORT TOURISTNow Only 65 00With 3 SpeedsPayment Plan AvailableAll Americon ports ore interchongeobleCome in and' ride one beforeyou buy oneIf you ore planning on overseas Hosteltrip orrongements ccr. be mode to poyfor your Roleigh Cycle ot the Englishprice ot our store ond receive deliveryot any English port. The soving isopproximotely $25.00. SPECIFICATIONS: FRAME:21", 23". Entirely braze<i-up.WHEELS: 26" x I^/b". RaleighPatent Dual Purpose rims.Stainless Steel Spokes. TIRES:Dunlop. GEAR: Sturmey-Archer 3-speed (AW), Trigger“Flick” control. PEDALS :Rubber. HANDLEBAR: NorthRoad Raised, adjustable stemBRAKES: Raleigh front andrear Caliper. GEARCASE: Ra¬leigh Ollbath. SADDLE:Brooks’ 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-Chromeplated. FITTINGS: Tools, kit¬bag, inflator, reflector.ART'S CYCLE -nd HOBBY SHOP815 East 75frh Street Chicago 19TRiangle 4-4100Hours: 9 to 6 — Mon. & Thurs 9 to 9 has depth as well in the pole vault,high jump, and shot put divisions.have helped him. Coach Derr an- smith and Smothers. The team onpcfacnlnr hTip in nnrt to a slow and windswent track Innounces good prospects m Walter spectacular, aue in part to a Slow ana wmaswept iracK inwinning, the Maroons took 12 out of 15 first places, theother three firsts going to1.1. T. in the sprint and broadjump events. We might atthis point comment that it is arecognized fact that the Maroonsare at their weakest in the sprints.Tennis season opened bynew, but balanced squadAfter one spends half an hour eluding tennis balls and M™“up‘afahrs?s«flerHpe!players m the Fieldhouse the logical conclusion to come to they meet North cen-is that the tennis season is about to open. trai at stagg Field. The assign-Under the very capable supervision of Coaches Murphy ment will be made yet tougherand Moyle the University of Chicago varsity tennis team since our five ace middle and longis boasting, if not a stronger, a much more balanced team distance men win be competing inthan appeared last year. two-miie relay eventsAfter a very successful 7 Kansas state Relays.o loc.4- Mouday, May 1—Valpafaiso VC 2:00 Two milers try againWins, 2 losses season last Friday, May 5—DePauw Gre€ncastle undefeated and recordyear, the team will pit its The undefeated and recordFriday, May 5—DePauw GreencastleThursday, May 11—Beloit VC 2:00, ^ .. Friday, May 12—Valparaiso, Valparaiso breaking twoskills against such institutions as Tuesday, May 16—Illinois TechMarquette and Lake Forest.Though lacking in experience,the only returning letterman fromlast year’s squad being CharlesShapiro, the team expects to makea strong showing in the doublesdepartment.Close squod competitionSquad competition for respectivepositions on the team has been VC 2:00Wednesday, May 17—Lake ForestLake ForestTeachers trygreen golfers m il e relay team(Mulcahy, Thomas, Cotton, Kil-lough), will try to remain in thewin column at Kansas State, whilethe mile relay team with only oneloss and the thrilling Daily NewsRelay victory still under theirbelts, are after another win.All in all the Maroons are seeingbetter days ahead, or as CoachMerriam modestly says whenspeaking of the impending out¬door season, “We’ll have a betterThe 1950 golf season will getclose and indicates overall ability under way on April 21, when Chi-in contrast to last year’s team meets Northern Illinois State record than last year’s,which produced a number-one o summaryman far above the rest of the Teachers, to be followed by a Chicago 94match with North Central on Mile — Muicahey (C)be followed uy a, ruirAnn qa IJT, 37squad. matcn wiin jNorm cemrai on ,cT."«ed‘ iSrflm; DinitrtiT®"’thiVZThe tentative roster for the team April 22. Both matches are to be Time. 4:40.lists such names as: Dave Souther, played at Silver Lodge Country, ^^^^^won^by^couo^^Brad Lyttle, Roy Kunze, Martin Club. Time, :50 4. k t <Orans, Charles Shapiro, Currie The golf team has lost some of BaumgartneJ”"iT), second; Baum^ iC).Downie, and Robert Barker. its seasoned players—Captain Don third. Time, :io.6. . ^suarda,. April 22-N«rth Central Gawthrop, Don Fitzgerald, and ,cif■LYnge'’r''aT)"'''’se'?md^°'oSWednesday, April 26—Lake Forest Bill Short—and W'ill bring forth third.^ Time, .16^4_ ^ ^ . a. a, AA upon the fairways new and un-Saturday, April 29—Marquette x • j j- x j-Milwaukee tried divot-diggers.CITRON’S MEN’S SHOP(Formerly Bohrer's Men's Shop)CH,%NGE OF OWNERSHIP SALESecond Big WeekDRASTIC REDUCTIONS ON ALL MERCHANDISEMust Moke Room for New Stock1148 E. 55»h Street Midway 3-8684Additional 10% Discounts to NSA CardsFRI. and sat. onlyClassical - Popular - Jazz-ALBUMS-lO-’mch Popular Singles 19c — 6 for $1.0010-inch Jazz Singles 49c each12-inch Classical Singles 49c eachOpen 'Til 9:00 P.M.RADIO CENTER1514 E. 51st St. PR 3-6111 High jump—Won by Goff (C): Bin-ford (C), second; Voss (C), third.Heleht, 5 feet 11 inches,880-yard run—Won by Thomas (C);Mulcahey (C), second; Bokman (C),third. Time, 2:01.6.220-yard dash—Won by Baumgartner(IT): Levi (IT), second; Chapman (C),third. Time, :23.3.Discus—Won by Norcross (C); Vos«(C), second: Devina (C), third. Distance,116 feet 7 inches.Two mile run—Won by Roberts (C);Riley (C), second; Donko (IT), third.Time. 10:36.8.Pole vault—Won by Zimmerman (C);Gottesman (IT), second; Case (C), third.Height. 11 feet 6 inches,220 low hurdles—Won by Gras (C);Langer (IT), second; Goff (C), third.Time, :25.2.Shot put—Won by Voss (C): Norcrosa(C), second: Hermanson (IT), third.Distance. 40 feet 5^2 inches.Broad jump—Won by Yahiro (IT);Goff (C), second: Chapman (C), third.Distance. 20 feet 5V2 Inches.Javelin—Won by Hayes (C): Yahiro(IT) second: Voss (C), third. Distance,164 Inches.Mile relay—Won by Chicago (Otstot,Chapman, Cotton, Kllough). Time,3:35.8.Midwoy Shoe RepairInvisible Half SolesShoes Dyed and Refinished24-Hour Service1017 E. 61stPhone HYde Pork 3-4286Quetico - Superior WildernessComplete ontflttinx eerTiee $3.50A dey with Grommen alumi-canoe*. Food, yourchoice—extra.SO-pace Cano# Country plc-I tore booklet mailed postpaidonywhare for II.00"BASSWOOD LAKE LODGE'on Minn.-Canadian border. MainI.odge and 20 log cabinsModern bathroom facil¬ities. American Plaratca 18.00 andup. Also house¬keeping cabins.ELY. MINNESOTAP«ge 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, April 21, 1950ft•RIftTOL-MYKIIS You'll cut quito a figuro, too — if you use your head — and“Live-Action” Vitalis care. Give that mop on top the famous“60-second workout,” 50 seconds scalp massage (feel the differ¬ence!) ... 10 seconds to comb (and will the wimmin see the dif¬ference!). You’ll look neat ’n natural. Bye-bye loose, flaky dandrufl!and dryness, too. So latch on to Vitalis—see the man at the drugstore or barber shop pronto."60-S«concl WorkoutIt ELIMINATES 99% OF ALL REPAIRSDUE TO STEEL MAINSPRING FAILURESof '‘Elsiloy” metal. Patent pendincImagine the thrill of owning one of these newElgin Watches! Their styling has won the highestpraise of America’s *‘best>dressed”. Their perform¬ance and dependability are assured by such technicalachievements as the DuraPower Mainspring. So let it be known that the gift you want most isan nigin Watch. When you get your graduationyou can look forward to years of pleasureand satisfaction; It will be a faithful companionand constant reminder of your graduation day.^Violinist Schneider performson Mercury 12** LP records Volpone play wifi beUT spring productionThe University Theatre for their spring offering hasTOose of us who were fortunate enough to Alexander Schneider do the ^ wuf be*shown^SaturSr'^aSj^Su^^y, April® 2rand 3oflnsonatas and partitas for unaccompanied violin a few University concerts ago are ac- TTaii j*s work. These performances (or ones much’t work. TOese perform^ces (or ones much yy- ^ be played by John M. Stevens, ahke them) Imve now been recorded on four Mercu^ 12 1^ disco Md it is graduate student in the social service administration, andthat an authoritative version of these taxing works has been set down m permanent f-rancls W. Weaver, a divisional student, is his frilowaudible form. c/vVipiyi^t* nnH — - ~ ■" ~ — —_Mr. Schneider is an alumnus of the Budapest String Quartet and,a disciple of PabloCasals; these antecedents areplainly evident in his inter- shows himself to be intimately ac- however, is always motivated bypretation. He plays Bach quainted with the style of per- musical considerations.^ One feelsneither in the Nineteenth Century formance in Bach’s day—some- constantly the violinist’s effort toweltschmertz manner nor in the thing which both other types of make sense to keep lines intel-dessicated purist style which many interpreters seem to be ignorant, lisible in the slow sections and tocontemporary instrumentalists af- Intelligible interpretationsfeet. The result is that Schneider’s There is much rhythmic * free-playing is most authentic for he dom in these performances which. George Blair, theatre di- The version being presented Urector, is directing the pro- original Ben Jonson playduction, fifth presentation of the adaptation by Stefanschool year and Alice Martini de- ^wieg whi^ was made into ansigned both sets and costumes. excellent French movie a fewOther cast members are EnidFootlights and Klieglights'Not bad' says criticof 'Simply the Best'Persons of refined sensibilities generally view the pros¬pect of seeing a student-faculty musical comedy or revue ballet Orpheus is another examplewith the same embarrassed trepidation that would come artificial music he haswith watching a flustered friend being exposed to the in- many yearsanities of some radio quiz-master. This feeling accompanied figuration and life.us, and we dare say a majority of the rest of the audience ortL’'pa”tonXIto?sr“h kas we prepared Tuesday night to witness the latest s-fhi-jinks, .. . Simply the Best. bring across the harmonic rhythm Ricser, Richard Eliel, Theodore S.of the fast movements. He sue- Hurwood, Earle L. Ludgin Jr.,ceeds superbly. Jonathan V. Jackson, Howard B.The four records are available ^rd, Alice B. Snyder, Severn T.as a boxed unit or separately—the I^^rden, Fred Kasner; and H. Reedpieces being divided as follows:MG 10017—Sonatas No. 1 and 2,MG 10018—Partita No. 1, MG10019— Partita No. 2, MG 10020—Sonata No. 3 and Partita No. 3Mercury’s engineers have ablymet the difficult •challenge of re¬cording a solo violin.Igor Sfrovinsky OrpheusIgor Stravinsky’s music for the—Aoron Asker NOT ASREAT SLATESIMPLYTHE BESTTHERE 1$VOTE ISL FINE FOOD137 1 East 57th StreetHappily, our anticipatedwrithings became merely anoccasional hand before the eyesand a couple of frustrated at¬tempts to duck behind the seatahead. All in all, the show was alot of fun: and though it won’timprove vaudeville or competewith television, it might serve asan inducement for some furtheroriginal campus shows.Further performanceSince we understand the showis scheduled for a further campusperformance (and none of ourprofs was in it), a few words ofcritical comment may be helpful.In the first place, the productionwas too long and, apparently beingslanted to a Quadrangle Club au¬dience, a good deal of the humorwas lost on us laymen. Much morewas lost, however, because of theinaudibility of a good deal of theclever lyrics. (We discovered theywere clever by reading them inthe pamphlet published by thesponsoring organizations.) Theshow needs pace more than any¬thing other than aural compre¬hensibility, a remedy easily ac¬complished by large and judiciouscutting and tighter direction.(Continued on Page 12) WE WANTNEW FRIENDSAND LIKE TO KEEPTHE OLD ONESNELLY'SYour Neighborhood Delicatessen6105 S. UniversaryGREGG COLLEGEA School of Ruslnoss—Proforrod byCollege Men and Women4 MONTHINTENSIVE COURSESECRETARIAL TRAINING FOR COLLEGISTUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough, intensive course—startingJune, October, February. Bul¬letin A on request•SPEaAL COUNSaOR for G.l. TRAINING•Regular Day and Evening Schools'Ihroughout the Year. Catalog•Pirector, Paul M. Pair, ItlA.THE 6REGG COLLEGEST S. WabMh CMm.. S. IIHii.1. • • •SAYSStarred as the High School Seniorin theSAMUEL GOLDWYNproductionQihvBIXBV DOES BETTER WITH FIGURESSINCE HE STARTED USING VlTALIS mELGIN.^^. Lord and Lady Elgins art pricedfrom $67.50 to $5,000. Elgin Dr-Luxe from $45.00 to $67.50. OtherElgins are priced as low as $29.75,including the Federal Excise Tax,ELGIN:^^VFriday, April 21, 1950 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 9WORLD THEATERARTS ASSOCIATION218 S. WabasK9th Floor Phone: WE 9-7265Saturday, April 22, 8:30 P.M.The RooscvoU StoryDocumentary Award Winner at1»47 Brussels World Film Festival—Plus Shorts—Tall TalesAmerican Folk Ballads sung byBurl Ives, Josh White and OthersAdmission 84c plus TaxSunday, April 23, 2:30 P.M.Special Childrens ShowChildren of Other LandsSampan FamilyAlsoChildren's Concert• Ages 4-11Chicago Musical College PresentationAdmission:Children 35c, Adults 65c Tax Inc. What, would you call him?KIMBARK• THEATRE •6240 KIMBARK AVENUEPUSH BACK SEATS“FLOATING COMFORT”Doors Open 12:30• Show Starts at 12:45 *Friday - SaturdayAcademy Award Picture“My Foolish Heart”Mrckey Rooney“Quicksand”“Traii’s End”Seventh Episode“Radar Patroi vs.Spy King”5 CARTOONSFirst Show Only SoturdoyDoors Open ot 12:30No Advance in AdmissionSundoy - MondayTechnicolor Jungle Picture“Savage Splendor”Moe West“The Heat’s On”“Brothers in the Saddle”CARTOONTuesdoy - WednesdayAcodemv Award Picture“Battle Ground”“Challenge to Lassie” Levarie revives17th cent, musicJudging from its most recent concerts, the CollegiumMusicum and its conductor, Siegmund Levarie, are attempt¬ing to present to the campus m.asterpieces from the early17th century, one of the great yet little known periods inmusic. As a secular companion to the Schutz SymphoniaeSacrae performed last quarter, the Collegium last Sundayperformed six. of Monteverdi’s delightful Scherzi Musicali.Claudio Monteverdi wrote ‘some 'of the most dramatic, quiremente in mind in such a pas-expressive, and beautifully opening of the Sanctus.wrought music ever, composed. Alighter counterpart to his seriousand intense operas and madrigals,the Scherzi Musicali are simple,dance-like songs, yet no less ex¬pressive or admirable.The charming and delicale creature above is o member of CAMPUSZOO, a forthcoming book by Clare Barnes, Jr., author of WHITE COLLARZOO and HOME SWEET ZOO. The publishers have decided to offer aprize for the best coption submitted. For further details on this,contestwrite to Campus Zoo Editor, Doubleday and Co., 14 W. 49tk St., NewYork 20, N.Y. Hint to captioneers: this bird hos chorocter-^ote care¬fully its eager eye and evident zest for living, heed well the haplessanimal in its jaws, then choose your caption wisely, invoke the gods ondowait results. Perhaps, though, rt is our concep¬tion of the dichotomy of sacredand secular music that is at fault.Mozart may have wished to ex¬press his religious feeling by allthe musical means at his disposal,^ ^ ... disregarding conventional dogmas.The performance by two violins utilization of those means isand cello, two sopranos and bass, jj^asterfulwith harpischord, was fully ap- ^ ' , , , xs.propriate, and projected the deli- . perfoirnance lacked thecate openness of these pieces, i^^ythmic piecision and stiengthThough the voices were a little accompanyweak, and the instrumentalists exultancy of this woik. Thenone too precise, .the performance unashamedly gay,was satisfactory, and was certainly peiformance should have beenless reticent.preferable to one bysemble. a mass en-Mozart’s festive Mass in C minor. Brahpis’ Five Folk Songs forchorus and piano were quite en-K. 337, had much of the character ioyable. The melodies were morereminiscent of the lieder of theof one of his symphonies or oper¬atic finales. It is difficult to imag-i^ that Mozart had liturgical re-AND DIVISIONPassport to Pimlico★ ★ ★ ★Ardan, Sun-Tima*g.■‘ViM to Utojria" .Leanar, Daily NawaToday o»-6 30,'8;IS, 10 00 >,•SPECIAL2 Acadamy Award-winning Short Subjtctt."Von Gogh" i "For Sc«nt-im«nfal RtoioniDigtit At: 7:40, 7:2$Students showing their identifica¬tion cards at the box office will beodmitted for 50c any week day, Mon¬day through Friday. On Soturdoys,Sundoys* ond Holidays 'till 5 P. M 15th and 16th centuries than merefolk songs, and were appropriatelyelaborated by archaic choral re¬frains, in addition to the richBrahmsian harmonizations pro¬vided by the piarfo. The perform¬ance was delightful, and ErnstLevy gave an excellent reading ofthe elaborate piano accompani¬ment. 'Reinhard Keiser’s Trio Sonatain D major. No. 1, was a pleasantBooks and ReadingAAag offers solid dietThe New Populist — A Student Quarter]^, 25 cents.This week we are in the happy position of being able_to report on a student publication which contains meat of iat^ Baroque"chamber^mu-and matter. The New Populist is a student quarterly of sic. Not as intense or complex asopinion published by the UC Political Forum. The view- works in this form by coreiii orpoints and reports are of such variety to be of almost uni- Bach, and not reaching the levelversal interest. of rhythmic gaiety and tuneful-The political viewpoints I'ange from those of Robert i^oss as Handel, the sonata wasLudlow who believes in “uur- — r- appealingly lyrical. The perform-SUine: the cl'ass war in a maintaii. this surpris- ances by flutist Paul Diesing, vio-Christian manner” to those '’‘s'’ comment Unist Paul Glickman, and ’cellist—Daniel. Joseph (Continued on Poge 11)Dynamic ! !Stimulating ! !SIX EYES ...SEE THE WORLD TODAYS. I. Hoyokowa, General SemonticistCurtis MocDougoll, JournalistPaul A. Schiipp, PhilosopherA lively symposium in which these outstonding thinkers view ourturbulent world conditions followed by question period.FRIDAY, APRIL 28 8:15 p.m.Thorne hall, Chicaga compus, N.U.Superior at Loke Shore Drive' Admission 90 cents^ Sponsored by >tax incl. * ' ’ N.U. ForumIt’S Not Too Late!!SUMMER TRIP TO EUROPEPARISBY AIR ^360(Round Trip)ALL CHARTER FLIGHTS GUARANTEEDRound Trip Flights to:Rome:$460 London:$360 Madrid: $360SPECIAL ARRANGEMENTS FOR GROUPS, Write or PhoneINTERNATIONAL YOUTH, Inc.ISO BROADWArNew York 7, New York WOrth 2-5348To assure passage write imiriediately of the fighting “radical” governorof Alabama, James Folsom, who . .is struggling “to get.the legisla- Tn0 P3|0ff0ture to construct state parks forNog roes.”Reports excelOn the factual side there area number of excellent reports.Mike Kerwin on “The CIO Con¬vention,” Jean Jordan on “TheAVC Convention,” and an articleby Leroy Wolins on “Dark Spotsin the Nation’s Economy” presentdata which are not widely pub¬lished but worthy of our atten¬tion. One of the most interestingarticles in the publication is thatof David Reisman, a UC facultymember, and Nathan Glazer on“Class and the Meaning of Opin¬ion.” This article sheds new lighton the tasks of the pollsters ^ndthe scientific validity of theirwork.Though the content of the pub¬lication is excellent the form isno better than terrible. We, too,believe in saving space but thismagazine is so crowded that read¬ing it violates our esthetic sensi¬bilities. We hope, however, thatthe publicatian will continue, even Artist Medard Klein seeks toevoke musical response to artHow do you respond emotionally to a Bach partita, aMozart sonata, or a late Beethoven quartet? Some non¬objective paintings by Medard Klein, which are on exhibitin the Burton-Judson Gallery through April 30th, “seekan emotional response not greatly different from thatevoked by the abstractions of music. (They) ask, as musicasks, imagination.”One day when we felt un- ^Klein’s work,usually imaginative, we hur- ex' loit consists in well-ried over to B-J to respond, composeu, inventively designedWe were greatly interested by all d’fw'nes, mono mts, and u-miprints—experiments in a wideof the paintings, and elevated bysome—which emotional reactionis the only one Mr. Klein mightreasonably expect, since we doubt , u , ^ j x •,that any true abstraction, whether T ' ®in art or In music, can evoke re- opaqueness and luminosityheighten his interesting texturalvariety of techniques and mate¬rials. Along with practical, ordi¬nary old paint, Mr. Klein has usedMEXICO.$80 A Month!Includes• Your own 3-bcd-room furnishedhouse and patio• Cook and maid• Food, Liquor andeigarettes• 17-Foot sloop onmagnifieent LakeChapalaEnglish-American ArtistsColony in Fishing VillageWinter Temp. 75*Summer 85*Peter Arnold StudiosAjuicvia Chapala/Jalisco, Mexico sponses that are significantlymore differentiated.Artistic analogyYou might press an analogy be¬tween elements in music andpainting: you might say that col¬ors “sing,” or speak of their “har- and tonal effects.Bright but crudeAlthough his colors are freshand bright throughout, Mr. Kleinhandles his primary colors rathercrudely. His most successful ex¬periments seem those whose tonesmonies” and “rhythrrt.s”; but when are subtle and muted,you consider some of the aesthetic Of the entire exhibit, we likedand psychological implications of best a drawing ''Number 12) ^inthese media’s essential character- black pencil on creamy white,ifetics—music’s movement and de- gold, and a soft shade of bluevelopment in time, painting’s con- which is an achievement in itself,finement to a two-dimensional its sensitive coloring, its play ofcanvas, formally immediate and forms anc^ textures, and its cleverstatic—you’ll probably decide that design together achieve an effectspeculation upon the analogy i& that is beautiful,after all, irrelevant to your en- —Sylvia KouzeiWARNER BROS.HAMILTON THEATER2150 E. 7Ist ST.— STARTS FRIDAY, APRIL 21, FOR 1 WEEKSPECIAL ACADEMY AWARD'WINNER!,OE SICA'SSPECIAL STUDENT RATE! Show your Idenification CardP«9« 10 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, April 21, 1950Special HSA SupplementIndependent StudentsLeagueBy LOUIS R. SILVERMANExperienced, active and effective candidates who willwork for and achieve a progressive NSA program—this iswhat the Independent Students League offers the campusat the NSA elections. 'The opposition to ISL comes one one side from a right-.wing slate led by the foremost obstructionist in StudentAssembly. On the other side a supposedly “non-partisan”group is out to break the “ma- Cobb Hall, Mandel Coiridor,Harper library will house ballotboxes for the All-campus NSAelections between 9:30 a.m. and4 pjn., Thursday and Friday,April 27 and 28. On Thursday,between 4:30 pjn. and 7 pan.,polling facilities will be set upin Burton-Judson Courts, In-tevnational House and Wood-lawn HaU.The statements of the vari¬ous parties and the issues ofthe referendum are presentedhere for * your consideration. Non-partisan StudentsLeagueBy JEAN JORDANThe basic issue in this election is whether or not a smallclique of politicians shall continue to monopolize UC par¬ticipation in the NSA Congress. ISL has b^n unable toenlist the student support needed to make NSA and StudentGovernment the vital, effective force on this campus theyshould be. This support can never be obtained under theone-party system ISL seeks to preserve.As for the charge that theNo'n-EIartisan StiinientsLeague merely seeks to createanother machine, it was formedonly to break ISL*s undemocraticone-party rule. We would prefera no-party system, with each can¬didate running independently onV... - V.... In addition to the Student Biil of Rights, a statute wilhparty’s candidates. Its program, This year as at the last con- be on the referendum, which outlines the followmg pro- “ “ “ ^its hon^ty, and the effectiveness gress UC wlU again have to defend cedure: a committee on organizations (CO) Of five Students Obviously they^ notcandidates its liberal position in cor^rvatlve ^^d two administration is established under Student accept this challenge until theyonce elected. sureoundmgs. An effective dele- New organizations submit applications to the CO. have been defeated.-nw-nartS^n" opUSStste'^l^ ^ir“He°'^S’srh«'‘ve”e^rie^ce M the registration form is properly prepared, recognition is ,sl f.11. h. .cu..to NSA and M ^per^ 2^? automatic. SO Can withdraw recogmtion by a two-toirds isL has also faded to implementbCAROON letters column. Even be familiar with the problems of 70te. SG will makeand program effwtlvely, as itsmore iUustrative is the “original” the campus. He should be able to amend student regulations thu Jffrprogram offered. 18 of the 21 strongly present your point:^f ^y two-thirds vote, subject to activiti«? and^univerelty housing.potats were ra ^ ISL jdatfom view. ISL candidates meet these approval by the Dean of Studen'-s. wU^Sirt^T^^d^tadl^^whoof last year. Who S me-tooing who? tests. ATHraniTafInn Vinlntf^s these discuss, and exchange any findings .. . . ... ,And ISL has always worked All have SG experience, four it mav be indicted to m ihard and with great effect to live are regional NSA officers; all five st^'SurnMup to its campaign commitments, have wide background in cam- ^ , . ’ - j a ^ 4. The right of every student to ew- th^ agree with us.a, .a .a , |, . , dcuts, two facuitv, ana two aa- ^is full rights as a citizen inform- One of their candPUS activity. It I, a well b.l ministration. The Co^ jrtll decide walkout 'bv maioritv vote. Penalties of sus- infAii«A«^i&i ratiivioim. ftociai. ooii- Anotherchine.” The “machine breaking”technique suggested is to set upanother machine.Let’s not be frightened by theword machine. Any organizationwhich attempts to elect candi¬dates to office is a “machine.”The question in the voter’s mindshould be the qualifications of the student governments, opposingloyalty oaths and guilt by asso¬ciation, vigorously opposing dis¬crimination and promoting hu¬man relations action, greaterinternational exchange, coordi¬nation of DP student placement,and exerting legislative acUonfor these goals. SQ statute starts‘orgs’ committeeISL candidates stepped in andmade student government at theU of C an effective reality. anced group, and effective dele candidates led thefrom the CommitteeAnother walked out of the Assem-forlargeThe NSA committee is recognized Eastern European countries, fedas the best in Elinois and among eral aid to public and higher edu- sions may be vetoed by the Bean ^ ^ ^^ve equally difficult things to«o wic AH AiAAiii/io Cl«i oiM pw vuMiic »iiw iiiBiici cuu" Studcots If tlic dwlslon co^ JJfiSising tJeif Hghts M citixeiiJ ^ explain in their records. We havethe best in the nation. CivU lib- cation, strong action on academic established University not The aspirations to nationalerties and academic freedom have freedom and student rights, vig- ^ versity. office of three of its candidatesbeen visrorouslv defended bv as- orous onno^itinn to And direct Stu<l6nt Bill of Rights * 6* Th© right of r6cognlzc<l student fire also likely to restrain themueen vigorously aeienaea oy as- orous opposition to ana airect (,rder to preserve and guarantee to orsanizatlons to nartlcloate freeiv in .t # msemblies with ISL majorities, action against discrimination on the students of the university of chi- oJKSSius^Mtivities subject orjf to ^roni fighting hard for positionsYes, you put ISL’ers in the ma- campus, opposition to federal fhf®fuii“ft®rwJv?mi5t*of*^tS**^ilctivM proce<*urai regulations. , • to which there is powerful oppo-Jority of assembly seats and you scholarship loyalty programs, con- of higher education in a free, demo- sition in NSA. We aspire only tomay be proud of your choice. The tinuance and expansion of pres- The riaht of students ««rv® you as well as possible.holds the following rights 'essential to 8. The right of students and recog- - . - ..... .—...— . camwhen confronted with fact.In the last national congressan ISL delegation' worked 16hours a day to get what UC stu¬dents wanted: federal scholar¬ships and fellowships, coopera¬tion with lUS on specific proj¬ects, blocking a powerful moveto make basic, students* rightsbe “privileges,” strengthening ISL ignores octionTheir platform ignores many ofattack on the ISL record shatters ent service’programs, opposition the complete development of the atu- nlzed student organizations to^e cwlipn rr>nfronted with fact. tO COmpulsory ROTC Before yOU individual and to the fulfill- pus f^UlU^, proj^e^ *^Tib- * -o~—. ^ xwiuic you nignt ^ ^Is responsibilities as a citizen used for the purpose contracted, sub- .. concrete suir<re<;tinn« made Invote, read the back page of the of that society: ject only to such regulations as am re- concrete suggestions mMAROON and our comnlete nlat- 1* right of every person to be qulred for scheduling meeting tlmee ours, especially in the field ofMAROON and c)ur complete pla^ considered for admission to the Uni- and places. Student needs They are anoarent-form on the bulletin boards. UC versity of Chicaeo or any of its divl- 9. The right of students and recog- fstudents are not the kind to be schools without regard for nized student organizations to Invite ly unwilling to deal With suchnanickPd hv pliffcrinp or Inqniir into the applicant's race, und hear speakers of their choice on problems as the right Of studentpaniCKea oy giitiering promises color, national origin, religious creed, or cubiects of their choice. , a,. ,or vicious and unfounded accusa- beliefs. lo. The right to establish and Issue worlwrs to bargain collectively, thetions. Vote for an effective dele- and cSSclsl^^at^m\n?.^?Sor'? entering nlocp University eatinggation of proved students. we university, o^m the case of the *^Doiicy wiTiT^the ^ris selection Pi^ces, and the role of universitiesVOTE ISL. ?egttrTtion"rof Si“?onTAcfSS??fghui hi community redevelopment^ solely to the organizations sponwrmg Their attempt to take Credit forTT ♦ *¥ "1 ^ 1 ^ j ^ whSe a^pubficat^n enjoys a’ monopoly everything the Assembly has doneLiberaL^Lonservative Coalition not‘'’re"rwV”ni,t\';*oistitution of the publication to insure anyone who knows who did theIvon Henri Latimer, president of the Liberal and Conservative Coalition, states, be^VmUed ^to‘^^interest!‘^^acUrityr’^\nd Work on these project^. For a few“We agree with the Non-Partisan Communists that ISL has forgotten the students, but journalistic ability. The staff ot the examples: They contributed littlewe feel that the UC can only provide leadership to U.S. Students if it elects idealistic, and ®shau the® sole judge of to any projects of the Civil Lib-able and responsible delegates. The NSL and .ISL crackpots we sent to the last NSA Con- qualifications. committee — except opposi-gress destroyed our good reputation as a community of citizens and scholars.” tiois ^5*en*jo?*re?ignitioS"in aii cas i f Forum and theThe candidates 6n this slate are Bonnie Betsinger, secretary of student union; Rob- «gaii^a^^io^a?^not'm Conflict were the result of wo?kert Blatt, former captain of the wrestling team; Neal Burns, chairman of Friday P.M. **Srrnitio"« people now supporting us. TheReynolds Club dance; Joseph ~ be used ai a level to (l) control the work of thte DP student aid pro-M. Gabriel, chairman of Mas- just expelled the Yugoslav Stu- for students and faculty. We agree tionTTl) to^farce^it*to mergVwith*other gram, the Purchase Card pro-aryk club; Kenneth Koenig, dents Union, for “fascism.** with President Eisenhower that organizations Exchange, weresports editor of the MAROON; 2. We favor the implementation Communism and Communist in- bersEip. ^or (3) to dktaS its form of carried on in large measure byMarilyn Kolber, Delta Sigma of the student aid recommenda- filtration must be understood to organization or procedure, except as in npsL members,prexy; Henry Larson, MAROON tiofis of the Report of the Presi- be combatted and defeated by Th\*‘riaht of students employed ^"‘*'<*®*®* voriedreporter; Henri Latimer, SG mem- dent’s Commission on Higher Edu- democrats. To this end we sup- b/VeUni;imityVjoiroWor\^ uS: Our Candidates . are Manfredber;, Warren Lehman, Campus cation — through action b> the port a more active "campaign by collective bargain- Brust, chairman of the DP aidChest; Marvin Mindes, former N,S.Ai on all campuses. N.S.A. concerning the principles *^13, The right to petition through P^’o^ram;* George Cooley, Inter¬chairman of Student Republican 3. We favor a nation-wide stu- and practice of democracy—politi- proper channels for changes in curricu- church Social Action Chairman;club; William Potsler, Calvert dent campaign to support state cal, economic, social, racial and faculty. * Chester Davis, SO member; OttoClub chairman, and Roger Brues legislation tq provide Fair Edu- cultural. enjoy^hel^Vight/^wfthoSt^^egaJ? to Weinstein, member of the NSAof Radio Midway cational Practices in all institu- « fov/xi. «« xi e a j race, color, sex. national origin, reiigiouz Committee of SG; Charles Gar-01 rtaaio jviiaway. eimllor ^® **VOr an N.S.A. stfldy and creed, or political beliefs. vin Purchase Card dlrert.or- FredLOG’S platform follows; tions of higher learning-simUar to all campuses on the ^ is. Enum.,.ti«n «f ..ruto rUhu. to the New York statute. aw herein shall not be congtmed as to nni- Gearing, Chairman of NAACP,1. We favor the calling of an in- 4. we favor a nation-wide stu- 1"”“^ Everett Gendler. President of Hil-temational student congress by dent education campaign by N.S.A. .. . ^ ^ ® or ederrf — lei; Jean Jordan. NSA delegateNational Students-Assn. (USA) to to infonn and ar^se administration. ® dents and cut student living costs. S^rt^KThn ^omir®wganto ademocr^ic^rldstu- reamp^iU o«. Tn tow sto! ^ 7-We favor the development by -Th« board Serf^arrendent Acderation. The CP-domin- participate in student gov- N-S-A. of a nation-wide student f*** ®P ^ officially re g Lehman, Work Projects chairmanated International Union of Stu- emment for a healthy democratic Purchase-card system with na- ^ student organization ded - Campus Chest; Vivian Marga-dents has lost its west European society. - advertising (free) to estab- ^ Secretary, and Adele Rod-affiliates during 1949 and it has 5. We favor academic freedom ^^sh mass buying power for stu- student Hillel Social Chairman.Save 50% onRecordsBring This Coupon toHERMA/VS935 E. 55th St.Receive 50% Discount onOoesicol and Pops 78 R.PAA.Records Summer CourgesUNIVERSITY Of MADRIDStudy and TravelA RARE oppotbunity to enjoy memo¬rable experiences In learning andliving! For students, teachers. Othersyet to discover fascinating,.historicalSpain. Courses include Spanish lan¬guage, art and culture. Interestingrecreational program Included.For detoils write now toSPANISH STUDENT TOURSSOO Fifth Ave.. New York 41. N. T. government "offices. .Theatre-Sports TicketsAuto License ServiceNotary PublicVarsityTicket ServiceWoodworth's Book Store1311 E. 57tli St. MUteum 4-1677 iiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini.I NOYES BOX"SIMPLY THEWORST"ss Music by VictoryFriday, April 21, 1950 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page II.EINSTEIN?j|\vVi ^ Ing:^=olb know that...A MOSIR ACOLilOl .f INTINfIVI = PAfCINATII■DVCATION COURSI lORA INTENSIVi COURSE for cotlofo wemoN ilortt on iho firti Monday in•oory ninntb. Too moy rooletor for M in ndvoncn or on tlio dny tlm coereo botioAMOSER Orlginolor ofINTENSIVi COUtSESfor collogo girlsWAboth 2-7377 * 57 Eott Jackson ioulovprd * Chicogo 4luf/tfin 1C fr^9 ON rogvfil Levarie...(Continued from Page 9)Gerald Terman were among thebest solo performances of the eve¬ning.On May 5 and 7, Ernst Levywill give two lecture-recitals onThe Piano Sonata in the Nine¬teenth Century. On May 5, he willplay Beethoven’s last three pianosonatas, Op. 109, 110, and 111. OnMay 7, he will perform Liszt’sSonata in B minor and lecture onthese works. Both concerts willtake place in Mandel Hall at 8:30pjn., and admission will be free.The late Beethoven sonatas, likethe late quartets, were once legen¬dary in their supposed incompre¬hensibility. This attitude has be¬come a thing of the past, and bothsonata,s and quartets are univer¬sally recognized as among Bee¬thoven’s greatest works.Tonight the wind players of theChicago Symphony orchestra, con¬ducted by Ernst Levy, will presentthe tenth program in the Univer¬sity Concert Series. Mortin PickerGOWN AND JEWELS BY SAKS FIFTH AVENUEWITH SMOKERS WHO KNOW ... IT'ScUyfi/ ?.CwM.e&, ccufUC!Yes, Camels are SO MILD that in a coast-to-coast lestof hundreds of men and women who smoked Camels —and only Camels—for 30 consecutive days, noted throatspecialists, making weekly examinations, reportedNOT ONE SINGLE CASEOF THROAT IRRITATIONdue to smoking CAMELS! By SHEILA BRISKINFRIDAY, APRIL 21Ernst Levy will conduct the woodwindl51ayers of the Chicago Symphony or¬chestra at 8:30 p.m. In Mandel Hall.Admission is $1.50.* • •*<Recent Developments in HydrideChemistry" wlU be discussed by HermanI. Schleslnger at 8 p.m. In the FurnitureClub at 666 North Lake Shore Drive.No charge for admission.* * •SSA is holding a square dance in theIda Noyes Dance Boom from 8 p.m. to12 midnight. Free refreshments will beserved. Members will be admitted free;charge for non-members is 25 cents.* 0 *NAACP is having a party "with all thetrimmings" at 8:30 p.m. at 5552 SouthEllis. Admisison is In the form of adonation. Ail are Invited.• * »The Hillel Fireside presents EdwardRosenheim at 8:30 p.m. “The Wall”by John Hershey Is the topic to be dis¬cussed at the Hillel Foundation. Ad¬mission Is free.« • • "Women, and Family Life in StalinistRussia” is the topic on which LewisCoser will speak at 7 p.m. in Ida Noyeslibrary. Refreshments will be served.The discussion is sponsored by STL.• * eMONDAY, APRIL 24Student Union’s Arts and Crafts shou^to run for two weeks, opens on the sec¬ond floor at Ida Noyes. Admission isfree.• 0 •Fritz Lieber, science fiction author,will discuss Science Fiction at 8 p.m.in Classics 17. The meeting is sponsored,by the Scence Fiction Club. No chargefor admission.* e *The Puritan, a French film concern¬ing a religious fanatic, will be shown atInternational House at 8 p.m. Admis¬sion is 46 cents.* • *"Fundamental Philosophies of Peace**wiU be discussed under the sponsor¬ship of the All-Campus Peace WeekCommittee, 7:45 p.m. in Rosenwald 2.Admission is free.* * •"Ride the Pink Horse" and ChaptersC and 7 of “The Phantom Empire" willbe shown by the B-J Council in JudsonLounge at 7 and. 9:30 p.m. Admission is10 cents.* • *"Variety," presenting Emil Jannings,will be the attraction In Social Sciences122 at 7:15 and 9:15 p.m. The film isthe second in a series of five films to beshown by the Documentary Film Group.Admission by season ticket Is $1.50.« « •Otto J. Gombosi speaks on "JohannSebastian Bach” at 3:30 p.m. in theWieboldt Commons. The lecture, spon¬sored by the Humboldt Club, will be InGerman. Admission is free.* * «Reynolds presents a mixer recorddance from 3 to 5 p.m. in the ReynoldsClub. No charge for admission.* * *Quincy Wright, Ira Kipnis, and Mal¬colm Sharp will discuss the UN Declara¬tion on Human .Rights at 2 p.m. inLaw North. The event is sponsored bythe Lawyer’s Guild. Admission is free.• * *Campus Committee for WilloughbyAbner will meet in Rosenwald 2 at3:30 p.m. A full discussion of the cam¬paign, election techniques, and plansfor the future will follow the reportsby the speakers.* * *The Outing Department of SU invitesIts members to a very special party at7:30 p.m. In the Alumni Room of IdaNoyes. No charge for admission.* * «Reception for K. M. Munshl, Indianpolitical leader, will be held at theInternational House at 7:30 p.m. Spon¬sored by Hindustan Students Associa¬tion.* « *A Piano Trio of YPA Amateur Cham¬ber Music Players will play Mozart’sTrio in B-flat Major at 7 p.m. in IdaNoyes, 3rd floor. No charge for admis¬sion.4> * *SATURDAY, APRIL 22Student Forum is holding a generalmeeting to plan for the 1950-51 season,at 10:30 a.m. in the Student Forumoffice at the Reynolds Club. No chargefor admission.* * «Thomas Mann, Nobel prize-winner forliterature, will speak on ‘‘The Years ofMy I.ife” in Mandel Hall at 8:30 p.m.The lecture Is sponsored by the UCWilliam Vaughn Moody series. Admis¬sion Is free.* *"Sweater Swing,” a C-Dance spon¬sored by SU will be held from 9 p.mto 12 midnight in Ida Noyes Gym. Ad¬mission is 75 cents per person.♦ ♦ ♦ 'SUNDAY, APRIL 23"A Double Life” with Ronald Cole¬man will be shown by the B-J Councilat 7 and 9:30 p.m. in Jud-son Lounge35 cents is the fee for admission.* * *The Housing Situation in Chicago isthe topic to be discussed by Mrs. Mil¬dred Mead and Mrs. Betty Forsythe at7 p.m. n the Hyde Park Baptist Church.The affair is sponsored by the CharlesW. Gllkey Foundation. No charge foradmission.* >i> *LYL will discuss Negro AmericanPoetry: Richard Wright and LangstonHughes, from 8 to 10 p.m. In the AlumniRoom of Ida Noyes. Admission is free.* *"Simply the Worst” a gala gagfest ofnothing much will be presented byNoyes Box at 8 p.m. Place of action isIda Noyes. Admission Is 25 cents formen; 5 cents for others.* * *Elrnst Levy will discuss and performLiszt’s Sonata in B Minor at 8:30 p.m.in Mandel Hall, as part of the Uni¬versity Lecture-Concert series. Nocharge for admission.« * *"Government and Busir -jss” will bediscussed by the Universiw, of ChicagoRound Table at 12:30 p.m. over NBCstations. This Is the first in a specialseries of broadcasts on “Problems ofProsperity.” TUESDAY, APRIL 25Documentary Film will present Agroup of Ebcperimental Art films in¬cluding "Lysis and. Chamides,” "Picnic,"and "Color Designs No. 1,” at 7:15 and9:15 p.m. in Social Sciences 122. Admis¬sion is 35 cents.« • •The UN Association will present Pro¬fessor Bert E. Hoselltz, who will dis¬cuss "Point Pour” at a luncheon in thoIda Noyes Sun Parlor from 12:15-1 p.m.Admission is 35 cents for members and50 cents for non-members.« a *"Narcosynthesis,” "Schizophrenia andPrefontal Lobotomy,” and "PrefontalLobotomy in Mental Disorders” will beshown by the Human Development Stu¬dent Organization and Psychology Clubat 3:30 p.m. in Judd 126. Admission Is14 cents.* * *"Pathways to Peace,” a student panel,sponsored by the All-Campus PeaceWeek Committee will be the topic fordiscussion at 3:30 p.m. in Rosenwald 2.No charge for admission.« « *Johaness Steels, Mr. Frank and LouisCoser will discuss "What is Being Donefor Peace” at 7:45 p.m. in Kent 106.This event Is part of the Peace Weekdoings, and is sponsored by All-CampusPeace Week Committee. Admission isfree.• * «WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26Hillel will hold a chorus rehearsal atthe Foundation at 4 p.m. No charge foradmission.4> * *SU Games Department offers studentsa chance to try their luck at canasta,without charge, in the Ida Noyes Libraryat 7:30 p.m.* * *Michael Polanyi will discuss “Free¬dom in Science” as part of the Uni¬versity’s Logic of Liberty series in So¬cial Sciences 122 at 4:30 p.m. Admis¬sion Is free.* * *"Language in Thought and Action"will be S. I. Hayakawa’s topic as partof the University College series on“Language in Thought and Action” Inroom 809, 19 South LaSalle, at 6:30 p.m.Admission is $1.* * *"The Ways of Detachment” will bethe topic of Charles Morris at 8 p.m.in Social Sciences 122, under the spon¬sorship of the Paths of Life series. Nocharge for admission.* m *“Festival of Peace,” a presentation ofthe world’s songs and dances, will beheld in International House at 8:30 p.m.Admis.sion Is $1. The affair is spon¬sored by All-Campus Peace Week Com¬mittee.4> * «THURSDAY, APRIL 27"Food for the World,” part of theUniversity College series, will be thesubject discussed by Theodore W.Schultz at 5:15 p.m. in the WoodrowWilson room of the Chicago Councilon Foreign Relations (116 South Michi¬gan Avenue). Admission is $1.* * *"Choosing a Life Mate,” third in aseries of lectures cn "Courtship andMarriage,” will be discussed by MissRosslyn Stiegle in Classics 10 at 7:30p.m. The event is sponsored by YWCA.Admission is 25 pents.* * *SS.4 is sponsoring a discussion on"Housing Today” at 7:30 p.m. in theIda Noyes Library. Admission is free.* « «"Organizational Structure for Peace,"a student panel, will be held at 3:30p.m. in Haskell 108. All-Campus PeaceWeek Committee is the sponsoringorganization."African Evening,” sponsored by theAll-Campus Peace Week Committee, willbe held at 8 p.m. in Rosenwald 2. Ad¬mission is free.# * *FRIDAY, APRIL 28"What Can We Do?” a Mass rallysponsored by All-Campus Peace WeekCommittee, will be held at 7:45 p.m.in Kent 106. No charge for admission.' t* - ^’SPage 12 THE CHICAGO MAROOH \Friaay, April 21, 1950Peace week..(Continued from Poge 1)Waterman, Northwestern Univer¬sity professor of anthropology, andNigerian students, Chimera Ikokuof*the University and DomonicAdibuah [Of Loyola, will be thefinal cultural event. It will beheld in Rosenwald 2 on Thursdayat 8 p.m. and will include musicalexamples from transcriptionsmade in Africa and the WestIndies.A- complete list of the panelsand seminars and presently knownparticipants follows:Monday, 3-5:30 p.m.: seminar “CanNegotiations End the Cold War?’* to beheld in the Chapel House llvtii|$ roomiind led by Maynard Kriieger; seminar^Can the UN Do Its Jo'.^?’’ to be heldIn the Ida Noyes Alumnae room andIM by Geral Daley; seminar “Roads toWorld Government” to !>} held in theChapel House dining room by ChloePox and Howard Pox.Monday, 7:45 p.m.: panel “Fundamen¬tal Bases of Peace” with the SocialistYouth League, Labor Youth League,Interchurch Council and Hlllel partici¬pating, in Rosenwald 2.Tuesday, 3:30 p.m.: panel “Pathwaysto Peace” with Quakers. Politics Club,Young Progressives and Students forDemocratic Action, participating, inRosenwald 2. Tuesday, 7:45 p.m.r panel "Pathwaysto Peace” with Lewis Coser, JohannesSteele (just back from a peace missionin Europe and the Soviet Union), anda third speaker as yet unnamed, inKent 106.Wednesday. 3-5:30 p.m.; seminar “Re¬ligious Approaches and Solutions to theCold War” to be led by George Watsonof Roosevelt College and George CooleyIn the Chapel House seminar room;seminar “The New Imperialism and theSmaller Nations” to be led by Dr, BertHoselltz in the Ida Noyes South Re¬ception room; and seminar “DynamicImportance of the Press and PublicOpinion” to be led by Dr. Lewis CoserIn the Chapel House basement.Thursday. 3:30 p.m.: panel “WorkiOrganization” with “minimalist” and“maximalist” representatives of Unitedworld Federalists. Atlantic Union, andthe United Nations Association partici¬pating, in Haskell 108. There once was a young mannamed JeanWho wished to replace themachineSo he started his ownto mount to the throneBut the U of C Voters weremeanTHEY VOTEDISL U.T.Not bad(Continued from Pogc 8)The highlight of the eveningfor us was the cavorting of Messrs.E. W. Puttkammer and StanleyWanzer. These two gentlemencould easily have won a spot onthe old Pantages circuit on thebasis of this one performance,Francis Weaver and John Ste¬vens were very good in what start¬ed as an excellent satire on somenoted campus figures. FRENCH MONTHLY, well-known magazine, interested infinding college representative.Commission basis.. Write:Elite Publishing Corp.58 W. 57th St. N.Y.C. 19 De Luxe Hcunburgers 20c55th at UniversityThe MAROON Classified AdsSEWING ALTERATIONS, hems. etc.Beeisonable rates. Edna Warinner. 5623Dorchester. By appointment only. MU4-4680.EXPRESS AND LIGHT HAULING. Will¬ing and courteous service, reasonablerates. Bordone, PL 2-9453. gone far beyond these figures sinceleaving school and I have been ap¬pointed supervisor In this area. I willpersonally train one or two seriousminded, responsible, individuals to woilcwth me. Write Box 90, CHICAGO MA¬ROON today stating qualifications andphone number.TYPEWRITERS for rent. $2.50 a month.Livingston 8-3877.AN OPPORTUNITY for a young manwith car for full or part time sales-work in local program and advance Ina young, expanding corporation. CallBob Martin, WE 9-^36 for Interview.PERSONALIZED TRANSPORTATION.Drive a new car to California and otherwestern locations. Enjoy an economical,comfortable trip with liberal time andgas allowances. This is convenienttransportation and not a job. Call FI6-3422, 82 W. Washington, Rm. 720.LOS ANGELES — Free transportation:Drive new cars independently and regu¬lar In a leisurely manner. Take familyor friends, leave anirtime. Apply 1204E. 47th St. or call WA 4-9160.I AM A GRADUATE OP UC. While at-t^odlng school I found I could makeS75 to $100 weekly and more during eve¬nings and week-ends. My earnlrxgs have PGR RENT: Two 1-room Pullmankitchenette apartments with privatebaths. Reasonable rents. 6028 S. Ingle-side Ave.iPOR SALE: Girl's used bicycles. CallEssex 5-4391, Mon.-Wed. evenings.TYPING DONE accurately and reason¬ably, special rates on papers broughtIn before May 15th. Call SU 7-1234,Davis, after € p.m. evenings.POUND: Piece of lady’s jewelry afterEsquire party. John Moore, PL 2-9704.FOR RENT: 2-room furnished apart¬ment. Private bath, newly equippedkitchen, utilities furnished, avail'^bleMay 1. $80 per month. 6042 InglesldeAve.CHILD WORK. Mature woman, excel¬lently qualified, wants to live with afamily. Extensive training and experi¬ence with children 4 to 12 years. Replyto Maroon, Box 10. LINCOLN MERCURYIN HYDE PARKSpecializing In Ford ProductsWE SERVICE AND REPAIRALL MAKES OF ALTOSSIMONIZERODY AND FENDER WORKFactory Trained Mechanic*LAKE PARK MOTORS, inc5601 HARPER AVE.S. TAUBER, President E. KAPLAN, TreasurerTHE BEST THERE ISDON’T BE FOOLED BY ATTACKS ON ISL• •The “non-partisans” have borrowed 18 of its 21 platform planks from lastyears ISL platform that for which we stood and fought. Who, then, is shout¬ing “Me Too.”By rejecting the ISL principle of concentrating on issues affecting theUniversity community on a local, national, and international scale our oppon¬ents open the way for again wrecking student government. THERE MUSTBE NO MORE USE OF SG AND NSA AS PARTISAN POLITICAL ORGANS,making them sounding boards for domestic and foreign policy.ISUERS WILL FIGHT FOR THIS PLATFORMpush fo make I US a real world student unioncooperation with other notionol Unions of StudentsNSA action for Federal scholarshipsopprovol of federal aid to public educationstrong NSA policy on academic freedomstrengthen student cooperativeseliminate discriminotion from oil campus lifeoppose loyalty progroms for federal scholorshipsWImt MSL Has Actually DONE To Hake NSA WorkLOOK AT THE RECORD!Through The Independent Students League You HaveSECURED UC AFFILIATIOH WITH NSA^ STRENGTHENED THE REGIONAL NSA PROGRAM^ PROVIDED STRONG LEADERSHIP AT LAST CONGRESS^ BUILT POWERFUL CAMPUS NSA PROGRAM1949 CONGRESS(xxiperation with lUSfederal scholarshipsstudent rights defensestronger SG’sfought loyalty oathsand guilt by associationcoordinating DP placementlegislative actionstudent exchange THE REGIONPEPA actionfought loyalty programslegislative subcommissionhuman relations confabregional n?iwsletterSmith amendment fightfederal scholarship programwon four regional officesUNEISCO conferencebus to Quebec boat THE CAMPUSpurchase card systemDP student aidtrain fare reductionstravel officeprotests on Peoria st.Mundt-FergusonSmith amendmentwindow stickersstudent-health inves.movie calendarart tour, to comegripe-box system (X) DON ARNDT—NSA regional convention delegate, 2 years SG, managerRadio Midway, VP NSA committee. Campus Chest, president IronMask, post-president Vincent House, college.(X) ANN COLLAR—Former managing editor. Maroon; SG member 48*49;post president. Green Holl; Maroon columnist; Student Aid, UWF;humanities division.(X) HASKEL DEUTSCH—Post president Mead House; SG civil libertiescommittee, B-J council; Radio Midway; Student Aid; Hillel IZFA;social sciences.(X) MERRILL FREED—President III Inois region NSA; choirmon NSA com¬mittee; NSA regional convention delegate; alternate '49 congress;2 years SG executive couricil; Student Forum; Iron Mask; Owl ondSerpent; social sciences.(X) DAVE LADD—Director, Student Forum; post-VP of SG; 2 yeors^ SG;Owl and Serpent; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Iron Mark; low school.(X) FRANK LOGAN—President of Student Government, delegate to NSA'49 congress; delegate regional convention and convention chm'n. ofStudent Life Commission; Student Faculty Administration AdvisoryBoard; Iron Mosk; Orientation Depxirtment of SU; college.(X) ALEXANDER POPE—Post president of SG; delegote '49 congress; 2years SG executive council; workshop leader '49 congress; IVI;UWF; Owl and Serpent; low school.(X) LOUIS SILVERMAN—Director of public relations, Illinois region NSA;chm'n. Student Needs Committee of SG; editor regional newsletter;post-managing editor Maroon; NSA regionol convention delegate;B-J council; Student Faculty Administration Advisory Board; past-president Iron Mask; college.(X) DAVID STRAUS—Purchase Cord Director Illinois Region NSA; vlce-chm'n. Student Needs Committee; post program director of StudentForum; NSA regional convention delegate; Radio Midway; StudentFaculty Administrotion Advisory Board; college. _(X) ZENO THIGPEN—Chairman Student Life Commission, Illinois regionNSA; public relations director; AVC; NSA regionol convention dele¬gate; NSA committee of SG; NAACP; Midwest Humon relationsconference; Social Sciences.(X) GERHARDT WEINBERG—NSA regional convention delegote; postpresident and notional delegate AVC; SG's NSA committee; SocialSciences.(X) ROGER WOODWORTH—NSA regionol convention delegate; SG financecommittee; president Mead House; AVC; delegate Midwest StudentGovernment Conference; college.LOOK AT THE RECORDLOOK AT THE PLATFORMLOOK AT THE CANDIDATESVOTE ISLVOTE YES ON THE REFERENDUM