Carousel is symbol atcarny C-dance tomorrowLadies, gentlemen and students! Here’s an opportunityto temporarily desert the complexities of Plato and Aristotle.Put on your gayest carnival mood and come to the secondall-campus C-dance of the autumn quarter. Here, on Sat¬urday night, all may dance round the SU carousel at . IdaNoyes. Those who secretly yearn for the joy of the merry-go-rounds of their younger days may recapture their lostyouth while wihling round thecarousel to the strains of TommyParker’s orchestra.Student Union regrets that itcannot supply wooden horses forthe occasion but they have prom¬ised refreshments and a goodorchestra.For those who are unfamilie-with the SU C- dances, they aredate affairs given three times eachquarter in the gym at Ida NoyesHall. Admission is 75 cents perperson. The carousel will beginwinding its musical way at 9 pm.and the revelers may whirl withabandon until closing time at 12. University's 2nd concert offersHungarian Quartet tonightThe second in the University concert series will be presented tonight at Mandel Hallby the Hungarian String Quartet. They will perform Haydn’s quartet in D major. Opus76, No. 5, Zoltan Kodaly’s quartet No. 4, and Bela Bartok’s fourth quartet.The group’s members, all of whom had reached fame individually before their organiza¬tion in 1935, are Zoltan Szekely, first violin; Alexander Moskowsky, second violin; DenesKoromzay, viola and Vilmos Palotai, cello. An authoritative performance of the Bartok isto be expected; Szekely knew the -composer as a boy and later ap- haps the greatest composer of hispeared with him in concert. Bar- time, next to Josquin de Prez. Thistok’s violin concerto was dedicated ^ork is the earliest known pieceto Szekely, who gave it its first of independent instrumental writ-public performance. The group ishere on its third transcontinentalconcert tour.On Sunday evening at 8:30 in Following will be two settings ofthe 96th Psalm; Symphonia Sacra,Sing to the Lord, written in 1650Mandel Hall Sigmund Levarie will by Heinrich Schutz, and the motet,conduct the Collegium Musicum Cantate Domino, written in 1700of the University in a program of by Dietrich Buxtehude, the greatworks dating from 1470 to 1770. organist-composer who had such aThe program will open with profound influence on J. S. Bach.A la Bataglia, a seldom heard fif¬teenth century instrumental work The composer’s cantata, Nimm vonuns, Herr will be given its firstBULLETIN 31 University of Chicago, November 10, 1950MAROONoyation No. 5“I know that Professor Urey Isan extremely loyal American. Iwish there were a great number The five week contest to pick a new flag for the MAROONof people like him,” steted ^irico terminated today in the choice which appears on this page.All flags submitted came from MAROON staff members,the winning entry being the work of Gary Steiner, who willreceive the ten dollar award.Watch for MAROONovation No. 6!Fermi In a MAROON interviewFermi termed the charges of dis¬loyalty made against Harold Ureyby Senator Joseph McCarthy“baseless.”Fermi does not regard the pres¬ent world situation as promisingbut he does not believe that Itbears any direct implication on hispresent research.Fermi received the Nobel Prizefor physics in 1938. He is theauthor of “Theromodynamics”and several other books.He began his career as a lec¬turer in physics at the Universityof Florence in 11 a 1 y. He thentaught theoretical physics at the Roosevelt 'rag^ slandersDC students' way of life written by Heinrich Isaac, per- American performance.Begin new drivefor CARE fundsby Ellis ShafferThe campus committee for CARE, the Cooperative forAmerican Remittances to Europe, is initiating its drive forthis year’s funds for the current academic year. CARE—the only student campus organization sponsored by Chan¬cellor Robert M. Hutchins—^has as its faculty advisor RobertRedfieid, noted anthropologist.The primary responsibility of CAREis the supplying of relief packages tothe needy of both Europe and Asia.These packages contain clothing as wellas food, and range in price from fiveto fifteen dollars. CARE also sends booksto foreign universities, and medical andby Gary Steiner“UC students are infinitely more gullible than students ^from other schools in the Chicago area when it comes to agricultural aid to all parts of the world,swallowing any inane and shallow nonsense that is dealt Last year the care program on ucout to them,” announced David Pomper, in the Roosevelt campus was administered as part ofUniVersity of Rome*until, in 1939, Torch, Oct. 6 issue. “This,” according to Pomper, “is why the Community chest program. $1,850.88he came to the United States. they are forever rummaging through dank, second-hand was collected and used to buy books for. the University of Toulouse, France, andbook stores hunting down obscure ^ tthe University of Calcutta, India. EachJ>ooks and magazines on fantasy book has a UNESCO bookplate in itEliot stresses moralsin concluding lectureby Leslie Foster and science-fictioo.”Closp anythingEmerging from the dank book¬stores, and waiting until our dankadapted eyes became accustomed saying that it was donated by the stu¬dents of UC.In 1948-49, CARE, in a separate *CARE will once again have a sep-campaign, sent a total of $6,447 in arate fund-raising campaign,packages to Europe. This year, SmoM contributions growTo facilitate this year’s CAREBeside the three parts of liberal education—the voca- to the light of day, we read fur- flourishes of the campaign, all campus dormitoriestional, the social, and the individual—there is a fourth inwhich these three are consummated: religious education.T. S. Eliot said in his last lecture at UC on “The Aims ofEducation.”Without religious education and the estimate of the “goodlife” for man which it Implies, andwhich inevitably implies it, edu¬cation of the individual is defec¬tive, the poet charged.In each context, and with eachspecific group, he said, this com¬bination of the other parts of edu¬cation and its religious aspect may.differ, but they are, finally, in¬separable.Forced to consider purpose *Speaking to a capacity audi¬ence, he recalled that the questionof education, and a considerationof its purposes inevitably forcedone toward a consideration ofmoral philosophy or religion.Just as It is not God’s use toman, but man’s use to God whichis Important, so too it is notsociety’s use, but man’s use tosociety which must be considered,he believes.While man has a duty to him¬self, as well as society, Eliotpointed out, being a good indi¬vidual—that is, in part a morallyresponsible and perceptive one—and being a good citizen implyeach other. Development of thelatent powers to make a godlyindividual makes also a goodcitizen.Context bosicBut there is no single formulafor the best kind of education,moral or otherwise, just as thereis no single aim of education, andno single morality for all societies.Education must be defined foreach society for which it isintended.It only must be rememberedthat whatever the “parts” of edu- The MAROON sponsored work-cation, or the aspect of their even- shop is an informal discussiontual fusion, this fusion must be group where members read andviewed as taking place in the con- talk over their works. New mem-text of a specifically moral human bers will be welcomed,nature, and that in neglecting this, A faculty member will lead theone neglects a natural attribute discussion. Refreshments will beof man himself. served. ther to find that we "eagerly claspanything that is touched withmadness, anything that is taintedwith the weird and unusual.” Inshort, we are “vogue happy.”UC students have, however,come a long way from the timewhen, according to the Torch, theirmain topic of discussion in res¬taurants and restrooms was “Sar¬tre’s silly and insane theory ofevistentialism”; and even a furtherway from the days of “meaning¬ leading exponents of cubism.’We gurrowSince, of course, our studies“compel us to burrow throughThomas Hobbes and John StuartMills,” these hunts for the hauntedare confined to our “leisure time.”God preserve the University com¬munity between quarters!Oh, would some pow’r the gif teegi’ve us.To see ourselves as others seeus! iRobert Burns) and organizations have been di¬vided into units. It was urged thateach organization and dormitorysend at least one CARE food pack¬age a month to Europe.Small sustaining contributionsby each member throughout theacademic year are expected to in¬sure the sending ox monthly pack¬ages. The Ciganization sending thepackage may designate the recip¬ient; in this way, students will beable to see directly the value of thework they are doing.List workersThe campus chairman for CAREis Gerald Greenwald and the groupchairman is Dan Levin. The fol¬lowing students are unit chair¬men: Dave Grossman, men’s dor¬mitories; Joyce Zeger, women’sdormitories; Seymour Smidt, co-An open letter to President Truman and Premier Stalin ops; Jerry Bernstein, fraternities;was signed by 25 persons, including eight University of Joy Grodzins, women’s clubs; andChicago faculty members, at a public forum November 3. Helen Aronson, student organiza-The forum, sponsored by the UC Faculty-Graduate Com¬mittee for Peace, and entitled “The Peaceful Alternativesto World Destruction,” heard talks by professor Robert J.Havighurst, chairman of the com-Urge Truman-Stalinmeeting to avert wartions.T. S. EliotPoets meetWednesdayThe poetry workshop will holdits third meeting Wednesday at Wyvern clubdance tonightThe Wyvern club is throwin’ ahoe down at Ida Noyes Gym¬nasium from 8 to 11 tonight for75 cents per person. A hoe downis a barn dance!^ This affair is being thrown forAn open letter tc President gions leading to the ^ttlenTent^of benefit of the Wyvern Club’s^ other outstanding differences. scholarship and loan fund which“What is your attitude toward fbe education of at leastmittee on human development;professor Malcolm Sharp of thelaw school, and Bishop W. J. Wallsof the A.M.E. Zion Church, amember of the central committeeof the World Council of Churches.The open letter is as follows: “D ending the UN deadlock onatomic bomb control plans;“2) the feasibility of stepstoward general disarmament;“3) easing tension in worldtrouble areas, through the conclu¬sion of Japanese and Germanpeace treaties, and through discus-Harry S. Truman and PremierJoseph Stalin:“The rapidly-mounting tensionin the world today, accompaniedby re-armament and open strife,has led to wide concern over thedanger of an atomic world war. a meeting of this kind?”“Respectfully yours,“Min-sun Chen, Michael Con-ant, Stanley Davis, Clifford M.Foust, Jr., Robert J. Havighurst,7:30 in the Alumni Room of Ida From many quarters there have Alice H. Hosach, Cynthia Isenberg,Irvin Isenberg, Paul B. Johnson.Loretta Klaber, H. G. Landau,Martin D. Lewis, Tremont Monroe,S. Novick, Evelyn Packer, AdeleSayvetz, Gene D. Selmanoff.been calls for a meeting betweenthe heads of the two major pow¬ers to seek means of averting sucha catastrophe, and of re-establish¬ing the coherence of the UnitedNations. Prominent among theissues which might be appropriatefor consideration at such a meet¬ing are: one student each year.There is going to be a profes¬sional caller from George WilliamsCollege who will instruct theunitiated.You can get some of you**Christmas shopping done at theWyvern County bazaar.There’ll be a constant mixtureof cider and doughnuts flowing allevening, included in the admission* Malcolmn Sharp, I. Sherman, charge.Phillip Shevick, Sidney J. Socolar, Students and faculty were urgedGeorge G. Stern, Sophia B. Travis, by the committee to give liberallyW. J. Walls, Mary Jane Worston.” in this campaign.r«9e 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON Noirembtr 10« 1950Europeantrip opento groups ^MandeIcrowdtame^:Ziemann®P®"by Nan Taylor —“ COmOGtlf lOll“It’s not so much fun here now as it used to be, says lues, social sciences, and history.Walter Ziemann, and he should know. He has witnessed “One quarter they had physical Pnzes of $500, $300 and $200a continuous parade of university life for 16 years as janitor science demonstrations here, will be awarded to the best three- of Leon Mandel Hall. Through the portals he guards have Those were interesting. But it was short stories submitted to *‘Tomor«t:’ •» passed famous lecturers and entertainers, generations of hard to set up all the things th^ Magazine’s” 1950 college wriuThe Experiment Way, ^nd students, and culture from Thucydides to Eliot, needed ^ they dont have them ^rs’ short story contest. The prizesponsored by Bennington ^ ansmiore. winning stories will be publishedCollege, offers a way for » ramnu^ Wotchet plays, droma in the magazine, and ak othergroups of students to go abroad lecture hall and its mhab- rec , P night the hall is the scene of stories submitted will be consid-with the express purpose of better itants have tamed down. Stu- t ea r gr p y . plays, concerts, and public lectures ered for publication,understanding our European dents used to have more fun. He “They dressed sometimes liKe sponsored by the University. Zie- »rhe contest which close*; Tanngirls and practiced waltong like j^ann attends these and also re- ary 15. 1951 ’ is open to anvnnithem. It was very funny, he said, hearsals for student plays. “registered aAd taking at leasfoneYears ago student productions years ago course in any college or universitywere huge affairs with at least university drama was much strict- in the United States.” Manu-three directors, professional bsfnds, gj. Qjjgg awhile a lead- scripts may not exceed 5,000 wordsand original music. People from ijjg player would be replaced even and a self-addressed, stamped en-the University community often ^j^g rehearsal Wuen he did velope should be provided forneighbors. This way to see a coun¬try is not the usual tourist visitbut a means to understand andappreciate a different culture.Groups are made up of at leasteight members and a leader whois familiar with the language andcustoms of the country visited.How to quolifyTo qualify, one must be sin¬cerely interested in working forInternational understanding, haveat least two years of language ifgoing to a country where anothertongue is spoken, have a reason¬ably good academic record, par¬ticipate in extra-curircular activi¬ties, and have some special inter¬est, such as photography.The organization practices nodiscrimination or restriction. Mem¬bers are chosen only on their per¬sonal merit.LitI’ feesThe group membership fee is During the following two weeks Bom abroadapproximately $700, registration members of the visiting group Born in Germany, Walter Zie-^fee $15. and the maximum spend- spend their time in special inter- mann was 17 when World War I the place where hlS first University physical examinationtag money allowed, $70. If the fees est groups. out and he fought for four was held, but not everyone knows the many Other servicesare prohibitive, scholarship funds The deadline for acceptance of offers.paid as much as $4 a seat to see nis part wrongthem. The student orchestra gaveseveral good concerts a year andthe faculty produced their ownplays.Students work hard“And now,” says Ziemann, "it’sdifferent. More outside people takethe place of the kids doing things,“Maybe they work harder now,I guess the courses are tougher. Itused to be that the tests were justquestions that anybody would—Keiiick Photo J^^ow. Now When they have ex-Wolter Ziemonn aminations in here everyone sayshow hard they are.” “The director got mad. He wouldsay, when the curtain goes up, doit this way; the boy would say,‘I’ve got it.’“ ‘Sure?’‘Yes, I’ve got it.’ return of the manuscript.Each entry should be marked“College Contest” and sent to“Tomorrow Magazine,” 11 East44th st.. New York 17, N.Y. Anynumber of entries may be sub¬mitted by any student provided“Then the curtain would go up that each story has not had pie-(Continued on page 4) Tious publication.UC student health serviceoffers doctors, psychiatryEveryone is familiar with the student health service asapplications is November 15, The Rumania and the Balkans. In 1926may be available.Individual members of the date of departure for the west- . ., ,,groups live about four weeks in a bound groups is January 5, 1951; ^ three-year-oid son _ ViPnlfb cpwipp rlnpc rinfpre-selected European family hav- for eastbound groups, March 5. ^ Germany but The health service does ^tag a child of the same age and 1951. All further information may not get a surveying job here have dent^ or glass flttmgsex as the student. The next two be obtained from Mrs. William *^ecause he didn’t know English, facilities, but Will give glassweeks are spent in group travel Chapman, 5752 Dorchester, Mid- ‘'O University of prescriptions at a special rate.with the "brothers” and “sisters.” way 3-7752. Chicago. sickness or accidentUp to eight years ago, he says,the Gei^an still showing in his services, diagnosis, operating room,voice, the lectures were the same ^oom andThree psychiatrists are now on hand to assist studentsof 'Negro Digest/'Ebony' tells of magazines he came to America ^ito would like help on emotional or personality difficulties.Watch forMAROONovationNo. 6every year. Then during the warthe army was here and there weremeteorology demonstrations.Courses changeby LaVerne Armstrong The three weeks’ free hospital¬ization is a new innovation thisyear. Last year only one free weekwas given to the student. Dr. W. T.“Now it’s different. It’s more of Lester, appointed director of stu-‘El^nv’ maffazinp and ‘Npjrrn ■nifrpcf’ bnvp ViPlrkPrl in ^ changed dent health last August, says plansiiwny magazine ana Negro Digest have helped in every year. But still they repeat, ^re underway for an expansion ofachieving more equality and more respect for the Negro,” Now. that man in there.” he said. fZ ^rv^^ ta tSe near fSreaccordmg to John H. Johnson, publisher and editor of the, pointing to the hail, “i can telltwo magazines. The two are dedicated to the purpose of you word for word what he’s goingbringing forth the brighter aspects of life and the success ^ ”of the Negro. During the day Leon Mandel isJohnson, 32, is a former UC student. He spent two years, college lectures, human-1936-38 in the College, after WHERE THE U OF CMEETS TO EATGoVdofi'-iFINE FOQI132 1 East S7th Streetwhich he worked for an in¬surance company, rising tqan important position. While edi¬tor of the insurance company’shouse pubiication, Johnson con¬ceived the idea of creating a new war than at any other time. Promthis need “Ebony” was born.Encourages youthAnother function of “Ebony,”according to Johnson, is to encour¬age young people, by knowing ofmagazine, which resulted in “Ne- Negro achievement, to make thegro Digest.”Tells new needsCkincerned with serious consid¬eration of the problems of Negroes,“Negro Digest” consists of conden¬sations of articles on Negroes ap- most of what they have whilepushing onw’ard for more equalityand respect.In an editorial in the September,1950, issue of “Ebony,” Johnsonemphasized the point that Negroespearing in other magazines and must be ready for opportunitiesnewspapers.After the last world war, John¬son found the need of showing thebrighter aspects of Negro life, par¬ticularly in the fields of business,employment, cultme, and sociallife. It is Johnson’<6 belief thatmore progress by the Negro hasbeen made since the end of the A Clark and ClarkBargainTHE GOEBBELS DIARIES. The bestand most accurate record we arelikely to have on what went on insideGermany during the war. Publishedat $4.00. Our price 49c.CLARK AND CLARK, Booksellers,1204 East 55th Street.Hours: 10 A M. to 9 P.M.(Continued on page 4)viiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiKS ^ • Automatic Changer sS S • No Needle Change S• Plays through Any Set SDOES YOUR BICYCLENEED REPAIRS?English Cyclesfrom $32.50 UpIF SO, GO TO ARTSe Carry a Complete Stock ofnericon and English Ports andres.ARTS CYCLEA HOBBY SHOP16 E. 75th St. TR. 4-4100ours: »-«; Mon. lS-9; Thom. »-S TheRCA VICTOR45 RPM PLAYERIHERMM$ \s 935 E. 55th Ml 3-670( S9 'ihe Biggest Selection of 45s in Hyde Pork SS Alto 78« and 33s S In Lincoln, Nebraska, a favoritegathering spot of students at theUniversity of Nebraska is Ilermie’s“Inn” because it is a cheerful place—full of friendly university atmos¬phere. And when the gang gathersaround, ice-cold Coca-Cola gets thecall. For here, as in universityhaunts everywhere—Coke belongs.^ Ask for it either way ... hoth# ^ trade-marks mean the same thing.lOTTlED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY lYCOCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF CHICAGO, INC1950, Th« Coca-C«la Compoiiy196S0 THE CHICAGO MAiOON Page 3More People Smoke CamelsHum any eifcer tigaroHe! lOiRobeson performance Theatre sets now finished,'blends songs, speech' built with actors in mindbv Fred Winalwrg EWwhLast Friday in Mandel Hall Piiul Robeson santc and spoke. University Theatre’s coming double production are finished, “built with theV/ords and music were in perfect harmony. problems in mind,” George Blair, UT director, has announced. A combin-His songs were drawn from the Negro people in America, ^^9^ sectional platforms and flats are being used that are both economical and ver-the partisans of the Warsaw ghetto, and the caiinese revolu- ^ ^ .- - - - - They have been painted with a technique developed durmg the war for camouflagepurposes. The first coat of paint is carefully flecked over with a second color. The re¬sulting surface has no lines, sotion. He also performed some of his standard favorites“Love Will Find a Way,” “Scandalized My Name,” and “OldMan River.” The last of these wassung with the words Robeson hasmade famoUs—” . . . must keepflghtin’ until I’m dyin’.”Robetoft expleint sIWfHfThe tonality of his speech wasidentical. Robeson explaified whyhe has become a member of the“progressive” movement in Amer¬ica. He told of his travels through¬out the world, of the conditionsof the Negro in America, and ofthe colonial revolutions of theAsian and African peoples. The most important platform ofprogressives, he emphasized, ispeace, for without peace therecan be no improvement in the lotof any people. This idea paralleleda song that he sang about thefour rivers: the Mississippi, theThames, the Yangtze, and the Don. Interchurch to Palos Park,sixty students to leave today that any object placed before itstands out emphatically. Thisfunctions to focus the audience at¬tention completely upon the actorand his movement, rather than,as is the case with gaudy sets, dis¬tracting attention.A weekend retreat sponsored by th6 Inter-church Council Anempt dromatie vers«Lenion can't stop him . begins this aftemoon when 60 students leave Chapel House rrrloT 'S5S; in Palos Park. ” in bm. ma'i tacould deprive him of his right to introduce the retreat^S theme of “personal integrity” discontented with dramatic versespeak, won with three hundred Snyder, assistant professor of religious education, that is so insistent on its rhyth-years ’of struggle by hi^eopie. a disGusskm this evening on “The Individual Faces “attern.«i that thp deiiverv isCampus Interviews on Cigarette TestsNumber 5»..THE GNUI gnu the answers.,,but I wasn*t talking!**Xhe debating team couldn’t make much use of thisnon-talkative baby..; but one look at his "literary leanings” tells youthat tests don’t buffalo him. ’Specially those tricky cigarette tests! As asmoker, you probably know, too, that one puff or one sniff—or a mere one-inhale comparison can’t prove very muchabout a cigarette! ^Why not make the sensible test—the 30-Day CamelMildness Test. You judge Camel mildness and flavorin your own "T-Zone” (T for Throat, T for Taste)... for 30 days. Yes, test Camels as a st3^<tysmoke and you’ll see why.. * Himself.”Tomorrow morning Dr. John B.Thompson, dean of RockefellerChapel, will speak on “The Indi¬vidual Paces Society” and discus¬sions broken by recreation periodswill continue-Vhrough the after¬noon and evening.Por Sunday morning the Inter¬church worship committee hasplanned a church sanrice afterwhich the retreat will close withthe Sunday noon zneal.Offer safety courseA course in canoeing and smolicroft sofety will be offered once oweek from 7 to 9 pL.m. in the Bart¬lett Gym peel beginning Wednes¬day.The CMtrse wliteh includes sixlessens, wiN be taught by Miss La-nere Morehouse of the Red CrossChicogo branch. She is the authorof KNOW YOOR CANOIING, obooklet published by the AmericonAssociotton.The course is open to oil stu¬dents whe ere strong swimmers.They will need their own suit andtowel.Watch forMAROC^loyationNo. 6 mic patterns that the delivery isspoiled. The dramatist cannot, hemaintained, indicate like the com¬poser'in great detail how he wisheshis work performed. The actormust find the meaning and thatmust provide the fundamentalrhythmic pattern. If the dramatistcan construct his metrical patternsaccording to meaning, the actorwill be better able to execute theauthor’s intentions.Mr. Olson is further dissatisfiedwith the dramas in which speechesare too atuational and not ade¬quately concerned with thoughta.nd character development. ThisFaust, under Otis Imboden’s direc¬tion, is “frankly experimental” andis Mr. .Olson’s first attempt in thetheater.Olson working on trogedyHe is now woricing on a tragedybased on the conflict betweenHenry II and Thomas a Becket, inwhich he is attempting to com¬bine the imitative and didactic' conceptions of poetry in the samework.John Stevens, the director ofNo Exit, the second part of theUT twin bill, said that his set hasbeen designed so that it is vir¬tually impossible to move in astraight line. The actor is forcedto move in flexible arcs. The fluid¬ness of movement facilitates asmooth and connected perform¬ance.The production dates for thisdual program are November 18and 19.pALHOii®*0I —- oprice. „ jgr typ« , » olKub*'*Usual He***locWW'f*jhpfe^i|praH||KiSwhjriTOrfst-iiattePmiyiTjj(p7u^M|^eXD^K^^^||F• tfia^Sgm^l im|B|BH|&wrmpe»MmS«3B||B|jP^'oif^^wragR^v^^.nBs^‘mOTayineRl^tifinSiBmJTirVptCS'iit'i^[t=vp3mgg,;BSyMMZl^^nn|hj^^g^]gniat-fi‘Icc t ure rsEE^asaffiKEsteaclSeB^tnSf/lcneWjhls^bl^^^wiieratJTSisCu^'rtiow^Om^Ime^^^'Wj^c^'ypwh^foi^i^fl'Doj/owUlSy^M-0mm:s) ■mS ^hff <^^-aak® &ic^?tes «<!/ Ifee(i^ovember 10, 1950 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5Texans smear shmoo,others warn of liquorby Max EricksonThis week’s big news front paged in the Daily Texanconcerned a smear campaign in which all students wereurged to “smear the shmoos.” The shmoos were the studentsof SMU. All non-shmoos were asked to wear orange andwhite and decorate their automobiles. The head cheerleaderannounced that he would lead any 10 students who wantedto cheer.Would like to see an air view ofthat campus with its little orangeand white groups of ten screaming“smear the shmoo.” Big news in the Daily Tarheelof the University of North Caro¬lina was that four Negro studentsLion painting was the big fear of had filed suit because they hadNorthwestern students during Hal- been denied entrance to theloween week according to the Daily school’s law school. They soughtNorthwestern. Said the Northwest- reversal of the previous decisionern, “Other than lion painting, which said that the facilities atNorthwestern students are gener- North Carolina College, a Negroally well-behaved on Halloween.” institution in IXirham, were equalAside from the lions the North- to, and in fact, better than atwerners found their walks painted UNC.with red W’s in honor of the com- Governor Tom Dewey receiveding Wiscomsin game—^retribution front page space in the Ohio Lan-for leaving a purple stream of N’s tern. The article concerned a ru-over the Wisconsin campus. Ah, mor that was spreading in NewYork to the effect that if Mr.Dewey was re-elected he wouldcollege life!Book ignores evolution ___The Michigan Daily announced make the children go to school onthat a biology text-book is on the Saturdays.market that ignores the theory ofeovlution. The book also teachesthe “evil effects of both tobaccoand liquor.” On evolution?The Cavalier Daily of the Uni¬versity of Virginia spotlighted thecampus battle over which comic Add to your classic headline col¬lection this One from the Pitt News,“Passing the Hat for Band.” I wasunder the impression that theycame complete.In the Fisheye, the publicationstrip was to be included in the Max Pish Technological In-Cavalier. The battle seemed to Une stitute, an attack on the Prohibi-up on two main fronts, these being tionist party, whose officials are“LIl Abner” and “Pogo." The Pogo trustees of the institute, filled aadvocates maintained that their whole page,strip was “new and clever,” while Reason wasAbner advocates screamed “Give wentus Abner or give us death.” this—since Techdry, the enrollment hasdropped 80 per cent. UC Radio Round Table boastsof many firsts—including od libby Jan MajdeThe UC Round Table, America’s first ad lib radio discussion program, is the oldestcontinuous program on the National Broadcasting Company’s network.During its life, it has piled up an impressive array of records. Among other things,it was the first American radio program to discuss the atomic bomb after Hiroshima, thefirst and only to present the leaders of India and Pakistan in a tribute to Gandhi afterhis assassination, and the first to combine radio listening with home-study courses.This week it will have as its “guest T. S. Eliot, the Nobel prize Round Table pamphlets have beenwinner, who will read and discuss distributed since printing beganhis poems for the first time over in 1938.a radio network. This is another Though originally begun simply“first” for the Round Table. to meet the requests for the textFirst' outside US. of each broadcast, the pamphletThe Round Table is the first },;as grown into a weekly magazinenetwork discussion program to vvith an annual sale of over 600,«take its programs outside the oqo copies. It features articles, il-United States. The President of lustrations, charts, maps, reading. Mexico, Miguel Aleman, made his suggestions, letters from listeners,^To 0X£LIXlin0 1/00 COri wirill0Cl first t£illc to tli6 Aixigi*ic&ii people discussion Quizzes b&ck^^ound in*violence and intimidation of via the Round Table. Round Table formation, and texts of documents.Negroes in the Chicago com- listeners not oidy hear experts Tjjg magazine’s subscription listmunitv’’ YPA will present at speak from Paris, London, New includes many of the nation’s lead-an open membership meet- Toronto, Mexico City, but ing citizens, with Carl Sandburgan open niemoci snip meet the “round table” idea has become as one of the earliest subscribersmg, Tuesday at 8 m Ida item, selected Round SiXoteslirfhdayNoyes, a discussion led by Aaron Tables are re-broadcast in Britain, The Round Table celebrated itsBindman, a victm in last year s Holland, and Denmark. twentieth birthday last February.Peoria street incident. Cabinet Minister Ramon Beteta “This group today still pioneersBindman, a leader in the Inter- of Mexico, following his appear- ‘firsts’ in important talk,” saidnational Longshoremen’s union, ance in 1947 on a Mexico City Uni- George E. Probst, director of thewill describe the mob violence that versity of Chicago Round Table, program, on the anniversary oc-occuied in front of his home as set in motion the beginnings of casion.a result of a union meeting at- the radio “round table” idea as the “By using the suggestions, judg-most satisfactory means of ex- ments, and expert participation ofplaining issues of public import- members of the University of Chi-ance to vast numbers of people cago and other university facul-in Mexico. ties,” Probst continued, “compe-Distributes pomphlets tent, free discussion is secured, aThe Round Table is the first thing which never goes out of daten|A|ac radio program in America to spon- or loses its importance, for it is^ sor and maintain a full - scale, the necessary condition for a freeweekly magazine. Five million society.”Victim of raceprejudice will 'address YPAtended by a mixed group of workers.Science fictionclub plans talks■HNIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIHHIIIIIIIIIIIillllUIIIIIIUIIUUIIIII^i LOUIE'S BARBER SHOP IB SS For Personality Hair Cut is mo E. 55tli St., Chicago 15 :s *S LOUIS CORTEZ ■iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiHiiiiHnHHiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiibiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil The science fiction club is plan¬ning a series of talks by scientists,writers, and publishers on mat¬ters of interest to science fictionfans.First speech is to be by HowardBrowne, editor of “Amazing"Stories.” Time and place will beannounced.Other speakers to appear in thenear future include Fritz Leiber,Norman Knight and E. E. Smith.Plans are being made to showscience fiction films and publisha “fan-zine.”,.,these^are theArrow Collar Stylespreferred on every campusSurveys show Arrow to be the best-likedshirt of college men—from coast-to-coast.Famous collar styling, careful tailoring, lineSanforized fabrics and laundry-defyingbuttons make Arrow your best shirt buy I•3.65 up;SHIRTS & TIESSPORTS SHIRTSARROWUNDERWEAR » HANDKERCHIEFS Lawyer to speak on spiesat Channing Club meeting“Secret Intelligence as a Threat to Freedom’’ will be thesubject of a speaker-discussion program at Channing Clubthis, Sunday evening.The speaker, Henry Heineman, has worked with thestate department during World War H and knows secretintelligence work from the inside. As a lawyer, he is now_ on the other side of the problemseeking in his work on alien andloyalty cases to oppose the threatto human lives which secret in¬telligence involves.When interviewed Heinemansaid, “The use of secret intelligenceas a way of establishing proof isa new thing in the American tradi¬tion which happened only afterthe last war. The wide use ofsecret intelligence—and it is rap¬idly growing as in the cases ofaliens and employment—is a seri¬ous threat to freedom.”The meeting begins with supperat 6 pjn. (no reservations needed).The program is at 7 and will befollowed by social activities.90% of the Style...of a shirt is in the collar . , . and only Arrowshirts have famous Arrow collars. You’ll findyour favorite Arrow style here—regular, wide¬spread or button-down. Drop in soon and seeour grand selection of Arrow shirts in white,solid colors and stripes. $3.65 up.JLiyttoxiTs /rot AttOW UNIVItSITY STYll Chariie I^PUNtnyUONTF’Todoy o» ■»S;«. 7:1$, •:«, l«:l$ 9tMt P':^f<P»$e 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 10, I950Issued once weekly by the publisher.The Chicago Maroon, at the publicationoffice, 5706 South University Avenue,Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: edi¬torial Office, Midway 3-0800. Ext. 1012;Business and Advertising Offees, Midway3-0800, Ext. 1011. Distributed free pfcharge, and subscriptions by mail, $4pel year.CHARLES GARVIN•Editor-in-ChlefManaging Editors: Robert Blauner, Hlllel Black.Assistant to the Managing Editors: Arietta Smith.Fage Editors: 2. Ed Wolpert; 3 Gary Steiner; 4. La Verne Armstrong; 7. JohnHurst; 8 Sheila Briskin; 9. Lor Treltler; 10. Marc Goff, Dave Kllot.Assistant Page Editor; Arnold Task.Associate Page Editors: Nan Taylor, Barbara Goldman, Skip Ashby, Dan Joseph,Charles Erickson, Walt Gerash.Fage Staffs: 2. Marilyn Mueler, Dodl Caplow, Joan Levey, Gloria Karasik, DaveDevin, Fred Wlnsberg. 3. Buck Farris, Martin Gendell, Paul Breslow, NancyCampbell, Heyward Erlich, Earl Herrick, Mark Nugent, Stepnen Brown, TomLois Key, Blossom Weskamp, 8. Clement Zimmer, Ernest Blum, John Grimes,Shirley Sorenson, Nancy Oates, Vivian Lober. 9. Beverly Llpsky, VivianMargari.>, George Jackson. 10. Ashby Smith, Glen Carr, Lyla Erb, Bob Marsh,Hero Zimmerman, Darwin Evans.Assistant Page Editors: Arnold Task, Renee Domlnes.Fage Staffs; 2. Stan Herzog, Bob Jacobs, Ellis Shaffer, Bob Gold. 4. MarshallHartman, 7. Betty Arnswald, Richard Karlin Daniel Simon.Fublic Relations Staff; Steve Carter, Marilyn Evans, Joan Galloway, LenoreGur<tlnick, Irv Levinson.Copy Editor: Dave Canter.Assistant Copy Editors; Charles Gaulkln. Renee Domlnls, David Behar.Public Relations Director: Howard Sherman.Public Relations Staff: Nan Hochterg Ira Dafman, Velma Slaughter.Photographers; David Sher. Bruce KelHck.Business Staff: Assistant Business Manager, Dave Canter Advertising Manager,Bill Goldberg. Staff: Dave Fischer, Marcy Morrow, Scotty Livingston.Advertising Staff: John Livingston, Donald Ginsberg, Dave Fisher, EllsworthMcCler.ahan.UC vs. LegionnairesThe MAROON wishes to congratulate the University ad¬ministration for standing up against the 200 per cent Amer¬ican Legionnaires who didn’t want Paul Robeson to appearon campus. We feel that this is a concrete example of theacademic freedom which is fast becoming a UC monopoly.To hold letters contestThe MAROON will run a week to week contest for the best letter to the•ditor sent in each week.In cooperation with the compus Chesterfield representative, CharlesM. Cullen, o carton of Chesterfield cigorets will be given oway for themost interesting letter.This week's letters follow:Slaps WristThroughout the recent studentgovernment campaign, the MA¬ROON was used as a partisanpolitical organ of NPSL. Many ofus had hoped that after the stu¬dent body had given its verdictat the polls, the MAROON wouldmake some efforts at impartiality.The November 3 issue stamps thishOF>e as illusory. The MAROONprinted a long NPSL “analysis” ofthe election. While the MAROONmay feel obligated to print allNPSL material submitted, itshould at least examine the fac- Tells of WSSFThe following editorial appearedin the “New York Times” of Sun¬day, November 5: :World Sfudent Service Fund“Sponsored by college organiza¬tions of the three major faiths, theWorld Student Service Fund isopening its campaign to helpfellow-students in Europe andSoutheast Asia. For those who arenot aware of its worthy role wemay recall that the World StudentService Fund is the agencythrough which American studentsand professors, on the high schooltual accuracy of such material college levels, share materiallybefore accepting responsibility forit by publication.The NPSL “analysis” is based onassumptions which are clearly un¬tenable—for example that every¬one voted a straight ticket andthat all those who voted for oneLCC candidate in the college votedfor no one else. The NPSL “anal¬ysis” is based on some strangejuggling—for example, some sec¬tions of the University such as the as well as intellectually with theirneedy colleagues throughout theworld.“That the WSSF does a valuablejob is apparent when one reviewsthe scope of its activities. Lastyear American students and fac¬ulty members contributed morethan $800,000 in money, gifts andscholarships to aid needy studentsabroa. Need and need alone is theprinciple which governs distribu¬tion of aid. The funds went tobusiness school, in which NPSL provide medical aid for overseascould not even get a candidate, students, maintain rest centers,have been thoughtfully omitted, ^id refugee and displaced students.The NPSL “analysis” is based onsome peculiar arithmetic—for ex¬ample, the NPSL candidates insocial service administration re¬ceived 39, 35, and 33 votes respec¬tively. NPSL found that thesethree figures add up to 137 for anaverage vote of 45.6!!Nice going boys, you almost got99.7 per cent of the vote—almost,but not quite.The IndependentStudents LeogueEditor’s Note: During the elec¬tion the MAROON attempted toreport fairly news about thecampus parties as they made thenews. We will never arbitrarilysay that each group on campusshould have exactly similaramounts of space but will dividespace as newsworthy events occur.In egard to the NPSL analysis,the MAROON announced to bothparties its intention to print theirseparate opinions on the outcomeof the election. At such time asthe ISL is forthcoming with suchmaterial, the MAROON will bemore than glad to print it. Tothose of you who wonder exactlywhat principles the MAROONstands for, a fuller statement inthe editorial column should appearnext week. Local andLong Distance MovingStorage Facilities for Books,Record Cabinets, Trunks, orCarloads of FurniturePeterson FireproofWarehouse, Inc.1011 East Fifty-fifth StreetButterfield 8-6711DAVID L. SUTTON, PresidentThis is the business manager. Helooks this woy becouse he needshelp. Join the MAROONUnion men to talkon civil libertiesTo acquaint students with therole labor plays in maintainingcivil liberties, the Politics club issponsoring a symposium today at3:30 in Rosenwald 2. Recent de¬velopments within and outsideunions are to be particularlystressed.Speakers will be B. J. Widick,chief shop steward of UAW local7 and co-author of “UAW andWalter Reuther,” Harold Katz, at¬torney for UAW district 4, andE. Fineman, Independent Unionof Electrical Workers district rep¬resentative.Admission is free.Sponsors concertsThe music department of SU issponsoring daily record concertsin social sciences 122 from 12:30to 1:30 Monday through Friday.Programs are planned for thebenefit of both classical and popu¬lar enthusiasts, to afford all achance to relax between classes.to whom the appeal is primarilymade. . . .”The University of ChicagoWSSF Committee meets Wednes¬day, at 4, in the seminar room atthe Chapel House, 5810 S. Wood-lawn,Interested students are invitedto attend.Bill AllenChairman, WSSF Doctors demonstrate drugHow cortisone, the drug which has already shown promisein treating arthritis and rheumatic fever, suppresses symu-toms of serum sickness in experimental animals was demon¬strated by two UC doctors before the Central Society forClinical Research last Friday.Dr. Robert H. Ebert, assistant professor of medicine, andDr, Robert W. Wissler, assist- —^ant professor of pathology Note cell damagedescribed experiments which .. animals not treated with cor-used the new “window on disease,” “sone, the tavestigators saw thedeveloped by Ebert to check the ‘damaging effect. The white bloodeffects of cortisone.Use "window”The “window” is a transparent. cells stuck to the side of the tinyblood vessels; cells lining the ves¬sels became swollen. In rabbits, ^ ^ treated with cortisone, these re-plastic device, the size of a half actions were remarkably reduced,dollar. It clips over exposed tis- Through his studies with thesues of a rabbit’s ear, and allows window. Dr. Ebert has found suchdoctors to examine minute chang- unrelated diseases as allergies andes that disease causes in living tis- tuberculosis have similar effects insue as they occur. attacking tissue.A Clark and ClarkBargainKuhii and Russo: MODERN HYPNO¬SIS. An anthology to acquaint theIntelligent reader with the latestadvances In hypnosis.Published at $5.00. Our price $1.98CLARK AND CLARK, Booksellers1204 East 55th StreetHours 10 a m. to 9 p.m. THE WHIFFLE TREETender, Juicy Sf-cakFrench Fries, Lettuce andTomatoesHot Buttered Toast601425 E. 60th .Opposife International Houseprovide educational supplies, andgive emergency food and clothing.The organization’s budget for1950-51 is set at $600,000; theneeds of students in Europe andAsia remain as urgent this yearas they were last.“As Chancellor Harry WoodburnChase of New York University,honorary chairman of the WSSFdrive, observes, we cannot under¬estimate the importance of suchstudent-to-student giving in ourpresent world.“For that reason we are confi¬dent that the project will receivethe enthusiastic response of thepreparatory school, college anduniversity students and professorsHi 5S PaintingsEtchingsWatercolorsPrintsand Framing CHILDREN’S BOOK WEEKI^oveiiiber 1!S - 18Make Friends with BooksTHE STORY OF APPLEBY CAPPLE $2.75By Anne ParrishA new kind of alphabet nonsense book, with afully develcvped character to represent each let¬ter.GIGGLE BOOKS $2.50Selected by Phyllis R. FennerPictures by* Wm. SteigFifteen funny stories for boys and girls.PIPPI LONGSTOCKING $2.00By Astrid LindgrenSwedish children have been chuckling overPippi's escapades for years and now with thistranslation we can laugh too.THE STORY OF LEWIS CARROLL $2.00By Roger Lancelyn GreenAs Charles L. Dodgson rowed up the river pastthe spires of Oxford, the two little girls he hadtaken boating pleaded, "Tel! us a story," andthat's how Alice's Adventures in Wonderlandbegan,HUNTING AMERICAN BEARS .$5.00By Frank C. HibbenThe reader is taken all the way from AdmiraltyIsland, Alaska to Chihuahua, Mexico to see bearsof all kinds.THE NATURE DICTIONARY $2.00By John Hayes Melady500 pictures in color with descriptions of birds,flowers, animals, fish, insects, trees and plants.A BOAT FOR PEPPE $2.00By Leo PolitiA true understanding of children and a warmfeeling of family life permeates this delightfulstory of Peppe with its setting in Monterey.See the Attractive «and Complete Displays forChildren's Book WeekUNIVERSITYof CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AYEHUEtH* c1168 E. 55tli StMLT 4-3388sSiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiniiiHiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiHnHiiiiiiiiisJimMHovembci’ 10, 1950 fHE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Atom pix support UC unveils netw malarianew Fermi theory 'wonder drug' treatmentExperimental proof of UC physics professor Enrico Fermi’snew nuclear fission theory was seen here this week as anoutgrowth of the cosmic ray colloquium of midwesternuniversities held here Saturday.The “proof” was contained in a set of photographic One more advance for University of Chicago scientists was chalked up yesterday withthe announcement of a new “wonder-drug” treatment by John S. Edgcomb, UC pathol¬ogy fellow.Tests of the new drug on human volunteers have led to a “practically 100 per cent”plates showing atornic’comstoWTnvomng^hirty-th^^^^ common forms of malaria, Edgcomb told a meeting of expertsbillion electron volts of en¬ergy. The plates were dis¬played at the session alongwith a report by Marcel Schein,professor of physics in the insti¬tute for nuclear studies.Key in meson countOne collision recorded on theplates is reportedly the most pow¬erful yet observed. It involved morethan 100,000 times the energywhich could be produced by themost potent atom - smasher yetplanned. The collision showed a proton(the stripped nucleus of a hydro¬gen atom) striking a nuclear par¬ticle. From the collision, one pro¬ton and a shower of 15 atomicparticles called mesons were givenoff.Photo supports FermiThe existence of the 15 mesons on tropical diseases in Savannah, Georgia, yesterday.Midwest universitiesconfer on race bias The new drug, primaquine,used in combination withquinine, is the best yet foundfor treating relapses fromvivax malaria, the recurringform of the disease, Edgcombstated. He is an American Cancersociety fellow in pathology in UC’tmedical research center.Treotment takes 14 days 'Contrary to earlier, unauthor-A Clark and ClarkBargainOUR OWN BAEDEKER from the NewYorker. By Klnkead and Maloney.10 maps, 240 Illustrations by CarlRose. A collection of 72 capsuletravelogues by two Inimitable re-conteurs.Published at $3.75. Our price 98c.CLARK AND CLARK, Booksellers,1204 East 55th Street.Hours: 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. Methods of combating discrimination in higher educationwere discussed by midwestern university officials and teach-and the extremely narrow path ers recently at the second regional conference sponsoredthrough which they move is re- by the American Council on Education and the Anti-Defam- ized reports, the drug is no "one-garded as experimental proof of ation League of B’nai B’rith. shot” cure but requires adminis-Fermi’s new theory about the States included in the conference were Illinois, Wisconsin, tration under the supervision of amechanics of meson production by -n-—=-• ^high energy nuclear particles, oth- Michigan, and Indiana. Sucher physicists have theorized that schools AS X^, Illinois Instl-such a collision would produce tute of Technology, Loyola,more than ten times that numberof mesons.The high energy collisions re¬ported by Schein were recorded onphotographic plates attached toballons sent aloft at intervals fromStagg field. The plates were car¬ried almost twenty miles high andthere were expo.sed to the impactof cosmic rays. Jere Lord, a grad¬uate student, collaborated withSchein in these studies. DePaul, Roosevelt, U of Wiscon¬sin, and Northwestern were repre¬sented. The conference was heldNov. 3 and 4.Lead panel talksAt one session the groups as¬sembled to hear speeches by Dr.Ivy of the University of Illinois,Floyd W. Reeves and ChancellorHutchins of the University of Chi¬cago.PYiday a panel discussion wasiimiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifcngliBliBICYCLESManufactured by the British Co-opsImported by Hyde Park Co-opAGoodBike•AGoodSavings led by Kenneth Benne of the Uni¬versity of Illinois. The topics were:Application Blanks by Helen C.White of the University of Wis¬consin; Admission Policies andProcedures by Thomas E. Jones,president of Earlham College inRichmond, Indiana; and Facilitiesand Economic Barriers by Cole¬man R. Griffith of the Universityof Illinois.Discriminatian lobeled subversiveDiscussions continued the nextmorning and in the afternoon thestates presented their resolutionsand reports, after which final res¬olutions of the conference weremade.At the conference, Louis Wirthbranded discrimination in collegesas subversive. “Discrimination andeconomic factors prove to be realbarriers to otherwise good collegematerial,” he said.I Name officers ofI new study groupB A new campus organization hasS been formed to study religious andS social problems, it was announcedthis week by John B. Thompson,dean of Rockefeller Chapel.The Student Christian Associa¬tion, formed through the action ofthe old YWCA board and theChapel, held its first meeting thisweek. The meeting resulted in theelection of Nancy Wong as presi¬dent.Other officers elected include:Edward Nelson, executive vice-president; Myrtle Chamberlin, ad¬ministrative vice-president; HilaryFonger, secretary, and GeorgeCoade, treasurer.4 POPULAR MODELSfor Meu aud WomeuEACH equipped with Sturmey-Archer3-speed gears aud 2-wheel brakesSpecially Priced $49®®By bringing these bicycles to you direct from England and by eliminatingguarantees and service, we are able to save you about $25.Place Your Order Now—Delivery iu 60 to 90 days |sSample bicycle now on display at sTHE HYDE PARK CO-OP |57th STREET AT HARPER |CONSUMER OWNED AND OPERATED B UniversalMilitary Trainingwill regiment young Americans for¬ever—UNLESS you express opposi¬tion. Contact your friends and VISITand phone Illinois congressmen, andWRITE your home-state senatorsand representative now before theyreturn to Washington.To continue such ads, contribute toU. S. Committee Against Militariz¬ation, 6329-u May, Chicago 21.B giiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiwii Home Ii| Plastics I■1 B I—B Lorge Selection of Phsics BS B for Your Home BB I Present This Ad |s I For a Free Gift |I B 1412 E. 55th St. as SiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiH physician over a period of 14 days.However, with one exception, allof 33 patients *reated with prima¬quine and quinine had no relapses.Demonstration of the effective¬ness of primaquine-quinine treat¬ment is the latest result of a sevenmillion dollar research programbegun for the U.S. Governmentduring World War II to find bet¬ter anti-malarial drugs.Nome rest group members ^Tests which showed the effec¬tiveness of the primaquine-quininetreatment were conducted underthe supervision of Dr. Alf S. Al-ving, UC professor of medicine.Volunteers from the convicts atStateville (Illinois) penitentiaryserved as guinea pigs for the testof primaquine and other antima-larial drugs.Working with Alving in the pri¬maquine research were LillianEichelberger, UC associate profes-.sor of biochemistry. Captains JohnArnold and Ernest H. Yount, Jr.,of the Army Medical corps, andEdgecomb, then a captain in theMedical corps.Geoffrey M. Jeffrey, Don Eyles,and Martin D. Young of the Na¬tional Institute of Health, pro¬vided the mosquitoes used in in¬fecting the volunteers.15,000 drugs studied 'Primaquine itself was first .syn¬thesized in research at ColumbiaUniversity. More than 15,000 drugswere studied during the course ofthis nation-wide project.In the testing, more than 1,100volunteers from the prisoners atStateville were infected with ma¬laria and treated with variousdrugs. The prisoners were exposedto mosquitoes infected with asouth Pacific strain of vivax ma¬laria, characterized by frequent re--lapses. Treatment was begunshortly after infection, before thebody could develop any naturalimmunity to the disease. This nat¬ural immunity results from under¬going prolonged attacks of the dis¬ease, and makes patients easier tocure.Daily doses of combined prima¬quine and quinine stopped all re¬lapses in patients suffering theirfirst attack of malaria.Cite use of drugAdministered alone, primaquineended relapses in more than halfthe cases treated. In addition toestablishing the usefulness ofprimaquine, Edgcomb, Alving, andtheir co-workers were able to dis¬cover the safest, effective dosages.Primaquine offers an effectiveway for treating such cases of ma¬laria as those which may affectveterans returning to the U.S. afterservice in the tropics. So far, pri¬maquine has only been tested onwhite patients. Similar types ofdrugs have proved more toxic intreating malaria in darker skinnedpatients.Dorian Hotel4545 S. Woodlawn ATIantic 5-1810Permanent and TransientFrom $10 WeeklyEvery Room with Private BathRestaurant in Hotelfage 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 10, I950, (' Stekel defends auto-eroticismin dynamic, heretical volumeWilhelm Stekel, AUTO-EROTICISM, Liveright Publishers, 1950, $4.00A few years ago books by Stekel were to be found in the remotest shelves of second¬hand book stores and cost just a few cents. This obscurity was probably related to his con¬flicts with Freud concerning psychoanalytic technique. Now his books are being repub¬lished in bright colors and for bigger markets.There is probably no better book on the subject of masturbation. One of the best as¬pects of the book is its emphasis on the social significance of auto-eroticism. In this respecthe is more in agreement withsuch authors as Sullivan andThompson.*Tiine to obdisk legend'Stekel writes: “It is high timeto abolish the legend that mas¬turbation is harmful. It is a vetuimto infantile gratification charac¬teristic of the neurotic. At theright time it is abandoned and therole of the adult is assumed. But have felt myself incapable,” writesGoethe. He writes also that whilein Leipzig he gave himself over tohis “physical nature.” Eliot hasobserved that no one ever raisedhis child to be a poet. This may notbe unrelated to the firm controlsimposed by paients on the child’ssexual explorations.•—Soul R^olskythis need not be achieved through -r-r t J ^taboos and threats; it is a Ques- W OYtlCtl UTgCCL tOtion of education and of growth |through freedom, such as may be p(XCk> jyiOyCS LjOX.This Sunday, as every Sundayattained through psychoanalysis.Two kinds of masturbation aredescribed: physiological and path¬ological. The fust represents astage in the psychosexual develop¬ment of the individual and isultimately replaced. The patho¬logical foi-m is compulsive and is evening, SU will present the NoyesBox in the Cloister Club at IdaNoyes.As those who have attendedknow, the atmosphere changeseach week as the Cloister Club is Crime storypacks forceManning Coles, DAKjGEROUS BYNATURE. Garden City, New York.Doubiedoy & Co., 1950.The latest book by ManningColes is more than just a crimestory. It combines an excellenceof narration, sharp and witty dia¬logue and apt characterization,with absorbing adventures andmisdeeds of the characters.At the same time it loses noneof the special qualities of a crimestory. Alumna's autobiographypictures Southern veneerMary Alves Long, HIGH TIME TO TELL IT, Durham, DukeUniversity Press, 1950, $3.50This autobiography depicts its author’s early life in NorthCarolina after the Civil War, and by no means in an objec¬tive manner. This period was of great importance sociolog¬ically in the development of the South, but any recognitionof the fact probably slipped in through a side door.The author seems to have flitted away her childhoodbetween lengthy visits to relatives, —.whom she traces back to the third of Chicago Miss Long met suchgeneration, and constant fear jags people as Mortimer Adler, Robertbrought on by animals. One savingfeature is the strain of humorwhich she uses to describe theLong hoiisehold, particularly theiroddities.Description superficiolThere is an extended descriptionof educational institutions in thelate seventies and glimpses intothe political and economic struc¬ture of the day—all of which isdone rather superficially.Author UC studentAs a student at the University Herrick and Robert Millikan andgives an interesting, humor-filledaccount of her stay here.On the whole High Time toTell It is the book to read for de¬tailed information on Southernfood after the Civil War and fash-ionable women’s dress of the pe¬riod.—Beverly LipskyShop the sign ofthe 'X''preferred even when heterosexual transformed Into a night club, aadjustments are possible. Stekel speakeasy, or even a candle-litdefines auto-eroticism as an aso¬cial sexual act, the essence of itbeing that another individual isnot involved. The message is thatmasturbation in itself is not harm¬ful, but. ..Masturbation complexThe “but” aspect can be said tofall generally around tlie area offantasy. Sexual drives are to bedistinguished from other primaryphysiological drives such as hun¬ger in terms of their great indi¬vidual differences, their pervasive¬ness throughout the whole per¬sonality and, especially, their con¬comitant fantasies. Masturbationcan subserve many complex needs:indeed, its significance may be¬come known only when it is pro¬hibited. Stekel shows that it isfalse reasoning to regard neurosisAS being brought about by mas¬turbation. As a matter of fact, theneurosis is brought about byabstinence.Pew real experiences and nodaily fantasy experience have thevividness of auto-erotic fantaisies.It cannot bc denied tliat thesefantasies can have an enlarginginfluence on the understandingand appreciation of human phe¬nomena, even if it is actually re¬mote. “I have never heard of anyact of a human being of which I rendezvous. America’s leading or¬chestras play the latest in dance-able music, and, if one wishes tosit out a dance, tables and refresh¬ments are provided.This week SU extended a specialinvitation to women. If you areunder the impression that a dateis essential, you are mistaken, forif you have no such animal, theNoyes Box is the place to find one. SHOE REPAIRIf it's shoes we do onything.QUALITY MATERIALS, reoson-able prices. Free pickup and de¬livery. One-doy service and workdone while you wait.Holliday’s DeLaxoShoe Service1407 E. 61st St. at DorcliastarTwo blocks from InternotionolHouse. Phone NOrmol 7-8717 DR. ILS R. ILSOIIAmi ASSOCIATES1138 E. 63rd HY 3-5352OPTOMETRISTS and OPTICIAIVS—o—• Discounts to NSA purchase card holders• Eye examination and glasses• Rapid and accurate optical repairingDURABILITY... DEPENDABILITYIt rides more smoothlyTake one ride and you’ll a^ee Chevroletis the smoothest riding car in its field. It’sthe only low-priced car combining thefamous Unitized Knee-Action Ride andaiiplane-type shock absorbers all around.It drives more easilyEnjoy finest no-shift driving with Power-glide Automatic Transmission* and 105-h.p. engine—or finest standard drivingwith standard engine and Synchro-MeshTransmission—nr lowest cost. It Operates more economicallyChevrolet’s famous Valve-in-Head En¬gine, exclusive to Chevrolet in its pricerange, brings you an outstanding combi¬nation of thrills and thrift, plus proveddependability, year after year.it lasts longer, tooMany Chevrolets are performing depend¬ably after ten, fifteen or twenty years ofservice. That’s one reason why there areover a million more Chevrolets on theroad than any other make. It's better looking all aroundOutstanding good looks accompany theoutstanding performance of Chevroletcars—only low-priced car with Body byFisher-and most beautiful in its field,according to a recent public survey.It gives more for less throughoutOnly Chevrolet offers so many perform¬ance, comfort and safety features ofhighest-priced cars at the lowest pricesand with such low cost of operation andupkeep. Come in and see it nowl*Combmation of Powerglide Automatic Transmission and 105-h.p. Engine optional om De Luxe models at extra cost.Your 'Best Buy-Sy M OefdsBig Wheels Th« Flaatlina Lux« 2-Door Sedoat-orn toHeine’sBLEND**'**’^\\ oiuuviont,, WPEa) TOBACCO AMERICA’S BEST SELLER!AMERICA’S BEST BUY!soniff TOBACCO CO 6SC) f.<t•ElSt 'S TOBACCO CO Mo^^ SEE YOUR LOCAL CHEVROLET DEALERConvenienf/y l/sfed unthr In your /ocol elastidM feltfilNme effreeforyWorld Playhouse ^satisfying^ Last Saturda,y, b<^ing possessed of 34 cents and veryelse, I attended one of these “gallery openings” thatis invited to now and then. The place was 733 N. Rush,-JeS? “om ‘ha?tag murdered'lT mistSS ^‘eTcSI theSvTthroinimpS^ S" S f ■Jeatel disembarking in Genoa, old and feeUng de- the door of the walk-down^sayslhey are opS "4^^'He hais aJUxitliiwfee, decides to give himself up, has the tooth pulled, tries to give him¬self up, become rhungry and meets Isa Miranda, a waitress. She is living in poverty withher daughter on account of a cruelhusband shl^'^hto left who keeps moves in with the two and con- new life, but he is stoically re¬trying to 1ctdd||i .the child. Oabin fides. She wishes him to begin a signed. After some vacillation onhis part the police, hot on histrail, catch up and, despite thedaughter’s attempt to foil them,take him away.Gabin has played this same partagain and agaiii, but played it■ with interest each tirde. ’The direc-tiim of Bene Clemeht, especiallyhia effective yet tasteful treatnient sign12 to 10.” A very classy joint.A phonograph plays Bach andsomeone dispenses refreshmentsfrom an obsolescent, television; ^ckets to All EvontsTheatre » Opera » BalletSPORTING EVENTSNOTARY PUBLICVarsity Ticket ServiceWoodworth’s Book Store1311 E. 57tli 5f. MU. 4-1677PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55tfc STREET Having aThanksgiving Party?Why No» ServeThose'DeJieiousLLOYD HARRiSMINCE, PUMPKIN, APPLEPIES.At Feohired otT^NUT, GORDON’SPhene TAyler 9-3000RepreteneHve Will"Shew SemplesRecognize these keys?light are the famous keys of national honor societies*No. 9 is an important newcomer. It’s the Bell System’s new keyset forthe 'idiftling of Long Distance telephone calls. And,, though not yet•’nationai^” it already has "chapters” in more than 900 cities and towns;By pressing these keys, your operator can dial calls straight through to tele¬phones in many distant places. Calls go through faster, ipore accurately,AulomatijC^aling of Long Distance calls by operators, a development of theBell Telephone Laboratories, is being extended steadily. This new method ofputting tlvough Long Distance calls is especially important right now, whentbe nation is hunting on telephone service to help speed the job of defense;BELL TfetEPHONl SYSTEMItoyr *l»wn: 1. Si|ma XI (SdanWHc Hasearch). 2. Si»m. Ttu (En«ir»*«ring). J. Slgmi Pi Sigma (Physics). 4. S'*™riL Mpha Pif (AccoiitingX t Blrn Key (StfVKaX 7. Omieron Palta Kappa (Men i LeedersiMp). t Pi Gamma Mu (Soaal Sc encei of the daughter, has both wit andcharm. The photography incor¬porates the Gknoa setting func¬tionally, not, as is too frequentlythe case, for own sake.The production as executed issatisfying but is perhaps not ade¬quate to overcome the disappoint¬ing scenario. This dense reviewerwill welcome an adequate explan¬ation of the film’s title.•wHeyword EhrlichPianist finein BeethovenColumbia this week presented apackage of Beethoven piano musicwhich includes the Andante Favoriin F and the last sonata, opus III,in C minor. Both are played bythe young American pianist JacobLateiner.Lateiner is a remarkable pianist.He combines a phenomenal tech¬nique'with a tremendous amountof energy and a healthy respectfor the directions of the composer.The instrument is completelyunder his control.Lateiner’s performance of these'two great works is vigorous andincisive. The recording reproducesthe full range of piano tone withexceptional realism and almostfull dynamic range.The performance is not asstudied, mature, > and poeticallymastered as Schnabel’s. It is, how¬ever, generally satisfying.—Fred Winsberg tube. ’These make very nicecanters, incidentally, and you,.'drink your wine^ (Petri Califcfi^|a -^red, vintage circa 1950) from Dixie^ ^cups. Now to look at the pinx^urbs ^and things.Display tketchei’liiey mostly of the skettype, in pencil, watercolor, orYou would be proud to own any¬one of them (almost), if itbeen done on the back of a mentiby a Picasso or a Klee—as a souv* Venir of something greater. Or ifyou were convinced that certain of Tthese young artists might them- ' yj-,selves be Picassos or Klees soi^filiday, why maybe it would be athing to get in on the- ground floor.Prices range from ten to sixty dol-lars, which makes the place a realbargain basement, as such placesgo. .One framed effort was a piece of . ,twhite paper on which someone had *^4 “happened, at one time or another*to draw an outline of a femi^e yff'figure, down in one comer. Thenthe artist had apparently -ff'tempted to erase this and, failii^v ''{Mhad—so help me—simply framed.the whole thing. There was anpainting of a face in which theeyes get sort of crossed, rather Inthe manner of cartoonist Stebtwhen he wants to ssrmbolize Im' " ‘4bewilderment of modem man. » .Jewelry on sole . 3And BO forth. If you have beenlooking for some really non-assembly-line Jewelry, why they .make that here too, very abstxaetand individual, as well as thingslike mobiles, and small statuary, ’and handsome black printed orsilk screened Christmas cards,—Quentin MookTERESA DOLANDANCE SCHOOL1208 E. CIRD STREETAnnounces the Opening ofs Foil ClossesBeelnnera—Mondays.—Fox Trot,WaltzTuesdays—Romba, PolkaWednesdays-^Fox TrotSaturdays—Romba, Viennese WaltzAdvanced—Thursdays—Mamba,TangoFridays—Tango, RumhaAfternoon Class Fridays—3 P.M.PRIVATE EFS^iONS BAY CRE aiilNG11 A;M. - 11 P.M.Fhene HY 3-3080For Further Information A Clark and Clark''BargainWulf Sachs: BLACK HAMLET.unique account of a native Africanmedicine man, his life experiencesOut priceand inner conflicts.PubUsbed at $3.00.CLARK AND CZiARK, ’ Booksellers,1204 East 55th Street.Hours: 10 A AC. to 9 FIX.ALL REDjrBLOOPeO.AMERICAN GALS fAN'GUYS WEARS MAH'DOOPATCH 5KONI<HAT, NATCHBRiy/l-A60Y WITHA SKPNK HAT ISMAH IDEEL.*’LIT ABNER’S D06PATCH FUR FASHIONSBOX 72* HINSDALE* ILLINOISplnqte snnd m«.U’l Abn.,'* Skonk 'feI oin •nclosing: ckwcli lory-?. -monty ordqr Lt Villd €.0«ILaddressCITY. STATLlAda 20%fid. T<mfas* 10 THtCfcUCikGO MAMOOH htevemher TO, 1950Cut-rate cord creotes croze for ^clothes, corsages and chicken jby Lee VickmanWe were stopped in front of Cobb' on Monday last by two ambitious looking youngsters Iwho asked us whether we lived in B-J, and when we answered negatively, promptly pre- Iseated us with an NS A purchase card This card, as we later discovered, will enable us Ito obtain discoimts: at various retail establishments in the University community. |Although we’re not quite iSure which campus political party takes credit for helping .students to get more for less, students seem to appreciate this gesture on the part of ISG. ■ liiNOW... in your favorite winning colors, too...the new Van Heusen CENTURY shirtI Purchase card pkinAll students of tke University of Chicago are entitled tohold NSA purchase cards. Students holding the NSA pur¬chase card are entitled to a discount when purchasing mer¬chandise at the following stores. At time of purchase, pre¬sent your purchase card and identification card. Dis¬counts as indicated below will be given. Merchandise underthe Fair Trade Laws and those items specifically mentionedbelow will not be sold at a discount.C}oHtin9<1. Bern’s Store for Men, Klmbark at E. 63r<l 10%2. Behrer’3 Men’s Shop, IMS E. 55th 10%3. Jftclt'.s Store for Men, 1121 E. 63rd 10% on all merchandiseIncluding advertised merchandise (socks, shirts, slacks, underwear, etc.)4. Jack's Store for Men, 6709 Stoney Island Same discount5. Sol's Men’s store, 1222 E. 63rd 15%6. S. Saliii, Store for Men, 1031-1035 E. 55th 10%7. Park Clothing Co.. 853 B. 55th (women’s and men’s clothing)on cevrything but marked down and s^e merchandise ..10%8. Hale J. Jarrls. 1039 B. 63rd (women’s .sportswear store) 10%9. The New Eleanor Shop, 1121 E. 63rd (lingerie, Infants’Wear, toys) 10%10. Bennett’s Millinery, 924 E. 63rd 10%11. Peggy Lou Shop, 1355 E. 63rd (women’s appEurel) 10%12. Lucille’s Dress Shop, 1317 B. 53rd 10%13. Nelle Stephens, Ladles* Specialty Shop, 1452 E. 53rd 10%14. We N'-Teen Shop. 1362 E. 63rd (Infant and children’s wear)...,. 10%Laundry TaiJor:15. J. Kraur Sc Son, 1135 E. 63rd (custom tailoring, ready made'pahts,dry cleaning) k 10%16. Harpev Hand Laundry, 1452 E. 57th 15%17. Klmbark Launderette, 6243 S. Klmbark 10%18. Art Quality Cleaners, 1325 E. 52rd (pickup and delivery) 10%19. Herman Cohn, Custom Tailor. 1363 E. 53rd (on all suits made to order)..., 10%Shoes and Repair:20. Health spot Shoe Store, 1027 E. 63rd (carry this brand only) 10%21. Woodlawn Shoe Store, 1007 E. 63rd (ladles’ and children’s shoes) 10%22 Lewis Shoes. 1328 E. 55th 10%23. Reliable Shoe Repairing, 1229 E. 55th 15%24. University Shoe Repair, 6251 University 10%25. Elman Shoes, 1222 E. 53rd 10% on all merchandise not fair-traded26. Elman Shoes. 9555 S, Jeffery 10% on all merchandise not fair-tradedMisceifoneous:27. Martin Jewelers, 857 B. 63rd—(Rings, 40%: cameras, watches, costumejewelry, luggage, fountain pens, and pencils, 20%; electrical appliances. .10%28. J. H. Watson, Jeweler, 1200 E. 55th (20% on rings, costume jewelry,leather goods, and all other non-fair trade Items.2Jk Dorchester Restaurant, 1375 E. 63rd 7%30. Wah Meo Lo Restaurant, 1226 £. 63rd (show card when ordering; discountgiven only to actual card holder) 10%31. Bloom Florist, 1443 E. 53rd (20% on all Items except telegraphed flowersand special sales)32 Mltzie’s Flower Shop, 1301 B. 55th; corsages, 20%; all other Items 10%23. Nelson Optical Co., 1138 E. 63rd 15%34. Dr. Kurt Rosenbaum, Optometrist, 1132 K. 55th 10%-20%Kim Rexall Pharmacy, 5500 Klmbark; 10% except on cigarettes and fairt'.'tide merchandiseSteinway Drug Store No. 3, 1301 E. 63rd—10% on fountain service and allmerchandise but tobacco and tobacco products, candy bars, gum, andfair trade Items.Ray Studios, 1035 E. 63rd—photography, portraits only) 15%The A'bum, photography, 1171 E. 55th—10% on portraits only; no dis¬count on application photos39. Travaion Luggage, 1002 E. 63rd 20%40. Southtown Sporting Goods, 1321 E. 63rd—20% discount on everythingexcept shotguns, ^es, shells, Pfleuger reels, cleaning supplies, and films41. Hyde Park Radio <Sf Appliance, 1344^ E. 55th—10%, excluding labor andservices.42. Ace Cycle Shop. 819 B. 56th—10% on motor bikes, bicycles, etc. No dis¬count on repairs43. Herman’s. 937 B. 55th—records and sporting goods, 20%; radio, television,and electrical appliances. 10%44. Berman Hardware and Paint, 1393 B. 53rd—10% on all household itemsand hardware; 20% on all major appliances45. Ace Trunk and Leather Goods. 10374^ E. 63rd—20% of list price; no dis¬count on specially priced promotional items on which a discount hasalready been given46. Abell Caterers, 1108 E. 55th—hors ’doeuvres, sandwiches, on orders of $10or more a dlscotint of41. University Garage, 1169 E. 55th—IVz cents discount per gallon of gas;10% on oil and parts, and other non-fair trade Items.48. Newman's Linen and Embroidery, .120612 B- 63rd40. Salon De-Beaut, 1313 B. 53rdr—20% on permanent waving and snampoolngon Mondays, Tuesdays, and Wednesdays.\3537.38.10%10% Discounts varyLooking over the list ofstores cooperating in this ven¬ture, we find that you can buyanything from infants’ wear tohors d’oeuvres at odd and assorteddiscounts of from seven to fortyper cent. We were particularlystruck by the fact that chickensubgum, chow mein, and otherChinese dishes which are not fair¬trade items, will cost the purchasecard holder ten per cent less thanusual if he buys same at the Wal.Mee Lo I’estaurant at 1226 Esust63rd. It was equally surprisingthat Wah Mee Lo will give thisdiscount only on the meal of theperson actually holding the pur¬chase card.DamesHc problemsWe asked ourselves if this meantthat when a student brings hisvisiting parents to Wah Mee fora snack, his discount wouldamount to only 3 1/3 per cent ofthe total bin. That’s how it seems,to us.Here’s one word of advice. If,after a C-Dance or Universityconcert, you and your date craveChinese food, make sure she is aUC student and is carrying herNSA purchase card, or you andWah Mee are liable to be tangledup in some vefy embarrassingarithmetic.WSSF startscampaign forstudent aidSponsored by college or¬ganizations of the three ma¬jor faiths, WSSF this weekopened a nation-wide cam¬paign to help fellow-studentsin Europe and southeast Asia,Last year American students' and faculty membei’s contributedmore than $800,000 in money, giftsand scholarships to aid needy stu¬dents abroad. Funds went to pro¬vide medical aid for overseas stu¬dents, maintain rest centers, aidrefugee and displaced students,provide educational supplies, andgive emergency food and clothing.Goal for 1950-51 is $600,000. II Cbssilied Ads | fFOR SALE; Royal standard and Coroaa A ftljjvl ISA ^portable typewriters. Good condition; ^FOR SALE; Royal standard and Coronaportable typewriters. Good condition;reasoAble. MU 4-0294, evenings.TWO HUNDRED Jazz and blues recordsfor sale, 10c each: Ellington, Bechet.Holiday, B&lly, Dorsey, Bob Crosby. BigBill, etc. Llndstrum, 6042 Ingleside.EXPERT DRY CLEANINGPickup and deliveryStudent — <>.I.Call PA 4-782^PEACE ENTHUSIASTS: Send Ic pc.<it-card and learn how to get $100 worthof peace publications, including #2books, all free. U. S. Committee AgainstMilitarization, 6329 S. May, Chicago 21.FOR RENT: 2-room furnished apt., closeto UC. reasonable rent. Modern kitch¬en. Share bath. Csdl Faerber, TR 4-4631.HAVE YOUR typing done neatly andreasonably. Call SU 7-1234 (Davis) after6. evenings.CHARMING 5-ROOM apartment. Im¬mediate possession. Very nei«r campus.Superior two-bedroom co-op. First floor,fireplace. Maintenance, $52.50 monthly,drops soon to one-third less. Buyer sub¬ject to board approval. Full price $8,500.Call Sun.-Thurs. DO 3-8762 or HA 7-2936.EXPRESS: Light and heavy moving;willing and courteous service; reason-srtJie rates. Bordone, HY 3-1915.A Clark aod ClarkBargainSartre: THE EMOTIONS: Outline ota Theory. In this volume the emi¬nent French philosopher develops anew theory of psychological Inter¬pretation.Published at $2.75, Our price 98c.CLARK AND CLARK, Booksellers.1204 East 55th Street.Hours 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. In U. S. Air Force pilot’s language, that means: ’’Getairborne ... get up there with everything you’ve got!”Start your-scramble with a year of training that pro¬duces leaders ... Aviation Cadet training with the U. S.Air For<». It’s training that wins your wings and com¬mission . . . and a starting salary close to $5,000. a year... if you qualify .Check Your Compels «.. And Climb on Course!Air Force talk for "waste no time—set your course whileyou’re gaining altitude.” It’s good advice.Talk it over with the U. S, Air Force Aviation CadetSelection TeamGet OB Top. • • Stuy on Top • •. With The U» S, Air ForceYaur U. S.Jackson BoulevardRoom 104F,.m N.W Till Dec. 1. >«0 with thesoft collar thatwon’t wrinkle...ever!Such a sensation in white ... we knew you’d want it inthese new fashion<«niart colors of grey, bine and tan.Soft collar, stays neat all day and night... can’t-be-copied,patented fold line always folds ri^t . . . collar pointsresist curling.All this! . .. and color too! In r^Iar or wide spreadcollar models.A new shirt free if your Van Heusen shrinks out of size.in white—$3.95, $4,95in colors—$3.959 Van Heusen*Uhe worldCs smartest'• sliirisPHILLIPS.JONES CORP., NEW YORK I, N. Y.BROOKS BROTHERShqs a long and illustrious history^Brooks Brothers, a &mous name in men’sclothing, was founded in 1818,..and wasd (if not the) pioneer in the manufactureof Men’s Ready-Made Suits,Through the decades many notablepersons have crossed our portals—fromLincoln and Grant...to Franklin Roose¬velt, Dempsey, Tunney, and iiiany ofHolly'wood’s best dressed men.Today a bright new chapter hasadded with the opening of a fine new.in Chicago...where Undergraduates willfind our traditional quality and good tastereflected :a distinctive clothes for campusor dress wear.isrAiUiHioitit^(n’5^mi5t)tttsi^at)S ^$hoei9i7* EAST MADISON STREET, CHICAGO 2, ILL.NEW YORK ♦ BOSTON • LOS ANGELES • SAN FRANCISCOU.S.AIR FORCE(i^ovembcr 10, 1950 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page II1. Harriers take 4th,duel Butler nextLast Saturday the varsity cross country squad placedfourth in the Loyola Invitational Meet held at the MontroseAvenue Beach. The UC aggregation not only competed withrepresentatives of eight other schools but the weather also.The temperature was 34 degrees and a 20 mile an hour windcut across snow-covered ground. Earlier in the week theharriers lost to DePaulChicagowhen the mercury hit 84.Wheaton College won the meet.Five of their men were among thefirst ten to cross the finish lineafter the three and one half milerun, Loyola won the first twoplaces but failed to receive thesupport needed from their otherthree men.For Chicago, the highpoint ofthe meet was beating De Paulafter being whipped by them in aduel meet earlier in the week.Chicago’s runners accumulatedtheir 129 points when AshbySmith, Bob Baptist, Hugh Brod-key, Dave Saffer, and AngeloAldana finished 15, 19, 29, 31 and35. Frank Vaughn and Roger Wil-I'M touchhallseason ending;Psi U, DU tieLeague play in intra-muraltouchball closed this week. Theleading fraternity teams are PsiUpidlon in the University leagueand D.K.E. in the WoodlawnLeague. In the fraternity "B”League Delta Upsilon and PsiUpsilon are tied for first place.In the College House League,Matthews and Coulter are tied forfirst in the Burton League andChamberlain is leading the JudsonLeague with five wins and nolosses. In the “B” League Salis¬bury is in first place.Coulter and Snell are in frontin the College House table-tennistournament, each having won twomatches.Six houses are entered in theCollege House swimming meet. Itwill start Tuesday in Bartlett Pool. cox also ran but were not includedin the scoring.Next Saturday the team willtravel to Indianapolis for a meetwith Butler University. This meetwill be both schools’ final dualmeet of the season. If the Chicagoteam brings back a victory, theywill have had a very successfulseason with 4 wins in 5 meets.Lis? Jayveecage agendaTlie junior varsity basketballteam, coached by Joe Stampf, an¬nounced Tuesday its schedule forthe 1950-51 season. The JV cagersparticipate in the Private SchoolLeague as University High.JUNIOR VARSITY BASKETBALLSCHEDULENov. 28—Chicago Jewish Acad., RG.Dec. 5—Westcott Vocational H. S., BG.Dec. 7—Bowen H. S., BG.Dec. 12—Glenwood H. S.. BG.Jan. 5—Noth Park Academy, BG.Jan. 12—Wheaton Academy. Wheaton.Jan. 16—Todd School. Woodstock.Jan. 19—Harvard School, BG.Jan. 26—Francis Parker H. S., BG.Feb. 2—Chicago Latin School, BG.Feb. 9—Chicago Christian H. S., Chris¬tian.Feb. 16—Luther Academy, Luther.Feb. 19—Private School League Tourney,FH.Feb. 21—Private School League Tourney,FH.Feb. 23—Private School League Tourney,PH.Feb. 24—Private Scho<d League Tourney,PH. Beecher wins Boosters top Purdue^JV squad wins twoChicago’s varsity soccer team racked up another shutouttriumph last Saturday when they beat the Purdue Boiler¬makers 1-0. The freezing wind that whipped across Staggfield was a prime factor in keeping the score down. Thewinning tally came on a boot by left inside Jim Kelly.The jayvee soccer team closed its season with two shut¬out victories last week. They de-in 1-M swimWith only a few laps to go,Beecher Hall is leading in thewomen’s inter-dorm swimmingmarathon. Foster Hall holds aclose second, with Green runningthird in the 15-mile jaunt. Con-third in the 15-mile jaunt.Continuing its winning ways,Beecher defeated Green in theirvolleyball match Tuesday, andthreatens to move into a three-way tie with Foster and Green forthe league lead.Practice for inter-collegiatevolleyball will be held on Mondayand Wednesday at 4:30 Ida Noyes.An inter - collegiate telegraphicbowling meet begins on the 27th,and girls interested should sign upwith Miss McFaul.The womens field hockey teamplays its final game at North¬western today. To date, the UCgirls have a record of one win,two losses and a tie. feated Marshall High 3-0 and LakeForest Academy 2-0. This gavethem three straight shutout wins,since they defeated Von SteubenHigh 3-0 last Friday.The three wins gave the jayveesa final total of three wins, threelosses, and one tie. Thus, after aslow staart, the jayvees made asuccessful season of it.Saturday morning the varsityteam will face Wheaton in thefinal game of the season. Thegame will be played in Stagg field.Game time is 11:30. A Clark and ClarkBargainTHE SYSTEM OF BASIC ENGLISH.Wh.at is It? How Is It put to use?By C. K. Ogden, Inventor of BasicEnglish and Editor of the Interna¬tional Library of Psychology, Phll-OM>phy and Scientific Method.Published at $3.00. Our price $1.25,CLARK AND CLARK, Booksellers,1204 East 55th Street.Hoiirs: 10 A.M. to 9 P.M.$436.70Was CollectedOn the TwoAll-CampusCOMMUNITY FUNDTAG DAYS—it’s easyto crack examswith a famousWEBSTER-CHKAGPimam Whim Yov SimmpAsk roue Webster-Chi-cago dealer for the amaz-■ ng results of before-deep recitations with aWebster-Chicago wirerecorder. Model 218; coiimswHh micrephone, 3speels of wire, fetyto cewry.It^s easy to study theElectronic Memory* way!This amazing method has helped many stu¬dents get startling improvements in theirgrades! Dates, formulas, language pronunci¬ations, economic theories that were hard toretain before become easy to remember withthe help of a Webster-Chicago wire recorde^It's simple to operate—wire can be ^ayedovvt and over or can be re-recorded. Clear,sharp tone. Come in today for foil details onthe electronic memory method of study.•TM.R.B. *149?tllMSi^€uUO’UI7 and 1233 East 55th PLaza 2-4361 THEM ALL!Philip Morris challenges *any other leading brandto suggest this testHUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OFSMOKERS, who tried this test,report in signed statements thatPHILIP MORRIS IS DEFINITELYLESS IRRITATING, DEFINITELY MILDER!1. . . Light up a PHILIP MORRIS 2... Light up your present brandJust take a puff—DON’T INHALE—and Do exactly the some thing—DON'Ts.|.o-w-l-y let the smoke come through inhale. Notice that bite, that sting?your nose. Easy, isn't it? And NOW... Quite a difference from PHILIP MORRIS!Other brands merely make claims—but Philip Morris invites youto compare, to judge, to decide for yourself.Try this simple test. We believe that you, too, will agree , . #Phiup Morris is, indeed, America’s FIOTST Ggarette!NO CI6ARETTEHANCOVERmeans MORE SMOKING PLEASURE!PHIUP MORRIS12Th3 Greatest Selection of Fine QualityLPRecords in the University DistrictR. Strauss > ''Also Sprach Zarathustra/' Lon. LLP 232.Klemens Kraus and Vienna Philharmonic.Bach - Cantata No. 46 "Schavet Doch und Sehet."Contata No. 104 "Du Hirte Israel Horg," Bach GuildBG 503.Verdi - Complete "Rigoletto/' Peerce, Warren, Tajo^Berger, etc. Victor LMX 6101.Paganini - Caprices 1-12 for unaccompanied violin.Ruggiero Ricci, Lon. LLP 264.Gilbert & Sullivan - "Ruddigore," D'oyly Carte Com¬pany. Lon. LLP 243-244.Mozart - Requiem K626. Lon. LPS 230-231.Gilbert tf Sullivan - "Veoman of the Guard," D'oylyCarte Company. Lon. LLP 241-242.Remember, if iis on LP you can get it at:JIM EARLE'SWOODUWN RADIO i TELEVISION CO.1204 L 63rd Street 1371 E. 55th StreetFAirfax 4-8400 FAirfax 4-0323 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 10, 1950SvcttlA OtFriday, Nov. 10Politics Club — syraposlum, “Labor’sRole In Civil Liberties.” A1 Plneman,Harold Katz, and B. J. Wldlck speaking,In Rosenwald 2 at 3:30 p.m.Charlie Chaplin In “The Rounders.”“Work,” and “Shanghai,’ Judd 126 at6:30, 8, and 9:45 p.m., Political Porum.Admission 60 cents.B. J. Wldick on “Intellectuals in theLabor Movement” at a social-educationmeeting of the Socialist Youth League at6337 Kimbark, 8:30 p.m.Alan Pryce-Jones—“Why Go on Writ¬ing?” in Soc. 122 at 4:30 p.m.Mathematical Biology meeting—H. D.Landahl—“A Neurophysical Interpreta¬tion of Some Aspects of the Problem ofRisks,” at 5741 Drexel Ave., 4:30 p.m.Doc-Pllm presents “The Blue Angel”in Soc. 122 at 7:15 and 9:15 p.m. Admis¬sion is by series ticket only.B-J Council is showing “Flesh andFantasy” and another chapter of the“Lost City” at 9:30 o.m. in the JudsonLounge. Admission 15 cents.William F. Albright, Johns HopkinsUniversity, lecture on “Exploring Qata-ban In South Arabia” in Breasted Hallat 8 p.m.University Concert with HungarianString Quartet in Mandel Hall at 8:30p.m. Works by Haydn, Walton and Bar-tok.Christopher K. Ingold, profes.sor ofchemistry at the University of London,Julius Stieglltz Memorial lecture on “Mechanics of the Benzene Molecule,”Kent 106 at 8:15 p.m.Mortimer J. Adler will speak on “Laborand Leisure, Work, Play and Best” asthe second lecture In the Great IdeasSeries to be given at 7:30 p.m, at thedowntown center.Saturdoy, Nov. 11Dr. Anatole Bapaport, professor ofmathematical biology, UC chapter of theSociety for General Sematlcs at 2 p.m.in Ida Noyes on the topic “SurvivalTechniques in the World Power Strug¬gle.”Dance music by Tommy Parker andhis orchestra will be featured at a C-dance in Ida Noyes from 9 to 12 p.m.Admission will be 75c.Sunday, Nov. 12Channlng Club will sponsor a visit tothe Baha’i Temple In Wilmette, leavingfrom the First Unitarian Church.At 5 p.m. the Channlng Glee Club willmeet in the parlor of the First UnitarianChurch.And at 6 p.m. Channlng Club willhave a supper meeting in the churchwith Henry Heineman speaking on “Se¬cret Ilntelligence as a Treat to Free¬dom.” Forty-five cents will be chargedfor the meal.“Carnival in Flanders” will be theB-J Council movie show In the Judsonlounge at 7 and 9:15 p.m. for 35c ad¬mission.A study gorup organized by the Inter-TYPEWRITERSSold - Rented - Repaired— Prompt, Expert Repair Service —WOODWORTH'S1311 E. 57tb St. 2 Blocks East Mandel HallOpen Evenines — Monday, Wednesdoy, Fridoy100,000 Books — New and Used in Stock collegiate Zionist Federation of Americ!.will discuss “The Prophets” in IdaNoyes at 8 p.m. *The Noyes Box, sponsored by the Stu¬dent Union forum will take over thaCloister’s Club from 8 to 11 p.m Ad-mlslson for men will be 35c, for other.i10c.Monday, Nov. 13THE BICYCLE THIEF! InternationalHouse will show De Sica's great film at8 p.m. for 55c admission.Tuesdoy, Nov. 14The student chapter of the LawyersGuild will present a discussion led byMalcolm Sharp, professor of law, on“The McCarran-Wood Act and CivilLiberties in Times of Emergencies” inLaw north at 3:30 p.m.Kyaw-Ttun, Burmese student, willspeak at a United Nations Associationluncheon at noon In Ida Noyes on "TheUnited Nations, the United States, andBurma.”The Christian Science Organizationwill hold Its regular meeting in Thorn¬dike Hilton Chapel at 7:30Wednesday, Nov. 15“Some Aspects of New Yugoslavia -will be discussed by Dragisha Ivanovichat a meeting sponsored by the educa¬tion committee of International Hou.seto be held in Room A of Int. House at8 p.m.Sherwood L. Washburn, social scienceprofessor of physical anthropology, willspeak on “Idea In Human Evolution” ata public meeting sponsored by SigmaDelta Ep.sllon In Eckart 133 at 8 p.m.The movie “A Star Is Born” will beshown by the Socialist Youth League insoc. scl. 122 at 7:15 and 9:15 p.m. Ad-mlslson will be 50c.The Science Fiction Club will hearHoward Browne, editor of "AmazingMagazine” at Its meeting In Ida Noyesat 8 p.m.Thursday, Nov. 16A lecture on “Humanism In an Ageof Science” to be delivered by RichardM. Weaver will be sponsored by CalvertClub In Ida Noyea library at 4:30 p.m.“World Federation: Partial or Unlver-say” will be discussed by Abba Lemer,Surlndar Surl, and Fred Carney whenthe United World Federalists presenttheir third forum on the quarter InIda Noyes at 7:15 p.m.'Htt* s'******IJAOiNO SlUER III AMIRICA’S COLLiQiSriVi'aHiH tsMiEiikMiiBEFORE YOU SMOKE THEM...you can tell Chesterfields will smoke milder,because tobaccos that smell milder smoke milder.AFTER YOU SMOKE THEM.. .you have no unpleasant after-taste.WHILE YOU SMOKE THEM you get more pleasure thanany other cigarette can give yoxx —that's why millions ofsmokers say: THEY SATISFY. -