MAROONoration No. 61 SC Yotes remembraflc^ ofh —-ru.-International Students DayAs part of its public service program^ the MAROON an¬nounces that beginning next week, it will publish want-ads andclassified advertising free of charge.This service will be free of charge to members of the univer¬sity community. All advertising and notices should be broughtinto the MAROON office, Reynolds Club 201 between 9 and 3.f Deadline for all ads is Wednesday. (Note: this week becauseof Thanksgiving, deadline is Tuesday.) All eds will run once.hTo be renewed, you must come in person. By an overwhelming majority Student Government at its last meeting voted to joinstudents throughout the world in proclaiming today, November 17 as International Stu¬dents Day. This day commemorates the death of many Czechoslovakian students wholost their lives defending their academic freedom against the Nazis on November 17,1939.In a report to Student Government, the NS A committee explained the purposes of In¬ternational Students Day. This day re-emphasizes the right and the need of all studentslor academic freedom.31 University of Chicago, November 17, 1950 Politico, TV star choosefrat dance queen to ruleby Bob JacobsThe 43rd Inter-Fratemity Ball, biggest event of the fra¬ternity social calendar, will be held on Wednesday, Novem¬ber 22, in the Gtold Room of the Congress Hotel.The ball, traditionally held on Thanksgiving Eve, is formaland will begin at 9:30 p.m., with three hours of dancing andentertainment. The music this year will be supplied byJimmie McShayne and his orches-Army to draft Discuss meaning ofi19-year-oldsin'January**rhere appears no doubt thatwe will have to take 19-year-oldmen to complete the January call¬up/' said Paul Q. Armstrong, di¬rector of Selective Service for Illi¬nois, this week.All available 20-year-old menwill be drafted to fill existingquotas for November, Decemberand January. The January quotafor the nation is 40,000 men, and1,423 of these must be furnishedby Cook County.Armstrong said there was somedifficulty in meeting the quota be¬cause of last-minute deferments,but he expressed confidence thesewould be adjusted before themonth ends.He added that there will be noInductions between Dec. 1 and Jan.1, a Christmas holiday. friendship,dates,love“What are friends? How do we find them? Once we’vefound them, how do we keep them?”Such provocative questions are a sample of what mayarise in a discussion of “The Meaning of Friendship” to beled by Ruth McCarn, assistant dean of students, Tuesdayevening 7:30 p.m., in Ida Noyes Alumnae Room.Two or more people will beasked to assume spontaneous rolesin a boy-meets-girl situation. The C'lijU //|cpcgroup’s opinion of what happens CACiH'In the course of the participants’reactions will sound the note ofdiscussion.Planned by the Personal GrowthCommittee of the Student Chris¬tian Association, this event is the Saturday. Purdue won, and Wash-first step in a program designed to 'i^Bton U., the host school, placedbring to the fore the student’s iccond.plans regatta hereThe Yacht Club placed third ina triangular meet held in St. Louis tra. As a special event, there wUlbe an interlude featuring Dixielandblues by Art Hodes and his DixieBand.Crown queonThe highlight of the eveningwill be the crowning of the Queenof the IP Ball. Every fraternitynominates one girl as their can¬didate for queen, and the winneris picked on the basis of “beautyand charm.” This year’s judges arethe TV star, Kay Westfall, andUC alumnus. Congressman SidYates. They will make their deci¬sion before the ball, but it will bekept secret imtil the actual coro¬nation. One of the other expressed aimsof this commemoration is theuniting of all students into one in¬ternational, representative, andnon-political body.The committee further pointedout that the USNAS, to which theUniversity of Chicago belongs,pledges “to continue efforts towardA greater exchange of ideas be¬tween all countries and toward theformation of an international or¬ganization representing students ofall areas, religions, colors, and allpolitical beliefs.”The chairman of the NSA com¬mittee, Sander Levin, also an¬nounced the undertaking of a proj¬ect, “which would help translatewords into actions.”A correspondence program be¬tween UC students and studentsin other countries has been estab¬lished. Beginning Monday formswill be distributed to all studentswho are interested in writing tosomeone in any foreign nation.Close school ThursdoyAH University facilities will beciesed Thursday, November 23,Thanksgiving day. This includesclasses, libraries, and public events.Although regular Student Healthhours will be suspended, theemergency clinic in Billings will beopen.University functions will be car¬ried on as usual on Fridoy.feelings about friendship, dating,love and sex in his campus life. All three teams were tied at theend of the six regular races, butMany questions arising Tuesday Chicago lost in the run-off.will be used to determine the con¬tent of a winter “Dating andCourtship” series. Preparations are now beingmade for a six school regatta tobe held here on 4he 18th and 19th.UT presents Sartre^s ^Nd Exit,Olson^s ^Fausf tomorrow nightby Heyward EhrlichTomorrow evening at 8:30 p.m. Mandel Hall will be the scene of the premiere of “Faust:a Masqu^” a fantasy by Elder Olson, UC teacher and poet. The double program includes“No Exit,^ by Jean-Paul Sartre, and is to be repeated Sunday evening at the same time andSunday afternoon at 3:30.Tickets are on sale in Mandel corridor from 11 to 1 except Sunday and one hour beforeeach performance. Admission for the evening performances is 70 cents. The Sunday budg¬et matinee is 35 cents.Otis Imboden, the director of*Taust,” said, in describing theplay, “The traditional story of'Faust, the man who sells his soul.>is one of the most meaningfullegends of our culture. Mr. Olsonthas called to his aid all the under-' lying significances in this tradi¬tion to enrich his new tale of manand his misuse of knowledge. Strozier asks,'don't show film'Dean Robert Strozier, through Miss Carol Saunders, asst,director of Student Activities, this week requested that theChicago Review refrain from showing a film, “Fireworks,” oiithis campus.The Showing had been scheduled for later in the quarter.He also extended the request to all campus organizations onthe grounds that a general con-ilaserts mw twist“Faust, as ever, is the avid volup¬tuary, ready to sacrifice all for hisdesires. But the play has a newcontext. Man’s biological fate isi in the balance. The ancient em-'bodiments of evil are impotent inithis contest. The only true wrong,I says Olson, is man’s unwillingnessI to accept the responsibilities of hisfuture. Faust sells out, but to adevil with a difference.”The cast includes Paul Sills asFaust, George Lazarus as Mephis-topeles, Jon Jackson as DoctorPolio-Anthrax, Gene Halboth andBrenda Handforth as the chorusgirl and Charles Jacobs and JerryCunliffe as the Old and YoungServing Men, respectively.'Na axit' it hell“Hell Is other people. That is themaxim underlying “No Exit,” saidJohn Stevens, director. “In thecomplex conflict between a coward,• lesbian and a nymphomaniac Post, times,for advanceregistrationA schedule for advance registra¬tion for the winter quarter, 1951,was issued this week by Ernest C.Miller, UC registrar. Miller listed . ,the following schedule for students mcludmg the Orthogenic School,in residence: sensus found the film “sadistic,obscene, in bad taste,” and “lack¬ing in art.”He pointed out that at this timeno “ban” exists and felt that itwould be “unfortunate if anygroup failed to comply on a mat¬ter such as this.” He made nostatement as to what action, ifany, would be taken at such time.The film which is an art experi¬ment dealing with homosexuality,has been shown on at least fouroccasions during the past threeyears by different organizations.Photographar catches the devilish Mephistopheles (George Laxerus),left, in tempting conversation with Foust (Paul Sills) during rehearsal ofEldar Olson's new version of the Faust dromo. Premiere performance tohe given tomorrow night.trapped in a room in hell, eachtortures the others and himself.The lesbian is attracted to theother woman who wants the manwho, in turn, is searching only forassurance from others that he hadnot behaved disgracefully.“Each/discovers he is trapped, each resigns himself to the finalrecognition of Sartre’s notion ofhell—other people."The cast includes ThomasStrauss as Garcin, Nancy Mikolicas Inez, Saundra Macdonald asEstelle and Heyward Ehrlich as theValet. Dec. 4 to 8—College, Social Sci¬ences Division, Physical Sciencesdivision. Federation of TheologicalSchools. Dec. 11 to 15—College,Humanities Division, Social Serv¬ice Administration, Biological Sci¬ences Division, School of Business.Dec. 18 to 2(2—College, Social Serv¬ice Administration, Graduate Li¬brary School, School of Medicine.College students already regis¬tered for the winter quarter, willreceive their class tickets throughthe mail by Dec. 4, Miller stated.Such students wishing to changetheir registration are advised*,.tomake an appointment with theiradvisers according to the follow¬ing schedule of surname initials:A through I, Dec. 4 to 8; Jthrough R, Dec. 11 to 18; Sthrough Z, Dec. 18 to 22.The student begins his registra¬tion in the office of the appropri¬ate dean of students where he pre¬pares his registration card andhas it checked and signed by thedean.The student then goes to theRegistrar’s office where his tuitionfees are assessed and then to the Inside today'sMAROONBartleft cage attendant'sinterview, p. 2.Student Forum debates UN, p. 3.Weigh Fulbright candidates, p. 7.Basketball team prepsfor opener, p. 10.Reviews of Vienna art treasures,Chaplin's "City Lights," p. 9.Bursar’s office to pay the fees ormake arrangements for payment.The last day to pay tuition_with-out a late-pasrment fee will beWednesday, Jan. 3, 1951.Registration hours in the deans*offices are 8:’30 to 11:30 a.m. and1:30 to 4:30 p.m. Hours in theregistrar’s office will be 8:30 a.m.to noon, and 1 to 5 p.m. The Bur¬sar will extend his office hours onJan. 2 and 3 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.1Ph« 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 17, 1950Football gone; UCsports improved: Vanby Ellis Schaffer“The disappearance of football at the U of C hasn’t hurtthe sports program; there are moxc people participating insports now than in the days of football,” said John Van]^skirk, cage attendant at Bartlett Gymnasium. Mr. VanBoskirk, known as “Van” by the part-time athletes of theU. of C., has been an employee of the University for 23 yearsand made special football equip¬ment for the team during the daysof football.Mr. Van Boskirk attributed thedecline of the Maroon football for¬tunes in the 30’s to the lack ofreserves. “We’d be leading in thefirst and second quarters, but inthe second half they’d run rightover us.’’ The Big Ten eligibilityrule, prohibiting the use of gradu¬ate students, definitely hurt theU of C, where many students wereenrolled in the divisions.Blames professionalismThe development of profession¬alism in the Big Ten also hurtfootball at the U of C, Mr. VanBoskirk said. He added that A. A.Stagg, formerly coach of the Ma¬roons, disliked professionalism tothe extent that he refused to hireon his coaching staff a U of Calumni who had played profes¬sional football. Mr. Van ^skirkhimself decried the hypocrisy ofthe Big Ten schools whose alumni,he said, buy the players and stillbelieve that football is an amateursport.The belief that ^irit is gener¬ated at football games is exagger¬ated, Mr. Van Boskirk said. “Wehad to close the gym during agame, and a lot of people askedme why the gym wasn’t open.”States views on footballMr. Van Boskirk declined togive an opinion about the possi¬bility of football ever coming back. Von BoskirkPhoto by KellickHe did say, however, that it mightbe possible to form a team andplay as an independent, provided4;hat other schools let us use divi¬sional students on the team.The Maroon teams during the20’s and early 30’s were coachedby A. A. Stagg, Mr. Van Boskirksaid. Stagg was succeeded by ClarkShaughnessy, former coach of theLos Angeles Rams. Nels Norgrenand Kyle Anderson, now on theathletic staff of the U of C, as¬sisted both Mr. Stagg and Mr.Shaughnessy. The “Prosh” teamwas headed by Jerome J. Dunne,now Judge of the Juvenile Court.MAROON publicfinds campus infoby Joan LeveyMost people on campus read the MAROON.This was the amazing result of a survey conducted to dis¬cover why people read a campus newspaper. Save for oneintrepid soul who claimed that the only reason he read theMAROON was because it is the. only campus newspaper, itwas found that obtaining information about campus activi¬ties and events is the chief motive ^of our readers.Sees liferory freedomRita Bemick and Allan Jacob- a view shared by Jean Milles. Jeancommented further on the cover-son agreed that they read the MA.BOON to keep in touch wiUi what's « , nt. h ,going on. Bill Hopkins reported I**.. , . . meaningful answer to our ques-SlS omS c^irnew^Z^ewitn otner college newspapers ne when he was interro-has seen, and commented on theliterary freedom and opportunity gated by this reporter, leplied,, , . ... “Yes, I read the MAROON. Why?lor lournalisUc experience which that's a good question.”it affords to the students.Further inquiries produced oth¬er reasons for reading the MA¬ROON. Kurt Konietzko ponderedthe question for a moment, andthen decided, “Sure, 1 read UieMAROON. It's free.” He .'oftenedthe blow, however, by adding thatJt proved a source of interestingarticles on lectures, the faculty,campus news, etc.Likes SU newsEarl Nielsen, president of Stu¬dent Union, claimed tliat he readthe paper solely for SU news, andto observe political interpretations.ALL RED-BLOOPEOAMERICAN GALS AN'GUYS WEARS MAHPOOMTCH SKONKMATy NATCHERiy/’®UFS U'l ABNEHSKONK HATCOUEGE BOV WITHA SICOHK HAT ISMAH IDEEL.'in ASNsrs ooesATCM ~nm rAneonssoxrx, MNSOAlf. lUINOISPImm *9n4 mt . .Ui AbAaf't Shanh N«M 9 $5.99I mm aAcUttes: afcaali far i■aaaa arOar far i mmd CO.D..STATS dormboot\•1Your feet never had it so niceWarmable white, red, yellow orblue plaid flannel with matchingpom pom. Wearable leather sole.Light as a fluff. Snugs up aroundthe ankles or turns down. Full andhalf sizes: 4-9 M. 5-9 N. $3.95 pr.pUfT 15c postage, handlino.'costa MfSA, CALIF.Conpns laprasealotive Woefad■ririNASHOTs ^COSTA MESA. CALIF.Rush my Dorm tools os ehaekadbalow on a monay-bock-if-not-plaosadbasis.Noma ■ -Addrass .City _Zona Stota.II Enelosad is Chack Monty Order-Six#Color Gives specialeye, teeth, careAlriiough regulor denfol ond^yecore ore not provided by Billmgsthrough ^udent Heolth, certainservices ore available in these coseste the student bfdy.Aside from refroction of eyes,which is used tf determine the cor¬rection necessary in the fitting ofglosses, treatment is offered foremergencies, infections and othereye diseases. Refroction is pro¬vided through the Clinics at re¬duced rotes to students.Dental X-rays ore supplied byStudent Health in coses where ocheck-up on the condition of teethmight be useful in the diognosisand treatment of some other in¬fection whose source is undeter¬mined. Emergency obcesses oreolso cored for, but os o generalrule, students ore referred by Stu¬dent Heolth to the American Den¬tal Association for recommenda¬tions to private dentists. Murdoch manhandle:mad Maroon minionsby Charles d'Exstrasuoux“How does the MAROON happen?”Murdoch had buttonholed me in my office' and was de¬manding to know who, how, what, where, why, and when.“It’s all chance,” I replied, indicating the method ofnews inclusion. “The amount of advertising determinesthe amount of news the MAROON can carry. If we havea lot of advertising, we havemany pages, and can car^ “The marcxjn,” i Wythiy an-much news. If we have little swered, “happens, due to inexor-advertising we can only carry a able laws of chance, not due tolittle news. Our dependence upon principles created by rationaladvertising makes the statement, thought processes.”UC to competein bridge playUC is one of the more than 300colleges invited to compete in the1951 National IntercollegiateBridge tournament. Invitationsand entry, blanks were receivedthis week by University officialsfrom Kenney L. Ford of KansasState College, chairman of the Na¬tional Intercollegiate Bridge tour¬nament committee.Only undergraduates are eli¬gible to play in the duplicate con¬tract bridge event for the titleand trophy. A preliminary roundwill be played- by mail in Feb¬ruary, and the sixteen highestranking pairs will meet for theface-to-face finals at the Black-stone Hotel in Chicago on April20 and 21, with their expenses paidby the tournament committee.Shop at the sign ofthe “C” ‘all the news that fits we print’especially true.Blames chance“Makeup faults are to be blamedupon anybody but yourself. If yourpage is messed up Its either yourassociate page editoiT the copydesk, the printshop or fate thatis to blame.“If the reporting or the writingis inadequate, if the news is dis¬torted or slanted, it’s the fault ofa too-small reportorial staff. Inany case it’s not otir fault.”Murdoch looked at me incred¬ulously and asked, “Isn’t the MA¬ROON the fault of the higherbrass just as much as our mis¬takes in the last war were thefault of the generals who knewmore about etiquette than abouttheory?” Who Iconis?“This implies.” retorted Wat-sonian centered Murdoch, “thatthe MAROON never learns.”I gasped at this heresy.MO MurJock poge 3• Automatic Changer ‘ S• No Needle Change So Plays through Any Set SA CLARK AND CLARKBARGAINCHICAGO. Photographs by Arthur E.Haug, text by Robert Cromie. Ahandsomely-designed volume, full ofInteresting photographs and anauthoritative story. Paper binding.Published at $1.25 New copies 49cCLARK AND CLARK, Booksellers1204 East 55th StreetHours 10 A.M. to 9 PJ4. S'8 TheRCA VICTOR45 RPM PLAYEROnly B wyear BrokenBlesses Repairedait Brandt*sTWO-HOURSERVICE*Your PrescriptionAccurately Duplicated- Just Bring in thePiecesEyes ExaminedGlasses Fitted1223 E. 63rd StreetMidway 3-1671DR. KEITH BERKSON/ OPTOMETRIST'^Most Types S 93S E. 55th Ml 3-6100 SS The Biggest Selection of 45s in Hyde Perk S5 Also TBs ond 33s S'uiX^U3M^S?ffW AJUDYBONDYou'll find Judy Bond blouses star material...alwaysr^dy to play a leading role in your wordrobe. Made upbeautifully, they give a sterling performance every time IBLOUSESAT BETTER STORES EVERYWHERESee Them at Marshall Field • Carsori-Pirie-Scott • Wiebotdt'sJudy Bend, fne., Dopl. O, 1375 Srondwoy, Now York IB, N.'Y.November 17, I9S0 THE CHICAGO MAROONDouglas speaks Student forumin RockefellerSenator Paul Douglas (D) will deliver a lecture on “Par¬ties, Politicians and Pressure Groups” at 8 p.m. tonight inRockefeller Chapel to open the Thomas Jefferson Lectureson “Ethics and Power Pc.itics: A Study of America Mid¬century.” The series is presented by the Channing Club.Paul Douglas, havingJ;emporarily left his UC professorialposition in order to serve his term New seminarto use grantA five-month seminar onnursing services administra¬tion, designed to develop thebest nursing administration cur¬riculum, will open January 15 atthe University of Chicago undera $100,000 grant to the universityfrom the W. K. Kellogg Founda¬tion.• The seminar plans were sum¬marized by He’-man Finer, directorof the project and professor ofpolitical science at the Universityof Chicago.The seminar. Finer pointed out,will review different areas of ad¬ministration—public, business andeducational administration — todetermine the best educationalprogram for meeting administra¬tive needs in nursing.as Senator, is returning to thecampus for the first lecture hehave given here since his election.The second lecture in the seriesis “Civil Liberties in a Period ofPower Politics” by Francis Heisler,the noted labor and civil rightslawyer, and will be Tuesday, No¬vember 21, 8 pjn., James BreastedHall, Oriental Institute. Admissionto all lectures is free.Having aThanksgiving Party?Why Not SorvoThose DeliciousLLOYD HARRISMINCE, PUMPKIN, APPLEPIESAs Feohired otT-HUT, GORDOH’SPhone TAylor 9-3000Represenotfve WillShow Semples T(^ight, student Forumteams will debate “Proposed:That the Non - CommunistCountries of the WorldShould Form a New Interna¬tional Organization” with aWheaton eight-man team hereand a Bradley University team atPeoria. The four Wheaton debateswill be held for public attendancewithout charge in Law Court,South, North, and in Social Sci¬ences lOG at 7:30.Meet BradleyAt Bradley University, the Stu¬dent Forum four-man team withDavid MacGinnis and HarrisHartzler (affirmative) and JimCalvin and Michael Feld debatein the first tournament competi¬tion of the season. David Ladd, di¬rector of the Forum will act asjudge. Student Forum has sched¬uled future debates with Munde¬lein College, Lyons Jr. College,University of Illinois, Lake Forestand Loyola.May registerLadd also announced that thosestudents who the Forum was un¬able to take in the speech clinicthis quarter may register for thecourse in the Forum office, Rey¬nolds Club 303, after December 15.In addition the Forum will spon One of the fen UC student volunteers who las week took o battery ofpsychological exominotions which were odministered by on investigatorfrom the Monteno Stote Hospital, arranges blocks ogoinst the clock.Group plans plays;will present in tria“Tonight at 8:30” will present three one act plays onDecember 8, 9 and 10 in the Ida Noyes theatre, Renniesor a winter quarter beginning Anselmo, the play group’s director, has announced. Thedebate class.a a H Q aa liL £1 a a • • •>I Court!Do LnxoDloioro from Shop at the sign ofthe "C”5487 LAKE PARR AVI.Phoa* Plata 2-90ltOf*n from 12 to 2 a. m., Sun. 12:30 to 2 t, m.ro* 70011 eoNvejucNci•‘•Cl plays are to be done arena style and are under Anselmo’sproduction. The titles are The Boor, This Property Con¬demned, and The Man of Destiny.Costs announcedThe Boor by Chekov will be di-mm rected by Anselmo, with a castVISCUSS KllSSla including Ann Sweet. FrancisWeaver and Jules Gordon. This“Russia” is going to be discussed Property Condemned, by Tennesseetoday in Ida Noyes at 8 p.m., with Williams, will be directed by AliceJustin Grossman leading the dis- Snyder and includes Florence BuUler and Henry Schwartz. The Mamcuss on., . ., , .of Destiny, by Bernard Shaw, isThe event is fourth of a series directed by Omar Shapli and in-sponsored by the Politics Club, eludes Ed Asner, Alex Hasliss, ReedSituation in United States and of Searle and Noreen Novick.the world in creneral have been tickets by moil ordertne world in general nave neen ^oo seats are to be usedtalked about previously. for each performance. Tickets armPermanent officers of the club now available in advance by mail,will also be elected at business care of the MAROON, at 60emeeting preceding the forum.In Your Exact Collar Size And Sleeve Length!Sleeves too long? Collar too tight? Not a chancelThis superb sports shirt is sized like your regularArrow shirts, so you can ask for your exact collarsize, your exact sleeve length, and be sure of perfectfit. Fine quality gabardine , » • really washable!In a wide choice of colors! 45,95ARROW SHIRTS TIESUNDERWEAR a HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTS A FAVORITE ATUniversity of ChicagoArrow "Gabanaro'*5.95 each. No seats are reserved. Appli¬cants should include a self-ad¬dressed, stamped envelope if theycanot be reached by Faculty Ex¬change.Murdock ...“We must,” he continued, “findsome way to teach this individual-(which in reality is a conglomora-tion of partial individuals) how tolearn.” -And thus was bom a new con¬cept: not teaching an individual agiven subject, but teaching the in¬dividual how to learn.(TO BE CONTINUED)THROW AWAYNlCOllNlWhon the Filter in MedicoPipes or Cigarette Holdersturns brown, throw it. away with the nicotine,tars, juices and flakesIt has trapped. Inserta fresh Filter to getcooler, doaner,dryer, pureromoking IALL SEASON SPORTS SHIRTFINE WASHABLE GABARDINEiThis is the sports shirt you’ll give plenty ofwear ... at the games, in. the dorm, and oninformal dates. Handsomely tailored forsuperb £t. Smart saddle-stitching on collarand lapels . plus a fine lirie-up of rich fallcolors. See it here today!rot ARROW UNIVERSITY STYLES MEDICO V. F. a (VERY FINE QUAUnfPipes of specioliy selected Imported brior.tAWide variety of shapes. With 10 filters... JLAlso Frank Med/co '‘'Standard'...Amorica's Outstanding Dollar ($J) P/pefrank Medico Cigarette Holders f] & <2MEDICOFILTER PIPES.Fas* ^ THE CHICAGO MAROON Nevambar 17, 1950CO^N., TNg AMMiCAN TOtACCO COW^AMVUC film groupstates purposeby Robert MaitinRobert L. Farris, spc^esman for the newly-formed Uni¬versity of Chicago Film Society, states that, “We are goingto serve the student body and its stifhent clubs that usefilms—this is the essential function of the University FilmSociety—^public service.”The new group’s constitution avows that, 'The purposeof the University of Chicago Film SG votes on International Houseabsence bill 1920 topicClub 1920 will be the theme for the Roaring Twentiesball, International House quarterly dance, which is to beheld in the assembly there Saturday, Nov. 18, from 10 to 1.Dress is semi-formal and admission, open to the entire Uni¬versity, is one dollar per person, which includes refresh¬ments. 5= ~~Society shall be to foster interest,and disseminate Information, con¬cerning the film as a mediurovofexpression; to bring to those inter¬ested ki group or individual pro¬duction a knowledge of the waysand means of film production;to enable members to appreciatemore fully the complex languageof cinema, and ,where possible, todevelop a personal mode of ex¬pression in terms of this language.”Beginning with the WinterQuarter, the Society will show fourfilms each quarter from the exten¬sive collection of the Museum ofModern Art. The only cost to asubscriber for the entire series willbe a thirty-cent registration fee,which will also make him an as¬sociate member of the Society en¬titled to receive Film Notes, a sum¬mary and discussion of films to beshown on campus during the quar¬ter. An ex#a-curricular course infUm history and technique will beheld during the quarter for mem¬bers who are interested in a closerstudy and more intensive discus¬sion of the film. As a public service to organiza¬tions planning to show films oncagipus, the Film Society will op¬erate a Preview Theatre through¬out the quarter, on irregular week¬day afternoons, at which qualifiedrepresentatives of student clubsmay have the opportunity ofscreening, without charge, hewfeature films of 16-mm size.The first formal meeting of theFilm Society, to which all inter¬ested in assisting in its operationsare invited, will be held Tuesdayevening, November 21, at 7:30 p.m.in Rosenwald 2. A short film willbe shown free.In conjunction with these ac¬tivities, Farris stated that techni¬cal advice and assistance will beavailable at cost of materials toany student group. The prepara¬tion of notes on films, publicityand whatever financial arrange¬ments are necessary will be as¬sisted by students experienced inthe booking and exhibition of filmson and off campus. At the last meeting of SG,a bill was passed to providemeans to expell any memberwho fails to attend two out ofthree sessions. The vote wasunanimous.According to the wording of thebill, any such member shall benotified by mail to present hiscase to the Elections and RulesCommittee within the next sevendays. “Should the Committee failto find two out of the three meet¬ings satisfactorily accounted forby presence or justifiable absence,and fail to find that the individ¬ual’s other work in SG warrantshis retention therein, it will rec¬ommend the expulsion of saidmember from SG.”S Julius Caesar” |I Actors Company i3 213 S. WABASH S3 November 10 thru S3 Dec. 17 3B Fri., Sot., Sun. Eves.—8:30 P.M. SStudent Rotes — WE 9-7265 STickets at Versify Ticket Service SWOODWORTH'SBOOK STORE S Transformed Into a Twentiesspeakeasy, the assembly will boastmurals painted by Internationalhouse artists, chorus girls can¬canning on the stage, and thedark, intimate atmosphere ef theProhibition Era. Signs of thetimes, such as the nickle beer willbring back happy memories.To carry out the prohibition theme, the dance committee hasdevised several unique and ori¬ginal “cocktails” to be served Iniced tea glasses in imitation of theinnocent lirlrks of the epoch.Phil Walsh’s orchestra, whichhas played at the O. Henry ball-room, will supply music for thedance. It is the first time theyhave played on the UC campus.I Treat Your Girl |I For the ThanUsglvlng Dance |I That's Next Thursday, November 22 . . • |I So HURRY and Buy Her Flowers from IMITZIE'SFLOWER SHOPS I Ml 3-4020 1301 E. 55th (corner Kimbark) II' OpM TiH 9:00 P.M. |S Fm« Con««M Studunt IHecuuiila iSU sponsorssquare danceSadie Hawkins Day is Saturday,Nov. 18. In honor of the event SUis sponsoring a square dance inIda Noyes from 8 to 11. Refresh¬ments will be served and admis¬sion is 35 cents.• In keeping with the event, girlsare encouraged to bring men.The Noyes Box Sunday eveningwill carry out the Sadie Hawkinstheme. *in»TVe sir.Tosntb«ByTeiPP*’' ^ U»uvSing lungs outat songfestAt one time or another, we allhave the urge to burst into song,and to sing our favorite melodies.Most of us don’t have the opporytunity, because of a lack of accom¬paniment and an overabundance ofwall-pounding by our neighbors.As a result, we have become bath¬tub baritones and sopranos.Realizing this situation, SU folkprograms department announcesa songfest to be held Friday, Nov.24, in the East lounge, Ida Noyes,at 8;30 p.m.Not only are the place and ac¬companiment provided, but alsofellow songsters to harmonize with.The admission, for this hoxir anda half of song, is just a desire tosing and have fun.Hy New York 24.95Miomi . . . 39.00Coiifornio . .75.00jfjjjj ^ fcCRETARIALERVICE1442 E. 55Hi Ml 3-2136 Efijotj your ci^areHo! &)oy Wyiltat combtfios Ixudi |>erlecl miMness aful rtchtas(e in one - Lucky Strike!Perfect mildtttss? You bet. Scientific tests,confirmed by three independent consultinglaboratories, prove that Lucky Strike is milderthan any other principal brand. Rich taste?Yes, the full, rich taste.of truly fine tobacco.Only fine tobacco gives you both real mildnessand ridi taste. And Lucky Strike means fine'tobacco. So enjoy the happy blending that com¬bines perfect mildness with a rich, true tobaccotaste. Be Happy—Go Lucky!iStrikeMeans Rne TofaactoSHOE REPAIRif it's shoes we do onythiri/.QUALITY MATERIALS, reoson-oble prices. Free pickup and de¬livery. Onc-doy service ond workdone while you woit,Holliday’s DoLuxeShoe Servico1407 E. 61tt St. of DorchesterTwo blocks from IntemotionolHouse. Phone NOrmol 7-8717Need collersAll "Callers" wishing to serve•t Square Donee Saturday night oreurged to contact Chuck Leingthrough the SU oHiee. Here’s echonce to hove some fun.November 17, 19$0 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5Nominations openfor Student CourtThe Court Committee of Student Government announcesthat the following people have been nominated to mem¬bership on the Student Court: David Broder, David V.Kahn, Harmon Carter, David Ladd, Alfred Feinstein, Fran¬cis Logan, Fred Gearing, Herbert Vetter, Gerhardt Wein¬berg. , :Further nominations will Dean of students. Among its dutiesbe made in the Student As- are: the hearing of cases referredsembly meeting on Tuesday to it by the student Assembly, thenight, November 21, and the elec- tp^ing of student organizations,tions for the five seats of the court and review of Assembly legislation,will held in SA at the following All students and student organi-meeting. zations having any informationThe Court, presided over by the concerning nominees are urged toDean of Students, is composed of submit such information in thefive students, two faculty mem- form of signed statesments to thebers. and one member of thte Ad- Civil Liberties Committee, c/oministration appointed by the Student Assembly, Reynolds club.For a freosured and cherished gift . . .Give o portrait of yourselfPHOTOGli\PHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETIh Jmsiwus 7iu>sl&kc&/toSciomCtfKOMU CCMupUSBvrl —oxford button-down collar with the soft roll(the college man^s staple diet). A "Manhattan,” of course.Range$3.95fine white broadcloth with the wide-spreadcollar. Made by "Manhattan,” which means perfect fit.1 H F 'A /ofThe ManhaiUmunderwear,lattan Shirt Company, makers of '’Manhattan'* shirts, tiesi ipajamas, sportshirts, beacnivear and handkerdtie/t, I SG requests complaintsStudent Government encouragesany holder of an NSA PurchaseCard who discovers that a store willnot give the discount promised tothe holder to please register theircomploints in writing or in per¬son to the Student Government of¬fice in the Reynolds club. StudentGovernment has a contract withevery store on the NSA list anddesires to make sure that everystore is abiding by the contract.NAACP c^b Doc color/ilmcoming Satunlay ^ „ a to beRejuvenated councilplans BJ activitiesby Manny SavasThis year dormitory residents can look to their Burton-Judson Council for greater activity both in the courts andon campus. The council is increasing its usefulness as aservice and facilities organization. Working with the ad¬ministration they are solving the problems of installinga snack bar and sandwich machine in the courts. They arealso working energetically toThe second annual conventionof youth councils and collegechapters of the National Associa¬tion for the Advancement of Col¬ored People will be held in Chi¬cago this weekend, Nov. 18 and 19.Panel meetings and discussionsof the group will be held Saturdayat Roosevelt college. A dance Sat¬urday evening will bring the groupto Ida Noyes hall, on the UC cam¬pus.On Sunday, the conventioneerswill attend services at the Metro¬politan Community church, 41stand South Parkway. shoten next weekOn Wednesday, November 22, at7:15, there will be shown a docu¬mentary film in color entitled“Disaster: Background to Korea.”The showing will take place in theEast Lounge of Ida Noyes Hall.This film deals with the agree¬ments made at Yalta, Cairo, Te¬heran, and Potsdam, and effectsthey had on the present situaiionin Korea. Sponsored by the YoungRepublicans’ Club, it is open to thepublic. Admission is free.Howard StyledCAMPUS”Just for you College Men!College means campus...and “THECAMPUS” means Howard. Here’s a threebutton University suit, featuring thepopular loose-fitting, easy-drape jacketwith center vent. All-wool flannels, 31.95.Cheviots and worsteds, 42.95, 44.95.See our complete varsity line of sportsclothes, topcoats, overcoats andfurnishings...styled in the best traditionof "THE CAMPUS"HowardClothes220 South State St., Chicago6345 So. Hoisted St., Chicago11121 So. Michigan Ave., Chicogo1613 Belmant Ave., ChicagoTill Greatest Selection of Fine QualityLPRecords in the University QistrictMozart—Six Sonatas for Piano and ViolinLili Krauss and Szymon GoldbergMenotti—^The ConsulOriginal New York Cast decca DX103decca DX101Handel—Concerto Grossi Op. 6 No. 1, 2, 3, 4Boyd Neel Orchestra 1 o LPS206 and 207Hindemith—^Theme and Four VariationsFoss, Zimbler Sinfoniett^ decca DL7501Bach—Preludes and FuguesRobert Noehren, organist allegro AL29Schumann—Quintet in E Flat for Piano, jnd Strings *Rubinstein, Paganini Quartet victor LM1095Hayon—Concerto in C Major for Violin and OrchestraSzymon Goldberg and Philharmonic Orchestrawith Susskind decca DL8504Remember, If ids on LP gosi can get it at:JIM EARLE'SWOODiAWN MDIO S TELEWSION CO.1204 E. 63rd Street 1371 E. 55th Streetf Airfax 4-8400 FAirfax 4-0323 get the long awaited clothesdryers. Further, they arelooking into the problem of con¬verting the house record players toLJ*.s. In addition to these newerimprovements the council will con¬tinue to show movies twice weeklyand has already scheduled a dancefor December 8.Service plusHowever the council feels thatit is capable of far more than mereservice fimctions. Because it is arepresentative body the councilcan and should reflect the resi¬dents’ views on all campus issues.As its flrst effort in this rple thecouncil recently consider^ thecollege advisory system. They feelat present this system is unsatis¬factory. Often the advisors are notsufficiently acquainted with thecollege courses. This results in poorapportionment of the students'academic program. Further, theycannot supply the accurate infor¬mation and good advice to collegestudents aiming for a place in thedivisions. The council suggests thata iJossible source of manpowerqualiflied to remedy these ills isthe divisions.Add social advisorsAn addition to the advisory sys¬tem, mentioned in the Council’sdiscussions, might be a social ad¬visor. As in other universities, hewould try to locate each studentin some extracurricular activity.The theory behind this is that thestudent benefits academically andotherwise from such participatimi.This year’s Burton Judson Coun¬cil, through effective cooperationwith the Administration and Stu¬dent Government hopes to attainthe ends that its residents and as¬sociates deem desirable.StudentCoytworks on cutin CTA faresStudent Government an¬nounced on Thursday, No¬vember 16, that it was be¬ginning immediately to work onreduced CTA fares. As the initialstep a conference has been sched¬uled among all Chicago areaschools for Sunday, December 3,at Ida Noyes. University of Chi¬cago students are needed who willhelp in the extensive research andorganizational work. Therefore,Student Government is asking allstudents who would like to con¬tribute their effort and time toeither call or write to the SG officein the Reynolds Club.AVIATIONCADETSGET ON TOP..:STAY ON TOP!IN THE U. S. NIR FOKCECan you qualify fw this starttoward the top?Find out by seeing the U. S. AirForce Aviation Cadet SelectionTeam ... here ... on campus.Your U. S. Air ForceSelection Team wUl be here:226 WestJackson BoulevardRoom 104From Now TIU Dec. 1, 1950U. S. AIR FORCEPa9^ ^ THE CHICAGO MAROON November 17, 1950Editorial...Unsigned editorials have been passed by a two-thirds vote of the MAROONstoff at a staff meeting. Signed editorials received a majority vote. Apolicy statement was to hove oppeared this week but has been postponeduntil the next issue.To remove some barriers The MAROON will run a week toweek contest for the best letter-to-the-editor sent in each week.In cooperation with the campusA.B.C. Chesterfield representative,Charles M. Cullen, a carton of Ches¬terfield cigarets will be given away forthis letter.Last weeks' winner was the ISL.This week we award the carton toCarey, etal for their most constructivecriticism. The persons concerned maypick up the "booty" on Mondoy ofter-noon in the MAROON office. Issued 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 Offces, Midway3-0800, Ext. 1011. Distributed free pfcharge, and subscriptions by mail, |4per year.CHARLES GARVINEditor-in-Chief LEROY WOLINSBusiness ManagerEarlier this quarter the editor of the MAROON was amember of a five person delegation to the annual Human j j jRelations Conference of the Round Table of Christians and JLctters SCty LOCO LogoGood Ideo?Mr. Steiner has had his flingwith compass and triangles—nowlet’s revive the old MAROONmasthead. The monstrosity whichnow mars the front page excelsonly in illegibility. It looks like theproduct of a kindergarten art class.Mr. Steiner’s unearned awardIt was with reeling Sensibilities,that We, steadfast Readers all ofyour venerable Journal, receiv’dthe new Mast-head Friday last.Indeed, this Issue looked consid¬erably shoddier than several ofthe previous excellent weeklyNumbers: and We sincerely hopethat, in the Sight of God, you willacquit Yourselves of the Odiumbrought upon Yourselves when youventured to bring this Abomina¬tion into the publick Print. ForGod’s Sake, hang it back on theJews, Noting the fact that a UC delegation to a conferenceof this sort contained no Negro members, the editor broughtthis problem to the attention of the director of student ac¬tivities, Mr. Birenbaum, who had chosen the delegation,Birenbaum explained that he had chosen the membersfrom among the leaders of the main campus organisationsand had paid no attention to the skin color of such leaders.He went on to explain that apparently Negro persons werenot in the leadership of such organizations and blamed thison the small percentage of Negro students, kept from at- will sooth a lot of injured personstending our school by economic barriers. if properly applied at Jimmy’s—The MAROON advocates two solutions to this problem so please scuttle MAROONovationof lack of Negro students and leaders, one a long time No. 5.proposition, the other for the short term.For the long term, the University must recognize a re¬sponsibility to educate members of all social groups, despite Parodisc Lostthe economic subjugation of some of them. In regard tothe above problem, tuition aids could be instiuted for Negrostudents. An objection to this has been raised however onthe grounds that qualified Negro students would enterthrough competitive scholarships.To this we answer that because of the poorer secondaryand elementary education which most Negroes are offered,these students would suffer on competitive intelligencetests. The results on I.Q. tests are related to a great extentto previous educational experiences, beyond any so called“innate” ability. Thus some Negro students who have en¬trance but no scholarship qualifications would be giventhese aids.Another way of looking at the situation is that Negroes wall where it belongs,who have been discriminated against as a group must, to The old, good, Giag gave an im-some extent, be given special aids as a group to compensate pressive air to our Paper (if wefor this discrimination.Short of scholarships, other measures should be takento encourage Negro students to attend the University. Asthe opinion may exist in the Negro community that we dis¬criminate in our admissions policies, the teams of studentsvisiting high schools should contain Negro members. Thepresent one does not. The booklet advertising our collegeplan shouW show the inter-group character of our classes.The present one does not.Lastly we should be sure to send teams to high schoolsin Chicago’s Negro areas. Even though the percentage ofstudents attending UC from these schools may be small foreconomic reasons, a strong attempt to encourage thesestudents to come here would help remedy the situation ofwhich Mr. Birenbaum spoke.The MAROON feels that some short term measures mightbe taken also. We notice that in the last student govern¬ment election, only one Negro student was elected. We be¬lieve that the broadest possible campaign against discrim¬ination, as well as bringing Negro leadership into leader¬ship positions on campus, the assembly must rectify thissituation. This can be done by filling some SG vacancies asthey occur with Negro students.In supporting our position, sometimes attacked by wellmeaning persons, we would use an analogy. We see a racebetween two men. One man has no barriers in his path, theother has many. Merely to say, as timekeeper, we will pickthe winner without discrimination, is not enough. Wewould give specail aids to the runner with barriers.The meaning should be clear. The Negro students havethe barriers of poorer secondary schools, worse Tiousing andthe major and minor prejudices of a great portion of thewhite population. Special measures must be taken to givethe Negro a real chance to compete in the race.Our student body and administration have shown greatleadership to other schools in fighting against discrimina¬tion. We were, for instance, one of the first to remove pic¬tures from entrance applications. We must never stop. Wemust keep moving and keep fighting. the Chaos of our Modern Age, itis truely Pitiable that a Publicka-tion of our University must fosteran Attitude that would nullify allthe old’ Values, and adorn Itselfwith an Exhibition of mereDraughtmanship.Patrick Carey, Gordan G. Scatt,Bill Poxen, Frank Logan, Ted Wiley,Charles Gaulkin.Hits policyI have a few remarks to makeconcerning the policy of the MA¬ROON regarding the Letters col¬umn. I was given to understandthat the Letters column is sup¬posed to be completely non-parti¬san and unbiased, and that all let¬ters are to be restricted to 250words or less.It struck nSle as strange, then,that Mr. Davis’ letter, defendinghimself againsi the accusation ofMr. Orlicky, which were printedin last week’s MAROON, was closeto 500 words long, while the replyby Mr. Orlicky’s friends was given second billing, and runs to about180 words.Would you please give me anexplanation of this curious stateof affairs, Mr. Editor? Coincidence,with which you explained awaythe many NPSL-slanted etonentsof the election issue, does not havethat long arm.—Lawrence LemerEditor’s Note; Davis’ letter waffin answer to Freed’s of the weekbefore and was of the same length,see Letterr- page 7may for a Moment depart fromour Habit of purely scientific criti¬cism), and was not without a cer¬tain Gothic Impressiveness, repre¬senting to the Souls of Men, asthat Style does, the essential One¬ness of the several Disciplines. In time THt BtSTOfQiariie ChaplincnyUBHTS'Todoy ot O ETS.4S, 7:15, 8:45, 10:15 9 VBl FMABtOH A? tWlUKa **Harry lovee toned galad,-now that we use AngotturaH^in the dreMing!*'AIOMATIC BITTIISMAKES lITTIK OBINKI*Angottura’t artmatic lift is ithghtjul4re$$ingi, roup* and gravtaa. But in g<Manhattans and Old Fa$Mant4$, tanfit damright ntetttaryl :4ar ■"This is the editor. He looks this woybecause he needs help.Join the MAROONThe Lutheran TrainingParish of the Universityof Chicago,governed by and forstudents, sponsors theCommon Service of theLutheron Church each Sundaymorning at eleven o'clockin Thorndike Hilton Chapel,58th Street off University be irresistible... in VANDUROYnew corduroy sport shirtsNo need to slalom or Christiana—just bowl ’em overin rugged, tough Van Heusen Vanduroy sport shirts.In bright, wide-awake colors, these corduroys doamazing things with skis or with the she^s. Let nothingstand in your way, see Vanduroy today.0 Van HeusenVthe world’s smartest’' shirtsPHILLIPS.JONES CORP., NEW YORK 1, N. Y.|(^ov6W*b®i' 17# 1950 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7law alumni group Yfeighhonors new. dean 55Wilbur G. Katz, former UC law school dean, will sharetop guest-speaker billing with Supreme Court Justice HugoL. Black and Governor Adlai E. Stevenson when UC’s LawSchool Alumni association holds its 43rd annual dinner inthe Palmer House Tuesday.The dinner is being held in honor of Katz’s successor,Edward H. Levi, fifth dean of the,a« school. Kate Is the newly ap- Vf1,;11pointed James Parker Hall pro- iCill Ullllessor of law here. . oopr jLevi was first appointed to UCjn 1936, He was in Washington forsix months this year as counsel to ers Look at the McCarran Bill” ing to study there,the Cellar committee of the House ^ Presented at Ida Noyes li-I of Representatives. Levi also as¬sisted in the writing of the Mc¬Mahon atomic energy control lawand was first assistant of the anti¬trust division under Assistant At-torrfey General Wendell Berge. Fulbrighthopefulls awardsat UCNames of 55 UC Fulbright hopefuls have been forwarded to the National Selections com¬mittee at the Institute of International Education, Robert M. Strozier, chairman of UC’slocal Fulbright committee, announced this week. 'The 55 were selected from a large field of UC students applying for Fulbright scholar¬ships. Final selection will be made from this group by the national committee.Of the candidates, 31 expressed desires to study in the United Kingdom. France, longrated a leading study center,qJJ second-best with a uorlbcck, John R. IsbclI. insky, Phillip K. Oxm&n, Morris4. 4. 1 « in TT4-I 4. j 4. • V, Raymond Johnson,A program titled, "Social Work- Of 10 UC Students Wish- Johnson, Nanette Thelma Philipson, Galen E. Sargent, Ed-B. Kahn, win W. Sunderow, and Warren L.Leonard Kasdan, Peter Krehel, Ziegler.Other countries requested Charles Lininger, Robert Marshall, For Austria: Edwin R. Strakna.brary Tuesday, Nov. 28, at 7:30 . . , . , . a ^4- r Rogolsky, Robert Rosenthal, Australia: Keith E, Chave andpm. include Austria, Aursiraiia, Daniel E. sell, Edward P. Snyder, Gordon E. Cole. Egypt: Carl E.Sponsored by the Social Service Egypt, Iran, Italy, Netherlands, Helen Sunukjian, Hall C. Taylor, Devries. Iran: Leon Novar, Her-Employees Union and the Social Thailand and India. Robert Y. Turner III, Herbert F. bert Paper. Italy: Henry A. De-Service Administration club, the ,. ... Vetter, Virginia Walcott, Martin Wind, Ernest L. Gayden. Nether-program will feature talks by Pearl ' 1 , j , iv, Weingartner, and William B. Wolf, lands: Abraham W. Berger, EverettHart, lawyer and professor at John candidates include, for the Fronee F. Bleiler. Thailand: Gerald E.Marshall College ,and Dean Helen United Kingdom: Phillip D. Ca- For France: Mary J. Barnard, Williams. India: Marshall Hodg-Ifright of the school of social serv- gan, Robert A. Clark, Martin Dia- Sally W. Cassidy, Philipp Fehl, son, Thomas A. Rusch, Lesterce. mond, John P. Feil, Lawrence Morton Gordon, Howard M. Kam- Wohlers. ^A question - and - answer period Friedman, Julius W. Friend, Johnwill follow. This event is open to p. Gilbert, John Goodenough,everyone, free of charge. Refresh- George D. Hallowell, Alexanderments will be served.THE WHIFFLE TREEOn the Midway - OppositeInternotional House1425 E. 6OH1 StreetPublished at $4Hare, Homer V. Hogan, FrankA CLARK AHD CLARKBARGAIHCAPABLANCA’S HUNDRED BESTGAMES OF CHESS. Chosen and edi¬ted by Golcmbek.New copies 98cCLARK AND CLARK. Booksellers1204 East 55th StreetHours 10 A M. to 9 P.M.FOR THE LADIESBrooks Brothers' fine sweatersand our famous Pink ShirtBrooks Brothers have long guarded a'reputation as a man’s world. The excef>-.tion that probes the rule is a small, color¬ful and exclusive department in which you.will find women’s pure cashmere and soft’Shetland sweaters made expressly for us.abroad...and a choice of three distinctive,styles in shirts that are made in ourown workrooms.They may be obtained in our fine newStore in Chicago. Or you may send for ourChristmas Catalogue, in which you wiHJind illustrated not only these sweaters"and shIrtS.T.but many outstanding giftsuggestions'for men,;iSTAILISHID liftfurnishings, Ifnts ^$hoesEAST MADISON STREET, CHICAGO 2, ILL.ilEW.yORK ♦.BOSTON.!. LOS ANGELES ♦ SAN FRANCISCO, College preceptorialplans outlined hereDescription of the College Preceptorial program for useof students enrolled in OH, History, Social Sciences 3, andHumanities 3, are now available, the college faculty an¬nounced today.This program is intended to bring to students who areinterested more information about the subject.As part of the comprehensivegrade, preceptorial students will berequired to write a paper duesometime in the spring quarter.This paper does away with someof the comprehensive questions.To register for preceptorials astudent must be preparing to takean examination in one of thecourses named. Individual stalls orpreceptors may wish to interview UC cancerfund gets$25,000On behalf of UC's Concer re-students who apply for entrance, search center, university presi-No student may take more than dent Ernest C. Colwell this weekone preceptorial. accepted a $25,000 gift to the Uni-In the booklet now out, each versity from the Albert G. Josephpreceptorial is described with lists Cancer Research Foundation,of books and subjects considered The occasion was a dinner Oithe foundation held Tuesday inthe Stevens hotel. The foundationwas organized this Spring to sup¬port the university’s research cen¬ter.Speakers at the meeting includ¬ed Dr. Lowell T. Coggeshall, deanof the Biological Sciences Divi¬sion, and Dr. James W. J. Car-pender, assistant of professor ofradiology.within an outline.LettersMore on Logo |Common sense will tell you thatUC prof speaksat Wesleyan U.Name LovellWF adviserAppointment of Rev. William N.Lovell as new advisor to the West¬minster Fellowship, UC Presby¬terian student group, was an¬nounced this week by PhilliQsMoulton, director of Chapel House.Rev. Locell will be formally in¬troduced to the group when it innovation to take root, itholds a Thanksgiving service and i^iust satisfy a purpose or at leastdinner Wednesday, Nov. 22. a significant variation in ascheme. This holds true even inthe field of esthetics. The newmast-head of the Maroon servesneither the purpose of communi¬cation, if one wishes to be par¬ticular), nor is it in the least, , tt, • 1.T ^ „ artistic. I have no idea what otherJohn Ulric Nef, professor of eco- “designs” were submitted, but thenomic history at UC, was guest choice of the one disgracing thespeaker Wednesday at Wesleyan last issue of Maroon was a per-Umversity in Middletown Con- version of taste. The old one re-*'®^*®1^*'* XT # 1- , mains intelligible and beautiful inProfes.«)r Nef, who spoke on comparison"Toward Ruin or Renewal.” is an why not' hold another contest,author noicd for his writings in university-wide (Art-School in-economic Wstory. He is chairman eluded), and let the students makeof the t7C Committee on Social the choice?Thought. Hillel A. SchillerFrom Our Large L.P. Selection:HANDEL —SonaHis for Violin ond figured Boss.Alexander Schneider, Ralph Kirkpatrick. 1-10” 3.85MOZART—Concerto for Clorinet and Orchestro, A. Major.Reginald Kell, Clarinet. 1-10” 3.85DVORAK —Symphony in E Flat.Scherxo Coppriccioso.Vienna Symphony Orchestro. 1-12” 5.95VERDI —Rigoletto, Complete Opera.Cellini, Peerce, Tojo, etc. 3-12” 16.35Order the BACH PRADES Festival! Recordings andany other L.P.'s fromTHE RECORD CHEST5112 Lake Pork Ave. NOrmal 7-2424At Hyde Pork Boulevordfafle 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 17, 1950<> Radio features 'Life'; Offer lecture aversions, fashions,Video views violence I i r l -^l jknow-how, trom hither and yonNBC’s documentary series on contemporary life in Amer¬ica, Living 1950, is currently completing a series on youthentitled, “Listen to the Children.” The present series comes. at an appropriate time to anticipate the Mid-Century White by Ebenezar Erickson i^ _ Little item from the front page of the Daily Barometer of Oregon State noted that theHouse Conference on youth to be held in Washington early 40th division in southern California named Dorothy Lamour as “The girl we’din December. The program is heard on WMAQ, Saturdays, m^ li^ to engage in handto hand c^bat. , ,, . , . . ^ -at 6 00 pm Titles for the pro- — The Queen’s journal of Kingston, Ont., offered this advice for those who had an aver-are provocative; Nov. 18. Eisenhower's sion to lectures. Get to the hall early and organize a choral group, “Then as the lecturegrams“Sidewalk Forest”; Nov. 25. “Trii- second World War Progresses, you Can all keep yourselves amused by'singing the Marseillaise in throatyogy”; and Dec. 2, “Postwar Cas- scanning - the - dial - and - clean - "i tones (who let Marlene in). If the professor objects let hin^ualties.” ing-the-file dept.; The Chicago MAROON PARTY sing the baritone lead. ^Later in the year. Living 1950 Theater of the Air will presentwill present a series under the gen- “New Moon” and Colonel McCor-eral title. “The People Act.” Each mick. tomorrow night at 9 p.m.episode will dramatize an actual on WGN. Theater Guild bn thestory showing how the people of Air has “Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde”an American commimity are work- starring Fredric March scheduleding together to solve some of the for Sunday on WMAQ at 7:30 p jn.economic and social problems fac- The NBC Theater. Sunday at 9:30Ing them. p.m. on WMAQ. will feature “The'Crusade' o« TV Baron of Grogswig” from Dickens’The third chapter of Crusade in ‘‘Nicholas Nickelby.”Europe. “America Goes to War, presents musicwill be pre^nts^ Sunday, if you have an FM radio and likeber 19 at 7:30 pm. ovct WEITO- ^ ^TV. This chapter covers the pmod ^he station broad-immediately following casts three consecutive hours ofbor. Included are filins of the first symphonic music from 10 p.m. to^toric meeting ^between Presi- j ^ gdent Roosevelt and Churchill. Pic-turesof^^ower w a brigadier Recently the station madegeneral in the Philippines, and proposition to those music lovers .. ...captured Japanese films of Em- complained of the lack the topic.MAROON PARTYTomorrow Nisht8 - 1 A.M.Alpha Delta Phi House5747 UniversityOnly staff members and tbeir dotesare invited. Members moy comestag if they prefer. Refreshments,enterteinment, dancing. AdnussioM$1 for men. Women's fashions reportodThe Daily Tar Heel of North Carolina reported that afashion expert had this to say in the field of sex appeal*“More of them (girls) will look better in ski suits. Ski suitsmake their legs look stream-lined even when they’re not. Big thing on the Michigan canJBeside who’s to say what’.s pus two week ago was a tug-of-Qerardreportson Europe trip more appealing to a man—what war between the freshmen andhe can see or what he can imag- the sophomores with the opposingine?” He had this advice for fe- teams on opposite banks of themales, “You can’t be flirty and river. The Michigan Daily hadsporty at the same time, it is dan- this to say about the battle: “Somegerous.” No comment—I’ll leave of the onlookers on the bank^it to you. cheered enthusiastically; otherlThe Daily Texan announce just smiled quietly as the men werithat the University had finally pulled into the water.** The othenlifted their ban on negro players, sound like UCers, or social work*Professor Ralph (ierard will if you wUl remember this column ers; or historians, or something,speak at the Sunday evening told, a few weeks ago, of their women dentists were subject of^ meeting of Channing Club on leaving to cancel a ganw with Loy- an article in Honi Soit of the Uni.r— nave comniained or tne lack topic, “Medical Missions because Loyola i^ted cm versity of Sidney. The article be.peror Hirohito will be shown. This classical music nroeramminfr tn Eastern Europe.” Dr. Ger- player. The r^ents gan thusly: “Women can pull teet^or cl^ical mimic program^g said that this move is no change as weU as men. it’s not a matte?over Chicago radio stations. They h Will report on hlS work policy, but that too many of brute force It’s knowing how"asked people to send in postcards with the Unitarian Service Com- schools were canceling games for oiowmg how.if they wanted the WOAK three- mlttee in Poland and Czechoslo- ^ continuehour program to continue after vakia and the efforts by such fusing, games on this groundDecember 20. The minimum vote "leans to promote world under- grouna.was to be 5,000 cards. Early this standing through direct aid toweek, the count went over the 5,000 suffering persons,mark and the station has decidedto add three more houi’s to the'Precided by supper—no reserva-program. tions needed—and will be followed—Arnold Task by a social program.^Hams* elect,enter Leagueradio contest them to be able to continue re¬fusing^, games on thisTha acid fongna ogamThe mid-term exam notice onThe meeting at 7 p.m. will be nftlemen;' the axe.”The University of ChicagoRadio Club met to elect oflB-cers and discuss plans for the1950-51 school term, lastTuesday evening in IdaNoyes.Del Tanner was elected presi- 'Girls with cues' becomeunique social phenomenaby Ed WolpeitWe’ve recently discovered that the feminine element ofdent; John Paisley, vice-president; the campus has appeared at the RC pool hall in greaterJim ^nco^t, secretaiy-treasurCT. and greater numbers. What grave sociological implicationsand Dave Gavenda, publicity offi- ^oes this phenomena have? ,"ifter the elecUons the group MAROON is grantingdiscussed the new transmitter ^ special study of girls who play pool. However,whicli they are building for use we thought it necessary to gather ~~ ^ ; ;at their club radio station. The preliminary information before thestation has the call letters W9- starting our ^itudv nmn^r balls. (What would Freud say,YWQ and is located in the north . j- , muscles.” “I get greatStands of Stagg Field. Accordmgly we asked certain my dear?)Construction of the new equip- ^ ® ^ssue we will presentment is being rushed so that the ^ Preliminary to our epoch-making facts designed to show the impactclub members can operate it in J’eport.we present several answers, of pool on the primary groupsthe 17th Annual ARRL Sweep- Because it s fun. It develops these girls belong to.Strikes contest tihs and the follow¬ing weekend.The American Radio Relayleague, a nation-wide organizationof amateur or “ham” radio oper¬ators, sponsors the Sweepstakeseach year to promote operatingability. The object is to contact asmany “ham” stations in as manydifferent ports of the United Statesand possessions as possible duringa specified period over the twoweekends. Wining stations receivecertifleate awards. A CLARK AND CLARKBARGAINNBW FAITH FOR OLD. An auto-blofraplijr by Sbailer ICatbewA, DeanEmeritus of the Divinity Scho<d ofthe University of Chicago. Added tothe story of his personal experiencesIs the account of the educationaland theological developments of theperiod in which he played so notablea part.Published at $3.00 New copies MeCLARK AND CLARK. Booksellen1204 East 55th StreetHours 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. A Trained ConsvItanIfram m Now York aaioii is comingnext aroek witk • thrilliiigQiftFOR YOUA Homa loanty Conraaand fraa individualSkin AnalysisMoka yo«r aagointwiantKIM REXALL DRUR5500 Kimbark DO 3-0643Nor. 20 ta 25GET IT HEREThe MAROON moy be secured atthe following neighborhood stores:CAMPUS SNACK SHOP1206 E. 55THCITRONS MEN'S SHOP1148 E. 55THLocal andLong Distanco MovingStorage Facilities for Books,Record Cabinets, Trunks, orCarloads of FurniturePeterson FireproofWarehouse, Inc.1011 East Fifty-fifth StreetButterfield 8-6711DAVID L. SUTTON, President “ifs easyto crack examswith a famousWEBSTER-CHKAM•niOTOLoMYKIIB Voa'N bowl 'om'aver, la#—if you use your bead—and “Live-Action” Vitalis care. Here’s tbe scoop—give your noggm that' famous “60-Secoad Workout” SO seconds’ scalp massage (feel thediffcienccO... 10 seconds to comb (and will the gals see the dif¬ference!). You’ll look neat and natural. Bye-bye loose flaky dan¬druff and dryness, too. So get hep to Vitalia—-set tbe man at thedrug store or txii^ shop pronto.^ ^ “60-Second Workout'" Laam ¥fUh Vow SleepAsk your Webster-Chi<caco dealer for the amaz-ing results of before¬sleep redutiotu with aWebster-Chicago wirerecorder. H*d Msy to study thoBoctronk Momory* woylThis amazing mtthod has helped many ate'dents get startling iraprovemeots in tbeirgrades.' Datea, formulas, language pronunci¬ations, economic theories that were hard toretain before become ea^ to remember withwv^a w* %i*aa a,e«, Awa^^mepsharp tone. Come in today for full details on.W- .. r . .the eUctnnic mtm0ry metiTM. R.O. of study.*149SU1217 and 1233 East 55tk PLoxo 2-4361Hov«mb«r 17, ; THE CHICAGO MAROON"'^fe-T- h;—-f'iji I fi;-'■ ■ 'V fa9« 9Interviews on Cigarette Tests7 should neverhave stuckmy neck outF^Chaplin film scores highly Viennese art Collectionwith music, plot, comedy fetes mastets, omamentsCity Lights, with Charlie Chaplin as the star, directorand producer, is now at the Surf. He pretends to a blindflower girl that he is wealthy, tries to get money to help herand, when hfcr sight is restored, is recognized by her as herbenefactor. Critical raves for tills film have been ecstatic;it certainly deserves them.The wonderful music, to begin.with, Chaplin’s own, is synchron¬ized to comment on the action.Chaplin’s contrivance of panto¬mime and of incident continuallybegin by creating expectations ona high comic level, but reach aturning point at which there iseither yet more ingenious con¬trivance or an anticlimax.His reviewer, aft^r a first view¬ing of City Lights, left its impact;after a second sitting, some weekslater, was delighted by the beauti¬ful construction of the film, direct and efficient, in constant move¬ment from climax to climax.To students bearing ID cards^by the way, admission at the Surfis reduced to 50c except for Satur¬day and Sunday evenings.Collegium needs singersTk« G>lleaiuiH Muticum of HieUniversity needs mere singers.Lerger works ere in the offing endsopronos, eltos, o.nd bosses will beespeciolly welcome. Those inter¬ested ere esked to contact Mr.Levoric es soon es possible. A visit to the Viennese collection at the Art Institute will repay especially those Inteivested in European arts of the fifteenth through seventeenth centuries. Imly, Holland*Belgium, Austria and Germany, and Spain are in this collection of paintings., tapestries*arms, goblets, and bronzes, but not France and England.Shew ernemcNtsThe most unusual part of ^the exhibit is the ornamental objects in precious and semi*precious materials. Probably the most famous work here is Benveneto Cellini’s goldsalt cellar with gods Neptune and •Tellus enthroned on the gifts of era, and several lesser Dutch andEarth and Sea. Several exquisite pemjsh^^e^otel wor^.bowls and goblets of the fifteenthand sixteenth centuries in agate,jade, onyx, and rock crystals, es¬pecially a seventeenth century Im¬perial Workshop group, are thehighlights of this collection. frecTy rendered study of the boyPrince of Mantua, and a more«>me (in. “*works by Titian, portraits, such asthe sensitively rendered Pope ill the best in the exhibit.Other great artists such as Rem«Farnese, nudes, including the fa- brandt, El Greco, Hals, and Ver-mous Danae. One room is devoted meer are represented by one or twoKiiuKiiw. ui wiis ^ Imporial portraits by Velasquez, works apiece. Notable among thisT nrae iinnrAvar Hv an Bxtremgly fine portrait of group is a self-portrait of Rem-I was. however, disappointed by ^ infante. Baltasar Carlos, brandt in his prime and El Greco sTintoretto is represented by rather Ascension of the Virgin, less lum-the paintings, many decadent Ital¬ian works of the Post-Renaissance impassive portraits and not by hispowerful religious subjects. A inous in color than I hfid expected,—Mervyn Adams*^Ihey had our slow-moving brother moving at too fasta pace with those quick-trick cigarette tests! A fast puff... a swift sniff., •a quick inhale... a rapid exhale. Terrapin’s head was spinning —didn’t know if he was coming or going! But he slowed do^vn to his ownspeed — decided there was no need to rush. After all, hq figured,bow c6uld anyone possibly prove cigarette mildness so fast?And he was right, too! That’s why we suggest:The sensible test... the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test, whichsimply asks you to try Camels as your steady smoke —on a pack after pack, day after,da]i basis. No snap ^judgments needed. After you’ve enjoyed Camels — and onlyCamels —for 30 days in your “T-Zone” (T for Throat,T for Taste) we believe you’ll know why,,,More People Smoke CamelslAoit any other tigaroHe! Hungarian Quartet excelsin Haydn, Bartok worksSome of the finest quartet playing in our recollection washeard Friday in the Mandel Hall concert of the HungarianString Quartet. They played Haydn’s quartet in D major,opus 76, no. 5, and the fourth quartets of Bela Bartok andZoltan Kodaly.The Haydn quartet is another of the composer’s ihanyworks in this genre which are un- ^ — mNew noveldeservedly little known. The quar¬tet was beautifully executed; es¬pecially the hunt-like last move¬ment. Our only complaint concernsthe violist’s weak tone in occa¬sional solos.Haydn was followed by Bartok'sthe fourth quartet, written in 1928,foreshadows, both thematicallyand formally, later works. It wasbetter received than in 1947 whenit was last performed in MandelHall, although there were stillscattered giggles and guffaws tobe heard. It would seem that bythis time laughter is hardly theproper response to Bartok.Kodaly differs from Bartok inhis use of Hungarian folk music.The latter begins with the idiomas a whole and makes it his own,while Kodaly simply includeswhole folk melodies undigested.His fourth quartet seems doomedto damnation by faint praise.—Leo TreitlerShop af the sign ofthe "C* spots war"Face of a Hero," by Louis Fal-stein. Harcourt, Brace andCompany, New York, 1950.Price $3.00."Face of a Hero" is what isusually termed a psychologicalnovel. It is a story of the war—and the personal war of the crewof a B24 in combat in Italy.Louis Falstein presents a vividpicture of five men confined in anunnatural life of contrasts, goingfrom commission. On this back¬ground Falstein paints the figureof one man and his emotions, aJew who has an e^ecially personalwar to fight.The book is written objectivelyend realistically, and without falsesentimental discords. The authortreats an old subject in a refresh¬ingly new way, sliowlng a veryrare and deep understanding ofthe problems of air combat.Immerse Your MindIn Qood StoriesTHE WAY TO LIVE NOW $3.95Anthony TrollopeThis lively "beef and ole" novel is concerned with the Literaryworld of London with a capital L.THE BEST OF LIFE $3,00Selected end Edited by Willis ThorntonProse, verse and epigrams take the reader from the foolishnessof youth to the serenity of oge.THE WISDOM OF THE SANDS • $4.00Antoine de Seinte-Exupery, In a codenced language of great poetic power o great writerpresents a virile philos^y that is the final fruit of life. ,BACK $3.00Henry GreenA story dominated by the color that contained oil that wos leftof a man's happiness. 'THE OLD MAN OF THE MOUNTAIN and17 Other Stories by Alan Seager $3.00All these stories reflect the author's obility to probe, with com¬passion but without sentimentality, into the lives of "ordinary"people, and uncover extraordinary emotions.THE MAINE WOODS $3.00Henry Devid ThoreauThis new edition of an old favorite is like o breeze laden withthe smell of balsam. Henry B. Kane draws the illustrationswith complete fidelity to the text.STILL SEEING TNINGS $3.75John Mason BrownA superb symposium on the arts and people. ^These and many more delightful books will add/to your reading enjoymentGet The Best Books af theUNIVERSITYolCHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUE10Cagers gird for battle;open year at St. JoeFacing an 18-game schedule which begins Nov. 29 atSt. Joe the varsity five engaged Wheaton in a lengthyscrimmage Monday night as a dress rehearsal for the opener.TTie tall, rangy Crusaders were able to maintain only afive point edge over Coach Nels Norgren’s starting quintet,but scored more freely later in the five period encounter.The 1950 Maroons include hold- Iovers Jack Karush, forward, and which be played at 8 pin. inguard Spence Boise. Dave Dick- the Fieldhouse, is as follows:man. an excellent long shot, is also 29—st. Joseph’s at coiiege-among the returnees; he’ll switch prl. Dec. 1—lake forestfrom guard to forward this year, , Dec. ^aLiNois, navyJoe Johnson, who saw considerable xechacUon last year, is also expected ^ec. le—laj^ewe4^^ ^,,4. -DrvU Tri.t Dec. 29—HARVARD TJ.to help out Slon^ ^ith p&ul Rob^ Sat., Jan. 6 — Coe College at Cedarerts, a transfer from Carleton. > Rapids, lowaTra T/\V,...Sat., J&ll. 13~-‘lLLXROIS TECHDave Johnson and Wally Cisow- wed.. Jan. 17—Chicago teachers*ski are two of the more promising collegeSat., Jan. 20PierBat., Jan. 27—ALBIONSat., Feb. 3—Knox College at Galesburg,Illinois 10 teams Actors Company presentsto run here Bard's 'Julius Caesar'The University of Chicago willagsdn play host to the Big TenConference Cross Country Cham¬pionships. The four mile run willbe held in Washington Park, Fri¬day, November 17, at 11:00 a.m.Wisconsin will return with a strongteam to defend its cross countrycrown against strong Indiana, andMichigan teams. None of theseteams has been defeated this sea¬son.Don McEwen of Michigan, own¬er of Don Gehrmann’s only loss in.cross country, will defend his indi¬vidual title against a field led byRobert Rodibough of Purdue. A group which last year causedsomething of a stir in Chicagowith its excellent King Lear iscurrently performing* Shake-peare’s Julius Caesar. MinnieGalatzer has succeeded in direct¬ing an excellent cast to give a Miss Galatzer Is never slovenlyabout details, and she payed asmuch attention here to keepingthe large cast under control andalways an integral part of the per¬formance as she has to effectivelystaging it.of several men moved up from the 20—luinois^Nacy Pier at Navy1949 “B” squad.Coach Norgren rates the teama.s somewhat short om height, es- at Lake Por-pecially at center, but nontheless est, 111.figures to better the 10-8 record —Albion college at Albion,Mlcb.of 49. Tbu., peb. 22—CURRY COLLEGEiTj-iytr.jx Feb. 24—COE OOLrjEOET!ie scneduie, nome games of sat., Mar. 3—knox collegeUC Harriers beaten,,lose to Butler by 1Butler University, winners of the Little Indiana StateCross Country title, beat the UC’s young harriers 27-28 (lowscore wins) in the closest race of the season over a four milecourse. It also was the toughest course encountered by theteam this year.Butler’s Robert White was the individual winner in thevery fine time of 22 minutes andJV track teamopens practiceThe junior varsity track team, 46 seconds. Chicago runners, im¬proving from week to week, fin¬ished 2, 4, 5, 7, and 10. They wereAshby Smith, Hugh Brodkey, BobBaptist, Dave Saffer, and ArtRielley. Frank Vaughn and RogerWilcox ran as extra men but showpromise of pushing one of the first, l>ack to the extra manPrivate School League champions position.Butler’s stock declined when oneof their runners, who was runningOnly seven lettermen are return- second at the time, dropped out.ing rom last year’s squad. They 'IWngs were equalized when Chl-r-vrii Angelo Aldana was forcedare John Smothers, miler, Cyril ^ sprained ankle.since 1939, and imdefeated lastyear, began practice this week.Harvey, shot putter; Bruce John- The Chicago team is entered inson, sprinter; Bob Appleman, Illinois Central Cross Countryvaulter; Bard Knight, quarter- run at Wheaton, Illinois, tomor-mller; Phil Lyons, half miler, and row. They will go into this meetGerald Czamanski, high jumper, '’'f ^ meet record, com-All eandidates for Junior Var¬sity track ar^ asked to report toMr. Derr in the Field House at3:30 any day in the week. No pre¬vious experience is necessary toparticipate in interscholastic com¬petition. Over half of last year’sundefeated track squad had no ex¬perience before coming to thisschool.JV TRACK SCHEDULEJaq. 19 Mt. Carmel26 SeburzFeb. 2 Tllden9 Aufitln16 Lane Tecb22 Lake View and DuSableFoster winsdorm meetFoster Hall achieved first placeIn the competition for the WAADormitory Plaque last week bywinning both the Inter - HouseSwimming Marathon and the In¬ter-House Volleyball Tournament,Results follow:Foster Hall, 33 points; BeecherHall, 21 points; Green Hall, 21points; Kelly Hall, 15 points. pleting their best season in manyyears.All University facilities will beclosed Thuesdoy, November 23,Thonksgiving Doy. This includesclasses, libraries, and public events.Although regular Student Healthhours will be suspended, the emer¬gency clinic in Billings will be open.University functions will be car¬ried on as usual on Friday.Lady' bowlersto hold meetAn intercollegiate telegraphicbowling tournament is scheduledfor Wednesday, Nov. 29, from 3:30to 5:30 p.m.All women students in the col¬lege and the first two years of thedivisions are eligi’ole. Women withbowling averages of over 100should plan to participate. Thoseinterested should contact Miss Mc-Faul at Ida Noyes Hall, or JanetStewart at Gates Hall, or sign upin the bowling alleys at Ida NoyesHall.TERESA DOLANDANCE SCHOOL1208 E. 63rd STREETAnnounces the Opening ofFoil GlossesBeginners—Mondays—Fox Trot,WaltzTuesdays—Rumba, PolkaWednesdays—Fox TrotSaturdays—Rumba. Viennese TValtzAdvanced—T.iurs lays—MambaTangoFridays—Tango, RumbaAfternoon Class Fridays—3 P.M.PRIVATE LESSONS DAY OREVENING11 A.M. - 11 P.M.Phone HY 3-3080For Farther Information A CLARK AND CLARKBARGAINTHE GREAT OUTDOORS, the Where,When, and How of Hunting andPishing. Edited by Joe Godfrey Jr.,and Frank DuFresne. 48 actionphotographs, 16 color plates, 24 ex¬citing chapters on hunting, fishing,dogs, guns, and outdoor hints.Published at |6.50 New copies $2.25CLARK AND CLARK, Booksellers1204 East 55th StreetHours 10 A. M. to 9 P.M. fine performaHce. Vivian MargarisI LOUIE'S BARBER SHOP Ia aa For Personality Hair Cut |1110 E. 55th Sf., Chicago 15 |LOUIS CORTEZ |jnilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllinillllHIIIIIIMIUll- •THEM AU!Philip Morris challengesany other leading brandto suggest this testHUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OFSMOKERS, who tried this test,report in signed statements thatPHILIP MORRIS IS DEFINITELYLESS IRRITATING, DEFINITELY MILDER!. Light up a PHILIP MORRISJust take a puff—DON’T inhale—ands-l-o-w-l-y let the smoke come throughyour nose. Easy, isn’t it? And NOW... dC. •. Light up your present brandDo exactly the some thing—DON'TINHALE. Notice that bite, that sting?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 • • •Philip Morris is, indeed, America’s FINEST Cigarette!NO CHSARETTEHANGOVERmeans MORE SMOKING PLEASURE!SKPNILIloveinb^r 17, 15150 THE CHICAGO MAROON Fa9c 11Calendar of Coming EventsThere is no ckorge for any eventfed here unless otherwise stoted.iday, Noy. 17loViE—Kugene O’Neill’s "The Emperor[Jones” starring Paul Robeson. Pre-Igpnted by the Politics Club In Judd1126 ( 5835 S. Klmbark av.) at 6:1 , 8Itnd 9:45. Price (Including tax) 60c.JCTURE—Intervarsity Christian Fel-Ijowshlp. presents Dr. A1 Brlghtblllipeaking on "Personal Prayer.” Sun^rlor, tlilrd floor of Ida Noyes; 12:30-1:20 p.m.^LITICS CLUB—Meeting: election ofIcfflcers, business, followed by a dls-Icusslon on Russia led by Justin Gross-Inian, 8 p.m., Ida Noyes, everyone In-Ulted.IfrMAN club—^Meeting; Miss James,chairman of the German departmentI’lll speak on "American Student inVlilcago, the German Student infrrankfort; a Comparison.” Refresh-Iments will follow. Wleboldt Commons,!:30 p.m. PUBLIC LECTURE—.Senator Paul HDouglas will speak on "Parties, PoU-tlclans and Pressure Groups.” Thefirst of Channlng Club’s Thomas Jef¬ferson lectures. Rockefeller Chapel,8 p.m.HILLEL—The Fireside Group continuesits series on Great Books in the Jew¬ish Tradition with J. Coert Blyaardamspeaking on the Book of Job. HiUelFoundation, 5715 Woodlawn, 8:30 p.m.DEBATE—The Student Forum sponsorsfour debates of Wheaton College vs.UC Jr. Varsity at Law North, LawSouth, Law Court, and Soc, Sci. 106at 7:30 p.m.PUBLIC LECTURE—Federal Judge Wil¬liam J. Campbell speaks on "KnowYour Chicago: the Administration ofJustice.” Sponsored by the Woman’sCollege Board in cooperation withthe University College, DowntownCenter, Club Room, the Art Instituteof Chicago, 11 a.m.MATHEMATICAL BIOLOGY MEETING—"Geometrico-statlstlcal Problems inMicroscopic Anatomy”: Hans Ellas,Assistant Professor of Anatomy, Chi¬cago Medical School, will speak. 5741Drexel av., 4:30 p.m.Hobby HouseOUR HOBBY . . . TASTY FOOD— Honorably Priced —STEAKS - WAFFLES - CHEESEBERGERSOpen Down Till Down53rd at Kenwood 63rd at DorchesterStony Island at 67Hi Saturday, Nov. 18MOVIE — Alexander Nevsky, presentedby YPA. in.Soc. 122, at 7:15 and 9:15.Admission 60c.SQUARE DANCE — SO sponsors SadteHawkins’ Day. Ida Noyes, 8 to 11. Re¬freshments. Admission 3Sc.DISCUSSION—Sponsored by the U of CChapter, Society for General Seman¬tics, Ida Noyes Hall, at 2 p.m.UNIVERSITY THEATRE — FAUST: AMASQUE and NO EXIT, Mandel Hall,8:30 p.m., admission 70c.INTERNATIONAL HOUSE HOP from 10p.m. to 1 a.m. The affair is semi-formal and admission is $1 per person.• * *Sunday, Nov. 19ART EXHIBITION — E. Ben Delmanoriginal paintings, at Hlllel Foun¬dation, 5715 Woodlawn.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE —Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 11. TheReverend Wallace W. Robbins, Asso¬ciate Dean of the Chapel.LECTURE—The Wranglers present RoseHum Lee af Roosevelt College on theSlum Problem in Society. UniversityChurch, at 7.LECTURE—"Medical Missions in East¬ern Europe,” Prof, Ralph Gerard,sponsored by Channlng Club, in JohnW o o 1 m a n Hall, First UnitarianChurch, 57th at Woodlawn. Supper6 p.m., 50c, no reservations. Programat 7 p.m.MEETING—Channlng Glee Club meetsat 5, In parlcM’, First Unitarian Church.UNIVERSITY THEATRE — FAUST: AMASQUE and NO EXIT, Mandel Hall,3:30 p.m., admission 35c, 8:30 p.m.,admission 70c.REGATTA — sponsored by ColumbiaYacht Club, schools coming — NotreDame, De Pauw, Purdue, I. I. T.,Northwestern, and Chicago. NOYES BOX—By Student Union, inIda Noyes Hall, 8-11. Admission, men35c; others 10c.EPISCOPAL COMMUNION SERVICE —Joseph Bond Chapel, 8:30 ajn. 'EXHIBITION OF THE DEAD SEASCROLLS — (Oriental Institute) — Anexhibition of Biblical scrolls, over2,000 years old. By courtesy of HisGrace the Syrian Archbishop of Jeru¬salem, Mar Athanasius Yeshue Sam¬uel. 11 a.m.-lO p.m., dally, throughNovember 26.RADIO BROADCAST—U of C RoundTable, WMAQ and NBC. 12:30-1 p.m. RECORD CONCERT — Turkish music:sponsored by the Non-Western MusioSociety, Soc. Sci. 122. 3:30-5:30 p.m.f R. E. $U9S, B.S. in M.E., George Washingston Univertity, 1948, doing mechanical re-"oearch to improve madiine design. Hiaeptieal-Ait microscope measures svarfoeescratches as fine as 20 millionths of an inch.AT DU PONT TTCY FIGUtE IMPORTANTIY M RIANT NBDSStudying product dovolopmont in a n^ary dryerare: H. J, Kamack, B.S. in Ch.E., GeorgiaInstitute of Technology, 1941; arid F. A.Oluckert, B.S. in Ch.E., Penn State, 1940.Because Du Pont is a chemicaloiMnpany, you might expect mostof its technical men to be chemists.Actually, there are more engineexsthan ch^nists at Du Pont. In each ofthe ten manufacturing departmentsthere is important work for mentrained in chemical, mechanical,electrical, metallurgical and otherbranches of engineering.These departments operate muchas independent units with their ownresearch, development, productionand sales staffs. In their respectivefields, they do fundamental and ap¬plied research on both processes andproducts. Sometimes engineers par¬ticipate in the early stages of a proj¬ect. More often, however, they enter.the incture when the project hasmoved to the point where commer¬cial production is considered. Theysee it through the pilot plant andsemi-works stages and assemble data ChMkint componuni for machine used to finishrolls to hi^ degree of precision: Donald F.Miller, B.S. in M.E., Lehi^, 1950; and AlbertW.G. Ervine, M.S. in M.E., Michigan, 1950.necessary for the full-scale plant.Even after manufacturing has be-giln, development work is continuedto standardize and improve the proc¬ess. Normally, engineers whose maininterest is production and i^ant op¬eration take over when the worksstage is reached.Engineers on tiie technical salesstaffs help maintain contact betweenDu Pont and its cummers. Theypresent data on new products andguide customers in process develop¬ment and similar problems. Theyalso use their technical knowledge inmaking surveys of possible marketsfor the Company’s products.In addition to the manufacturinggroups, the Du Pont EngineeringDepartment—a central staff organi¬zation—requires engineers with manytypes of training. This Departmentcarries on its own program of funda¬mental and applied research. It also R. L. SiMrns, B.S. in (A.E., Yale, 1949;andH.Peterson, B.S. in Ch.E., Northeastern Univer¬sity, 1942, checking a multi-stage carbon-mon¬oxide compressor used for making methanol.makes site investigations, lays outand designs new plants and labora¬tories for the manufacturing depart¬ments. It serves th^n in research onprocess development,, on materialsof construction and on methods ofmeasurement and control.Yes, engineers figure importantlyat Du Pont. Through their teamworkwith chemists, physicists and othertrained personnel, the Du Pont Com¬pany produces its "Better Things forBetter Living...through Chemistry.’*S. PAT. Off.BETTER THINGS FOR BETTER LIVINGi,,THIlOUGH CHEMISTkYEntertaining, Informative—Listen to "Cavalcade ofAmerica.” Tuesday Nights, NBC Coast to Coast Wednesday, Nov. 22UNIVERSITY BAHA’I FELLOWSHIP —presents "Baha’i Proofs of PersonalImmorality” by Nancy Dobbins. IdaNoyes Hall, North Reception Room,7:30 p.m.MOVIE — Color documentary films re¬viewing Teheran, Yalta and Potsdamdecisions and their relation to U. S.policy In Korea. The Young Repub¬licans are showing this at Ida Noye»at 7:15 p.m.Mondoy, Nov. 20CHARLES WALGREEN FOUNDATIONLECTURE—David Morris Potter, Pro¬fessor of American History, Yale Uni¬versity, speaks on "Economic Abun¬dance and American Character: Oldand New Concepts of National Char¬acter.” Soc. Sci. 122, 4:30 p.m.MOVIE—“Fame Is the Spur,” a Britishfilm, shown at International House,8 p.m. Admission charged.Tuesday, Nov. 21DISCUSSION—“The Meaning of Friend¬ship,” role-playing and discussion ledby Dean Ruth McCarn. Sponsored bythe Student Christian Association,Ida Noyes Alumnae Room, 7:30 p.m.Everyone Invited.BIBLE DISCUSSION—Intervarsity Chris¬tian Fellowship discussing the Bookof Mark. Ida Noyes Hall, North Re¬ception Room, 7:30-8:30 p.m.TOUR OF HULL HOUSE—Sponsored bySocial Responsibility Committee. Alsoshort talk on "How Interracial Ten¬sion Is Combatted In a CommunityCenter.” For reservations call MI 3-2189 after 3:30. Thursday, Nov. 23Thanksgiving — a Uni¬versity Holiday. 'Exhibit raremanuscriptsA Chicago showing of theDead Sea scrolls — the OldTestament manuscriptswhose recent discovery byshepherds pushed back by1,000 years knowledge of theHebrew Bible—will be sponsoredby the Oriental Institute from No¬vember 18 to 26.His Grace, the Syrian Archbish¬op of Jerusalem, Mar AthansiusYeshu Samuel, head of the SyrianOrthodox Monastery of St. Markin Jerusalem, where the scrollswere brought, will personally ex¬hibit the four scrolls found in1947 in a barren region northeastof Bethlehem.The exhibition presents for thefirst time all the scrolls broughtto America, a full pictorial recordof the location and the excavationof the scroll cave, examples of thejars and. the cloth wrappings inwhich the scrolls were preserved,and reproductions of other manu¬scripts from the same cave nowin Israel and England.The scrolls, the earliest knownmanuscripts of the entire Biblicalbook of Isiah, dating it is believedaround the first century B.C., acommentary on the Book of Ha-bakkuk, a discipline manual, anda mystery scroll, not yet unwound,will be previewed by Chicago mem¬bers and friends of the OrientalInstitute at 8:30 p.m. November17.Public exhibition of the scrollswill be held daily November 18 to26, from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. TheMuseum will be open Thanksgiv¬ing Day.Pound by two Arab shepherds ina cave south of Jericho, the Isiahmanuscript and fragments ofnumerous other documents hadbeen sealed in jars for more than2,000 years.Classified AdsFOR SALENEW $1,000 BIrACK Persian coat for $600.Also white fur upper wrap for $65. Rea¬son? Going south. KEnwood 6-U15.ROYAL QUIET deluxe portable. Custommade with German, Spanish, Frenchsymbols. Special dead keys. Substantialsavings on other typewriters. HY 3-8885.SENSIBLE SUGGESTIONS, real savings.Christmas cards, cosmetics, other gifts.HY 3-8885.NO OPPORTUNITY cmnparable to oursfor rings, watches, silverware, otherjewelry. HY 3-8885.PUR COATS, suits, overcoats. Univer¬sity discounts. HY 3-8885.A SIX-MONTH wait may be too late!Save now on new and used cars. HY3-8885.SELLING: BOOKCASES; mahoganydesk; English girl’s bicycle; Zenith PMand AM; Hawaiian guitar; EncyclopediaBritannlca. HY 3-8885.LINGUAPHONE FRENCH record course,$35. Argus C-3 camera, flash, Hght meter,$40. Jensen bass-reflex walnut speakercabinet, $35. Mimeograph machine, costnew $65, only $30. Plve-foot woodencabinet $10. Small filing cabinet, $2.Metal typewriter table. $2. Have furni¬ture for small apartment, cost newover $300, only $75. Leaving city. Mar¬shall, WA 4-2005.MISCELLANEOUSLOST BETWEEN Mandel Hall and Bur-ton-Judson dorm on evening of Nov. 2,a 17-Jewel Lugerne waterproof, anti- ,magnetic, shock-protected waten. Finderplease contact Byron Rainey, 735 Bur-ton-Judson. Reward.EXPRESS; Light and heavy moving;, willing and courteous service: reason¬able rates. Bordone, HY 3-1915.YOU CAN rent an electric refrigeratorfor $4-$5.50 per month. PU 5-8824.QIRL TO baby-sit several nights aweek in exchange for room and board.Betty Fountzine, 1366 E. 61st.THE CHICAGO MAROON November 17, 195Store Hours, 9:16 to 5:45ijimou? romctnces'■tricot wentmoral all for the wantof a giftfrom Field^s!Love was just a side line to Mectea:patricide, regicide, {raticide, Komicide,cliildicide. And ifs no wonder,as long as Jason insisted on (ailing inlove slieep (irst, and Medea wasnaturally a(raid lie’d take it on tke lumand sKe’d te (leeced. Now i{ she’dkeen smart, she would have hastenedto Jason with a gift from Field’sand tethered the old goat (or good.: qou never lee s'lJe tracked wi tU gift |tom peltI