SG president testifies againstseditious activities probe gretifTGlee Club to sponsor 'Sing'celebrating end of quarterThe new University Glee Club announces a special hourlong end-of-the-quarter “Sing” for this Sunday, March 11 by Dave Zimmermonat five o’clock. All singers on campus are invited to leave their w^‘"? **£”* *£« ET^T Committeeon Military and Veteran Affairs Rogerbooks for an hour and join in the fun. Music will be provided. chal.r.man. of ACCLC, testified Tuesday, against House Bill 96 (the McClintock, , ,iD_,. „ , -,v , ,, . , . , Bill), which would set up in Illinois a commission to investigate seditipus activities.Brahm s Requiem choruses will be the special feature. Accompanying Woodworth to Springfield was an ACCLC - sponsored delegation of 40The “Sing” will warm up on folk songs and then after an students. Included in this group were members of the steering committee of ACCLC, andinitial look at the trickier placesin the “Requiem” sing throughthree of four of its choruses. Sep¬arate pianos will follow voiceparts and the orchestral accom¬paniment. Members of other cam¬pus choral groups are especiallywelcome at this informal eventopen to everyone.University Glee club, an inde- Aero schedules new show Birenbaum offfor weekend of April 6,7,8 on honeymoonThe UC Acrotheater’s new show, “Midnight Phantasy,”scheduled for April 6, 7 and 8, is rapidly taking form underpendent student organization the direction of “Bud” Beyer and Mrs. John Lindsay. The(formally under Channing club Acros hope to surpass their smash hit production of “Thesponsorship), continues to meetin its own room at the Unitarianchurch on 57th and Woodlawn.Team is secondin sivim contestThe UC swimming team lastSaturday finished second in thefourth annual Chicago Intercol¬legiate Swimming Meet in Bart¬lett pool. Chicago won the pre¬vious three tournaments.De Paul scored 69 points to win.Chicago scored 59. Loyola wasthird with 48.The Maroons’ 300-yard medleyrelay team turned in a time of3:07.1 to set a new meet record.Gordon Ralph set a new recordin the 200-yard backstroke in thepreliminaries, swimming the dis¬tance in 2:24.9.Ash Krug won the breaststroke and the 120-yard individualmedley. Sammons of DePaul wasleading scorer in the meet, takingthree first places. William Birenbaum, UC direc¬tor of student activities, today ison his way to Florida with hisbride of less than 24 hours.Birenbaum and Helen Bloch, aMagic Rope,” which two years ago won them national recog- student in the social sciences,nition and a Life article.The new production has a castof over 75 and over 100 costumes.The love story forrrling the basisof the plot will be told throughthe media of adagio, ballet, tumb¬ling, aireal work, acrobatics, andtrampoline work. There is a musi¬cal background.Proceeds to settlementProceeds will go to the UC Set¬tlement.The setting of the story is alarge, ultra-modern departmentstore after closing time. Toyscome to life in a fantastic dreamsequence. The musical score willbe played by Jack Cavan and hisEdgewater Beach Hotel orchestra.Student ducats on saleA limited number of $1.00 stu¬dent tickets for the Apr. 7 performance are available. Otherprices are as follows: Apr. 6, 7, 8—8:30 p.m. — general admissionand children, $1.50; reserved seats $2.25. Apr. 8—2 p.m. matinee—children $1; general admission$1.50.Tickets are now on sale in MissSaunders’ office, Reynolds Club202. There are no COD’s or re¬funds. SU is assisting in ticketsale and promotion.Voice of HutchinsRubinstein Records, an enter¬prise undertaken by Dan Rubin¬stein, a UC college student, willissue Chancellor Hutchin’s fare¬well address in long playing rec¬ord form, at the beginning ofnext week. The record will be $5,obtainable on order from ManlyHouse, room 36. were married late yesterday inceremonies at the Beth MidrashHagodol temple. Dean of Stu¬dents Robert M. Strozier acted asbest man.A reception at the WindemereEast, attended by close to 150relatives and close friends, fol¬lowed the ceremony. The bride isa member of the Mortar Boardwomen’s club.The couple will return from ahoneymoon in Florida and Cubaon March 27.Close quarterThis is the last MAROON thisquarter. The first issue of theSpring quarter will appear an Fri¬day, March 30. other observers.Woodworth uses "People Shall Judge*Stressing the idea that “onlythrough the free competition ofideas can enlightened citizensmake a democratic choice in is¬sues of government,” Woodworthused as an example The PeopleShall Judge, Soc. Sci. 1 syllabus,which presents various argu¬ments on an issue, and allows thestudent to draw his own conclu¬sions on the basis of the materialpresented.Despite other testimony againstthe bill, which included shortspeeches by a member of the Na¬tional Students Association, anda member of the American Asso¬ciation of University Professors,among others, the bill, which wassupported only by the AmericanLegion, was voted onto the housefloor by a vote of 18-4.Representative Noble W. Lee(Rep.) from the University ofChicago district, was one of thosewho voted for passing the bill.Twc stay overAllen Coleman, and Frank Lo¬gan stayed in Springfield overnight in order to testify againstSenate Bill 102, a bill which woulddefine communism, and make it afelony. This bill passed 11-0.i Seek fund-raising sourcesto prevent tuition hikeBulletinThe N. S. A. regional conven¬tion will be held at the UC campuson Thursday April 26th and Fri¬day April 27th.v Student Government, by a voteof 24 to 1, passed an act submittedby Lawrence Buttenweiser to theeffect that recognition shall bewithdrawn by Student Govern¬ment from any campus organiza-tion having discriminatoryclauses in their constitutions as of1 October, 1952.Text of S. G. Letter on Tuition RaiseMarch 1, 1951TO ALL STUDENTORGANIZATIONS:Because of the general pricerise since last summer, the ad¬ministration at present believesthat it will be necessary to raisetuition again next year—in theCollege from $561 per year to$600, in the divisions from $576per year to $625, with correspond¬ing increases in the professionalschools.However, Dean Strozier has in-^ dicated that the final decisions onthis matter have not yet beentaken, and that the increase mightbe avoided if the students are ableto present concrete proposals forraising money from new sources,or for the reduction of the ex-see Text, page 2 Student Government, in a meet¬ing held on Wednesday Night ap¬proved, unanimously, the forma¬tion of a seven man committee toinvestigate ways to affect savingsin the UC budget so that tuitionwill not have to be raised.Harold Blumberg, chairman ofthe committee, stated that allstudents are requested to bringto his attention any possible sav¬ings that they feel the universitymight make.Text of the Student Govern¬ment resolution:The Student Government feels that,In lieu of the contemplated raise Intuition, savings can be made In theUniversity costs, savings that would notimpair the normal functioning of theUniversity. Student Government feelsthat students can help indicate wherethese savings can be made. Therefore,be it enacted that the Student Govern¬ment set up a special committee:1. Of seven members, drawn from theStudent Assembly or from outside of it,to be appointed by the President, sub¬ject to the approval of the Assembly.The President shall be one of the sevenmembers of the committee.2. The committee shall receive sug¬gestions from the student body as toposisble savings.3. The committee shall investigatethe feasibility of these suggestions.4. The committee shall meet with theAdministration, at a date not later thanMarch 17, 1951, to point out these sav¬ings and help in putting them intoeffect.5. The committee shall indicate to theUniversity ways of raising additionalfunds in order to lessen the need forthe tuition raise.Submitted byLawrence ButtenwieserMarch 6, 1951 University of Chicago, March 9, 1951to discover title for new opusA jackpot of prizes awaits the University of Chicago stu¬dent who names UC’s new yearbook, it was announced thisweek. In addition, a photo contest, offering weekly prizes tothe best photos submitted, is also under way.Announcement of plans to revive the yearbook after a lapseof more than 10 years was made last week. Gary Steiner,editor-in-chief of the new venture,dress and phone number shouldaccompany each entry.Outline photo contestThe photo contest, announcedthis week by photo editor Art Par¬sons, offers a carton of Chester¬fields to the best picture sub¬mitted each week for publicationin the yearbook. In addition, agrand prize of $10 will go to thebest photo of all. Photos may besubmitted at the yearbook office,Reynolds 304.'For savan loan years hath the famineConst thou foreea • way out?" increased on my people eh Joseph. ROTC forum Yearbook announces contestsparked byfiery debateThe major clash of last Fri¬day’s NPSL-sponsored forum onmobilization was over the ques¬tion of setting up an air ROTCon campus. Dean of StudentsRobert M. Strozier pointed outthat the administration has takenneither side of the argument, butis sounding out student opinionon the matter.' To anti-ROTC student DonaldW. Clark, whose views appear ina letter on page four, Strozierpointed out that it was the armywhich dropped ROTC at the Uni¬versity, not former ChancellorHutchins. Hutchins, said Strozier,has made no statement as towhere he stands on having anROTC unit on campus at present.He felt that it was therefore in¬correct to attribute any positionto Hutchins.SG sets limit onelection spendingNew rules for Student Govern¬ment election campaign expenseswere adopted at the regular SGmeeting Tuesday, February 27.Under the new system a singleparty can not spend more than$125, and an independent candi¬date cannot spend more than $12if he is in the college or socialscience division or more than $10if he is in another division or pro¬fessional school.Additional rules were draftedto control expenditures in thecoming NSA election. For thisApril election a group cannotspend more than $7 per candi¬date, and not more than $100total. Individual candidates mayspend up to $15. states there are still a few open¬ings for staff members.The student submitting the bestname for the new yearbook willreceive a long list of prizes worthclose to $30, it is announced.Prizes include:List prize jackpotChicken dinner for two at theTropical Hut; choice of any 78r.p.m. record album in stock atHerman’s Record Shop; a cartonof Chesterfield cigarettes; a copyof James Joyce’s Finnegan’sWake from the Red Door Bookshop; two tickets to the comedy,“Happiest Days of Your Life,” atthe Surf theater, and a ChesterDanforth color etching of Rocke¬feller chapel from the UC Book¬store.In addition, students whose en¬tries place second and third in thename contest will each receive acarton of Chesterfield cigarettes.Contest rules disclosedThe name contest is open to anyUC student. Students may sub¬mit only one name each. In caseof a tie, the entry first receivedwill be considered for the awards.If the winning name is one sub¬mitted by a Yearbook staff mem¬ber, he or she will receive a car¬ton of Chesterfields only and therest of the prize list will go to thesecond prize winner.Contest closes Wednesday,March 21.Entries may be submitted atthe Reynolds club desk, in theyearbook office, room 304, Rey¬nolds club, or in the yearbook boxin Mandel corridor. Name, ad- Mermen defend crownThe JV Swimming team will de¬fend its PSL championship in theBartlett pool today at 3:30 p.m.The JV’s have won eleven straightPSL titles, winning every tourna¬ment since the league was founded.Admission to the meet is free.Quarterlies out,may be resumedNo college quarterlies arescheduled for this term, thoughthere are going to be examina¬tions in some classes during classhours, it was announced by F.Champion Ward, Dean of the Col¬lege. Dean Ward’s release alsomentioned as probable that onequarterly period will be missednext year, though to date no finaldecision has been made*.The resolution was taken by thestaff chairmen and college deansin order to save money, to reducethe overemphasis on quarterlygrades and segments of courses,and to make more time availablefor the actual teaching itself.Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON March 9, 1951Federalist peace pollresults summarizedEighty-four per cent of the UC faculty and 65 per cent ofits student body think that changes in American foreign policycan significantly reduce the possibility of a third world war,a recent foreign policy appraisal poll conducted by the UnitedWorld Federalists revealed. Present U. S. foreign policymakes war probable or inevitable, 86 per cent said.A majority of those who voiced ~an opinion on formation of a Th fifteen point questionairewestern German army were was mailed to 293 persons on Feb.against it. 19. Forty-six per cent of the stu-Oppose bombing Manchuria dents and 25 per cent of the fac-Students favored peace talks ujt repiiecjmore than faculty. Seventy per Interesting work found inmath-biology groupby Arthur BiermanA converted apartment house on Drexel avenue serves asthe home of one of the smallest committees of the University:the Committee on Mathematical Biology.This committee was originally conceived and organized Your Photo for EasterRICHARD M. STEVENSPhotographerGraduations - ApplicationsPhotostats - Passports - Portraits6319 WoodlawnPhone Ml 3-8797Eves. & Sundays by AppointmentMember N.S.A. Association‘There’s Photographic ExcellenceStevens-Style Study”In Aby its present head, ProfessorNicolas Rashevsky. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII9IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHcent of the students and 45 percent of the faculty favored moreinitiative by Trunjan to talk di- Text...(from page 11rectly to Stalin. Acceptance of penses of the University, in anythe Peiping government’s offer of area.a Korean cease fire and seven Student Government is there-power conference on Asian af- fore contacting every organiza-fairs was advocated by 50 per tion on campus, to request mostcent of the students and 40 per urgently that any idea or infor-cent of the faculty. mation, on however large or smallOn bombing Manchuria, the stu- a scale, which might be useful indents were 14 per cent in favor, reducing the cost of operating the70 per cent opposed, and 16 per University be forwarded to our of-cent had no opinion. The faculty fiee before March 10, in orderwas 8 per cent in favor, 86 per that our proposals may be pre-cent opposed, and four per cent sented to the Administration be-had no opinion. A majority fa- fore the decision is irrevocablyvored stopping at the 38th parallel made.in hopes of a cease fire. The implications of the pro-Think Matthews should be dumped posed increase in tuition, andTo the question “Do you think their effect on large numbers ofwe could militarily win a World students, are too obvious to re-War III?” the students and fac- quire extended comment, andulty were in agreement, half say- student Government will makeing yes, one fourth no, and one every effort to co-ordinate all sug-fourth with no opinion. gestions sent to it, in order to pre-The majority of students and sent a practical plan for reducing Biology not statisticsMany persons not acquaintedwith the field often assumethat mathematical biologist areconcerned with statistics. Actu¬ally,statistical methods of dataevaluation are explicitly excludedfrom the committee and its pub¬lication, The Bulletin of Mathe¬matical Biology.What the Department tries todo is to apply physico-mathemati-cal methods to biological phe¬nomena, by setting up theoreticalbiological systems in mathemati¬cal language and developing theirimplications. Often these theo¬retical results are checked againstknown experimental data and attimes have even been used to pre¬dict data not yet available.faculty expressing an opinionthought Sec’y. of the Navy Mat¬thews should be removed from of¬fice for advocating a preventivewar.Believe world government not feasible80 per cent of the students andfaculty wanted the government tosupport land reform and othereconomic measures rather thanthe status quo “in non-democraticcountries.” A large majoritythought that such a policy inChina would have made the gov¬ernment “more democratic andless dependent on Russia.”Three fourths of students andfaculty favored world govern¬ment, but thought it was notfeasible now or in the nearfuture. expenses to the Administration.Sincerely,Roger H. WoodworthPresident, StudentGovernment Nerve excitation studiedOne of the most developed the¬ories along these lines originatedby Rashevsky and developed byother members of the committee,is a theory of cell division.Another field widely explored bythe committee has been that ofnerve excitation. Good correla¬tions have been achieved betweenresults obtained from abstractmodels of nerves having only cer¬tain physical properties, and theresults received from experimen¬tal measurements.For the third consecutive summer, STS presents itsEuropean Student Flight ProgramChicago «• Paris *445 Round TripNew York f Paris *395 Round TripStudent tours to all parts of the worldStudent Travel Service Ltd.1540 E. 57th St. MUseum 4-7320Open Thursday until 9, all day Saturday, and Sunday 1-5Easter ReadingHERE I STANDby Roland BaintonA life of Martin Luther. .4.75THE BELIEF IN PROGRESSby John Ba i I lieIn what sense, if any, canthe belief be justified?. ..2.75THE THEOLOGY OFALBERT SCHWEITZERby E. N. MozleyIncludes Schweitzer's ownepilogue which is a master¬ly statement of his religiousthinking 2.00A LIFE OF JESUSby Edgar J. GoodspeedCombines literary charm,critical integrity, and truereligious fervor 3.00THE ART OFCOURAGEOUS LIVINGby John A. O'BrienShows the conditionsbreed fear, and the thatatti¬tudes which beget courage. 2.50LIFT UP YOUR HEARTby Fulton J. Sheen. .3.00See special Easter Displaysat theUniversity of ChicagoBookstore5802 Ellis Avenue Lowe’s RadioChicago’s Largest andMost Complete Stock ofLp Records★THETEMPTEST: William ShakespeareComplete Recording with Raymond Massey, HurdHatfield, Margaret Phillips, and others.Directed by Richard Barr.PR-5001-2—$14.50ROMEO and JULIET: William ShakespeareComplete Recording with Dennis King,Eva Gallienne, and others. $14.50BEETHOVEN: Violin ConcertoFrancescatti, violinPhiladelphia Orchestra—Ormandy, Cond.ML-4371—$5.45MOZART: Ei ne Kleine NachtmusikSymphony No. 33Herbert Von Karajan Conducting theVienna Philharmonic Orch.ML-4370—$5.45RACHMANINOFF: Concerto No. 3 for Piano andOrch. Witold Malcuzynski, pianoThe Philharmonia OrchestraConducted by Paul KletzkiML-4369—$4.85SUSAN REED: Songs of The AuvergneML-4368—$5.45Lowe’s Radioand Lp Records1217 E. 55th St. PL 2-4361BiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiBiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiFEMININE CONSENSUS:ARROWSHIRTSare the smoothest on campus lEvery man looks his best in Arrow shirts . . . madewith the best looking, most comfortable collar stylesin the country. Mitoga cut to fit perfectly . . .Sanforized-labeled to keep that fit. Pick your favoriteshere today.GORDON BUTTON-DOWN “PAR” WIDESPREADCrisp white oxford $4<.50 Fine broadcloth $3.95 An Arrow ShirtMakes A Man Look His BestIn The Easter Parade!Before you leave for Easier vacation, besure to get a supply of your favoriteArrow white shirts and Arrow ties . . •at your Arrow dealer now!Shirts $3.95 up Ties $1 up ij(ff\ARROW SHIRTS &TIESUNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS -• SPORTS SHIRTS/—FOR ARROW UNIVIRSITY STYLIS51 March 9, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3its Student Union elects officersto serve for coming quartersStudent Union officers for the next three quarters wereelected at the regular meeting last Tuesday.Hugh Brodkey is the new president, Robert-Gutchen is ex¬ecutive vice-president, Lois Carlson is administrative vice-president, and Ernest Helides is treasurer. The election of asecretary was postponed. . ,,James Oates, Michael Wein- Organization ottersberg, Jr., Jost Baum, and Mae . .Svoboda, who has been acting research in Europepresident since the resignation oftarl Nielsen, were elected alumniadvisers.Student Union was organized in3945 for the purpose of increasingstudent activities. Its purposes,as stated in the Union’s handbook,are: “The maximization of aslarge a recreational schedule ascan be handled, with emphasis ona program which (will) integratethe academic and extra-curricu¬lar phases of student life; inter¬est prospective and present stu¬dents, as well as faculty, alumniand the public in the opportuni¬ties presented; and provide any►appropriate service that wouldtend to encourage a closer, moreenjoyable, and more successfulcommunity life.”Said President Brodkey, follow¬ing his election, “I would like toencourage students to drop intothe Student Union offices at any£ime to become more familiar withL" the internal operations of StudentUnion.”Books that speak forPEACEPEOPLE'S CHINEfrom Peking bi-monthly15cCommunity Book Shop1404 55th Ml 3-0567Huy it tor Easter . , ,An Egg in a BasketWhat Is It?SILLY PUTTYSilly Putty is a real solid liquid.If you shape it round, it bounceshigher than a rubber ball.If you press it over your funnypaper, it picks up a per¬fect picture, in color.If you pull it slowly, it stretcheslike taffy, butIf you tug it quickly, it breaks.If you hit it with a hammer, itshatters like glass, andIf you let it alone, it settlesslowly and majesticallyinto a tired little puddle.• Silly Putty has a newEaster basket• Grand for sifts, prizes• Pleases chUdren from7 to 70TheHazel Hoff Shop1377 E. 55th St.HYde Park 3-8180AAAAAAAAAAAAAA^► AAAAASP/iecta/ ffffwMalionfot {jfjfvun# "Pcuxi/ionYou are invited to visit a Katha¬rine Gibbs School during yourvacation. See for yourself thepleasant, stimulating atmospherein which young women are taughtsecretarial skills. You are welcomeany time. No appointment neces¬sary. And no obligation, of course.Tor illustrated catalog,address College Course DeanFjatli arineSECRETARIAL Qilk:NEW YORK 17 230 Park Avene*CHICAGO 11.... SI East Superior StreetBOSTON 16 90 Marlborough StreetMONTCLAIR. N. J....33 Plymouth StreetPROVIDENCE 6 ISS Angell Street Opportunities for specializedindividual research in Europeduring the summer are being of¬fered by the International Re¬search Fund, a non-profit or¬ganization designed to stimulateinterest in present day worldproblems.Under its program students willspend six and one-half weeks in aWestern European country oftheir choice and then will tourthrough other countries for tendays.Further information can be ob¬tained by writing to InternationalResearch Fund, Inc., Holywell,Oxford, England.Group asks women Hugh Brodkey Home nursingcourse offeredCollege students may sign upnow for Red Cross courses inhome nursing care which will be¬gin April 10 at the Sinai Com¬munity Center, 5350 South ShoreDrive.There will be classes Tuesdaysand Thursdays Tit 10 a.m. and1:30 p.m. and Tuesdays at 7:30p.m. The series includes six two-hour lessons. This free RedCross service is recommended byCivilian Defense.Students may enroll by signinga blank at the Sinai Center or bycalling the Red Cross office,WAbash 2-7850, Ext. 60.to attend polo game measures the Federal govern-iv UI,V,IW rwlw j v ment is usiner in its ceaseless 8:30 groupbegins castingof Shaw playFollowing a reorganization inwhich Mike Nichols and OmarShapli were named co-producersto replace Rennie Anselmo, whoresigned because of pressure ofstudies, Tonight at 8:30 has sched¬uled trycuts for G. B. Shaw’s“Androcles and the Lion” Mon¬day from 7 to 10 p.m. in IdaNoyes.The group plans to stage thistwo-act play and another opus,yet to be determined, during thespring quarter.Speakers at conference weighmeasures of law enforcementby Ralph M. GorenHow can we stamp out criminal activity in the United States?This was one of the major questions discussed last Friday by the Conference on CriminalLaw Enforcement. This conference was the second in a series sponsored by the Law Schooland included such well-known law enforcement students as J. Howard McGrath, Max Low-enthal and Virgil Peterson.McGrath, as Attorney General of the United States, presented an overall view of thement is using in its ceaseless crimes committed in aircraft over committee has unearthed. HalleyThe Red Cross has requested 25 war against crime. The most the high seas and sabotage to presented some reasons whyCollege women to collect contri- important revelation made at the commercial aircraft in peacetime, crime was flourishing in America,butions at polo matches Satur- meeting was the new legislation ^0ns meth0ds harmful He blamed primarily “buck pass-day, Mar. 31, in the Armory. Any the government is seeking. t^wpnthai author of Thp Fpd- ing” on the part of law enforce*students who are interested and immil„it> fot wi(nc„„ e^"'oSt Jtol fc me,nt. and Particularlywho will be available during the ™ , , ,, enu , , U1 , ’ . criticised the various sheriff s of-sprint- interim should contact „ The,maJ°r bill proposed by the agreed with such methods as wire f, whlch wcre lound enerallP S Department of Justice is an act tapping and arrests without war- ,0 ^ anachronlstlc ^efficientto allow the Attorney General to rants. He claimed that espionage and even corruptgrant immunity to persons who and treasonable crimes could be p *will testify and present evidence solved just as successfully usingagainst criminals and subver- presently available processes andsives. methods. He contended thatMiss Saunders in the ReynoldsClub.1AUSTAID %m ■ HUKMST MJTHUFMHappiestDays of Your life >90 minutes of waggishwhimsical —delight. \10jToday at: 4:30, 8:I0, 10:00and "Gerald MeBolng Bolng" »' ’“"'VS. Describes war on KKKOther speakers included DanielDuke, former assistant attorneygeneral of Georgia, who describedAnother proposed bill would “softening up” witnesses and ille- his war on the KKK and battlesallow the FBI and Armed Forces gal police acts only resulted in reIntelligence to tap telephone versals in appellate courts andwires and introduce such evidencein a court of law. Other impor¬tant legislation would deal with were harmful to our democraticinstitutions.The chief counsel for the Ke-fauver committee, Rudolph Hal¬ley, described the extensive em-J. Paul Sheedy* Switched to Wildroot Cream-OilBecause He Flunked The Finger-Nail Test pire of rackets and vice that his Illinois.”for civil liberties in the South;Donald S. Leonard and O. W. Wil¬son who talked on law enforce¬ment on local levels; J. D. Loh-man, Virgil Peterson and MilbumAkers, who talked on “Law En¬forcement and Public Opinion inROOR Paul was having a fowl time because hie down was up.All the chicks made wise quacks about his upswept hairdountil his shellmata suggested he duck over to the di^igstore.“Waddle I do?” he asked. “Get Wildroot Cream-Oil!” thedruggist answered.“Non-alcoholic. Made with soothing lanolin.Grooms your hair neatly and naturally without that plastered-down look. Removes ugly ducklings — I mean ugly dandruff IHelps pass the fingernail teat!” Now he’s engaged—he’a lovely—he uses ponds—to swim in! (Isn’t he decoy one?) So wateryou waiting for? Get a tube or bottle of Wildroot Cream-OilHair Tonic at any drug or toilat goods counter today. Ask yourbarber for professional applications. And tel! all your webfootedfriends it’a eggzactly what the ducktor ordered Iof 327 Burroughs Dr., Snyder, N. Y.Wildroot Company, Inc., Buffalo 11, N. Y.GET IT ATReader’sTHE CAMPUS DRUG STORE61st and Ellis Opposite B-J CtI*Page 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON March 9, 1951Peace, pure and simple'1—Robert Maynard HutchinsIssued once weekly by the publisher, The Chicago Maroon, at the publicationoffice, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: EditorialOffice, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1012; Business and Advertising Offices Midway3-0800, Ext. 1011. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions by mail, $4 per year.CHARLES GARVINEditor-in-Chief LEROY WOLINSBusiness ManagerMemberPlssocicrted Collegiate PressCopy Editor: A1 Kimmel.Page Editors: Fred Wlnsberg, John Grimes, Walter Gerash, Arnold Task, RobertMarch.Associate Page Editors: Joan Levey, Gary Bahr, Jan Majde, Nancy Oates, BlossomWeskamp.Associate Copy Editors: Joan Brennard, Marilyn Chambers, Jane Nyberg.Training Director: John Hurst.Public Relations Staff: Velma Slaughter, Marilyn Evans..Photographers: Dave Sher. Bruce Kellick.Staff Artists: Peter Gourfain, John Hogan, Irwin Levinson.Literary Editor: Hillel Black.Assistant Business Manager: Dave Canter.Advertising Manager: Ken Tillin.Business Associate: Don Ginsberg.News Staff: 2. Ellis Shaffer, Gloria Karasik, Enid Sharp. 3. Martin Gendell,Marshall Hartman, John Sevcik, Dave Kliot, Ralph Goren, Mala Dietch,Art Blerman, Heyward Erlich, Russell Block. 5. Alan Tritter, Manny Savas,Anita Tardy, Lois Carlson, Howard Sherman, Edward Drum, Mervyn Adams,Nan Hochberg, John Lindop, Roy Alpert, Jean Jordan. 6. Leo Treitler, NoreenNovlck, Vivian Margaris, Cesar Rotondi, 7. Ken Koenig, Ashby Smith, DaveZimmerman. 8. Vera Sammy. .Support Peace March“Peace pure and simple” is the desire of mankind. A mightygrass roots movement for peace by people from all walks oflife can stem the growing danger of an atomic war. Such amovement is now in the making.Last week 90 UC professors urged Truman to recognizethe People’s Republic of China and then to negotiate withChina to peacefully solve the Far Eastern crisis. Facultymembers from 44 other universities joined the UC signersof the open letter.Polls throughout the nation show that the American peoplewant to abandon the sacrifice of American lives in Korea,and the destruction of that country and its people.In a democracy an incorrect foreign policy can and mustbe corrected by the people.An American Peace Crusade to visit Washington to urgeour representatives to negotiate for peace will take placeMarch 15, 1951. A campus committee to support this cru¬sade has been formed.The MAROON feels that such a peace pilgrimage is longoverdue. Regardless of political beliefs UC students shouldsupport and take part in this venture.Stop a murderWillie McGee again faces the electric chair March 20. Thisis the third attempt by all-white juries of Mississippi to sendthe young Negro to death for a rape committed while he wasseveral miles away.Previous convictions have been set aside due to legal tech¬nicalities. Current efforts to save his life will prove fruit¬less, however, unless much greater popular pressure isbrought to bear.This new threat to McGee’s life comes while the memoryof the Martinsville Seven execution last month on a similarconviction still burns in our minds.Mid-Year GraduatesMake Your Appointment NowFor that Graduation PortraitGowns AvailablePHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETCHOICE WOOLENS A WORSTEDSevery yard laboratory testedSPRING SUITS 37.95 to 44.95SPRING TOPCOATS 37.95 to 42.95SPORT JACKETS 23.95 to 27.95MO CHARGE FOR ALTERATIONS AT 50 HOWARD STORES Begin serieson ROTCThe administration has askedfor student sentiment on thebringing of an Air Corps ROTCunit to the campus. The MA¬ROON hopes to print a cross sec¬tion of student opinion as com¬munications are received. To initi¬ate this series, we reprint thefollowing letter which was firstdistributed in mimeographedform by the writer.Fellow Students in the College:Whether as individuals, or as mem¬bers of a group, we are, during thecourse of our lives constantly calledupon to make decisions, some trivialand some momentous. Our peril today,as for men in all times, lies in lettingourselves be misled and failing to recog¬nize a momentous issue, treating it in¬stead as a trivial one. This is alwaysthe pitfall we must avoid.Hardly has the farewell address of ourdistinguished Chancellor, Robert May¬nard Hutchins, ceased to echo in ourears than we, the members of this col¬lege, are required to make a decisionupon a matter which bears the innocu-220 South State Street6345 So. Hoisted Street 11121 So. Michigan Avenue1613 Belmont Avenue ous label of “ROTC on a college cam¬pus,” but which, if we distinguish be¬tween appearances and realities, weshall find to have serious Implicationsfor everything fundamental which we,as students, ought to cherish.In his farewell address, Mr. Hutchinstold us that here we have a model uni¬versity. This I heartily believe, or Ishould not be here as a student, and Iam confident that most of you feel thesame way. Now since this is a univer¬sity, with all that word implies, thenit naturally follows that it can bestserve society, In either turbulent orpeaceful times, by the fulfillment of itsproper function, education. It can be ofgreatest service to humanity by seekingto cure those diseases of the social or¬ganism of which war and feudalism arebut surface symptoms. Now whateverother parts of the social structure mayproperly concern themselves with thesymptoms, this University must concernitself solely with the disease. This le Itsrightful function, the supreme goal towhich It has long been dedicated. Here¬in lies Its greatest contribution to thenation and to humanity. To ask It tooccupy Itself with the symptoms ofsocial disease Is analagous to requiringan ethical surgeon to treat a patientsuffering with a headache due to braintumor by using aspirin for the headacheinstead of surgery for the tumor.It was a firm and uncompromisingprinciple at the core of Mr. Hutchins’educational philosophy that neitherfootball nor ROTC belonged on thecampus of a true university. It wasmainly as a result of his opposition tothese two forces so antagonistic to edu¬cation that he has been able to build upthis Institution to the stature It has at¬tained: the first time In American his¬tory that a university had the principle and courage to dedicate Itself pureiveducation, despite opposition from hntkwithin and without.Under Mr. Hutchins’ rein there wa»no ROTC on this campus during Wo. mWar II. Nor, in view of his keen understanding of what was essential to main’tanl true education. Is It in any wa»conceivable tha; he would permit \twere he here today, despite draft law.or financial difficulties. A true educitor, no matter what the difficulty hiwould face and solve It without com.premising his principles.Yet today, scarcely after his depar¬ture we are asked to restore ROTCgive our approval to the gradual uu.doing of all the great work he has doneAll moral disintegration must have &start and the time to check It is at iubeginning. Mr. Hutchins, in departingtold us that we did not need him hereany more. At that time we had doubtsbut they have since grown Into fea-s’But he left us a legacy. The principlesto which he resolutely adhered In orderto build this great educational Institu¬tion must by us be Just as steadfastlyupheld If what he has bequeathed to usis to be preserved. We wish he washere to uphold those principles for usbut he Is not here, and therefore it be¬fits us to act Intelligently to recognizeand fulfill the Intellectual and moralobligation of affirming and defendingthose great principles ourselves, by re¬fusing to be bequlled into approval ofROTC, firm In our conviction that by sodoing we are rendering to humanity thehighest service possible, by enabling ouruniversity to contribute that which, un.fortunately, society lacks most—educa¬tion.Donald W. Clark(Student in the College)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 MILDER1. . . Light up a PHILIP MORRIS 2-.. Light up your present brandJust take a puff— DON’T INHALE—and Do exactly the same thing—DON’Ts-l-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 IOther 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 CIGARETTEHANGOVERmeans MORE SMOKING PLEASURE)CALLFOR PHILIP MORRIS:nm9* March 9, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5meet the newOXFORDchamps■ Q stroke:Traditional oxford™ Jmm button-down, in whiteno. ^ man:Ifr Button-down color oxfordno. 3 man:Van Ron collar in Oxford.New, soft, rounded collar, in white onlyno. 4 man:Van Chick Oxford . . . not a stitch insight on collar, cuffs, clean-cut front$450Oxford Circle ties,$1.50Van Heusen shirtsiL "the world's smartest’PHILLIPS.JONES CORP., NEW YORK 1, N. Y. Witness tells of evidencehe gave at French trialby Jan MajdeJerzy Gliksman, author of “Tell the West,” former allegedprisoner in a Russian slave labor camp, and a witness in theRousset trial will lecture on “Slave labor exposed in the Rous-set trial,” according to Leon Lipschitz, chairman of the SYLexecutive committee. The meeting will take place in IdaNoyes library on Sunday at 4 p.m.David Rousset is a radicalis aFrench author, and former in¬mate of a Nazi concentrationcamp. After he proposed to forma commission to investigate allslave labor camps in the worldincluding Russia’s, he was at¬tacked by a pro-Russian paper,Rousset sued the paper for defa¬mation, and won his suit.Gliksman, as a former prisonerin a Russian concentration camp,was asked by Rousset to testifyon his behalf.SHOE REPAIRSubstantial Discountsto Students“IT MUST BE DONE RIGHT’*HOLLIDAY’S DELUXESHOE SERVICE1407 East 61st Street(at Dorchester Ave.)Phone NOrmal 7-8717Two blocks from Inti. HouseWhile-U-Wait or One-Day Service UC cyclotrontried outSatisfactory initial tests of theUC’s synchrocyclotron, giantatom smasher, have been madeafter three and a half years spenton design and construction, Sam¬uel K. Allison, director of the UCInstitute for Nuclear Studies an¬nounced last week.Deuterons, the nuclei of heavyhydrogen atoms, have been ac¬celerated to an energy of 250 mil¬lion electron volts, the highestknown energy ever achieved arti¬ficially with these atomic par¬ticles.★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ACarl Sandburg’s NewAMERICAN SONGBAGPaper $125 Cloth *250CLARK and CLARKBOOKSELLERS1204 E. 55th Street 10'A.M. to 9 P.M. DailySave money... ■%>wGREYHOCfAiOf Co-op offersnew housingA new low-cost cooperativehousing project is scheduled forconstruction in the Hyde Parkarea at* 54th and Dorchester assoon as four more families signup, a UC faculty-student commit¬tee announced this week.Aim of the group is to providethemselves with attractive andadequate housing in Hyde Parkat reasonable cost, and with anopportunity to experiment with anew approach to family living.Students or faculty membersinterested can get further infor¬mation from Anatol Rapoport,campus extension 3687 or SA1-1110.Ask for studentviews on ROTCA questionnaire to determineopinion of men students on a pro¬posed UC air force ROTC unitwas mailed this week by John R.Davey, college dean of students.The survey is being taken to de¬termine how much student sup¬port could be gained for such aunit.A minimum of 200 students isneeded to form such a unit oncampus, Davey announced.SF to holdtriangle meet“Should the non-communist na¬tions of the world form a newworld organization?” is the topicfor debate when the UC meetsDe Paul University and Concor¬dia Teachers in a triangular de¬bate meet to be held Saturday,March 17, at 2:30 in Law North.In addition last week, Maroondebaters, Field and Ward lost adebate to West Point.| TYPEWRITERS |FOR SALEFOR RENTPORTABLES —STANDARDSON TRIPS HOME FORSpring VacationGREYHOUND FARES ARE REALLY LOW! RECONDITIONEDNEWREPAIR SERVICECOMPLETE OVERHAULSEXTRA SAVINGS!BUY AROUND TRIPTICKETAND SAVEAN EXTRA10 PER CENTEACH WAY! CLEVELAND, OHIO . One Way$ 6.95 Round Trip$11.85DAVENPORT, IOWA. 3.20 5.80DES MOINES, IOWA . 7.00 12.60DETROIT, MICH. . . • 3.75 10.35ERIE, PENN. . . . 9.1 S 15.30FORT WAYNE, IND. . 2.90 5.25GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. 4.25 7.65INDIANAPOLIS, IND. . 3.95 7.13MILWAUKEE, WIS. . 1.55 2.80MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL, MINN. . 7.30 13.15MUSKEGON, MICH. . 4.50 8.10NEW YORK, N. Y. . 17.25 27.60PITTSBURGH, PENN. • 9.43 15.40ROCKFORD, ILL. . . • 1.65 2.75ST. LOUIS, MO. . . • 4.95 8.95SIOUX FALLS, S. D. . • 10.30 18.55SPRINGFIELD, ILL. . c 3.30 5.95SOUTH BEND, IND. . • 2.00 3.60TOLEDO, OHIO . . . 4.85 8.75WASHINGTON, D. C. • 15.50 24.80JOHN STOCKS (U. S. Tax extra)TRAVEL BUREi5801 S. Ellis Administration E TRY OUR NEWWASHING SERVICE—CHEMICAL BATHPhone Midway 3-0800★ A Greyhound representative will be atJOHN STOCKS TRAVEL BUREAU5801 S. Ellis Avenue Administration Bldg.MONDAY, MARCH 12to sell tickets and give informationG R E YH | University of Chicago |Bookstore5802 Ellis AvenueI |tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiniiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiTERESA DOLANDANCING SCHOOL1208 E. 63rd St.Lea.n to dance nowBeginners Ballroom ClassesMon., Wed., Sat. Eves.s> * *Rumba, Samba, Tango, etc.Tnes., Thurs., Fri. Eves.Private Lessons—the quick, sure,and inexpensive way to become agood darcerAny day 12 noon to 11 p.m.Phone H\ 3-3080EA ' Wt vj ft EQMMWHERE THE U of CMEETS tO EATGo^lotv’iFINE FOOD1321 East 57th StreetPage 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON March 9, 1951miiiiiaiiiiiim JEvery Saturday in the NewActing falls through;play follows likewiseOf course, a play should present some sort of challengeto the actors. There is little sense in spending time on a playwhich in its simple-mindedness becomes dull after the firstrehearsal. But on the other hand, this writer, at least, be¬lieves that there is even less wisdom in choosing a play whichdemands so much of the performers that they are doomedto faliure from the start. ForUniversity Theatre, Ibsen’s Admittedly Tesman is such &Hedda Gabler was such a play, character, but there is an art toIt is difficult to conceive of this being dull, and Searle has notplay without an excellent Hedda. mastered it. Stuart Bykoff wasAnd although Alice Snyder may choppy and often overdramatic inbe admitted to be a competent the role of Eilert Lovberg. (Annactress, she was sadly unable to Sweet as Miss Tesman and Joycedo the Ibsen part. Her extrava- Goldstein as Thea Slysted weregant emotions and grimaces, her adequate.)petulance, her melodramatic airs Francis Weaver as Judge BrackWere poorly suited to the con- was in a category apart. He af-trolled and tragic woman whom forded excellent proof that theMiss Snyder seems to have under- really fine actor is a creative artiststood only superficially. in his own right. To Mr. WeaverAs Hedda’s husband, (George we owe thanks for breathing lifeTesman) Reed Searle was indis- into the production,criminately nervous and dull. —Vivian MargarisBritish film hits schools,bureaucracy in fresh satireThe Happiest Days of Your Life, now at the Surf Theater,is the most recent British film comedy to reach Chicago.This one is a satire on bureaucracy and its machinations inthe English public school system.The basic situation is a funny one and the formula fordeveloping the action is very successful if somewhat familiar.A girls’ school, “St. Swithins,” —is mistakenly billeted at “Nut- very like a merry Rene Clairbourne,” a boys’ school. A chase.crisis in their already hazardous The wit is pungent and plenti-operation is reached when a party ful but the end comes painfullyof the girls’ parents and a group close to the moment when the lastof Nutbourne patrons choose thesame afternoon to inspect theschool. A system of relaying thetwo groups through the differentparts of the school is contrived toavoid discovery of the embarras¬sing circumstances and the result¬ing confusion produces something touch of humor is exhausted.Margaret Rutherford heads thebattle-axes and Amazons thatstaff St. Swithins and AlastairSim directs the gentlemen inslightly threadbare tweeds thatclaim Nutbourne.—Cesar J. Rotondi Toscanini scoldsFurtwaenglerThe Story of Arturo Toscanini,(Henry Holt $2.50) by DavidEwen, is a repetition of the manystories wnich have made Tosca¬nini, like his countryman Pagani¬ni, a legend in his lifetime. Theonly clue one gets to the basis ofToscanini’s understanding of life,which is, as well as his “devlish”ear and memory, the basis of hismiraculous musicianship is in aremark Toscanini made to Wil-Wilhelm Furtwaengler, conductorof the Berlin Philharmonic uponbeing complimented on his con¬ducting;“I wish I could return yourcompliment. But I have alwaysthought that a man who giveshis assent to a system that per¬secutes every independent-mind¬ed man and woman cannot inter-peret Beethoven’s symphonies.For you Nazis have banned allmanifestations of spirit, leavingnothing but forced rhythms andan excessive display of strength.And that is precisely what youdid the other day with Beetho¬ven’s Ninth Symphony, extin¬guishing all that is noble in it andunduly accentuating the loud andwhat you probably call the ‘dy¬namic’ passages. But, sir, theNinth is the symphony of broth¬erly love, mind you. . . . How canone conduct such an appeal tomankind and remain a Nazi?”The Perfect Conductor, by Fred¬erick Goldbeck, (Pellegrini-Cud-ahy $3.50) is a collection of theauthor’s general opinions and pre¬dilections about music and in par¬ticular about conducting.Many of his ideas are stimulat¬ing. Those of little value he isable to disguise with an unfail¬ing sence of wit.The book is well supplied withmusical illustrations. A piano athand is requisite for intelligentenjoyment.—Fred Winsberg Debut army novel 'clicks'From Here to Eternity a debut novel by James Jones(Scribner’s $4.50) is a book worth reading. It’s an experienceall by itself. Despite claims of the publishers that one cancompare it to Thomas Wolfe (a false claim—the only thingin common with Wolfe is the length, the publisher and Wolfe’seditor, Maxwell Perkins) or P?S. Fitzgerald (again a felseclaim), I would rather com-pare it to Mailers Naked and about Pearl Harbor for I oftenthe Dead. Decidedly Eternity wonder just how these “profes-suffers in comparison. sicnals’’ were able to play anyYou waste your time in Scho- role in World War II (must onefield Barracks, Hawaii. As a pro- reiterate time and time again thatfessional soldier you either box, professional soldiers never winplay soldier, blow a bugle, em- any great battles or wars?),bezzle supplies and to top this dis- The hero’s courageous fightgusting manner of life, you sleep against the “Treatment,” effortswith an “aristocratic” prostitute of the bureaucratic elite to forceor the captain’s wife. If you blow him to conform to the militaryup at this life, you’re in the code. The hero’s failure bespeaks“Stockade” where the prison of the future for future “radicals”guards beat you to death.Fortunately Eternity stops just in the armed forces. On this pointthe author wavers between a sortof hatred and a sort of sentiment¬ality for the military code.The book is too long. And whyomit the apostrophes? Most punc¬tuation symbols in the Englishlanguage have some meaning andWhen FDR spoke ol the ‘'horse '"Tt-..1?’*5 Mr‘ Jo"es Pro£oseto establish a new school whereUS basic lawgets going overand buggy days,” he must havereferred to Thomas Norton’sUndermining the Constitution, a1021 item that was revised up todate and published by Devin-Adair. For want of a better labelI’d call Norton a reactionary. Butnot a screaming but rather of thebland type reactionary. BlandlyNorton calls the New Deal “un¬constitutional” and so the Wag¬ner Act, the Social Security Act,the TV A, soil conservation, thewhole boodle of them are null andvoid.Norton would have you believethat the Supreme Court (up tillFDR’s day) was very friendly tolabor and blandly ignores thewhole period from 1917-1937which was the period when theCourt sunk to a lowest low inlabor history. By the way, theprogressive income tax is uncon¬stitutional and communistic (be¬cause Marx mentioned it in theCommunist Manifesto).—DSC salvation may be achieved by say¬ing “cant, dont, wont, and didnt?”—David S. CanterLocal andLong Distance MovingStorage Facilities for Books,Record Cabinets, Trunks, orCarloads of FurniturePeterson FireproofWarehouse, Inc.1011 East Fifty-fifth StreetBUtterfield 8-6711DAVID L. SUTTON, PresidentChancellorROBERT M. HUTCHINSTakes one last crackat complacency in Chicagoas he reviews two decadesin his outspoken seriesMarch 9, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7r» • in* nnamwnn COMPANLS/M F.T-lucky Strike Means Rue Tobacco ReadersThe CampusDrug Store61st and EllisOpposite B-J Ct.We Carry a Complete Lineof Pal BladesGive Yourself A Treat Between QuartersLike to Fly? VisitMexico: 8 Day MexicanSiestaFly to Mexico and back. DepartMarch 18th, return March 25.First-class airlines, hotels. Lowcost includes airfare, twinbed hotelroom, meals on trips, sightseeing,program of cultural and socialcontacts. Cuenevaca, Taxco, Az¬tec Pyramid Temples. Size of grouplimited. TOTAL —$295. (Halffare family plan available.) or Combine Fun andLearning: 4 Day TripUnited NationsSeminar of National StudentYMCA — YWCA. Depart March28th, return March 31, flying air-coach to and from New York. (Op¬tion to go earlier, return later dateif desired.) All-inclusive price in¬cluding good rooms . . . meals . . .tickets UN sessions . . . interviewsoutstanding leaders, includingReinhold Niebuhr. Co-sponsored bycampus SCA, Chicago. TOTALCOSTS $87.50 all inclusive. Enroll¬ment limited.Similar Trip Once Each Month - Inquire Also About EUROPEANand MEXICAN Summer Study ToursSEE YOUR SCA OFFICE (2nd floor Ida Noyes Hall) or RUSH TO NEAREST PHONECall WEntworth 6-2670, and Ask for Mr. Hammond.HORIZONS UNLIMITED, Inc.6545 South Union Avenue (21)A Non-profit Educational Foundation Sports briefsby Bob MarchThe Varsity Baseball team heads south for Spring trainingApril 4-8. The trip, financed by a grant from an alumnus,covers three states.Candidates for the team may try out from 12:30 to 2:30 inthe Fieldhouse.Thinclads place in relaysThe Varsity Thinclads placed sixth in a field of 21 at the13th annual North Central Relays at Naperville, Ill., lastSaturday. Marc Goff tied for second in the high jump andplaced fourth in the broad jump to pace Chicago in scoring.Vern Gras took fourth in the highNEWYORKNon*Stop2900*MIAMI I4374 | SAtfCOGcfLand SAVECALIFORNIALos Angeles—San DiegoSan Francisco4-Engino Luxury LinersNon-Stop57500Complete Tours—Transportation t> HotelAccommodations.One Week $150*Two Wooks $164*RAndolphi6-96161fSkucoadiAirlines AgencyTax excluded NORTHAgency forGovernment LlcentedIrregular Carrier*sox'® iS alrt"a4 ^a sm0ke*gjs***-*0. Nixon caltf°frU*[&Z of s°ather LUCKIES TASTE BETTERTHAN ANY OTHER CIGARETTE IFine tobacco—and only fine tobacco—can give you theperfect mildness and rich taste that make a cigarette com¬pletely enjoyable. And Lucky Strike means fine tobacco.So if you’re not happy with your present brand (and a38-city survey shows that millions are not), switch toLuckies. You’ll find that Luckies taste better than anyother cigarette. Be Happy-Go Lucky today!in a hurdles and fifth in the low hur¬dles. Miler Hugh Brodkey placedfifth, and the two mile relayteam of Ash Smith, Dave Saffer,Art Reilley, and Bob Baptist alsotook a fifth to round out Chi¬cago’s 10 points.Wheaton and Loyola tied forfirst in the meet.JV's splitThe JV Track team last Fridaysplit a triangular meet. HydePark scored 25 to 33 for Chicagoand 49 for Crane.The Varsity Gymnasts lost toMinnesota 70-26 last Saturday.Varsity Fencers split a three-way meet last Saturday, defeat¬ing Iowa 16-11 and losing to OhioState 15-12.Psi U successfully defended itsFrat track title last Thursday,winning all events but the broadjump and shot put. Chamberlinwon the College House champion¬ship.Marko Zlatich of the VarsityWrestling team placed second inthe Park District tourney.Cagers end with lossThe Varsity Cagers finishedtheir season last Saturday by los¬ing to Knox 72-47. Their finalrecord is no wins and 18 losses. Agroup of Lab School boys sangthe Alma Mater in hope of stir¬ring the team on to victory, but tono avail.The Women’s Varsity basket-balers split with Parker lastThursday. Team I lost 27-20 andteam II won 28-12.Before you "give up* onyour injector razor...YOU MUST TRYBA I HOLLOW■ MmGROUNDINJECTOR BLADESin metalinjector...!“T UKfWtshave youbetter...cost youless! m10 for 394 • 6 for 2541Fit yourInjectorRazorPerfectlyMONEY BACKGUARANTEE IBay Mt! Try Pita! Uu umwy Mata ig i ptek nyn will. If ygg'n notggtkuMd. return dispenserto os for full refund. PelBMg Cs., toe., 43 WestS7tk Street, New Yak IS. PAL doable and tingleedge bladei in dtor-vigwZlpokt with used blade vaults44* oft a4f‘»forTOy 10 for 254Regular packing 4 for 104LEAD (NO SEUER| IN AMERICA’S|COUEOESPage 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON March 9, T951THE STRAIGHT FACTS ON CIGARETTESPROOF ofMILDNESS"When I apply the standardtobacco growers’ test tocigarettes I find Chesterfieldis the one that smells milderand smokes milder."Statement by hundreds ofProminent Tobacco GrowersPROOF ofNO UNPLEASANTAFTER-TASTEChesterfield is the onlycigarette in which membersof our taste panel foundno unpleasant after-taste."From the report of a well-knownIndustrial Research OrganizationFriday, March 9HILLEL FOUNDATION: Sabbath service7:45 p.m. Informal Oneg Shabbat at8:30, 5715 Woodlawn.NAACP BUSINESS MEETING: 3:30 pm.Mitchell Tower 200.GLOP SUPPER: YPA right. 5:30-10 p.m.6038 Dorchester. Singing, skit, danc¬ing. 50c admission or bring a can ofvegetables.CERCLE FRANCAIS: Slides on NewMexico with commentary In Frenchby Prof. Durbin Rowland. 4 p.m. Int.House. Refreshments.Sunday, March 11BRAHMS REQUIEM SING sponsored byUniversity Glee Club, 1174 E. 57th, 5-6p.m.SOCIALIST YOUTH LEAGUE JerzyGliksman, “Slave Labor Exposed inRousset Trial,” 4 p.m. Ida Noyes.CHANNING GLEE CLUB. 5-6 p.m. Re¬hearsal. First Unitarian church sup¬per 6 p.m. Program 7 p.m. "Symbolsof Despair,” Edward W. Rosenheim.Monday, March 12EDUCATION WITHOUT MOBILIZA¬TION: An emergency committee willhold its first meeting at 4:30 p.m.Soc. Sci. 122. All interested in oppos¬ing an ROTC on campus invited.NEW TESTAMENT CLUB: Bernard M.Loomer and J. Coert Rylaarsdam in“Importance of Theological Studies inInterpretation of the Bible,” 8 p.m.Swift Hall Commons.ALL - CAMPUS COMMITTEE on CivilLiberties, regular meeting at 7 p.m.Law North to hear report from Spring-field.Tuesday, March 13EXPERIMENT IN INTERN ATIONALLIVING: 7:30 p.m. Rr-.mwald 2 “TheExperimenter’s Summer,” film.NaSTAM sm ■ DMCA«t wr*»<S ^!>>• Happiest >Days of Tour We* s90 minutes of waggishdelight. , / lToday at: 6:30, 8:10, 10:00 I Iand “Gerald Mcloing »»lna” Classified AdsDeadline: 5 p.m., TuesdayLOST AND FOUNDLOST: Beta Theta Pi fraternity pin.Please return to James M. Ratcllffe, 5737University avenue. Reward.FOUND: Camera. First person with cor¬rect details takes It. MU. 4-1815, eve¬nings.LOST: Cultured pearl earring. If found,please call M. Kimura, MI. 3-0800, Ex¬tension 1036. Reward.FOUND: Suit coat and muffler foundIn Law in early Feb. Owner please claimat Adm. Bldg. info. desk.LOST: CLIPBOARD containing valuableresearch on cards. Urgently needed im¬mediately for Master’s paper. Will find¬er kindly return cards to Adm. Bldg,information desk.LOST: LATE last quarter, small sliderule K&E. No. 10000. Finder please callBob Nye, KE. 9-0566. Reward.LOST: ONE small tiger-striped gray catwith white ruff. May have red collar.May answer to “Mio.” HY. 3-3215(Holmes).LOST: OUTSIDE Commons, a leathernotebook with initials H.E.G. Pleasereturn to Harry Gourevitch, 5733 Dor¬chester, HY. 3-0172.LOST: SMITH-CORONA portable type¬writer No. 3S-94838 in vicinity ReynoldsClub, Feb. 19. $10 reward.- Call DO.3-6131.FOR SALEPAIR BINOCULARS, $35. Call Mrs. RuthShlaes, Ext. 3605 or evenings MU. 4-0255.USED ROYAL portable typewriter picatype. In need of adjustment. $25. Bloom,915»,fe E. 60th.7.2 CUBIC feet Frigidalre excellent con¬dition, one year guarantee left. $125,Melillo. 1151 Vz East 60th. FA. 4-8658 after3 p.m.GERMAN-MADE Kodak Retina. 3.5 Ek-tar lens. Compur shutter. Superb forcolor. Compact. Case. Supplementarylenses, filters. $93.75. Sole owner. Finecondition. HY. 3-4213. G-E PORTABLE radio. Self-charging.Unusual. Discontinued model, short¬wave. $75. PLaza 2-0586.OUT OF PRINT and collector’s recordalbums. Weekly sales. PL. 2-0586. “Smil¬ing Idler."HOCKEY gKATES: Excellent condition,satisfaction or money back. Size 11. Or¬ville MacMillan. FA. 4-8200. Int. House,Room 466.INEXPENSIVE! CHROME kitchen set.Call TR. 4-8903.G-E TABLE MODEL radio-phonograph,LP attachment, walnut finish, perfectcondition. $120 or best offer. KennethSparks. BU. 8-8820.YOUTH BED. Removable sides. Birchfinish. Good felt mattress. $20. DO.3-5286.SPRING IS HERE! Bikes for sale. Wom¬an’s Schwinn balloon tires. Man’sSchwinn New World. Excellent condi¬tion. Dotty Lleber, 5721 Kenwood. MU.4-9368.TYPEWRITER. EXCELLENT condition.Remington, one year old. $97, but mustsell immediately for $65. Irwin Schul-man, Room 429-A, Burton Judson.DINING ROOM set, 6 chairs, table,china cabinet, buffet, $250 or best offer.Excellent condition. Must also sell otherodd pieces. DO. 3-2321.FOR RENTLIGHT ROOM two blocks from Campus.$7.00 weekly. Woman student. 1227 East57th Street. FAlrfax 4-5770. Graham.PLEASANT ROOM and bath with pri¬vate family In elevator bldg. Near cam¬pus. BU. 8-5612.APARTMENT TO SHARE. Two some¬times students have large completelyfurnished attic apartment. Want thirdgirl. FA. 4-8867 evenings. HY. 3-3215 daysand ask for Joyce.RENT AN electric refrigerator $4.50-$5.50 per month. CO. 4-9231.HOUSEKEEPING AND sleeping room,$5 up weekly. Refrigerator. Near UC.6017 Woodlawn.COOPERATING HOUSING for men andwomen. Room and board In a coopera¬tive Interracial conomical sociable set¬up. United Cooperative Projects. Office:5721 Kenwood, MU. 4-9368. BUSINESS SERVICESLESSONS IN PIANO and theory forchildren and adults. Call MiriamRhoads. MU. 4-3360.BOOK 16mm. motion pictures at largediscounts. Extensive library and newprints of outstanding films. MakeSpring quarter reservations now. Gor¬don Berkow, Room 618 B-J.COMPETENT INSTRUCTOR to help 1AMath, student, PO. 7-2982.EXPERT GERMAN tutoring and trans¬lating. Anita Schroeder, NO. 7-0855.MURPHY MOTOR SERVICE Express andlight hauling. Over 30 years of know¬how. DO. 3-0822.EXPRESS LIGHT and heavy moving.Willing and courteous service. Reason¬able rates. Bordone, HY. 3-1915.SEWING ALTERATIONS. Bachelor’s re¬pairing. Reasonable rates. For appoint¬ment call Edna Warriner. MU. 4-4680.ARTISTS’ SUPPLIES, picture framing,glft-shO£fciMAROONBOXi113iiM—TRANSPORTATIONROUND-TRIP Chicago - Boston - NewYork City-Washlngton, D. C.-Chicagoduring Spring vacation. Wanted tworiders or ride for two. Please contactMiss Jansone AN. 3-7888, 9-12 a.m.WANTED: Ride to Washington, D. C. atend of Winter quarter. Share expenses.Contact Int. House 466, Vladimir Relsky.RIDERS WANTED to New Englandabout March 16. Will share expensesand driving. Jerry Rosenfield, Room 444,Burton Judson.PENN R.R. ticket to New York. Goodon any train Including Trailblazer. Ex¬tra fare already paid. $25. A1 Mesnlkoff,Hitchcock. Campus phone 1072.WANTED: RIDE to Boston. Will driveand share expenses. Experienced driver.Call Robert Marsh HY. 3-0272 early eve¬nings.I WILL PAY $15 and share driving forride to Baltimore, Md., March 18-20,books and some clothing Included. CallSelger, PL. 2-7027.WANTED RIDE to Pittsburgh, March 16.Will share expenses and driving. Room615 Burton Judson. D. Cramer. RIDE WANTEDv$o Florida, glad to shareexpenses. Leave March 16 or 17. Enjovmy witty conversation during trip. Con-tact Sheldon Wolfe, Hitchcock HallRIDE WANTED to Pittsburgh March 16share driving, expenses. Call Room 712*Burton Judson.RIDERS TO NEW ORLEANS. LeavlnJaround March 13. Call Joe McFarlandHY. 3-7288.EXPERIENCED DRIVER wants rldfl toWashington, D. C., over spring InterimCall extension 1072, Sara Phillips, 55Snell.WANTED RIDfe to NYC by one or twomen students (experienced drivers 1share expenses, leave March 17. CallDO. 3-7080, Cameron.MISCELLANEOUSHIGH SOPRANOS with or without ex¬perience needed for University Gleeclub’s end of quarter Brahm’s Sing,5-6 p.m. this Sunday, 1174 East 57th.STUDENT BOOK Exchange open Mon.through Frl., 12-3 p.m. during last weekof winter quarter. Bring in your booksnow. Location: Cobb basement.WANTED: WORK between quarters.Typing or anything else. Call AnitaSchroeder, NO. 7-0855.FIRST AND SECOND year college stu¬dents are eligible for Sun-Times beautycontest. Photos by Kalllck will win.Call Sandy Levine AT. 5-2122 eveningsfor Information.DR. A. ZIMBLER1454 E. 55th St.DO 3-9442N.S.A. Discount 15%QuickServicePrescriptions FilledImmediate Duplication offBroken Lenses and FramesHours: 9-6; Mon. & Thurs., 9-9■■