NSA convention on campusWill assemble today in Ida;to discuss policy and program Kimpton airs viewsfoLAK speaks to campusfcy Wolpert Students of the University of# _ _ TT „ ^ . Last Friday Chancellor Law* Chicago:Tonight at Ida Noyes Hall the Convention of the Illinois Region of the United States rence A. Kimpton held a press I have known you well in theNational Student Association will be called into session. Approximately 70 delegates from conference in the Administration past when I was Dean of Stu-schools throughout Illinois are expected to attend the first meeting on Friday evening and Building, on the fifth floor. dents, and I hope to know youthe sessions on Saturday and Sunday. This will mark the first time that the Illinois Region The question asked most often ^e11 as Chancellor. I am deeplyhas held its convention at UC. was whether the UC wiU return interested in student welfare andThe agenda for the Regional Convention provides'for consideration of all the different to football on any scale. The most honored to^of assist anceto youin every way possible.Ours is a very great unversity.I hope I may rely on your help inkeeping it great.L. A. Kimptonareas of NSA program and policy.On Friday evening Herbert Isen-berg, NSA vice - president incharge of International Affairs,will present the keynote address.Reports by the delegates on cam¬pus activity at their schools willfollow the address. On Saturday,commission work on the threegeneral areas of NSA activity isscheduled. Saturday evening thedelegates will attend a buffet din¬ner and then a square dance atIda Noyes Hall. At the plenarysession on Sunday, the Conven¬tion will concentrate on resolu¬tions. a program in Illinois to im¬plement the NSA program, andthe election of new officers.In a statement to the MAROON,Merrill Freed, president of the Illinois Region, urged all UC stu¬dents who are interested in NSAto attend the convention. The ses¬sions on Saturday will be in CobbHall and Law North, and the plen-see NSA convenes, page 2Barr at UCStringfellow Barr, author of"Let's Join the Human Race," willspeak on "Path to Peace" Tues¬day, May 1 at 8 p.m. in MandelHall. Tickets are available be¬ginning Monday in the MAROONoffice, the aJminisrrarion building,the SG ticket office and the Rey¬nolds Club Desk. Collegium offers 2ndconcert, SchneiderAlexander Schneider, violinistof world fame, has volunteered toappear as a soloist with the Col¬legium Musicum, Sunday eveningin Mandel Hall at 8:30 p.m., as aresult of hearing this studentgroup perform last year. He willplay Divertimento, D major, K.334— a very long, and difficult com¬position. Admission is free. Stu¬dents who missed their chance tohear Schneider in his currentBeethoven cycle in Mandel Hall(which is sold out) will welcomethe extra occasion. appropriate answer was, "It isnot an impossibility.”No change* yetWhen asked about educationalpolicy, Kimpton said, “I am sym-Quiz KimptonAn interview has been arrangedbetween Chancellor Kimpton andthe MAROON. Students are invit¬ed to submit questions for theMAROON interviewer to ask theChancellor.University of Chicago, April 20, 1951The exact status of the "14 free¬doms” Bill recently enacted bySG was uncertain as theMAROON went to press. Sectionslifting the need for faculty ad¬visors for student organizationssee Strozier nixes, page 5 pathetic toward the educationalpolicies that Chancellor Hutchinshas established at Chicago, butI’m not yet ready to say whetherthere will be any fundamentalchanges in the type of educationwe shall offer.”In response to the inevitablequestion regarding communismand Communists at UC, Kimptonsaid, “I believe in the maximumamount of freedom under the law.Students can participate in anylegal political action so long asthey do not do so in the name ofthe University.”May be no presidentWhen questioned about theresignation of President Colwell,Kimpton replied, "Mr. Colwell hasdone a remarkable job at the UC.... I cannot believe that Mr.Hutchins’ resignation and my ap¬pointment as chancellor had any¬thing to do with Mr. Colwell’sresignation.” Chancellor Kimptonfurther remarked, “It is unde¬cided whether or not there willbe a president as well as a chan¬cellor.”Chancellor Kimpton defended UCwomen by saying, in response tosee LAK speaks, page SStrozier nixes Court convicts Law Guild,SQ proposals sentences, drops sentenceActing Chief Justice, William Birenbaum, announced asuspended sentence of suspension for the remainder of thequarter, for the National Lawyers’ Guild, UC chapter, atMonday’s session of the Student - Faculty - Administration-court.The Guild was convicted for: (1) not obtaining permissionfrom Birenbaum, director of stu¬dent activities, to collect funds(£) not notifying the campus, bymeans of the bulletin boards ofintention to collect funds. (TheGuild collected $8.10 to defer thecost of phone calls made to thespeaker at their meeting.)Plead guiltyThe Guild pleaded guilty to the o ,“Tonight at 8:30,” UC’s Theater-In-the-Round group, will charge of not obtaining Biren- this country until further notice.” of the individual fraternities’present its third production of the year at Ida Noyes The- baum’s permission. It pleaded not in an interview with the MA- rushing functions, urged that "allater for three performances, starting tonight, tomorrow and guilty to the charge of not nothSunday evenings, announced co-producers Mike Nichols and fying the campus, saying that itOmar Shapli. The program will feature Bernard Shaw’ssatirical chronicle play Androcles and the Lion, to be pre¬ceded by the poetic tragedy Pur- —gatory by William Butler Yeats. Tickets, 70 cents each, are nowon sale at the Reynolds Club desk,8:30' players willoffer new show UC Chinesecan stay hereReversing an earlier decision,which had denied renewal visasto six Chinese UC students, theUS Immigration Department is al¬lowing the students to “remain in Photo by ZimmermanChancellor KimptonI am more than pleased tolearn of the appointment of Law¬rence A. Kimpton as Chancellorof the University. He has dis¬tinguished himself in every fieldof education. He is moreover agentleman of the highest calibreand will, I am sure, continue thegreat traditions of the Universityof Chicago.Robert M. StrozierDean of StudentsFrats to giverush partiesFraternities may rush andpledge third year college studentsso long as the men will be eigh¬teen years of age, and have fouror less comps to pass on the dateof their initiation, Dean of Stu¬dents Strozier told the I-F Coun¬cil at a meeting Wednesday. Nocollege man may live in a fra¬ternity house until he is initiated.Paul Kaup, president of the I-FCouncil, in announcing the datesIda Noyes lobby and Mandel Cor¬ridor box-office. Tickets will alsobe sold an hour before perform¬ances ; however people are advisedto buy tickets now due to heavyadvance sales. The audience is re¬quested to arrive on time as noone will be seated during Purga¬tory. had posted notices on blackboards.(The court ruled that blackboardsare not bulletin boards.)Objections to procedure by pros¬ecutor Alperin were overruled byBirenbaum who said, “We makeour own procedure here.”Allen is RepublicanRobert Allen, president of theRepublican Club introduced test-mony objected to by the defenseas hearsay. Objection was over¬ruled. Under pressure, Allen stat¬ed that he belongs to the Republi¬can club. In an interview with the MA¬ROON, Mr. A. W. Skardon, UCadvisor to foreign students, said:“I am confident that (the Chinesestudents) will be able to stay.”The original charges by theImmigration Department againstthe students were to the effectthat they were a "menace to na¬tional security.” The particularcharges involved membership intwo organizations: the ChineseChristian Students, and the Chi¬nese Scientific Workers. Thestudents were also "evasive” inanswering questions posed by Im¬migration authorities in regardto their political beliefs. men who are eligible attend asmany functions as possible so thatthey can fully acquaint them¬selves with the several fraterni¬ties.”The fraternity smoker todaywill be given by Psi Upsilon; nextMonday: Phi Delta Theta, SigmaChi, Beta Theta Pi; Tuesday:Alpha Delta Phi, Zeta Beta Tau,Delta Kappa Epsilon, Phi KappaPsi; Wednesday: Psi Upsilon,Beta Theta Pi, Phi Sigma Delta;Thursday: Delta Kappa Epsilon,Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Kappa Psi;Friday: Alpha Delta Phi, SigmaChi, and Phi Delta Theta.Campus NSA elections set for Thursday and FridayPolitical parties announce slates and draw platformsPhoto by Kent McPherronSandra MacDonald a* LaviniaPurgatory’s cast will includeEdward Asner as the Old Manand Jerry Cunliffe as the Boy, andwill be directed by Mike Nichols.Androcles and the lion featuresRichard Eliel and Alex Hassilev,Saundra MacDonald, David Bach-rach, June Gibbons, Omar Shapli,David Schwartz, Mike Nichols andothers. An all-campus election will beheld next Thursday and Friday,Apr. 26 and 27, to select dele¬gates to the National Student As¬sociation. At the same election,students will vote on three pro¬posed amendments to the StudentGovernment Constitution.The positions to be filled in theNSA election are the following:five delegates to the National Con-'vention to be held in Minneapolisnext August, who will also bedelegates to the Illinois RegionalConvention; five alternate dele¬gates to the national congress, who will also be delegates to theIllinois Convention; and 10 alter¬nate delegates to the Illinois con¬vention.The United States National Stu¬dent Association (NSA) is an or¬ganization of college and univer¬sity student bodies, representedthrough their student govern¬ments. It was created to serve along-standing need for a repre¬sentative intercollegiate organiza¬tion designed to serve the Ameri¬can student community and topromote student interests andw* NSA •laotians, poge 2 The Non-Partisan StudentsLeague announced its slate andplatform for the NSA elections,at a meeting Monday. Candidatesare: for national delegates—DonArnstine, Arthur Bierman, HughLane, Frank Rosen, and GloriaMorgan; for national alternates—Harmon Carter, Tom Connor,Joyce Ellman, Fred Gearing, andFreda Gould; and for regional al¬ternates—Jim Kline, Marcie Mor¬row, June Northrop, Jerry Rosen-field, Enid Sharp, Huey Thursch-well, Joyee Wallace, Bob White, Del Wilson, and David Zimmer¬man.The Independent StudentsLeague’s candidates for the NSAelections of April 26 and 27 are:Anton DePorte, Sander Levin,Frank Logan, Alexander Pope,and Roger Woodworth for na¬tional delegates; Larry Butten-wieser, Bob LeVine, HermanRichey, Charlotte Toll, and GerryWeinberg for national alternates,and Stanley Baron, Judy Blake,Henry Blumberg, Carol Butten-wieser, Allan Coleman, Ann Col-*•« pmf 2 %1 ItTHE CHICAGO MAROON April U, I95uStore Hours, 9:15 to 5:45,amou? 'romance?that wentall lor the want•f a giftfrom Field’s!Cleopatra'* cozy little Rome-aneswith Caesar li?,l .* Brutal ending, and,not being a girl to sit around andcry in bis bier, Cleopatra foundherself an easy mark. Antony wasnot adverse and soon they workedout a beautiful merger on tbebanks of tbe Nile. But Mark gotdevaluated when Octavius* stockwent up in Rome and Cleo triedto squirm into tbe new deal.Octavius, though, had no interestin Egyptian futures and Cleoand Antony wound up dead brokers.And all because Antony forgotone principle: to keep interesthigh .. . your best investment isa gift from Field’s!on a gift from j—ieU ANSA convention onWill assemble today in Ida;to discuss policy and program campus:-‘o miKimpton airs viewsjoLAK speaks to campus essby Ed Wolpert Students of the University of. Last Friday Chancellor Law- Chicago:Tonight at Ida Noyes Hall the Convention of the Illinois Region of the United States rence A. Kimpton held a press I have known you well in theNational Student Association will be called into session. Approximately 70 delegates from conference in the Administration past when I was Dean of Stu-schools throughout Illinois are expected to attend the first meeting on Friday evening and Building, on the fifth floor. dents, and I hope to knew youthe sessions on Saturday and Sunday. This will mark the first time that the Illinois Region The question asked most often a* Chancellor. Iam deeplyhas held its convention at UC. was whether the UC will return interested m student welfare andThe agenda for the Regional Convention provides'for consideration of all the different to football on any scale. The mostareas of NSA program and policy.On Friday evening Herbert Isen-berg. NSA vice - president incharge of International Affairs,will present the keynote address.Reports by the delegates on cam¬pus activity at their schools willfollow the address. On Saturday,commission work on the threegeneral areas of NSA activity isscheduled. Saturday evening thedelegates will attend a buffet din¬ner and then a square dance atIda Noyes Hall. At the plenarysession on Sunday, the Conven¬tion wiil concentrate on resolu¬tions, a program in Illinois to im¬plement the NSA program, andthe election of new officers.In a statement to the MAROON,Merrill Freed, president of the Illinois Region, urged all UC stu¬dents who are interested in NSAto attend the convention. The ses¬sions on Saturday will be in CobbHall and Law North, and the plen-see NSA convenes, page 2 appropriate answer was,not an impossibility.” ‘It isCollegium otters 2nd No Changes yet_ I .. When asked about educationalconcert, 5chneider policy, Kimpton said, “I am sym- honored to be of assistance to youin every way possible.Ours is a very great unversity.I hope I may rely on your help inkeeping it great.L. A. KimptonBarr at UCStringfellow Barr, author of"Let's Join the Human Race," willspeak on "Path to Peace" Tues¬day, May 1 at 8 p.m. in MandelHall. Tickets are available be¬ginning Monday in the MAROONoffice, the administration building,the SG ticket office and the Rey¬nolds Club Desk. Alexander Schneider, violinistof world fame, has volunteered toappear as a soloist with the Collegium Musicum, Sunday eveningin Mandel Hall at 8:30 p.m., as aresult of hearing this studentgroup perform last year. He willplay Divertimento, D major, K.334—a very long, and difficult com¬position. Admission is free. Stu¬dents who missed their chance tohear Schneider in his currentBeethoven cycle in Mandel Hall(which is sold out) will welcomethe extra occasion. Quiz KimptonAn interview has been arrangedbetween Chancellor Kimpton andthe MAROON. Students are invit¬ed to submit questions for theMAROON interviewer to ask theChancellor.pathetic toward the educationalpolicies that Chancellor Hutchinshas established at Chicago, butI’m not yet ready to say whetherthere will be any fundamentalchanges in the type of educationwe shall offer.”In response to the inevitablequestion regarding communismand Communists at UC: Kimptonsaid, “I believe in the maximumamount of freedom under the law.Students can participate in anylegal political action so long asthey do not do so in the name ofthe University.”May be no presidentWhen questioned about theresignation of President Colwell,Kimpton replied, “Mr. Colwell hasdone a remarkable job at the UC.... I cannot believe that Mr.Hutchins’ resignation and my ap¬pointment as chancellor had any¬thing to do with Mr. Colwell’sresignation.” Chancellor Kimptonfurther remarked, “It is unde¬cided whether or not there willbe a president as well as a chan-The exact status of the “14 free- Acting Chief Justice, William Birenbaum, announced a cellor.”doms” Bill recently enacted by suspencjed sentence of suspension for the remainder of the Chancellor Kimpton defended UCSG was uncertain as the rt for the National Lawyers’ Guild, UC chapter, at women m resP°nse toMonday,s session of the Student - Faculty - Administration - see LAK speak*, page 5court.The Guild was convicted for: (1) not obtaining permissionfrom Birenbaum, director of stu-University of Chicago, April 20, 1951Strozier nixes Court convicts Law Guild,SQ proposals sentences, drops sentenceMAROON went to press. Sectionslifting the need for faculty ad¬visors for student organizationssee Stroxier nixes, page 5'8:30' players willoffer new show UC Chinesecan stay heredent activities, to collect funds(2-) not notifying the campus, bymeans of the bulletin boards ofintention to collect funds. (TheGuild collected $8.10 to defer thecost of phone calls made to thespeaker at their meeting.)Plead guiltyThe Guild pleaded guilty to the“Tonight at 8:30,” UC’s Theater-In-the-Round group, will charge of not obtaining Biren-present its third production of the year at Ida Noyes The- baum’s permission. It pleaded notater for three performances, starting tonight, tomorrow and guilty to the charge of not noti- roon, Mr. A. W. Skardon, UCSundav evenings announced co-producers Mike Nichols and fy*ng campus, saying that it advisor to foreign students, said:Cl i; nmfrram u/ill feature Bernard Shaw’s had posted notices on blackboards. “I am confident that (the Chineseto be pre- (The court ru!ed that bIackboards students) will be able to stay.”are not bulletin boards.) The original charges by theReversing an earlier decision,which had denied renewal visasto six Chinese UC students, theUS Immigration Department is al¬lowing the students to “remain inthis country until further notice.”In an interview with the MA-Omar Shapli. The program willsatirical chronicle play Androcles and the Lion,ceded by the poetic tragedy Pur¬gatory by William Butler Yeats. Tickets, 70 cenis each, are now ecutor Alperin were overruled byon sale at the Reynolds Club desk, Birenbaum who said, “We makeIda Noyes lobby and Mandel Cor- our own procedure here.”ridor box-office. Tickets will also Allen is Republicanbe sold an hour before perform- Robert Allen, president of theances; however people are advised Republican Club introduced test-to buy tickets now due to heavy mony objected to by the defenseadvance sales. The audience is re- as hearsay. Objection was over¬quested to arrive on time as no ruled. Under pressure, Allen stat-one will be seated during Purga- ed that he belongs to the Republi-tory. can club.Objections to procedure by pros- Immigration Department againstthe students were to the effectthat they were a “menace to na- Photo by ZimmermanChancellor KimptonI am more than pleased tolearn of the appointment of Law¬rence A. Kimpton as Chancellorof the University. He has dis¬tinguished himself in every fieldof education. He is moreover agentleman of the highest calibreand will, I am sure, continue thegreat traditions of the Universityof Chicago.Robert M. StrozierDean of StudentsFrats to giverush partiesFraternities may rush andpledge third year college studentsso long as the men will be eigh¬teen years of age, and have fouror less comps to pass on the dateof their initiation, Dean of Stu¬dents Strozier told the I-F Coun¬cil at a meeting Wednesday. Nocollege man may live in a fra¬ternity house until he is initiated.Paul Kaup, president of the I-FCouncil, in announcing the datesof the individual fraternities’rushing functions, urged that “allmen who are eligible attend asmany functions as possible so thatthey can fully acquaint them¬selves with the several fraterni¬ties.”The fraternity smoker todaywill be given by Psi Upsilon; nextMonday: Phi Delta Theta, Sigmational security.” The particular Chi, Beta Theta Pi; Tuesday:charges involved membership in Alpha Delta Phi, Zeta Beta Tau,two organizations: the Chinese Delta Kappa Epsilon, Phi KappaChristian Students, and the Chi- Psi; Wednesday: Psi Upsilon,nese Scientific Workers. The Beta Theta Pi, Phi Sigma Delta;students were also “evasive” in Thursday: Delta Kappa Epsilon,answering questions posed by Im- Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Kappa Psi;migration authorities in regard Friday: Alpha Delta Phi, Sigmato their political beliefs. Chi, and Phi Delta Theta.Campus NSA elections set for Thursday and FridayPolitical parties announce slates and draw platformsPhoto by Kent McPherronSandra MacDonald as LaviniaPurgatory’s cast will includeEdward Asner as the Old Manand Jerry Cunliffe as the Boy, andwill be directed by Mike Nichols.Androcles and the Lion featuresRichard Eliel and Alex Hassilev,Saundra MacDonald, David Bach-rach, June Gibbons, Omar Shapli,David Schwartz, Mike Nichols andethers, An all-campus election will beheld next Thursday and Friday,Apr. 26 and 27, to select dele¬gates to the National Student As¬sociation. At the same election,students will vote on three pro¬posed amendments to the StudentGovernment Constitution.The positions to be filled in theNSA election are the following:five delegates to the National Con-'vention to be held in Minneapolisnext August, who will also bedelegates to the Illinois RegionalConvention; five alternate dele¬gates to the national congress, who will also be delegates to theIllinois Convention; and 10 alter¬nate delegates to the Illinois con¬vention.The United States National Stu¬dent Association (NSA) is an or¬ganization of college and univer¬sity student bodies, representedthrough their student govern¬ments. It was created to serve along-standing need for a repre¬sentative intercollegiate organiza¬tion designed to serve the Ameri¬can student community and topromote student interests and•a* NSA iIcoHmi^ page 2 The Non-Partisan StudentsLeague announced its slate andplatform for the NSA elections,at a meeting Monday. Candidatesare: for national delegates—DonArnstine, Arthur Bierman, HughLane, Frank Rosen, and GloriaMorgan; for national alternates—Harmon Carter, Tom Connor,Joyce Ellman, Fred Gearing, andFreda Gould; and for regional al¬ternates—Jim Kline, Marcie Mor¬row, June Northrop, Jerry Rosen-field, Enid Sharp, Huey Thursch-well, Joyee Wallace, Bob White, Del Wilson, and David Zimmer¬man.The Independent StudentsLeague’s candidates for the NSAelections of April 26 and 27 are:Anton DePorte, Sander Levin,Frank Logan, Alexander Pope,and Roger Woodworth for na¬tional delegates; Larry Butten-wieser, Bob LeVine, HermanRichey, Charlotte Toll, and GerryWeinberg for national alternates,and Stanley Baron, Judy Blake,Henry Blumberg, Carol Butten-wieser, Allan Coleman, Ann Col-•oc PtHf *!•«•*, page 2— —Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 20, 1951Blue ys. Craywill be themeof B-i dance MacArthur is Dormitory planners to give NSA convenes.../ • (front Daoe 1)topic in series lecture series on 'Society'“The North-South Ball” featur¬ing a Civil War theme will be pre¬sented tomorrow night in theBurton dining hall from 9 p.m. to12:30 a m. by the B-J Council.Tickets for the dance can bebought for 75 cents from mem¬bers of the B-J Council or fromany man on campus wearing ablue or gray uniform. Tickets willalso be sold at the door.Eddie James’ 10-piece orchestrawill provide music. Refreshmentsand entertainment will also befurnished. Proceeds from thedance will benefit the Burton-Judson snack bar.Venture date setIn the issue of May 11, theMAROON will contain MAROON-venture, a literary supplement thathad its first appearance last quar¬ter. Deadline for contributions isMay 7. Cartoons ond poetry areespecially needed.I-F Councilreviews lawThe Inter-Fraternity Council isnow reviewing its constitution onthe recommendation of its consti¬tutional committee, which hasbeen meeting for the past monthin attempts to improve the docu¬ment.Alpha Delta Phi, which with¬drew from the Council severalyears ago, is cooperating in at¬tempts to improve the constitu¬tion, Kenny Sears of Alpha Deltand Paul Kaup of the Councilhave announced.TYPEWRITERSFOR SALEFOR RENTPORTABLES —STANDARDSRECONDITIONEDNEWREPAIR SERVICEI COMPLETE OVERHAULSTRY OUR NEWWASHING SERVICE-CHEMICAL BATHI University of ChicagoBookstore5802 Ellis Avenue “Korea After MacArthur” willbe the subject of the next of theseries of informal discussionssponsored by the Faculty-Gradu¬ate Committee for Peace.The session at which the impli¬cations of MacArthur’s removaland U. S. foreign policy will beconsidered will be held at theBerger’s, 6149 Greenwood, Thurs¬day at 8 p.m.The group’s discussion will beopen to faculty members, gradu¬ate students, and their wives andhusbands. (from page 1ary session on Sunday will takeplace in Law North.The University of Chicago willThe Dormitory Planning Committee’s spring lecture series have 12 delegates and 12 alteron “The Structured Society” will Wednesday when nates at the Reglona, convention'Christian Mackauer, associate professor of social science n-in the College, speaks on “A Contrast to Marx: Robert Owen,A Prophet of Utopianism” in the Judson lounge at 7:30 p.m.The second and third talks of the series will be titled “WhatEngland Is Trying to Do” and Party slates...(from page 1)lar, Haskell Deutsch, Irving Dunn,and George Kaufman, for region¬al alternates.NSA elections...(from page 1 )welfare. NSA represents morethan 800,000 students from over300 American colleges and uni¬versities.The proposed amendments tothe student government Consti¬tution are the following: that of¬ficers of Student Government(except the president) be given avote in Student Assembly; thatStudent Assembly may grant tem¬porary powers to its ExecutiveCouncil by a three-fourths vote;and that vacancies must be filledwithin one month after the sub¬mission of two applications.All UC students registered onthe Quadrangles may vote. IDcards will be absolutely necessaryto vote.Polling hours—Apr. 26, 27:Cobb—9-3:30, Thursday andFriday. Harper — 9-4:30, Thurs¬day; 9-5:30, Friday. Mandel—9-7,Thursday and Friday. Burton- will be delivered May 3 byFriedrick A. Hayek, professorof social and moral science, andMay 16 by Rexford Guy Tugwell,professor of political science.Remaining lectures will be “TheProblem of Natural Right” by LeoStrauss, professor of politicalphilosophy, and “World Govern¬ment as Seen by a Social Scien¬tist” by Robert Redfield, professorof anthropology.The exact tune and place of thelectures to be given in May willbe announced in the MAROONcalendars. They are: Frank Jx>gan, Ann Col-lar, Alexander Pope, DonaldArndt, Roger Woodworth, Ger¬hard Weinberg, David Kahn, San¬der Levin, Anton DePorte, Char-lotte Toll, Jean Jordan, and BobLeVine, delegates;Larry Buttenwieser, HermanRichey, Allan Coleman, HenryBlumberg, Irving Dunn, JudyNPSL Chairman Hugh Lane Blake, Stanley Baron, Carol But-Oops . . .The symposium issue of the UCLaw Review was put out by theregular editorial board whosenames are listed on the mastheadof the issue. The three peoplementioned in the MAROON storytwo weeks ago were material as¬sistants for that issue only.Judson (2 boxes)—5-7:30, Thurs¬day. Snell-Hitchcock — 5-7:30,Thursday. Law — 9-3:30, Thurs¬day. Haskell—9-ll;45, Friday. In¬ternational House — 5-7, Friday.Green—5-7, Friday.ilHMimHIlHilllllllllimiHlllllllli;Local andLong Distance MovingStorage Facilities for Books,Record Cabinets, Trunks, orCarloads of FurniturePeterson FireproofWarehouse, Inc.1011 East Fifty-fifth StreetBUtterfield 8-6711DAVID L. SUTTON, President Ask Jor it either way .. . bothtrade-marks mean the same thing.IOTTIED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COIA COMPANY BYCOCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF CHICAGO, INC. © 1951, Th. Coca-Cola Company voiced the intention of the coali¬tion to avoid the type of campaignin which each party attempts, byclever word juggling, to takecredit for activities or accomplish¬ments, for which credit shouldjustly accrue to the campus as awhole. Deploring the “moral pov¬erty underlying our opponents’practice of slating candidates whoresign immediately after elec¬tion,” Lane listed “concrete aimsof NPSL in NSA; federal aid toneedy students lest students defer¬ment be a mere farce; a strongdrive for affiliation of southernschols; opposition to militariza¬tion of our American educationalsystem including opposition toany form of ROTC here, and astrengthened program for aca¬demic freedom,” as planks in theNPSL platform.A full platform will be found onpage 3. tenweiser, George Kaufman, Rob¬ert Alperin, David Kliot, Ted Levi-ton, alternates.ALBERT DRUG STORE5245 S. WoodlownW> ifrllrer —• Sandwiches• Prescriptions• Sundries• Drugs— till 10 p.m.Just phone FAirfox 4-2797MAROON policy Is to reject discrimina-tory advertising. Please report violationiof this policy to us.“LATEST FASHION” FOR SPRING WEEKENDS:Visit United Nations and New York City(Only 1 Day Away from School)3 Days Seminar and Sights of New YorkYour choice of following schedules:ENROLL NOW FOR ( Sat Sun MonApril. ..21.. .22. . .23May ...12...13. ..14orJune...16...17...18FLY both ways comfortable alrcoach. 2 nights NYC, returning Chicagolate Monday evening. Tickets to IIN sessions, seminars with delegates.Sunday morning and night free for church or sights. All expensesincluded except meals in NY.Price $85 from ChicagoLimited enrolment each session. To enroll, or for sheet of furtherparticulars.write HORIZONS UNLIMITED, CM6545 S. Union Avenue Chicago 21or phone Mr. Hammond, 2-6 p.m.WEntworth 6-2670 or stop in, STS, 1540 E. 57th StreetIn Tucson, Arizona, the Co-op onthe campus is a favorite studentgathering spot. At the Co-op—Coca-Cola is the favorite drink.With the college crowd at theUniversity of Arizona, as withevery crowd—Coke belongs. Harkness is really making time since hediscovered the convertible arrow “bi-way”The new Bi-Way’s amazing “Arafold”collar is the most comfortable you’ve everworn . . . looks wonderful open—or closed,with a tie. $4.50ARROWshirts & TIESUNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTSTHE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3s - /kpril 20, 1951Parties give NS A platformsNPSL • ISL:War is again threatening U. S. campuses. The draft willterminate the education of some, and seriously affect the con¬ditions under which the remainder will receive their edu¬cation. The new student deferment plan together with therising cost of an education will tend to create a draft exempt“elite” of those able to afford a college education. The en¬rollment drop will wipe outmany small colleges. ROTC, academic freedom under the de-the war hysteria, and the red ferment plan,scare, are undermining academic The efforts to obtain such a pol-freedom and civil liberties on jCy should in no way be considered3campus ... a substitute for efforts designed^Cite world situation v to achieve world peace, which canThese student problems are a eliminate the draft entirely,part of the general world situa- Want student cooperationtion. Therefore attempts to solve We, as students, can make athem depend on our views of the major contribution to the develop-world situation ... NPSL believes ment of peace by fostering mutualthat it is the right and responsi- understanding and f r i e n d s h i pbility of every citizen to resist among students all over the world,aggression by every possible it should be possible for studentsmeans consistent with his con- Gf an nationalities and politicalscience. We have many differing beliefs to meet, discuss, learnviews as to who is responsible from one another, and find a basisfor, and what is to be done about for cooperation. This cooperationthe world crisis. But we are united should be effected through allin our belief that not all peaceful available channels including thealternatives have been explored ius and its member national un-and that we as student - citizens ions Gf students. We believe thatmust point out and insist on these past disagreements and contro-alternatives . . , versies between NSA and IUSWith its prestige as a national should not hinder further effortsorganization embracing large towards understanding and coop-numbers of U. S. students the eration. We are not interested inN.S.A. is in a position to make a fixing the blame for the manymajor contribution to world peace, errors made on both sides in theCite NSA contributions NSA-IUS relationship. The greatIt is with the above perspective need f^1" *nterna^ona^ student co-that we propose the following operation as a means in bringingconcrete points on militarization about world peace dwarfs all pastfor NSA to consider: controversies.1. Oppose Universal Military We believe that the NSA andTraining and Universal Military the IUS should actively cooperateService. to work out a program of a broad2. Oppose the establishment of exchange of cultural, sports, andROTC on campuses (both com- academic delegations between thepulsory and voluntary). United States and all other coun-3. NSA, as a student organiza- tries. This program should placetion, should work for as broad and special emphasis on such ex-as democratic a student deferment changes with the U.S.S.R. andpolicy as possible to include: other countries with which wea. Selection criteria based only have strained relations,on the ability to pursue an aca- Want academic freedomdemic career. We believe the free dissemina-b. Federal aid for those stu- tion of ideas to be vital to thedents satisfying these criteria very purpose of an academic in-who do not have the money to go stitution. Therefore, the followingto school otherwise. conditions are seen as being es-c. Safeguards to guarantee that sential to the fulfillment of this:there are no encroachments on 1. Academic competence as the One of the most important problems which must be decided by the NSA congress thisyear is its attitude toward other national unions of students, the International Union ofStudents (IUS), and the possible formation of a new international students’organization.ISL policy in this area is based on the following considerations: we believe that IUS isa tool of Soviet policy, whose concern with student affairs is entirely incidental to itspartisan political activity. ISL’s past policy of advocating NSA co-operation with IUS onpractical non-political projectshas been rendered meaning- NSA continue and expand its pro-less by the obstructionism of gram m the field of human rela'the Communist leadership of IUS, tions- recently-held Confer-and the divisive machinations of ence on Discrimination in Higher‘Committee for In- Education must serve as a spring¬board for vigorous action againstdiscriminatory practices in theeducational community.only basis for hiring, granting oftenure, promoting and dismissingof faculties and for the admissionof students.►2. No unnecessary restrictionson the right to petition and to the so-calledissue and distribute pamphlets ternational Student Cooperation,”"a Freedom of political expres- which was establisheii so*1? tosion_ divide the American student com-4. *No unreasonable restrictions munity, and lead some part of it Wont tuition downpertaining to the requisites for, into IUS. ISL believes that under theor activities of, student organiza- Against Western Union present conditions of increasedtions. However, we do not now sup- financial demands upon students,5. No interference with, or un- port the establishment of a west- nSA should insist that tuition andrestriction of, school ern union of students because other gtudent fees be k t at anewspapers. one of its principal results would . .Therefore we strongly oppose be to isolate the United States minimum, and that in such casessuch breaches of academic free- from the national unions of stu- wbere tbe educational institutiondom as: The McCarran Act, the dents in the colonial areas, Africa, deems an increase in student feesBroyles and McClintock bills in Southeast Asia, Latin America, necessary, the student body ofIllinois, the California loyalty and Western Europe. tbat institution should be con-oath, and the revocation of the NSA ghould therefore refrain sulted before such a raise in feescharter of the Brooklyn College fromTakhiJ anv steps toWardThe is finally approved- Should in*paper—“The Vanguard.” fr^tiofofa newfnternSal or creases be unavoidable- every ef‘We recommend that NSA show creatlor? o1 a ne^ r a ° . 0 fort should be made to increaseItsConcern for all^such breaches Samza‘10" °f students un,“ 1 18 the job opportunities offered toof academic freedom by setting up tion will havp SUDDort jn all the students’ in order to return asmachinery to combat them more a^ve named from Us nceo much as possiblc of ,he increaseabove-named aieas Horn its mcep- to the student body. SG attempt-tlon* ed, on this campus, to prevent theNeed co-operation latest tuition increase by pointingNSA and its staff should there- out ways whereby the Universityeffectively, and to disseminate information to schools, colleges andthe public at large.View discriminotiontvtqa io o otrotnmo „ f°re direct their international ef- could cut down its expenses.NSA is in a strategic position fnrts dnrinfT the nevt vear evrlu- * ^this year to make far reaching forts during the next year exclu¬sively along the following lines:h?,mr^Ut‘,T t0 ;he fte,rine °£ contacts between NSA and otherhuman relations. In order to makefull use of this opportunity, NSA national unions of students shouldtake place on an ad hoc basis, In view of the dishearteningrevelations concerning the integ¬rity and scholastic desirability oflarge-scale intercollegiate athleticWear It As A Dress ShirtWear It As A Sports ShirtArrowBI-WAY• Revolutionary “Arafold” collar 1• Amazing new collar comfort!• Two handy pockets! *4.50A new double-purpose shirt . , . right for any occa¬sion. Wear the collar open sports-style, wear it closedwith a tie for dress. Very important: the new“Arafold” collar is the last word in comfort becauseof its vanishing neckband and seamless collar facing• *. ask us for the “Bi-Way” today.FOR ARROW UNIVERSITY STYUS must now initiate on campus, re- ,aKe pf, • - V Tv! comPetition, ISL feels that thegional, and national levels, three fh^g+ liaison committees estab- time has come when NSA> as theintensive programs. lished to deal with special proj- representative of those who are1. A thorough, nation-wide pro- ectS' most vitally concerned with col-gram to enable Negro students to ISL suPPorts the most exten- legiate athletics, must develop andenter non-segregated colleges and sive P°ssible program of interna- implement a definite programuniversities in greater numbers, tional cooperation along these looking to the establishment ofa. Non - discriminatory schools tines, and strongly opposes all at- an iron-clad code of ethics for in-should give wide publicity to their tempts to by-pass NSA through tercollegiate athletics, perhapsnon-discriminatory policies. such fraudulent organizations as similar to the recently shelvedb. Recent Supreme Court deci- the “Committee for International “sanity code” of the NCAA,sions with regard to graduate edu- Student Cooperation.” ISl candidates at tfte nationalcation must be utilized by NSA to Work on relief congress will favor approval ofthe fullest extent (in cooperation In keeping with the above posi- plans looking to the deferment ofwith the NAACP, et al). tion, NSA should work in the field college students, provided thatc. A nationwide effort for the of student relief with World Uni- such a program is supplementedpassage of State Fair Educational versity Service (WUS), rather by a system of federal scholar-Practices Acts must be intensively than with the IUS-controlled In- ships which will enable all de-pushed. ternational Student Relief. NSA serving persons to receive a col-2. A campaign to gain the af- should demand, however, that lege education,filiation of southern schools with WUS give more power to student Endorses NSA policyNSA should be undertaken. The representatives, and place major isl stronelv endorses the nres-entrance of many more Southern emphasis on material, rather than ent NSA policv on academic free-schools will open channels hither- cultural relief. dom This poshion condemns theganization° fertilizing ^ncT ex- ISL praises the policy designed use of criteria based on political,fending the inroads made into t0 plac.e technical assistance social, or religious beliefs in these^rp^ated edupatinn dnrino- ro wblcb is at tbe command of stu- employment and tenure of col-cfS months dentS in industrialized areas of lege professors. Standards for3. A nation-wide campaign to W°^ld at the dlsposal of stu‘ judging professional competencegain the passage bv student gov- dents ln underdeveloped areas should be established by the aca-fmmenl^d fdmLfstraUonfof who are in need of such help* v dem* 'ommun!ty* ISL oppase.legislation denying campus rec- ^®v'ew ISL-SG record the McCarran Act, and all otherognition to student organizations During the past year, the ISL- legislation which endangers thehaving restrictive membership organized Student Government application of these principles,clauses in their constitutions or bas carried forward on every ISL will introduce and supportcharters. Such legislation should front the ISL policy of campus cu the. floor of the congress abe similar (as to time allowed be- service. Among many other ac- resolution denouncing all pro-fore recognition be withdrawn and tivities may be mentioned interim P°sed legislation which would re-other provisions) to the plan travel service, expansion of the strict in any way the subject mat-adopted by our Student Govern- Book Exchange, establishment of ter> readings, or ideas to be taughtcommuters’ and travelers’ regis- *n schools, or calling for spe-ters, investigation of the College cial teachers’ oaths, or in anyAdvisory system, organization of other way destroying the freedomous and continuous effort to put the Mandel COITido£ concession of enquiry of the academic com-a lid on inflated student costs. service, and of the Student Gov- mum y.Rising costs have already wiped ernmenf ticket agency. ISL will Implement freedomout the possibility of a college auPP°rt a parallel program of ISL favors the improvementcareer for thousands of American NSA for the American student.’ and implementation by NSA ofyoung people, and if this expen- Under the powers granted SG machinery to investigate all viola-sive trend continues, colleges will *as* ^ear by *be Statute and Stu- tions of academic freedombe institutions available only to dent of Bights, the Assembly throughout the country,the rich. succeeded in substantially liber- ISL opposes all restrictivealizmg the rule! and regulations amendments to the Student Billgoverning campus organizations. of Rights by those who wish toAdopt Michigan plan weaken it. ISL strongly favors theSG this year adopted the “Mich- liberalization of the regulationsigan Plan,” ISL candidates will governing NSA’s power to investi-fight for the same policy at the gate violations of student rights,national congress. by decreasing the number of peti-ISL considers it essential that tioned students necessary to se¬cure an investigation, and bybroadening the provisions regard¬ing the actions which NSA cantake in an investigation. ISLurges that the national officersregard the promotion of the prin¬ciples of the Student Bill ofRights as one of their highestduties.ment this yearView student needsNPSL calls for decisive, vigorDRAFT NERVOUS?Less than one-third of the studentsnow ln college will be back nextSeptember. Whether or not YOUwill be among them probably de¬pends on the ETS deferment test,the most Important exam of yourlife. We have drawn up a bulletinIncluding all the Info available,hints on how to prepare yourselfpsychologically, and even a practicetest. If the next two years of yourlife are worth Investing one old,inflated dollar bill, send It to usand receive your bulletin by returnmail.Eltee Dist. Co. Dept. 12509 N. Newlond Ave.Chicago 35, III. 'A *A I'1 FINE FOOD132 1 East 57th StreetPage 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 20, 1951Reports On the Fight for AcademicFreedom No. 3by Fred Gearing and Martin OransThe avowed purpose of theUniversity of California regentsin demanding a loyalty oath wasto eliminate Communists fromthe faculty. Their actions beliedtheir words. After promising non¬signing faculty members a hear¬ing before a faculty committee todetermine whether the refusalwas a conscientious one, they pro¬ceeded to fire even those whowre approved by the committee.What then was the aim of theregents? Subsequent events dem¬onstrated that it was to gain con¬trol over hiring and firing of pro¬fessors and thereby to hold aneconomic bludgeon over thinkingand teaching.If the regents had fired 6nlythose known to be members ofthe Communist Party, only oneperson, a piano player at UCLA,would have been fired. But eventhis action was based on guilt byassociation. She was not judgedto determine if her work was sat¬isfactory, but lost her job becauseof her party association.Withheld contractsThe majority of regents, like allenemies of civil liberties, were notgentlemen. They smashed originalfaculty opposition by proposingthe oath just before a summervacation so that the AcademicSenate could not meet; this tactichelped splinter faculty opinion.Direct economic threat wasbrought to bear by withholdingcontracts from non-signers.The faculty lacked a commonuniting principle. The simple rule,no political tests and no guilt byassociation would have sufficed.Disunited, ecenomic pressure fellon professors individually, andthe burden proved too great.Fear phones tappedThe regents recruited spiesfrom among the faculty to un¬cover anti-oath activity. The pro¬fessors then refused to meet inlarge groups, and important con¬versations concerning the oathwere not carried on by telephonefor fear that wires were tapped.Yet when numerous student bodyleaders approached the facultyand offered to demonstrate intheir behalf, they were told not tofor fear that it would antagonizethe regents and jeopardize thefaculty position.Next week this column will re¬view the ouster of “Vanguard”at Brooklyn College. Peace, pure and simple"—Robert Maynard Hutchins Public Relations Staff: Marilyn Evans, Velma Slaughter.Photographers: David Zimmerman, David Sher, Bruce Kalllck.Staff Artists: Peter Gourfain, John Hogan, Irwin Levinson.Literary Editor: Hlllel Black.Assistant Business Manager: David Canter.Advertising Manager: Ken Tillin.Business Associate: Don Ginsberg.News Staff: 2. Ellis Shaffer, Art Bierman, Enid Sharp, Huey Thurschwell. 3 j0hnSevcik, David KUot. Mark Nugent, Heyward Erlich, Russel Bloch, Ralph Gorer.Bob Jacobs, Maia Deitch. 4 Martin Orans. 5. Marshall Hartman, HowardSherman, Edward Drum. Mervyn Adams, Roy Albert, Nan Hochberg, WaltGerash, Carol Ann Davis. 6. Leo Treitler, Noreen Novick Vivien MargarisCesar Rotondi. 7. Ken Koenig, Ashby Smith, Arnold Katz.Issued 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 Manager | Books that rpeak for PEACEMemberAssociated Cb0e6iate Press 50-75% offManaging Editors: LaVerne Armstrong, Ed Wolpert.Copy Editor: Alan Kimmel.Page Editors: Fred Winsberg, John Grimes, Jan Majde, Arnold Task, RobertMarch, Blossom Weskamp.Associate Page Editors: Joan Levey, Gary Bahr, ixancy oates.Associate Copy Editors: Joan Brennard, Marilyn Chambers, Jane Nyberg.Training Director: John Hurst. onto the reviewer, with movie reviews, and and in their runs gave out heavy sta-pompous editorials espousing coverage catto rhythms; the tenors could not beo feverything of interest to the student, heard, at times. Ail of which is not ln-Events by students, which draw turn- tended to criticize Northwestern’s su-away crowds and reviews by journals of perb performance, but to give Schmidtmusic which report never surpassed per- something to look forward to when he Marxist books,pamphlets, periodicalsformances are not reported in its pages.A final word to Mr. Schmidt: did younotice Northwestern’s sopranos and ten¬ors? The sopranos went consistently flat attends the Spring Concert of theRockefeller Choir in May. But hfe shouldnot look for it in the MAROON.Roger Weiss★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★a 2j includingPEOPLE'S CHINAMASSES & MAINSTREAMPOLITICAL AFFAIRSRESORT & TRAVELNew York $29.00Miami . . . 43.00California . 75.00Plus tax | Community Book ShopECRETARIAL.ERVICE & TRAVELTUDIO1442 E. 55th Mf 3-2136 MAROON advertising policy is not tolist discriminatory advertising. Pleasereport violations of this policy to us. s 1404 E. 55th Ml 3-0567Free TransportationWe are sending cars to variouswestern States. All car expensesare paid. Your trip costs you ab¬solutely nothing. Adequate timeallowance. New cars. Fully insured.An ideal way to go on a vacationor to return from one. Return homefrom school. See us for one ofthese oil car-expenses paid trips.AAA DRIVEAWAYRoom 1419343 So. Dearborn St.Chicago IllinoisPhone WEbster 9-5298JSC tat TripsA-*!,i th« beautiful Superior -Queticowilderness... safely equipped by tbe oldest andlargest canoe outfitter! in the North Country.,. since 1919. Grumman aluminum canoea,complete outfitting, individual attention nomatter how targe your party ... $3.50.per day... yout choice of food, extra. ILetters ..,Good recordKnowing the MAROON’S oucstandingrecord against discrimination and racialprejudice, we were surprised to find ad¬vertised an apartment restricted towhites. We strongly suggest that theMAROON accept no more discriminatoryadvertising such as the apartment forrent at 5122 Woodlawn (Mrs. Coplan)which appeared In last week’s issue.Huey ThurschwellKarl Weichinger 18 th Year65*80 Day Bicycle' ToursIron $46574 Day French StudyTour $77556 Day Motor Toars -fro* $1090Including Round Trip Steamshipfro* New York or Montreal.33 Day Adventure Tour • $29547 Day Study Tonr $295“ America's Foremost Organizationfor Educational Travel."SITU 545 5th Avenue,New York, N. Y.Reviews MAROONIt is no surprise that Mr. Schmidt(Apr. 6 letter to editor, MAROON) hasnever heard the Choir of RockefellerChapel—all one has to assume is thathe is naive enough to get his Informa¬tion from the MAROON.Possibly if he would have seen a pageone spread on the Messiah productionlast December he might have bought aticket (if he was lucky enough to getone). But no—he was only told at thattime of the performance of Judas Mac-cabbeus in three columns, which con¬cert of another group I am sure he didattend; thus his opinion of our choirs.In spite of the publication of,Mr. Sig¬mund Levarie’s letter, the MAROONcontinued to ignore his concert whichfollowed, and doubtless Mr. Schmidtdoesn’t know that we have a CollegiumMuslcum.Instead the MAROON fills Its featureswith book reviews often of Interest only rt\» V% y, . vni FNnAMy s vNVj 4 s.s. vULLnUnlYI“Thrifty” Co-ed Student SailingKURTROSENBAUMOPTOMETRISTNSA Discount of 10 - 20%Immediate Repair Service1132 E. 55thHYde Park 3-8372 Join the student group this summerto Rotterdam on the S. S. VOLEN-DAM, host to over 4000 students onthree annual sailings since 1948. Re¬turn sailing September 5 fromRotterdam.Dormitory type accommodations.Plenty of deck space. Large, publicrooms. Good and plentiful menu.High standards of Dutch seaman¬ship, cleanliness, and traditionalfriendliness. Staff of 20 distinguished Europeanand American lecturers, under thejoint direction of Netherlands Officefor Foreign Student Relations andU. S. National Student Associationoffer a comprehensive OrientationProgram enroute.an aa aa Round Trip for dormitory-1 ~J n n type space. $320 for mul-U fiplo-berth cabins forApplications from bona fide collegestudents only are being accepted byNETHERLANDS OFFICE FOR FOREIGN STUDENT RELATIONSC//°29 Broadway, New York 6, N. Y.Agents for the Ministerie van Verkeer en Waterstaat(Directorate-General of Shipping) The Hague. Netherlands ShfrfSrnartia cum foundry [—White button-down oxford, softroll to the collar.Popular aa a holidaywith the fellows andthe gals.The Manhattan Shirt Company, makers of Manhattan shirts, neck¬wear, underwear, pajamas, sportshirts, beachwear and handkerchiefs.▼April 20, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5CommunismBaha’i topicAn open discussion on “Whatare the Alternatives to Commu¬nism?’' will be held Wednesday.Apr. 25, at 7:30 p.m. in Ida NoyesNorth Reception Room.Sponsored by the UniversityBaha’i Fellowship, the discussionis planned to encourage the freeexpression of various studentopinions and to demonstrate thenecessity for an independent in¬vestigation of truth. Free refresh¬ments will be served.= Glees sponsoringmadrigal chorusThe Glee Club, in affiliationwith SU, is sponsoring a MadrigalSing, Wednesday, Apr. 25, at 7:30p.m. in south lounge, Reynolds’Club. Music and piano will beprovided. All students are invitedto come whether they can sing ornot.Strozer nixes . ..(from page 1)have been vetoed by Robert M.Strozier, Dean of Students. Alsovetoed was a part making un¬necessary obtaining permission tocollect funds at open meetings.In elaborating on his veto ofsections concerning collection offunds and sale and distribution ofprinted matter Strozier wrotethat those items . . involve es¬tablished University policies per-»jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiii9iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii»iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiii^1 OUT OF PRINT NEW PUBLISHER'S |BOOKS BOOKS REMAINDERS |USED BOOKS| CLARK and CLARK ]Booksellers I1204 East 55th Street Phone HYde Park 3-0321 || 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. Every Day No Noyes Box SundayContrary to bulletin board pub¬licity, there will be no Noyes Boxthis Sunday night. The next dancewill be held Sundoy, Apr. 29."IT SHOE REPAIRSubstantial Discountsto StudentsMUST BE DONE RIGHT"HOLLIDAY'S1407 East 61st Street(at Dorchester Ave.YPhone Normal 7-8717Two blocks from Inti. HouseWhile-U-Wait or One-Day Service Gerth to talkbefore SYLHans Gerth, editor and transla¬tor of the works of Max Weber,will speak on “The Enigma of theMiddle Class’’ on Sunday, at 4p.m. in Ida Noyes library. Ad¬mission is 25 cents.The lecture is sponsored by theSYL. “We had a very large at¬tendance last year when Gerthspoke here during the compre-hensives,” said Leon Lipschitz,SYL president.taining to the Bookstore and itsright to sell printed matter onUniversity premises, internalrevenue, and other legal matters.”Robert Alperin, chairman of SGcommittee on organizations, ex¬pressed surprise at Strozier’s YDs get officers,form exec, groupfor coming termThe Young Democrats at aregular business meeting electedRalph M. Goren as their chairmanfor the next term. Also electedwere Bob Cameron as Secretary-Treasurer and Dan Burkholder asdelegate to the YD central com¬mittee.The newly elected officersformed an executive council andbegan to make plans for the forth¬coming year. According to Goren,the organization hopes to makearrangements for the presenta¬tion to the campus of severalDemocratic nominees for judgeswithin the next weeks.statement, pointing out thatabout a month elapsed betweenintroduction and passage of thebill, and that “We had received nocriticism either from the Dean’soffice or from the Administrationmembers of our committee. Ifsuch information as the veto al¬ludes to had been available, wewould have suitably amended thebill.”Sf/te yJ/frtm PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETBeLUCKIES TASTE BETTERA'1 V~a\orH«eS*he onC 'E. St. L»ut9t*Boston Collet• THAN ANY OTHER CIGARETTE 1Fine 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 thanother cigarette. Be Happy—Go Lucky today!eOFN., THK AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY> ?I make mg girl -feel good ythings don’t seem so -funny* say, “The world’s okay, yv-7>lere’s a lucky, honey 1"M. J. SuttonStanford UniversityLS/M FT-Lucky Strike Means fine Tobacco Back DuBoisThe recent indictment under the“Foreign Agents RegistrationAet” of Dr. W. E. B. DuBois, whospoke on campus during lastyear’s Negro History Week, hasbeen protested in a resolutionadopted at a membership meet¬ing of the UC Faculty-GraduateCommittee for Peace.Scholarships offeredfor summer partyFive scholarships will be award¬ed through the National StudentAssociation by the Summer Insti¬tute for Social Progress at Welles¬ley, Mass.Each scholarship covers all ex-penses for tuition, room and board(but not travel) for the confer¬ence, Jul. 7-21, 1951, on the cam¬pus at Wellesley College. Thescholarships are not competitivebut are awarded on the basis ofrecommendations by SG and fac¬ulty.Applicants should get theirqualifications to the Student Gov¬ernment office as soon as possible.LAK speaks . ..I from page 1)a question posed by a Northwest¬ern alumnus, “I haven’t noticed alack of pulchritude among thegirls at UC ...”Football sidesteppedThe reporters repeatedly re¬turned to one of three themes:what about football—which thechancellor adroitly sidestepped,what about changes in educationalpolicy—which the chancellor an¬swered by saying it was too earlyfor him to reply, and what aboutCommunists—which the chancel¬lor answered by indicating thatstudents can act in any way with¬in the law, that he didn’t thinkthat there were any Communistson the UC faculty, and that he“would never hire a Communistfor the staff of the UC.”Before you "give up* onyour injector razor...YOU MUST TRYHOLLOWGROUNDPALINJECTOR BLADESin metalinjector..shave youbetter...cost youless!10 for 39< • 6 for 25<MONEY IACKGUARANTEE Itoy Ms! Tty fill! Ust osmany bletfts in | hyoti wild. II yoo'cs sotifltkusN, ictum ditoouMla us for toll rofwd. MIMs Co., Ik., 41 RostSturt, Mw Tort II. PAL doubts and ilnfl*•dg« bladtt is doat-rtswZlpoks with vtod blado vartts71 for 4f<I0(or2$4tops lor packing 4 for \(H44i«98tPage 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 20, 1951Acros, JV gymnastsearn laurels in AAUAcrotheatre and the JV gymnastics t^am representedUC in the annual Central AAU gymnastics meet last Sat¬urday at Navy Pier.The top performance of the day was turned in by Aero’sAlyse Seubert and Ruth Grulkowski who copped the women’steam championship, taking firsts and seconds in all events.Finos fineThe Finas did a neat “brother Chicago in the high school divi-act.” Paul Fina took first in all- sion and finished third behindaround, Joe Fina second, and John perennial winners, Lindblom andFina fourth. Senn. Herb Taylor led the teamThe JV gymnasts represented in scoring, taking second in side-horse and tumbling, and fifth inQolfers lose toValparaisoCoach Kooman Boycheff’s Var¬sity golfers lost their openingmeet of the 1951 season to Val¬paraiso 8-4 last Saturday in LaPorte, Ind.Only four singles matches wereplayed instead of the usual six.Mud and cold weather held thescores above 80.Collegiate golf meets use matchscoring. Each singles matchcounts three points, one for eachnine holes and one for winningthe entire 18.The UC golf team has six play¬ing members and two alternates.Home matches are played atSilver Lake Country Club nearGlencoe. long horse and parallel bars tocop fourth in all-around. CaptainLarry Glasser added extra punchwith a fourth in tumbling.North third in noviceMarylin North competed in theNovice Women division, takingfirsts in balance beam and sidahorse and second in parallel barsfor a third in all-around. JV nine winsopening gamesThe JV baseball team this weektook up where their basketballbrethren left off, winning the firsttwo games on their PSL schedule.Tuesday they defeated Latin 8-3with a Crushing five-run thirdinning rally. Wednesday theyscored three in the first and wenton to win 4-2 while pitchers Goldeand Udell held Christian to threehits.Golde did the iron-man stunt ofpitching on consecutive days,pitching 12 innings of the total14. He was judged winning pitcherboth times. New Czech film to be shownFrom behind the Iron Curtain has come recently one ofthe most brilliant, most powerful films on the Nazi persecu¬tion of the Jews. The Czechoslovak State Film Studios haveproduced Distant Journey, originally called Ghetto Terezin,after the dreaded concentration camp to which the Jews weredriven by Nazi terror during the Occupation.The story of the extermination '—-of six million Jews is not new, and her family, who are hounded bymany will say . . we have seen the Nazis till they end up in Ghet-these things . . .” and will want to Terezin. Brilliant technique, ex-to forget. Yet the realization of pert performance, and excellentthis horror will always remain use of music make this film oneterrifyingly new and real, and that should not be missed by any-Distant Journey has brought mas- one.terfully to the screen what mustnot and cannot be forgotten. Distant Journey will be showntonight in Judd 126 at 7:15 andIt is the story of a young Jew- 9:15, by NAACP. Admission is 60ish girl, her gentile husband, and cents. —Arnold TaskAMUSEMENTS★★★★★★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★■>Sports calendarFriday, Apr. 20Varsity Golf—1:30 p.m. Silver Lake CCLake ForestSaturday, Apr. 21Varsity Baseball—1 p.m. Stagg Field—Ill. Tech.Varsity Golf—1:30 p.m. Silver Lake CCIll. Tech.JV Track—10 a.m. Stagg Field—Mt.CarmelVarsity Track—3:30 p.m. Stagg Field—Wabash IU 1/1 ■—Z l/l u.IU -JM Z <V comingin 3 next<D£ O u. weekend£ O April 28 & 292 UNIVERSITY*-* THEATRE Mow playing t- / I ntosM rotMEBmmsmwiov3rd WCEKBetter ie« it from the beginning!Tuesday, Apr. 24JV Track—3 30 p.m.Reavis Stagg Field—She wants important workjob with opportunity-one that menurespect in her community.She wants a good salary »° shecan have nice do,he. and <h. .h.npgo with better living.She wan., to meet and,„h interesting, attractive people,pleasant surroundings.A,.LL these things can be yours after graduation,as a Service Representative for the Illinois Bell TelephoneCompany.Yes — there are desirable openings for a select groupof college girls in this stimulating, challenging work.June commitments are now being made.You’ll like the responsibilities that go with this posi¬tion and the opportunities that are open to you. You’lllike the salary, too — $44 to start for a five-day week($191 a month) and regular increases every three monthsfor several years.As a Service Representative, you’ll have charge of theaccounts of your own group of telephone customers.You’ll be “Miss Telephone” to them — handle theirrequests for service, their questions, their problems. It’sfascinating work!Interested? Then see Miss Allan, Employment Office—Women, 309 W. Washington St., Chicago, Illinois, oryour own College Employment Bureau.ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY HOOTENANNYfeaturingRETT\ S A!\'DFltS f of fc music of off /amtsNAIIALI4 JACkSOA—noted spiritual singerJENNY WELLS Mexican and Indian balladsISERNIE ASREL—songs of AmericaOSCAR HROWN, JR.—Master of CeremoniesSaturday, April 28, 1951 — 8:15 p.m.Wendell Phillips H.S. — 39th & PrairieAdmission: 83c - tax 17c - total $1.00Auspices: South Side Cultural AssociationMETROPOLITAN OPERA COMPANY— Presents —Fledermaus - La Traviata - La BohemeTickets Still Availablefor All PerformancesVARSITY TICKET SERVICE1311 E. 57th St. In Woodworth's MU 4-1677 LEX THEATRE1162 East 63 rd StreetDOrchester 3-108SWednesday and ThursdayApril 25 - 26Filmed on a’majestic scalewith a castof thousands ICelor by TECHNICOLORSTEWART HANGER RANCOISE R0SATA Ml clu*l Bale on ProductionAn (*f<o Uon Film Baton*— and —) AK lllllk' RANKBlanche ffuty(OI OK UY TECHNICOLORd ffdndsThose special hands... the guiding, tei*ch-ing hands of the occupational therapistor the physical therapist... the strength-giving hands of the hospital dietitian ...are the ones Air Force men in hospitalslook to wjth admiration and respect.Those mending hands are hands to flywith ... the skilled fingers that bring theflying and supporting men of the AirForce back to duty strong and healthy.Graduates and prospective graduatesin occupational or physical therapy, orWOMEN’SMedicalSpecialistCorps SHpSw^iiSUi1*-dietetics, can now have interesting,challenging careers as commissionedofficers with good pay and allowances inthe Women’s Medical Specialist Corpsof the U. S. Air Force Medical Service.Opportunities for further professionaleducation are also available.Regular and reserve commissions are of¬fered to qualified specialists in these fields.Write for details to The Surgeon General,U. S. Air Force, Washington 25, D. C.U. S. Air Force Medical ServiceDietetic Internships, OccupationalTherapyAffil-iates, and Physical Therapy Training Coursesare offered to selected individuals.For inf2rBjVtion, write to The Surgeon General, U. S. AirForce, Washington 25, D. C.April 20, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON rage TWhat puts JimOUT IN FRONT?Have you wondered about that? What makes certain studentsable to answer questions more readily, to show quickerunderstanding of their studies, and to write better exams?Well, educator-scientists have isolated several elements insuccessful people in all walks of life. One such element is fasterreading, and quicker perception of material being read.When you read well, you concentrate better, and you achieve amore lasting understanding of what you read. That naturally helpsyou answer questions more readily, improves your recitation andconversation. Helps you learn more and earn better grades. Classified AdsDeadline: 5 p.m., TuesdayFOR SALEOLD RECORDS by Caruso, Farrar, Cas¬als. etc. Best offer. Can be heard inRoom 618 BJ after 3 p.m. today.LIVINGSTON UNIVERSAL 16” pickuparm with cartridge, LP and standardweights. All hardware, like new. Ulti¬mate reproduction of all records. Bestoffer. Berkow, 618 BJ.MAN'S BALLOON TIRE Schwinn bi¬cycle. Good condition. 5833 CottageGrove, BU 8-1460.MEN’S SCHWINN Heavy bicycle, excel¬lent condition cheap. Call MI 3-2427after 6 p.m. any evening.NOW AVAILABLE tickets for new Czechfilm DISTANT JOURNEY. Judd 126 to¬night 7:15 and 9:15. Adm. 60 cents.1939 PONTIAC SEDAN, good condition,radio, heater, two Jacks, must sell soon.Best offer. Call J. Blocjcer, HY 3-5452after 8 p.m.'39 DODGE 2-door sedan, radio, over¬sized heater, seat covers original paintjob. Good all around condition. HaroldHarris, 5707 S. Dorchester, HY 3-3429.DOUBLE-BREASTED Tuxedo, size 38,and one set of tails, size 36. Both rea¬sonably priced because they no longerfit seller. BJ. Room 355.PORTABLE SMITH-CORONA tab key“floating shift” ribbon color lever; elitetype, clean, excellent. Bill Marutani,1147 >/2 East 60th Street, MU 4-1098.35 mm. CANDID CAMERA Contax IIIZeiss-Sonnar f :1.5 lens. Cp.ld range find¬er, built-in exposure meter; built-indelayed action timer, \'2 sec. to l/1250th;top condition. Bill Marutani, 11471/2 East60th Street, MU 4-1098.8x10 PHOTOS of Lawrence A. Kimptoncan be framed, $1.50. Box 111 MAROONor enclose cash to Zimmerman, 5205Dorchester. FOR SALECAR FOR SALE: New tires and newbattery, excellent running condition.Only $59. Write Box 570, 1414 East 59thCAR FOR SALE, '37 Oldsmoblle in goodcondition. Call M. Fox, BU 8-2609.GE SELF-CHARGING portable radio. Areal steal at $65! Will withdraw frommarket after this week. Call PL 2-0586.1947 HUDSON 4-DOOR sedan; radio,heater, fog lights, air foam seats, newmotor, excellent condition reasonable.Call Frank Tachau, Snell 43, Saturday,2-6 p.m.RADIOS, PHONOGRAPHS, tape record¬ers, FM sets are sold at Dan’s 36 RadioShack. NSA cards honored. Phone Ex¬tension 1053, Monday through Thursdayafter 7 p.m.STARCK PIANO, reconditioned, finetone. Modern upright, recently cost $225,now $150. Terms possible. Call HomerHogan, MU 4-1823.VERY GOOD man’s bicycle, Americanballoon tires, little used $20. StephenFulkerson, 1145 East 60th, BU 8-8271.WILL SELL for $12 one pair York dumb¬bells, adjustable. Total weight 74 lbs.Original cost $20. Call PL 2-4181.LESSONS IN PIANO and theory for chil¬dren and adults. Call Miriam Rhoads,MU 4-3360.NEW KEYSTONE 16mm movie projectorwith case. $105. BU 8-6042.BUSINESS SERVICESALTERATIONS, Remodeling. Lowestrates. FA 4-7646.SEWING ALTERATIONS. Bachelor’s re¬pairing. Reasonable rates. For appoint¬ment call Edna Wariner, MU 4-4680.EXPRESS. Light and heavy moving.Willing and courteous service. Reason¬able rates. Bordone, HY 3-1915.FRENCH LESSONS at reasonable ratesby well - trained experienced nativeteacher. All levels. NOrmal 7-6703.see Classified, page 8ADVERTISEMENTOPEN LETTER TO THE MEN OF THE COLLEGE:Almost lost amid the local administrative and international political turmoilof the past week, we found a space, a little place, a dozen lines in the MAROON.For the first time since the February of 1947, college men are permitted to beinitiated into the Greek letter fraternities. Men old enough for the disciplineof war are presumed sufficiently mature for the sustaind horror of the full life.This is a confused time. There is war, rumors of war, Comps, Summer Vacation,Mickey Mantle, and the seasonal turning of young men’s fancy, one may reason¬ably be aghast in the face of frenetic rushing from various chapters. Aristotlenotes there are some things a courageous man should be afraid of. Do not plungeprecipitately into rash judgments affirmatively or negatively. When one returnsto the cave from the sunlight, as an obscure fraternity brother of ours oncenoted, one’s eyes are inclined to be temporarily useless. Therefore, in a spirit ofpure love, it probably behooves us to recommend to you some general principlesto bear in mind in the initial stage of approachment. The fraternity life is agood life. It provides a community of friendliness in which the fruits of educa¬tion may more fully be appreciated, digested and assimilated. The various chap¬ter houses to a large extent provide respite from those evils of the large institu¬tion per se which Mr. Hutchins lamented in his farewell speech.All fraternities are not the same. Like a university, a fraternity is as good asthose of which it is composed. The temperament, personality, interests andmeans of a house are a complex of tradition and accidental membership. Onewill be more congenial to your personality than another. Shop around. Anyfraternity is Interested in a good man. The Inter-Fraternity Council has placed atwo-week ban on pledging to assure, “sane and order inspection of the severalfraternities.”There is a box on the information desk in the Reynold’s Club. We have placedit there to receive the names and addresses of men Interested in or Just curiousabout the damned business. It is available to the rushing chairman of all thehouses. We want to meet you. Because some proselytizer grabs your arm, he hasnot necessarily led you to your natural home.One more thing: do not be snowed under, consciously or unconsciously, bycanards emanating from uninformed professional anti-fraternity ultra ’’liberal”sources. See for yourself.You're on your own. God bless you.Easy Reading Training Does ItNow you can speed up your reading and understanding capacitiesthrough new, scientific training methods developed by educatorsand offered by the Foundation for Better Reading.In just a few short, but guided hours—at your personalconvenience, day or evening—you will be amazed at yourimprovement. You will feel proud and confident in yourability to recite more quickly and correctly. And, you will be mightyhappy about the speed with which you can complete yourreading—to give you lots of time for extra activities.Hundreds of students, successful businessmen and professionalpeople have benefited from the fascinating opportunities for self-improvement made available through the Foundation for BetterReading. Now the facilities of the Foundation are easilyobtainable by students in Chicago.10-Page Booklet Gets You StartedTo learn more about this simple way to boost youracademic standing — and to gain more time for otheractivities—get your copy of the Foundation for BetterReading's 10 - page booklet, "You Can Read Better."It's free—simply return the coupon below, or phone.Better still, stop in for your copy and take the freereading test now being offered. No cost or obligation.3oundation f^or (f3etter l^eadinff100 East Ohio Street Chicago 11, IllinoisTelephone: Ml chigan 2-3863To: Mr. Steven Warren, DirectorFoundation for Better Reading100 East Ohio Street, Dept. C-2Chicogo 11, IllinoisPleose send me your 10-poge booklet, "You Con Read Better."MissNome MrsMr.Street AddressCity and State• tPlease Print) Class. . . .YearTelephone The University of Chicago ChapterThe Lambda Rho of Beta Theta Pi★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★SCHOOLS & COLLEGES★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★■A:MAROON policy Is to reject discrimina¬tory advertising. Please report violationsof this policy to us.LOW COST SEMINARSFor student, during July and Augustunder the auspices of the Inter-University Jewish Federation of GreatBritain and Ireland, and the FrenchUnion of Jewish students.For Information, WrittiJewish Educational Travel OrganizationJO W*»t 45th Jtrsst, New York it, N. Y.CHICAGO COLLEGE ofOPTOMETRYFully AccreditedAn Outstanding Collegein a Splendid ProfessionEntrance requirement thirty se¬mester hours of credits in speci¬fied courses. Advanced standinggranted for additional L. A creditsin specified courses.Registration Now OpenExcellent clinical facilities. Rec¬reational and athletic activities.Dormitories on campus. Approvedfor Veterans.1845-X Larrabee St.CHICAGO 14, ILLINOIS Formula for SuccessAdd Katharine Gibbs secretarial train¬ing to your college education! With thiscombination, you’re prepared to go fazin any business or profession.Ff'rift College Count Dean for catalogKatharine Gibbs230 Psrk A.« NEW YORK II 33 Plymouth St. MONTCl/SI t Supwiw St ,CHICAGO It 155 Anitfl St. PROVIOENC90 M*rN)oro«|h St. B0S10N 16Page 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 20, 195Classified... WANTED(from page 7)FOR SALETYPING, fast, accurate, reasonably ex¬perienced in social sciences. Also rewritework and shorthand dictation. MI 3-0473,8106 University Avenue, Apt. 2.TRAVELGOING WEST? would you like inex¬pensive transportation to west coast?Drive a new 1951 car to west coast cities,as your own, gas paid. TransportationLease Co., 188 W. Randolph 3t., Room1416, Chicago, Illinois. FI 6-3422.ANY STUDENT who might be interestedin a five-week student study trip to Eu¬rope please contact Mrs. Wayne Service,phone HOmewood 1026.WANTEDFULL OR PART TIME Job (days) fit ourneeds to meet your schedule. Work asdemonstrator at Museum of Science andIndustry. Please call in person.FOLK SINGERS, classical music groups,composers and Dixieland orchestras thatare interested in making records on apercentage basis. PL 2-9176 or Room618 BJ.ADDRESS OR PHONE NUMBER Of oneChet More (or Moore), late of St. John’s,Annapolis. Call Joe Hayden, 317 BJ.WILL BUY NAVY cravanetter aincoatwith lining. Must be in good condition.FA 4-8200, Box 456, leave message. Size38-40, long. WANTED NAVY veterans, for part orfull time work on Navy writing project.Call extension 1179 or 1176,GOOD USED CAR. I’m looking for pre¬sentable car in good running conditionfor about $250. Call MU 4-8402 eve. andweekend.LOVELY ROOM and board In return forsitting and light duties. BUtterfleli 8-2179.FOR RENTATTRACTIVE studio-room on campus.Private home, best transportation, rea¬sonable. Call PL 2-0735.TO SUBLET: 5 room apartment newfaculty bldg. Fully furnished: May 20 toSeptember 20. Prefer UC professor. MU4-4926.RENT AN ELECTRIC Refrigerator, $4.50to $5.50 per month. COmmodore 4-9231.PART TIME student has 4 room spa¬cious apartment to share with a girl,near campus, IC, excellent shopping.1300 East, 5400 South. MI 3-4826.HAVE THREE rooms, large porch begin¬ning summer quarter. HYde Park 3-8460.SMALL FURNISHED apartment for 2boys. Midway 3-3807 Sat. afternoon orSunday.LOST AND FOUND .RING LOST in Social Science building.Gold with blue stone. Reward. Returnto Box 114, MAROON. £ve*tt6Friday, April 20SU HEARTS PARTY: 7 p.m. ReynoldsClub. Admission 35 cents.LE CERCLE FRANCAIS: 4 p.m. Room AInternational House, 20 cents for re-ireshments. “Ce mai qui repond laterreur,” lecture by Dr. Jean AntoineSice.FILMS: “Hypnotic Behavior,” “Uncon¬scious Motivation,” Soc. Sci. 122. Ad¬mission 20 cents. Human DevelopmentStudent Organization.INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOW¬SHIP: 12:30-1:20 p.m. Ida Noyes Hall.“Secrets of the Kingdom.” Dr. HoraceLarsen.FILM: “Distant Journey,” NAACP, Judd126, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m. 60 cents.EXHIBITION: Hill el paintings andand drawings by Isaac: Llcht;tein.WALGREEN FOUNDATION LECTURE:Judd 126, 4:30 p.m. Charles Kennan,final lecture in series.FILM: “Moana,” “Chien Andalou,” Soc.Sci. 122, 7:15 and 9:30 p.m. Doc FilmUNIVERSITY CONCERT: Final Beetho¬ven concert. Alexander Schneider andEugene Istomin. Mandel Hall, 8:30p.m.LECTURES: 2:30 and 3:30 MAROONnewswriting class. Topic: The NewsLead. Eckhard 202.Saturday, April 21TONIGHT AT 8:30: “Purgatory.” "An-drocles an dthe Lion,” Ida Noyes The¬atre.HILLEL SEDER: 7 p.m. Reservationsonly. Sunday, April 22“OVER 21 OPEN HOUSE”: Kelly Hall,3-5 p.m. Dancing, cards, refreshments.SOCIALIST YOUTH LEAGUE: Ida NoyesLibrary, 4 p m. Hans Gerth: “Enigmaof the Middle Class.”FELLOWSHIP OF RECONCILIATION:Chapel House, 4 p.m. Jack Ross: “AVisit from the FBI.”INTERCHURCH BREAKFAST: 9:15 a.m.Chapel House: Robert True leads dis¬cussion on “New Testament.”COLLEGIUM MUSICUM: 8:30 p.m. Man-del Hall, Mozart-Machaut concert.TONIGHT AT 8:30: Ida Noyes Theatre,8:30 p.m. Admission 70 cents. “Purga¬tory and “Androcles and the Lion.”UNIVERSITY GLEE CLUB: 4:30 p.m.Rehearsal. D74 East 57th St. *Monday, April 23FILM: “Dreams That Money Oan Buy,’*8 p.m. Int. House.CALVERT CLUB: DeSales Center. Fr.Connerton: St. Thomas Aquinas: OnBeing and Essence. 7:30 p.m.IZFA: “Role of Religion in Israel,” 3:30p.m. Hlllel. Rabbi Ralph Simon.Tuesday, April 24HILLEL COFFEE HOUR: “Three Types of Tragic Hero,” Preston Roberts mSCA DRAMA GROUP: 7 p.m. Anvoninterested in forming one comeoffice, Ida Noyes 2nd floor.CALVERT CLUB: 8 p.m. DeSales CenteiSeminar on Cardinal NewmanINTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30-8:30 nnDiscussion on Book of JamesSTUDENT CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATIONIda Noyes 7:30 p.m. Dan Williams“What is Unique in Christian \nproach to Marriage?”Wednesday, April 25MADRIGAL SONG FEST: RevnoMClub, 7:30 p.m. SU sponsorshipSSA CLUB: "Confidentiality In PubuAssistance,” Alton A. Linford and MiMcMullen of Chicago Dally New.Breasted Hall, 8 p.m.Thursday, April 26FACULTY - GRADUATE COMMIT! ElFOR PEACE: “Korea After MacArthur,” 8 p.m. at the Bergers, 6149 Greenwood.POLITICS CLUB: "Twentieth CenturPost Marxist Movements,” 8 p.m athe Fauguhers, 1157 East 61st St., M\irray Wax, 8 p.m.RIDE ALightweightBICYCLEYOURSELF!Don't, test one brand alone...compare them alllUnlike others, we never ask youto test our brand alone. We say...compare PHILIP MORRIS...matchPhilip Morris...!»*»• Philip Morrisagainst any other cigarette!Then make your own choice!TRY THIS TEST ITak. a mm. MOMU-and anyother cigarette. Then, hett’t allyou dot1 tight up either cigarette. Take opuff-don’t inhale—and i-1-o-w-l-ylet the smoke come through your nose.2 Now do exactly the same thingwith the other cigarette.NOTICE THAT PHILIP MORRISIS DEFINITELY LESS IRRITATING,DEFINITELY MILDER! NEW 1951 MODELSEquipped with 3-Speed GearMake Your Selection from thesefamous brand namesSCHWINN - HERCULES - RUDGERALEIGH - DUNETT - ARMSTRONG30-Day Fret Checkup •Complete Line of Parts for All ModelsReg. $65.00NOW!$4750and upJACKSON PARKBIKE SHOPWe Service What We Sell5333 Lake Park DO 3-7524Ml 3-2999Remember. ••, £psf*CALLFOR NO CIGARETTEHANGOVERmeansMORE SMOKING PLEASURE!PHILIP MORRIS sports major...new VAN GAB gabardineIf you’re a student of relaxation—and week-endingis your main course—then Van Heusen new VanGab sport shirts are the subject for you.A.sGabardine sport shirt (especially smart withcontrasting vest), Shirt $5.95, Vest $2.95.B. Puhover Teezer with gabardine front, knittedcollar, waist and back, $2.95.C. California lx>-No model has two-way collarsmart with or without tie, $5.95.o Van Heusen*the world's smartest''• shirtsPHILLIPS-JONES CORP., NEW YORK 1, N. Y. |.