m.ed38endoi!I Poets’ plight themeof Moody Lecture“The Predicament of the Modern Poet’' was the theme ofRolfe Humphries’ lecture given this week under the auspicesoi ihe William Vaughn Moody Foundation.Humphries, a poet in his own right and translator of theAeneid, classified the modern poet as combination peepingtom and seer. As the product of seers, Humphries complainedthat modern poetry too often con-A-lab opened University of Chicago, May 18, 1951 31by KimptonAt 10.20 a.m. Wednesday, Chan¬cellor L. A. Kimpton cut the rib- tains the subject of doom.He pointed out that the attitudeof doom has become fashionable,sometimes a fad. Humphries re¬called that \yhen the A bomb wasdropped for the first time a groupof writers gathered together in Strozier hints 'no probe'new blasts rip MAROONbon signifying the formal opening New York where they concludedoi UC’s new 11 - million dollar that future writing was futile,atomic research laboratories. Eventually even these writersThe new laboratories are to be didn’t think that the world wasused by the various branches of going to be atomized, Humphriesthe University devoted to atomic added. A short time later, a small-research. The research will be on pox epidemic hit New York and by John V. HurstEven as Dean of Students Robert M. Strozier indicated there would be no investigationof the MAROON this Spring, the student newspaper came in for separate attacks fromtwo new sources this week.I the writers rushed to get vacci¬nated. They had all the intentionsof living they said.The translator of the Aeniedcommented that often poets be¬come professors because they arepoets, not because such a profes¬sion is a last resort. He felt thattwo ills are possible for the poet-professors.The teaching poet^s creative en-Fermi, Nobel Prize ergy is either destroyed throughdirected the first wasting too much time with thecorrection of freshman papers orexhausted in an over-identifica¬tion with his students.Although modern poetry is gen¬erally not obscure, Humphriessaid, he noted that the emotionsexpressed in contemporary verseare a little monotonous. Nobodywrites love poetry except Cum¬mings, he complained. Most poetsbegin and end with the theme,“I feel terrible.”the peacetime uses of atomic en¬ergy.The wartime project out ofwhich these research groups grewwas directed by Kimpton.Dr. M. J. Kelly, president ofBell Telephone Laboratories inNew York, was guest speaker atthe ribbon-cutting ceremony.Several distinguished US physi¬cists were present. Among thesewere Enricowinner whoatomic pile in the West Stands,Samuel K. Allison, director of theInstitute for Nuclear Studies, Cy¬ril S. Smith, director of the Insti¬tute for the Study of Metals, andT. H. Davis, director of the Insti¬tute of Radiobiology and Radio¬physics. One attack came from the Southtown Economist, Chicago community newspaper, whichWednesday blasted the MAROON’s recent literary supplement for employing what it deli¬cately called “twenty-eight expressions of profanity.”Closer to home, the secondattack was contained in a let- Strozier’s desk yesterday, his sec-ter to Dean Strozier signed by Efutary stated- „A c,c ° r d 1 n g toUC faculty members. The peti- Thomas, the bulk of the signers-tlon, which suggests a four-point a11 .lacu.Uy members-are Collegeprogram aimed at improving the instructors. Thomas said no at- Campus to meetKimpton tonighttempt was made to “comb” thefaculty for all available signa¬tures.Petition recommends four pointsConceiving the function of aThomas" denied there was any camPus newspaper as a dual role _____direct connection between his pe- and^Hwicrelations organ ^hepe and dancing in the third fl.oortition and a recent blast against expresses the belief that the theatre wiU folloW the recePtlon-the MAROON from the faculty- MARWN has “for some years Student marshalls who willof„^f.nHm.niofra*!nn a r- a MAKUUN has lor some years share the receptionMAROON’s journalistic quality,was written by Russell B. Thomas,associate professor of the Col¬lege Humanities staff.Denies Schwab tie-in An all-campus welcome will betendered Chancellor - to - be Law¬rence A. Kimption tonight at areception sponsored by StudentUnion. The reception will be heldin Ida Noyes, beginning at 8 p.m.Refreshments will be served,UC gets two student - administration board IlVt” failed "in this function Tt share the reception line withwhich advises Strozier on univer- P failure Qn lacR f Kimptr-n include: Joseph Hayden,s,ty policy. Led by natural sci- journalistlc understanding by Calvert Club; Terry Lunsford,fi t , ? staff members and points to stu- Student Forum; Roger Wood-he board recently recommended adm,„is,ration cooperation worth. Student Government; Garyhat Strozier initiate an mvesUga- as a means „f ellminat;ng this Filosa. Student Union; Roberttion of the MAROON s journalis- jajjure Lusher, Student Union; Charlesticrompelence and general con- The petiHon. Q) recommends Garvin. MAROON.new hospitals During the last part of the lec¬ture, Humphries read five of hisown poems. The petition:. . ... . ,, a r>r»rtKT that UC employ a director of stu- Paul Kaup, Inter - Fraternityrozier imp l dent publications to set standards Council; Lindell Sawyers, Inter-reporters this week that he may Blasts, p.,. 5 .a. Kimpta., page 2not act on the board s recom-Chancellor L. A. Kimpton an¬nounced last Saturday that twonow hospitals are to be added tothe UC medical facilities. The hos-<)i'yfls will be constructed onDrexel between 58th and 59th bythe J. W. Snyder ConstructionCompany.One of the hospitals will be aseven-story west wing to theclinics. It will contain 92 t>eds, in¬cluding special facilities for tu¬bercular patients and facilities fortuberculosis and allergy research.The other hospital will be theCharles Gilman Smith hospital,devoted to treatment of and re¬search on cardiac and contagiousdiseases. It will be six stories highand contain 75 beds.The addition of these two hos¬pitals will bring the facilities ofthe UC Clinics to 709 beds. One more June 8Tired from comps and investiga¬tions, the MAROON has decidednot to publish on May 25 andJune 1. Final issue will be June 8.UCers registerAdvance registration will be car¬ried on on the following dates:May 7-June 1—College; May 28-June 1—Physical Sciences, SocialSciences, School of Business; June4-6 — Federation of TheologicalSchools; June 4-7—Humanities;June 4-8 — Biological Sciences;June 4-15—Social Service Admin¬istration; June 11-15—School ofMedicine, Graduate LibrarySchool. mendation. He said, however,that he could not comment oneither the investigation or theThomas petition until after ameeting of the board set for Mon¬day. Should he fail to follow theboard’s recommendation, he willeffectively veto the investigation.Strozier outlines standAn indication of Strozier’s posi¬tion is contained in remarks at¬tributed to him in the Economistarticle.Stating that “a cleanup (of theMAROON) is a matter for itsstudent staff,” Strozier reportedlytold the Economist that “the uni¬versity’s responsibility is limitedto determining that the publica¬tion is conducted on a sound finan¬cial basis and that it does not vio¬late the law.”Meanwhile,, the Thomas peti¬tion, reportedly placed in themails early this week, reached Adler to defendman from DarwinDr. Mortimer J. Adler, Professor of Law at the UC, andeditor of The Great Ideas (Syntopicon) and Great Books ofthe Western World, will make one of his rare appearanceson campus next monday evening at 8 p.m. in Breasted Hallof Oriental Institute.The subject of his lecture will be, “The Defense of Managainst Darwin.” His reflectionson this controversial issue willgain added force from his wellknow n pioneering* in the greatbooks and great ideas of the west¬ern world.Rep. Velde charges IllinoisNSA chapter red-dominatedi) by David ZimmermanCharges that Communist groups at UC and Roosevelt College are dictating student poli¬cies at 10 Illinois colleges were made in Congress, Tuesday, by Rep. Harold Velde (Rep.,Ill.), according to Wednesday’s Chicago Tribune. Velde said that the Illinois chapter of NSAis under the control of the UC and Roosevelt groups.Velde, a member of the house un-American activities committee, claimed it is a well-known fact that “powerful elements of the Illinois Communist party, the Young Commu¬nist League, and the American Youth for Democracy have in thepast concentrated their efforts to influence students and faculty atdie UC and Roosevelt College in the communist movement,hubveriive* control NSA“These subversive elements have, through their treacherous andun-American maneuvers, been able to place Communists and com¬munist sympathizers in control over many student organizations, dent Service Fund is not asking He will present his concept ofthe nature of man and discussMortimer J. Adler the consequent theoretical andpractical inadequacies of the Dar¬winian thesis.The lecture will be followedby the open discussion period.The lecture, originally sched¬uled for tonight was postponeduntil Monday because it conflictedwith the SU Kimpton reception.Admittance to the lecture,which is- sponsored by CalvertClub, is free.Asks for clothesWould you give the shirt offyour back for Peace? World Stu- Foldi to do Bartok. Mozart,Debussy, Schubert Thurs.Through their control of these two chapters, they have in turn gained for that—just for any unwanted,control of the offices and -policies of the Illinois regional chapter ofthe NSA.’r but clean and usable clothing youmight have. Beginning today,boxes for such clothing will befound in the following places:Gates-Blake, Hitchcock-Snell, Cal-Pope repliesReplying to Velde’s charges, UC student Alexander Pope, chair-man of the Illinois chapter of the NSA, said in a statement to theMAROON: “As president of the Illinois region of NSA, it is my vert Club, Chapel House, Hillel,duty to point out that Rep. Velde is mis-informed. To the best of my all fraternity houses, laundry-knowledge, the delegates to the regional convention included no rooms of the pre-fabs, and thecommunists or communist sympathizers. As a member of the UCdelegation, I know that there were no communists or communistsympathizers in the UC delegation, and all its members belong toISL which specifically bars such persons from membership.”Velde’s charges were printed in the Tribune in connection with a for them. Any contributions tostory on a referendum being held today at Bradley University as to pay mailing costs will be grateful-tvhether that university should withdraw from NSA. ly accepted. Andrew Foldi, bass, recent star of the opera The Abductionfrom the Seraglio, will give a concert at International HouseTheatre, Thursday at 8:15 p.m. The concert is sponsored bythe UC Association of Interns and Medical Students. Proceedsof the concert will go for drugs and medical supplies tobe sent to other countries, particularly India, Burma, andPakistan. —Reynolds Club.WSSF will forward the clothescollected to Europe and Asia,where there is a tremendous need Tickets at $1 will be available atInternational House from Mon¬day to Thursday, 11:30 to 1:00p.m. and at the ticket office inHutchinson Commons.The concert will include tensongs from Schubert’s song cycle,Die Winterreisc, Mozart arias,and a group of songs by Debussyand Bartok. Foldi is well known in Univer¬sity circles. His column, the MusicStand, once graced the pages ofthe MAROON. He has been onthe faculty of the University Col¬lege and is now with the ChicagoMusical College. His singing inThe Abduction from the Seragliowas hailed by owtks as “superb.”,— >Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROONCampus tours set to Wins debate® T T TrtnWo torfight low enrollmentTo combat the effects of the nationwide drop in college en¬rollment on the US campus, the Administration is fosteringan extensive publicity campaign. The object, to quote DavidLadd, college representative, is, “To draw students who are anotch above average, and to increase enrollment” Says Laddfurther, “The extent of abysmal ignorance about the Chicagoplan of education is phenomenal.”To demonstrate the Chicago planof education and to attract “top-notch” students, the Administra¬tion is sponsoring a series oftours of the campus. High schoolstudents of other cities and states,well as of the Chicago area, Hillel to offerscholarship Lewis Baron, UC debater, cap¬tured top speaking honors at theWestern Conference DebateLeague Congress held at IowaCity last weekend. Baron tied withtwo University of Illinois dele¬gates for the highest overall rat¬ing awarded at the combined de¬bate-discussion meeting of 60 stu¬dents from the Big Ten schools.Ratings of “excellent” wereearned by Chicago delegates Mi¬chael Field (in discussion and de¬bate) and David Green (in discus¬sion). UCer Harris Hartzler wasrated “good.” Monday deadlinefor Summer listMonday is the deadline for list¬ing events for the summer quar¬ter in the printed summer Calen¬dar.Carol Saunders, assistant direc¬tor of student activities, who is¬sues the calendar, offers this ad¬vice to organizations planningsummer activities, be they socialor cultural programs, lectures orparties: tell her about them inReynolds Club 202 today or Mon¬day.are participating in these tours.An important part of the cam¬paign was the Tri-Hi-Y tour, orig¬inated by Interclub Council, spon¬sored by the Administration, andaccomplished through the co-op¬eration of Interclub Council, Stu¬dent Union, and the Phi GammaDelta fraternity. Over two hun¬dred Tri-Hi-Y girls were excusedflrom high school classes Wednes¬day to take part in the tour. Theyattended college discussion classesat 1:30 and at 2:30 were takenon tours of the campus. At 3 theyreturned to Ida Noyes, where In¬terclub Council and the Phi Gamsplied them with refreshments,entertainment, and college cata¬logs.The three UC groups involvedreceived the warm thanks of theAdministration for their whole¬hearted co-operation. In return,they expressed hopes that this Application blanks for the Sgt.Robert Golbus Memorial Scholar¬ship are available at Hillel Foun¬dation, 5715 Woodlawn. The schol¬arship, in memory of St. Golbus,killed in action in Germany, pro¬vides full tuition to the UC Col¬lege and is awarded on the basisof scholastic performance andneed. »Deadline for application for thescholarship, which is open to allUC students, is May 21.Applications are also availablefor a work scholarship to HillelFoundation, sponsored by theWomen’s District Grand LodgeNo. 6, B’nai B’rith. Deadline forapplication for this scholarship isJune 30. Abbott honoredEdith Abbott, professor anddean emeritus of the School ofSocial Service Administration,was given the 1951 Survey AwardMonday in Atlantic City*Presentation was made at theNational Conference of SocialWork. The award was conferredon her for “imaginative and con¬structive contributions to socialwork.” WSSF receives $1,000WSSF last week acknowledgedthe receipt of $1,000 os UC's con¬tribution to their annual fund cam¬paign. Local andLong Distance MovingStorage Facilities for Books,Record Cabinets, Trunks, orCarloads of FurniturePeterson FireproofWarehouse, Inc.1011 East Fifty-fifth StreetBUtterfield 8-6711DAVID L. SUTTON. PresidentKimpton...(from page I )Church council; Jackson Burgess,Chicago Review; Jack Sparks,Burton - Judson council; WalterPozen, Orientation Board; andtour and others being planned Donald Miller, Inter-Varsity Chris-will achieve the desired results. tian Fellowship.1169 Eost 55th Street 24-Hour Service PLoso 2-3246University Garage_ THORNTON ROGERSExpert Service on All CorsCOMPLETE SPRING TUNE-UPo WASHING - GREASINGo BRAKE SERVICENSA Student Discount on Ports, Gos ond Oil 1950ComprehensiveExams are HereGet Your CopiesTodayReasonably Fricedfrom 2 cents to50 centsSome 1948 and 1949 CopiesAvailable at Reduced PricesUofC Bookstore5802 Elis AvenueCan You Read ThisIn 30 Seconds?The benefits of better reading training include faster reading, improved com¬prehension and better concentration. *Sir Francis Bacon has summed up many of the other advantages of betterreading. He said, “Reading maketh a full man.” Better reading improvesyour visual skills and understanding ability so that you approach moreclosely your capacity to learn.Experience at the Foundation for Better Reading, and at colleges and otherinstitutions giving reading training, prove that anyone who can read canread better. Foundation case histories show that reading speed is increasedon an average of 150%, with commensurate increase in comprehension.Many of those who have taken Foundation training have doubled—eventripled and quadrupled—their initial reading speed.Foundation training is personalized and private . . . not classroom work.No advance preparation is necessary. You read two or three books of yourown choice during training. You set your own hours . . . day or evening.Foundation training is short and pleasant. And, now is the time to start—because you take advantage of special student rate in effect until May 31only. Come in . . . find out about it . . . today.There are over 200 words in the above passage. If youread it in 30 seconds you are well above average, butyou also are well equipped to improve your readingskill even more. If you required more than 30 secondsto read the above text, you will find better readingtraining exceptionally valuable.3 ounclalion flor better l^eadin^100 East Ohio Street • Chicago, 11, IllinoisTelephone: Ml chigan 2-3863To: Mr. Steven Warren, Executive DirectorFoundation for Better Reading100 East Ohio Street, Dept. C-5Chicago 11, Illinoisj~j Please send me your 10-page booklet, “You Con Read Better.I would like to arrange for a reading survey.MissName MrsMr.Street Address #City ond State (Pleose Print) course •Year •Telephone • 0She want* important workJob with opportunity-one that —respect in her community.SW »,n.. . “go with better living.— - -r*with intere*t»ng attractivepleasant 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($191 a month) and regular increases every three monthsfor several years.As a Service Representative, you’ll have charge of theaccounts of your own group of telephone customers.You’ll be “Mis6 Telephone” to them — handle theirrequests for service, their questions, their problems. It *fascinating work!Interested? Then see Miss Allan, Employment Office—Women, 309 W. Washington St., Chicago. Illinois, oryour own College Employment Bureau.ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANYM*y >»! THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3LESS THAN */> the PRICEYou Would Expect to PayFor famous Make REMINGTONLong Play Records• Finest European Recordings• IVon-Breakable• 33 1/3 RPM High FidelityCOMPARE with other National BrandsSelling as High as 5.9510-Inch Classic LP$|69Ri.P—149-39TALES OF HOFFMANExcerpts Vocal8KLF-149-2SIPPOLITOV-IVOVCAUCASIAN SKETCHESRLP-149-25SIBELIUS-FINLANDIA, OP. 27MOZART-THAMOS, KONIG INAEGYPTEN (K-34S)RLP-149-24TOSCA AND CAVALLERIAKUSTICANA(Instrumental highlights)PAGANINI CONCERTO FORVIOLIN AND ORCHESTRAOp. 6 in D MajorRLP-149-19TSCHAIKOVSK YNUTCRACKER SUITE, OP 71RLP-149-18WILLIAM TELL OVERTUREBARBER OF SEVILLEOVERTUREOrchestra of theMaggio FiorentinoErasmo Ghiglia, ConductorCARMEN PRELUDEThe Paris Opera OrchestraRL P-149-15SCHUBERT-UNFINISHEDSYMPHONY NO. 8In B MinorRLP-149-13GILL1S: TULSA SUITEKOSENKAVAI.IER WALTZESRLP-149-11RIMSKY-KORSAKOFFLE COQ D’OR SUITERLP-149-9BEETHOVEN-SYMPHONYNO. 5 In C Minor, Op. 67RLP-149-1THE FLEDKRMAUSOVERTUREPL-1-149BACH-SONATA NO. 2In B MinorCHOPIN MELODIESPolonaise in A Major, OP. 40No. 1; Fantasy Impromptu inC Sharp Minor, Op. 66; Polo¬naise in E Flat Major, Op. 53;Scherzo in C Sharp Minor, 12-Inch Classic LP$2^99RLP-199-32RACHMANINOFF - PIANO -CONCERTO NO. 2 IN CMINOR. Op. 188RLP-199-31BIZET - SYMPHONY IN C8RLP-199-24BRAHMSHUNGARIAN DANCESRI.P-199-21BEETHOVEN: EROICASYMPHONY NO. 3 IN E FLATRLP-199-20TSCHAIKOVSKY: CONCERTOFOR VIOLIN AND ORCH.Op. 35 in D MajorRLP-199-17LISZT FAUST WALTZLiebestraum and Dance ofthe GnomesCHOPIN: BALLADE NO. 1 ING MINORSCHERZO NO. 3 IN CSHARP MINORRLP-199-15CARMEN(Voral Highlights)KLP-199-14BARBER OF SEVILLE(Vocal Highlights)RLP-199-11KIMSKY-KORSAKOFFSCHEHEREZADERI.P-199-10BEETHOVEN MOONLIGHTSONATAOp.Op. 27, No. 2 in C SharpMinorRLP-199-8BEETHOVEN-SYMPONY NO. 7In A Major, Opus 92RLP-199-4DVORAKNEW WORLD SYMPHONYSymphony No. 5 in E Minor,RLP-199-3GRIEG-PIANO CONCERTOIn A Minor, Op. 16RLP-199-1BEETHOVENEMPEROR CONCERTO'No. 5 in 7 Flat MajorAVAILABLE %T YOUR NEARESTRECORD SHOP:LOWE’S1223 EAST 55th STREETUniversity Music1371 E. 55Woodlawn Radio1204 E. 63Melodie Shoppe1349 E. 63 Victory Radio1546 E. 53Garrick Music Shop733 W. 63Holland's6335 S. HalstedAsk for Complete Catalogue(NOT AN ADVERTISEMENT)aiiiimiiiiimiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiExcerptS “The UNIVERSE is a big lump of Jello with*****stars jS crawling about it like cockroaches. It will eventually be gob- |i bled up by the neighbor’s cat. The MASTER PLAN of the■ PETATER OF1 ALL THINGS is perfect and unchangeable3 and may be applied to predicting the result of the 19515 World Series.”FROM EI COSMpHOOEY1929 SCRATCHSHEETS |The Philosophers Scratch Sheet (a supplement)lowever, ASK THIS of a professor; does he know it is true or 33 false that the intense light of the sun is the result of a DES- 3■ PERATE ATTEMPT of nuclear physicists to cast into outer 55 space a NUCLEAR REACTOR PILE that ran wild? Do not5 press the matter. TIME has the ANSWER (so does the3 NEW YORKER).•OSmOHOOEY 1929 scratch sheets were sent to 1,453 librariesS throughout the Esperanto-speaking world. Some were usedg as Toilet Paper. GOD KNOWS what happened to the rest.5 (Write Him and see, will you?)ACCEPTANCE by anybody is unimportant. It’s right, I know it,S you can trust me. COSMOHOOEY is a new and different3 type of Boloney. The HYDRAMATIC core/of the Earth is5 directly below the residential district of Oshkosh, Wiscon-S sin. A constant beam of energy is fed out through theg plumbing. Grandchildren of present-day crackpots willS know.Published at the cost of CHICAGO MAROONnmiiitiaiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiimiA Overhears future conversation;finds UC’ers become ‘typical’by Joe CadizA recent issue of Life maga¬zine offers its readers somesnatches of “typical” college con¬versation. It would seem from thisthat, if UC wants to be typical,we students must change our wayof talking.Following is a* conversation,secretly tape-recorded in Hutchin¬son circle. The date is Spring,1954.JIM. Gee, Amy, hi! Guess you’rereal excited ’bout our date for theBig Dance! Guess you can hardlywait!AMY. Can’t wait, Jim!JIM: I’m fixing up the hot-rodreal jazzy. We’ll have a time of it!AMY. We will, Jim; we will!JIM. Here comes Bud. Let’s godown to the Coke club, where allthe gang on our campus hangsout.AMY. Too late. He’s alreadyseen us.JIM. Hi, Bud!BUD. Hi, gang! Whaddya saySQ to offerbus to WrightBecause of the large number ofstudents who are to take the Col¬lege deferment examination onMay 26 at Wright Junior College,3400 North Austin, Student Gov¬ernment has arranged direct busservice between the campus andWright, provided at least 25 stu¬dents register for the trip. Inter¬ested students must sign up forthe trip at the Reynolds Clubdesk by noon, Wednesday, May23. SG has arranged to subsidizethe trip, so that the charge perstudent will be $.60, to be paid be¬fore boarding the bus which willleave from the AdministrationBuilding at 7 a.m. on Saturday,May 26.According to Jerome A. Gross,SG treasurer, the bus trip willtake a little over an hour, whileto reach Wright Junior Collegeby CTA lines requires twochanges and nearly two hours oftraveling.SG is also attempting to ar¬range for breakfast to be servedat Burton - Judson sufficientlyearly to accommodate residentswho must report at Wright at8:30 a.m. we go down to the Coke club. Allthe gang on our campus is theretalking about the Big Game.JIM. Yea — we really sockedTeck!BUD. Amy, you sure lookedswell doin’ that cheer-leading.AMY. Aw, gee Bud. I know that.JIM. Bud, I hear you are goingto enter the business of your Dad,that of munitions, when you havesuccessfully completed yourcourse of study at this university.BUD. That is right, Jim. I wantto do all that I can for my nation.AMY. It is a great nation; every¬one on our campus is saying so.BUD. Our campus newspaper,The Stuffed Owl, had a story on itlast week. They really showed upthe Reds. Remember that last line,“If Russia is so good, why does itkeep an Iron Curtain around it¬self?” That was clever.JIM. Real shrewd. But we mustOil gefs new name;Curriculum sameby Fred WinsbergObservation, Integration, andInterpretation, has died. The nameis to be replaced by Organization,Methods, and Principles of Knowl¬edge. The old name was not clear.Students who have already tak¬en the crowning gem of UC edu¬cation and are still wonderingwhat it is, or students strugglingto take the comp this spring, maytake consolation in the apparentfact that the faculty is in similarneed of clarity.Oil not firstOil is not the first course tomake a quiet exit from UC. Eng¬lish 1 and 2 are no more, and theNatural Sciences have been in-distinguishably fused with theBiological and Physical Sciences.Time was, when students did¬n’t have to take Oil. Studentswho entered no later than 1946were able to drop two of the threecourses, Oil, Soc. 3, and Hum. 3.Since then, the course History ofWestern Civilization has been in¬troduced.No change expectedWhile there has been no an¬nounced change in the content ofthe Oil course, unqualified ob¬servers expect none.The affectionate abbreviationfor Oil, “Oy oy oy,” has no re¬placement as yet. be tolerant. Would it not be ashame if we were to lose the verybattle we are fighting in foreignlands by failing to be alert anddemocratic citizens at home?AMY. They did a real job of pro¬moting Religious Emphasis Week.I already feel . . .BUD. Closer to God ?AMY. Yes (reverent pause).ALL. Now we’ll all go down tothe Coke club on our campus.Everybody will be there!Staff exhibitstheir art workFor the coming month, Good-speed Hall will house the work ofthe artist members of the Renais¬sance Society of the University ofChicago. On exhibit are the paint¬ings of two of the Humanities 1staff of the college, Harold Hay-don and James Gilbert, and also aterracotta by Freeman School¬craft, director of the Burton-Judson studio. Mr. Schoolcraft’selongated and emaciated nude,“Thin Ice” is good.This cannot be said with asmuch feeling of Harold Haydon’soil, “The Big City.” Mr. Haydonexperiments here with double vis¬ion. His measure of success canbe determined by no one but theartist; however, the reviewerfound the painting unpleasing.Perhaps the most arrestingwork to be seen upon entering thegallery was the massive “Torsoof Maia” by Milton Horn. Thesculpture can be bought in bronzefor $2,000.Special notice should be takenof Mike Mason’s “Don Quixote.”This color lithograph catches themood of the famed character withits thin, wispy lines and limitedcolors. Completely opposite butalso very good is Flora Schofield’s“Yacht Harbor, Florida.” This oilwith its large shapes and brightcolors is fresh.Nancy OatesSet date for FolliesThe fourth annual production ofthe Human Development Folliesis scheduled for May 25 in IdaNoyes Theatre. The Follies is ahumorous show produced by Hu¬man Development students.AMUSEMENTS“Variations ona Thome”Saturday, May 19, 8:00 P.M.Four artists will demonstrate anddiscuss their technique whileworking from one model.Members, 60c - Non-members 80cTHE NEW GULLIVERSt nday, May 20, 3 and 8 P.M.A Russian satire, made with overthree thousand puppets, withEnglish titles.Mat. 25c for children; 50c formembers; 75c for non-members.Eve. 75c for members; 51 for non¬members.Arts - Sciences - Professions946 N. Clark St.Film Forum of ChicagoPresents New and ExcitingFILMS of EUROPEEVERY FRIDAY NIGHTat 2457 W. Chicago (adm. 60c)Showing May 18 8 p.m.“GHETTO TEREZIN" (Czech)(Distant Journey)Added Feature“THE EARTH SINGS"(Israeli) Hurry! While They Last!RIDE ALightweightBICYCLENEW 1951 MODELSEquipped with 3-Speed GearMake Your Selection from thesefamous brand namesSchwinn -Rudge- RaleighDunelt-Armstrong-Hercules30-Day Free CheckupComplete Line of Parts for All ModelsReg. $65.00NOW!$4750and up/i-viofe/ 450,N. CLARK SU. 7-5478 ^ JACKSON PARKBIKE SHOPWe Service What We Sell5333 Lake ParkV •,< ’,V*VeV.* Y. NOrmai 7-9860DOrchester 3-7524,■Page 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON May IS, 1CUtty *7<Mtty&Peace, pure and simple"—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 Midway1-0800, Ext. 1011. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions by mail, $4 per year. Report* on the Fight tor Academic Freedomby Fred Gearing and Martin Orans“A subtle creeping paralysis of freedom of thought andspeech is attacking college campuses in many parts of thecountry, limiting both students and faculty in the area tradi¬tionally reserved for the free exploration of knowledge andtruth.” So stated the New York Times last Thursday ai)d Fri¬day in reporting a survey of 72 major U.S. campuses,through-CHARLES GARVINEditor-in-Chief LEROY WOLiNSBusiness ManagerLetters some day you mature and become realAmericans.Lucille A. SieversMore on MAROON ...The proposed investigation of theMAROON by t h e Faculty-Student-Ad¬ministration Committee has many dan¬gerous possibilities as we see it. It isespecially alarming in view of whathappened to the Brooklyn College “Van¬guard” last year.The chairman of the three-man UCStudent Government sub - committee,composed of one ISL, one independent,end one NPSL, that is investigating the“Vanguard” case went to New York lastChristmas and learned many detailsfirst hand.A report of the Vanguard case will bepresented to SG very soon,At Brooklyn, another faculty-studentcommittee, the Faculty Student Com¬mittee on Publications had made a rulethat every controversial editorial hadto be accompanied by at least one op¬posing editorial. At the first violation(about which there was much dispute)of this rule, the charter of “Vanguard”was revoked and a new paper, “Klngs-man,” with an administration-spon¬sored staff was begun. There was morethan a little evidence leading to theconclusion that the administration hadbeen laying for “Vanguard” for a longtime.So great was the opposition to this onthe part of the students that eightstudent organizations, led by SDA, pub¬lished an off-campus newspaper, fi¬nanced by student collections, for sever¬al weeks. This paper called “CampusNews,’’strongly opposed the administra¬tion action. Last January, SDA wassuspended for this.The UC administration is one of themost liberal in the country. It must bewary, however, of Interfering with acampus newspaper, especially one whichis self supporting and whose staff isopen to all students.This can be the start of a trend thatwill be regretted in the future.We believe that the MAROON is nota good paper.But if we would improve it, wouldit not be far better to adopt a non-coercive method, such as suggestionsto the editor, joining the short-handedMAROON staff, etc.?Charles FaurquherArthur Featherston HoughLeon WarshoyUniversity of Chicago SG CivilLiberties sub - committee in¬vestigating the revocation ofthe charter of the BrooklynCollege "Vonguard"Hutchins eliminated football. Toobad that he did not eliminate theMAROON. There are at least two waysto have a paper representative of thestudents, one is to have a school ofjournalism with credits for work on theschool paper; the other is to pay thestaff and charge the students for eachcopy.In either case all communists shouldbe barred from all positions. A newname for the paper would be necessary,so that none of the new staff wouldbear the stigma that surrounds the“reds” of the MAROON.It would be nice to never again seesuch stuff’ as Mrs. Willie McGee’s let¬ter, “Hutchins Out” headlines, “Onionsto Northwestern,” to cite only the big¬gest items of all the examples of poortaste and uninteresting dribble-drabblethat makes up the MAROON.Of course the MAROON will go on,and this letter will not be printed; but,oh, how sorry you “workers” may befor your past connections, when and if, As a former MAROON editor, I wouldlike to urge that serious considerationbe given to the Student-Faculty Com¬mittee’s suggestion for an investigationof the paper's proper place on campus.The MAROON has a long and proudrecord of independence, going back toits first editor, Harold Ickes, who nevertook any guff from anybody. It hasbeen vigilant in protecting its freedom.But it has been, and ought to con¬tinue to be, its boast that it has con¬stantly sought to improve its serviceto the university community. A fulldiscussion of the MAROON’S assets andshortcomings, led by a fair and knowl¬edgeable body, would be of benefit tothe newspaper and the university itserves. I hope the suggestion will bewelcomed by the present staff andthe Dean of Students office.David BroderI hope the MAROON will stick to itsguns and not be intimidated by theassorted sophists, witch hunters andbook burners which every campus, eventhat of the University of Chicago,spawns. ,There seems to be an allegation cur¬rent that the MAROON does not com¬pare favorably with other campus pa¬pers. The charge is tommyrot and any¬one who has ever read the relevantdocuments (i.e.. the other newspapers)will see that it is so. The MAROONbadly needs improvements but it isvastly superior to its rah-rah competi¬tors.John WilkinsonInstructor, Physical SciencesIn its last issue (May 4) the MAROONdisplayed its usual ineptitude and gen¬eral inability to understand or reflectin its columns the actual politicaltrends on campus. An all-campus elec¬tion was held on April 26 and 27 todetermine the delegates who wouldrepresent UC at the next national NSAconvention. ISL candidates won all 20positions. The MAROON forgot to reportanything at all of the election. I don’twish to intimate that the MAROON’seditors neglected the story out of poli¬tical prejudice. I wish to say that thisneglect, whatever its motive, is typicalof the MAROON’S abominable incapa¬bility and its Journalistic insincerity.The projected investigation of theMAROON will undoubtedly bear out theaccusations I have written in the aboveparagraph but I don’t think that aninvestigation will solve the essentialproblem of a student newspaper runby political troglodltes which is unrep¬resentative of the student body it issupposed to service. I think that theelections held recently for next year’seditor should be voided and that a newelection should take place. All studentsshould be Invited to vote, and the in¬vitations should be posted on all theavailable bulletin boards with sufficientadvance notice to assure a large turn¬out of voters. The present staff of edi¬tors has succeeded in alienating thecampus. Perhaps a new and more rep¬resentative body will stem the risingwave of nausea the present staff seemsto be cultivating so earnestly throughits repeated bungling.Lorry ShermanSnell Hall Two themes runout the report: restrictivemeasures taken by adminis¬trations and legislatures are avery real daijger to academicfreedom; a greater danger still isthe self-censorship by students in Registration Now OpTERESA DOLANDANCING SCHOOLLearn to Dance NowPrivate and Class LessonsBacked by 35 Years ExperienceDaily 12 noon to 10 p.m.1208 E. 63rd St. Tel. HY 3-3080■PHYSICS'?Newton needed a knock on the noodle to latch onto gravity.But smart chicks know that lovely Judy Bond blouses makethem the center of attraction always. Try one and prove it IawK. BLOUSESAT BETTER STORES EVERYWHERESoe them •» MARSHALL FIELD b COMPANYBond, Inc., Dept. C, 1373 Broadway, New York IB, N. Y. Student governments and in¬dividual members of student com¬munities manifest their fear ofpolitical labeling in decrying par¬ticipation in, argument about, andpublication regarding off-campusactivity. Students feel that it hasthe face of McCarthyism. Dr. Tay- become "unwise” to think andlor of Sarah Lawrence summed talk about the most pressingup the latter, "The trouble is that problems of the world commu-the liberal students who are in- nity.terested in political and social re-form are so conscious of the dan- g CHICAGO COLLEGE .QPTOMETRFully AccreditedAn Outstanding Colleta Splendid ProfessitinEntrance requirement thirtymester hours of credits in sptied courses. Advanced stan<granted for additional L. A. erein specified courses.Excellent clinical facilities. Freational and athletic activiDormitories on campus. Apprcfor Veterans.1845-X Larrabee St.CHICAGO 14, ILLINCgers of being labeled pro-Commu-nist by those outside the collegethat they do not wish to run thatkind of risk . . .”See students dodging problemsExamples are cited from some30 colleges in which students andfaculties have reported a generalreluctance to act on the part ofstudent governments, student or¬ganizations, and student bodiesgenerally, “a sharp turning in¬ward to local college problems, tothe exclusion of broader currentquestions.”Yale’s Daily News editorialized,"We see college men growingmore and more docile, more andmore accepting the status quo,paralyzed by the fear of theirfutures, radicalism snuffed outwhere it should flame the bright¬est.”The fear reached absurdlengths in an incident in which“a number of Rutgers studentswho were asked to sign the wide¬ly publicized anti- CommunistCrusade for Freedom Scroll re¬fused because they were suspic¬ious of the words ‘crusade’ and‘freedom’ and unsure of the spon-sors”(!)One Dean reported that "any¬thing identified with peace, free¬dom of speech or negotiation toresolve differences, was suspectedof Communist influence.” THE COLOPHONof University Pressesis the mark of authoritatixe publishing. These books are significantto the scholarly reader. 'THE LIBRARY'S PUBLIC (Columbia) $3.0Cby Bernard BerelesonA synthesis of research literature on library book use andusers. This is one of the volumes in the Columbia Univer¬sity Reports of the Public Library Inquiry.THE MUSES' LIBRARY (Harvard) ea. $2.5CA series of authoritative editions—each volume contain¬ing a critical and biographical introduction by a writerand scholar versed in the works of the poet and his time.THE MEANING OF SHAKESPEARE (Chicago) $6.0CBy Harold C. GoddardShakespeare's characters are presented os real humanbeings in a systematic structure of profound beliefs.SHAKESPEARE SURVEY 4 (Cambridge) $2.75A series of yearly volumes, dealing with Shakesperiaadiscovery, history, criticism, and production over all theworld.THE LONELY CROWD (Yole) $4.0Cby David Riesman* A fresh approach to the evaluation of the changing Amer¬ican character.Special Window Display of Books fromUniversity DressesThe University of ChicagoBookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUEfnminniiiiiiHniHiiuiHimiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinnniniiiiiinniiiiHiiiiiiHiimiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiHiiiiiiii■KE4UIYG UlkMH A FULL H1V— Francis Bacon^ a r\ Save by Enrolling Nowaf theFoundation for Better Reading4Special Student Rate Ends May 31Now is the time to obtain the benefits of faster reading, improvedcomprehension and better concentration that better reading train¬ing can give you.Through Foundation for Better Reading training, you can double-even triple—your reading speed. That gives you more time toaccomplish your day’s work—gives you extra time for other activi¬ties. You obtain more enjoyment out of your at-home reading, too.Hundreds of business and professional people and students whohave taken Foundation training testify to its benefits. And, astheir reading speed increased, their comprehension and under¬standing skills also improved.There’s a substantial saving for you by enrolling at the Foundationfor Better Reading before May 31. Come in now.Get Your Free Copy of BookletAsk about valuable reading survey. Be sureto have a copy of the interesting 10-pagebooklet, ‘‘You Can Read Better.” It’s yoursfor the asking.3ounclution j^or (better t^eculinff100 East Ohio Street • Chicago, 11, IllinoisTelephone: Ml chigan 2-S863To: Mr. Steven Warren, DirectorFoundation for Better Reading100 East Ohio Street, Dept. C-4Chicago 11, IllinoisPlease send me your 10-page booklet, "You Can Read Better.'MissName MrsMr. wStreet AddressCity and State.(Please Print)May 1», 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5NEWREMAINDERBARGAINSScottsboro Boy by HaywoodPatterson and Earl Conrad.Pub. price $3.00. Our price98cThe People's Song Book.Songs of the labor unions,old rally songs, and worksongs. Pub. price $1.00. Ourprice 49cOur Vanishing Civil Libertiesby 0. John Rogge. Pub. price$3.00. Our price 79cThe Private Manufacture ofArmaments by Philip Noel-Baker, M.P. Pub. price$3.75. Our price 59cEagle Forgotten, the life ofJohn Peter Altgeld, by HarryBarnard. Pub. price $5.00.Our price 98cGoethe: The Story of a Manby Ludwig Lewisohn. 2 vol¬umes, boxed. Pub. price$10.00. Our price. . . .$3.98Transition Workshop, editedby Eugene Jolas. Pub. price$5.00. Our price $1.98Bernard Clare by James T.Farrell. Pub. price $2.75.Our price 59cThe Road Between by JamesT. Farrell. Pub. price $3.50.Our price 59cThe Puppet Theatre inAmerica, a History: 1524 toNow, by Paul McPharlin.Pub. price $6.00. Our price$2.49The Conquest of Culture,How Man Invented His Wayto Civilization, by M. D. C.Crawford. Pub. price $3.00.Our price 98cMystic Rebels, Apollonius,John of L e i d e n , SabbetaiZevi, Cagliostro, by Harry C.Schnur. Pub. price $3.50.Our price .* 75cWhen the Going Was Goodby Evelyn Waugh. Pub. price$3.00. Our price 79cLords of the Press by GeorgeSeldes. Pub. price $3.00. Ourprice 98cFragment of a Great Confes¬sion, A Psychoanalytic Auto¬biography by Theodor Reik.Pub. price $6.00. Our price$1.98British Thought, 1947. Ananthology. Contributions byBernard Shaw, RobertGraves, Stephen Spender,etc. Pub. price $3.75. Ourprice 98cAmerica's Destiny by Her¬man Finer. Pub. price $5.00.Our price 59cThe Black Book, the NaziCrime Against the JewishPeople. Pub. price $5.00. Ourprice 98cThis Is Pearl! The UnitedStates and Japan—1941,, byWalter M i 11 i s. Pub. price$4.00. Our price 98cand hundreds of othersClark & ClarkBooksellers1204 East 55th StreetHours 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. Sport briefsTrackmen, Baseballers split contests;Women face Northwestern in tennis>y Bob MarchThe Varsity Baseball team Tuesday defeated St. Joseph’s, 14-10, on a 10-hit barrage.Saturday the Maroons lost to Washington u! in St. Louis.Net men lose 2Outfielder Ken Koenig will be discharged from the hospital today. He has been theresince May 8, recovering from a skull fracture resulting from a beaning.The Varsity Netmen went below the .500 mark this week, losing to Beloit and Kalamazoo.Their record now stands at.three won, four lost.Iowa State last Saturdayhanded the UC tracksterstheir second defeat of the out¬door season, defeating them97-2/3 to 33-1/3 in a homecomingmeeting at Ames, Iowa. CaptainVern Gras, standout UC hurdler,took his first defeats in the highand low hurdles events of theseason. Vern had previously won15 straight times in each event.Women face NUThe Women’s Varsity tennisteam faces Northwestern in ameet on Varsity Courts at 2:45this afternoon. The UC’ers havenot had a meet in several weeksand, after concerted practice, arein top shape for this meet. Thesquad facing NU will include:singles—No. 1, Marge Espiritu;No. 2, Sandra Parocki; No. 3,Betty Wright; No. 4, Diane Reich;doubles—No. 1, Betty Cope andMarian Yeh; No. 2, Janet Bezarkand Helen Aronson.The JV netmen retained thePSL championship last Saturday,with Parker Hall winning thesingles title, Joe Ellis finishingsecond in singles, and GeorgeStone and Alf Knight winningthe doubles crown. Draft deadline nearThe deadline for filing of appli¬cations to take the Selective Serv¬ice College Qualifying Examinationhas been extended to May 25. Ap¬plication may be made to take theexam on June 16, June 30, orJuly 12.Blasts...Jv's qualityFour JV trackmen qualified forthe State finals tomorrow atUrbana - Champaign. Ken Stapeyearned the right to go downstateby winning the half mile in 2:03.3.Milers Purdie and Smothers bothbroke 4:45 to qualify, and BobAppleman tied for first in thepole vault to earn his State berth.UC golfers played IllinoisTeachers to a 9-9 tie on the Kish-waukee Country Club fairways ternational House tomorrow night.Int. Houseto offer danceStriped awnings, checkeredtablecloths, park benches, appleblossoms, a luminous fountain—ail will be part of Le Bal du Prin-temps, the quarterly dance at In¬last Saturday. Friedman shot a78 to tie the season’s record, pre¬viously shot by Taylor and Vos-burgh.4 get awardsDean Robert M. Strozier lastweek released the names of thefirst four UCers to receive Ful-bright Awards for foreign study.Arthur Robert Evans will study the completion of renovation workat the University of Tolouse, in the basement.Decorations, corsages, refresh¬ments, and an intermission skitcarry out a special theme, spring¬time in Paris.RC closed for quarterCardplayers, as if they didn’talready know from experience,were told this week by the Rey¬nolds Club that there will be nomore cardplaying in the club untilFrance; Mary Jane Barnard at theUniversity of Grenoble, France;alumnus John Torgny at the Uni¬versity of Oslo; and Charles M.Leslie, an alumnus, at the Na¬tional University in Canberra,Australia. To the impatient, it is pointedout that this won’t be until sometime during the summer quarter.It is suggested that they don’twait at the door since they mightmiss comps. As if a cardplayerwould care. (from page 1)up and editorial management; (2)affirms the principle of studentfreedom but avers that “studentsgenuinely interested in the tech¬niques of good journalism willwelcome good instruction”; rec¬ommends (3) the MAROON staffbe recruited actively from stu¬dents in all parts of the university,and (4) the MAROON should be,if possible, a daily newspaper.MAROON apes Steinbeck, paper saysStating the issue is “strictly oneof technical competence,” Thomas .added that this issue does some¬times merge with the ideology oreditorial opinions of the staff. Hesaid he had no immediate sugges¬tions as to how this conflict mightbe resolved, but asserted his will¬ingness to defend the right ofstudents to determine MAROONeditorial policies.The Economist article, after in¬forming shocked south-siders ofthe profanity stemming from thelocal Midway, ventured the opin¬ion that “students evidently weretrying to follow the trend of‘realistic’ expression which beganwith Steinbeck.”Strozier labelled the profanityas “juvenile,” according to the ar¬ticle, and said he planned to pointout to MAROON editors that thelanguage was in poor taste. Hereportedly told the paper, how¬ever, that UC’s administration hasno control over the contents orpolicies of the MAROON.RESORT & TRAVELMAKE YOURHORIZONS UNLIMITEDAll-Expense Summer Seminar Tours(including roundtrip air transportation)★ MONTH-IN-FRANCE: Paris 2000th Birthday, UNESCOGeneral Assembly, Art, Music; Vosges Mountains, Stras¬bourg '. $ 650★ EUROPEAN CO-OPS: 60 days, 7 nations official co-optour plus socio-political contacts, sightseeing $ 850★ CHRISTIAN YOUTH SEMINAR: 60 days, 7 nations surveyof socio-politico-religious scene, plus major sights $ 850★ ROUND-WORLD-FLIGHT-SEMINAR: 45 days, 25 nations(10 major stops Orient, Near East, Europe, Previous yearsmet Nehru, Ben-Gurion, Shah Iran, et al.) College credit. .$1510A SOUTH AMERICA CRUISE SEMINAR: 62 days (sea andair) Rio de Janiero, Buenos Aires, LaPaz, Cuzco, Lima. . .$ 985ACARRIBEAN CARAVAN: 28 days flying 6000 miles Ba¬hamas, Puerto Rico, Venezuela, Haiti, Jamaica v. .$ 498A FRONTIERS of Religious DRAMA, RADIO, AUDIO-VIS¬UALS in England (BBC, J Arthur Rank, etc.) 30 days. . .$ 570A MEXICAN ART WORKSHOP TAXCO: 4 weeks plus 3weeks tour $ 550or three week tour alone, $275; monthly 2 week tours.HORIZONS UNLIMITED6545 S. Union Ayenue, Chicago 21or phone WEntworth 6-2670, 2-6 p.m., Mr. Hammond Canoe tripsinto Quetico - Superior wilderness.Only $4.50 per man day for completecamping equipment, canoes and foodsupplies. - For Booklet write: BillRom, Canoe Country Outfitters, Ely,Minnesota. New York . . $29ftgpl Miami 43I TF California ... 75| I Plus taxIff—f A ECRETAR1ALHA & ERVICE & TRAVEL' —* TUDIO. Hrs. 6-10 P.M.1442 E. 55th Ml 3-2136WANT TO TAKE A CANOE TRIP?Adventure into Quetico Provincial Park of Canada andSuperior National Forest. Canoes, tents, blankets orsleeping bags, packsaeks, axe, cooking and eating uten¬sils and excellent food for your taste only $4.50 and 45.00per man per day. ($3.00 and $3.50 without food.) Forillustrated booklet and map, write toFishermen's Headquarters and Canoe OutfittersEly, Minn.s.s. VOLENDAM“Thrifty” Co-ed Student SailingJoin 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 Europe**end American lecturers, under thejoint direction of Netherlands Officefor Foreign Student Relations andV. S. National Student Associationoffer a comprehensive OrientationProgram enroute.a an an an Round Trip for donaitory-1 ”1 f| || typo space. $320 for mut-^vU U tiplo-bortk cabins farApplications from bona fidt collegestudents only are being accepted byNETHERLANDS OFFICE FOR FOREIGN STUDENT RELATIONS19 Broadway. New York 6, N. Y.Agents for tlie Miniscerie van Verkeer en Waterstaat(Directorate-General of Shipping) The Hague. Netherlands VACATION STARTSat theRAILROAD STATIONAnd You Can SAVE up to 28%on GROUP COACH TICKETSMare's the Low-Down on Low Cost!Gather a group of 26 or moreheading home in the same direc¬tion at the same time. Buy groupplan tickets. Each group mem¬ber saves 28% compared to reg¬ular round-trip fares, or up to46% compared to buying one¬way tickets in each direction!CoTogothor—RotMrn as Yon Please!You all leave on one train. Butyou can return separately, in timefor reopening of school. GroupPlan savings apply as far as youall go together. Then buy indi¬vidual round-trip tickets the restof the way.Plan Your Croup Plan Savings NOW!Your nearest railroad passengeragent will help you organize agroup to get these big savings...good on most coach trains east ofChicago or St. Louis, north of theOhio and Potomac Rivers, andwest of New York City.Or, if you're traveling alone,gave on Regular Round-Tripe.For Comfort and SafetyIN ANY WEATHERTake The Train!EASTERN RAILROADS Free TransportationWe are sending cars to variouswestern States. All car expensesare paid. Your trip costs you ab¬solutely nothing. Adequate timeallowance! New cats. Fully insured.An ideal way to go on a vacationor to return from one. Return homefrom school. See us for one ofthese all car-expenses paid trips.AAA DRIVEAWAYRoom 1419343 So. Dearborn St.Chicago IllinoisPhone WEbster 9-5298students!teachers!PASSAGEf EUROPE’U5:Sailing: From New Yorkto Le Harve, Southhamp¬ton, and Bremerhaven,June 8, June 25, July 6.From Le Harve andSouthhampton to NewYork August 25, and Sep¬tember 7.For Full InformationWriteAOIJNCIL 53 B’wayNew Yorkm STUDENTTRAVEL ••••••••UC Choir performsin concert at ChapelLast Sunday the UC Choir, with members of the ChicagoSymphony Orchestra, gave their annua? Spring concert atRockefeller Chapel; Richard Vikstrom conducted a programthat included sacred music of the seventeenth and twentiethcenturies.The quality of the performance was magnificient and inevery way impressive. The choirrevealed itself as well-trained and bearing little resemblance to anystudious, even meticulous, in its mus>c written after 1450 withinterpretations; at the same time,the group showed a joy and en¬thusiasm for the music and anadmirable understanding of itsdemands.The program began with Gio¬vanni Gabrielli’s In Ecclesiis, apiece that achieves wonderful dra- which we are familiar with thepossible exception of Bruckner’sE minor Mass. The “Kyrie,”"Gloria" and "Credo" are pre¬sented in a setting of basic chantpattern, while the “Sanctus” and“Agnus Dei" had more elabora¬tion and development, particular- Feature glee club in BJ sing;plan choral music committeeMadrigals and choruses from Brahms’ Requiem will befeatured tonight in a Glee Club all-campus meeting in B-Jlounge at 7:30 p.m. Harvard choirmaster and conductor ofHarvard Glee Club, G. Wallace Woodworth, will lead the sing¬ing. The group will later move to Ida Noyes to attend theChancellor’s reception and serenade the reception line.The representatives of severalcampus singing organizations willform a SU-sponsored campus com¬mittee for choral music and ex¬plore the possibilities for greaterchorus activity next season. ChrisMoore, director of the Glee Club,urged $11 interested groups toattend. BU 8-9282Direct Wireto theRat RaceJimmy’s•* 55th and Woodlawamatic effects with contrasts of ™ a magni/lcent cadenza forsimple rhythms and musical lines the Hosanna m excelsis.and particularly with a striking theThe final work, Lili Boulanger’ssection for brass choir. While *>sa,m ^4* sounded to us like athere was a certain confusion in demonstrative expression ofthe “In Deo salutari," the singing rf tlier pedestrian ideas, in itswas generally precise and well- * ^e’ somewhat reminiscent offormed; the brass rendered their desperate scenario music. This ispart with great clarity, and the to detract from the fine per-soprano and tenor solists in the crmance the piece received; and“Deus meus” were particularly t"e tenor solo of Carl Honzakfjne was exceptional, particularly inThe next work, Randall Thomp- tfie secti°n> “He shall receive ason’s The Peaceable Kingdom for blessing from the Lord Kappas fete campusKappa Alpha Psi's annual openhouse will he held tonight from9 to 1 at the Phi Psi house, 5555Woodlawn. All are invited to at¬tend. June GraduatesMake Your Appointment NowFor that .Graduation PortraitGowns AvailablePHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 117! EAST 55th STREETunaccompanied voices, recalls amultitude of styles ranging fromPalestrina to Humperdinck. Whilethe writing evidences much ingen¬uity and technical adroitness, wefail to find much substance ofreligious feeling in it; as a show¬piece it is quite adequate andsometimes brilliant, and in thiscapacity served the choir well.Igor Stravinsky’s Mass (1948)that followed is not music to beeasily assimulated in a couple ofhearings. Its style is neo-rnedieval, —Horry Maguire Jr.FINE FOOD |1 321 East 57th Street jDR. KURTROSENBAUMOPTOMETRISTNSA Discount of 10 - 20%Immediate Repair Service1132 E. 55thHYde Pork 3-8372 Business CareersCOLLEGE4-MONTH INTENSIVE COURSESECRETARIAL TRAINING forCOLLEGE STUDENTS and GRADUATESStarting June, October, FebruaryBulletin A,en request.Registration now open.NEXT COURSE STARTS JUNE ItLifetime Placement ServiceWrite Admission CounselorCo-Educational • G. I. ApprovedTHE GREGG COLLEGEST South Wabash Avenue. Chicago 3, IllinoisPhone STate 2-1880mmmmmhow tokeep off thestag line...■ M3 yjVan Tux andVan Dress, *595Will you be the life of the party in these Van HeusenFormal Favorites? Well, not necessarily ... but youwill have that nice, confident\feeling of knowingyou’re properly dressed. Van Tux comes in twocollar-attached models—wide-spread and regular.Van Dress is neck hand only. Both with snowy-whitepique front;..0 Van Heusen"the world1s smartest” Rp|lli_ I/OPHILLIPS-JONES CORP., NEW YORK 1,’ N. Y. YOURSELF!%Don't test one brand alone...compare them all!Unlike others, we never, ask youto test our brand alone. We say***compare PHILIP MORRIS.matchPhiup Morris...P*"1"’ “0RRISagainst any other cigarette.Then make your own choicelTRY THIS TEST ITokO a PHILIP MORRIS- and anyother cigarette. Then, here s allyou do:1 Light up either cigarette. Take apuff—don’t inhale—and s-l-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 MILPERjRemember.. •NO CIGARETTE■HANGOVERmeansCALLFOR MORE SMOKING PLEASURE!PHIUP MORRISMay 1*f 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON mPage 7SHOE REPAIRSubstantial Discountsto Students“II MUST BE DONE RIGHT”HOLLIDAY'S1407 East Cist Street(at Dorchester Are.)Phone NOrmal 7-R717Two blocks from inti. HouseWhlle-U-Wait or One-Day Service Fridoy, May 18TRACK MEET: Stagg Fieldi" 4 p.m., Chi¬cago vs. Wright June College andHerzl Junior College.SEMINAR: Division of Biological andMedical Research, Argonne NationalLaboratory, Conference Room, Biology £ve*ti&LONG DISTANCE MOVINGLOVMRATES - Bonded - Insured612 No. Michigan Ave.SUperior 7-3484 Building, 6111 University Avenue,4 p.m. “The Development of New‘ Antibiotics.” Dr. Robert Coghill, Ab¬bott Laboratories.MATHEMATICAL BIOLOGY MEETING:5741 Drexel Avenue, 4:30 p.m. "Diffu¬sion and Permeability Coefficients inCertain Issues.” George W. Schmidt,student in Mathematical Biology.MOTION PICTURES: “Feelings of De¬pression” and “Angry Boy” (HumanDevelopment Student Organization),Judd 126, 4:30 p.m.MOTION PICTURE: “Rio Escondido”(Hidden River), (Documentary FilmGroup), Social Science 122, 7:15 and9:15 p.m. (A Mexican film of 1948,written and directed by Emilio Fer¬nandez, photographed by GabrielFigueroa, starring Marla Felix.) Ad¬mission 50 cents.INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOW¬SHIP: 12:30-1:20 p.m. Sun Parlor IdaNoyes. Canon Bernard Iddings Bell.Saturday, May 19TENNIS MATCH: Varsity Courts, 2 p.m.Chicago vs. Northern Illinois StateTeachers College.BASEBALL GAME: Stagg Field, 2:30p.m. Chicago vs. James Mllllkin Uni-versity.SU OUTING DEPART: Devil’s Lake,Baraboo, Wis. $10, two-day outingtrip. Call AL 2-3520.METHODIST STUDENT FELLOWSHIP:Picnic. Meet Chapel House, 3 p.m.- *ff _ft Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests ^ftNumber 19.. .THE WEASELftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftft AtMV/AtAt“Who do theythink they’re kiddin’S:I invented ' |double talk!”ANo wonder he blew his stack! All this double talkabout quick cigarette tests was a flagrant infringementon his patent rights! They couldn’t fool this characterwith “one-puff”—“one-whiff” experiments. Millions of smokers havereached the same conclusion —there’s just one real way to prove%the flavor and mildness of a cigarette.ft’j the sensible test — the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test—which simply asks you to try Camels as your steady smoke... on a pack-after-pack, day-after-day basis. No snapjudgments needed! After you ve enjoyed Camels and onlyCamels —for 30 days, we believe you’ll know why ...More People Smoke Camelsthan any other tigarettel 4/ &\ Sunday, May 20EPISCOPAL COMMUNION SERVICE,Joseph Bond Chapel, 8:30 a.m.CARILLON RECITAL: Rockefeller Me¬morial Chapel, 3:30 p.m. Donald A.Mills, Carlllonneur.ORGAN RECITAL by Heinrich Fleischer,formerly organist of the Universityof Leipzig (Lutheran Council), Rocke¬feller Memorial Chapel, 4 p.m. Admis¬sion is without ticket and withoutcharge.CHANNING CLUB: “Religion and Neu¬rosis,” Russell Becker, Dean UC Col¬lege (downtown). Supper 6 p.m.program at 7. First Unitarian Church.INTERCHURCH BREAKFAST: 9:15 a.m.Chapel House. Joe Ham will lead dis¬cussion on New Testament.Monday, May 21PUBLIC LECTURE: (Calvert Club),James Henry Breasted Lecture Hall,8 p.m. “The Defense of Man AgainstDarwin.” Mortimer J. Adler, Profes¬sor of Philosophy of Law, Law School.EXHIBITION: (Renaissance Society);Paintings, Drawings, Prints, andSculpture by Artist-Members of theRenaissance Society. Goodspeed 108,daily except Sunday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.,through June 17.BOTANY CLUB: Botany 106, 4:30 p.m.“Population Structure in Evolution.”Sewall Wright, Ernest D. Burton, Dis-tinguished Service Professor ofZoology.MOTION PICTURES: Charlie ChaplinSeries “A”—“The Rink”; "The Vaga¬bond’’; “The Adventurer”; EasyStreet.” International House, 8 p.m.Admission 46 cents.Books that speak forPEACEPeople’s China15cCommunity Book Shop1404 55th Ml 3-0567Specializing in Marxist-LeninistLiterature Tuesday, May 22WORSHIP SERVICE: (Federation ofTheological Schools), Joseph BoydChapel, 10:30 a.m. James Gustafson,student.TENNIS MATCH: Varsity Courts, 2 p.m.Chicago vs. Illinois Institute of Tech¬nology.BASEBALL GAME: Stagg Field, 3:30p.m. Chicago vs. Lake Forest College,BASEBALL GAME: North Field, 3:45p.m. Junior Varsity vs. Francis Parker.MOTION PICTURES: (DocumentaryFilm Group), Social Science 122, 7:15and 9:15 p.m. “Children on Trial”(1946), directed by Jack Lee; “Over-Dependency,” directed by Robert An¬derson; “Sight and Sound,” by theNFBC.INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOW¬SHIP: 7:30-8:30 p.m. Ida Noyes. Dis¬cussion of the First Epistle of Peter.Wednesday, May 23ZOOLOGY CLUB: Zoology 14, 4 p.m.“Cell Shape and Movement in Vitro.”Mrs. Beatrice Garber, student in theDepartment of Zoology. “The Beha¬vior, Tissue Affinities, and TissueSpecificity Exhibited by Urcdele Lar¬val Epithelia during Wound Healing.”John J. Chiakulas, students in theDepartment of Zoology.SU OUTING DEPARTMENT: Openmeeting, 7:30 p.m. Ida Noyes.POLITICAL SCIENCE CLUB: 7:30 p.m."Ida Noyes, 30c Film series on “Teach¬ing by Discussion,'’ Prof. Earl S.Johnson.SU CONCERT Robert Howat, pianist,7:30 p.m. North Lounge ReynoldsClub.STUDENTS WHO are going to Germany.this summer, Frankfort in particular,please contact Cindy Wickens, Commit¬tee on the Frankfort Exchange.Thursday, May 24TENNIS MATCH: Varsity Courts, 3:30p.m. Junior Varsity vs. Evanston HighSchool.SEMINAR: Cowles Commission for Re-Search in Economics, Law Court, LawBuilding, 7:45 p.m. “Oscillations in aMultisector Economy.” John Chipman,student in the Department of Eco¬nomics.MEETING of the Chicago Chapter ofSigma XI, Eckhart 133, 8 p.m. “Radio¬carbon Dating.” Willard F. Libby,Professor of Chemistry, Department ofChemistry and the Institute for Nu¬clear Studies.METHODIST STUDENT FELLOWSHIP:Bull session on movie “The Road WeWalk.” Chapel House. 50 cents, 6 p.m.Student SpecialsEnglish Lightweight BICYCLES3 Speed - Handbrakes - Pump - Choinguord - KickstandREGULAR $59.95 VALUE — NOW ONLY$ 50 00with presentation of student ID cardACE CYCLE SHOP819 E. 55th Street • Mldwoy 3-2672 • Chicago 15This offer may be cancelled without further noticeIff TICEEARLY DAYSA GOLF BN-L WASAPT TO BREAKIff TWO—TXSKULE... i /BROPAHOTffER \vl //Iff PLACE OF 7THE BIGGER ^ UTTLEuAif \IS ALWAV$*TE£0# JUP. SHALF....J M-Tuek)HALF IS 'VBUPlEO?)Yes, the new Spalding DOT*with improved "TRU-TENSION" Winding,combines maximum distance with sweatfeel. .. True uniformity assured, plus fa¬mous DOT "click"."TRU-TENSION"Winding is alsoa feature of thehigh-poweredSpalding AlR-FLITE.For real toughnessIt's the KRO-FLITEand the TOP-FLITE*.*A> Pro Shops OnlySPALDWfrPage 8 May 18, 1?THE CHICAGO MAROONr Classified AdsDeadline: S p.m., Tuesday CAMPERS—ALL wool sleeping bag, goodcondition, $15. Call Olson, HY 3-9291evenings, or Ext. 3453 weekdays.FOR SALE SIX-PIECE bedroom set, springs, mat¬tress, $50: ping pong table, net, paddles,$20. Call Olson, HY 3-9291, evenings, orExt. 3453 weekdays. LARGE ROOM for couples or single,kitchen privileges. In small family oftwo adult.,. Phone MI 3-2956 or MI 3-7306, Mrs. Rose Liph, 830 E. 57th.G E 4 CUBIC foot refrigerator; $40.Call CA 7-6453.NORTHCOOL tropical man’s suit, size38, exc. cond., $16. MU 4-1821. 1943 HARLEY DAVIDSON, 125 c.c. en¬gine, just overhauled, new clutch, newfront suspension, perfect running con¬dition, good paint Job, $160. DonaldWlrsching, Midway 3-0579. FURNISHED ROOM for rent. 56th andEllis. Small, ascetic, but convenient.$25 mo. Share washroom, shower withone. Available June 23. Bramson, PL2-9531 afternoons, evenings. WANTED—STUDENTS good at imper¬sonation to participate In skit at Poli¬tical Science Club party on Saturday,May 26 Please contact Mrs. Hurlihy,Ext. 1415. 1949 OLDSMOBILE 4-door sedan In ccondition may be'available for dri'from Chicago to Portland, Oregon Vson, Ext. 3204. ’FOR SALE—1935 Pontiac sedan. Motor,battery, tires, brakes, in very good con¬dition. Recommended for drivingaround Chicago, not for cross countrytours. Price $50. Neville Ross, 1491 E. 57. G. E. REFRIGERATOR, small, $50; 9x12rug, pad $10; desk lamp, $5; floor lamp,$5; bedroom chair, $5. Phone ES 5-6526,7-10 p.m. FURNISHED HOME in rural Michigan,June through November 300 miles fromChicago. Private lake, boat, fishing. Alsonear Lake Michigan. Ideal for writing,studying. MI 3-5521. MATURE PROFESSIONAL woman wish¬es 2 to 4 room unfurnished apartmentnear I. C. on Hyde Park or Kenwood,up to $70. Telephone Miss Gllckman,WE 9-7200 days, and PL 2-2500 evenings. WANT ONE or two riders to driveLos Angeles, leaving about JuneBill Pryor, Burton Judson, RoomI WOULD like to rent a raccoon coatfo’- the nights of May 25 and 26 foruse in a play. Please contact CharlesMcKinney, Ext. 2431. RIDE WANTED to Connecticut or viilty, June 11, 12, 13. Will drive or siexpenses. Call PE 7-6959, John Otthcimer.MUST SELL 1939 Pontiac by June 1.Name your own price. Good condition.Radio, heater. Call D. Bernstein, HY3-5452 after 8 p.m. STOKOWSKI RECORD ALBUMSCall PLaza 2-0586 5-ROOM FURNISHED apartment In newfaculty building. Light, cool groundfloor. Play-yard, automatic laundry.Faculty or staff, summer quarter only.Subletting at sacrifice. MU 4-0191. THREE-FIVE rooms wanted by profes¬sor and wife, starting July or August 1,Hyde Park or South Shore; exposure forgrowing house plants desired. MI 3-7787evenings. Banks. MUST CATCH boat from Montreal 1<lng June 20. Will siiare d„»vimjexpenses. Phone CE 3-7152 after 7 p rWANTED: A ride to Des Moines, l23 or 24. Will share expenses and ding Call BU 8-9523. Rm. 25.FORD ’36 4-DOOR sedan, excellent mo¬tor, good body, good brakes, new fuelpump; seat covers. $U0. MI 3-2592.WHY RENT a piano? For $5 monthlyown a Strack reconditioned, modernupright. Hue tone, beautiful finish.Cost $260, now $150. Phone Hogan, MU4-1823. SHORT WAVE, short wave and AM,too, and $50 gets It for you! GeneralElectrical self-charging portable radio.Call PL 2-0586.HOME-BUILT, 3-way portable^ radio,AM; best offer over $15. Dat’e Sher,MAROON. WILL SUBLET 4-room furnished apart¬ment for June, July, and August. SouthShore. Call BU 8-2717. FACULTY - GRADUATE COMMITTEEFOR PEACE. 8 p.m., Loretta Klaber’shome, 5123 Dorchester. "Can AmericaKeep Her Allies?’’ BUSINESS SERVICELESSONS IN piano and theory for cdren and adults. Call Miriam Rho;MU 4-3360.WANTEDSPRING IS here. Ride a blue and silverElgin American balloon tired woman’sbicycle; basket, etc. Yours for $20. CallM. Rigsbey, Gates Hall, Ext. 1036. LEAVING FOR England June 10. Aminterested In securing information oncycling In Britain and also places andpeople to see. Christopher Ralble 839-B,B-J. ’ .SUMMER WORK, five-day, 35-hourweek; good pay. Call V. Zlgler, MI 3-8030 for appointment. ALTERATIONS, remodeling. Lov<rates. FA 4-7646.TRAVELBATHINETTE, NURSERY chair, playpen, "’bath buoy,’’ folding screen, 78r.p.m. records, gardening tools, women’sclothing, sizes 9-13; beige lynx tuxedocoat. Excellent condition. Reasonable.BU 8-2717. FOR SALE—Army officer’s wool shirts,summer and winter, 14-31, slightly used,cheap. Call PL 2-5653, evenings. WANTED: USED FM radio,burd, Room 61, Hitchcock.SACRIFICE—MAN’S size 40 gold woolsport Jacket; cost $35, like new!! $10.PL 2-5891. MEN’S RIDING boots, size 9, $45 whennew, $7, Including spurs, boot hooks,boot jack; also two pair men’s breeches,waist 31, excellent condition, $5 each.Robert Goldwin, 1237 E. 58th St. PRESTO 1-C or 1-D or equivalent cut¬ting head, used. Notify by mall. Mitch¬ell Heller, 4833 N. Harding Ave., Chicago. A COUPLE of students wanted whocould help In driving. In return forJoe Nor- transp. to Seattle, about June 10. Gas,but no other expenses paid for. MU4-0098. EXPRESS. Light and heavy movlWilling and courteous service. Reasable rates. Bardone. HY 3-1915.MOVING. HAULING, light trucksvans. For better rates. BU 8-6210.LOST & FOUNDCOLLEGE MEN, summer work, $2-$3per hour. Full or part time. RepresentReals ilk Hosiery Mills. FR 2-0797. WANTED—RIDERS to Spokane. Wash¬ington, May 28. New Ford. Help drive.Frank Logan, Burton-Judson.TOURALUX RAILWAY ticket, Chicago- YOUNG EXECUTIVE desires 4 or 5Seattle at y2 round trip fare. Phone rooms In South Shore or HYde Pars.NO 7-1860. Decent rental. Call RE 4-9629. GOING WEST? would like an Inex¬pensive transportation to west coast?Drive a new 1951 car to west coastcities, as your own, gas paid. Trans¬portation Lease Co., 188 W. RandolphSt.. Room 1416. FI 6-3422. STILL MISSING: Horn-rimmed, tscript Ion sun glasses ground for my cbrown myopic eyes. Cash reward. Wor call. Leonard Pearson, 5410 CoraFA 4-5181.IT'S NOT like Maude's Diary, so plireturn red leatherette assignment dlLost 5:35 p.m., May 4, between Jand Harper. Reward. Box 151, MAROis *mmoS'Ba GUITAR, LIKE new, $25, or will ex¬change it and cash for typewriter. CallNE 2-2394. TWO GRADUATE male students wantfurnished apartment for summer. CallMerrill Rodin, BU 8-0667, evenings.FOR RENTIDEAL SUMMER apt., furn. 2-room,large porch, kit.; J/2 bl. from Midway.June 15-Oct. 1. J. Blocker, HY 3-5451,after 8 p.m. GIRL AS weekend summer companionto seven-year-old girl, no housework.Interest in sports desirable, Box 200,MAROON. FREE RIDE to San Francisco. Leavingtomorrow, driving a new 1951 Ford.Riders or baggage welcomed. Free! Con¬tact Bill Burton, Phi Kappa Psl House, LOST: RED wallet on Midway. MayPlease return with or without moiReward. Jo Tice, Green Hall.RIDERS WANTED to Washington, D. C.,June 1st. Paul Hare 6016 Woodlawn,DO 3-3849. LOST: LIGHT grey topcoat, 2nd flClassics. Contact Dave Nelson, RoomB-J.4-ROOM APT. to share with couple ortwo girls. Bedroom, living room for you,share kitchen and bath. 939 E. 54th St.,or call PL 2-5538 after 4 p.m. POLITICAL SCIENTIST, proficient attending bar, organizing games, callingdances, for Political Science Club partyon May 26. Contact Mrs. Hurlihy, Ext.1415. WANTED—RIDERS to Detroit, Buffaloand Rochester. Share expenses. 1948Studebaker sedan. Leaving about June4. MI 3-7505. MAN’S RING, gold with 2 raisedtlals. Can be claimed upon ldentiftlon at International House desk, 1Veolln.HAVE THREE rooms, large porch, begin¬ning summer quarter. HYde Park 3-8460. 3-ROOM APARTMENT for couple begin¬ning Aug. or Sept. Furn. or unfurn.Judy Ginsberg. MU 4-9383 after 5 p.m. MEXICAN .STUDENT wishes ride toMexico City or points Intermediate onor about June 8. Share driving and ex¬penses. Call Rolf Stavenhagen, MI 3-6425. LOST: PROBABLY In Rosenwald 27somewhere In Cobb—old-fashioned gHamilton pocket watch, worn engravon back. Family heirloom. Reward.Goldberg, College English. MI 3-0Ext. 1261 or PL 2-0069.5Ui UPPER.CLASSMENONLYV»4n',\assr^ |:uvfee ^a'rwi S^'^eS#it uour® lWhere**%*£*•**Vout tfCLUCKIES TASTE BETTERTHAN ANY OTHER CIGARETTE!Fine tobacco—and only fine tobacco—cangive you a better-tasting cigarette. AndL.S./M.F.T.—Lucky Strike means fine to¬bacco. So, for the best-tasting cigarette youever smoked, Be Happy—Go Lucky! Howabout startin’ with a carton—today?LS/M FT-lucky StrikeMeans Fine lobaccoaump***0*'a* SwW*When are n°^CW&Sft UPjjj£5;UMmS>mid £U)Sy'gia■111* „l«sav •