Psychologist Koehler SQ group to probe policies;to do research here forced tests, forbidden compsWnlfVanp Koehler, one of the world’s foremost nsveholo- • 7 * AWolfgang Koehler, one of the world’s foremost psycholo¬gists and professor of philosophy and psychology at Swarth-more College, has been appointed a visiting professor at UCt? do original research in sensory perception as indicated bybrain waves of both animals and humans.Koehler, who received an honorary doctorate of sciencefrom the UC last June, is also lecturing in the University’sdivisions of Social Sciencesand Biological Sciences. He willremain in Chicago until January.Director of the PsychologicalInstitute at the University of Ber¬lin from 1922 to 1935 when he re¬signed because of the politicalsituation in Germany, Koehler isthe last surviving member of theGestalt trinity, Wertheimer, Koff-ka and Koehler.More than any other person,Koehler has been responsible forpresenting the Gestalt theory tothe world of psychology. He isauthor of Gestalt Psychology.During the past three years hehas been working on questions ofbrain physiology.Deadline notice iBecause of the Thanksgivingholiday, copy and ad deadlines fornext Friday's MAROON will be oneday ahead of schedule. All newsand calendar announcements mustbe submitted to the MAROON nolater than 5 p.m. Monday. SG to discussLYL Tuesday Student Government approved Wednesday a bill instituting a student-faculty committe#to investigate recent changes in administrative policy.Introduced by Matt Dillon (ISL, Humanities) and Allen Coleman (ISL, Law), the billstates that SG “asserts its desire that this community be strengthened, and the educationalprogram be improved, without derogation from present excellence.” \;The committee will be empowered to;fl Inquire into the reasons fop" the change in college policyregarding quarterly tests.ft Inquire into the decision to™ discontinue comprehensive ex¬aminations in March and De¬cember.3 Confer with the administrationregarding the establishment ofpermanent consultive machinerybetween SG, the administration,and the faculty for the consider¬ation of future proposed changesin policy.A report will be made to theAssembly within three weeksalong with recommendations foraction.Object of the bill is to make cer¬tain that student opinion is as¬sessed before major policychanges are effected. /University of Chicago, November 16, 1951 31Financial loss given as reasonfor closing of Cloister Clubfor next weekDean hits biasof fraternitiesDiscriminatory practices on the in£, U\ ^ _ „part of college fraternities, came ^ o cl a v at 3:30 p.m., Studentunder attack this week by Direc- Government President Sander Le-tor of Student Activities William v,n ^?g?r Wood'Student Government next week A , , , ,.,■■■ ■% ■ ■ _will begin .formal consideration A five-figure loss at the Cloister Club last year combined IE R~|l| epfof whether the UC Labor Youth with a Board of Trustees decree made the Cloister’s downfall ** " 9League is a legal organization jnevjtable, the administration explained Tuesday,and therefore entitled to recog- .nition on campus. SG meets Tues- The loss was $11,700.day at 7:30 in Law north. The decree was that the University’s room and board enter-The case, first of its kind in prises must break even each year,the history of the University,grows out of the conviction of 11national leaders of the Commu¬nist Party and the subsequentSupreme Court decision uphold- CM checkupcoming: NSA The Crystal Ball Room of theEdgewater Beach Hotel will beThe explanation came at astudent - administration meet- night. The Ralph Marterie banding, Business Manager W. L. will provide music.Krogman, Dean Robert M. Stroz- Highlight of the evening willier, Activities Director William 5tier,c1°1r^n^0” of tbe Queen_. , .. ... „ . of the Ball by Carl Mensalo, mem-Birenbaum, Miss Nellie Pope and ber o£ Beta Theta p. and presi.f r william v.«. > The National Student Associa- Mfes LYlas Kay (both o£ Res1' dent of the Inter-Fraternity Coun-!?r of student Activities William h (iSL Law) chairman of t;nn will conduct an investigation dence Halls and Commons) faced cil. Each of the active campusBirenbaum, speaking at the Delta worm uau uwinndn ui tion will conduct an investigation ... _ fraternities i« aUpsilon initiation dinner Monday. committee on recognized stu- f the MAROON suspension and SG s student needs committeemen paternities is sponsoring a queenL, . . ,. , .. dent organizations, and Robert .... . .. T.. Feldman (ISL College), and Cdnuiudie-Pointing out that there are A]perjn (ic-Soc. Sci.) former the finng of Edltor Alan Kim‘ Baumruk (ISL Library School) Judging (he potential Queensserious discrimination issues to jjead Qf tbat committee, will meet mel in the near future, according ’ will be: Dean Robert M. Strozier,1)0 faced by fraternities on our wjtb p>ean of Students Robert M. to a letter received by Roger and temporary committeeman foi Tony Weitzel (Daily News), andterized8the'Dl^fr^tern^v VsThe Strozier and Director o£ Student Woodworth, former president of the Cloister Club, Robert Boyd, a Balaban and Katz connoisseur,••liberal and nroeressive frater- Activities William Birenbaum in Student Government, from Sylvia Between the Junes of 1950 and Nate Gross (Herald-American)!liberal ana progressive i r strozier’s office to hear the rec- NSA vice president in 1951 the Club lost $7,500. Last and Patricia Stevens (modelmol*nity in our country. nmmpndatinns of the administra- cbargg o£ student affairs. summer another $4,200 vanished, der) were also asked to perform.Miss Bacon and two other NSA Hutchinson Commons also lost: bu£ have not yet replied. ^members will probably be here $2,900. The administration had ex-o ^ during the Thanksgiving weekend pected a rise in attendance at theyear at Bowdoin over the "ques- Malcolm ’p* SharD^of The* law in order to begin preliminary ob- Commons and the Coffee Shop,tion of pledging a Negro student, school submitted a brief to Stro- servations- but the nse was sllght-the UC chapter of DU last May Zjer on june is stating that his Miss Bacon’s letter was written SG suggested that meal ticketspassed a resolution stating that interpretation of the Vinson de- *n reply to a formal request made might assure a sufficienly large“membership in Delta Upsilon cision upholding the conviction by Woodworth on October 19. and steady patronage to reopen(UC chapter) should not in the Df the Communists was that it In this request Woodworth gave the Club. The administration was ^ ikCUC1 1/CIfuture be prohibited on account raised serious questions about the as his major reason for calling cocd to this proposal, it was assistant professor of social sci*of race, color, or religion.” legality of the LYL. The LYL on the NSA the fact that “There learned. ences in the College, will be theBroader action on this resolu- submitted a counter-brief. is a considerable group of stu- The student needs committee curtain raiser in Tonight at 8:30’stion was taken last month when Subsequent conferences were dents on campus who feel that announced its intention to secure performance of three one - actthe Inter-Fraternity Council held between LYL chairman Ar- an outside organization should be student sentiment concerning the plays on November 23, 24 and 25,unanimously adopted a resolution thur Bierman, Strozier, Biren- called in to make an impartial reopening of the cafeteria and to at 8:30 p.m. in the Ida Novessupporting the DU fraternity in bauni, Alperin and Sharp, which study of the whole situation from consult the SG assembly before theatre.ommendations of the administra-He referred to the UC chapter’s tion.action in the case of the Bowdoin The University legal depart-College Delta Upsilon fraternity, rnent has been studying the caseAs a result of controversy last since former LYL sponsor Prof. 8:30 to presentplay by DennyA new play by Reuel Denny,its anti-discriminatory policy. see SG meetings, page 12 beginning to end.’ taking further steps.Kimpton: on academic freedom and monetary problemsFreedom doesn't corrupt UC needs industry cashChancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton described and defended Denny’s play, which he will di¬rect, has been described by an8:30 spokesman as “an eye open¬er, a fragment of conversation,an aside on life, an irreverenthandling of our social mores, afarcical fantasy on the parodyknown as business.” It is as yetunnamed.On the program with the playare two selections from Italianrepertory, The House with theFederal aid to education, as a solution to the financialfreedom and liberal teaching in universities before a sym- problems of UC, was decried by Chancellor Lawrence A.posium arranged by the Americanism commission of the Kimpton in a speech Friday before a luncheon of the Mid- cidumn^and The* Paten"' bv piAmerican Legion Tuesday. Continent Trust Conference. Kimpton said: “It is the tendency randello. Both are being present-According to the Chicago Sun-Times, which reported the today when you get in trouble to turn to the federal govern- ed by popular demand accordingspeech in Wednesday’s edition, Chancellor Kimpton “denied ment. I regard this as the most pernicious trend in modern to the 8:30 spokesman.that freedom and liberal times.” — Tickets for the performance^teachings in universities ‘soft- is advanced. Kimpton went on to point chancellor, who pointed out that whicb w,h be staged in 8:30’s reg.ens up the minds of the young’ “ when universities are criti- out that “he who pays the they “move in slowly, but they obtained at^the Varsitv "Ticketand ‘leads them towards Com- cized because they do not teach fiddler calls the tune» and that moVe in.” Service in Woodworth’s Book-* mur»ist ideas. the American way, my answei federal aid js “building up prob- “The only justification for the store and at the Student TicketThe article continued: is that that is precisely what they , * e H * « , , . . . Aeenrv in Marvel“He reminded his audience that do teach,’ he emphasized. lems on down the line that may existence of the private umver- Ag®ray {" 2a 1^the American democracy had “Kimpton took up two other force us at some point to change sity is its complete freedom from and between 5 and 6-30 pm Mombeen ‘hammered out on the bat- criticisms of universities. He our entire way of life, and for the this kind of domination.” day through Friday! 9tlefield of the controversy of pointed out that because Com- worse.” Results from his program of Requests for tickets, accompa-« ‘deas ’ and that the democratic munists ‘claim to believe in peace Private endowment, despite soliciting aid from industrial cor- nied by a stamped, self-addressedtradition can only exist throug and racial equality, other people high taxation, is the only other porations were indicated by Kimp- envelope, may be mailed to Thethe free interchange of opposed who believe m the same things source o£ funds, Kimpton said. ton who said that at the present Tonight at 8:30 Players, Univee--'"This is the freedom we talk “"‘Th muSo!"'pl£about,' he said. 'The moment we are 'an articulate group' and that “*X" ,he continued, “■* worth mUhon and a half dollars from Chicago ST, IBtao*. Ticket price, cease to have opposed viewpoints, when they come out for the rem- financing because it makes or ss^ Jour democracy comes to an end edy of abuses‘they do not there- W"that Franklin to Speak at MAROON sponsored seminarand we become indistinguishable by become Communists, any more m. precisely me same way uiai r . , ... . .from the totalitarian state ’ than you or I ’ private enterprise as opposed to The next speaker in the series of Maroon seminars will be Wade“The chancellor described the "Youth, he said, is a time of government monopoly makes for franklin, telegraph editor of the Chicago Sun Tinu* He will speakuniversity as the very symbol of rebellion, and pointed out that in Progress and for constructive on “The Copy Desk." Mr. Franklin formerly headed the copy deskfreedom. Its function, he said, 'due time' reMliousness is cor- ehange." of the Sun-Times for three years He has «*o taught “>e Norta-‘ * to tolerate and even to promote rected by the assumption ot re- The dangers of politics and bu- Western school of Journalism. Tlw seminar will be held Wednesda«•owtoovawy, thvougji which truth sponsibilities.” • ipeaucracy were considered by the at 8 p.m. m the MAROON office, Reynold* Club 201.November 16, I95J, Student-comment ocreate storm -/w «#-1 • 1. ... ♦ 20% 1C fare increasni iiciu u ■ iucicny ct mciyni »vm..,»*h.„.,»yy, ^. / „ J ^ ^ew Up ^,..i„ui,Ce„,ra.rec,nUy racoon,,,v om$ *"c “What do you think of the recent Illinois Central jar,.Gone relatively unpublirized on campus <Uu ine th»'aupiM lvi^n of Mr. Hutchins, lv.s U rn hikes?”Ronald S. c Vane, distinguished' service professor of English-, whoseideas on the teaehmg*ot This question startled a number of unoffending UC’eiEnglishistudies' wereias -reyplutionaiMahdJas'stimulating as anv put--fortH;in?the days oMhef-sthe Reynolds Club lounge" 'Tuesday.. By and large thevdookenformer chancellor. ‘ * startled, but answered. Their — ~His purpose, a daring one at the time, was to add the serious study of litemry .criticism to answers are below. T ' commented acidly, when we|tfie-in|rpichedj.system of historical-scholarship,.which had with great,expert ness investigat- “I don’t k n o w , I haven’t preached her, “For the svwuved everything relevant to the ; ~ ” 'T-: ■~ T T-, ^studied the economics of the situ- they give, the old f ares'\uu.text of4 a work; except the/tex$§about?,theimanners-or thought or seems to mV a completely unreal ation,” said Lionell Lerner of the enough.”itself. ‘ spirit" of the age which produced and pedantic opposition.” ~ - economics department. /,a deceptive sitter-with aV. . K/This historical methpd of teach- them. Those, like-(John' Crowe Ran^, Di^"'* ogoinst it - y ' in-one-hand in the Reynoldsfeli#ing literature4quite;inyaluableifc)^^?;J|iJsynb|0iericitism but€auto^somgvvhd|earljgrecognized the^m^*’-, n 1 Know. there weie any.vu.ho turnetj out t0 be a- salesnfim?knowing the background of a biography when we coni' :t our- mense new field/that would/be l}' mam* for Wieboldt s Department VVwork, left the majority of mu- selves w ith stat ing our personal opened up, the-.t e ac h e r s that r I?avI<?1 .Chale 0/the College, phiiijn Spencer by name thoughtdents unable to read a page of preferences with 1 to them would have'To be;,trained in this ' "’Angeta.;:EUiston ofThe English^^^"^ew ^#7 |poetry^f’rofessoriCrane;prppqse^oi§the|;adye‘ntures>oftpuiv:s:puls ingmethod, had this to say: 5* ACthe/d^,paitment-commented cynically,. rjge -n price must ^ Seen*as n',-it-to emphasized he aest hetu exploit their presence. Ci itici^m as we L ni\ ersity^of?- Chicago,'^! ■ believeS justed to inflation of;ft ]arger picture. This 11‘-e isation of texts and analysis of- shall undei stand n is not am of that Professor Crane, with some aft^/SO -many^year^ of it. --A.: / lo seen in the light of our m.-sideas while preservingthe Mudy these things; ,, ,s Mmply the di otheis is putting the resolution “aid Ro^r^DrechC oI U,e Col- expenditures" for <le-uofdanguagevand historical*back”4ciplmedvconsiderationj#at\o nee into effccGin his own 'teachinjg^-^p^ 0<£ • EspedaUyMoS^ n d v destructable - nor|pllf|.w, v ■s^&9thJltreet^My,25,rjdeTiSetTronT^oodsand services'P^^»?ibinldTip H^geneuiT'schoul oMMef Blue lsland uent UP fiom*-$4.78 ,.*••<>«* bu*i"«»* demooped ^MS^P# *S™Tal scho°l:9^^^,$6,^This is 20,per centra l think , it’s a baaad VthlTffe^skyJSSSs The^issue is whether,, the*; IC said Edith Arlen of thepp^jf||j^Crane put forth Ins ideas quiie fas or that thev are now being at- aeademtie7:-*nmdui:d* Vpei t u u- n.<‘<'l,s ,he additional-revenue, ..and agreeing that the “bad’,’ sh,,dearly anti IokoJuMv. "It j. n,i lacked a. warning 10 replace tli I.,, ' .1 .t can sh„w that it does, and ,fpelledtoith three a^■'ciriticWri^^fe^lpsyeho]bg'\^^engichiola^^This^#fJc^fsel#is^u'h-mcth?dssf ' Our final commenter,^mjyi|M^eat poems 01 novels as t-ase^ uue. Professor Crane, whose TV , , , , • Ti Training it, they have no right who prefers to draw thehan;,. . Cbooks and attempt to dis< o\ ei in n lews aie wide and 1 lex i b 1 e f. : ol ,1 a,m,j 10 " ' . 11 ^ *° p*otost 0,1 1 be basis of its ef- ? theunknown god ’ acrossthei^^^t^th^ttirtifeijtStHettp^rwi>ni|f'en6ti^Mtofadrhittriianyi;es,sentiaiiy^ Y, lual,-,commuters,”-ih*hntity, said briskly, "! doni^rlii&tiitySSpS^M®»iai^«ii!l|»ihdSi^itfeaPiffiii^j^^^f^^}#^^p!^de^Stanle^aueri«Hvai4the IC, but my eommentilnM«.»«-. m but hl-M, or ... ...I.,-. ,v„, ,,„1. -1 the l,Kht lhal ^ '"v., US' W c„.hi..d ■: S . ?or motorcoaeh, (are, hikes ■■when « .,..1 inii.K,n.,uv: u,„ In Imfe I. CT" ,, C? s,n"h »f ,h- «'••"<'*» be unprintable.- : ,I"’" j’" " ! "■ - "■ " 1 dt.;;n.d-'Bnlnnianc koar Mar A i 1 ,, \ NeW Foundations 5gromans near /v\acA; u^moioi i-.l-u,ii,,ub ; Wl/.. , < i,ties and t ..... ' J ^ent Marxist quarterlyL I J L • I and Modern, a l.u go\olimn . : i - / ^teenmen hold sub-rosa class ^ - -m„ . his lolleupue. This \uiume it t ."Roots of Racism"—Myrdal debunked ft„ .. .--a!.-,,,,,, Keane, lyaua.ied « ... « .. J™! . „JIgroundlasfessentiallgm^i^l analytical and,e\aluation, of liter“ . .%If the department should rwell rounded program. .u\ works as works of ait. systematically and intelligerBHot criticism, but psychology Deplores fight ' tniiM up a general school^bfiliIn his now’: far mins essaV, '‘‘His-:^ Since these words were writ tent-arv?criticisrrr«libelieve itm b^avpp}se^pspl^M®|(v®e^|t ri u mpl%ha^w'ou ld§.^?;Cl ane put foil h his ideas quite fa\ or t hat ihey are now being at a< adcmtic standaids, snT®thc> Ed- by-^.both old and new’ etitics whooniesCof |haye felCthe'sting and sometimes• the po-" utter demol'ishinent"- whenVtheir '^rp'iiHpnt works were reviewed in'a'h it her tounknown thoroughness b\ a mem-- 4*he! ol the ( ol of e[ UK >andfhistoju al pii^ciples ei ,ih /feffiS :h' s; :\\\\\\\\\\\»\\\%\\\\%\>I - v-v- ■ ■ - - " stiue the her<Irriinistiationn the Wash in®ead an editoir •f, I f**, ,emoaning the Alcllon |,lci)ly of iliesyviijrliere.1 in tlx■■ ■conduct:v’s- spoits -g«h rsw obs after m 1a\. .some memmftmmwho apparently'cxcTc&rvri't-vri'cxc&’i .c*leiFn e^r essfno t i Wsm hey^■n gettinEVIatel'y, took' it ;erftselves4 to shave hims:. - A:1 bef^ /ut helria 11 i^a t < > imm.. u.. jnot Hunderstand^wh?atit I will defendAtoith’my right to- deny/itT Techn^ogy Nows hiT; As ^ 1\AMONwestern Stotes. All cor :;expenseseare paid. Your' tep,costs,,you ob-;allowance. New,>cors^Fullyrinsured.'An ideal -way. to" go*on -a. vacation,>;or to return from .oner!, Return homesfrom school./See us° for ,one ofSfci. Room £14tSjrm|.l^g-343. So.c Dearborn St.-ChicagdJ|lllin'ois^fe^fegjPhqne - W £ bster^-529a|J /GO* DONMpo yttM; I j;j_. JA man just oah’f helR,looking - gootl/infArrow• white hliii tP.;.They‘re so, hamlttomelv.'fel v jedT.*.;with the;faiiioue, trim-fitting Arrow collars;... J$hjra&lk I-, , • ,rs%^-.-1CT S H', , - s:M i to ga cut- forAconi f6 r t a l> le;' bptl :t a p ered h t.Jmpecc .< I• I v tailored in the finest “Sanforized?fabrics. We June vour favorite collar styles.: maggot plenty of thes^down liereJ'f■A/Arr ow . Do r *, w i»h Arrow P or,, W i d • -Medium;point. $3.93 >p,eod .oft tollor $3.93 Arrow Gordon? Dover,,tlirtton-Down $4.30SHIRTS • TIES • SPORTS SHIRTS • UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFSPOR ARROW UNIVIRSITY STY1ISV FINE FOOD1 32 1 East 57th Street iil> tw 0 \U‘si mi1 In onWH!3?W£m{in ter,e ^t mNovember 16, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3Adler to talk su Plans triP>Tuesday on bmianh tmmeyimmortalityMortimer J. Adler, professor ofphilosophy of law, will speak onthe “Immortality of the Soul,” atMandel Hall Tuesday at 8 p.m.Admission is without chargeand without ticket. The lecture,which will be followed by a dis¬cussion period, is the second ofa series of three talks being givenby Adler and sponsored by theUC Canterbury Club. The firstwas on “The Existence of God,"and the third, to be given Dec. 4in Mandel Hall, will be on “Free*dom of the Will.”Travel agent Krebs'trial gets postponedThe trial of Larry Krebs,charged last month for runninga confidence game and fraud inhis Student Travel Service Ltd.,which he operated with two part¬ners from England, has been post¬poned to Nov. 27 after openingon the 9th.A number of students who hadtours arranged by Krebs, fromhis New York headquarters,found themselves strandedabroad, when return trips, sup-posedly part of the “service,”were not given them./?- i-iona/ijedr£US10M MADE KEY CHAIN1WE A# YOUR NAME PROUDlYb/ hondiom# Key Cho*n hibcoj' ful noturol gold finish . A PetfECI GlfT for every man or boy . . .•deal for servicemen . . . pocked in g>fsboa teg 17 95 vofue. NOW ONi f13 50 POSTPAIO . . Print norne de- An-allday outing trip and ahandicap billiards tournament arethe latest activities being sched¬uled by Student Union.Assembling in front of IdaNoyes at 9 a m. Sunday, partici¬pants in the outing trip will goto the Trailside Museum nearHarlem. They will spend theirtime hiking, visiting the museum,etc. Open nominations for Baha'i proofsSFA court Judges of Qod givenNominations to three of the five students seats on the Stu¬dent-Faculty-Administration Court were opened at last Wed¬nesday’s meeting of the assembly.Election of the judges by the assembly will take place thefirst meeting after the nomi-nations are closed, which will were David Kahn (up for reap-prohably be at the next meet- pointment), Jerome Gross, Freding. The one-week period between Gearing and Alan Coleman,closing of nominations and elec-The billiards tournament will h°n Is to allow any student to Anawajf fo fa Ik 013submit information concerningthe candidates for the considcra- A A_ _ _ J \A/—tion of the assembly. Missions and WomenCandidates, nominated by thetake place in the Reynolds Clubbilliard room. Nov. 27, 28 and 29,from 7 to 9 each evening. En¬trance in the tournament isfree; pre - registration is neces¬sary. Prizes will be awarded tothe winners; first prize is a two-piece cue. assembly, must be registered stu¬dents, have at least a C average,have one quarter’s residenceprior to election, and not be mem¬bers of the assembly.Nominated last Wednesday The Baha’i Fellowship of theUniversity will present an infor¬mal discussion of “Baha’i Proofsof the Existence of God,” Wed¬nesday at 7:30 p.m., at Ida Noyesnorth reception room.Bahai’s belief that such basictruths as the existence of Godcan be logically proved.Refreshments will be servedand all are welcome.Free poolfor womenThe Reynolds Club billiardsesa Anawalt, head of the Society room will offer free billiards to“The Missions and the ModernWoman,” is the topic of a publiclecture to be given by Miss Ther-Exhibition of low-pricedart featured at Coodspeed of Lay Auxiliaries of the Mis¬sions, Wednesday, at the CalvertClub.Miss Anawalt, presented byCalvert Club, will discuss thework of the Society, a group oflay people who assist the clergyin Catholic missionary work andoperate a perpetual “open house” ladies every Thursday from 6:30to 9:30 p.m. This policy will bein effect until Christmas, HilaryFry, director of the Reynolds Clubsaid recently. This means that ifa man and woman play, the costwill be half the usual amount.The billiards room was just re¬cently improved with the install-The Renaissance Society opened its third exhibition of Con¬temporary Art for Young Collectors yesterday at the So¬ciety’s gallery in Goodspeed Hall. Highly successful last year,the purpose of these exhibitions is to bring good original worksof art into the price range of students and others of modestmeans. Working on a completely non-profit basis, the societywill sell the items in the collec¬tion at costs ranging from lessthan $5 to a top price of $50. Ballet troupe near the University for students ation of new fluorescent light fix-from the Orient, the Near East tures, as a part of the renova-and Africa. tion of the club.SQ offers free Atlasdiscount cards to allThe collection includes exam¬ples of all contemporary schoolsand represents the work of over70 artists gathered from nation¬wide sources. Oils, water colors,aqua tints, lithographs, smallsculpture, drawings and mobilesare among the wide range of me¬dia in the exhibit.The exhibition will run untilDec. 15. Gallery hours are from9 a.tn. to 5 p.m. every day exceptSunday.A FEW WORDSFROM THE PUBLISHER OFGOD AND MAN AT YALEThe public response to Mr. Buckley's first book has been mostgratifying from at least one angle important to a publisher.GOD AND MAN AT YALE is being widely commented on andreviewed in important magazines and papers throughout thecountry. A typical example is the Yale Newi, which has givenmany columns in issue after issue to a discussion of the book.Public interest and frequency of reviewers' comments are notthe only matters of importance to a publisher, however. WhileOur fears of the well known "silent treatment' for a book suchas GOD AND MAN AT YALE were quickly dispelled, we cannot help but feel that the quality of the public response has beenless gratifying than its quantity. In this connection, we wouldlike to point out a few of the principles which guide us in ourpublishing activities.Henry Regnery Company published GOD AND MAN AT YALEbecause in our opinion what Mr. Buckley had to say deserved ahearing. We had no thought that his was the last word onacademic freedom. In fact, we doubt whether there ever will be tfinal judgment on that subject, or on the larger question of theresponsibilities of the University. It is also our belief that whatMr. Buckley has to say, written with the experience of an under¬graduate at Yale fresh in his mind, deserves the seriousconsideration of his elders as well as of his teachers. What hehas written can not be brushed aside by such remarks as pureunadulterated fascism,” or as "simply dishonest."If those of the generation to which Mr. Buckley belongs do notfind the world entirely to their liking, it is hardly their fault.If they wish to do something about it, then we can have reasonto hope that the world they will pass on will be a better one thanthey found upon reaching maturity. We were glad to offer aplatform to Bill Buckley. We would be equally glad to offer anopportunity to others of his generation, whatever their views, tomake themselves heard, provided only that thet are motivated byhigh principles and have something significant and serious to say./ Purchase cards for the AtlasBuying Service, as well as theNational Student Association’sdiscount cards, are available atthe Student Government office,Reynolds 301. Anyone who hasnot received these cards is invitedto come to the SG office.Atlas Buying Service is a con¬cern which is able to obtain greatbuying advantages for its mem¬bers by concentrating and coor¬dinating their buying power. Suchitems as typewriters, televisionsets, musical instruments, andelectrical supplies may be pur¬chased at a discount because ofthe contract between ABS andSG.1952 catalogs of Atlas Buying. .•vvv-. v-. v-.-.-vvvvvvvvv-.--.-vv-.-vvvvvvvv-.--.-v>-.--.-:-v-.-vvv-.-vxI1fItcoming soonThe Stone - Cameron BalletTroupe will present two perform¬ances in Mandel Hall later thismonth under the sponsorship ofthe Reynolds Club Council.The performances, which arescheduled for Nov. 27 al 8:30 p.m.and Dec. 1, will include two newballets, Alice in Wonderland andLes Infants Perdues.This is the first of many eventsto be presented this year by theReynolds Club Council, supple¬menting the activities of StudentUnion. Further information maybe obtained by calling extension1064. Service are being placed at theReynolds Club information desk,Administration Building informa¬tion desk, Harper reading room,Harper reference room, Burton-Judson office and at Hitchcock,Green, Foster and InternationalHouses.SPECIAL RATES ONMODERN PHILOLGY: A Journal of Research in Me¬dieval and Modern Literature (Quarterly)A medium for the publication of papers on the literaryand linguistic problems, on the social and intellectualmovement, and on the principles and methods of liter¬ary criticism in the field of modern languages.Rate per volume: Regular, $6.00; Personal, $4.25;Students, $3.50Subscription by volume onlyThe University of Chicago Tress5750 Ellis Avenue, Chicago 37, IllinoisPlease enter my subscription to MODERN PHILOLOGYbeginning with Vol. 49 (August 1951) at ($3.50)($4.25)NAMEADDRESSPlease inclose payment CFTY givesyouth serviceA city-wide youth service willbe presented by the Chicago Fed¬eration of Temple Youth, which iscomposed of youth groups of Re¬form Jewish congregations in theChicago area at Temple Menorahtonight at 8:15.Rabbi Herman E. Sehaalman,director of the Chicago Federa¬tion, Union of American HebrewCongregations will deliver thesermon.Temple Menorah is at 2800 W.Sherwin avenue.Alpha Delt concertat chapter houseAlpha Delta Phi fraternity an¬nounced today that the third ofits series of Sunday afternoonrecord concerts will be held Sun¬day from 3 to 5 p.m. at the Chap¬ter House at 5747 University Ave¬nue. Refreshments will be served.REYNOLDS CLUB COUNCILPresentsSTONE-CAMRYN BALLETinALICE IN WONDERLANDWorld PremiereLES INFANTS PERDUESWorld PremiereIRE LOST CHILDRENDIVERTISSEMENTS(Cast of Thirty)Tues., Nov. 27, 8:30 — $1.50Sat., Dee. 1,2:30 — $1.20 Mandel HallTickets Available at Woodworth's and S.G. Ticket OfficeMail Order to Reynolds Club Council, University of ChicagoPage 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 16, 1951Second in seriesEx-editor continues European reportFollowing; is the second in aseries of five articles by Kx-MAROON Editor Alan D. Kim-mel on his recent trip to East¬ern Germany, Poland and theSoviet Union. The MAROONpublishes this series becauseit feels the campus will be in¬terested in reading: of and com-menting upon Kimmel’s viewsand experiences. In no case arethe views contained in these ar¬ticles to be taken as represent¬ing the views of the MAROONstaff.by Alon Kimme!Goebbels inflamed the HitlerYouth to “reach for their gunswhen they heard the word “cul¬ture,” but the new German youthI saw in East Berlin wrere reviv¬ing their national dances and mu¬sic. Nowhere was this bettershown than at the splendid Ger¬man culture show: Bavarian folkdances, German opera and sym¬phonic music, new youth songs,etc. There were dozens of othersong and dance displays in theshow's of the foreign delegationsand tens of thousands of youthfrom all over Germany saw andenjoyed them.The scale of cultural events atthe Festival was almost incon¬ceivable. The fourth day, August8, was typical:There were seven competitions(choral, instrumental, dancing);21 national programs (USSR,Scotland, Mongolia, etc.); 31 mov¬ies; four German programs; sixsport shows (canoe regatta, bi¬cycle polo, hockey, etc.); two Ger¬man plays; two concerts; andother miscellaneous events.Olympic records brokenAnother major part of the Fes¬tival were the week-long EleventhWorld Student Games. Two thou¬sand athletes from over 40 coun¬tries competed in every conceiv¬able sport and even broke a fewOlympic records.Of the dozen or so receptionsand exhibitions I w’ent to, the Ko¬rean impressed me most. Theirexhibition was in a small buildingon Friedrichstrasse. It began withthe story of reconstruction afterthe Japanese defeat and rapidlymoved into many dozens ofphotos of the present war in theircountry. These photos of devasta¬tion and alleged atrocities wereappalling.Koreans claim atrocitiesThe caption under one de¬scribed it as showing the ex¬humed bodies of 7,000 Koreans inTaiden buried alive by South Ko¬reans and American troops; an¬other claimed to show rows ofbodies of 3,000 civilians in SouthKensan province killed by Amer¬icans. Koreans I met said thatU.S. POW’s have confirmed theseand other brutalities.I got a pamphlet entitled “WeAccuse,” report of the Commis-Throw AwayNICOTINE sion of the Women’s Internation¬al Democratic Federation in Ko¬rea, May 16 to 27, 1951. Twenty-one women from 17 countries, in¬cluding Canada, USSR, Algeria,China, and Denmark comprisedthe commission. Its document isto be discussed at the currentU.N. Paris meeting.Women accuse U.S. militaryIt, too, accuses our military ofa “methodical campaign of ex¬termination” of the people of Ko¬rea. This is being done by “syste¬matic destruction of food ... (andby killing) peasants working intheir fields ... by machine-gunfire from low-flying planes”; by“systematic destruction of townafter town . . . many of which byno stretch of the imaginationcould be considered military ob¬jectives or even industrial cen¬ters”; by deliberate destruction of“dwellings, hospitals, schools,etc.”; by “systematically employ¬ing against the peaceful inhabi¬tants weapons banned by interna¬tional convention, i.e., incendiar¬ies, petrol bombs, napalm bombs,time-bombs . . .”; by “. . . . entirefamilies from old men to littlechildren (being) tortured, beatento death, burned, and buried aliveffThe pamphlet then goes on for34 pages citing the personal ob¬servations of the Commission,giving witnesses’ names, places,dates, and bloody details.Cannot lough at chargesTo say the least, these chargesare very serious and cannot belaughed off. They certainlyshocked me when I first heardthem, and I believe we should askour Government about them.Those Festival Participantsfrom English-speaking countrieswhom I met and who disagreedon the causes of the Korean warwere equally appalled at the Ko¬reans’ accusations.Everyone insisted on immedi¬ate ceasefire and end to theslaughter of Americans, Koreans,and Chinese.Much of my time at the Festi¬val was taken up in rehearsalsfor the two performances of theAmerican show. It includedsquare dances, bop, spirituals,and peace songs.I also attended a conference of100 student journalists at Hum¬boldt University. Albert Norden,Chief of Press of the DDR (Ger¬man Democratic Republic or EastGermany), spoke to us about therole of newspapers in maintain¬ing peace. He cited figures fromRobert Hutchins’ investigation ofAmerican newspaper ownershipin explaining that monopoly con¬trol has perverted these papers into proponents of a war policy.Monopolists “chased away"He told us that in the DDR, be¬cause “we have chased away” themonopolists and their press whichhad supported Hitler and glori¬fied war and racism, the newspa¬pers are all organs of govern¬ment parties and mass popularorganizations. Their reporting isdone largely by “peoples’ corre¬spondents” writing from their fac¬tories, schools, and farms, show¬ing up bad conditions, attackingbureaucracy, and proposing im¬provements.Students from many countriesspoke at the conference, includ¬ing myself, on conditions in ourown countries. I talked about theUniversity of Chicago and howour students wanted facts on stu¬dent life in other parts of theworld; one thing I brought outwas that I had come to the Festi¬val as an individual and not as arepresentative of my newspaper,the MAROON.Analyzed DDR governmentProf. Wilhelm Koernen, a lead¬er of the German Peoples’ Con¬gress Movement, spoke to us atour hostel one afternoon. He an¬alyzed the history and structureof the DDR government whoseleaders, Pieck and Grotewohl, Isaw taking part in Festivalevents.The Government is led by thecoalition Peoples’ Congress move¬ment which won two-thirds of thevote in the May, 1949, elections.All parties are in this coalitionand in the Government: SocialistUnity, Liberal Democratic, Chris¬tian Democratic, National Demo¬cratic, and Democratic Peasant.Not for socialismOnly the Socialist Unity is aMarxist party, while the othersrepresent business, farmer, mid¬dle class, and intellectual group¬ings. All are anti-fascist and sup¬ported the confiscation of Naziand Junker factories and estates.Because of its class compositionand the keynote of its program(a united Germany and a speedypeace treaty, for peace and re¬construction), the Government,unlike Poland and other East Eu¬ropean countries, has no socialistperspective.At the Peace-Fighters’ confer¬ence, in the chamber of the DDRparliament, 600 youths salutedthe world’s leading signature-gatherers in the petition cam¬paign for a pact of peace amongthe Big Five powers. Some indi¬viduals had secured as many as45,000 names (a housewife inPunjab, India); and 12,000 names(a student in Cuba)!Grand finale of the Festivalwas the parade of foreign partici-Switch toMEDICOWB #1101When filter turnsbrown—in MedicoPipes or Cigarette Holders—throw itaway, with the nicotine, juices, flakesand tars it has trapped. Insert freshfilter for cooler, cleaner, dryer,sweeter smoking. Imported Briar.New. MEDICO CREST-13.00M*dico't fintsll Rich Burgundy flnhh.MEDICO V.F.Q. — 12 00MEDICO MEDALIST-M.5IWide variety of styles and sizes.Writ* S. M Frank l Co.. N. Y., far Saaklal 0MEDICO'CIGARETTE H0LDERS-I! , ATTENTION FACULTY WIVESWives of Students, TooPerhaps you will enjoy doing occasional interviewing fora nationally known market research organization, as achange now and then from your household, social and civicactivities. Assignments come at infrequent intervals, lastonly a week or two, and are never dull. The money toocan be interesting. Good education and an active com¬munity life are important requirements. Write or phone:S-D SURVEYS, INC.333 No. Michigan Avenue Chicago, IllinoisDEarborn 2-0830Going Formal to the l-F Ball?See Logan's and Rent a Tuxedo atSpecial Student RateLogan’s Tuxedo Rental6309 Cottage Grove PL 2-7310To the young ladies: If your date does not attend the UC,have him present this ad, and he will receive the sameSPECIAL RATE.Monday and Thursday evenings ‘lit 9:00 pants in which I marched Aug.19. The 500,000 gathered at therally afterward told the world inthe Festival Oath what they stoodfor;“. . . We are firmly convincedthat there is a way of preventinga new war; namely to put an endto the armaments race and to con¬clude a Peace Pact between theFive Great Powers.... (We mustfight for) the improvement ofthe living conditions of youth(and to) strengthen the friend¬ship and peaceful cooperation ofthe people and youth of all coun¬tries . .Fesfivol slanderedThis, then, is what the ThirdWorld Festival of Youth and Stu¬dents for Peace was like; this iswhat I, myself, saw and did inBerlin last August. More Amer¬icans should have been there andseen for themselves the participa¬tion of both Communists and non-Communists united on the singleissue of peace, and how the Fes¬tival has been distorted and slan¬dered; they could have seen howconfident and determined ourworld’s youth are that peace shallbe maintained.We young Americans must useevery opportunity we have, with¬in our border and internationally,writing letters, signing petitions,attending meetings, speaking out.We must brave the name-callingof those who would make theyearning for peace a crime. Remind drivers of'no parking’ rulesA warning to students whoJrive cars on campus has beenissued by the Student ActivitiesOffice. According to the commu¬nication “There have been severalviolations of parking regulationsrecently, and many students havebeen receiving city parking tick¬ets, and paying fines which theycan ill afford to pay.” NSpecific violations mentioned inthe communication involve theno-parking regulation on EllisAvenue between 59th and 58thstreets and the no-double parkingregulations in the circle in frontof the Ad building.State deadline FridayFriday, Nocember 23, has beenset as the deadline for filing appli¬cations for State Department in¬ternships, according to WilliamBirenbaum, director of student ac¬tivities.Students desiring informationmay contact Birenbaum in ReynoldsClub 202.SITUATIONS WANTEDStatistician—Woman experienced inpsychological statistics. Includingfactor analysis. Interested in doingcomputation on dissertation andother research projects. Reasonablerates. Phone NEvada 8-3081.Our anti-freeze, Chili Con Carne 35cCOLLEGE HOWL1425 East- 60th StreetSandwiches - Plate LunchesFountain SpecialtiesORDERS TO GO — BU 8-92768 A.M. to 12 P.M. Every DayNow you can getUork Si tat#“Alt the News That’s Fit to Print**delivered to your homedelivered weekdays ondate of publicationHere's a wonderful convenience! Have The New YorkTimes delivered to your home every day. You'll likeThe New York Times. It brings you more news thanyou can get anywhere else . . . alertly, vigorously, inter¬estingly, reliably reported by the biggest and mostversatile staff of any publication. These days, when thenews is so important to you, you'll appreciate the com¬plete and completely objective news reports in TheTimes more than ever. So right now, while you're think¬ing of it, mail this coupon — or telephoner your orderto HYDE PARK 3 0935.HYDE PARK NEWS SERVICE1210 East 55th Street, Chicago, IllinoisPlease deliver The New York Times to me as checked;Every day r—»($4.00 a month) LJ Sundays only r-i($1.25 a month) LJ Weekdays only($2.75 a month) □My name.My address.(Please print to avoid error J -Apt.November 16, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Pag* 5To featurescrolls here Traveler speaks;to discuss youthThe Oriental institute of theUC is now featuring several un¬usual exhibits including one ofthe widely publicized jars inwhich were found the “Dead Sea “Youth in Eastern Europe andthe Soviet Union" will be the topicof discussion at a public meetingsponsored by the Labor YouthLeague this afternoon at 3:30 inClassics 16.The speaker will be Lou Dis-trin, a national officer of LYL, McKeon analyzes liberties;academic freedom necessaryRichard P. McKeon, distinguished service professor of Greek and philosophy and formerU. S. delegate to UNESCO in a lecture here Monday night stated that “the rights weare defending must be clearly analyzed" and that “arguing against a law must be clearly dis-Scrolls," oldest known manu’seript who spent a year in these coun- tinguished from disobeying it."of the biblical book of Isaiah. In tries. “Although the Seventeenth Century analysis of human rights as self-evident truths fol-addition they are exhibiting the Admission is free. lowing from the nature of man have received a recredescende . . . there are three other,a Business to be taken up at the equally good types of analysis," *.paintings of Mesopotamia, the meeting will center around the said McKeon.Tower of Babel, and the Home of forthcoming SG debate as toAbraham, executed by the late whether the LYL is a legal or-H. M. HergetThese 24 paintings were exe¬cuted in close collaboration withProfessor E. A. Apeiser of theUniversity of Pennsylvania, withwhich institution the Oriental In¬stitute conducts joint excavationsin the Near East. By special ar¬rangement with the NationalGeographic Society, which has re¬cently published the paintings,they will be displayed for the firsttime in Chicago.The paintings will be accom- The other three types of an-ganization and therefore entitled a^ses human rights are into be a recognized student organ- terms of “power as -right,"ization. again in terms of “the evolution mentalrightsIUS Warsaw meeting unanimousin wanting student cooperation of society, increase of opportu- (e.g., freedom from fear andnity and the historic moment want) need the establishment ofapart from which one ought not a whole social and economic orderto consider rights,” or again in as the agencies to secure them,or terms of “the legal and govern- while civil rights (e.g., free as-institutions that secure sembly) are secured by mere lack. . agencies that advance of government interference intothem or appeal for them.” their exercises, and politicalNeeded institutions differ rights (e.g., the franchise) needIn choosing the latter, “consti- only an appropriate frameworktutional” mode of analysis, Mo as their agency.Keon distinguished between civil “Cultural rights," another type,and political rights, and social which include academic freedom,and economic rights, pointing out also demand a whole social orderwill be open from 10 a.m. to 5 that intensified attempts mustA Council meeting of the International Union of Students exetr“se/nd-in additlon-, ,, . . . . ,17° . 7. each other for their functioning, depend on the degree of a na-held m August in Warsaw unanimously decided for a meeting Jn this country social and eco- lion’s development of consciencebetween IUS and non-member organizations to discuss the nomic rights arose through ex- and facilities. “Academic free-tended interpretation of civil dom expresses the conviction thatThis resolution crystallized the belief of the students of rights, such as the right to bar- in institutions of learning ... theexperts of education should judgeUons^and phoTograph^ uTerf™' problem of cooperation among the world’s students^During*the exhibit! the museum the world, irrespective of religious, social or political views, gain in the free sale of labor.win DC uptM. Alum xu a.m. iu u —— Hnntiinitv the Programme for the satisfac-p.m. daily except Sunday, when be made to build student unity tion of student needs elaboratedit will be open from 11 a.m. to on a world scale and that such b the councii *» said tbe jus let-5 p.m. unity is possible on the basis of ter to the MAROON.Roger Social and economic rightsCrime rate rises;form committeeThea soft touch in washableshirts Woodworth and JerryKaufman of UC Student Govern¬ment commented: “Even thoughNSA’s attempts at cooperation . A“' „ .with IUS in the past have not lawn area was called’worked because cooperation wasalways to be op IUS terms, NSAmay be willing to sit down again crime rate in the Wood-very high’ the aims.” The “insttiutionthat secures the right, in thiscase, is the whole body of stu¬dents, professors, administrationand trustees.”Academic freedom operates ‘‘be¬tween freedom of information (acultural right) and freedom ofopinion (a civil right)," academicsport and discuss with IUS the working “tata JoS? En.out of some cooperation.”Marine recruitershold interviews recently by Alderman Muir of the freedom increases the availability6th ward. He stated that the area information and improves opin-had more than four times as lons-Disagreement is not revoltPark district. Captain John En- , McKeon said that at the UN heright of the Woodlawn police sta- Pr°Posed the right of over-tion said that the area bounded tirow °f governments" whichby 60th and 65th streets and Cot- Permanently suppress the othertage Grove and Woodlawn ave- ri£hts included in the UN Declar-nues is especially bad. f lonT T^T ^Shts. Of theThose of the students who were which voted onhere in 1949-’50 will recognize the that ^elusion, McKeon said thatRepresentatives for the MarineCorps procurement office con¬tacted members of the UC admin- the scholars accepted it, but thepoliticians did not.”He also quoted Spinoza, whosaid that after a law is adoptedsee McKeon, page 11parallel to the story in the MAROON of October 14, 1949, head¬lined “CRIME RATE SOARS!istration earlier this week in or- Rape and robbery rage on cam-der to discuss the possibility of Pus ” At that time a total of seven“launching a drive toward en- crimes were reported for the pre-rollment of ideal junior officer vious ten-day period. p » 7material." A group, led by Mrs. Augusta KjlVC CXCtTTl VCSUltSThe Marine officers will re- Campbell, is planning a meetingturn January 25 and 28 to inter- with Mayor Kennelly and Policeview interested students in re- Commissioner O’Connor to re¬gard to the Marine Corps’ Officer quest better lighting and round-Candidate Course, which is open the-clock police protection forto graduates between 20 and 27 neighborhood,years old, and in regard to aplatoon leader class for under¬graduates between 17 andyears old.TYPEWRITERS$lt UP - PAYMENTSWt BUY - SILL • RENT - REPAIR • EXCHANGE* STAR TYPEWRITER CO.1«» W. MADISON ST.— 10 YEARS ON MADISON AT WELLS —Phone AN dover 3 - 7 3 7 3 Major General Lewis B. Her-shey, director of Selective Serv¬ice, reported on October 29, that63 per cent of the 399,000 stu¬dents who took the SelectiveService Qualification Tests lastSpring and Summer made a scorex I , 1 of 70 or better. He said a furtherlO lecture on pldnets breakdown of the results of thetests will be available in a shortA talk on “The Standardizationof the Concepts of the VariousPlanets in Science Fiction Stories”will ge given at a meeting of theScience Fiction Club on Wednes¬day, Nov. 21, at 7:30 p.m. inClassics 17. John Boardman, amember of the club will be thespeaker. - time.Brazil dancecomes to IdaFine cotton with a touch of rayon, give*Rifleclub the soft feel of fine Frenchflannel. But because it’s Sanforized* andvat-dyed it’s a washable whiz—won’tshrink, won’t fade. The sparkling color*in plaids, checks, and stripes are infor keeps.Ask for them at your favoritimen’s wear, department orspecialty store.Galey & Lord inc. /vh* r*m Burlington‘Residual shrinkage legs than 1%. FOR LITTLEBOOKWORMSIVew and Better BooksADVENTURES OF BENJAMIN PINK 2.00Garth Williams—Hard-working, orderly Ben, the rab¬bit, is forced to meet the challenge of a desert islandand the problems of a leader for reform of wicked cats.Age 6-10.THE ZOO 2.00Alberita Semrad—All about the animals at BrookfieldZoo with beautiful, authentic photographs. Age 6-12.FUNNY BOOTS 1.00Betty Russell—A gay book with lots of action, andexcellent for the beginning reader.LITTLE FUR FAMILY 1.75Margaret Wise Brown—A cozy, little story, color¬fully illustrated, that will delight tjie 3 to 6 year olds.See Special Displays for:Children’s Book WeekAsk for the NEW Children'sBook Catalog at theUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue Folk lore, modern dance andrhythms in percussion instru¬ments will be presented in a spe¬cial concert by the University ofBrazil dance group this Satur¬day at 2:30, in Ida Noyes, it wasannounced by Miss KatharineManning of the Physical Educa¬tion Department.A dance class is to be given onthe same day, registration forwhich will be at 10:30 a.m. A feewill be charged for both.The dance group, which is be¬ing partially financed by the Pres¬ident of Brazil, is making a good¬will tour of the United Stateswhere they are performing at 26colleges and universities in theeast and middle-west.After their stay at UC, thedancers will perform at eightmore schools.luiuiniffimiimmnnnniHiminmitMHiuim<I: S.lf. Presents§ Four Famous Voices in a Programof American and Englishjj Folk MusicI COME FORTO SINGI Win Stracke - Big Bill BroonzyLarry LaneNarrated by Studs Terkel| Mandel Hall, 8:30 p.m., Dec. 1Admission $1.00■■tagc 6 THE CHICAGO MAXOON November 16, 1951"Peace, pore 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 Midway9-MOO, Ext. 1011. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions by mail, $4 per year.John V. Hurst David ZimmermanEditor-m-chief Business ManagerManaging editor: La Verne Armstrong.Executive editor: John Grimes.Copy editor: Larry Fisher.Eage editors: Bob March, Gary Babr, Jan M&jde, Martin Grans, Fred Winsberg,Peter Gourfain, Charles Gaulkin, Boy Albert.Editorial staff: Jay Chidsey, Doris Hanes, Arden Meizer, Tom Connor, RobinJackson, David Kliot, Dan Simon, Dan Solomon, Jerry Stone, Eileen Sullivan,Ed Wolpert, Ed Berkowitz, Charles Fauquher, David Fain, Frank Kirk, ArleneKramer, Bruce MacLachlan, Bob Marcus, Pat Morrow, Bay Nelson, Barbara Perl¬man, Tom Seldman, Enid Sharp, Alan Tritter, Jackie Wilson, Gene Gendlin,Barbara Kaplan, Jay Orear, Nan Hockberg, Marvin Chirlestein, Henry Maguire,Daniel Queen, Barrie Simmons, Rinnie Templeton, Leo Treitler, Leonard Wolfe,Caroline Lee, Hlllel Black, Ashby Smith, Bob Peters, Mathew Messelson.Copy staff: Joan Brennard, Roger Kallen.Photography staff: Editor—David Sher; Bruce Kallick, Roger Severson.Business staff: Advertising manager—Joyce Cowan; Don Ginsburg, LeRoy Wolins.Personnel staff: Director—Blossom Weskamp; Barbara Mills, Richard Harelick,Nan Thurber.Cartoonist: Irwin Levinson.The editor’s columnby John V. Hurst, editor-in-chiefMuch has been said and written on the subject of peace.Like money, everybody wants it. And again like money,(everyone has a different scheme for making it and keeping it.In America, the leaders of a great nation say: "Peace isgood, desirable; we support the idea of peace; we believe wehave the best means for obtaining peace; serious considerationof alternative paths to peace notEUggested by our allies or byAmericans of unquestioned loy¬alty is ‘appeasement’; appease¬ment is to be avoided at all costs;therefore, anyone who does notagree with our proposals forpeace is against peace, or ‘Com¬munist’.”And where does this leavethe American man-in-the-Street? In the name of thepeace he so urgently desires hesees the leaders of his nation:vote billions of needed dollarsfor rearmament; wage a ‘pre¬ventive war’ in Korea with hisown body as a buffer; espouseeconomic and military block¬ades against so-called “un¬friendly” nations; advocate thevirtual suicide of using themost destructive weapon man’stechnology has come up with todate; and propose expansion ofthe present Korean war into alarger-scale war in order to as¬sure eventual “peace.”And what of Russia, the othermajor contender in the world’saearch for peace? Her leadersseem to feel: “Peace is good, de¬sirable; we support the idea ofpeace; all countries which opposevs are ‘capitalist, imperialistwarmongers’; since ‘warmongers’do not want peace by the simplecontradiction in terms, we are theonly nation which sincerely seekspeace; therefore, anyone whodoes not agree with our sugges¬tions for peace is against peace,or ‘warmonger’.”So what do the Russian leadersdo? In the name of peace they:shout “peace” so often and soloudly that the very word itselfIs placed in danger of becominganother Communist slogan; seekto foster world understandingbasic to peace by refusing (asdoes the United States) to admitpersons considered “dangerous”or “unsympathetic”; violently dis¬agree, with maximum of name¬calling and minimum of explana¬tion, to any peace proposalbrought forth by the “imperial¬ist” nations.And where does this leave theRussian man-in-the-street? I hon¬estly don’t know.A discussion of the inconsis¬tencies could go on ad infini¬tum: both sides seek to by-passthe United Nations organiza¬tion with “Atlantic Pacts,”“Five-Power Peace Pacts,” etc.;both sides seem to be moremindful of nationalistic or ide¬ological aims than with themore simple one earnestly de¬sired by all peoples: peace. Andso forth.Yet the area of agreement be¬tween the two major world blocsas to how peace may be best wonIs large. The current Paris ses¬sions show that, on paper at least,both sides agree the key to peacemay be found in world disarma¬ment. Since neither side truststhe other, both again agree thatadequate inspection measures must be instituted to insure suchdisarmament. Each expresses awillingness to hear all fair pro¬posals for peace.But the mutual name-callingand power politics tends to ob¬scure the basic agreement. Andmeantime, the world’s peoplestand helplessly by and wonderhow long their simple desire forpeace will remain ignored and/orforgotten.But must they stand helplesslyby?Wars between nations arefought and paid for by the peo¬ple who belong to those nations.If the peoples of the world wereto adopt Ghandi’s program ofpassive, civil disobediencetoward all governmental ac¬tions and attitudes which en¬danger peace, there could be nomore wars. It could be as sim¬ple as that.But the word “if” in the aboveparagraph removes the prob¬lem completely from the realmof simplicity.The world’s people must beacquainted with one patent fact:in their collective hands lies thepower to stop war. It is uselessfor one half the world to disarmin the face of no correspondingattitude in the people of the otherhalf.To be successful in stoppingwar, such a move would need tobe worldwide. Steps must betaken to inform all peoples of thepower in their hands. And in thiscountry, along with the others,the move must be begun some¬where.Of course, it takes “guts”—sucha stand involves the direct sub¬version of established law. Tomany this is abominable. How¬ever, the demonstrable lack ofsupport of both the prohibitionand the anti-gambling laws inthis country—to name only twoexamples — demonstrates thatthere is ample precedent for suchlegal subversion. In addition, thephilosophy of a higher moral lawwhich transcends all civil law isalso well established.As individuals, it takes toomuch of the stuff called cour¬age to stand up and say, “I re¬fuse to support the draft, paytaxes, or otherwise support inany way any law or actiontaken on my behalf which en¬dangers peace.” Let me be thefirst to admit I would be reluc¬tant to face the jail sentences,“Communist” labels, and overtpressure and disapproval re¬sulting from such a forthrightdeclaration. The fabric of pas¬sive resistance is woven withmany martyrs, and few of uswant to be martyrs.But there are many of us whb—barring individual lack of forti¬tude-feel strongly that peace isof prime importance. Individu¬ally we are alone, unloved; col¬lectively we have a voice, and areat least heard if not respected. Ineach country, the move has to be Beg pardonThe MAROON regrets that, dueto a technical error, a letter to theeditor, held in type at the printshop for more than a year, ap¬peared in last week's MAROON bymistake. The conditions regardingquarterly college examinations asdescribed in the letter titled,“Knocks hypocrisy," are no longervalid, according to the College ex¬aminers. The MAROON apologizesto the signers of the letter and tothe University.Letters ...'Alice1 Kimmel?This p*st summer many of the students of this and other universitieswere fortunate enough to be able totravel abroad. Each of them has doubt¬less come home with many interestingtales to tell, tales which the MAROONhas not printed for our enlightenment.May I ask, then, how it is that thenaive peregrinations of one Alan Kim¬mel rate serialization in the school’sweekly paper? Surely the coverage of theAssociated, United, and other presseswas enough to inform us of what wasgoing on at meetings in Berlin andelsewhere. Why then need the MAROONclutter, its columns with the events ofthe recent past instead of devoting itselfto news of the campus? Informationconcerning local campus events, I'msure, will be of more Interest to themajority of our student body than arethe confessions of any of our localAlices in Wonderland.John H. MartinQuestions Kimmel 'facts'As a student at the University ofChicago, and as a citizen of the UnitedStates who has spent a full school yearin (western) Europe, I want to lodge astrong protest against the factual mis¬representations and adolescent implica¬tions in Kimmel’s article in theMAROON last week. His flights of fancyconcerning facts and morals are bemus¬ing. In the days when Pulse existed,this might, with a few appropriate al¬terations, have made of itself a fine,humorous article; to present it as aserious review is not highly compli¬mentary to the discernment, acuity andintelligence of the student body on thiscampus.First, transit permits for westernGermany are issued by the Allied HighCommission, not the U. S. State depart¬ment. Since the early winter of 1950such permits have been easily available;and I have received specific advice fromthe Commission the procedure one mustuse if he wants to travel from westGermany to Berlin, and is unable to ob¬tain a transit permit for overland travelfrom the Russian occupation authories.If one could receive a specific refusalfrom the Commission this would be ofinestimably greater comfort than thelack of response which met my 25 or30 letters to officials, German and Rus¬sian, consular and military, in Ger¬many, Denmark and Russia, requestingpermisison to visit my relatives in Er¬furt, Germany. As to not being able toenter Czechoslovakia, I fail to see therelevance of a trip there to taking partin a conference in Berlin, unless it be avacation trip to prepare for the strenu¬ous exertions of carrying banners, sing¬ing in the streets, and shouting"Freundschaft.”Second, Kimmel should have enjoyedthe enforced trip on the Batory. Ad¬mittedly the route to Gdynia, Poland,is a bit round-about, but he saved alitle cash by traveling thus, rather thanflying in from Frankfort am Main orpoints further south. I can say fromthe experience of two Atlantic crossingsthat the camaraderie on the Batory isterrific, and I hope Kimmel enjoyed it.The fact are of course, that if he couldtravel through Poland and eastern Ger¬many to get to Berlin, then there wasno need to fly in from points in west¬ern Germany anyway, as only those un¬able to obtain transit permits for east¬ern Germany have to fly over it to getto Berlin.Third, I will be candid to admit thatI spoke to no more Germans than didKimmel; but I did not have to rely onan interpreter. In my several weeks inwestern Germany I talked to no onewho showed any great remorse over thedemise of the German Jew, or theAustrian or the Polish; of the Scandi¬navian or the Dutch or the BelgianJew. Ironically, a sociological problemhad been solved! But the attitude to¬ward war was in terms of strong andvigorous disapproval. Now can it be,that the millions of Germans, east andwest, all of whom hate war, and all ofwhom want little more for this worldthan to find Germany reunited—canit be that of these, the east Germanshanker for the establishment of a neweast-German paradie, while their ownbrothers slightly west are really quitepleased at having one less problem tobother wtih? Nor, on the other hand,do I find the prospect of being thrownin jail for a prejudiced statement verysavory to equitable standards of liberty,especially when that which is “preju¬dice” may change from day to day.The day has long since passed whenyoung adults in their third decade maysafely and trustingly possess the faithof a child. The way to find out howpeople feel is obviously not at a confer¬ence the basic premise of which is thatonly those who are in sympathy willattend. Kimmel’s sampling techniquesare atrocious, his incredulity undevel¬oped, his Insights well-rehearsed andhis conlusions preposterous. It pleasesme to know that the MAROON believesin and supports the practice of non¬discrimination. In publishing Kimmel’sarticle, the MAROON has shown Itselfto be completely undiscriminating.C. H. LushboughCM not- intimidatedI am very glad to see that the MA¬ROON has not been intimidated by therecent attacks upon It. Journalistic in¬tegrity and a desire to print all thenews was shown in the publishing ofAlan Klmmel’s article. I hope that theMAROON continues in this tradition.Not So Worried,Studentbegun somewhere to give voiceto the world’s great, mute yearn¬ing for peace.For the United States, couldthe University of Chicago be that“somewhere”? Finds Kimmel welcomeI found the articles of Mr. A. Kimmel,describing his recent trip to the USSRand Eastern Europe, a welcome relieffrom the barrage of ridiculous slanderto which we Americans are currentlyexposed, i.e. Colliers!Rou HolderRaps 'shallow thinking'In the past few weeks, there haveappeared in the MAROON many critic¬isms and condemnations of universitypolicy in regard to various issues—aca¬demic freedom, student rights, tuitionfees, etc. All these criticisms may ormay not have been Just ones. It be¬comes tiresome, however, and a littleirritating to see people join in the at¬tack, apparently Just for the sake ofattacking. Such an attack was madelast week in the MAROON letters col¬umn by “unsigned, plese” in his critic¬ism of the new regulation that now re¬quires first year college students totake quarterlies.Perhaps I am being unjust. Perhapshe was sincerely concerned about theeffect of the new ruling. This beingthe case, it is still irritating to see peo¬ple throw every individual case likethis into the hopper of “dangeroustrends,’’ “undesirable precedents,” and“evil tendencies.” It seems to be rapid¬ly becoming a habit for people aroundhere to attack something they don’tlike, to predict it as the beginning ofworse things to come, and to end withsome rhetorical question like, "Is Chi¬cago joining the mob?”In this case, a change in universitypolicy was looked upon as establishinga regrettable precedent, the beginningof a dangerous trend. Now there is noreason why this or any other policythe College sets up or mtalntalns shouldnot be subject to criticism. Nevertheless,it should be argued strictly on its owngrounds, and very little of that wasdone here. No real argument at all waspresented to show why the new rulingis bad. The meaning of intelligenceand maturity were incredibly confused,and a remark of Mr. Hutchins com¬pletely misapplied. Instead, over halfthe letter was devoted to showing usthat this change was starting us onthe road back to conventionality.This college is unconventional and sooutstanding not because of the posses¬sion of a particular set of proceduresand practices that are different fromthose of other places. This institutionis great because it has constantlysearched and continues to search forthe best way to provide for a good edu¬cation. The “best way” at any particu¬lar time represents the decisions basedupon experience up to that time. Con¬sequently there is nothing sacred,nothing that cannot be abandoned iffurther experience seems to indicatethe lack of need for it. There is noreason in the world to believe that allstudents may not at some future timebe required to take quarterlies or toattend classes. Whether or not this willever be done will depend on whetherit Is found later, as knowledge of theeducational process Increases, that theseprocedures are a necessary part of theprocess of a good education. I am surethat the experience of students willplay an Important part in those find¬ings insofar as student experience canbe communicated and expressed intel¬ligently. Student opinion will not servea very useful purpose, however, if itexpresses Itself In the shallow thinkingcharacteristic of last week’s criticism,and of other times before. I certainlyhope there will be a bit- more responsi¬bility for the way in which words areused in the letters to the MAROON.Joe ShimbelCriticizes criticismReally, kids, your criticism is incred¬ibly bad. You lead with a glass chinevery week, as if confident that no onewill ever read your stuff. Time was,you had some review writers who maynot have abounded in critical Judge¬ment, but who had obviously scraped an acquaintance with their fields ofcriticism. They wrote as if they knewwhat they were hearing, looking at. orreading. Cognoscenti may debate thesoundness of a llterately written criticalopinion; but I submit that the critic¬ism currently appearing in the MA¬ROON deserves no such Indulgence.Winsberg is of course beyond the paleLeonard Wolfe on Carson McCullerssays nothing, revealing only a largefund of Ignorance on the subject ofcontemporary writing. Jimmy Holland'spiece on the American exhibition at theArt Institute is better. Perhaps lim¬ited by space, his adjectives are pat andhis generalizations unsatisfactory, butone feels that he possesses some inform¬ation. Maguire, who reviewed the Ger¬man! organ recital, combined incoher¬ence — what is a “’climacteric treat¬ment?”—with reflections on the impor¬tance of the compositions played, andremarks on the state of the organ, thevalidity of which I am unable to JudgeCompared to the load of (deleted) inthis issue, the review of Mussorgsky bvNichols and Templeton in last week *MAROON was rather well done.Robert F. JohnsonCM mixes factsThe MAROON purports to presentfacts to otherwise misguided students,enabling them to make intelligent deci¬sions for themselves.The front page of the November 9 is¬sue bears a local news story—about theInternational House Day Celebration.The following errors or omissions inreporting are noted: (1) InternationalHouse was not the sponsor of the ban¬quet as the lead sentence stated. It wassponsored by the Chicago Chapter ofInternational House Association. Inc.,an alumni organization with chaptersor corresponding groups in over 50 coun¬tries. (2) Nor was the occasion of th«banquet solely commemoration of In¬ternational House Day. It was also par¬tially in honor of the Board of Trusteesof International House Association, Inc ,meeting in Chicago this year for thefirst time since 1948. (3) the fourthparagraph of the articles states that“David Rockefeller . . . will alsospeak.” Mr. Rockefeller (whom the re¬porter failed to identify as one of thetrustees of the association) was, as amatter of fact, the featured speaker ofthe evening, and all invitations andannouncements of the occasion clearlyadvertised that fact.If the MAROON is so Inadequate inpresenting the students facts aboutlocal events, can you blame the stu¬dents, faculty, or administration forquestioning your ability to report onevents or Issues of great significance’I predict that unless the quality ofJournalistic reporting, writing, and edit,ing improves considerably, the “MA¬ROON” issue will be revived and againwill provide you an opportunity to be¬come martyrs.The MAROON wishes to apologize forthese errors in fact.—Ed.Robert A. HeilForum commentsI am the editor of the weekly publi¬cation. Forum, circulated on the Uni¬versity of Utah campus. . . .It has recently come to my knowledgethat the Chicago MAROON suffered aweek-long suspension after the editorhad been removed by administrationauthorities for political reasons. Inlight of th^high reputation for liberal¬ism that the University of Chicago en¬joys throughout the country, this in¬formation was received by some of uswith considerable surprise. We had our¬selves organized the Forum to combatthe “creeping paralysis of freedom ofthought and speech” on college cam¬puses which the New York Times haddeplored in its famous survey of lastMay .and we are naturally concernedabout the state of student rights inother universities.Even in our remote valley the Chi¬cago affair appears highly significant.Sincerely yours,Richard L. Sklar• a a a v VVVVVVVVVVVVVV1 Treat Your GirlFor the Thanksgiving DanceStudent Discount — 20%Buy Her Flowers fromMITZ1E ’S| FLOWER SHOP -* Ml 3-4020 1301 I. 55th St.j ' Open TUI 9:00 r.Iig.November 16f 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Next topics: Black Dissents on Communist DecisionNext week’s forum topfc willbe the “Supreme Court decisionon the conviction of the Commu¬nist leaders.”Letters should be submitted to The next. Forum’s topic will be on the Supreme Court’s decision on the legality of the Smith Act and the conviction of theCommunist Party of America’s leaders under this act. The convictions were made in May, 1950, by a grand jury in NewYork City, Judge Medina presiding. We present here Justice Black’s dissent on this Suprdm^ Court ruling in its completeform.“Here again, as in Breard v. Alexandria, decided this day, my basic disagreement with the Court is not as to how wethe editor of the Ivory Tower should explain or reconcile what was said in prior decisions but springs from a fundamental difference in constitutional ap-pa£*" Monday. would serve no useful DurDOse tbis case *s* and wbat it is not. were not charged with non-verbal the Founders of this Nation, how-be “U°ai°XuldTemthrcomS to state my positio^ at length. These petitioners were not acts of any kind designed to over- ever, the benefits derived fromtions for general disarmament?” At the outset I want to empha- charged with an attempt to over- throw the Government. They free expression were worth th*Letters should be in by Dec. 3. size what the crime involved in throw the Government. They were not even charged with say- risk. They embodied this phft-ing anything or writing anything osophy in the First Amendment’sdesigned to overthrow the Gov- command that Congress “shallernment. The charge was that make no law abridging . . . th«they agreed to assemble and to freedom of speech, or of the presstalk and to publish certain ideas ...” I have always believed thatat a later date. The indictment the first Amendment is the key-is that they conspired to organize stone Gf our government, that thenities and brutalities suffered by committed against recognition. s^ech^Traws^r “fnd‘other “infuranc"''^^!''^SjfJLSS °rleLC„°Un' ognitio"/of'TheTh"anged govern: Publications in the future to teach „“e^ At ieattognmon ot the changed govern and advocate the forceful over- as speech in the realm of pub-Beyond the Ivory TowerForum: Should we recognize China?Since space did not permit us to. give all the letters submitted on therecognition of China forum, we oreincluding fwo more as a supplementto last week's forum. tries behind the Iron Curtain6. A certain degree of sanction ment in China is probably irrele- Throw of the government No f-S l° s*fecn “ rea11" °i puo*of China’s nresent form of gov- vant Rpoo«nition hv the TJN is tnrow , . . government, ino j,c matters, I believe that theoi l tuna s present iorm oi gov vant. Recognition by tne ujn is, matter how it is worded, this is a «clear an(i m-esent dancer” testernment. The American people however, another matter. virulent form of nrior censorship / an„ P," 7 !!havp npvpr annrnvprl of tntalitar- rr-u tt-nt , , , • Virulent iorm OI prior tensorsrup (joes not «mark the furthermost.... ... a . ave. never aPProved 01 totaiitar- The UN should not recognize Gf speech and press, which I be- constitutional boundaries for Dro-about Red China, recognition 'an forms of government. It was any nation with which it is at lieve the first amendment forbids. tecUve exoresston" b™ does •'noseems inadvisable at the present S"1? *,,<-r 15 y“rs hat Fra"c° war, but it might well state what i wouW hold Section 3 of the more than rwognizea mtaimurnSpam was grudgmgly accorded its pollcy would be after a cease. Smith Act authorizlng this prior "0mpuls?on Hll ofWehts™some degree of recognition; why llre is agreed upon. - restraint unconstitutional on its XSees v California 3H U S■ S“e . ranTh°r«TeaarsPs anedfng- If the UN iS maintain <he a"d »»)There is no purpose in diplomatic Eventual admission to the peace of a11 nations—not merely But let us assume, contrary to So long as this court exercisesrelations with China at present, united Nations General Assemblv betweei} those that already agreed an constitutional ideas of fair the power of judicial review ofuntil peace negotiations in Korea . Seeuritv Council This would ** should act as quickly as criminal procedure, that petition- legislation, I can not agree thatarp nrmpiiuipH *_ United Nations at war P°^s*ble to malte its membership ers although not indicted for the the First Amendment permits usuniversal. There would then exist crime of actual advocacy may be to sustain laws suppressing free-a forum in which even unfriendly punished for it. Even on this rad- dom of speech and press on thenations could negotiate. jCal assumption, the only way to basis of Congresses or our ownThe UN might state that it in- affirm these convictions, as the notions of mere “reasonableness.”tends to recognize all de facto dissent of Mr. Justice Douglas Such a doctrine waters down theSays 'no'On the basis of what we knowtimeRecognition implies:1. Diplomatic intercourse.are concluded.2. Trade agreements. The verysame reasons for establishmentof the present economic embargoagainst Red China are still ap¬plicable, with itself; furthermore, twovetoes are no more effective thanone.Would it not be preposterous to3. Territorial agreements. In thereafter break off relations due governments (with which it is not showed is to qualify drastically or First Amendment so that __to Red China’s aggression and in- at war) and that this includes wholly repudiate the established amounts to little more than anterference with U N action in both the PeiPing government on “clear and present danger rule.” admonition to Congress. TheKorea7 the mainland and the Nationalist This the court does in a way Amendment as so construed isIn short we advise recognition government on Formosa (it would which greatly restricts the protec- not likely to protect any butof Red China only for the threat also have to include Spain, etc.), tions accorded by the First those “safe” or orthodox viewsto liberty and world peace that Not onl^ would such a proposal Amendment, The opinions for which rarely need its protection.it is.W. J. Pom Jr.T. P. RudySoys 'yes'Right now U.S. feeling againstview of Red China’s obvious ex¬pansionist tendencies, what ter¬ritorial agreement would havemeaning ?4. Relations between peoples ofboth countries. Under Red China'stotalitarian form of governmentit seems impossible to deal withthe people of China: we alreadyhave an embassy in Moscow, thecapitol of the Soviet Empire.5. Exchange of visas. Weshould be in no hurry to subject Red China runs so high, and theU.S. citizens to the sort of indig- State Department is so stronglyAttorney submits affidavit on Cicero riotOne item which escaped much attention in the reporting of the Cicero riots was an affi-david submitted by Charles S. Edwards, rental agent and attorney, to Judge Barne’s Ciceroriot injunction hearings.“About 6 p.m. the Chief of Police of Cicero rushed out of the alley nearby followed by about20 men and rushed up and grabbed my arm. The police in the cars out front got out of theircars and rushed.up toward us. The chief said to me, ‘You should know better—get going—get out of here fast. There will statements the chief held mybe no moving into this build- left arm with his strong left handing. I am not going to endan- and he kept hitting me in theger the lives of 1SL families for back with his right fist, especiallythe likes of you.’ During these at my right shoulder and on my allow the Chinese to solve their affirmance show that the chief I must also express my objectionown proposals without the out- reason for jettisoning the rule is to the holding because, as Mr.side interference they so resent, the expressed fear that advocacy Justice Douglas’s dissent shows,but it would not be too hard to of Communist doctrine endangers it sanctions the determination ofswallow for those who are de- the safety of the Republic. Un- a crucial issue of fact by thetermined not to walk out on doubtedly, the governmental pol- judge rather than the jury. NorChiang Kai Shek. icy of unfettered communication can I let this opportunity passA. H. Rosenfeld of ideas does entail dangers. To without expressing ray objectionto the severly limited grant ofcertiorari in this case which pre¬cluded consideration here of atleast two other reasons fo’r re¬versing these convictions: (1) therecord shows a discriminatory se¬lection of the jury panel whichprevented trial before a represen¬tative cross-section of the com¬munity; (2) the record showedthat one member of the trial jurywas violently hostile to petition¬ers before and during the trial.Public opinion being what it isnow, few will protest the convic¬tion of these communist petition¬ers. There is hope, however, thatin calmer times, when presentpressures, passions, and fearssubside, this or some later courtwill restore the First Amendmentliberties to the high preferredplace where they belong in a freesociety.Mr. Justice Black’s dissent inthe review of the case of Denniset al v. U. S„ No. 336.right side below the shoulder. Hehit me about eight times whilehe was puting me ahead of himtoward my car which was parkedacross the street. I was trying to walk but he was trying to makeme move faster. When we reach¬ed my car I opened the door andthe chief shoved me inside andsaid, ‘Get out of Cicero and don’tcome back in town or you’ll geta bullet through you.’ There werethree or four officers with thechief. ... I have not been backto Cicero since and my clientsthe Clarks, have not been allowedto move into the apartment whichis theirs.”SignedCharles S. 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W.oJIow.Whether you are a beginner or seekto improve your dancing—you can’tgo wrong in selecting this schoolwhere prestige, experience and econ¬omy insure your learning quicklyand correctly.PRIVATE LES-SON s are given any¬time—any day, 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.Ju6t call lor your first appointment.PHONE MUSEUM 4-9505Do it- now—It’s later than you think.Square Dance Class Sun. Eves. 8 p.m.Very truly yoursTERESA DOLANreservationi. Secretarial CareersVIACOLLEGESPECIAL CAREER TRAINING FORCOLUECE STUDENTS and GRADUATESStarting December, March, Juneand SeptemberExecutives are showing preference forcollege-trained men and women ie high-level secretarial positions.Registration Now Open.,yu Lifetime Placement Service Taj■ Write Admissions Counselor ;9THE GREGG COLLEGEJt South Wabash Avenue, Chicago 3, IllinoisPhone STate 2-1880Page 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 16, 1951Find Tangeman artist aswell as a singer with a voiceNell Tangeman presented a concert last Friday night con¬sisting of works by Berlioz, Mahler, Milhaud, Chandler andCopland. That she possesses artistry as well as a good voiceis borne out by the fact that she succeeded in clouding thedistinctions between the interesting and uninteresting musicshe sang.Milhaud’s “Hebrew Chants”are among the best music that American music was repre-has been composed in this folk sented, and rather poorly, byidiom. They combine subtlety of Theodore Ward Chandler and formances are excellent, andharmony, and simplicity of mel- Aaron Copland. Their utilizationody with persistent syncopation, of folk material is merely conven-Miss Tangeman’s singing added tional. An exception was the Cop-to the power of the compositions, land song “I Bought Me a Cat.”The Berlioz songs contained It is constructed along th<? lines of Recent releases now availableneither the unusual harmonicprogressions nor the asymet-retical melodies which enthu¬siasts of this neglected com¬poser expect. The aria from TheDamnation of Faust sufferedfrom piano transcription. Norwas Mahler at home on the pi¬ano, though the mystical flavorof his music was sympathetical¬ly projected. ‘‘Old MacDonald Had a Farm.”Each animal is represented by ap¬propriate harmonies and phonet¬ics, and the repetitively increas¬ing sequence adds up to an inter¬esting progression. That the audi-ience enjoyed the song was evi¬denced by sporadic laughter.The pianist, Norman Brockway,was competent.Fred Winsberg As if to aggravate the record Greater depth of recordingbuyer’s quandry, two recordings again speaks for the Westmin-of Beethoven’s Quartet in E mi- stenster pressing,nor, opus 59, no. 2, have been re- Paul Badura-Skoda has record-leased this week. The perform- ed Mozart’s Piano Concerti nos.ances are by the Pascal Quartet, 24, K 491, and 27, K 595 for West¬on Concert Hall (CHS 1206), and minster (WL 5097). Felix Pro-the Vienna Konzerthaus Quartet, haska conducts the Vienna Phil-on Westminster (WL 5098). harmonic Orchestra. This releaseIn choosing between the two js surprising, and, in view of pastthe listener must look for subtle performances by these musicians,points of difference. Both per- disappointing., ,,,, . ^ . Badura-Skoda plays with thewhere dillerences exist in coneep- Mme broadness and c,arUy; thetion, each is acceptable. Pascal s yjenna Philharmonic is as virtu-playing lacks the ihythmic crisp- oso especially the woodwinds, soness that characterizes the Vi- central in Mozart piano.concertoenna Konzerthaus Quartet. The slow movements but both Mn.letters performance of the slow cer„ are p, aed consistentl 1oomovement is expansive, and, ,ast. The extreme tempo is justl-through detailed attention given lied ,he passionate Jflrstit, becomes more absorbing. movement of the C minor.Another Westminster release(WL 5101) has Reine GianoliWolfe discusses author'spresentation of the NegroAs a Southern writer, Carson McCullers is concerned withthe Negro problem. She deals with Negro problems per seand as types of the issues she loves to treat. The Negrobecomes the type of her characters.“We all of us somehow caught,” says Berenice in The Mem¬ber of the Wedding, “we born this way or that way and wedon’t know why. . . . Every¬body is caught one way or an¬other. But they don't drawcompletely extra bounds aroundall colored people. ... So wecaught that first-way I was tell¬ing you, as all human beings iscaught. And we caught as coloredpeople also. Sometimes a boylike Honey feel like he just can’tbreathe no more.”The tragic figure of HoneyBrown is related to Lancy Davisof The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter.Dr. Copeland of Hunter is Lancygrown old in futility and despair.Dr. Copeland's daughter, Portia,experienced and patient, is relatedto Big Berenice. Dr. Copeland’sson, Willie, whose feet were froz¬en and sawed off in jail, is relatedto Honey Brown. All of these arerelated to the chain gang in TheBallad of the Sad Cafe—“twelvemortal men, seven of them blackand five of them white boys fromthis county.”All of these characters are re¬lated to Allison Langdon, the sad,thin nervous woman of Reflec¬tions in a Golden Eye. She, thewoman with a weak heart, whowas declared insane and commit-,ted to an insane asylum, who “cutBest Films of EuropeEvery Fri. & Sat. eveningpresented byFilm ForumPeople’s Auditorium2157 W. ChicagoFri., Nov. 16, 8:00 p.m. off the tender nipples of herbreasts with garden shears,” isperhaps the central character inthe fiction of Carson McCullers.She is one of the true martyrs.McCullers has always been im¬pressed with one of the basicfacts of human experience—thefact that many people seem to bevictims and some are not reallyso. Negroes in Carson McCullersare among the true martyrs.The obsessive theme of trueand false martyr is basic in herwork; more of this next week.Leonard Wolfe Play oratorioDmitri Shostakovich’ new ora¬torio, Song of the Forest, writtenafter the Soviet musical criticismof 1948, will be heard for the firsttime in Chicago at Fullerton Hallof the Art Institute Wednesdayat 8:15 p.m.The performance will be in theform of a record recently receivedfrom the Soviet Union, one of twoavailable in the U. S., with com¬ment by William Mandel of NewYork, author of several works onthe USSR.Admission is by invitation only.The Labor Youth League has 75admission cards for distributionon campus. They may be obtainedfrom LYL chairman Arthur Bier-man at the following times andplaces: meeting this afternoon at3:30 in Classics 16, discussion ofMarxism and Freud Sunday at7 p.m. in Ida Noyes east lounge,and Student Government meetingTuesday evening in the Law build¬ing.The LYL is arranging campushearings of the recording on Nov.30 and Dec. 1. playing Bach's Fantasia in A mi-nor, Toccata in D minor, andChaccone in D minor.This record is perhaps morevaluable for its presentation ofrarely heard music than for anypositive qualities of performance.The Fantasia in A minor isamong Bach’s most chromaticworks, immediately presentingunconventional sounds. The Dminor Toccata is more of a dis¬play piece. The Chaccone is, ofcourse, a transcription, and wouldbe better left alone.Leo TreiHer| American Conservatory Iof Musicauuth Side Branch1133 E. 63rd St.3 Piano, Voice, Violin and Wind ;InstrumentsClasses day or evening| MU 4-9564 Start Anytime 3BiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiMiimiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuijHAMILTON THEATERhome of prestige entertainment2150 E. 71st St. HY 3-9491amazing adventures of six on a raft across thePacific, photographed by the men who lived itKON - TIKIspecial discount rates for students — present I.D. cards te cashierECONOMICAL AIR TRAVELOne Way Round TripNew York $24.00 $45.60Washington 24.00 45.60Detroit 11.45 21.76Miami 43.74 87.48Los Angeles 70.00 each woy5% Discount Students—Faculty and Staff Members (plus tax)DAILY SCUEDCLED FLIGHTSReservations atVarsity Ticket Service1311 E. 57 Woodworth's Bookstore MU 4-1677Free Ticket DeliveryyiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiimiiiiiiiimmiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimigjI Attention! I• Students and All University Faculty and Employees ~Progressive Party Hall §306 E. 43rd St.Sot., Nov. 17, 8:00 p.m."IVAN PAVLOV"(Russian)"BURLESQUE ONCARMEN"(Charlie Chaplin)(Russian, uncut version) =Admission 60cmilllllllllllHIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIHIIIIHII—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 I SPECIAL I| DISCOUNT |5 On Brand New 1951 Mercurys and Lincolns— £5 Ail Models. While Our Stock Lasts. £i B% Inuire Today and Bring This Ad ~! LAKE PARK| MOTORS, Inc. [£ 5600 LAKE PARK AVENUE ELincoln - Mercury Dealer “HYde Park 3-3445 1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiMiniiS The Madisona handsome new modelo««» *5450In Eastern universities, at North¬western and Chicago ... in thesmart clubs ... on La Salle Street,the men who set the pace in fash¬ion are wearing this elegant newstyle. See how becoming are theeasy lines, natural shoulder treat¬ment, 3-button spacing, and centervent. And note! it's only $54.50.Second FloorShown on figure:Madison Narrow Brim Hat, $10 •Madison Button Down Collar Shirt, $4.50Madison Silk Repp Tie, $2.50U«in FloorNovember 16, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 9Choir sings original scripts ‘River’ swollen filmThe Rockefeller Chapel Choir has been a part of the musical life of the UC campus formany years, but its tremendous improvement, under the guidance of Richard E. Vickstrom,has aroused much curiosity about its work.The heightening of its musical standards has stimulated rather than discouraged interestin its activities. Skill in sight reading, adequate voice quality, and an acquaintance with thedevelopment of choral music are the basic qualities sought.The choir now boasts an inno- ' ’ The Theatre Guild has, for reasons perhaps best known toits business staff, placed Jean Renoir’s The River at the Sel-wyn, an erstwhile legit house. The logic of this move, at aboutthe same time that the Palace, home for Chicagoans (in hap¬pier years) of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs and otherimmortal favorites, went legit might at first glance escape one.The River is a large, travelog- .ration known as a training choir.Students who want to acquirethese basic skills can px^epare for adherence to the original scorethe gallery choir through work an^ clarhy of its delivery.The UC performance of the Mes- a conductor, and was written forsiah is noted for its meticulous small, highly skilled groups.in the smaller group.The choir presents much ofthe work of DeVictoria, Pale¬strina, Bach, Handel, and Mo¬zart. Last spring the choir pre¬sented a program of works byIgor Stravinsky, Lili Boulanger,and Randall Thompson.This year the choir will concen-trate on Handels’ Messiah, whichwas performed last Christmas,and Bach’s 'St. Mathew Passion. This spring The St. Mathew Pas¬sion will receive its first perform¬ance by a UC choir.Mutilation of original scoreshas often occurred in their publi¬cation and performance. Much of These singers used the samemethod of discussion and agree¬ment which quartet players usetoday. Shortage of time and theincreased size of the chorus hascreated the necessity for a con¬ductor.The UC choir is exceptional inits effort to remain close to theBaroque conception. Mr. Vick-this practice has been due to the strom’s preciseness with the ba-presence of the conductor as well ton is simply the efficient use of ish film. There is occasional finecamera work, the opening shotsof the boats on the river and ofworkers carrying raw jute up tothe x’iver bank, a later sequence,which gives a strongly Dickensianpicture of the jute processingplant, and a pitifully few othersgave promise of visual poetry.This promise, alas, was not tobe fulfilled. For heaven knowswhat reason, the Anglo-Indianfamily, that of the manager ofthe twine works, is pulled in, be¬nevolent and sweatless as ever. spring of the Owner of the jutemill, and the half-breed daugh¬ter of their philosophical Irishneighbor all fall inexplicably inlove with the Bitter YoungAmerican Who Lost His LegIn The War, an unpleasant chapwho is visiting the Irish neigh¬bor. The girls adolesce somemore, the young man acceptshis limitation, one child dies ofcobra bite, and another child isborn. Life, we are to assume,flows on like the river.The actors, for the most part,as to that of the editorial “correc- moderntion.” Early sacred music was saver,meant to be performed withoutinm The only relation these people get tangled in the stick dialogue,music’s greatest time have to India (as opposed to In- an(} eventually seem to becomejah) is to admire and participate, resigned to staying where theyCaroline Lee as only the English can, in such happen to land. Radha, a worker~ ~~ Beautiful Native Customs as the jn the prolific Indian film indus-festival of lights, when th?y have try, plays the daughter of the1 their servants light dozens of lit- Celto-Indian. She is obviouslyCampus Interviews on Cigarette TestsNo. 27...THE LYNX.his sporty student really teed off on a long tiradewhen he found himself stymied on the “single puff”and “one sniff” cigarette tests. “They’re strictlyfor the birdies!” said he. He realized thatcigarette mildness requires more deliberationthan a cursory inhale or exhale. Millions ofsmokers concur — there’s only one true test ofmildness and flavor in a cigarette.It's the sensible test. . . the 30-Day CamelMildness Test, which simply asks you to tryCamels as your steady smoke on a day-after-day,pack-after-pack basis. No snap judgments! Onceyou’ve tried Camels for 30 days in your “ T-Zone”(T for Throat, T for Taste), you’ll see why ...After all the Mildness Tests.. • litCamel leads all other byhi/fionsw -rr tie oil lamps, and a frw roman working in a style foreign to her,candles to boot, to commemorate but does a yeoman job of it, andthe dead of some ancient war dofvs a traditional dance beauti-these natives had. The film’s at- fully, as far as we could tell,titude towards India brings albeit quite irrelevantly.nothing to mind quite so muchas Lives of a Bengal Lancer.The story, from a book byRuiner Godden, is a hazytreatise on the life-cycle, aboutwhich India seems to be intol¬erably wise. The daughters ofthe Family, their friend, thevolcanically adolescing o f f -We Specialize inFINGER TAME PARAKEETSComplete Line of Dog ond CotAccessoriesHYDE PARK PET SHOP1370 E. 55th MU. 4-4428 The director’s technique wasgenerally pedestrian; the camerawork was spotty, although the.shifts of facial color from shotto shot may be attributable tothe storage of exposed stock ina bad climate.So. Such a shoddy product isbeing sent out as an experi¬ment: placing it in legit thea¬ters at legit prices with “heat¬er” type ads is calculated tohoodwink one and all. Wewould advise waiting, a smallsacrifice, until the film comesto the 60-eent houses.J. Kent PoleHe•***’BROOKS BROTHERS' EVENING WEARis traditionally correctBrooks Brothers have long been authori¬ties on evening wear clothing and acces¬sories. Favored by undergraduates areour ”346” dinner jackets, which are tai¬lored on our own patterns of fine worstedsof our own selection...and, like all ourclothing, may be worn with the assurancethat they are correct in every detail.In addition we have an excellent selec¬tion of clothing and furnishings for sportand daytime wear, designed for today’sundergraduates.KSTABUSHW1818cSOTHjJNGI$ms furnishings, Hats «r§hoes74 E. MADISON ST., NEAR MICHICAN AVE., CHICAGO 2, ILL.NEW YORK. • BOSTON • LOS ANGELES • SAN FRANCISCOPage 10 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 16, 1951Thinclads beat Butler 24*31; Seek GymnastsThe Junior Varsity gymnasticsBoosters blank Indiana the coming season. Members ofTed Haydon’s harriers defeated Butler University 24-31in a four-mile race at Washington Park Saturday. (In cross¬country meets, the winner is the team having the least num¬ber of points.) John Owensby won the race for Butler in22:48 but Chicago team members John Smothers, AshbySmith Jr., Art Reilley and Tom Scott, finished second, third,fourth and fifth to revenge aone-point defeat last year.The varsity squad will attemptto complete their dual meet sea¬son undefeated when they try fortheir fifth straight win at Wash¬ington University in St. Louis,tomorrow.Playing in a field of mud. thevarsity hooters shut out IndianaUniversity 2-0 last Saturday. Thewin put Chicago on top in theMidwest Soccer conference, withIndiana University second. Twogoals by Godfrey gave the Ma¬roon their fourth win against nolosses. Indiana has a three-won,one-lost record. Varsity plays In¬diana tomorrow at Indiana. Coach Kooman Boycheff of theJV Swimming team opened prac¬tice last week with his squad offirst and second year collegemen. The team competes in theChicago Private School league.Squash enthusiasts are urged tosign up for the All-Universitysquash team. Play in the ChicagoCity Squash League is on tap forthe UC’ers, who will begin com¬pleting tonight. Squash instruc¬tion will be provided enthusiastscontacting Coach Boycheff.First-round play in the Frater¬nity Table Tennis tournament be¬gan this w'eek. Defending cham¬pion in the meet is Delta Upsilon. the squad learn routines on theside horse, parallel bars, trampo¬line, and other equipment in theGym.Tumbling also is a part of thissport. It is the sport which willdo most to produce a fine, well-developed body. JV gymnastsmay also join Acrotheater andparticipate in its productions andactivities. Interested students con¬tact Coaches Beyer or Potts atBartlett Gym.SHOE REPAIRSubstantial Discountsto Students“IT MUST BE DONE RIGHT*'HOLLIDAY'S1407 East 61st Street(at Dorchester Are.)Phone Normal 7-R717Two blocks front Inti. HouseWhlle-U-Wait or One-Da? Service* New Aero showAcrotheater is planning a newproduction in the tradition of“Magic Rope’’ and “MidnightPhantasy.” The dates have beenset for the spring quarter. Sincethe setting is in New Mexico,Spanish singers, castenet artistsand Spanish dancers are needed.Those who are interested, shouldcontact E. F. Beyer at Bartlettgym. Issue 'C' passesat BartlettNon - transferrable “C** passe*to all athletic contests are beingissued without charge, on properidentification, at the physical edu¬cation office in Bartlett gym.These are for the use of facultymembers and their immediatefamilies as well as full time non-academic staff members.1169 Etil S5ih Street 24-Hour Sorvieo PLese 2-1246University GarageTHORNTON ROGERSExport Sorvieo on AH Oort• COMPLETE WINTERIZATION• WASHING - GREASING• BRAKE SERVICE• ROAD SERVICENSA Student Discount on Ports, Gas end Oil9Yes, 200 times every dayyour nose and throat areexposed to irritation...200 GOOD REASONS WHYYOU'RE BETTER OFF SMOKINGPhilip Morris!PROVED definitely milder ******PROVED definitely less irritating thanany other leading brandPROVED by outstanding'noseand throat specialists,YIS,you’ll be gladtomorrow • •«you smokedPHILIP MORRIStodaylTV Manhattan Shirt Company, makers of Manhattan shirts, necknear, underwear, pajamas, sportshirls, beaehwear and handkerchiefs*ixc—Fine whitebroadcloth, extremewidespread collar.Sharpest shirt on thequadrangles this year.* Style-Con sc iov*r'j/ie tf4Mum PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREET'wz'—White button-downoxford, soft roil tothe collar. Popular asa holiday with thefellows and the gals. HOW MANY TIMES A DAY200?IF YOU’RE AN AVERAGE SMOKERTHE RIGHT ANSWER IS OVER 200!HovemtMr 16, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page If,Classified AdsFOR SALEHAVE A NEW CAREER! Be ft gigolo,maltre ’d., professional mourner. Starta new life with this finely tailored din¬ner suit, size 42. $35 will compromise.Ml 3-1352.MUST SELL Immediately, my 1940Dodge. I will also sell four 6.00 x 16tires with excellent treads and an sjutoradio. Rock bottom prices. Marsh, HY3-8460. MEN'S WOOL ARGYLE SOCKS, handblock, lrr., 6 different patterns. Retailprice $3.95, for only $1.50. */a dozen ordozen, lots only. PL 2-4785.DROP LEAP TABLE and four cha .rs,42 by 52, unopened. $15. FA 4-8274.COPIES OP ECHO MIDWAY, $3.25 toneophytes, $3.75 to pre-Kimptouites.Contact Blossom Weskamp, MAP.CONoffice.TRANSLATION OP scientific, literary,and medical from and into English,French, German, and Hungarian. HY3-6859.Trquble WritingPapers?Let me write that manuscript,thesis, or difficult letter. Experi¬enced editing, composition. Everyletter should hove a subtle ond gra¬cious quality underlying oil of itslines. Excite interest ond make afriend.ESTHER LAVINPUBLIC STENOGRAPHER670 N. Michigan AvenueSuite 202 Michigan 2-6322Mon. thru Fri. 9:30 a.m. to 8 p.m.Sat. 1 :00 to 5:00 » Sun. by App't Voice of HutchinsWhot mokes the U.C. student tick?Whot causes moss to grow on theplanet Mars? Our Exchancellor an¬swers these and other interestingquestions on an unbreakable longplaying record. You con hear thisrecord free of charge atDan's UniversityRadio Shock1126 E. 55fh Streetony afternoon between1:00 and 7:00Publishing company with offices in theUniversity district is looking for aSECRETARYPart time or full time. Shorthand preferred, but not£ necessary. Apply Chicago MAROON, box 122. CHRISTMAS TOYS and gifts. 10 percent above wholesale. All standardbrands. Order from catalog. 2-week de¬livery. PL 2-4785.CARMEN, COMPLETE opera on Colum¬bia LP, by L’Opera Comique de Paris.Records played twice. Retail $17, myprice, $10. Breslow, room 610, B-J, MI3-6000.SLIGHTLY USED Hoover vacuum, tanktype, excellent condition. Will sellcheap. Call NO 7-5419 after 7:30 p.m.WANTEDA JOB IN AFTERNOONS, any day. Con¬tact Tom Seidman, room 611, B-J, MI3-6000.FM PILOT TUNER. Call Carla Zlngarelllafter 6 p.m. at BU 8-3842.WARDROBE CLOSET needed badly!Sheldon Kaufman, Ext. 2493.ARGUS C-3 or similar model. No acces¬sories desired, except case. Can payabout $20-$25. Phone BU 8-4160 eve¬nings.gjillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllitt£ • Cut Films£ • Film Packs| • Flash Bulbs■ • Color and Black andWhite Roll Film• 35 MM Color orBlack and WhiteBe$f Photo FinishingIn Town —One Day ServiceRELIANCE£ CAMERA & PHOTOSUPPLIES1517-19 E. 63rd StreetPhone Mldwoy 3-0288SllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllRTHE MEETING’S UPSTAIRSWhat happens to a high-flying enemy bomberwhen it meets the newest anti-aircraft guidedmissile shouldn't happen to a low-flying duck.Radar “eyes” and electronic “brains” makesure the meeting takes place. They guide thepilotless missile to within lethal range of theplane, then explode it.This teaming of intricate tracking and com-, BELL TELEP puting devices was made possible by teamingof another sort. The electronic control systemwas developed for Army Ordnance by the BellTelephone Laboratories and the Western Elec¬tric Company, close-working research andmanufacturing units of the Bell System.It’s just one of the many important militaryprojects being entrusted to the Bell System. HELP WANTEDYOUNG PEOPLE of Republican sym¬pathy. Purpose: to advance Ideals ofIntelligent opposition to Increasing In¬anity In national government. Meeting,Classics 18, Monday, Nov. 19, 4:30.PRIATE ROOM and bath In exchangefor baby sitting a few nights a week.Good deal. Pleasant surroundings. LI8-7233.FEMALE: EXPERT typist and generalclerical. Permanent. 37^4 hour week,3 weeks vacation. New air conditionedbuilding. $200 monthly full time, $100monthly half time. Midwest Inter-library center, MU 4-4545.MISCELLANEOUSDO YOU LIVE in or near Oak Park anddrive to school? If so, may I ride withyou whenever possible for modest re¬imbursement. Please call Laurie Hen-nick, EU 6-5256.RIDE WANTED to Indianapolis Wednes¬day evening or Thursday morning. Candrive. Jack Gordon, MI 3-0800, Hitch¬cock.BUSINESS SERVICESRADIO OUT of whack? Take it to Uni¬versity Radio Shack.EXPERIENCED free-lance editorialworker, edit, rewrite manuscripts. BU8-7861.SEWING, ALTERATIONS, bachelor’s re.pairs. Call for appointment, MU 4-4680.Edna Warinner, 5625 S. Dorchester.EXPRESS, LIGHT and heavy moving.Willing and courteous service. Reason¬able rates. Bordone, VI 6-9832 and MI3-1198.APARTMENTSFURNISHED APARTMENT for twoyoung men. MI 3-3807. McKeon ...“the right of free action ceases,but not the right of free reasonand speech against it.” McKeonsaid that he would no longer urgethe University of Washington tohire Communist professors, as hehad done until the recent courtinterpretations of the Smith Act.He is opposed to that interpreta¬tion itself as “expressing an atti¬tude that is unwise toward dif¬ference of opinion.” He favors“effecting a change in that judi¬cial legislation.”He quoted himself as havingsaid that the action of the Uni¬versity of Washington “endan¬gered the basic institutions ofthis country.”To improve informotionIn answer to a question con¬cerning the MAROON suspen¬sion, McKeon said he would an*!swer “hypothetically” that “mak¬ing the MAROON a better instru¬ment of information would be agood reason” for corrective ac¬tion, “whether or not that wasthe reason.”McKeon gave this lecture to anopen meeting of about 70 studentsand faculty which was called bythe Committee for the Preserva¬tion of Student Rights.RIDE ALightweightBICYCLENEW 1951 MODELSWHY PAY WORE?DAWES BIKE, with three-speed gear to ease pedalling,$52.50 . . . alsoSchwinn - Rudge - RaleighDunelt-Armstrong-Hercules30-Day Free CheckupDon't moke o mistake; see us first. We kove 30 yeors of experienceJACKSON PARKBIKE SHOPWe Service What We Sell5333 Lake Park NOrmal 7-9860DOrchester 3-7524There’ll be no bottles for dotes when you goplaces in Judy Bonds I These “designed-to-make-history*blouses come through with flying colors every time*ttwiu BLOUSESAT BETTER STORES EVERYWHERESee them ot MARSHALL FIELDJudy Bend, Inc., 1975 Breadway, Naw Yark It, N. Y.Page 12 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 16, 195121 for 49< • 10 for 254Regular packing, 4 for 104Ppl Double Edge GOLD THIN-some low pritetAlso Pol Injoctor Blades in melol injector*20 (of 59< * 10 i* 39< • 6 hr 25<HN., two AMOMOMI tOOMOO CtwfewtSTUDENTS!Let’s go! We want your jingles! We’reready and willing and eager to payyou $25 for every jingle we use. Sendas many jingles as you like to Happy-Go-Lucky, P. O. Box 67, New York46, N. Y.(Z&tuHf &wtftcte £ve*tt4 ittFriday, Nov, 16SEMINAR: DIVISION OF BIOLOGICALAND MEDICAL RESEARCH. AR-GONNE NATIONAL LABORATORY,conference room, Site B, 6111 Univer¬sity avenue, 4 p.m. “The Mechanismof Virus Invasion of Host Cells.”Theodore T. Puck, Professor of Bio¬physics, Department of Medicine, Uni¬versity of Colorado.CHARLES R. WALGREEN FOUNDA¬TION LECTURE ON HUMAN RIGHTS,Social Science 122, 4:30 p.m. “HumanRights and the Mass Society." Proles¬sor Rommen. (The fourth in a seriesof six lectures.)MATHEMATICAL BIOLOGY MEETING,5741 Drexel avenue, 4:30 p.m. “On Dif¬fusion of Electrolytes.” I. Opatowski,Assistant Professor of MathematicalBiology.MOTION PICTURE: Blockade (PoliticsClub), Social Science 122, 7:15 and9:15 p.m. (Walter Wanger's drama ofthe Spanish Civil War, with HenryFonda and Madeline Carroll.)WILLIAM VAUGHN MOODY FOUNDA¬TION LECTURE, Leon Mandel Assem¬bly Hall, 8:30 p.m.."A Collect of Phil¬osophy.” Wallace Stevens, Poet, Win¬ner of the Bollingen Prize in Poetry,1950. (Admisison is without ticket andwithout charge.)FRIDAY FROLIC, International House,9-12 p.m.LYL LECTURE, Classics 16 at 3:30 p.m.“Youth in Eastern Europe and theSoviet Union” given by a nationalofficer of the Labor Youth League. Abusiness session will consider theforthcoming Student Government ac¬tion on LYL’s campus recognition.BALLET CLASS and rehearsal, spon¬sored by KOB, 3 p.m., dance room, IdaNoyes Hall.LECTURE on “The Christian and theNature of the University,” given byDaniel F. Jenkins, visiting professorof economic theology. Ida Noyes Hallsun parlor, 12:30-1:20 p.m.MOTION PICTURE, presented by Hu¬man Development Student Organiza¬tion. Three shorts: “What’s oii YourMind?” “Behavior in Hypnotic Regres¬sion,” and “Cryptic Automatic Writ¬ing ” Judd Hall 126 , 4:30 p.m.LECTURE sponsored by the HumboldtClub: Mr. Max Putzel on “Bilder AusMexiko.” Wieboldt 408, 3:30 p.m.TV — TV — TV — TV — j£ MIDWAY RADIO <I (Formerly 6306 Greenwood IAve.) HILLED FOUNDATION presents “Livingas a Jew Today”; a student discussion,followed by regular Sabbath ServiceKarasik House, 5715 Woodlawn, 8:30p.m.Saturday, Nov. 17DANCE RECITAL: University of BrazilDance Group (Department of PhysicalEducation), Ida Noyes Hall gymna¬sium. 2:30 p.m.INTERNATIONAL HOUSE quarterlydance. Shadowy Seas. Seml-formal.Music by Phil Walsh and his orches¬tra. Free corsages and refreshments.Admission, $1 per person. 9:30 p.m -1 a.m.Sunday, Nov. 18EPISCOPAL COMMUNION SERVICE,Joseph Bond Chapel, 8:30 a.m.LUTHERAN SERVICE, Thorndike Hil¬ton Chapel, 10 a.m.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE,Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 11 a m.The Reverend John B. Thompson.Dean of the Chapel. (November 25,the Reverend Wallace W. Robbins,Associate Dean of the Chapel.)RADIO BROADCAST, University of Chi¬cago Round Table, WMAQ and NBC.12:30-1 p.m.CARILLON RECITAL. Rockefeller Me¬morial Chapel. 4 p.m. Frederick Mar¬riott, Carillonneur.“NOYES BOX” (Student Union), IdaNoyes Hall, 8 p.m.VIENNESE WALTZING, InternationalHouse Assembly Room, 8-10 p.m.RECORD CONCERT given by AlphaDelta Phi. 5747 University- avenue.3-5 p.m.GATES HOUSE COFFEE HOUR: Allcampus dancing and folk singing, re¬freshments. Gates House. 8 p.m.DISCUSSION OF PRELIMINARY draftsof two articles on Marxism and FreudNew Foundations, student Marxistquarterly, will be on sale. Ida NoyesEast lounge, 7 p.m.Monday, Nov. 19EXHIBITION (Renaissance Society): Anexhibition of contemporary art foryoung collectors, represented by over70 artists. Paintings in oil and watercolors: lithographs and block printsIn black and white and in color: smallsculpture; etchings; drawings: mo¬biles; etc. All items will be availablefor purchase. Goodspeed 108, dallyexcept Sunday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m CHARLES R. WALGREEN FOUNDA¬TION LECTURE ON HUMAN RIGHTS,Soc. Scl. 122, 4:30 p.m. “Liberty andProperty: The Social and EconomicRights and Democracy." HeinrichRommen, professor of political sci¬ence, College of St. Thomas, St. Paul,Minnesota.BOTANY CLUB, Botany 106, 4:30 p.m."The Ecological Significance of SandDunes.” Jerry S. Olson, postdoctoralfellow in statistics and botany.PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR, Abbott 133,4:30 p.m. “Respiration of the EggCell Before and After Fertilization.”Dr. Hans Borei, Wenner-Gren Insti¬tute of Biology, Stockholm.ANTHROPOLOGY CLUB. Social Science122, 8 p.m. Two sound films showingthe work done at Yerkes Laboratorieswith chimpanzees, and the attemptsto teach them to speak, will be pre¬sented by James Gavan. Yerkes Lab¬oratories of Primate Biologies. OrangePark, Florida.MOTION PICTURE: Adventures ofC'hico, International House, 8 p.m.DISCUSSION on LYL’s campus recogni¬tion pending Student Government'saction, sponsored by LYL Rosenwald28. 3:30 p.m.Tuesday, Nov. 20WORSHIP SERVICE (Federated Theo¬logical Schools), Rockefeller Chapel,10:30 a.m.MEETING OF THE COUNCIL OF THEUNIVERSITY SENATE. 3:30 p.m.. Lawsouth.CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SERVICE. Thorn¬dike Hilton Chapel, 4:30 p.m.PUBLIC LECTURE SERIES ON THESOVIET UNION IN TODAY'S WORLD(University College, Downtown Cen¬ter), Woodrow Wilson room, 116 SouthMichigan avenue, 6:45 p.m. “SovietPolicy and the Problem of Revolutionin Asia.” Seymour Rotter, InstructorIn modern historv.PUBLIC LECTURE SERIES ON SEMAN¬TICS IN MODERN LIFE. 19 South LaSalle street. 6:30 p.m. “Science: TheLanguage of Agreement." S. I. Haya-kawa. lecturer In University College.Author of Language in Thought andAction, and editor of Etc.PUBLIC LECTURE SERIES ON SE¬LECTED TOPICS IN BIOCHEMISTRY(University College, Downtown Cen¬ter), 19 South La Salle street, 7:30. p.m. “III. Molecular Patterns andCellular Organization: Cytochemistryand Enzyme Chemistry.” IsidoreGersch, professor of anatomy.GRADUATE HISTORY CLUB, Ida NoyesLibrary, 7:30 p.m. “The Chlcago-‘Frankfort Intercultural Exchange Pro¬gram.” Wilhelm Paupk, professor ofhistorical theology, and Louis Gott-schalk, professor of modern history.MOTION PICTURE: The Informer (Doc¬umentary Film Group), Social Science123, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m.PUBLIC LECTURE (Canterbury Club),Leon Mandel Assembly Hall, 8 p.m.“Immortality of the Soul.” MortimerJ. Adler, professor of the philosophyof law. Law School.PUBLIC LECTURE (De Sales House Inconjunction with Calvert Club), 5735University avenue, 8 p.m. “The Mis¬sions and the Modern Woman.”Theresa Anawalt, American Assistant,Cross Roads Center. Chicago.FOLK DANCING, International House,8-10 p.m.BALLET CLASS given by KOB. IdaNoyes dance room. 3 p.m.Wednesday, Nov. 21PUBLIC LECTURE SERIES “Skeptics’Hour” (Student Christian Association)Ida Noyes library, 4 p.m. “Why Be¬lieve in God?” James H. Nichols, asso¬ciate professor of church history.CARILLON RECITAL. RockefellerChapel. 4:30 p.m. Mr Marriott.CHARLES R. WALGREEN FOUNDA¬TION LECTURE ON HUMAN RIGHTS,Sco. Scl. 122, 4:30 p.m. “Social-Eco¬nomic Rights versus Personal Rights.”Professor Rommen. (The final In aseries of lectures.)MOTION PICTURE: End of St. Peters¬burg (Student Federalists), Social Sci¬ence 122, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m.PEACE COMMITTEE meeting. IdaNoyes, 7:30 p.m. Atomic energy poll.SCIENCE-FICTION CLUB presents JohnBoardman, “Standardization of theConcents of the various Plants In Sci¬ence-fiction Stories.” Classics 17, 7:30p.m.LECTURE: “Baha'i Proofs of the Exis¬tence of God.” given by the Baha’iFellowship, Ida Noyes reception room,7:30 p.m.MAROON SEMINAR: “The Copy Desk,"speaker: Wade Morris, former head ofthe Sun-Times copy desk. 8 p.m.,MAROON office. Reynolds 201.Thurs^ov, Nov. 22THANKSGIVING: A UNIVERSITY HOL¬IDAY. SC meetings ...from page 1resulted in tentative recognitionbeing granted to the organizationpending the report of the Univer¬sity legal staff and the action ofthe Student Government.At present the application ofLYL for recognition, along withabout 50 others, reportedly re¬mains unprocessed in Biren-baum’s office. No action can betaken by SG until it reaches thecommittee on recognized studentorganizations.Members of this committee be¬sides chairman Woodworth areBob Ransmeier (ISL, Bi. Sci.),Harry Adler (ISL, College), JopJosephson (UCI, College), amiAlperin. The two administrationseats on the committee have notyet been filled, although Wood-*worth, having requested action *from Strozier, expects this to bodone by next week.Woodworth Wednesday stated“I believe so” when asked if hiscommittee would hold publichearings before submitting itsrecommendations to the full Stu¬dent Government. All interestedpersons and groups would be ableto testify.Thu wackiest crimu iforyof the year—poking impiousfun of the Bonk of England.At 6 30 8,|5 I0^ftAve.)NOW LOCATEDIn New and Larger Quartersat>• 1017 East 63rd Street H Be Happy- 0% GO LUCKY!Phone Midway 3-6575Specialists in ServicingElectronic Equipment H<TV —TV —TV —TVSpecialized Repairs ofBICYCLESLightweight and BalloonComplete Line of Parts forAll BicyclesACE CYCLE SHOP819 E. 55th Ml 3-2672 -the 4ravr* LUCKIESTASTE BETTER!It takes fine tobacco to give you a better-tasting cigarette. And Lucky Strikemeans fine tobacco. 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