Collegians' Kefauver Student representatives mayconvention set here join S£ CWme CommissionThe UC Kefauver-for-President Club announces that Chi¬cago will be the site of a convention of students supportingKefauver for President, being held at Thorne Hall at down- Student representatives may be presented as candidates to fill vacancies in the Scaith-Easttown Northwestern University College on Saturday and Sun- Crime Commission after its by-laws are passed, Chancellor Kknpton stated this week. Theday. The convention, which will convene at 9 a.m. Saturday, Chancellor is chairman of the commission.will be attended by delegations from colleges all over the In a telephone conversation with the MAROON last Wednesday, Kimpton said: “I amcountry. “ — - ; ■ n°t aware of any vacanies at present; if and when any do arise, I would be very much inter-Kefauver to speak tional Convention, and discussions ested in proposing student members.”The morning session will be on political issues at which Sena- The plan to include studentan organizational meeting, tors and Representatives will be ^ . . .. Ttc . lo_, ar.a . . _ . .while keynote speeches will be available ns resource Dersons. *eaaers in the community or- Its by-laws are being drafted bygiven in the Saturday afternoonsession from 1:30 to 4:30. Con¬gressman Kent Keller, and Sen¬ator Paul Douglas, both of Illi¬nois, will be keynote speakers.There will be a dinner for Ke¬fauver at the Sherman Hotel inthe evening from 6:30 to 9 atwhich he will speak.Student to visit delegatesOn Sunday afternoon, from 2to 4:30, there will be visits todelegations to the Democratic Na- The convention will wind up witha picnic from 5 to 6:30 and atorchlight parade down StateStreet at 7 p.m.Frank Kirk, chairman of theKefauver-for-President Club an¬nounced at a meeting Wednesdaynight that all UC students are in¬vited to attend the convention andthat arrangements for transpor¬tation and/or further informationcan be obtained by calling him atPLaza 2-9835. ganization originated with theStudent Government. SG present¬ed the idea to Dean Robert M.Strozier, who approved it andpassed it on to the Chancellor.The South-East Crime Commis¬sion is composed of the HydePark-Woodlawn-Kenwood leaders.Formed last April to combat therising crime rate in the vicinity,it numbers in its executive com¬mittee such members as RabbiLouis Mann and Oscar Brown Sr.University of'Chicago, July 18, 1952 31 , professorof law at UC.UC supports commissionThe University collaborated withthe commission from the momentof the organization’s conception.The mass meeting at which theidea of the commission was pro¬posed, was held in Mandel hall onMarch 27, as a result of a longseries of crimes in which both theUniversity and the communitysuffered. The commission was thefirst of its kind in the city, al¬though similar bodies sprang upin most localities soon after theforming of the South-East com¬mittee.When the commission was juststarting on its work, the Univer¬sity lent it its chief of guards,to staff its newly opened office.Chancellor Kimpton also pledged$15,000 for the commission's workif that amount would be met byother contributors. Apply now for.'53 FulbrightsStudents planning to apply forFulbright scholarships for theacademic year 1953-4 are remind¬ed that the deadline for applica¬tions is October 31 1952.William Birenbaum, director ofstudent activities, warns studentsoften fail to recognize how far inadvance they must make theirplans. Students should contact thestudent activities office in theReynolds Club at their earlies op¬portunity and request screeninginterviews and application forms.About 800 scholarships areavailable for study in nearly twen¬ty nations.SU outers plan trip toRocky Mountain Park Police seminarhere for 12 days;talk racial tensionWith reaction to the violence ofSU Outing Department has announced that its annual Sep- the recent Union Street riot eddy-tember amping trip will go to Rocky Mountain National Park ing about them, UC faculty mem-in Colorado. Thirty-seven people will leave Chicago by chart¬ered bus on August 29 to return September 17. Cost for foodand transportation together will run between $55 and $60.Sleeping bags, mess kits and the like will be necessary, buttrip leaders in the past nave ,often found that arrange- departmentments can be made to borrow and Art Institutethe equipment.in the past trip members offer MA programAs•an make their own choice ofvaried activities. For hardy, ex¬perienced hikers there will belong hikes taking several days to•omplete. For beginners numer¬ous one-day trips are available.Those interested should contactJordan Holtzman at Midway 3-6000 or Ext 1053, and watch forannouncements of another meet¬ing at the beginning of Augustwhen a colored film of the Parkwill be shown, and final arrange¬ments for the trip will be made. A program is now being plan¬ned by the UC Art Departmentand the Art Institute of Chicagofor offering a masters degree inart jointly by the two schools,probably starting next quarter.According to Mr. Joshua C. Tay¬lor of the UC Art department, theprogram is being planned so thatthe two schools will complementeach other in the fields covered.UC students planning to teachafter receiving their degree willbe able to acquire technical train¬ing in art media, while Art Insti¬tute people will gather training inthe more academic aspects of artthrough courses given here now.Classes in this program will meetboth on this campus and in theArt Institute downtown. hers opened a 12 day seminar, theConference on the Police andRacial Tensions, to discuss meth¬ods and techniques of handlingtensions to prevent race riots.Headed by Joseph D. Lohman,the conference plays host to 50police chiefs, and other law en¬forcement officers from all partsof the U.S. who will exchange in¬formation on their local situationsand discuss the role of the policeduring outbreaks of interracialviolence.The first session of the confer¬ence heard professor Lohman pre¬sent a sociological analysis of thecause and spread of racial tensionand a discussion of violence in St.Louis, Cicero, and Detroit. Ed¬ward J. Kelly, superintendent ofthe National Capitol Parks, andDavid McCandless, head of theSouthern Police Institute in Louis¬ville, described efforts of law en¬forcement agencies to preventviolence in two sensitive situa¬tions: the admission of Negroesand whites to Washington’s sixpark pools, in 1950, and the 1948decision, in Louisville, to set asidepark facilities for Negroes. Off to UNShow student anglesIn its July 31 issue the MA¬ROON will present a special cover¬age of the four political conven¬tions held in Chicago-Democratic,Republican, Progressive, and So¬cialist. This issue of the MAROONwill give news and feature storieson the conventions devoted pri¬marily to student reactions andviews of the convention activitiesand the personalities involved,rather than a resume of dailynewspaper, radio and telivisioacoverage. Roy Blough, professor of eco¬nomics and political science, pres¬ently on leave from the Univer¬sity, becomes the latest appointeeto a top UN post, it was aifcnounced by David K. Owen, actingsecretary general of the UN.While on leave from the uni¬versity, professor Blough has beenserving as a member of PresidentTruman’s Council of EconomicAdvisers. His new position is thatof principal director of the de¬partment of economic affairs andpays from $17,000 to $18,000.UT presents threeCervantes one-actersAppropriately for the summer, when many UCer’s whohave ventured into the outside world return to these cloister*to nurse their wounds, the University Theater’s quarterly pre¬sentation will bring together some faces familiar to campusaudiences of yore.At least five performers who have distinguished themselvesin the past will appear in aTalk communism influenceThe world influence of communism was discussed in a series of four lectures at the 28thannual Norman Wait Harris Foundation conference at the University of Chicago, June 17-20. group of three Cervantes one-act plays to be presented thenights of Aug. 1, 2 and 3.The plays, called “entremeses”or interludes in the Spanish, havebeen translated only recently andare considered by some critics tobe Cervantes’ best work next toDon Quixote. They were origin¬ally written in a farcical vein ascurtain raisers and after-piecesfor regular Spanish plays of theearly seventeenth century.Director Otis Imboden has se¬lected for his program the Mar¬velous Pageant, the Jealous OldMan, and the Cave of Salamanca.Three stars performThree of the performers havehad leads in full length plays onthis campus. Paul Sills, who is to Lois Karbel as Christina, the not-so-mnocent young maid in "ThaJealous Old Man," one of Hiresinterludes to be presented by Uni¬versity Theater the weekend ofAugust 1, 2 and 3.The Harris Foundation Lectures, established in 1923, are given with the purpose of pro- play the leader of the pageant in Salamanca>vantes one-acter, The Cave ofmoting a better understanding on the part of American citizens of the other peoples of the the first of the Cervantes inter¬world, thus establishing a basis for improved international relations and a more enlightened Jj^^chess, ^the Duch^world order.The aim of these lectures, inaddition, is to always give ac¬curate information, not propa¬ganda.The present Harris Foundationcommittee includes: QuincyWright, chairman; L. A. Kimpton,honorary chairman; Bert F. Hose-litz, executive secretary; G. B.Carson, C. O. Houle, L. A. Metzler,H. J. Morganthau, E. H. Pritch¬ard, Robert Redfield, and J. A.Rippy.Namzer gives first talkThe first public lecture wasgiven by Louis Nemzer, whospoke on “The Organization ofCommunism as a World Power.”Nemzer maintained that theWest must undertake a full mobil¬ization of its resources to com¬ bat communism and the diseasesthat are attacking our social struc¬ture, but we must avoid makingthe mistake of trying to conquertotalitarianism by imitating itsmethods.Propaganda is discussedIn the June 18 lecture, AlexInkeles of the Russian ResearchCenter at Harvard University,spoke on “Communist Propagandaand Counter-Propaganda.”Professor Inkeles stated thatSoviet propaganda is not as suc¬cessful as we have been led to be¬lieve and that U.S. internationalinformation services have in con¬siderable part unjustifiably ac¬cused of failing to combat theSoviets successfully.Give Hie world alternatesInkeles attributes the failures we have made to be the result ofconcentrating our efforts on try¬ing to make people like us in¬stead of trying to help them seea real alternative to the solutionto their problems the communistsoffer them.June 19, the series continuedwith a panel discussion on “Hu¬man Rights and Communist Sub¬version in the United States.” Thespeakers on the panel were Quin¬cy Wright, Daniel Bell and DwightMacDonald.Hoselitx sounds final noteThe Harris Foundation seriesconcluded June 20 with an addressby professor Bert F. Hoselitz, ofthe University of Chicago’s Com¬mittee on International Relationson “The Communist Religion;Orthodoxy and Heresy.” Malfi, which UT produced a yearago this spring.From the same season, we willalso have Richard Eliel whoplayed Androcles hi Tonight at8:30’s production of Shaw’s An-drocles and the lion.Sills acts and directsBoth Androcles and the Duchesswere in the mind of this revieweramong the best things the campushas seen in recent years, bothfrom the standpoint of acting andof directing. Paul Sills, a man ofconsiderable experience in thetheater, directed the Duchess, aswell as appearing in one of itsmajor roles.Another standout performer,Estelle Luttrell, who played Ali-thea in the highly successful TheCountry Wife this winter, wiMcarry the lead in the third Gee- Unusual summer talentAltogether this is an unusualarray of talent for a summer seat-son, and UT is to be praised forselecting a program which whileof interest and novelty in itself,provides a vehicle for the leadsin these past successes to displaytheir talents again.Lois Karbel, who did very wellin Adam the Creator this spring;and Nancy Mikolic, who has beenin a half-dozen things the lasttwo years, wifi appear in support¬ing roles.A factor to be noted is that thaprogram wifi not be put on inMandel Hall, but in the UT’s stu¬dio theater on the third floor ofthe Reynolds club. As this theaterseats hardly more than a hundred,it may well be wise to get ticket*m advance. They are on sale for75 cents at the Reynolds club deskand Woodworth’s. .■ TNt 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON My 18, 1952Peace, pure and simple"—Robert Maynard HutchinsIssued ones weekly by the publisher, The Chicago Maroon, at the publication•Mice, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: EditorialOffice, Midway 3-M00, Ext. 1012: Business and Advertising offices Midway1-0800, Ext. 1011. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions by mail, M per year.Robert Peters ^Acting editor-in-chiefLetters...Still in raceI have every respect for the reporterialaccuracy and good faith of the staff ofthe MAROON. 1 desire, however, to cor¬rect a readily understandable misinter¬pretation of my own remarks whichappeared in its most recent issue.In it, I am quoted as being preparedto withdraw as candidate for governor infavor of the Incumbent, Governor Ste-uenson. Such a deevlopment I hadpointed out as a theoretical possibility,not by any means as an actual or con¬templated line of action.As a matter of fact, the ProgressiveParty stands at all times ready to with¬draw its own candidates and to throwIts support behind the candidates ofeither one of the old parties, providedsuch candidates give support to certainbasic principles. We want to know ofany candidate for public office:M) Does he stand for an uncompromis¬ing battle against corruption in po¬litics?Is he prepared to take a firm andunhestltating stand for the rightsof labor and the Negro people?m Is he determined to seek every hon¬orable alternative to war and prepa¬rations for war?It is far too early to make a finaldetermination with respect to all thecandidates of the two old parties. Thedebate in the political area around can¬didates and Issues is ju6t beginning.When the bright light of public debate•ufficlently illuminates the platforms«f the candidates, the Progressive PartyWill in democratic assembly make itsdetermination of support or opposition.Until such time, I must declare thatI am and remain a candidate for thedffice of governor of the State of Illi¬nois. My purpose is to give maximumoupport for the effort of this party toWin a place on the Illinois ballot andbo give the people of Illinois an oppor¬tunity for registering a maximum votebehind the principles of basic Ameri¬can democracy for which it stands.Robert Mom LovettDear Miss Tolerance:I am a gentile. I must make this dis¬tinction from the start because yourletter precludes the possibility for a Jewto defend himself. A Jew would auto¬matically in your terms be unable tosee the true "other side of anti-seme-ttem.”I find that an answer to your posi¬tion is in order because regretably toomany people in this community do nottnow how to disagree basically with you.oo many so called liberals around hereprove their lack of prejudice with state¬ments that begin: "I'm not prejudicedAgainst those. Why, some of my bestAre . . .”The fact that you are willing to shakebands with men does not prove a lackOf prejudice. Your inability to judgeIndividuals as Individuals proves theContrary is true.Once more we must reiterate thatlove for humanity requires that oneevaluate and accept others for what theyAre as individuals. Prejudice Is evalu¬ ating others in terms of stereotypes—arbitrarily and artificially assuming thatcertain people, because they have one ortwo things in common, also have awhole host of other characteristics andatttudes n common.How dare you, Miss T., presume toattribute to individuals who happen tohave a common religion (or color ofskin or place of birth) a common modeof behavior?The question here is not to investi¬gate whether more Jews are obnoxiousthan other people (or whether Negroesas a whole are mort shiftless). The re¬sults would reflect the situations andpositions of these people in society. Thequestion is whether you are going towalk up to a man and talk with himto see what he is like or whether youalready know what he is going to belike because he is this or that.We do not doubt that the actions ofthe people you describe were reprehen¬sible and vulgar. But not because thepersons are Jewish.Nor is the question here whether onecan make exceptions and admit thatthere are some likeable Jews ("some ofis Judged not in terms of himself but iaterms of your concept which ha salreadyprejudgede him and which he mustovercome. The latter is a very artificialand unfair way to treat others. None ofus are so perfect that we don’t have ahard enough time proving to objectivecritlcie that we are decent.You are wrong to consider yourselfliberal; you are wrong to consider your¬self Christian. I submit that the con¬cept of intolerance is blasphemouslyun-Christian.Robert Janz, Jr.Student in Hie CollegeNotes toward a * "’'nr*'definition of LAKThe tremendous pressures by thetrustees and alumni that must havebeen directed towards Hutchins nowbecome apparent in the behavior ofLAK. Almost none—whether pro- orcon-LAK—doubts the following: (1)Except in most unusual cases, the ad¬ministration which pays the fiddlercalls the tune, (2) it is not difficult tolocate such a fiddler; state institutionsare full of them, (3) LAK fills thetrustees’ requirements to perfection. Thetrustees have their boy.In this period of nation-wide hysteria,it should not be considered strange orremarkable that anyone who has dic¬tatorial power over a quasi - govern¬mental institution should behave asLAK has done. The remarkable thingis that he should do it so boldly. LAK’slack of modesty is outstanding. Hedoesn’t seem to be the slightest bit em-barrased in making patently stupidstatements, or in tearing down by edictin a few months what Hutchins builtup by cooperation and rational democ¬racy in decades. LAK’s audacity is trulyremarkable, and more befitting a master(e.g., RMH) than a serf.To any UC old-timer, a parallel mustInevitably present itself. One Harry D.Gideonse, late and unlamented profes¬sor at UC, and now making a hash ofcivil liberties as president of BrooklynCollege, was also a leader of the anti- Hutchins forces at UC at one time. Notonly do both of these men exhibit ex¬tremely similar behavior configurations(e.g., academic freedom for faculty only,the university as mirror rather thanleader of community), but I feel Intu¬itively that there must be some realpsychological community between them.These notes, most preliminary andtentative in nature, may serve to directinquiry towards an understanding ofthis peculiar kinship. That such an un¬derstanding is imperative can best beasserted by asking a question: if andwhen the un - American committeecomes to UC, who is there here to meetIt as Hutchins met the Walgreen andBroyles committees? And, even prior tothis, is there still anything here worthsticking up fo ras we have stuck up forthe University so many times in thepast?Rickard J. DcHoon *Food for strikersFood is urgently needed by the fami¬lies of the steelworkers who are onstrike. Families with children especiallyneed help in their fight against hunger.Adequate aid is not available fromrelief agencies due to administrativeregulations.Many organizations and individualsare contributing food and money, butmuch more is needed. We urge stu¬dents to bring their contributions toEnid Sharp, 5207 S. Ingleside, or to callDO 3-0049.George ResisChester DavisRuth StruikLloyd HoganEnid Sharp German lauds "Report"You may be Interested In a letter wehave received from Dr. Oscar C. Pfaus,a German author and scholar who form¬erly resided in Chicago.Elsewhere, Dr. Pfaus has said of him¬self, “I am an ex-soldier of the Germanarmy of World War I, an ex-soldier ofthe US army of post-World War I years,and a veteran of World War II (Ger¬many army again). I am of course notproud of this record of my former ignor¬ance, but I mention it to show that I,too, am entitled to voice an opinion onwar, war experiences, and militarism.’’The text of the letter follows:"Hamburg, April 2nd, 1952"Faculty-Graduate Committee for Peace5706 S. University AvenueChicago 37, Illinois, USAGentlemen:Please permit me to thank you mostsincerely for the copy of your excellentReport on Germany.We had given up all hope that theAmerican people would come to the de¬fense of those in this unhappy countrywho not only fear but know what a re¬militarized Germany will Immediatelyrevert to Nazi totalitarianism.We felt that we had been cheated byAmerican promises and realized that wewere left to our fate. Our Job was done,and we were cast aside.Having supported all efforts of libera¬tion from Nazi and German militaristdomination we were getting ready oncemore to receive our rewards in form ofnew Gestapo summons and of newcharges by the "People’s Court," andwe prepared ourselves for the inevitableand torturous end in concentrationcamps.But your Report on Germany broughtme the happiest surprise of my life.I was deeply moved by the contents of this outstanding and timely boo_and I thank you once more for yi,truly great and noble defense of fustic*and fair play. ^The Faculty-Graduate Committtee foePeace of the University of Chicago hastaken the initiative in a case which toU6 is one of life and death. I pray thatthe American people and the Americangovernment will heed your warning.You blessed U6 with the happy realiza¬tion that we are no longer alone anddefenseless, and we are grateful. Thename of the University of Chicago willbe reverenced by millions of womenand children who look up to this greatacademical Institution for guidance andprotection.Please free us from the fear of a re¬vival of Nazi terrorism, and from ttoAfear of a remilitarization 1Please read the enclosed article andknow how friends of peace in Germanyare being terrorized into silence andsubmission by Nazi threats of violenceand blackmail! And all this happensunder the very eyes of the American,British and French occupational forcesin Western Germany! And such Naziterrorism is taking place while theAmerican government advocates andsupports a German rearmament! To usit Is nothing else but an organizedmovement for the re-establi6hment ofthe reign of yesteryear. ...Thanking you again for your great de¬fense of the helpless, I beg to remainyourself most respectfully and withmy best wishes, (signed)Oscar C. Pfaus.*'Dr. h. c. Oscar c. PfausMuelhaeuser Str. 7, I. Etage,Hamburg 43, Brlltsh Zone (Germany!Loretta Permutt, SecretaryFoculty-Graduate Commiteefor Peace f-Cokes invade Cambridge-Coca-Cola infiltration of Cambridge pubscause consternation in loyal BritishersThe great tradition of the English public house has been largely abandoned in the centerof this city, and in its place we have a number of licensed premises which unsuccessfullyemulate the American Bar and the Rugger Club Bar. American forces and undergradu¬ates are about equally responsible for this state of affairs. »In at least one pub patronized by the Americans, bottles of beer are kept in a refrigeratoraod served over the bar as American-style iced beer. The managament is even so misguidedas to advertise the fact by aMarkham released,held temporarily insaneLess than three months after he killed his wife, HaroldMarkham, graduate library Ph.D. UC’er, was released onJune 14 by a jury which held that he was temporarily insaneat the time of the deed.Though Dr. William H. Haines, head of the Cook countybehavior clinic, testified that Markham had been in full pos¬session of his wits, the jury agreed he visited a friend, who after along argument persuaded him tocall the police.With the defense alienist, who de¬clared that Markham had beenout of his mind for a short periodOf time.Markham, a veteran of twoyears, came to UC after trying abusiness life and finding it un¬satisfactory. He has been termed**an excellent, almost a brilliantStudent.”The shooting occurred on March17, following an argument whichdeveloped into a quarrel. Mark¬ham left his wife’s body where ithad fallen on the bedroom floor,and lived in the apartment’skitchen for six days, eating hardboiled eggs and going out only toget cigarettes. On the sixth night,Mandel Hal! RAVINIA CONCERT TOUR July 296:45 P.M.Musk Under the Stars withEurope's famous OTTO KLEMPERER conducting44Beethoven'sc Ninth Symphony"$2.98—Round Trip ond General Admission. Reservations atVARSITY TICKET SERVICE. 1311 E. 57th Woodworth's Bookstore MUseum 4-1677t Please make your reservations no later than July 25PANE’SPIZZERIA1603 E. 53rd St.South Side’s TastiestPIZZAand other delicatelypreparedITALIAN FOODAll phones NOrmal 7-9520 placard in the window. Thelandlord of another pub near¬by once went so far as to put anotice over the bar saying “Amer¬ican forces are requested not tobring their own whiskey,” butsince then he seems to have pan¬dered to their tastes in almostevery way.Coca-Cola, which is already onsale in several pubs in Newmar¬ket, is advancing in a sickly pur¬ple flood towards Cambridge, andmay soon be obtainable in thepubs in the very heart of the city.This habit-ferming fluid, whichneither cheers nor inebriates, isan outward sign of all that isworst in the American Way ofLife, admirable though this Wayof Life may be in many other re¬spects. It is a symbol of the causeand effect of the Prohibition,since it is recommended by pussy¬foots and consumed by hoodlums.It demonstrates conclusively thelink between total abstinence andcrime.The coming of the Coca-Colaera is indicated by the style of theredecoration of a large pub nearMarket Hill. Where formerly onecould play darts, or stand aroundand chat, a number of tablesand chairs in the modern cock¬tail-bar style have been installed,and on them are placed price-listsfor the most bizarre kinds of cock¬tails. The cocktail bar is an ad¬mirable institution, but a cross be¬tween a cocktail bar and a pub isunlikely to possess the good qual¬ities of either.Equal responsibility for the de¬terioration of Cambridge pubs The MAROON ii here reprtintingan article by Norman Deaty from"Varsity/* the weekly newspaperof Cambridge (England) Univer¬sity, issue of March 1 ,1952, sub¬mitted by Garry Smith of Interna¬tional House. We feel Hiot thisortide may be of interest to manystudents here as it gives a pictureof certain extracurricular activitiesat Cambridge.quality of the beer so long asy could get light and make amust be taken by the most notice¬able kind of undergraduate beer-drinker; that is, the man whodrinks seldom, and then only toexcess. There are two reasons forbehavior of this type; poverty,and training for competitive sport.Poverty forces many under¬graduates to drink only on Satur¬day nights, but to make up foreach week’s abstinence by gettingnoisily drunk. Training for gamespromotes the desire for drink andtakes away the capability forholding very much of it, so thatthe celebration of a Rugger vic¬tory usually means that any oneof half-a-dozen central pubs willbe full of drunks by nine o’clock,and echoing with the deafeningnoise of those tedious “Ruggersongs.” Of course, the Ruggerplayers are by no means the worstoffenders. The longer and more austere training required for row*ing has even more lamentable *e«suits.The net result of this sort ofbehavior is to make the majorityof the central pubs unbearable onSaturday nights, and to lower thestandard of the beer. If you werea landlord, and you relied for alarge part of your profits on cus¬tomers who were indifferent tothetheynoise, would you try to maintaina high standard of quality in thebeer you served?Far be it from me to belittle thepleasures of intoxication—but letus be more discriminate in ourdrinking. Let us drink less heawily, but more often. If one wantsto drink really heavily, there isno need to do so in a public place.It is only by striving to improvethe standard of Cambridge pubsby our own efforts that we canhope to resist the hideous menaceof Coca-Cola. ( !WHERE THE UofCMEETS TO EATQcY(W4FINE FOOD1321 East 57th StreetIf llttltlllllllf MIM VIIMIIIMMMITERESA DOLANDANCE SCHOOL1208 East 63rd StreetHours 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.Private Lessons AnytimeClass in JitterbugEvery Thursday at 7:30 p.m.Phone MUseum 4-9505lllimMIHIIIHIIIIIIIIHHMIlimHIMIMIIFor on adventure in good eatingHICKORY SMOKEDBABY BACKRIBSwithBarbecue SoucaGoldenFrench FriesSalad Bowl$200Sophisticated Music 8:30 ’til C losingOpen from It to t a.m., Sun. lt:S0 to t a.wt. SPACE RESERVED FORSALT CREEK THEATREMy t-8, 1952 TNC CHICAGO MAROOMILC new hope’ quoth some,*3,000000 book dump’: reply’ 514,500 cubic feet of stacks can accommodate 3,150,000 books, which means that itwould take over 430 years to read them all at the rate of 20 volumes per day.Nevertheless, these are the facilities offered to all UC scholars by the Midwest Inter-library Center, “the libraries’ library,” in operation for the last year in the 5700 hundredblock of Cottage Grove, within sight of the Administration building.The Center is connected with UC in more ways than one. The University makes its in-fluence felt in everything from Euilt by Shaw, Metz and d„uo. be».. ...iithe familiar yellow message contractors of Chicago, MILC is The stacks, specially designedpads by the phones to the stu- the last word both in architecture for MILC’s needs, are unusuallydent attendants in the stacks, even * !!‘>rary The compact. They differ from thethough the Center is a nroiect in buildmg was constructed on first, conventional kind in that they; Ihich 16 other institutions Jshare. se*<>nd, and seventh story levels, have two shelves swinging outHowever not only was the orie- Wlth the massive seven-floor from each stationary stack unit,inal idea of the center conceived s*acks sPace at tbe back- The of- thus saving two-thirds of the aislebv ex-president Ernest C Colwell fice area’ featuring one story-high space which would be normallywho left UC last year for a post wmdows’ faces required. In terms of volumes thisat the Emory Uiversity, but also Co*taJ£ ™ve. ... makes room for over a millionMILC is built on UC-donated There are twenty work cubicles additional books. Architect's model of the Midwest Inter-Library Center. Facing CottageGrove Avenue, it occupies grounds 320 feet long ond 130 feet deep, leav¬ing enough space for two additional stock units should the need for themever arise.grounds and Chicago is the larg- witb swivel armchairs The Center also uses a size with all of the participating in- ed.) universities in the Middleest contributor to the Center’s fP in°UvpUn,w ®*ielving system, in which books stitutions, making possible to West to solve some of the prob-fimrtc nut<(idp of erants from thp . tower* Finished in yellow are filed according to their size draw material on twenty-four , ... ,.Rockefeller and Carnegie foun brick'the building looks like three rather than by their subject class, hour notice by any scholar in any ^ms °* 1116 everexPand,n£dations. tremendous cubes from the side, which system, too, results in sav- member school. It is also equipped search library." It is the firstand like a small oblong with a ing space for another million with a microfilm projector, and project of its kind, and has beenCynic* rampant cube at the back and another ob- books in comparison with a li- is putting on film little known discussed in publications rangingThe center is an association of long standing out from the mid- brary such as Harper. and foreign papers. from the Chicago Tribune and16 universities and John Crerar die when it is seen from across Orders filled promptly The center has been called the Time to Nachrichten fur Wissenrlibrary. Its purpose, according to the street. MILC is connected by teletype "hope of thirteen (at the time— schaftliche Bibliotheken. ,its first annual report, is "to pro¬vide for more economical and.efficient utilization of resourcesto avoid needless duplication andexpense” for little used and rareresearch materials. In connectionwith this, the cynics point to the (Stone, I. F. The Hidden History of the Korean War pub. by Monthly Review, distributed by Citadel Press, 1951)many books MILC has turned up Stone’s new book is an example erf what has become'A’tare1 commodity in American political writing; an honest, ob-entry^is^'Bmted—J1anuarydl9i3,” je<^tive piece of reporting. Since Stone has no political axe to grind, his work is eminently qualified to represent accu-testifying to the usefulness of and rately the events which have caused, and consist of the Korean war.♦he demand for these works. Onthe other hand, the Center has Stone book sheds new light on Korean warfrom the day it opened for use,and the research workers averageas many as 10-12 a day lately. For the casual newspaper reader, the doemumented facts in the Hidden History wifl come as a bit of a surprise. Theyhad a "steady’stream 'of visitors Present a unified, sQlf-consistent, and defensible picture totally different from that proclaimed in the headlines and edito-China. The section of Stone’s bookdealing with the question of theYalu power stations is particu¬larly interesting in Mght of therecent US air attacks on them(see picture).US. Yalu KaiasStir British R°wrials of most American news- propagandist, and this book maypapers. help the reader learn how to ex-Yet Stone’s sources were facts—for himself.”not much more extensive than Wor benefits Rbeethose available to the average Stone shows that the Koreanreader. Compiled exclusively from war was advantageous to at leastUN and pro - American sources three groups: Chiang’s National-(mainly the New York Times), ists (then holed up on Formosathe Hidden History, in Stone’s and, according to their ownwords: sources, in danger of communist"... is also a study in war attack); Rhee’s tottering South Review delayedThis review wos prepored for HieMAROON earlier in Hie year, butdue to space requirements, wosheld until this week. It has beenslighHy revised to bring it up todate with developments in theKorean war.methods in stemming the flow ofworld communism.ACASA BOOK STORESelect Stock of UMed BooksGreeting Cards for Sophisticates1117 E. 55th Street HYde Park 3-5651, . , T. . . .. Stone does not say who actuallypropaganda, rn how to road news- Korean government; and the sup- fjmi ^ ^ sho, He shows 'wapers and official documents in porters of the MacArthur-Dulles . .. .. .^„ . . . , .. „.x both sides were ready, and pre¬wartime. Emphasis, omission, and foreign policy of aid and militarydistortion rather than outright resistance in combatting commu-lying are the tools of the war nism in the far east.Chiang and Rhee feared thatif the announced US (state dept.) sents evidence to the effect that"the stage was set” by the alliesfor such a war. /1 * rReds provoked HST, Mac fight on policyStone maintains that d’ ring thetime MacArthur headed the UNcommand, he and Truman wereMacArthur’s persistence in UA- ^ constant conflict over policy,foreign policy of no military un- lowin„ Drovocative Dolioies was the former wishing t0ion in the Pacific were carried o. .... ... the scope of the Korean increasewar, thethrough their regimes would be paraltel la,‘erwishin* to "mH *'m great danger of collapse both Anied ,*rces and the intervention Although this was at one timeof Chinese forces in the Korean ?asewar.from internal and external forces.US intervention in the Koreanwar brought life saving benefitsto both regimes.Mac policies lead fa warMacArthur and Dulles were two the character of waractivities since the MacArthur, ,, ouster, and especially the recentStone shows that the Chinese Yalu ;aids ld!lj ane (Q wleve, Mreacted only when American g,one suggests in later chapters ofr«‘ TYPEWRITERS LIVE LONGEROPERATE SMOOTHER— IF—INSPECTED - CLEANEDREPAIREDat regular intervals by competent servicemen.Bring yours in for on estimate. *If you do not own a machine, see our recondi¬tioned models, or if you insist, shoot the worksand get a new one.University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS forces attacked power plants the book that Truman, in the roleof the leading protagonists of a ‘Sid* V Manctaria ' ThS reKtralner' was bein* MlipMdforeign policy which called for attacks came despite promisesactions which would lead into an from Washington and Tokyo thateventual large scale war. This, oniy rok trops would be em-says Stone, is in contradistinction ployed in this maneuvcr in orderto lessen the chance of war withto Truman’s “containment policy”which called for less agressiveTHESESMASTER’S PAPERSMSS.Extra-fast DelveryServiceup to 200 pp. 4 daysup to 100 pp. 2 daysNo extra chorge for this specialservice, but it would be wise tomake on advance reservation.HELENPANARETOS5656 S. KenwoodPLaxa 2-9270 CANOE TRIPSin the Quetico - Superior wilderness.At a price a student can afford. Forfree colored booklet and map, write:Bill Rom, Mgr.Canoe Country OutfittersBox 717 c Ely, Minnesota by a Truman following the samepolicies for which Mac^thur hadbeen fired.Book is voluobfeThe outcome of the present Ko¬rean truce talks will to a largeextent depend on the actions andattitudes portrayed in the HiddenHistory, and for the puzzled lay¬men, as well as the erudite politi¬cal scientist, Stone’s book provide*a valuable tool for better under¬standing.David R. ZimmenneeThe Disci: 1367 E. 57th Hy 3-5151New FREE Offeron Remington recordsCome in and inquire•: ■! ■ . ; •’Activities plannedRAVINIA FESTIVALCHICAGO SYMPHONYORCHESTRAPICRRE MONTEUX, ConductorSATURDAY EVENINGJULY 19, AT 3:30Overture, FlyingDutchman WagnerHarold in Italy ....BerliozDaphnis and Chloe RavelHELP WANTED. TYPEWRITER desk, $10; chairs. 50 centsWE WELL train you In advertising. 10% and up. W. McDavld Used Furniture,Call J. C o v a n, MU 4-9368, or the 1510 E- 55th, BU 8-6210. We buy lumi-MAROON. ture- BABY BUGGY and high chair lor sale,good condition, low prlbe. HY 3-6369.PHOTOGRAPHERSSHOE REPAIRSubstantial Discountsto Students"IT MUST BE DONE RIGHT"HOLLIDAYS1407 East 61st Street(at Dorchester Ate.)Phone NOrmal 7-8717Two blocks from Inti. HouseWhile-U-Wait or One-Day Service 1171 EAST 55th STREETfor ONLY *40”with 3 Speeds, Pump, Tool Cose,Topis and Instruction Book. You save$46.55 by ordering your RALEIGHfrom Art's and Taking delivery in anEnglish port. For full details COMEIN AND RIDE ONE BEFORE YOUBUY ONE.CHICAGO'S LEADINGLIGHTWEIGHT SPECIALISTLocal andLong Distance MovingStorage Facilities for Books,Record Cabinets, Trunks, OfCarloads of FurniturePeterson FireproofWarehouse, Inc.1011 East Fifty-fifth StreetBUtterfield 8-6711DAVID L. SUTTON, President WE CARRY 7 MAKES OF ENGLISH BICYCLES — 42 AMERICANLIBERAL TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE — TERMS AVAILABLEsort'd CYCLE & HOBBY SHOP" hours' ;■MONDAY 12 P.M. to 9 — THl RsDVY 9 to 9 — REG. 9-6816 EAST 75th STREET TR 4-4100 1328 East 57th StreetPLaza 2-6445 Chicago 37, IIGOING ABROAD THIS SUMMERBuy a RALEIGH, ■for coming fortnightGRANT PARKCONCERTSWednesday e FridaySaturday e Sundayt P.M.—Admission Free FilmsFRIDAY, JULY 18Nicolai Malko, ConductorFritz Siegal, ViolinsitSUNDAY AFTERNOONJULY 20, AT 4:00Fantasia ThomasTallis Vaughan WilliamsSymphony No. 2 BeethovenAlborado Del Gracioso....RavelFirebird StravinskyOverture Rienzi Wagner SATURDAY, JULY 19SUNDAY, JULY 20Pop ConcertArthur Fiedler, ConductorEugene List, PianistJOSEF KRIPS, Conductor WEDNESDAY, JULY 23FRIDAY, JULY 25Joseph Rosenstock, ConductorFrank Glazer, PianistTUESDAY EVENINGJULY 22, AT 8:30Overture, Tannhauser WagnerDon Juan ....StraussSymphony No. 3.... Beethoven SATURDAY, JULY 26SUNDAY, JULY 27Opera Buff a, “Cosi fan TuttemConcert FormTHURSDAY EVENINGJULY 24, AT 8:30Symphony No. 4 SchumannOverture, William Tell..RossiniSymphony No. 5 DvorakSATURDAY EVENINGJULY 26, AT 8:30Isaac Stern, SoloistALL BEETHOVENPROGRAMOverture Leonore No. 3Violin ConcertoSymphony No. 7 Joseph Rosenstock, ConductorAnne Bollinger, FiordellaHerta Glaz, DorabellaAdelaide Bishop, DespinaDonald Gramm, GuglielmoDavid Lloyd, FernandoRalph Herbert, Don Alfonso Prominent among scheduledStudent Union activities for therest of this month are the Out¬ing Club bike trip and the C-dance (semi - formal), both ofwhich top the calendar for tomor¬row, Saturday, June 19. The out¬ing extends over Saturday andSunday, while the dance takesover Ida Noyes from 9 to 12.Mondays bring table tennis tour¬naments, at Ida from 7 to 10,Wednesdays feature the CountryDancers, from 7:30 to 9:30, andImt Horizon is found to be thesole movie, on July 26.S.U. Board Meeting:-, on Tues¬days, S.U. department meetingson Thursdays, and religious ac¬tivities and Noyes Box on Sun¬days appear in their usual spots;while grapeade, jazz, and golfbring an end to week-day activ¬ities for the month, on Friday,July 25. Tonight at 7:15 and 9:,'tO pDoc-films present a twin hillthe second in their series of sumer films covering “CornedGreatest Era (1914-1934),Buster Keaton stars in andrects “Sherlock Jr.” (1921), whHarold Lloyd appears in “Grasma’s Boy" (1922).Other films in the series <presented on succeeding Endevenings, cover the history ofanimated cartoon, a Marx Broers extravaganza, and the “TtMan.” with William PowellMyrna Loy.Admission is by aeries ticlonly. Tickets may not bechased for individual prograrPInsideWEDNESDAY, JULY 30FRIDAY, AUGUST 1Walter Hendl, ConductorCamilla Wicks, Violinist Colored peoplesare moving up:Mrs. RobesonSUNDAY AFTERNOONJULY 27, AT 4:00Surprise Symphony ..HaydnDon Juan StraussSymphony No. 7 Schubert SATURDAY, AUGUST 2SUNDAY* AUGUST 3Thor Johnson, ConductorGold and Fizdale, Duo-PianistsClassified ads LOST A FOUNDHOUSES FOR RENT LOST: RED jacket and yellow scarf Invicinity of Commons on Wednesday,July 9. Please call SA 1-0995 at 6:30 p.m. Madison echoPLEASANT FAMILY house, roomy sleep¬ing porch, nice garden, near IC andcampus. Aug. 29 to Sept. 20. Rent rea¬sonable. Phone PL 2-5761. RIDESFOR SALE OFFERING RIDE to Florida. LeavingJuly 19-21, return Aug. 2. Sight seeingon route, share expenses. Room 394, Int.House, FA 4-8200. in newspaperLIKE NEW Remington portable, hasFrench accents and Germant Umlaut,$50; also Majestic wire recorder, withrecord player, microphone, 3 spools ofwire, will play through any amplifier,very reasonable. Call MV 4-5186 before1 p.m. or after 6 p.m. RIDE WANTED to LA after Democraticconvention. Leave July 26-28, or there¬abouts. Share driving and expenses. CallTom Thorner, NO 7-9691.HOUSINGLINOLEUM. NEW, grey, 12'xl3'8'\ $8.Call Weinreb. Eves., PL 2-3017.USED, RECONDITIONED vacuum clean¬er, very reasonable. Please call PL 2-6633,ask for Harry. STUDENT HAS been baby-sitter, per¬formed other duties In return for roomand 2 meals a day for family now leftChicago. Desires similar arrangementnow. Raymond Wander, DO 3-1101.ALL MAPLE COUCH. $18; armchair, $13;six-drawer desk, $18; coffee table, $7.$45 for the lot. DO 3-5363. I WISH to obtain room and board forthe duration of my stay In Chicago.State references. Ed Szkirpan, MU 4-9368.BUSINESS SERVICEPROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHER willdo photo illustrating (books, etc.) por¬traits, parties, what-have-you. 24-houra day service, rush orders accepted. HY3-1757, ask for Dave. CO-ED, INTER-RACIAL room and board.Cheap, comfortable, cozy environment.You will like the people. $55-$60 amonth. Whitman Co-op, MU 4-9368,WANTEDGUITAR. CHEAP. Call Weinreb, eves.PL 2-3017. The Continuation Committee ofthe Madison Conference on Peace,Equality and Academic Freedommet June 28-29 in Philadelphia,Pennsylvania. Among the ques¬tions discussed were the activ¬ities of regional groups, the hold¬ing of a National Academic Free¬dom Week on American campusesand the sending of greetings toall the participants of the Olym¬pics.The first issue of a national stu¬dent newspaper, The StudentVoice, has been completed bymembers of the Conference, andwill be available on campus in thenear future. Relation of man to man, theway one gets along with one’s fel¬lows, were given as the definitionof practical anthropology l»y Mrs.Eslanda G o o d e Robeson (Mrs.Paul Robeson) who delivered alecture on “Anthropology in aChanging World” last July 9.Mrs. Robeson, the wife of PaulRobeson, the singer, studied an-thropology in London under Mal¬inowski ; has traveled and wroteAfrica, China, and the Soviet Un¬ion; collaborated with Pearl Buckon a book called “American Argu¬ment”; and is a candidate for Con¬gress and secretary of the Pro¬gressive party of Connecticut.“The great amount of frustra¬tion and anxiety in the presentworld once could have been set¬tled with armies,” Mrs. Robesonsaid, “today, in order to survive,we must get along together. Peo¬ple must realize that white West¬erners are a minority in the world.The colored peoples are on therise." “India’s salvation from Comonism is a higher .stundanliving,” William I-'. Ogburn,fessor emeritus of sociology atdeclared last week.Eighty five per cent of Indipopulation lives in farminglages with farms a' ei i ;in ; Itthan four acres. If there wtone half the number <>f farmctlie average family farm wmbe eight acres and the standsof living \%milil he raised.“India’s population increasefive million a year will sooncessitatc desperate measuresdesperate men” Ogburn"Medical progress and heawork . . . are keeping alive nuof India's population,‘‘In a means of equalizing biiand death rates in India the fitstep might be the disseminatiof informfetion on tl>o fcrtilperiod.”Ogburn delivered the lecturea session of the university’sference of the Society for SocResearch. WMM2for$All over the world these coloredpeoples are asking about the Ne¬gro people of the United States,Mrs. Robeson staled. We must lie-gin at home to end segregationand discrimination. The Britishand French in Africa (South Af¬rica, Tunisia, Egypt) and in Asia,Indochina, Malaya ) are being chal¬lenged, and have not been able towin by force of arms. These prob¬lems can be solved only by treat¬ing people as equal human beings. Surplus LampShades . .Radio ■ ■ ,Bookcases . . S3 UBeds, Complete. $10 UTowels ... 50c eMcDAVIDUsed FurnitureBUtterfield 8-62101510 East 55th