h 1952:30 p.m, ;bill asof sum-omedy'sand eft-\), while“Grand-is, to beFridayy of thek Broth-« "Thinveil anas ticketbe pur-•ograms,liam Com-idard ofim, pro-gy at U€f India'sling vil-;ing lessre werefarmers,n wouldstandard College, divisions, schoolsopen advanced registrationRegistration for the autumn quarter will begin August 18,it was announced by the registrar this week.Students are to commence their registrations in the officesof the appropriate dean of students, and moving through theregistrar’s office will end up at the bursar or to pay their tu¬ition or make arrangements for later payment.Registration hours in the University of Chicago, August 8, 1952 31dean’s office are 8:30 - 11:30a.m. and 1:30-4:30 p.m. Hourslor the registrar are 8:30 a.m.to noon., and 1-4 p.m.Dates for students of the vari¬ous divisions to register are:August 18-22—School of SocialService Administration, Divisionof the Social Sciences, Division ofthe Biological Sciences and theLaw School.August 19-22— School of Busi¬ness.August 25-27—Division of Phys- Students may not live at co-edco-op; must choose co-op or UC Strozier goesto foundationfor summerby Robert Peters and Jon MajdeUC students at Wnitman Co-opwill be barred from registeringnext September.This is the final sense of a let During the summer quarterDean of Students Robert M. Stro-, . , zier will be on leave of absencestudents, whether they sre in the Whitman, the destn would only from the university. He is servingcollege or in a division. The Uni- tell the paper that the University as advisor to the Ford Foundationversity feels that coeducational would flatly refuse to allow “this *n Washington, DC, and New Yorkhousing is usually unwise, the type of coeducational houslng;. City. Sttozier's work consists otol tea. Sciences, Federation of Then- ,er written on June S by Acting £ d-cussions ^en askMb? editor sib Pe,esrs gathering intonation on the ex-. - J * iten zo oy Attrn. wlth whitman Co op. wta* she meant by the phrase change of students between thelogical Schools and the Graduate Dean Gf Students Ruth McCarnLibrary school. to Glen Sandberg, the then presi- ., , ... . ... ,, , r-. r _ . . , .August 25-29—Division of the (jent 0f the United Cooperative Slt^ s P°sltlon m taking the ban the objections to Whitman house Centering his work in Washing-Humanities and School of Medi- projects of which Whitman house ac^on was asked by Whitman rep- already mentioned. ton, where he has an office, heis a member resentatives, Dean McCarn stated while the University does not wiil interview foreign student ad-Thp letter elimaxed six months’ Jhat .“thl? type ot coeducational object to coeducational housing visors vvorking for embassiesl ne ictiei tiimaxeu six monins housing 1S contrary to custom.” as practiced in Hitchcock-Snell located there, as well as othersme. When question of the Univer- “this type,” Mrs. McCarn repeated United States and other countries.The pause that refreshesThis is the final MAROON ofthe summer quarter. An orienta¬tion week edition will come out onSeptember 22. Students wishing tojoin the business or editorial staffare requested to contact actingeditor Robert Peters at MU 4-631 3. Unfversity and the Co op ?n the ^°r?mg l° Jandber2 shc amPh’ Hall or the International House, People in the fields of education“ J University ob fledTtThlS stand,by exPiammS that Dean McCarn told the Co-op del- and foreign relations,wmd tn ma Vr^ r “ rnt the Umversity,s sensitivity to the egation that four objections have Dean Strozier plans to gatherviewpoints and opinions of the to be resolved before the house data on the state of student ex-Foreign grantsdeadline nearsAppointments for personal jected to matters ranging fromcoeducational housing to leakingfaucets.The present situation arisesfrom the fact that the University,invoking regulation VI A (6A)of the Official Manual for Stu- students’ parents and of the com¬munity has initiated this move.“This type” out: McCarnIn response to a series of ques- may gain University approval, change at present and possibleUnder the new policy there must means of facilitating it. He willbe a physical separation of men determine areas in which the Fordfrom women; installation of resi- Foundation can help speed inter-tions about the University’s mo- dent house heads would also be change of students.. ., tives behind the ban, put to Mrs. required for both men and worn- Robert C. Woellner, assistantdents, claims the right to forbid McCarn in the course of several en in conjunction with rules simi- dean of students, is serving as act-men and women to live on the MAROON interviews concerning see Whitman, page 4 ing dean during August,same premises.“The University expects of allrease oi (soon ne-mres byn said.I healthive moreing birththe firstminationfertilityjeture atty’s con->r SocialFor $1. $5(3 Up10 Upk ea.ure10 Cl bill for Korean veterans beginseducation and business aid providedInquiries concerning the new GI Bill for Korea war veterans began piling up last weekat the Illinois regional office of the Veterans Administration, 366 W. Adams.Robert D. Beer, VA regional manager, reported his staff is prepared to begin processingterviews and application forms students responsible social con-for 1953-4 Fulbright Scholarships duct which shall reflect credit up-can be obtained at the student ac- on tbe University; it requires be-tivities office in Reynolds Hall, havior which is consistent withWilliam Birenbaum, director of d10 laws and *be generally accept-student activities, will interview ed morals and manners of ourapplicants any time after August society, reads the regulation.15. Concerned about studentsThe final deadline for applica¬nts arf uried Jo fii^’theirs'^s wh^”t?cie^ts JS^MibSity for The new bill was signed into law July 20 by President Truman. Designed to help vet-soon as possible. According to Dean McCarn, the 'V.Y T ^ ^nivpr^itv is moving into a phase applications as soon as the necessary forms are received from Washington.SGfile: concern about the housing of its erans who served since the Korean fighting broke out June 27,1950, it contains the follow¬ing provisions:startspublic action onmeeting housingtonight and farm one-half days for each day spentin service, with a maixmum of 36months’ training under govern¬ment aid.Monthly allowances, paid direct-compensa- iy to the veteran, must cover alltuition, equipment and livingcosts, or the vet must make upthe difference out of his ownpocket.A vet taking a full-time course444HIIM8 1. Education and training benefits are limited to one andbenefits.2. Home, businessloan guarantees.3. Mustering-out pay.4. Unemploymenttion.by Henry Schwort* the meeting and that it should be might be at the site of the re- 5. Job counseling and employ-Tonight at 7:30 a public meeting possible to set it into operation freshment bar in the basement ment assistance,of persons interested in cooperat- on the following Monday. Sawyer of the Reynolds Club. Sawyer says The mustering - out paymentsing in the operation of the SG states that some ideas for the that at present it is not expected are limited to veterans who servednon-discriminatory housing file operation of the files have been in that the file will operate in Sep- with the rank of captain or lower at school or college will receivewill be held in Soc. Sci. 108. This formulation by members of the tember. in the Army, Air Force or Ma- $110 a month if single, $135 if hemeeting represents the first ac- SG committee since last June. The tentative plan of operation rine Corps or as lieutenant senior has one dependent, $160 if theretion since the passage three Locate file in SG office now is to have students phone the file grade or lower in the Navy. is more than one dependent,months ago of the Coleman-Carter They suggested that the file be when they are vacating an apart- The GI loans for homes, Job training allowances will bebill calling for a file to be set up up in the SG office during the re- ment and either discuss the file farms or business ventures are reduced every four months, as theby SG. mainder of the summer quarter, with their landlord or ask the file guaranteed under the same con- veteran’s training progresses andRichard Sawyer, chairman of where a phone is available. Sug- to send someone to discuss it. The ditions now in effect for World his pay increases. Top monthlythe housing committee told the gested hours for the file are from telephone at Student Government War II vets. The deadline for Ko- checks in this category are $70MAROON reporter Tuesday that 1-5 p.m. each weekday afternoon, is Ext. 1067. Students learning of rea vets is 10 years after the pres- without dependents, $85 with onehe expected or concrete plans During orientation week next vacant apartments should notify ent emergency is declared ended, and $105 with more than one de-for the operation of the file on a quarter the file should be open 8 the file by means of cards which Educational and job training pendent,volunteer basis could be made at hours a day. One possible location will be printed for this purpose.Roy John of the Housing Com¬mittee of the UC committee onPeace, Academic Freedom, andEquality, has suggested that themembers of that committee mightaid SG by canvassing the neighSam Handy retires in Julyas chapel custodian at UCTwenty-one years’ service to the University have cometo an end for Sam Handy, custodian of Rockefeller Chapel,who came to UC at the beginning of the Hutchins era. He was February 12 when the Carter- Z’’’ „ VmvifnteH hv Indian students claim fundsretired July 15th, after having seen 31,089 students receive Toilet bill was passed by SG call- nf A letter to Miss Nancy Hopkinstheir degrees in the chapel. ing tor complete replacement of ?e vice-chancellor of the of SG from the Inter-Varsity re-India rejects UC’ersTwo UC students, cleared by the University and the StateDepartment for travel abroad, have been turned down asborhood for apartments to be list- exchange students by the administration of the University ofed and to notify the people of the Calcutta, Calcutta, India.UC district that the file exists. Martin Orans, ex-MAROON editor, and Marc Galanter ofNew file follows Stroxier veto the Humanities division were infused accommodations at Cal-Action on the file days back to cutta when a special commit--mWBFtf mdegrees in the chapelThe variety of the job has always suited Mr. Handy, whohas helped to prepare for suchevents as the recent installa¬tion of Chancellor Kimptonand the awarding of honorary de¬grees to many American and for¬eign scholars, and statesmen. Hisnew life on a farm in BerrienSprings, Michigan, will seem com¬paratively quiet after the succes¬sion of religious services, con¬certs and convocations which havekept Rockefeller Chapel in almostconstant use during the manyyears of his service. Mr. Handy’swife, daughter, and son-in-law willmake their home with him at Ber¬rien Springs.His friendly service will bewarmly remembered by all whohave been connected with the ac¬tivities of the ChapeL. Sam Handy the Administration file by a non- school recommended that the lationship group at Calcutta, thediscriminatory one. On April 23 project be called off. The vice- student organization which wasStrozier vetoed the bill, stating chancellor accepted the recom- panning the exchange, denied theat that time “...the bill, emanating mendation, and explained his rea- vice-chancellor’s allegation of in-from student government...deals sons f°r the action in a letter to sufficient sum. Said the students:with but one phase of a much Dean of Students Robert Strozier: “\ye have three times the moneybroader problem . . . the broad “I have full sympathy for the needed to support an Indian stu-problem the university is now at- exchange scheme, but I told the (jent for a year;”tacking under the leadership of (Indian) students not to commit The Indian inter-varsity groupits chancellor who is striving for themselves to you about it until “strongly objected” to the totalthe cooperation of several import- (hey have found accommodations report on the exchange brought inant community organizations.” *or (he students who are to come by a committee appointed by theOn April 28 a new bill, the Cole- from America and also money for vice-chancellor and upon which heman-Carter bill, was passed by their expenses. At the last mo- apparently based his decision.SG under the approval of Dean ment the students said that they Committae says US stadents don't fitStrozier. Sander Levin, SG presi- had not been able to collect tl^e The report of the committeedent said in discussing this bill: requisite sum ... As at present (which consisted of faculty mem-“...the students will now have an advised having regard to the pau- bers and administrators of Cad-opportunity . . . discrimination city accommodation in Cal- cutta university) said in part:can be fought with more vigor cutta and other diverse causes I “There exists such a great dif-and effectiveness than is thought do n°t think it will be possible to ference between the universityby the Administration.” The bill give effect to the exchange scheme life of a US university and thatsee SG, page 6 this year.” Me India, po§« 6IPage 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON August 8, 1952Mush!!Peace, pure and simple"—Robert Maynard Hutchins Dear Sir:Grave rumors have been circu¬lating over the campus during thelast weeks, and there was a som¬ber demand for facts on Tuesday,August 5, at the planning meet¬ing of SU Outing Dept.’s Septem¬ber trip to Rocky Mountain Na- Chapel offers concertby Valparaiso organistDear sir:Issued once weekly by the publisher, The Chicago Maroon, at the publication•ffice, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Editorial tional Park. The whispering cam-“'<!&• *£»K SatSJSJS? Pa‘g" had >° do with claims thatP . . p . it was not necessary—in order toODerr refers go on tbe trip—to be happy only_ ing i or-m-c le ' when racing up mountains at fiftymiles an hour, when living onLetters...Whitman states housing, it may prove helpful to fruits and nuts, or when sleepingpoint out that co-educational hous- outside in a gale.We of Whitman Co-op have taken our stand. We believe in coeducational housing and the right for grantedof the individual to manage hisown affairs, free from the pettyinterferences of frightened uni¬versity administrators. We shallcontinue to offer freedom fromcoat-and-tie rules, freedom from“hours” regulations, and freedomfrom all other arbitrary, unrea¬soned interferences. We choose tolive in a co-op, not a barracks.Should the University choose toprohibit its students from livinghere, that is between itself andGod. We shall survive, if need be,without University of Chicagostudents.Yet it will be interesting to seewhether University of Chicagostudents will put up a fight fortheir rights, or whether a timor¬ous and apathetic student bodywill allow itself to be herded un¬der the administration^ motherlywing. It will be interesting to seewhether graduate students andtoughened ex-GIs are willing to bekept under the same protectivecustody as junior high schooladolescents.Those who are concerned withthe University's current backwardtrend towards "respectability” andmediocrity will perhaps be in¬terested to learn of its connection ing is thoroughly acceptable evenwithin the framework of moreswhich the Administration, obvi¬ously failing to consult its anthro- Jordan Holtzmann, trip leader,revealed that people who justwant to loaf and relax have goneon trips before and are welcomepology department, takes so much again. Easy hikes will be plannedif newcomers want them, foodThe American Friends Service will be well-planned and adequate,Committee, a religious organiza- and the group hopes to have antion held in the highest respect by adequate supply of tents. Thegood, conservative Christians ev- group will leave by chartered buserywhere, has sponsored numer- °n August 29 to return Septem-ous projects in all parts of the ter 17. Estimated cost will be be-country which featured co-educa¬tional housing. Having person¬ally participated in one of theseprojects for nine months, andlived in Whitman Co-op for an¬other nine, I can testify that theatmosphere is exactly the same.(In fact, this is one of the reasonswhy I moved into Whitman Co-opin the first place . . . the otherbeing that I lived for a year inBurton-Judson Courts, the Univer¬sity’s weird idea of ahealthful place to live.) tween $55 and $60 for food andtransportation. There are still va¬cancies, and interested peopleshould call Jordan Holtzmann atMI 3 6000 or Ext. 1055.Mory WotsonS. V. Outing ClubObject to policeDeor Sir:As if things weren’t bad enoughalready, the University has nowsocially become a refuge for the TownClowns under the tutelage of thatWill liberals, then, lightly con- venerable professor of legalizedelude that an institution perfectly brutality, Joseph D. Lohman. Theacceptable to a religious organ- object of the flatfeets’ study atization like the AFSC is too in- UC is to learn new and betteriquitous to defend on the Univer- methods for the suppression ofsity of Chicago campus? riots (and we all know which riot-The University of Chicago ad- ers the police force is always in- The President of the U.C.:Please allow me to send a letterto you. I am now working in theNakagyo Post Office which is thelargest one in Kyoto City aftergraduating from Osaka Univer¬sity.Our group which consists of col¬lege students and other workingmen and women are studyingEnglish or are having discussionabout American life at this office.We should esteem it a greatfavor if we should have oppor¬tunity to correspond with youruniversity’s students owing to get¬ting some knowledge about Amer¬ican life.We can’t speak or write goodEnglish, but we’d like to studymore real good English by havingcorrespondence with Americanstudents.If there are some boys’ andgirl’s students of understandingto help our studies and if theyare interesting in Japanese lives,please introduce them to us. Andplease tell them to send lettersto me. We want to be their goodletter friends.Hoping your good health.Turao Muraoka41-3 NakagomonchioNishinokyo, NakagyokuKyoto City, Japan. Heinrich Fleischer, organist ofValparaiso University, Valparaiso,Indiana, will give a concert nextMonday at 8:15 p.m. in Rockefel¬ler Chapel.His program will include: Prel-ude and Fugue in E Minor, Niko¬laus Bruhns; Pastorale in F Ma¬jor, Chorale Prelude “O Man, Be¬wail Thy Grievous Sin,” and Prel¬ude and Fugue in E Minor, J. s.Bach; Two Choraie Preludes, Lud¬wig Lenel; and Fantasie andFugue, Opus 52, on the Chorale"Sleepers wake,” by Max Reger.Admission to this concert iswithout ticket and withoutcharge.Brains testedMiss Toleranceministration and others who auto¬matically identify co-educationalhousing with immorality, whocannot conceive of living withina two-flights’ radius of the oppo¬site sex without envisioning one which the police are the mostleresieu w learn ui us cui.i.^wun thereby merely serve effective expression, there wouldwith this latest act of the admin- ‘ndU “iereoy merely serve *istration. The same crew of dis- to _re^:e,ai..w^t unholy mayhem ,reputable characters down terested in suppressing). Evident¬ly overlooked in their instructionis the obvious truth that, if itwere not for the system of ex¬ploitation and organized coercionlies hidden in their own little Every succeeding quarter moreSpringfield w h o attempted to . housing. js nerfectlv re- ance at this great humanistic in-smear the University four years cail°nfi. mousing is periectiy re- well as more andspectable; that it offers a more stitution, as well as more andminds. The facts are that co-edu- army officers make their appear-ago as a "hotbed of Communism,thwarted in this effort, threatenedlast year to conduct a “morality”investigation. Though the Univer¬sity declines to say so, this isprobably why it now feels it nec¬essary to make of show of ban- natural and less tempting contact more adepts of the art of masswith the opposite sex than such murder in the Accelerator Build-conventional situations as dating; *n&-that it provides a healthier atmos- The "community of scholarsphere in which students spend ^as become ar* encourager of andto m-iiro or snow or nan more time studying and less time a haven f°r the forces of reaction,essary xo mane oi snow oi Dan- r di (, r th j loneliness* Apparently this is what Kimptonmng coeducational housing from !v0?<!ing. ov.. l.neiA, la^enn^.ss> mpans bv adiustinc ourselves to♦ho ooroooo T iho»-oic chooiH toiro that by trusting to the discretion means Dy adjusting ourseives tothe campus. Liberals should take and common sense of the individ_ the needs of the community, forual it achieves a far more effec- the cults of the stool-pigeon, thetive and abiding social control militarist, and the Pinkerton pa-than could artificial rules and triot are certainly what are exalt-regulations which only exist to be et* m the community,broken; and that any student or The reasons why we shoulduniversity administrator is per¬fectly welcome to live in WhitmanCo-op and see for himself (or her¬self) whether this is not so.Dick FredericksenA Member ofWhitman Co-opwarning; the University’s obviouswillingness to placate the Spring-field bigots should show what isin store for academic freedom ingeneral unless students begin tomatch this outside pressure withsome pressure of their own.For the benefit of those whostaunchly defend academic free¬dom and civil liberties in general,but who are inclined to snicker atthe right to live in co-educational work so hard to pay exorditanttuition for the support of thesethugs—dedicated by their verynature to the fight against freethought and free speech—are be¬coming increasingly obscure.Richard DeHoanSupreme court says yes; cops no;Chicago still awaits ‘Miracle’In what has been called a directviolation of a recent SupremeCourt decision which reverses asunconstitutional the New YorkState Board of Regents’ ban onThe Miracle, the Chicago PoliceDepartment refuses to issue anexhibitor’s license for the prize¬winning Italian film, describingit as “immoral . . . and sacrilegi¬ous.” The film is one of threemade by Roberto Rossellini anddedicated "to the art of AnnaMagnani,” and grouped togetherunder the title, The Ways of Love.Joseph M. Burstyn, Americandistributor of the films, immedi¬ately asked the Chicago office ofthe American Civil Liberties Un¬ion to lodge a protest with MayorKennedy, and ask him to reversethe police decision.Threaten license lossMeanwhile, pending this appeal,the ACLU scheduled a privateshowing at the Surf Theatre forTuesday of this week. On arrivingat the theatre, some three hun¬dred invitees were informed thatthe Chicago police departmenthad threatened to revoke the thea¬ tre’s license to do business, if thepicture were screened.The police claim jurisdictionover private screenings in publicplaces, even though outside ofregular business hours and re¬stricted to admission by invita¬tion only. Another private screen¬ing, this time in private premises,will be announced at an earlydate.Some Catholics objectMr. Edward H. Meyerding,ACLU Executive Director for Illi¬nois, said that their fight to havethis film released for exhibitionto the general public was not tobe construed as anti - Catholic,even though the only objectionsto the film have come from someAmerican Catholics. Common¬weal, a Catholic magazine pub¬lished in this country, said thefilm contains "no obvious or in¬tentional blasphemy,” and II Os-servatore Romano, generally re¬garded as spokesman for the Vat¬ican, echoed the world wide praiseaccorded the all-Catholic produc¬tion.Other speakers at the meeting held in lieu of the scheduledscreening of The Miracle saidtheir main defense of the film willassert \)Mf. it is not immoral, par¬ticularly^ comparison with thou¬sands of Hollywood productions,and they said they also will tryto prove that it is not sacrilegious,even though the Supreme Courtdecision most emphatically deniesthat a religion may claim protec:tion from the expression of un¬favorable opinions about it.The controversial film centersaround the illusion of a simple-minded shepherdess (Anna Mag¬nani) that she will give birth tothe Christ-child. One day whiletending her flocks she is ap¬proached by a rather shabbystranger, apparently a mendicant.There is a “black - out” on thescreen; when it lights up again,she is seen to be pregnant. She isconvinced that the stranger wasSt. Joseph, and she proudly tellsthe village. They stage a parade inher honor, complete with religi¬ous symbols. The final sceneshows her in labor, saying, "MyBlessed Child, my Holy Son.” (Editor's Note: Due to errorsin copy-reading, the followingletter, which appeared in theMAROON of July 18 was con¬siderably altered in content.We are reprinting the correctedversion and offer our apologiesto Mr. Janz.)Dear Miss Tolerance:I am gentile. I must make thisdistinction from the start becauseyour letter precludes the possibil¬ity of a Jew to defend himself. AJew would automatically in yourterms be unable to see the true"other side of anti semitism.”I find that an answer to yourposition is in order because re-gretably too many people in thiscommunity do not know how todisagree basically with you. Toomany so called liberals aroundhere prove their lack of prejudicewith statements that begin: "I’mnot prejudiced against those. Whysome of my best friends are . . .”The fact that you are willing toshake hands with men does notprove a lack of prejudice. Yourinability to judge individuals asindividuals proves the contraryis true.Once more we must reileratethat love for humanity requiresthat one evaluate and accept oth¬ers for what they are as individ¬uals. Prejudice is interpreting oth¬ers in terms of stereotype—arbi¬trarily and articicially assumingthat certain people because theyhave one or two things in com¬mon, also have a whole host ofother characteristics in common.How dare you, Miss T., presumeto attribute to individuals whohappen to have a common re¬ligion (or color of skin or placeof birth) a common mode of be¬havior?The question here is not to in¬vestigate whether more Jews areobnoxious than other people (or A kind of super-aptitude exam¬ination for executives, designed todetermine whether they are goodbets for promotion, was testedTuesday on fifty Chicago businessleaders at the UC Medican Center.The examination, a brain testwhich reveals impairment of thenervous system by age or disease,was sponsored by the UC Councilon Medical and Biological Re¬search. The test was developed byWard Halstead,’ professor of ex¬perimental research.Halstead believes the examina¬tion should be given to presiden¬tial candidates and other aspirantsto high office. "We gamble heav¬ily on the mental ability of manyelderly men whom we put instategic positions,” he stated.The test attempts to measurefour basic qualities of the nervoussystem—ability to abstract essen¬tials; memory; ability to sustainlong range mental effort; andability to express experiences inwriting and speaking. "These arethe minimum requirements for ahealthy mind,” said Halstead.The test requires three hours,and has been taken by 2,000 per¬sons. Three in ten showed braindamage.whether Negroes as a whole aremore shiftless). The results wouldreflect the situations and posi¬tions of these people in society.The question is whether you aregoing to walk up to a man andtalk with him to see what he islike or whether you already knowwhat he is going to be like be¬cause he is this or that.We do not doubt that the ac¬tions of the people you describewere reprehensible and vulgar.But not because the persons wereJewish.Nor is the question here wheth¬er one can make exceptions andadmit that there are some like¬able Jews ("some of my best yfriends . . .”). The Jew is judgednot in terms of himself but interms of your concept which hasalready prejudged him and whichlie must overcome. The latter isa very artificial and unfair wayto treat others. None of us are so *perfect that we don’t have a hardenough time proving to objectivecritics that we are decent.You are wrong to consider your¬self liberal; you are wrong to callyourself Christian. I submit thatthe concept of tolerance is bias-1phemously un-Christian.Robert Jonx, Jr.Student in the CollegeChicago Norton Soles A Service1548 E. 57th St.T. WALLACHCert, of Eng. Unix, of LondonE. License C.A.A., Washington, D.C.ENGLISH MECHANIC - GENERAL REPAIRSREASONABLE RATESENGINE TUNINGMAGNETO LUCAS-BTH SERVICEELECTRICAL ANDTRANSMISSION REPAIRSOn All LeadingEnglish Motor-CyclesmmAugust 8, 1952 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3Socialists meetby Dick FredericksonNo man called for a poll of hisdelegation as the Socialist partynominated its candidate for thepresidency. In fact, it took theparty’s national convention, meet¬ing in Cleveland May 30-June 2,little more than an hour to nom¬inate both its presidential and itsvice presidential candidates.On the other hand, in contrastto the Democratic and Republicanconventions, neither of which tookmore than ten minutes to adoptits platform, the Socialist conven¬tion spent three days in frankand spirited discussion from thefloor of the issues of the day.Proise discussionsTwo issues in particular foundthe delegates sharply divided. Thefirst on whether the Socialistparty should run a national cam¬paign in 1952, was decided in aresounding affirmative after animpressive and dignified discus¬sion in which at least two-thirdsof the delegates rose to expressthemselves. The other, whetherthe Socialist party should lend“critical support” to the presentforeign policy of the Democraticadministration, or adopt a morefundamentally critical position insupport of an independent Social¬ist third camp, proved to be amore knotty problem. So evenlydivided were the proponents ofthe two positions that variousplanks in the platform as finallyadopted reflected the presence orabsence of individual delegates.No TVAbsent were TV cameras,guards, limousines, balloons, dem¬onstrations, visiting dignitaries,and the carnival atmosphere ingeneral. Delegates were prone tospend their spare time caucusingand to stay up all night draftingresolutions and planks for theplatform. A note of festivity wasprovided occasionally, however,by younger delegates who sanglabor, Socialist, and antiwarsongs.The convention nominated Dar¬lington Hoopes of Reading, Pa.,three times elected to the Penn¬sylvania state legislature on theSocialist ticket as its presidentialcandidate; and Samuel H. Fried¬man, well known Socialist andlabor organizer from New YorkCity, for Vice President. SHOOT GENERAL . . . YOU'RE FADEDPOGO FOR PARADICEBETTER A POSSUM PLAYINGPRESIDENTTHAN A PRESIDENT PLAYINGPOSSUMJohnson tells of citizens-for-Adlai roleThe work of a small committeeof “unprofessional professionals”in winning the Democratic nomi¬nation for president for GovernorAdlai Stevenson was one of thepoints of the recent DemocraticConvention here in Chicago.SHOE REPAIRSubstantial Discountsto Students“IT MUST BE DONE Rl(iHT“HOLLIDAY'S140? East 61st Street(at Dorchester Ave.)Phone Normal 7-8717Two blocks from Inti. HouseWhile-U-Wait or One-Day Serrlce In an interview given to the MA¬ROON Prof. T. Walter Johnson,chairman of the testing depart¬ment, outlined the genesis anddevelopment of the independentcitizens committee responsible forthis nomination. The committeewas originated in late January bymembers of the Independent Vot¬ers of Illinois.Political Horatio Alger seenThe reception of Governor Stev¬enson on a Meet the Press TVbroadcast of last November anda White House interview withPresident Truman made Steven¬son a national figure. It was felt,said Johnson, that Illinois shouldpresent Governor Stevenson tothe American voters and for thispurpose the Stevenson for Presi¬dent committee, initially co¬chaired by Johnson and GeorgeOverton, was created.The executive committee includ¬ing several members of the uni¬versity faculty, included Johnson,Overton, Alex Rope, political■ * lCHRISTMAS CARDSALE25% OFF ON ALL CAROSUnfit September 1THE DISC1367 East 57th Street science department; William MingJr., professor of law; Paul Berger,former assistant to Aid. RobertE. Merriam; Richard Meyer, IVIhead; Hubert Will, Richard Eiger,Marshall Halleb and Leo Lerner.Volunteers askedOverton went to* Europe on anassignment and Lerner, a northside newspaper editor, co-chairedthe group with Johnson. The com¬mittee then issued a call forvolunteers to help with the con¬vention preparation. 700 volun¬teers soon joined the ranks andthe committee began to activelypromote the nomination of Stev¬enson. Headquarters were set upin the Conrad Hilton and thecommittee began operations.The plans of the committeemust now take on a broad nation¬al aspect and in a conference tobe held ugust 6 with GovernorStevenson and Wilson Wyatt,Stevenson’s personal campaignmanager. Johnson states that thecommittee will most emphaticallybe an “independent citizens com¬mittee” and will base its opera¬tions out of Wilson Wyatt’s officeat Springfield.To stick to notional issueJohnson stated that the commit¬tee will not take any part in thenomination of a replacement forStevenson for governor of Illinoisbut will concentrate wholly on thepresidential campaign this fall.The success of the committeein nominating their candidate wassupplemented by the respect paidto it by the professional politi¬cians and in statements GovernorStevenson made to the press afterhis nomination. When asked whathe thought of the committee, Gov¬ernor Stevenson said, “I was do¬ing fine going backwards until Itripped over Johnson and Lerqer.” Enter Democrats,Fractions Clashby Gene GendlinAn understanding of the real meaning of the results produced bythe Democratic National Convention might be helped by putting to¬gether the following details about the events which took place there.When the convention began Monday, it was generally agreed amongliberals that they could expect a majority of the delegates to followthem on any clear-cut issue. They recalled their civil rights victoryof ’48 and felt that this year the position of liberals was certainlymuch better.The liberals envisioned three major fights; the first for a statementthat only the Democratic nominee could be placed on any ballotcalled “Democratic”; the second for seating the liberal contestingdelegations from Texas and Mississippi, the third for civil rights.Dixiecrats seatedThe liberals were divided, in respect to candidates, among Harri-man, Kefauver and Stevenson. They agreed to cooperate on the threeissues just mentioned. The Saturday before the convention the tem¬porary credentials committee seated the Dixiecrats from the contestedstates. This came as a shock to the liberals, and delegates wentscurrying to find their delegation heads and argue the decision. Thecredentials committee which seated the Dixiecrats consisted of Arveyof Illinois, Lawrence (Pennsylvania boss) and other party machinemen. Arvey and Lawrence were pushing Stevenson’s campaign atthe same time and soon took over the little Stevenson Headquarters,until then run by UC Professor Walter Johnson.From that time until late in the convention, Stevenson forces wereheaded by northern party machine men who also championed theDixiecrat cause. Whether this fact is important should emerge fromthe details.Monday night the liberals led and won their first fight, that ofthe pledge for support of the nominee. Despite warnings fromKefauver and Douglas, however, this “rule” was presented on thefloor (by Blair Moody and FDR Jr.), not merely as a statement aboutwho could be placed on any “Democratic ticket.” Instead it becamea different matter, namely a pledge by the individuals attending theconvention, that they would support the nominee’s getting on theballot. A proposed convention rule became a loyalty pledge.The pledge had the effect of making the delegations which signedit, “loyal.” When it came to the second fight, that for unseating theDixiecrats of the contested states, the liberal leaders decided not tofight because it seemed that such a fight would put them in theunattractive position of trying to throw out people of whom theyfirst asked a pledge of loyalty. Even then these leaders might havefelt forced to fight, if the Kefauver forces had actually lead such afight. They wanted very much to avoid any liberal defeat. Communi¬cations were very poor and it was only at the last minute that con¬tact with Kefauver forces was definitely established, and at thattime these forces also had dropped the fight.A Kefauver man reported that Kefauver delegations were threat¬ened on the floor that “you won’t get any northern votes for yourcandidate if you fight to unseat these delegations.” It seemed to themthat if they fought, they would be quite alone.Fight droppedThe fight was finally brought to the floor by Proxmeyer, candidatefor governor in Wisconsin, in a short, lost, little-reported attempt toget the convention to consider the legal argument in favor of thecontesting liberal Texas group, the Maverik delegation. He pointedout that the Supreme Court in 1950 directed the democratic party ofTexas specifically to obey certain conditions of national endorse¬ment, which they had not obeyed, but which the Maverik group hadobeyed. When it became evident that neither the northern liberals,nor the Kefauver forces would join this fight, Proxmeyer withdrew.(Of Mississippi one delegate from the liberal delegation said “If youthink Texas got a legal case, you should hear ours.”)It seemed that the loyalty oath, as passed, eliminated any legalobjections against the contested delegations. But the compromisesforced on that loyalty oath turned it into a liberal defeat. Theliberals won the floor fight, (as predicted, since they commanded aslight majority). However, Blair Moody and FDR Jr. compromisedthat pledge in committee to include a proviso that it would not con¬travene local, state, or party rules. That compromise was not chal¬lenged when the "rule” returned to tfie floor. It was furthercompromised, when a ruling of chair was'accepted, to the effect thatnon-signing delegations could remain and could vote unless chal¬lenged individually on each voting issue. When Minnesota laterattempted to make that challenge, it was ignored by the chairman.The final blow at the pledge was struck Thursday, by the motion topermit Virginia full rights anyway, despite it not having signed atall. Even at this late date the liberals as expected, summoned amajority to keep Virginia out, until it became known on the floorthat the Stevenson people wanted Virginia in. Arvey of Illinois whohad been out, came in and changed the Illinois vote from 15 for and45 against Virginia, to 52 for and 8 against it. Under similar pressuremany delegations changed their vote and Virginia was fully admitted.Liberals briefly boltIt was after this open manifestation of boss pressure among theStevenson backers, that many liberals, including Blair Moody andWalter Reuther and some absent labor leaders, withdrew their sup¬port of Stevenson. (Soapy Williams of Michigan did so earlier thatday.)Actually the tie-up behind Stevenson came out during the loyaltypledge fight Monday night, when one Dixiecrat speaker said: “Withthe ouster of the five southern states you will eliminate two majorcandidates. Dick Russell of Georgia and Adlai Stevenson of Illinois.You say no, but without the support of these five states he can notexpect to win.” This statement made it public that the Dixiecratshad agreed to vote for Stevenson if they were needed. However,reaction to the real meaning of this tie-up came from pro-StevensonLiberals only after the Virginia vote switch Thursday night, whenthe character of Stevenson pressure became apparent.Harriman Headquarters instructed messengers going to the floorto say that the above-mentioned liberal and labor leaders had leftthe Stevenson camp. It was hoped that this information would rallythe delegates and enable them to force an adjournment before aballot, so that further liberal coordination might take place.Later that night, when more than 100 delegates and others metat a rally at the Congress Hotel, Senator Humphrey spoke of acoalition of “selfish groups using Stevenson’s good name for theirown purposes,” yet did not mention either the implications of thistie-up for any Stevenson administration, nor the information aboutthese Liberals who had left Stevenson. FDR Jr. at the same meetingsaid: “If Stevenson is nominated by a coalition of bosses and Dixie¬crats . . . well . . . question mark.”Party control strengthenedBy this time, what the southern party controllers and the northernparty, controllers respectively got out of their tie-up behind Steven-se« DEMOCRATS BATTLE, page iPage 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON August 8, 1952Whitman(from poge 1)Jar to those governing dormitoriesand fraternities. The last neces¬sary factor is that Whitman com¬ply with the city building andsanitation codes.Physicol contact verbotenBy physical separation DeanMcCarn means separate facilities,such as washrooms, entrances,and stairways. When asked by theCo-op representatives whether thefact that men and women live ondifferent floors in WhitmanHouse with separate facilities ex¬cept for stairways and entrancesis acceptable, she replied no. Inthe course of two MAROON in¬terviews last Friday and Monday,Mrs. McCarn admitted that shedoes not see how arrangementssatisfactory to her could be ob¬tained in Whitman’s present loca¬tion.Although the subject of residenthouse heads and regulations suchas hours was mentioned by thedean only vaguely, she empha¬sized that inspection by city build¬ing authorities revealed healthand fire hazards. The Co-op claimsto have received a notice of codeviolations only last week, basedupon an inspection made in May.The violations listed consist of theuse of the basement which is morethat two feet below street levelfor living space, faulty outsidestairs and railings, trash in theback yard, cracked glass in a win¬dow, a spot of broken plaster, anda dripping faucet.Whitmanite representativeshave informed the MAROON thatplans are under way to changethe use of the basement, and thatthe other violations were cor¬rected last month.fter discussion in three housemeetings, Whitman stated, “We,the members of Whitman House,do not believe that the structural Engineer draft charge false Progressive convention notesby Ken Adler Twenty-five hundred delegates tor the Progressive party conven-Reports that the nomination of Governor Adlai E. Stevenson for tion met in Chicago over the July 4th weekend to select presiden-President was engineered by the big city bosses are gaining increas- tial and vice-presidential candidates for the PP ticket, and to formu-ing currency. A careful analysis of the national press and inter- late a platform for the party.views with members of the Stevenson for President Committee, sug- The convention unanimously ratified decisions of the PP’s variousgest that these reports are not based on fact. state organizations by choosing Vincent Hallinan and Mrs. Chai-The composition of the Stevenson Committee and its work are by lotta Bass to head its ticket,this time well known. If anyone “engineered” the Stevenson draft Candidate in jailit was these “amateurs,” headed by Walter Johnson, chairman of Hallinan, a California attorney, is presently (until August 18)the department of history at UC, and George Overton, attorney and serving a six-month jail sentence for contempt of court. Hallinangraduate of the UC law school.Less well known, though now more in the news, is the role playedby the professional politicians in Stevenson’s nomination. Just whatdid they do to draft the reluctant governor?The answer is that they did essentially two things, neither par¬ticularly helpful.First, since early this year many party leaders tried to prevailupon Stevenson to make the race. They were interested, of course,in getting the strongest man they could find to head the ticket inNovmber. They thought Stevenson was that man.Stevenson turns down offers incurred the sentence while acting as defense counsel for laborleader Harry Bridges during his recent perjury trial.Mrs. Bass, formerly an official in the Republican party, is theex-editor of the west coast’s oldest Negro newspaper, “the Cali¬fornia Eagle.”The major campaign issues raised by the Progressives are muchthe same as in 1948, in brief:The PP asks for immediate end to the Korean War, a big fivepeace parley to end the cold war, and a restoration of east-west trade.On the domestic scene, the PP demands federal guarantee ofBut Adlai turned them all down. He wanted to finish the job he full Negro rights and full representation of Negros in government;had started in Illinois and just wasn’t eager to be President. repeal of the Taft-Hartley law; defeat of the Smith “anti-labor” bill;If there were a genuine draft which would leave him a free agent, full security for all Americans; and an end to witch hunts, loyaltywithout indebtedness to either the President and his cronies or to oaths, and abolishment of the House Un-American Activities Coni-the party machine—that would be different. But Adlai did not mittee.believe that such a draft was possible or likely as long as he con¬tinued to discourage it.Some of the party big shots, notably Jacob Arvey, Democraticnational committeeman from Illinois, did not give up easily. Arveyrepeatedly pressured the governor for a statement indicating hisavailability. But, when Stevenson stuck to his guns, the politicianslooked around for other candidates. PP is ex-Wollace partyThe Progressive party, which is now active in 40 states, is the“Wallace party” of the 1948 election—minus Wallace and a numberof his adherents. The split occured in 1950 when, after the out¬break of war in Korea, Wallace supported the actions of the U..S.and UN, while the PP called for the UN, with communist China'sparticipation, “to issue appropriate orders for the cessation ofYet the draft, fanned by the independent Stevenson Committee, hostilities in Korea, and (to) make provisions for the prompt estabdid come off. That’s when the political bigwigs turned to Stevenson lishment of a unified, independent, and democratic government forall of Korea.”Many of the present leaders of the PP, including its secretaryC. B. “Beanie” Baldwin, are former “new dealers” of the Rooseveltadministration. Baldwin served in the department of agriculture,once more.Adlai in when Barkley outAfter the failure of the Barkley boom, and with the national pressalready conceding Stevenson’s nomination as a foregone conclusion,the pros came flocking madly to Adlai. They hopped on the band- and later was chief of the farm security administrationwagon and tried their best to look as if they had been pulling the DuBois keynoteswagon all along—rather than just hitching a ride across the finishline.As a matter of fact, during most of the convention and precon¬vention activity of the Stevenson for President Committee, the prosonly threw rocks in the Committee’s path. Their attitude seemed This year’s convention, the third in PP history, was keynotedby Dr. W. E. B. DuBois, 84 year old founder of the NAACP. Inhis address DuBois discussed the relationship of war and peaceto the Progressive party:“War is a vicious human habit, a throw-back to primeval bar-to be that if there was going to be a “genuine draft” they wanted barism, an anachronism which shames religion and retards civiliz¬ation. Before this century, war may at times have been the lesserof two evils. Since world wars have come, and the atomic age, thisis no longer true. War is the supreme disaster. There is nothingworse . ..“The Progressive Party is your only alternative for doing what theworld must do. And that is, stop war . .Turning to the field of education, DuBois took a direct poke atto engineer it; and if Stevenson didn’t want their help, then they’djust as soon see someone else nominated who would gladly accepttheir support.Try to bar Adlai group at HiltonWhen the committee tried to get rooms for its convention head-fj00. changes demanded by quarters, for example, Jack Arvey asked the Democratic Nationale 0 icago or a Committee not to give that group any space, because it was “un- luimug iu me neiu ui euucauon, uursois iook a direct poke atstudent house are practical or de- authorized and unimportant.” Only the Johnson group’s good con- Eisenhower, and an indirect one at other university administrators:sirabie lor our Co-op. therefore, neetions with the Conrad Hilton management made a Stevenson “College presidents can be depended upon to render service toany cause from universal military service to ousting professors whorefuse to think at the command of the industrial leaders who dom¬inate their trustee boards.”In the absence of her husband, Mrs. Vivian Hallinan, aided byher eldest son Patrick Butch Sarsfield Hallinan gave the accept¬ance speech following the nominations by the convention.Analyze Progressive partyby David Zimmerman, .. , . , . . , . . . has been 100 years since a new party has raised enough popularcommittee kept both the press and the delegates mformed on ates sup t to wln a nationa, eleclion |he 'oum „ast succasXfdevelopment in the convention contest. A daily summary of national ,urc. Republican party which filled the void in the two party systemleft after the demise of the Whigs, and won its first presidentialelection with Lincoln in 1860, less than 10 years after its inceptionas a national political movement).Populist and Prohibitionist, Bull Moose and Debs Socialist, La Fol-if the present university policycontinues, we will expect to con¬tinue without University of Chi¬cago students as residents.”UC queers low-cosf housingCuriously contrasting chargesof “paternalism” coupled with“conspicuous lack of considera¬tion for the Whitman students’material means and personal pref¬erence” were made to the MA¬ROON by members of the co¬operative. The tenor of thesecharges was that not only did theUniversity through its actions in¬sult the moral integrity of its stu¬dents, but that it also presentedthose living in Whitman with anuntenable situation.According to this argument neetions with the Conrad Hilton management made a Stevensonoffice at the convention headquarters possible.When the Committee tried to get Convention tickets for itsworkers, it was turned down. Except for the first session, notone ticket could be obtained from the National Committee. Afterall, the Committee didn’t have a candidate.No help from DemocratsNo support in terms of money or help came from the Democraticmachine or the city bosses. What little money the committee couldraise—up to the second day of the convention less than $5,000 hadbeen spent or committed—was used to send out inexpensive bro¬chures about the Governor, to buy Stevenson buttons and to organ¬ize headquarters.Using hundreds of volunteers and only two paid workers thepress headlines was given to delegates right on the floor of theconvention. Most of the national papers predicted a Stevensonvictory.Stevenson buttons scarceStevenson buttons were so scarce that they had to be locked upOlCVCllDUII UUUUilD W Cl t ovCti v_V» Uiat liau IVI UC i .. p ' /IT? T L .made among others by Sandberg, and reserved for delegates, VIP’s and the hardest-working volun- ,, ogressive an armer-Labor, many won local elections, andthe University seemingly showsgreat interest in protecting andcultivating the students’ morallife, while it actually deprives himof tangibly existing low cost hous¬ing which is within his materialmeans, and is provided by a co¬operative movement. Otherwisethat housing is no different from teers. Most visitors to the Stevenson headquarters had to be contentwith mimeographed paper badges.As the Stevenson boom grew in size, more and more delegatesflocked to the Stevenson headquarters. A team of volunteers talkedto some 400 delegates and alternates before the convention was over.Because a monitoring service called in the latest radio and TV all served to introduce policies and platforms which later became theproperty of one or the other of the two big parties. None, however,was able to elect a president.Likewise, at least so far, the Progressives. With no major victoriesto their credit, they have prompted the Democrats to at least pro¬pound policies which otherwise might never have been advanced. Areports and rumors, and a crew of volunteers bird-dogged every ca*? Point involves the 1948 election. The strong "peace plank”delegation and attended most of the caucuses, visitors to headquar- ° * e, r°Pre*slve platform was undoubtedly one of the major causesters could be given the latest delegate line-up. They would be e inc ProPosc^ Vinson mission to Moscow. The election overmost student apartments in other assured that the Governor would accept if nominated, and that he an<1 won’Ji1f 1^ission to Moscow idea was, however, discarded.buildings in the area. Studentneeds and preferences were seento be totally neglected in the ad¬ministration’s deliberations, andstudents’ sense of independent re¬sponsibility flaunted.When the MAROON broughtthese charges to Dean McCarn’sattention, she pointed out that Some see PP ballot only as protest voteIn the present campaign, the question of winning or losing is atouchy one in Progressive circles. Some liberals feel that a Progres¬sive vote is merely a protest vote. Rather than see Eisenhower winin November, they will choose the "lesser of two evils,” and voteDemocratic, despite the fact that Stevenson, as of yet, has given nowould be nominated.Schricker nominates AdlaiOn the first day of the convention the Committee picked GovernorSchricker of Indiana to nominate Stevenson. But Wednesday night,when Stevenson appeared as a sure bet, Jack Arvey decided to jointhe boom and announced that Governor Carvell of Delaware, who ... - , __ ,had been scheduled to second Barkley, was going to nominate in<llcatl°n that he will alter the Truman foreign policy of “contain-Stevenson. ment of communism” throughout the world — the very policy uponBarkley, of course, had been backed by the party machine, and Pr°Sressives stand in greatest opposition to the adminis*she and several other members the Johnson group feared Adlai might still issue a Sherman-type traAtlon’ . . , .of the administration had attempt- statement if the nomination were handed him by the machine. Since . ,?oth®r factor whichi will influence the PP s showing at the pollsed to provide more low-cost stu- Delaware is called before Indiana, the best compromise that could .8 jiarty standard bearer, Henry Wallace,dent honsing in the past and that be worked out was that both Schricker and Carvell would nominate.Stevenson, with the Governor of Indiana getting the first crack.Stevenson draft is uniqueThe Stevenson draft is perhaps the first genuine draft in Ameri¬can history. A group of citizens—among them many UC students,alumni and faculty—believing that Adlai Stevenson would makethe best possible President, simply got together and started workingtoward that objective.Just before the convention opened, several politicos, notablyshe was continuing this effort atthe present moment. Among proj¬ects under consideration, shementioned the possibility of con¬verting some of the University-owned apartment buildings nowsee WHITMAN, page 4 Many of the PP’s votes in the last election came as a result of Wal¬lace’s reputation and personal popularity with the voters. He hadbeen an active new dealer, and but for a quirk of fate (or the calcu¬lated intent of certain Democratic politicians) would have been, atthe time, president of the United States.Wallace’s exit from the PP marked the turning point for manyof his new deal followers as well; reconciling themselves to thepolicies of the administration, they accepted fair dealism as thelogical heir to new dealism. The PP plays upon this shift, and uponCANOE 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 former Sen. Francis Myers of Pennsylvania and Rep. John Kennedy the shift to the right by the Democratic party as a whole; it callsof Massachusetts, agreed to work with the Committee. But theparty machine, the “big city bosses,” did nothing to back this re¬luctant candidate for fear he would pull the rug from under theirfeet.That now the pros try to give the impression that they were work¬ing for Stevenson all along is merely part of the game of politics.y/ie r/ltium PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREET CARMENSUSED FURNITURE & APPLIANCESBARGAINS!WE BUY AND SELLREPAIR WORK . MOVING1127 E. 55th St. FA 4-7954 itself the “Roosevelt party,” and the heir to much of the new dealplatform.Circus is overMany of the delegates to the convention attended the PP foundingconvention in Philadelphia four years ago. The attitudes they ex¬pressed as to the PP’s development since 1948 are interesting. Almostall interviewed by this reporter felt that the “circus atmosphere”of the ’48 campaign was gone, and that instead, there was about thepresent convention a feeling of resoluteness, a feeling that “we’vebeen beaten around plenty, but we’re tougher now, and we’re goingin this time to win!”The determination to win of all those present, trade unionists aswell as college students (less in evidence this time than in 1948when 800 UC’ers joined Youth for Wallace), was perhaps the mostsee PROGRESSIVE ANALYSIS, poge 6August F, 1952 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5Three parties give points of viewThey key issueDemocratic"The free choice of the Demo¬cratic party by the people ofAmerica . . . will mean worldpeace with honor, national secu¬rity based on collective pacts withother free nations and a high levelof human dignity. National se¬curity demands that these goalsbe attained, and the endowmentsof the Democratic party alone canassure their attainment . . . Wehave helped establish the instru¬mentalities through which thehope of mankind for universalworld peace can be realized. Un¬der Democratic leadership, ournation has moved promptly andeffectively to meet and repel themenace to world peace by Sovietimperialism ... We are convincedthat peace and security can besafe guarded if America does notdeviate from the practical andsuccessful policies developed un¬der Democratic leadership sincethe close of World War II.”Republican"The supreme goal of our for¬eign policy will be an honorableand a just peace. We dedicate our¬selves to wage peace and win it. . . (We shall) end the negative,futile and immoral policy of ‘con¬tainment’ which abandons count¬less human beings to a despotismand Godless terrorism ... InWestern Europe we shall use ourfriendly influence without med¬dling or imperialistic attitudesfor ending the political and eco¬nomic divisions which alone pre¬vent that vital area from beingstrong in its own right. We shallencourage and aid the develop¬ment of collective security forcesthere, as elsewhere, so as to endthe Soviet power to intimidatedirectly or by satellites and sothat the free governments will besturdy to resist Communist in¬roads. In the balanced considera¬tion of our problems, we shall endneglect of the Far East.’’Progressive"The American people wantpeace. In recognition of this . . .each party will claim to be thepeace party in 1952. There is onlyone touchstone by which everyvote can test the sincerity ofthese claims: Does the party havea program for ending the fightingin Korea? Has it any proposal tostop a useless and senseless warwhich has already cost over 110,-000 American casualties and un¬told suffering to the Korean peo¬ple ... ?“Judged by this acid test, theprofessions of peace made by theDemocratic and Republican can¬didates are a fraud and a pre¬tense. They may differ on how thewar in Korea should be foughtand vie with each other in reck¬less acts and proposals thatthreaten to spread it beyond Ko¬rea’s borders, engulfing the world.But neither old party and noneof its candidates . . . has anyrealistic plan for ending it."Only the Progressive Partyopposed the Korean war from itsoutset. Only the Progressive partyhas a program for its immediatetermination. The Progressive par¬ty is the only only genuine partyof peace.“American - Soviet understand¬ing and cooperation remain thekey to peace. Despite differencesin political and economic view¬points . . . Whatever mistakeseach may have made ... they canand must work together on thebasis of mutual self-interest andthe dictates of survival for worldpeace, far-reaching disarmamentand normal international trade.”KoreaDemocratic“The Communist aggressor hasbeen hurled back from South Ko¬rea. Thus Korea has proved . . .that the UN will resist aggres¬sion. We urged continued effort,by honorable means, to bringabout a fair and effective peacesettlement in Korea within theprinciples of the UN charter.”RepublicanAccuses Democrats of invitingwar by withdrawing US forcesfrom South Korea, then plungingUS into war “without the consentof our citizens through . . . Con¬gress,” and conducting it “with¬ out the will to victory. With fore¬sight the Korean war would neverhave happened . . . (The Demo¬crats offer no hope of victory.”ProgressiveImmediate cease-fire at agreed-upon demarcation line "withoutany ifs, ands or buts”; all disputes,including exchange of PWs, to be“settled by civilian representa¬tives of all nations involved in thewar after the fighting stops.”The Cold warDemocraticThe Truman doctrine in 1947.. . the Marshall Plan in 1948, theNorth Atlantic Treaty in 1949, thePoint 4 program, the resistance toCommunist aggression in Korea,the Pacific security pacts in 1951and the Mutual Security pro¬grams now under way . . . standas landmarks of America’s prog¬ress in mobilizing the strength ofthe free world to keep the peace... We will not abandon the once-free peoples of Central and East¬ern Europe who now suffer underthe Kremlin’s tyranny . . . Welook forward to the day when theliberties of Poland and other op¬pressed Soviet satellites . . . willbe restored.” Continue economicand military aid to Chiag Kai-Shek on Formosa. Continue Point4.RepublicanAccuses Democrats of losingthe peace. Promises abandonmentof "containment” policy for morevigorous opposition to Commu¬nism, elimination of those in gov¬ernment responsible for Teheran,Potsdam and Yalta agreements.The US, under GOP, “will repudi¬ate all commitments contained insecret understandings such asthose of Yalta which aid Commu¬nist enslavement . . . (and) lookhappily forward to the genuine in¬dependence of those captive peo¬ples.” Continue aid to Chiang Kai-Shek.ProgressiveAn immediate conference of thefive great powers “as the onlypeaceful means for securing anover-all settlement of differ¬ences.” Abolition of trade barriersbetween US and Communist coun¬tries. Admit Communist China tothe UN, withdraw recognition ofFranco Spain. Support demandsfor independence of colonial peo¬ples. Contribute to UN fund of$50 billion to aid underprivilegednations.Germany, JapanDemocratic"Welcome” West Germany"into the company of free na¬tions.” Continue to “do every¬thing we can to overcome theKremlin's obstruction” of Germanunification. "We welcome freeJapan as a friendly neighbor andan ally.”Republican"The good in our foreign poli¬cies has been accomplished withRepublican cooperation, such as. . . the making of peace withJapan and German ...”ProgressiveStop the rearmament and re-nazification of a "disunited Ger¬many,” and rearmament of Japan.Four-power conference to “makeGermany a united and disarmedneutral.” Conference of all for¬mer belligerents against Japan towrite a peace treaty.A-Bomb, disarmamentDemocraticContinue "vigorous and nonparti¬san civilian administration” ofatomic energy, “build all theatomic and hydrogen firepowerneeded to . . . promote worldpeace,” and exert every effort tobring about bonafide internation¬al control and inspection ofatomic weapons .. . Disarmamentremains the goal. The free worldis rearming to secure the peace.”Republican"Always” seek universal arma¬ment control “on a dependablebasis” but “we should developwith utmost speed a force in be¬ing ... of such power as to detersudden attack or promptly anddecisively defeat it. This ... re¬quires quickest possible develop¬ment of . . . adequate air power,and the simultaneous readiness ofcoordinated air, land and seaforces... including atomic energyweapons in abundance.” ProgressiveNegotiate international agree¬ment outlawing use of the A-bomb and H-bomb,” with effec¬tive control and inspection ofatomic stockpiles.” Ratify Genevaprotocol outlawing germ warfare.UN action for universal disarma¬ment. " .Universal MilitaryTrainingDemocraticNone.RepublicanNone.ProgressiveDefeat UMT, repeal draft law.ControlsDemocraticContinue "workable” price con¬trols “so long as the emergencyrequires,” remove controls as“quickly as economic conditionsallow.” Continue federal rent con¬trol in “critical defense areas.”Republican“Remove injurious price andwage controls . . . oppose Federalrent controls “except in areas” ofdefense-inspired critical housingshortages.ProgressiveFederal dollar and cents priceceilings and restoration of Fed¬eral rent control at pre-Koreanlevels. End wage freeze.LaborDemocratic• Repeal Taft-Hartley, enact leg¬islation to deal with strikes that“seriously threaten the nationalsafety.” Wage rates should be de¬termined by free collective bar¬gaining “to the widest possibleextent consistent with the publicinterest.” Continue present mini¬mum wage of 75 cents an hour.RepublicanRetain Taft-Hartley act. “Wecondemn the President’s seizureof plants and industries to forcethe settlement of labor disputes.”ProgressiveRepeal Taft - Hartley, reenactWagner act. Defeat proposedSmith anti-strike bill. Increaseminimum wage to $1.25 an hourwith overtime after 30 hours aweek. Restore free collective bar¬gaining.Social SecurityDemocraticExtend old - age assistance tomore people, increase benefits,lower retirement age for women.Broader unemployment insurancecoverage and “substantially” in¬creased benefits with dependencyallowances.RepublicanAmend old - age insurance to“provide coverage for those justlyentitled to it but who are nowexcluded.”ProgressiveA "comprehensive federal sys¬tem” of old-age, unemploymentand disability compensation. “Forthe aged, not less than $150monthly; for the unemployed ordisabled, not less than $40 weekly,with additional dependency allow¬ances.” Extend Social Securitycoverage to all workers, includingfarmers and self-employed.Health InsuranceDemocraticA “resolute attack on the heavyfinancial hazard of serious ill¬ness.” Federal aid to hospital con¬struction, support of medical re¬search, and aid for medical edu¬cation.RepublicanOppose Federal compulsoryhealth insurance and “Federalbureaucratic dictation” of medi¬care.ProgressiveA system of national health in¬surance guaranteeing all Ameri¬cans “adequate dental and medi¬cal care.” Hospital and health cen¬ter construction program and ex¬pansion of medical education andresearch.SchoolsDemocraticEducational opportunitiesshould be available to everyAmerican child irrespective ofcolor or national Origin. “Immedi¬ate consideration for those schoolsystems which need further legis¬lation to provide Federal aid fornew school construction, teachers’salaries and school maintenance.”Federal scholarships. RepublicanSupport principle that responsi¬bility for "popular education, tax-supported and free to all,” rests"upon the local communities andthe states.”ProgressiveA 10-billion dollar annual fed¬eral program for school construc¬tion; one-billion for federal aid toraise teachers’ salaries and em¬ploy additional teachers. Elimin¬ate segregation in all phases ofeducation. “Stop attempts to im¬pose thought control on teachersand pupils and the use of publicschools to promote war hysteria.”Maintain separation of churchand state, and protect freedom ofpublic education.VeteransDemocratic“Continue and improve our na¬tional program of benefits for vet¬erans and their families.”Republican“Extend aid and compensation”given to earlier veterans to Ko¬rean War veterans.ProgressiveEnact GI Bill of Rights for allvets since World War II; provideall benefits granted them with in¬creases to reflect cost of livingchanges. Extend benefits to mer¬chant seamen.WomenDemocraticEqual pay for equal work.Enactment of a Constitutionalment of a Constitutional amend:ndment providing equal rightsamendment providing equalrights for women.RepublicanConstitutional amendment forequal rights for “men and wom¬en” and legislation for equal payfor equal work.ProgressiveForbid discrimination againstwomen; guarantee equal pay andjob security, without jeopardizingexisting protective legislation.Negro, Civil RightsDemocratic“Racial and religious minoritieshave progressed further towardreal equality (during the last 20years) than during the preceding150 years ... We are proud of theprogress that has been made insecuring equality of treatmentand opportunity in the nation’sarmed forces and the Civil serv¬ice .. . The Department of Jus¬tice has taken an important partin successfully arguing in thecourts for the elimination ofmany illegal discriminations, in¬cluding those to own and use realproperty, to engage in gainful oc¬cupations and to enroll in publiclysupported higher educational in¬stitutions ... We also favor legis¬lation to perfect existing Federalcivil rights statutes.” Favor legis¬lation to secure everyone” theright of full and equal participa¬tion in the nation’s political life,free from arbitrary restraints,”and the “right to security of per¬sons.”RepublicanAll citizens are entitled to full,impartial enforcement of Federallaws relating to their civil right. . . (but) it is the primary re¬sponsibility of each state to orderand control its own domestic in¬stitutions.” Favor supplementalFederal action “toward the elim¬ination of lynching” and “towardthe elimination of poll taxes,” and“appropriate action” to end segre¬gation in D. C.Progressive“The deliberate official policyof government at all levels whichdenies full equality to 16 millionNegro Americans is responsibilefor the evils of segregation, dis¬crimination, police brutality, ter¬ror, lynching and second-class citi¬zenship. That policy has short¬ened the average life span of theNegro people to 8 years less thanthe life span of whites. It sanc¬tions violence and murder againstNegroes . . . and this violence isbeing wrought on so mounting ascale that it approaches what isdefined as ‘genocide’ under theUN convention.” Promulgate im¬mediately a Presidential order foreffective prosecution under Fed¬eral civil rights statutes of viola¬tions of civil rights and for elimination of civil rights and forelimination of segregation in armed forces and Federal agen¬cies. End segregation in housingand District of Columbia. EnactFederal anti-poll tax and anti¬lynching laws. Guarantee right ofNegroes, Puerto Ricans, Mexican-Americans and other minorities toregister and vote in primary andgeneral elections.Job discriminationDemocratic“We favor Federal legislationeffectively to secure to everyonethe right to equal opportunity inemployment.”ProgressiveEnact Federal legislation "tofurther just and equitable treat¬ment in the area of discrimina¬tory employment practices” butavoid duplication of state lawsand “another huge bureaucracy.”ProgressiveA Federal fair employmentpractices law with effective en¬forcement powers. Immediate is¬suance of Presidential order toprohibit discrimination in employ¬ment under government contracts.Equal job opportunities and jobtraining for Negroes, Mexican-Americans, Puerto Ricans andother minority groups.FilibustersDemocratic"Improve Congressional pro¬cedure so that majority prevailsand decisions can be made afterreasonable debate without beingblocked by a minority of eitherhouse.”RepublicanNone.ProgressiveRevise Senate cloture rules tomake filibusters impossible.Minority representationDemocraticNone.RepublicanNone.Progressive"Full representation of the Ne¬gro and Puerto Rican and Mexi-can-American people in Congress,State Legislatures and all levelsof public office.”GenocideDemocratic“The US should join other na¬tions in formally declaring geno¬cide to be an international crimein time of peace as well as war.This crime-shocking revelationsof Soviet guilt as disclosed ... bythe special committee investigat¬ing the Katyn Forest massacre.”RepublicanNone.ProgressiveRatify UN conventions on gen¬ocide and human rights.Civil libertiesDemocratic“Under Democratic party lead¬ership more has been done in thepast 20 years to enhance the sanc¬tity of individual rights than everbefore in our history.”RepublicanNone.Progressive“Under the pretense of the so-called national emergency, Amer¬ican democratic liberties are be¬ing destroyed . .. Workers, teach¬ers, authors, actors, governmentemployes, small businessmen andprofessional people are hounded,harassed, denied passports, driv¬en from their jobs, terroried, andblacklisted for daring to expresspolitical criticism. Men and wom¬en are victimized and jailed on theunsupported testimony of stool-pigeons and paid informers, or onthe charges of nameless accusersbrought by the FBI.” To restorethe Bill of Rights, repeal theSmith Sedition and McCarran In¬ternal Security acts. Abolish con¬centration camps now under con¬struction. End prosecutions underSmith Act, pardon those convictedunder it. Guarantee freedom ofadvocacy for lawyers and right ofaccused to counsel of their ownchoice. Abolish House Un-Amer¬ican Activities and Senate Inter¬nal Security Committees.US communistsDemocraticNone.RepubliconAccuses Democrats of appeas¬ing American Communists, re¬sulting in "the needless sacrific ofAmerican lives, a crushing cost»«* «4 1, iPage 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON August 8, 1952Pogo lecture hereKelly and PagoPogo, the swamp’s gift to thepolitical dilemma, barnstormed atthe University of Chicago July23. His creator and campaign man¬ager, Walt Kelly, spoke on Pogo’sbehalf. He explained that Pogo’sbasic political philosophy is, “Ani¬mals is animals, but people stillmake the best type of humanbean.” Pogo’s campaign note wasstruck in a militant campaignsong written by one of his sup¬porters, Churchy la Femme.The party of the first partAnd the party of the nextAre partly participledIn a sparsely covered text.Were you partial to a partyThat has parceled out itspartsTo the party that was secondIn your politickin’ heart?Then parlay all your losingsOn a horse that’s runnin’ dark With lights out you maytripleIn a homer—in the park.Kelly explained that the evolu¬tion of Pogo from a possum in afairy tale strip with a little boy,to the present strip came becausepeople like a strip with either allpeople or all animals; but not onein which they are mixed. He saidthat Pogo became, in effect, thelittle boy himself. The changewhich marked this transition wasthe turning of Pogo’s nose up inthe air to give him a winsomelook.Kelly also spoke about the roleof the humorist in our culture.It has been asserted, he said, thatthe temper of the times makes itdifficult for humorists to survive.However, he pointed out that nev¬er at any time in history hasthere been an abundance of hu¬morists. He explained that theonly way to deal with the tenden¬cies to intimidate freely speakingout about contemporary society,is simply not to be afraid tospeak out.Kelly illustrated his talk withsketches of his swampland char¬acters which he handed to luckymembers of the audience. Every¬one was given an autographedpicture of Pogo “Sweeping theConvention” broom in hand, aswell as a Pogo campaign button.Henry W. Sams, director ofthe summer term, introduced Mr.Kelly. Arrangements for the meet¬ing were made with the help ofthe MAROON. We are gratefulThe MAROON wishes to thankthe Committee in Education, Train¬ing, and Research in Race Relationswho unwittingly played hosts to usWednesday night when we put thepaper to bed.SG Thugs beat up professor,SECC activates by-lawsDespite the alleged drop in the crime rate of the Hyde Parkdistrict, members of the UC community still fall prey to thehoodlums, who quite apart from terrorizing the inhabitantsof the area, have on several occasions exhibited a specialviciousness in attacking UCers.An example of this was an attack July 20, at 10:30 p.m. onProfessor Heinrich Kluver of the(from page 1)called for a file to be establishedon or before September 1, 1952,and to compare the service rec¬ords of the two files some timeduring the winter quarter of1953. psychology department as he wasnearing his home at 53rd andBlackstone. Seven young mendrove up in a car, four got out,one hit him in the face andknocked off his glasses, anotherpicked them up for him. Thenthey all got back into the car anddrove off.1849-COLD!!1880-LAND!!1952-ROOMS!!S.G. Housing Bureau needs Prospectors, Explorers ond Volunteersto launch the S.G. Student Housing File.CONTACT RICHARD SAWYERInformation Desk Administration Bldg. 11 :00 - 1 :30 p.m.Democraats battle ... Kluver called the Hyde Parkpolice, but as he was unable togive adequate descriptions, he wastold that nothing could be done.Later Mr. Lyman of UC Buildingsand Grounds and campus guardsheard of it and got the Hyde Parkpolice to ask Kluver for a report.Commission adopts by lawsSouth East Chicago Crime Com¬mission, meanwhile, was still get¬ting under way. William Morgen-stern, director of UC public rela¬tions office, told the MAROONthat the 75 members, includingthe 15 executive board members,last Thursday night approved theby-laws worked out by UC LawSchool Professor Bernard Melzer.It is now up to the “Committee ofFive” to approve them, inasmuchas they are the present legal in¬corporators, until they approvethe by-laws. Some of the “five”are out of town at the moment,Morgenstem said. He felt thatthe work of the commission wasnot impaired by these unfinishedlegal aspects.Morgenstem also said that theIndia(from page 1)of Calcutta University that theforeign student will feel most un¬comfortable here. As a matter offact, some American students ac¬tually left this university withoutfinishing the courses for whichthey were admitted.”In addition, the committee alsotook into account the lack of facil¬ities and shortness in time in mak¬ing their decisions.Two get »•»Other UC'ers have fared betterthan Orans and Galanter. DonLevine of the social science dept,is presently en route to Europe toattend the Frankfurt (Germany)university, and David Cummings(College) is scheduled to sail forZagreb, Yugoslavia, around Oc¬tober 1.Reciprocating for Cummings,Frankfurt is sending two studentsto the UC. Hans Joachim Ernstand Ursula Mattieson will arriveat the UC early in October withClive Gray, an ex-UCer who hasbeen studying in Germany.Miss Matthieson will reside atInternational House, while Ernst has been offered room and boardby Phi Kappa Psi fraternity.Need money for room and boardAlice Turngren, president ofinter-club has written to the presi-ing sufficient finance to pay forMiss Matthieson’s board. Theproject will be discussed at thenext inter-club meeting. (from page 3)son, was quite evident. They won a safe continuation of their effec¬tive control of their local parties, control of who runs for the Houseof Representtaives, and in the case of the Dixiecrats, continuance of Commission had not yet under-their control of the balance in Congress. In all, Dixiecrat control of taken work on any specific in¬local parties was susceptible to being overthrown or seriously weak- stances such as the Kluver case,ened in five states (the two where liberal forces were contesting and In order to organize carefully,ready to take over, and the three non-signing states where liberals the commission has been concen-locally “would have loved it” (in the words of one of them) if the trating on relations with otherdelegations had been thrown out. In all these cases the Stevenson organizations and with the corn-forces helped the Dixiecrats retain control. munity. The Board of DirectorsFrom southern liberal delegates much consternation and outrage has had to work for agreement,was heard. They felt that their work in the South had progressed Morgenstem said., very markedly. They felt in a position to change the old tale that the Fmonce campaign is starteddents of the various women s South itself is reactionary. The South votes democratic and they felt Morgenstem said that some rep-clubs asking Hieir support in rais- on the way to strongly representing liberalism in the local parties, resentation had been made by theand nationally. commission about the poor streetThe Texas Maverik group was especially disappointed, since they lighting. Also a finance campaignhad at first felt that at least Governor Shivers had been forced to is getting under way, but it willsign something he had promised not to sign. Of course, the loyalty not ^ finished until long afterpledge was later rendered meaningless ... as Governor Shivers had August. There have been manypromised. The promise provides interesting corroboration for the meetings, he said. The majorbitterness of the battle over party control. Maury Maverik of the thing now, according to Morgen-liberal Texans brought a press release, issued only in Texas, the day stem, which confronts the Com-before the lost fight to unseat him in which Governor Shivers made mission, is to find a permanentthat promise. The release was hastily mimeographed by some Harri- director. The “Committee ofman supporters and given out to about one-third of the delegates Three” is empowered to recom-before the losing fight to unseat him in which Governor Shivers madeit was too late for that statement to influence anyone.The Shivers statement said; “The middle of the road conservativeDemocrats of Texas have won a signal victory. I would not person¬ally pledge myself to blindly support the nominee. ... It should bepointed out in the interest of conservative control of our state con¬vention in September, that this resolution ... is in no way bindingon that (state) convention.” Governor Shivers was quite right. Hehad not blindly endorsed anyone, and had won a signal victory inthe interest of conservative control, all this quite despite the factthat he did sign.The northern party controllers on their part achieved a victoryover the seriously contesting Liberals and are now safe in theircontrol of the Democratic Party. While the many polls of delegationsshowed that home listeners were liberal and civil right-oriented, thebosses consolidated conservative control behind a liberal name, andreduced the liberals to much less influence in the party and anyfuture administration, than they have had.UC'ers reportChicago was host to three ofthe national political conventions.The opportunity for UC studentsto view directly and participate inthese conventions caused evengreater interest on their part.The MAROON believed that thestudents who went to the conven¬tion or felt keen interest in theirproceedings would like to expresstheir opinion to other students.The selections we took were ar¬bitrary but for the most part consistof contributions of present and paststaff members of the CHICAGOMAROON. To allow independentwriters space, the MAROON is re¬laxing its general rules of newsfeature coverage and in doing sodoes not endorse their contents orassume the responsibility of sub¬stantiating their views. mend one, he said. This consists ofChancellor Lawrence Kimpton,Sydney Stein Jr., and Fred Sprow-les of Hyde Park YMCA.For SaleWill Exchange diamond ring (25 pts.)tor 35 mm. camera and case. AppraisalInvited. NO. 7-0251.6-lb. Monitor washing machine. Ex¬cellent condition. Available now, $35.1141 E. 60th. MI. 3-7224.For Sale—Touring bicycle, Raleigh Club¬man, 26" wheel, 22" frame, Dunlap tires.Saddle hand-brack, 3-speed, Sturney-Archer generator. Light and swift withpump carrier. Cyclometer including ex¬tra saddle and tool kit. Color green, $55.W. Howard. 8200 S. Jeffery, RE. 4-8721week days after 4 p.m. Sunday all day.Three parties compare points of platform WantedManager for Student Oovernment Bookexchange for autumn quarter. ApplyBook Exchange, basement Cobb Hall.For Rent(from page 5)views is the first line in the de¬fense of the liberties of the Amer¬ican people . . . The nullificationof constitutional freedom was atfirst ostensibly directed againstthe Communists alone. Now, in¬evitably, all Americans—and or¬ganized labor foremost—are thevictims.”Foreign bornDemocratic“Subversive elements must beprevented from entering ourland” but “victims of Soviet bru¬tality” must be admitted in the“humanitarian tradition” of theDisplaced Persons Act. “Wepledge continuing revision of ourimmigration and naturalizationlaws to do away with any unjustand unfair practices against na¬tional groups.”RepublicanNone.ProgressiveRepeal the McCarran - WalterImmigration Law. Stop the perse¬cution, deportation and imprison¬ment of foreign born Americansbecause of their trade union orpolitical activities.Loyalty programDemocraticThe Democratic party “has been alert to the corroding and demor¬alizing effect of dishonesty anddisloyalty in the public service. . . The loyalty program of Pres¬ident Truman has served effec¬tively to prevent infiltration bysubversive elements, and to pro¬tect honest and loyal public serv¬ants against unfounded and ma¬licious attacks.”RepubliconAccuses Democrats of obstruct¬ing loyalty investigations and at¬tributes loyalty program amonggovernment employes to Repub¬lican disclosures. “A Republicanpresident will appoint only per¬sons of unquestioned loyalty. Wewill overhaul loyalty and securityprograms.”ProgressiveEnd loyalty and screening pro¬grams, and the attorney general’ssubversive list which affects mil¬lions of government workers,teachers, artists, professionalsand workers in private industry.CorruptionDemocraticExposure of corruption hascome under Democratic leader¬ship but party opposes “slander,defamation of character, decep¬tion and dishonesty” in public life, deplores “smear attacks on thecharacter of Federal workers, andwill “use every proper means” toeliminate pressure by private in¬terests “seeking undeserved fa¬vors from the Government.”Seeks “strongest penaltiesagainst bribe-givers and bribe¬takers.RepublicanCredits Republicans with expos¬ing governmental corruption andcharges Democrats with establish¬ing immorality as a way of life.Pledges “to put an end to corrup¬tion, to oust the crooks and graft¬ers, to administer tax laws fairlyand impartially and to restorehonest government.”Progressive“The only liberty guaranteed byboth old parties is the liberty topilfer the public purse. The taxgraft, the police graft, the minkcoat scandals have revolted allhonest Americans. But these arepenny-ante games compared tothe big rackety the war racket.Billions are made in the deals ar¬rived at in the Pentagon and inthe very halls of Congress. Tide-land oil, natural gas, pipelines,extravagant ship subsidies, con¬ trol over railroad rate-making. Room wlth a *iew- 6237 Kimbark. PhonoNOrmal 7-9946 alter 6 p.m. or week-control of the airwaves, rapid tax ends. $8 a week,write-offs, tax loopholes — these Ride Wantedmean billions to the profit-mad Will share expenses and driving tof +. . .. „ Boston or vicinity, on or about 10th ofbackers of the two old parties, sept call Dave, hy 3-1757.GOING ABROAD THIS SUMMERBuy a RALEICHfor ONLY *40**with 3 Speeds, Pump, Tool Cose,Tools ond Instruction Book. You save$46.55 by ordering your RALEIGHfrom Art's ond Taking delivery in onEnglish port. For full details COMEIN AND RIDE ONE BEFORE YOUBUY ONE.CHICAGO'S LEADINGLIGHTWEIGHT SPECIALISTWE CARRY 7 MAKES OF ENGLISH BICYCLES — 42 AMERICANLIBERAL TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE — TERMS AVAILABLE/lit'4. CYCLE & HOBBY SHOPHOURSMONDAY 12 P.M. U * — THURSDAY • to 9 — REG. M816 EAST 75th STREET " TR 4-4100August 8, 1952 THE CHICAGO MAROON Pags 7'Young and Damned', Luis Bunuel's masterpiecerocks Chicago at Playhouse; savage film fareThe Young and the Damned, currently featured at the World Playhouse, is the latestcreation of Luis Bunuel, the great Spanish writer - director who gave us Land WithoutBread, a documentary of poverty, ignorance, and superstition.Like its great predecessor, The Young and the Damned looks for a brief while into thelives and the world of the poor; but in this film his concern is chiefly for Los Olvidados(The Forgotten Ones, as it was entitled originally)— the children.Superficially a “slice of life,” —r———; — ~, r . ’ ner of the children s minds—all .in fact, a classic example of these add up to the highest order 1S through adult treachery thatthe genre, the film consists of filmic art. the children fail each other,essentially of a spring of appar- Impartial camera Arcangeli in Shoeshine andently unrelated incidents, each The camera merely transports Jaibo in The Young and theone exceeding the former in hor- us to the scene of the action, Damned are not really children,ror, violence and desperation - filmed almost entire in the nor yet adults, but their roles arefrom the robbery and assault on streets and slums of Mexico City. ’a blind beggar, the attack on and stands and observes with us, and identical, as trouble-makers andtormenting of a legless cripple, to passes on. The camera forms no betrayers of younger children,attempted rape, successful seduc- judgments for us, it rests with lu The Young and the Damned,tion, and murder—all of them impartial compassion upon the the children are not only exploit-committed by the children, the faces of the dead Julian, the dead ed, preyed upon, and betrayed"forgotten ones.” Pedro, and the dead Jaibo; there in all their contacts with the adultPoetic documentor are no tricks of lighting or of world; but they exploit and preySome reviewers, while praising angles which a director of less upon, betray and war against eachthe film, have criticized it for not integrity might point up the ac- other—and this is their tragicgoing into the causes of this juve- tion for us. There is only one long fate, that their heritage is vio-nile anarchy; in our opinion that panoramic shot in which the cam- lence and death. Those who sur-is not a defect, not only because era ieads our gaze from the close, v|ve are scarred; those who die,the slight hint' of cause given is immediate barrenness of a vacant die violently and without havingperfectly adequate, but because and deserted lot, by slow degrees known, except in fleeting instants,there are two ways to handle a to tbe distant horizon, somewhat tbe k>ve they wanteddocumentary theme: the first, a above eye-level. Some low build-straight-forward factual presenta- *n£s are cau£bt and held for a *tion of a "case,” not omitting clin- moment in perfect composition,ical data; the second, a poetic and then the camera brings ustreatment which, transcending hack again to the vacant lot, nowthe limits of objective representa- oppressive in the dusk,tion, creates for us, or in us, the Universal theme Left to right: (standing) Ralph Markus of the Oriental Institute, Pro¬fessor Oskar T. Broneer, Greek and Classic archiology, (seated) ProfessorGertrude Smith, chairman of committee on classics, (standing) Dr. Elia*Bogdanopulos.Helen Panaretos(from page 4)being rented to non-UCers tostudent needs. Such units could UC professoors initiatenew Qrecian magazineDeucalion is the tentative name of a new Greek languagemagazine sponsored by a group of UC professors, whose pur¬pose is to be spreading of American culture on the Pelopon¬nesian peninsula.The magazine, edited by Dr. Elias Bogdanopoulos, a nativeof Patrai, is expected to come out some time before the endof this year.insight by means of which we Bunel’s theme is at the same then either be operated by the . , ,bridge the gap between the con- time the key to the “cause” which university itself or, in the light of and would like to see such facil- Bogdanopoulos, who has flCrete world and the more true others have thought to be lack- the present crisis, turned over Hies expanded. The university, degree in law from Athensuniverse, and, for an instant, look mg: love; of mother for child, of to a cooperative association for however, does not approve co- University, has visited the USinto eternity. frTend^The barterfotove-sS ""however, these efforts have educational housing, although it twice, once in 1946 under anIn choosing this second treat- ^ a hatred and heen stymied by budget dif£icui_ believes in interracial housing.” UNRRA grant, and once in 1950.above'all, the’coldness with which McCorn likes co-ops In line with this, Mrs. McCarn ?^fth1I?tends11t° run contnbutlon®has chosen well, and he has ’ , of others— ties. told the MAROON that another both by wel1 known professors atbrought the tremendous resources breed Jmost readny in poverty and "Though I would be willing to d + . R°? . .. this University, and by men fromof the cine-art to bear upon his erfme^his^seems1"^0^^^ cross channels toward this end, I way to resolve the conflict would other institutions,theme with the most consummate gunuel is saying> do not believe it would expedite be to convert Whitman into an Xhe uc sponsors of the maga-Compares shoeshine matters. There is a need for closer all male or all female house, de- zine are Prof. Ralph Marcus ofA comparison with Sciuscia cooperation between the business voting another building to accom- Oriental institute; Prof. Oscar T.skill and artistry. The splendidunion of image and sound--—thediscreet, contemplative camera, (ghoeshine) by Vittorio De Sica and administrative offices of the modate the other gender. How- Broneer of the Greek department;the eloquent “pointing finger” of sbows tbat Bunuel has carried the university in this matter,” said ever, since UCP has at present Miss Gertrude Smith, chairmanstrategically placed silences, the desperate plight of slum-ridden dean McCarn. The dean made the no hope of obtaining such a prop- of the Committee on Classics; and•iirvorH oo chiidren one step beyond De Sica, correspondence betwwen the erty under its own power, the Prof. Harold Willoughby of theIn Shoeshine, the children are dean’s office and Whitman House dean admitted that she herself New Testament department. Prof,loyal to each other; their hostil- available to the MAROON. Mrs. does not see what can be done to Broneer is doing excavations insuperb score which acts now ascomment, now as chorus to thetragedy, the delicate use of sur¬realist techniques (in Pedro’s it is djrected towards the aduit McCarn wrote that “the univer- remedy all the evils of the situa- Greece this year, and has spent ailrnom Q ToiKn’e loot mow - . < . • . ^ ^dream and Jaibo’s last momentsof life) which help us to pass thebarrier of inarticulte speech intothe most protected and hidden cor- world whose victims they are and s*ty *s favor of cooperatives tion.by whidh they are exploited. It total of 18 years in the country.PANESPIZZERIA1603 E. 53rd St.South Side’s TastiestPIZZAand other delicatelypreparedITALIAN FOODAll phones NOrmal 7-9520 Surplus LampShades . . 2 for $ fRadio ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ $5Bookcases . . $3 UpBeds, Complete. $10 UpTowels ... 50c ea.McDAVIDUsed FurnitureBUtterfield 8-62101510 East 55th Campus institution on the rocks,hopes brighten for Woodlawn Tapby Steve Elliston rvt.-RECORD SALEAny 10 Inch Remington RecordOnly lewith the Purchase of Any Remington Recordfor Limited TimeISO Compositions to Choose Fromle Especially Reeonimend:Schubert: Symphony No. 5 in B Flat MajorAustrian Symphony Orchestra andMendelssohn: Overture Op. 27 No. 199-86 $2.49Mussorgsky: Pictures at an Exhibitionleethoven: Concerto No. 4 in G for pianoand Orchestra, op. 58 No. 199-75 $2.49srieg: Perr Gynt Suite andlimsky Korsokov: Le Coq Dor No. 199-68 $2.49;ranck: Symphony in D. MinorAustrian Symphony Orchestra No. 199-36 $2.49inesco: Roumanian Rhapsody No. 2 in D andimetna: The Moldau No. 149-50 $1.89Mozart: Symphony No. 35 in D Major No. 149-20 $1.89For (he Best Listen Come to theRecord ShopUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue8 A.M. - 5 P.M. - Monday thru Saturday The UC is unique among campuses of this land in the paucity of college hangouts in itsenvirons. The drinking establishments of those two great boulevards of sin to the Northand to the South are largely dedicated to the entertainment of an uncouth species whollyignorant of the content, nay the very name, of Aristotle.These heathens look askance at the entrance of a UC’er into their midst. And it is notwithout wonder that until 1948 students at this campus were an introverted, ascocial, un-convivial lot indeed. —. . rr~7 — ; —77———: ——Horry and Jimmy raised above the bar at Jimmy s. Neither Nigeria nor South AfricaTn this ereat vear however Four *° one , wi!I ever hear of any discourtesyii 1st one month before Harrv But Jimmy s became known not to their citizens arising at thejust one montn Deiore Marry only ^ a bar where students were Woodlawn Tap. This happy assur-w T™™3" defeated Henry A. we]Comed, not only as the one ance arises from the fact that atWallace and J. Strom Thurmond bar in the whole Great Lakes Jimmy-S discrimination is notfor the piesidency, there was a drainage basin where one could known.significant turn of events. One reconciie conflicting points of Th Wi] . , , ,James Wilson, who had hitherto view as to the correct date of . ™ W1. family has had aTSKX“bir,h°!™°r a i b ref.£wn“,r ,0 mol: ££& —and founded the Woodlawn Tap. tanica, but as the one bar in the ^With a few months the entire whole world where a Martini re- To™CcH,ns fo **Mn*!’ toclkscomplexion of campus life had ceived the prescribed four parts , e Present difficulty arosebeen changed. UCers discovered of gin to one Vermouth. w en a boy of 15, not a studentwith A. E. Housman that: Jimmy’s mixed drinks became , ere’ was cauSbt in the act of“Wine does more than Plato ean justly famous. The costly liquors ay.y’ and in order to divertTo justify the ways of God to were not spared in favor of spe .he po5lce *r°m their embarrass-man.’ cious mixers. Dry Martinis were ing cross-examination of himselfWith this insight, students be- made suitably dry and bonded decided to pin one on Jimmy,gan to take a brighter view of straight whiskies appeared in Jnasmuch as this was the onlythe great books. And to symbolize highballs. place °" 55th St* ^he^e’ a* athe reconciliation of these two They'll be no distinction .l10 »great spheres, the world of knowl- Jimmy’s also became noted as drink, he felt that the loss ofedge and the world of sipping a place where students from for- Jjmmy s would be no loss to him.reporse, a complete set of the eign lands could relax for a mo- c™"*$ *frvedEncyclopaedia Brittanica w a s ment without risk of life and limb, earljer ejn° the e^^^had hada drink at the Woodlawn Tap. ItACASA BOOK STORESelect Stock of Used BooksGreeting Curtis for Sophisticates1117 E. 55th Street HYde Pork 3-5651 was a strange drink,wearetocon-clude, which led him irresistiblyto the act of breaking and enter¬ing. The bartender who allegedlysewed up the magic potion wascharged and convicted with “serv¬ing” and "contributing to the de¬linquency of” a minor.The upshot was that, with theconviction of his bartender, thesee JIMMY, poge 8'Page & THE CHICAGO MAROON August 8, 1952 /U T tilts with Cervantes,loses two out of three boutsThe University Theater’s summer production was too tirelessly bawdy and boisterous torank with the better things they have done this year.The program consisted of a group of three farces by the author of Don Quixote, whichhave been disinterred and translated only recently. One of them, say the last, The Mar¬velous Pageant, would have been a curiosity. But director Otis Imboden might better havesought elsewhere for material to fill out the entertainment.The evening was leavened Draft... iby several groups of Spanishdances performed by JoseCastro and Agnes de la Cruz in amost engaging Iberian manner.The opportunity to see these na¬tional dances done by one-timecitizens of that land was an un¬usual and unexpected treat forwhich we are indebted to UT.Castro ex-UCerCastro is an alumnus of the UC,and during his stay here wasprominent in the Blackfriars, thatextravagant, and at its peak,highly successful theatrical or¬ganization here which unfortunat-ly went bankrupt just before thewar. He is now a professor of thedance down in the Loop.Contemporary UCers on theprogram, however, were definite¬ly not at their best. Almost every¬body in the various casts was anold-timer on the local stage, manyproven men and women among Estelle Luttrell os Leonardo, thefun-loving wife in The Cove of Sa¬lamanca, one of three interludesby Cervantes presented by Univer¬sity Theatre. both a past and future in thetheater. All had definite stagepersonalities and spoke theirlines with assurance. Estelle Lut¬trell, Lois Karbel, Jerry Cunliffe,Dick Eliel, Nancy Mikolic andCreighton Clarke can all “putthemselves across” ~nd make aconvincing appearance on thestage. uBt all overacted. To makethe step from the school to pro¬fessional level, they must injectmore insight and thought intotheir parts.In two minor roles, Charles Ja¬cobs was distinguished for hisexcellent appearance and tongue-in-cheek. The costuming, incident¬ally, was all very good. And theone set used for the whole eve¬ning was simple but lovely, evoc¬atively Old Spanish, and quite ver-Steve EllistonJimmy's ...(from page 7)them, and a high level of acting in the last of the pieces, The Mar- satile enough for the demands puthad been indicated. But the mate- vedous Pageant, where he acted upon it.rial apparently did not give them the role of the fraudulent travel- Staging well stagedor director Imboden a chance to ing impressario. In his example, The staging, too, was well han-do their best. we learn that the secret to sue- died, and obviously some goodFor six-year-olds?? cessful farce playing is to main- thought had been put into it.Over-acting was the order of tain what, in the old Castilian, It should be mentioned that UTthe night, nearly everyone pres- was known as the “straight” or filled its upstairs studio theaterent knocked himself out to get “poker” face. for all three of the performances,across the broad farcical elements Show, ,ophishcohon and as far as 1 could teJ, th restwhich without such solicitation Diane Deknatel, as the mounte- of the audience seemed to enjwould have been obvious to a six- banks sister in chicanery was the proceedi more than 1 ^year-old, the level of audience for also cognizant of this art. fhere It is ihought that the theater maywhich one suspects the plays were was considerable sophistication to bri this show back next 0clQyintended. her acting. ^ bOne is reminded that the pres- Another interesting perform-tige of such a name as Cervantes ance was given by Arlene Peter-should not divert one from care son as the young wife in Theas to the intrinsic merit of the Jealous Old Man. Her dignifiedwork. Let us see the classic lit- and honest performance of thiserature by all means, but not role somewhat moderated theworship all things ancient. wildness of what was going on city concluded that Jimmy him-SiUs performs well elsewhere on the stage. self was not, in legal language,The Cave of Salamanca and But in this connection, it is in- “fit to operate a public bar,” andThe Jealous Old Man, one and teresting to consider that the tone his license was revoked. Thistwo on the program, each ex- of high righteous indignation, al- meant that Jimmy could not andplored that fascinating old theme most tragic in its dignity, which never again would be able tocuckold and faithless wives. As she lent tc the part would have keep a tavern in Illinois,the cuckold in the first, Paul Sills been magnificent in the Duchess Never soy dieshowed considerable restraint and of Malfi, but gave rather bizarre Fortunately for us, Mr. Wilsonsubtlety and carried his part in mingling of effects to this low- refused to say die. He manageda manner which might well have down farce. to reopen the case of his bar-been emulated by his assistants Budding thespians tender with new and conclusivein the cast. Almost without exception, the evidence that the boy, althoughSills also had a certain flavor other members of the cast proved he may well have been in the Tap,ala the grand farcical tradition again that they are people with had never been served a drinkthere. The evidence was sufficientto lead the judge to reverse thedecision and the bartender wasdischarged on both counts.But mine host still did not haveFriday, Aug. 8 cS9nMreMmcltefellerCliape1' 7.:3° his license- still, armed with theStudent-Faculty -‘Ade Hour,” Ida Noyes Country Dancers, Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30 favorable decision of the COUrt,Hail, 3:30 p.m. P-m- . , . he could and did appeal to the%lKl»“US!iMeS Thursday, August 14 Illinois liquor control board to105, 4:00 p.m. "Industrial Location in Psychology Club, Social Science 122, 4:30 reVerse the ruling of the mavnrtt—i— Professor p.m. “some Problems in the Integra- . ° 1 , .tion of Psychology and Law." Harry in the matter. It is for this deci-LawVen’ Jr * Assoclate Pro*essor oi sion reinstating his license, thatCariiion Recital, Rockefeller Chapel, 7:30 Jimmy and the thirsty campusp.m. Mr. Marriott. has been waiting.Square Dancing, Ida Noyes Patio, 8:00- °0:30 p.m. Hope remainsFriday, August 14 In our interview with the pop-Friday Iiolic, International House, 9:00- ular tapster, he appeared hopeful12:00 p m. that tbe decision would be in hisSaturday, August 16 favor. That the state would over-Motion Picture: Walk a Crooked Mile, r-iilp thp ritv nn/i T-pturn hie 15Ida Noyes Garden, 8:30 p.m. lu e lelurn nl-s «Sunday, August 17 cense t0 hlm- But there are stl11 (from page 41emphatic coming from the old-timers at the convention. Indeed, theAshland auditorium, PP convention hall, must have been familiar tomany of them, for it was there that the Bull Moose was born in 1912These third party habituees, many of whom voted for Roosevelt in’12, Lafollette in '24, and even for Debs himself at one time or an¬other, feel that the hopes which they had laid with “the thirdparty” so many times before might this time become reality.1952 vote unpredictableEquating the PP’s convention attendance and delegation enthusi¬asm to its vote in November amounts to pure speculation. As far asactual tabulated votes, the PP, in all fairness to its efforts, stands avery minor chance of electing a president. Last election, it received1,116,390 votes, finishing a hair’s breadth ahead of J. Strom Thur¬mond’s Dixiecrat organization (exact figures for the totals of thetwo parties vary—these figures are the AP’s, quoted from the Infor¬mation Please Almanac). Despite their popular vote edge, the PPscored a goose-egg in the electoral college, while the States’ Rights’tally sheet shows 39 electoral votes.This, however, is not an opportune time for the PP to challengethe electoral system. Instead, it has got its job cut out in attemptingto beat its 1948 mark in popular presidential vote. Despite the factthat the PP will, in all likelihood, be on the ballot in Illinois thisyear, while it was off in ’48, the chances of its reaching a millionvotes are, at this time slim. On the other hand, were it, by miracle,cr dint of hard work, to reach a million and a half, or two millionvotes this year, the PP would keep itself in the class of “parties tobe reckoned with.”Victory in any case says BassThere are, then, two mutually agreeable types of victory possiblefor the PP. The total picture was expressed by Mrs. Charlotta A.Bass, vice presidential candidate, at a recent press conference. SaidMrs. Bass:“Whether we win or lose, we win!”Mrs. Bass points out her candidacy as an example of the win-in-any-event type victory. While she claims to be the first woman torun for vice-president, Mrs. Bass points to the increasing role ofwomen in the national political scene as partially a result of theefforts of the PP.Four parties consider or select women for VeepThe PP’s influence is to a great extent unmeasurable, but the factremains that four different parties had, at one time or another inthe last month, a woman in contention for the position of vice-presi¬dent of the US. The Socialist Workers party nominee was the firstto go; she resigned from her candidacy, and from the party as well.On the opposite end of the political spectrum, former congress-woman Claire Booth Luce let it be known that she intended to nomi¬nate Senator Margaret Chase Smith for the second spot on theRepublican ticket. Plans never materialized, for, according to aChicago Herald American story appearing several hours beforenominations began for vice-president, the idea had been droppedbecause, as Mrs. Luce said: “We will not present her name as acandidate if there is only one nominee. We do not wish to embarrassthe presidential nominee by creating a contest!”India in running“India” was the mystery candidate of the Democratic convention.A Democratic national committeewoman, whose last name is Ed¬wards, India, got as far as having her name placed in nomination,but then withdrew herself from the race in the interest of partyunity so that Sen. Sparkman could receive a unanimous okay asStevenson’s running unate.Thus, Mrs. Bass alone remains in the race.PP must reach people to winThe Progressive party claims to be based on the desires of thepeople, and its self-appointed task is therefore to seek the peopleand convince them that the party expresses a political reality tomatch their hopes. If it is to grow, the PP will have to become morethan a means for protest vote, so that it can say, as Dr. DuBois saidin his convention keynote address;“The flimsiest excuse for voting wrong is that the right cannotwin. The right has won in the past, and will win in the future. Itloses only when you let it lose.”eventsUnder - developed Areas.Florence. (Second of two lectures.)Student Union Round-Up: Square danc¬ing and folk music, Ida Noyes Hall,8:00-11:00 p.m.Friday Frolic, International House, 9:00-12:00 p.m.Saturday, Aug. 9Motion Picture: Talk of the Town, IdaNoyes Garden, 8:30 p.m.Sunday, August 10Bible Discussion Breakfast, ChapelHouse, 5810 Woodlawn Avenue, 9:00a.m. “The Significance of the Bible.”Summary Discussion. w _uu, ,Lutheran service, Hilton chapel, 10:00 „ , r many causes for uncertainty. Oft-a m Breakfast Discussion Group, Chapel « * ,University Religious Service, Rockefeller House, 9:00 a.m. the scandal caused by such aChapel, 11:00 a.m. The Reverend Jo- Religious Service, Dean Thompson. case alone might influence theseph Haroutunian, Professor of Sys- Rockefeller Chapel, 11:00 a.m.tematlc Theology, McCormick Theo- MondaV AuClUSt 18logical Seminary. (August 17, The HlOnguy, V, j . .Reverend John B. Thompson, Dean Motion Picture: Tight Little Island. Int.of the Chapel.) House, 45c, 8:30 p.m.Radio Broadcast, University of Chicago Tuesday, August 19 Air ConditionedSalt Creek SummerTheatre in HinsdaleMonday thru Saturday, Aug. 11-16Kim HunterAcademy Award Winnerin Pulitzer Prixe PloyTHEY KNEW WHATTHEY WANTEDMondoy thru Saturday, Aug. 18-23Dennis KingBernard Shaw's "Pygmalion"Phone Mission 1493for Reservation>♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ Local andLong Distance MovingStorage Facilities for Books,Record Cabinets, Trunks, orCarloads of FurniturePeterson FireproofWarehouse, Inc.1011 East Fifty-fifth StreetBUtterfield 8-6711DAVID L. SUTTON, PresidentRound Table, WMAQ and NBC, 12-30-1:00 p.m.Viennese Waltzing, International House,8 00-11:00 p.m.Monday, August 11Table Tennis: Informal tournament,Ida Noyes Hall, 7:00-10:00 p.m.Organ Recital, Rockefeller Chapel, 8:15p.m. Heinrich Fleischer, organist ofValparaiso University. Music by Bach,Lenel, Bruhns, and Reger.Motion Picture: Anzal (Indian film),International House, 8:00 p.m. .mienA ......A 1 T Fields and Edgar Bergen. InternationTuesday, August iz ai House, 45c, 8:30 p.m.Mathematics Club, Eckhart 206, 4:30 MondaV, September 8ntn "Uniqueness and Finiteness of niunuuj,nnerators Representing Interacting Movie: House of Seven Gables. Nathan-Quantum Fields." I. E. Segal. Assist- ial Hawthorne’s classic of New Eng-ant Professor of Mathematics.Carillon Recital, Rockefeller Chapel, 7:30p.m. Mr. Marriott. „ . , , -Wednesday, August 13 Monday, September 15i ure Series: "Research in the Hii- Movie: Harvey. The wonderful Pulitzer^ manities” (Division of the Human- Prize play that has become one of thetti&s? Social Science 122, 4::00 p.m. great motion pictures of our time,"A Review of the English Revolution starring James Stewart, Peggy Dow,(ifi40-60) ” Alan Simpson, Assistant and Josephine Hull.Professor of English History. House, 45c, 8:30 p.m. Board against a tavernkeeper.But there is hope and, indeedhope centered on this very day.When we went to press, JimmyMotion Picture: odd Man out. Soc. Sci. was of the opinion that he might122, 50c. 7:15 and 9:15 p.m get hig ruljng and his ljcense tbjsMonday, August Z5 - very Friday.Charlie Chaplin: A Film Festival, TheRink - The vagabond - The Adven- It is an understatement to sayturer - Easy Street. Int. House, 45c, we ajj hope he does. The reopen-ii ..V,, c 1 mg of Jimmy’s will be a galaYnU' JSPSZrl llonest event’ made SO- We exPect> by theMovie: You Cbh t Client «m Honest i „Man.” Starring Charlie McCarthy and onrush of Students from the fourMortimer Snerd, assisted by W. C. nujiptgps of the communifv on.nil Wrtcar -Reran. Datamation- ^ 170 E 5rth St U ^ °n■ iiiiiiiiiii.ituirland life, starring George Sanders,Vincent Price, and Margaret Lindsay.International House, 5c, 8:30 p.m.International £ TERESA DOLANDANCE SCHOOL1208 East 63rd StreetHours 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.s Private Lessons AnytimeClass in Jitterbug* Every Thursday at 7:30 p.m.Phone MUseum 4-9505VlllHIHIMHItflHIHmifflllllHIHHMHHmilllHIHfmilA CHICAGO MORTON SALES and SERVICE57Hi and Cottage GrovaT. WALLACHCert. Eng. Univ. ot London - E. License CAA - Wash., D. C.New Machines Used MachinesEnglish MechanicLucas-??? Magneto ServiceGeneral Repairs on AR Leading'English Motorcycles