*AAU attacks Communists’right to academic freedom"1 iie protection of academic freedom must be denied to members of the Com¬munist party and to those who adhere to the Soviet Union and its satellites/' theAssociation of American Universities announced to the press Tuesday. Suchmembership or adherence is "incompatible with loyalty, integrity, and independ¬ence,” continued the AAUreport.The statement, according to RMH hon edRobert M. Hutchins to speakh I s'Hazard! to E&Jft^fiorTin tViaUnited Stata^&vill be the sub¬ject of fourex-UC ChancellorHutchins next week. The spe¬cific topics of the talks will be:Industrialization, Monday; Spe¬cialization, Tuesday; Philoso¬phical Diversity, Wednesday;and Social and Political Con¬formity, Thursday.The lectures, sponsored bythe Charles R. Walgreen Foun¬dation, are free. They will beheld in Rockefeller Chapel at8 p.m. Hutchins left the Uni¬versity in 1951 to become As¬sociate Director of the multi¬million dollar Ford Foundation.NS A elections to he held soonican and Canadian people over an proof of their fitness to hold ainternational conspiracy which teaching position.”Bell tells UC civic groupInquisitors harm freedom Fellowship awardto honorMerriamThirty-three friends and col-would destroy all free institutions. Modem American universities,Must hove loyal teachers the report continued, are “united_ Loyal citizenship, integrity, and in loyalty to the ideal of learning,the New York Times, was the independence, as well as profes- to the moral code, to the country-, . „ rvf si°nai competence, should be re- and to its form of government.”’vvtn '. ' quired in the appointing and re- Free enterprise is as essential tothe AAU, an organization of Lni-. taining of faculty members, said intellectual as to economic pro-versity presidents which speaks the report. Cooperation should be gress. A university must, there¬on matters of common policy for extended to legislative investigat- fore, be hospitable to an infinite37 leading American and C anadian ing committees and abuses should variety of skills and viewpointsuniversities, including UC, Har- be met by appealing to public relying on open competitionvard, and Columbia. opinion rather than by non-coop- among them as the surest safe-The report, the Times said, was eration or defiance. The qualifi- guard of truth.”an attempt to explain the nature cations of professors who invoke Scholars must examine unpopular ideasand functions of the university the Fifth Amendment in refusing “The scholar’s mission requiresand at the same time to indicate to answer questions should be the study and examination of un-that the Association shares the “re-examined,” and the professors popular ideas, of ideas consid- Elections for delegates to the sixth National Congress of the“profound concern” of the Amer- should bear a “heavy burden of ered abhorrent and even danger- National Student Association (NSA) will be held April 23 andi,an and Canadian Deonle over an oroof of their fitness to hold a 0us. For just as in the case of 24 at polling places on campus, according to Roy John, actingdeadly diseases or the military chairman of the Elections and Rules Committee of‘Studentpotential of an enemy, it is only Government,by intense study and research The election will be held accord-that the nature and extent of the jng to the system of proportionaldanger can be understood and de-. representation (PR) establishedfenses against it perfected.” by SG last quarter. Under thisInsistence on “complete con- system, parties receive a numberformity” would do “infinite” of delegates to the Congress inharm to American freedom. Even proportion to the size of their leagues of the late f lotessor“Present investigations are not really after Communists in ™ the face of popular disapproval, vote. Five national delegates are Charles E. Merriam have pro¬education. The stated concern of one inquisitor with Commu- timidity should not lead a scholar to be elected, along with five na- posed a political science fellow-nist thinking is not so much to free the country from Commu- <° =Sa^TthlRP and Bll ship ln his honor’ Leonard D'nist thinking as to discourage independent thinking and ideas cpnsciencc particularly in Ms own have announced their intention of wh,te' chalrman of ,he f'!llowshlE’distasteful to the investigators,” said Laird Bell, chairman of field of study Facuity members running a full slate of candidates, fund committee announced,the University of Chicago Ijoard of trustees, to members of Who meet the requirements of Independents may file applica- Among the sponsors are Adlai E.the University’s Citizens Board at loyalty, competence, and “good tions for the ballot by obtaining Stevenson, Senator Paul H. Doug-a luncheon meeting March 18. servative. It must present a fair taste” are entitled to “all the pro- petition forms from the Elections lag Marshaii Field, Harold H.“This is but a short step to all picture of all material doctrines tection the full resources of the and Rules Committee in Reynolds ’thought control,” Bell added, in a controversial field,” declared university can provide.” Club 302.“Freedom of thought is the es- Bell. When Chancellor Kimpton wassence of democracy. Democracy “Universities are tough, how- approached for comment onassumes that each citizen is a free eVer. They have survived wars, changes in university policy thatman who will think for himself, rebellions, prosecutions and all this statement would entail, heIt proceeds by discussion between manner of disasters.. They will was not available. His secretaryindependent thinkers by debate continue to live if they are true told the MAROON that Kimpton,and the clash of opinion. to their principles in the pursuit having been ill when the reportSpeaking on “Legislative In- of truth and do not trim to popu- was sent for his approval, did notvestigations,” Bell stated that in- lar whims or truckle to dema- see it and has not yet had timevestigation have become the great gogs,” Bell said. to read it.political sport of the time, and areconducted in defiance of all therules of fair dealing.Investigations are like circuses“The hostility and suspicion,the bully-ragging tactics whichfrequently would be a disgrace toa police court, and the tremend¬ous apparatus of publicity of thecommittee hearing contribute toa circus atmosphere, the effectof which is devastating,” Bell said.“You can’t run down conspira¬tors by broadcasting under klieglights. The FBI does not publicizeits clues first and look for the mis¬creant later,” Bell noted, addingthat none of the safeguards whichare thrown about the ordinaryprosecution in the American sys¬tem of law exist in the legislativeprocedure, and that inevitably inthe public mind the accusationtends to produce an impressionof guilt.“These procedures, unfair tothe victim of an investigation,are also unfair to the universities.All universities in a free countryare opposed to the spread of com¬munism,” he said.“A university should not anddoes not teach any one doctrine.It has no right to proselytize for h h 1r, was put off until now. Howeverany doctrine, be it radical or. con- inS applies, and v\ ho w ere held facultv is now deciding onto the full program of 14 com- faculty ls now decidl"g ™ Four SG seats vacantFour Student Government seatsare vacant according to SG presi¬dent, Julius Lewis. Three vacanciesare from the Social Sciences di¬vision and one is from Humanities.Students wishing to fill theseseats should leave word at the SGbox in the Reynold's Club.University of Chicago, April 3, 1953 Swift, David Rockefeller, T. V.Smith, Clifton Utley, and QuincyWright.Another honor was bestowedupon Merriam when the politicalscience department establishedthe Charles E. Merriam award.This award and a prize of 200 dol¬lars will be presented to the UCstudent writihg the best essay onthe field of government.Charles E. Merriam, who diedJanuary 8, was a professor ofpolitical science from 1900 untilhis retirement in 1940, serving 17years as chairman of the depart¬ment. Merriam served in the Chi¬cago City Council and ran forMayor in 1911. Later he served onseveral executive agencies underHoover and Roosevelt.Other fellowship sponsors areWalter Johnson, Fred K. Hoehler,Jerome G. Kerwin, Harold D.Lasswell, Rabbi Louis Mann, Rt.Rev. Msgr. John O’Grady, andLeo Rosten.High school gradsruling affects over may drop courses;200 now in collegeA reduction in the BA requirements for over 200 high school graduates now in the College will shortly re¬sult from a resolution just passed by the College faculty. Only those graduates who entered since summer,1951, and were held to a program of either 13 or 14 comps for their BA's will be affected by the decision,however.Students to whom this rul- t0 Dean Ward’ since the decisionLouis MacNeiceto read poetry prehensives, may drop eithdr His¬tory or OMP, and one of the fol¬lowing courses: Hum 3, Soc 3, orNat Sci 3. Those who were heldLouis MacNeice, poet and critic, . „ „,.... , , t. , to 13 comps will choose betweenwill read and comment on some of ^his poems in one of the William dropping History or OMP. The Conee##jo|| tofuture policy on courses to beeliminated. John R. Davey, deanof students in the College, statedthat the decision would probablybe made before the SummerQuarter. LAK denies Time quoteon scrapping UC college plantime Along with a brief announce¬ment about the new BS degree,Time magazine of March 23 quot¬ed Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimp-Vaughn Moody lectures. He is ap- specific courses each student is Dean Ward stated that the orig- 1 . T.wf , 7 . p‘pearing Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. to drop will be chosen in confer- inal premise of the College was innovatienffor eleven%ears hoo”in Mandel Hall. ence with his advlser. that high school graduates would “"XTma" o her Jlleges andBorn in Belfast and educated at “fade away” and would not be a • ma... . . egOxford, MacNeice is considered Pl.«.«.»t. « serious problem.“We have to face haveht ^re comS ? noiMa member of the Auden-Spend- According to F. Champion the fact that the College did not jL_e 7*idl that terhaoser school of poetry. Delmore Ward, Dean of the College, when get built on the base of the pvprvhydv pl~p isn>t out steD »Schwartz, a fellow poet and critic, lhe placements were tightened, younger student... This (exem'p- Ch ,, Kimoton said Wed-described hts work as ‘adro.tiy commltted ourselves not t0 tion from two courses) is certam- JJaanca“°rnaive. ly a concession to time. 11 , ?MacNeice has taught at the make excessive impositions on I anything like that, and he had noUniversity of Birmingham (Eng.) high school graduates.” However, ^ .... idea where Time got the quote.and at the women’s college of the it was found that 37 per cent ofUniversity of London. His articles, graduate entrants in 1951-52 andboth critical and political, have 1952-53 had to take 13 or 14 comps,appeared in numerous periodicals The choice of terminal coursesand his books include “Blind Fire- from work beyond 12 courses,works,” “The Earth Compels” and Accordingly, the above action was“Plant and Phantom.” taken, releasing such studentsAdmission is without ticket and as those to be omitted was pure-Without charge. ly one of expediency, according Coffee availablenear MandelThe coffee shop located in Man-del corridor is now open eveningsfrom 8:30 to 11 p.m. Accordingto Commons authorities, it will re¬main open during these hours onlyif business improves. This Chicago office of Timesaid that Kimpton had made thestatement in an “informal state¬ment” to a staff member of Time.The statement was made duringa discussion of the new BS de¬gree a week before the Time issuewas published, according to aspokesman for Time. fl»Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 3, 1953"International living/' workcamps, available for UCersUC students who are beginning now to think in terms of a summer travel program would do well to examine the oppor¬tunities for educational travel offered by several internationally-minded groups. Outstanding among these organizationsare the Experiment in International Living, Inc., and the various work-camp groups, notably those sponsored by the WorldCouncil of Churches and the American Friends Service Committee.The Experiment in International Living, a non-profit organization founded in 1932 for the purpose of promoting inter¬national understanding among young people of different nations, offers a unique program whereby American students canlive in foreign families and get Foreign travelopportunitiesThis is the first article in a seriesto help inform UC students of theopportunities for travel, study, orliving outside of the United Statesduring the summer quarter.The concluding articles will op-pear in the MAROON during thenext few weeks.a much more intimate view ofa foreign people and their cul¬ture than is available to any tour¬ist. To quote from a leaflet putout by the group:‘Normally Experiment groups three emphasized the great edu¬cational value of the Experi¬ment program, and asserted itssuperiority to the more super¬ficial “tourist” way of seeing acountry. number of work camps each year,principally in Europe but also toan extent in Asia. The programat these camps generally includes6-7 hours of manual labor dailyThe Experiment sends groups except Sunday, with the rest ofof five men and five women live to 19 countries, including most the time taken up in group activ- _in the same town for the first West European and several South hies such as worship, preparing Arrow’s inquiring reporter if she thought the voting agefour weeks of the summer as American nations, as well as meals, discussion, Bible study, should be lowered to 18, replied:members of separate families, Israel and Yugoslavia. Some and excursions to points of inter-where there is a voung person of knowledge of the language of the est in the community. _ . T , .their own age and sex. In this country is generally a prerequi- While the camps-emphasize re- vote lor Eisenhowei and COU dn t very well vote for Steven-unique way each Experimenter is site with German, French, Span- ligious aspects, it is nevertheless son because 1 m a KepUDlican.confronted with the challenge of ish, and Italian groups. For other possible for students who are not Another girl commented announce<j jt will not accept abturning foreigners into friends, groups there is no language re- members of churches to partici- that lowering the voting age sentees’ excuses of fatigue andMaking real friends abroad de- quirement. Costs for one summer, pate in the program. The mini- ,, , , i# isjo-tw t. „ imands maturity, self-control and transportation included, amount mum cost of a World Council of wouldn t prevent »var because cauge ^ athe ability to express oneself— to $725 on the average; a few Churches work-camp program is ““ *s usually the younger boysbasic requirements for adaption $100 scholarships are offered, and about $500. Inquiries should be w^° favor conscription. The aver-to new and different customs and the UC College German staff has directed to Ecumenical Work “£e 18-year-old, she continued,national attitudes. Each group is announced the availability of ad- Camps, 110 E. 29th St., New York “cant wait to get into the army.”assigned a trained leader who ditional $100 stipends for quali- 16, N. Y. Frenchmen call off strike;Hunter against low voting ageA young lady at Hunter College, when asked by the 'Tunterrrow’s inquiring reporter if she thought the voting agelould be lowered to 18, replied:“I’m so glad it wasn’t last time because I didn’t want toserves as a friend and adviser fied College students who par-in helping Experimenters under- ticipate in groups to Austria orstand another culture.” Germany. Additional informationDuring the second half of the may be secured by writing to thesummer the American invites his Experiment in International Liv-(or her) student host to accom- ing, Putney, Vt., or contactingpany the group on a camping or Dave Hutchison in B-J.bicycling trip to other parts of The work-camp idea is basi-the country. With the help of his cally this: that engaging in afriend’s viewpoint, the Experi¬menter gains new perspective andlearns to see the country he isvisiting from, the inside. Singing,dancing, cooking and biking to¬gether, the Americans and their“foreign” hosts strengthen theirunderstanding of each other’sways and deepen their personalfriendships.Recently three UC “alumni”of the Experiment in Interna¬tional Living spoke before theHumboldt Club on their expe¬riences in Experiment groups;they were Dave Hutch»son (Bel¬fort, France, 1952) and CliveGray (Arendal, Norway, 1950),College students; and ErichSchmid, Austrian exchange stu¬dent in Soc Sci, who stayed withan American family last fall un¬der Experiment auspices. All common service project, in be¬half of either the Church or thecommunity, and working to¬gether toward a common goalprovides the best opportunityfor young people with differentnational, racial, social, andspiritual backgrounds to growto an understanding of one an¬other. In practice, this ideatakes the form of a camp ofanywhere from 15-100 people,largely students, who come to¬gether for a 4-8 week period,live in tents, and work at suchvaried tasks as rubble-clearing,brick-laying, road-building, etc.The World Council of Churches. 302 students of Moscow Univer¬sity were‘expelled during the lastacademic year because of insuf-The University of Cape Town achievements; 15 studentsand the Witwatersrand Univer- cou^ n°t *n *or state examina-sity at Johannesburg have been t'ons tor want of a satisfactorywarned by Prime Minister Malan knowledge of ' Marxism - Lenin-to cease admitting colored stu- lsrr1,dents. The state of racial non¬segregation still extant at these ^he student council at Emorytwo universities, was described as University, Ga., is trying to decidean “anomaly.” In the future, col- whether or not membership in theored students are to receive aca- National Student Association isdemic training at either special profitable for a southern univer-colleges or else, in separate de- sltY*partments at the universities al- NSA membership in the Southready existing. has fallen considerably because,as one Southern student said, theThe announced strike of French organization has passed “strongstudents was called off the night civil rights planks and other ultra-before the date which had been liberal measures to which manyset for its start, after the Minis- state-supported Southern univer-ter of Education had promised to sities object.”devote his attention to the prob- The Emory Wheel puts the di-lems of student restaurants and lemma this way: “Either to stayThe program consists ir. about student housing. The National in the national organization along7-8 hours of work per day, with Union of Students did, however, with the great universities of thefree time devoted to discussion, emphasize that the strike had North and East, which see farThe American Friends Serv¬ice Committee, which is theservice organization of the So¬ciety of Friends, sponsors workcampo in as many differentcountries as the World Council.The Committee endeavors tosecure participants for itscamps from a great variety ofnations, and sometimes has asmany as fifteen or twenty coun¬tries represented. The religiousaspect is not stressed in thesecamps as much as in WorldCouncil camps, and participantsgenerally have a wider varietyof religious backgrounds. ThusMohammedan, Hindu, and Jew¬ish students are often found liv¬ing and working together withChristian students in the cams.group games, sightseeing trips,and Friends’ silent meeting. Costsfor a summer program, within which all of the world’s major transportation included, amount n..t „ri.nl sfndnntv r»ia7mVProtestant denominations, as well to approximately $500. Inquiries 8 C S‘only been put off and that it was enough beyond the narrow cen¬to be held under all conditions, fines of their own region ... orshould the Ministry of Education to withdraw from the group andform a select circle of Southernuniversities which . . . can remainas several Orthodox churches, as- should be directed to the Chicago Two members of the hygiene in the cozy comfort of their littlesociated themselves at a 1948 con- Regional Office, AFSC, 19 So. department at Harvard have fireside comer and perpetuate theference in Rotterdam, sponsors a Wells St. warned students that the use of petty prejudices of their ownCambridge life leisurely, specializedSpring has come to England, and Nature, as is her wont, has truly outdone herself. InCambridge the crocuses have been in abundance for weeks and the lawns, many of whichare more than 700 years old, are already a rich, thick green. A stroll down the Backs on awarm afternoon tells one quickly of the effect the weather is having on the Cambridge un¬dergrad. He is carelessly punting down the Cam, dozing on the grass after a vain attemptto study, playing chess with a friend, or perhaps even being tossed playfully into the not tooluxuriant river. No-Doz is partially responsiblefor the nervous collapse of manystudents around exam time. Aprofessor termed the taking ofthe pills “self inflicted injury.”He added, "If a fellow can’t dohis work without resort to suchdrugs I would say he doesn’tbelong in school.” Harvard hasHELEN PANARETOS region.When the question of NSAmembership came up in the fallquarter, the Emory Council votedeight to seven to stay in. Opposi¬tion to membership hasn't dimin¬ished, however, and the Wheel isasking the Council for “somedefinitive action on the matter.”Cambridge University isquite unlike any university inAmerica. To begin with, it is di¬vided into about 22 colleges, eachof which has its own faculty,buildings, and regulations. Lec¬tures for most subjects are givenin University buildings by mem¬bers of the University staff. (Eachlecturer is, however, a memoer ofthe faculty of one of the colleges.)Specialization intenseThe Cambridge BA degree inmost subjects covers about athird again as much as a UC MAin the same field. Unfortunatelythese BA courses are strictly acontinuation of the specializationthat began for most students inhigh school when they were 16.The average student here knowshis subject, and that is all. Oncea mathematician has covered theusual topics of women and sports,he becomes extremely difficult totalk to. He has studied no phil¬osophy, read very few of the“Great Books,” and furthermorehas not the slightest interest inany subject but his own. It seemsto be a great shame that the Eng¬lish student must decide upon hisvocation before he is a junior inhigh school; for this often resultsin discontent among students whochange courses after a year ordrop out altogether as unable to“make the grade,” both of whichoccur frequently.In the undergraduates’ extra¬curricular life, sports play an im¬portant part. Each college fieldsits own teams in track, tennis, Letter from EnglandThis letter was written by PhilipWyatt, UC college graduate nowstudying physics at CambridgeUniversity.rugby, soccer, cricket, boating,hockey, lacrosse, ping-pong, bad¬minton, and squash. The univer¬sity counterpart of these teams isselected from the best of all thecolleges. For men who don’t maketheir college “first” team, thereare always the seconds, thirds, oreven fourths, fifths, and sixths.Over 90 per cent of the studentstake part in a college athletic pro¬gram.Newspaper non-politicalAnother facet of extra-curricu¬lar life is the weekly studentnewspaper, VARSITY—and it isa unique paper, indeed, for allpolitics are kept out of it, andeditorials, instead of discussingthe latest Red scare in Washing¬ton, stick strictly to University matters such as “who pouredwater on the Earl of Beckive’shead last week?” or “is it fair forwomen to bathe in the men’s col¬leges?” The book reviews steerclear of items like “I Was Stalin’sWet Nurse,” and focus on playsby Christopher Fry or more uni¬versal topics. Humor is an impor¬tant factor in the paper’s layout,and students to whom I haveshown the MAROON consider itshockingly dry and political. Per"haps some of the VARSITY’spranks, such as a crossword puz¬zle with the statement “answeron page 14, clues next week,” arerather silly, yet a comment like“I hear there’ll be a lot of coro¬ners at the Fornication” is appre¬ciated by the Dons whose businessit is to keep the paper clean.Of the 7,000 undergraduate stu¬dents at Cambridge, more than95 per cent receive scholarshipaid of one type or another. This isa striking fact when one realizes(from page 4) Thesis & General Typing Mimeographing5656 S. Kenwood!PL 2-9270Documentary CLUNY BROWNDirected by Ernst Lubitsch, starring CharlesBoyer and Jennifer Jones. A breezy satireconcerning on unclass-conscious plumber'sniece and an unmoral professor. Directedby the master of the sophisticated filmcomedy.Also:CORROBOREE—An Australian film based onthe traditional dance forms of the AustralianFilm Group aborigines.Tuesday, April 7, Social Science 122; Adm. $.50INTERNATIONAL HOUSE FILMSPresentApril 6 — OPEN CITY — Italian — Admission 55c — RobertoRosselini's greot postwar reolistic drama, starring Anna Magnani andAldo Fobrizi os the priest who sided with the resistance ogainst theNozi occupation. Colled the best film of the year by the New Yorkfilm critics.INTERNATIONAL HOUSEAUDITORIUM— — CLARK AT NORTHNTS CHARLTON HESTON INALSO JVLIVS GESARBy WILLIAM SHAKESPEAREA remarkable film mad* in Chicajo "mor* cinematic than LaurtnctOlivier’i 'Henry V' end Hamlet." "A Setirfyin* Shekerp**'**"'Ceesar' of deep intensity."The Color Maji* of NORMAN McLAREN in"BEGONE DULL CARE" AND"A GRANDMA MOSES"Short showinj her work in KodacolorPage 3April 3, 1953 THE CHICAGO MAROONSQ studies discriminationThe SG Commission on the University Neighborhood dur- I v? U C JThe SG Commission on the University Neighborhood durmg the interim investigated the problems of possible commu¬nity reactions to he proposed change in the acceptance ofdiscriminatory listings in the Housing Bureau. It sought anunderstanding of the attitudes in the community now and,from the ethnic and geographic leaders, the manner in whichthese attitudes might be af- ———^ „fected by a new University . . . .. , ,.HU J J and suggested that his orgamza-policy statement. tion urge Negro landlords in the1’he t ommission contacted all area to discontjnue any discrim-of those persons who had placed ., . ... , . , ,vacancies on files with the Uni- inatory pollcies whlch they migh*versity on March 18, 1953. It harbor. Sidney Williams, Execu-learned that 80 per cent of the tiv: Secretary of the Chicagoprivate and 54 per cent of the Urban League, felt that the whitecommercial listings were not community would be unaffectedavailable to Negro students. Of by the proposed change and thatthose who refused rooms to Ne- the University would have clearlygroes, however, the great major- demonstrated its belief in equal¬ity explained that they would like- ity of opportunity had it adoptedto, personally, but could not be- SG’s policy. He was convinced ofcause of community pressures, the positive effects of such an an-“This seemed to make more rele- nouncement to the community,vant the argument that the Uni- Only William Bradbury, Execu-versity take a position of moral tive Secretary of the Committeeleadership in the neighborhood,” on Education, Training and Re-“ said Frank Kirk, chairman of the search Relations, and Julian LeviSG Civil Liberties Committee.Leaders of intergroup and com of the South East Chicago Com¬mission expressed the possibil-munity organizations for an ap- ities of ill community reactions,praisal of what a changed Univer- Bradbury explained that he doubt-sity Housing Bureau policy might ed it would make much differencemean to the area. James Cassels, to the total area, and that hechairman of the Housing Oppor- agreed with the Civil Libertiestunities Program of the American Committee proposal in the area ofFriends Service Committee, ex- commercial listings. Levi agreedpressed a desire that the Univer- with the desire of the Studentsity agree to the Student Govern- Government but felt that the reac-ment proposal. Samuel Freifeld, tion by the community, the con-Housing Chairman of the Council tribution this statement couldAgainst Racial and Religious Dis- make to realtors and racists incrimination in Chicago, and of- driving out a part of the popula-ficials (Eleanor Dungan, Douglas tion, would far outweigh the mor-Turner, and David McNamara > of al and educative advantages. Hethe Commission on Human Rela- hoped that some manner or state-tions further expressed their ment could be suggested to theagreement with the SG position University Administration whichand their feelings that the total would not excite the fears andcommunity would benefit more propagandists already too influ-by this positive step than it could ential in the neighborhood,lose. All of these persons promisedGeorge Leighton, president of to attend a meeting with Deanthe Chicago Branch of the Na- Strozier on Wednesday afternoon,tional Association for the Ad- Only McNamara, Williams, andvancement of Colored People, con- Bradbury attended. Dr. Pierce Butler, 66, professoremeritus of bibliographical his¬tory in the UC graduate libraryschool, died Saturday of injuriesreceived in an automobile acci¬dent near Burlington, North Caro¬lina.Dr. Butler was associated withthe University from 1931 until1951 when he retired. He was avisiting professor in the Univer¬sity of North Carolina schooLoflibrary science this quarter. Dr.Butler wrote several works in¬cluding “Checklist of 15th Cen¬tury Books,” and the “Origin ofPrinting in Europe.”Surviving are his widow, RuthLapham Butler, curator of theAyer collection of the Newberrylibrary, and one brother.SU loses TV setThe Student Union televisionset was stolen from Ida NoyesHall Wednesday night. Apparent¬ly the thieves made off with theset down the fire escape on theKimbark side of the building. Thetheft took place between 9:50 and10:20 p.m.Both campus and Hyde Parkpolice have been called in, but sofar no clues have been uncovered. UC YR members dissent1Nat. Andelson DecisionUC members made up three of the four votes dissentingfrom a resolution which claims that the motives of the Uni¬versity in not admitting Robert Andelson to the MA can¬didacy in the Divinity School were entirely political. Theresolution, passed by the annual convention of the MidwestFederation of College Young Republican Clubs, was describedby the chairman of the con- — ~ :ventions Arrangements Com- ..0<K) help ,hemittee as the most important “If in 20 years the Republicanaction taken by the delegates. Party is going to be controlled byThe convention was held at In- the type of leaders present atdiana University over March 26, the convention, God help the Re-27, and 28, with 86 delegates publican party and the country,”representing six states and more Steele said, when asked for hisopinion of the convention as awhole. The YR president said thatThree ol the five man UC group th? Chicag° ?,ei,ehgat,‘on wa?, cal,'f. . . . .. ^ 6 subversive off the floor after thevoted against the resolution, the . mpmbprs of uc delegationfourth vote being provided by a , e members o£ uc delegation, , . . u i refused to vote for an unqualifieddelegate from another school. , . .. ... 1 r ~i . . - .. .in approval to the activities of Sena-de°leg? rohpC„kTaTaL°. tiemso «»» a"« McCarthy anddelegation, spoke against tne reso Representative Veide, and for “alution in a delegation chairmen s * . . . , , ’ .. „6 very stringent loyalty oath.than tenties. colleges and universi-Andelson biased-delegate “It is foolish for a man to claimthat his side is entirely right.“Andelson’s writings concern- The nation is going into a sorrying the University of Chicago are state if a handful of Communistsa collection of half-truths, distor- Can cause it to scyap the Bill oltions, and biased omissions,” Rights,” Steele said.Jimmy's ad contestedThe MAROON and Jimmy (thefont of fifty-fifth street) announc¬es that the weekly Jimmy's ad willbe subject to the wit of the Uni¬versity at large. That is to say,there shall be a weekly contestheld to determine the content ofthe advertisement. The contest isopen to students of legal age whofeel themselves capable of short,succinct, and witty statements.The contest deadline is Wednes¬day noon of the week of issue. Theentries will be judged by Jimmyhimself and by a panel of MA¬ROON experts. The struggle shallyield to the winner a liberal har¬vest of Berghoff and in the futurea carton of cigarettes. Steele said. “It would be necessarythat all delegates read Andelson’sstories concerning the Univer- Loyalty oath plank passedThe loyalty oath plank of theplatform adopted by the conven-sity, and then that the Chicago tion states that no man who is adelegation review point by point member of any subversive or-the inaccuracies contained in ganization so called by either thethem, for the convention to have House Committee or by Senatoran adequate background on jenner should be allowed the usewhich they could form an intel- 0f the state universities facilities,ligent opinion,” he pointed out. Steele also attacked the conven-According to Steele, the Chicago tion’s stand in leaving FEPCdelegation has influenced 12 dele- legislation entirely to the state,gates so that they abstained in “As long as men of the breedthe vote. Steele also stressed the of James Byrnes and Herman Tal-fact that several sympathetic madge infest the South, nothingdelegates had already left the constructive can be done aboutconvention by the time the reso- civil rights,” he said.Kimpton tells business leadersAndelson's MA degree bid deferred UC needs business friendsby Clive GrayBob Andelson, UC student in the divinity school, who recently published an attack onthe University for coddling alleged subversive activities, figured in the city news last week¬end. In a Chicago Tribune article last Friday Andelson was quoted as accusing the Uni¬versity of holding up his Master’s degree because of the article he wrote in the AmericanStudent, official publication of Students for America. He said the action was inconsistentwith the University’s purported policy of academic freedom. Andelson’s article, entitled“U of C Springboard ForKremlin’s Propaganda,"” washandled in a Feb. 13 MAROONfeature. Sun-Times, was the fact that An- affair. He said only one of thedelson had received a “D” in the committee members had failed tobasic course in religion, as well as read either the original article byAndelson or the quotes from itwhich appeared in the MAROON.Andelson told the MAROON ?eve,al' h,e ,addad' ,had read *"th'Loomer stated that the members,t two “incompletes” in courses reBoth the Tribune item, as well Iated to ehtcis his maior field.as an article which appeared Sat¬urday in the Sun-Times, stated . that »since the Dubiicjtv “ “““ l*lcthat the faculty MA-PhD commit- Parted they (the committed had satisfied themselves individu-tee of the federated theological '^started, they une committee) ally as tQ the irresponsibility offaculty had deferred action on academic Scord looked ratheJ data-gathering and interpretationAndelson’s petition for a degree. my aca ., , . f in the article. The meeting, heThe articles quoted Dean Bernard P°or’ .u V1. f ^ said, centered around a “discus-Loomer of the divinity school as |?ha° gcTthat the committee was sion of three points: 1} the prob'saying that the faculty commit- ctxargea tnat tne commmee was lem o£ the inadequacy of evidencetee based its action on both aca- ^^mete” Trades as proof of regarding Andelson’s workingdemic grounds and considerations inc?mp g p . competence in the field of ethics;related .0 Andelson's article. & ***?&£■ 21 “£ **Illustrative of the academic son sajd bjs WOrk in general hadreasons for the committee’s ac- rated a higher-than-average “B—.”tion. said Loomer according to the Furthermore, he added, DeanLoomer had admitted that theacademic aspect played a rela¬tively minor role in the commit¬tee’s deliberations. Education for business can succeed only on the quality ofits product, Lawrence A. Kimpton, UC Chancellor, told 1,000business leaders at the one-day management conference lastSaturday. The conference was sponsored by the University’sSchool of Business and the Executive Program Club.Kimpton declared, “A university needs friends in the busi¬ness community more than it a ■! ■ever has before, and industry also I 2a ▼ ©IShas its st&ke in education.” He The Association of Interns andadded, “We must train the busi- Medical Students is now organiz-ness leaders of the future and do inK hs annual low-cost summerit with the same high standards European travel program. Thisprogram, first begun seven yearswhich a university must impose ag0j provjdes inexpensive air andon any scholarly or professional sea transportation to Europe;education.” optional tours of various medicalThe chancellor also praised the centers have been arranged. This. „ . „ . „ service is designed primarily forBusiness Schools unique Execu- medical studeiftg an‘d workers intive Program, which commemo- allied sciences,rated its tenth anniversary at theconference.tegrity in relation to a student’srecommendability for a position spoke,of religious leadership; and 3) thepractical wisdom of deciding neg¬atively on Andelson’s petition inthe atmosphere of the present cul¬tural crisis.” All people interested should im¬mediately leave their names andJohn Jeuck, newly appointed addresses with AIMS, Box 13,dean of the Business School, also Billings Hospital InformationDesk; campus mail can be used.. .. ., Loomer emphasized that theWith regard to the considers- commlttee ha£ ^en concernedtions involving his article, Andel¬son stated the dean admitted to Students, execs meetStudents interested in Adver- H. Selz, each heads of their ownprimarily with its responsibilityu- * *1, ... _ in regard to point No. 2. He saidhim that the committee neither (he *embws1' o£ the committeediscussed the article in detail, norbrought up any specific objec¬tions to it. He charged that no onehas been able to point out andprove any specific instances of ir¬responsibility in his approach.Dean Loomer gave the MA¬ROON a different story of the felt unanimously that they wouldbe abdicating this responsibilityif they abstained in general frommaking judgments about the stu-see "Andelson," page 7A chess set, hand-carved froir genuine elephant ivoryby one of Japan's foremost artists, will be sold for$1.00 (one dollar). Details of the sale may be obtainedat the Student Mimeograph Service, Reynolds Clubbasement. The chess set will be on view Monday,Tuesday, and Wednesday, April 6, 7, 8. CANOE TRIPSInto Quetico—Superior WildernessOnly $4.85 to $5.40 per personper dayFor Free information, writeCanoe Country OutfittersBill Rom, Box C Ely, MinnesotaSHOE REPAIRSubstantial Discountsto Students“IT MUST BE DONE RIGHT"HOLLIDAY'S1407 East 61st Street(at Dorchester Ave.)Phone Normal 7-8717Two blocks from Inti. HouseWbile-U-Wait or One-Day Service tising and Public Relations willget their chance to meet with,and talk to men in the field at avocational “Bull Session” beingpresented by the student alumnicommittee this Wednesday from4:30 to 5:30 p.m. at the AlumniHouse, 5733 University.Meeting students across thecoffee cups will be advertisingmen Fairfax M. Cone of Foote,Cone, and Belding (handling suchdiverse products as Kleenex andChanel No. 5) and Earle Ludginof Earle Ludgin and Company(handling products ranging fromBendix wash machines to Stop-pette) and public relations menJulian J. Jackson and LawrenceWHERE THE UofCMEETS TO EATGefeLrfi’4FINE FOOD1 32 1 East 57th Street companies. Admission is by ticketonly and to keep it informal thesession will be limited to twentypeople.This “Vbcational Bull Session”is the first of a series of such in¬formal meetings to be sponsoredby the Student-Alumni Commit¬tee. They will cover any vocationin which the student body showsconcrete interest and will haveoutstanding people from thesevocations to talk to students. The“Bull Sessions” have been pri¬marily designed to give studentsanswers to the questions thatplague a student in planning hiscareer but which can only be an¬swered by people in the field.The second “Bull Session” inthe series will be the followingWednesday on the subject of poli¬tics. Guests will be Aldermen Rob¬ert Merriam, Archibald Carey,and Herbert Geisler, all membersof the Chicago City Council’s so*called “economy bloc.”Page 4 THE CHICAGO MAROONLatest on bachelors degreesby Joan BrennardAll pending actions concerning changes in bachelors’ de¬grees are now being considered by a sub-committee of theCouncil of the Senate, which expects to complete its work inabout three weeks, according to Emery Filbey, vice-presidentof the University and chairman of the sub-committee. TheCouncil, whose membership is elected from the Faculty Sen¬ate, is the supreme ruling $25 contest extendedThe Foculty-Groduote for Peaceannounces that the deadline forits essay contest on "A PeacefulSolution in Korea" hos been ex¬tended to April 15. Rules for en¬try may be found on the bulletinboard announcements.body in academic matters atthe University.This sub committee was set upto consider the whole problem ofbachelors’ degrees at UC and toreport its findings to the Council,which must approve all proposalsfor new bachelors’ degrees. Thereport will probably recommendwhether or not *every bachelors’degree must be awarded jointlyby the College and a division, orwhether a division may award itsown four-year bachelors’ degree.It will also deal, explicitly or im¬plicitly, with the role and func¬tion of general education at thisUniversity.State different proposalsParticular faculty statementsnow before the sub committee forconsiderations are the following:1) The physical sciences fac¬ulty’s proposal for a BS degree tobe awarded by the Phy Sci facultyto high school graduates afterfour years of work, which wouldconsist of "an approximatelyequal balance” between special¬ized courses and general educa¬tion. The statement indicated thatin some cases specialized workwould start in the first year ofthe the program, and that divi¬sional courses might be substi¬tuted for College courses in thesame subject.2) A statement by the Collegefaculty stating those things itfelt essential to its curriculumand those aspects about whichthey might be willing to negoti¬ate. The statement indicated thatthe essentials were that the Col¬lege must be able to grant the BAdegree, and that the Collegeshould be a full partner in thegranting of other bachelors’ de¬grees. The College might be will¬ing to discuss with the divisionssuch alterations as special "plus”sections in specialized work,creating of majors for Collegestudents, giving some divisionalwork college credit, and place¬ment tests for College graduatesentering the divisions.3) The Humanities division rec¬ommendation that conventionalfour-year bachelors’ degrees begiven by the University. (MA¬ROON, March 13, page 2.)see "Degrees," page 6India dancersgive show tonightDilip Kumar Roy and IndiraDevi, a singer-dancer twosome ofnight at International House atIndia, will present a recital to-8 p.m. under the sponsorship ofthe UC India Association.Roy is one of the few musiciansof the world who blend Orientaland Western music. His musicalprograms encompass five lan¬guages—Hindu, Bengali, English,French, and German. Miss Devi isan exponent of the "bhajan”dances of India.The pair is on a round-the-worldtour to raise money for the “Ash¬ram” funds for the destitute inIndia. Admission is 60 cents andall proceeds go to these funds. Strozier, SQ representativesdiscuss housing file at meetingby Mortin OronsThe SG Commission on the University and the Communityheld a meeting Wednesday in Dean Robert M. Strozier’s ante¬room. The Commission expected to discuss the Universitydiscriminatory housing file; the dean pleaded misunderstand¬ing of the nature of the meeting, explaining that he thoughtthe subject to be discussed was the community problem. Twonon-University executives con- 3 .. ... „ rpprnpd with nrnblpms f his position on the file ; personal-cernea witn pi 0Diems 01 jy he sdid ..be Wjsbed the Uni-discrimination, housing, and versity would accept the SG posi-community relations, Sidney Wil- tion » He said that private non-liams, Executive Secretary of the commercial housing was a dif-Urban League, and Dave McNa- ferent sort of prob]em.mara of the Committee on . t .. .. .. .Human Relations, were present n *r_roc,° uni ,scusseat the meeting. Professor Wil- . Discussion then turned to anliam Bradbury, Executive Secre- inter racial building unit beingtary of an organization concerned erected on 60th and Langley. V\ ll-with education and race relations banns brought the subject back toattended as did Ralph Fertig statement *bat(SRP), chairman of the SG Com- the University was in a prestigemission, Frank Kirk (SRP), Position in the community. HeChairman of the SG Civil Liber- argued that like management inties Committee, Larry Lichten- race Nation situations, the Urn-stein (ISL), Civil Liberties Com- yersity was m a position to de-mittee representative, and Martin *,ne terms. Strozier said heOrans of the MAROON. thought the situations were notFertig opened the meeting by ^QranT asked for concrete sug-stating that the question to be estions ol a program with re-discussed was the role of the Uni- |ard to discrimination whichversity in the community and the * ould not entail the detrimental*ousl”g hlet■ ?e effects feared by the University,added that the function of the The Dean lied «a ood job wasmeetmg was clarification, not done with c stickers»to urge. Strozier then advanced p#|i *fotement neededthe argument that it was not his Kirk said «a c]ear policy state.function as Dean to receive advice ment against discrimination” byfrom outside sources or defend the University was needed. Hebefore them University policy on mentioned former discriminatorythe housing file. practices of the University as hav-Asks for explanation jng left the University positionWilliams broke a twenty second unclear to the community,silence by asking for an explana- The University’s opposition totion of the University’s reluctance eliminating its discriminatory list-to accept the SG stand against ings has been officially defendedthe file. The Dean replied, “I on the grounds that it would “stepwon’t go into it.” He commented on the toes” of landlords who arethat the Administration’s posi- needed in the program againsttion has been made clear on the subdivision. Orans argued thatsubject. At this point in the meet- there must be a high correlationing the Dean was called out of between discriminatory landlordsthe room. In the Dean’s absence and landlords that are againstBradbury asked why SG felt so subdivision for the University"hamstrung” about this particu- position to be tenable. He addedlar impasse and suggested alter- that such a policy of “catering tonative activities. Fertig and Kirk discriminatory landlords” made itexplained that this problem re- impossible to act constructively infleeted basically the relation ofthe University to the community.Bradbury stated, as the Deanre-entered that he “saw little pur¬pose on this occasion of repeatingAllen to speakDr. J. G. Allen, professor ofsurgery in the UC medical school,will be the featured speaker atthe Pre-med club’s first meetingof the quarter Monday at 4 p.m.in Abbott 101. Dr. Allen’s topic is“The Career and Life of a Sur¬geon.” see "Housing File," poge 6Chicago GreenwoodCurtain CleandrsCurtains, Drapes, Blankets,Spreads, Table Linens, Slip Coversand Banquet Cloths1032 E. 55TH ST. COUNSELORS—Summer CampsMen and Women Nineteen Years up.Salary and living, land sports, water¬front, music, nature, other oppor^tunities.CHICAGO CAMPING ASSOCIATIONMandel BrothersChicago 3 ECONOMY EUROPEANTRAVEL PROGRAMS1 f Countries, 41 doy>. June1 7-August 17. Fly both ways.A" 5860expenses www4slr about student rate.2 1 Countries. 35 days. Sept.IS-October IS. Boat bothways. All SAQRexpanses3 One Semester. 5'/i months.Live and study in ViennaTravel in 9 countries. AMespenses and SQQRtuition. 5103Please writ* to:Clarence E. Gieie. Director Institute ofEuropean Studies Incorporated. Not lorProfit. 7325 South Maryland Ave. Chi-caqo If, Illinois., % * , , VCARMEN'SUSED FURNITUREWe Buy and Sell AnythingDesks, Typewriters, LampsMoving and Light Hauling1127 E. 55th MU 4-90031116 E. 63rd PL 2-90161547 E. 63rd NO 7-9773 \ THE ANNUALWM. ELLERY CHANNING LECTURESThe New Conservatisms — A CritiqueApril 14 LITERARYThe Mad Flight—Charles BellApril 16 RELIGIOUSThe So-Called Neo-orthodoxy—Wilhelm PauckApril 17 JURISTICOld Roads Forward—Karl LlewellynApril 20 ECONOMICConservatism: Political-Economic—Herman FineiOriental Institute — James Breasted HollOpen to the Public 8:00 P.M.Sonsored by Chonning Club First Unitarian Churchmmmmmmrn -*<*«**< wmmmrn*/ April 3, 1953Stozier, Probst: shieldforeign info from politicsIfTwo UC officials testified recently before the Senate Sub¬committee on Overseas Information Programs. Robert M.Strozier, Dean of Students, advised the Committee on educa¬tional exchange programs, while George Probst, Director ofthe UC Round Table, evaluated the voice of America pro¬grams.The Subcommittee has formany months been reviewingthe operations of the Inter¬national Information Association,which directs Voice of Americaand many government projects.Both Strozier and Probst main¬tained that the activities of theIIA should be kept free of politi¬cal pressures. Strozier stated inhis testimony on March 30, thatthe objectives of the exchangeprogram “were meant to include,and should include somethingmore than the combatting of anti-American propaganda, or the ex¬ploitation of transient politicaland strategic situations.”The IIA “has done a very com¬mendable job,” he said; however,it is primarily an “educationalendeavor,” and has suffered dis¬tortion due to certain conditionsimposed upon it. Some of the con¬ditions he cited wrere competitionwith certain other governmentaland private agencies, which hasled to duplication of effort; anemphasis upon quantity of activ¬ity rather than quality; the intru¬sion of certain political objectivesthat have caused distortions ofpolicy; and budgetary problems.In conclusion Strozier advisedthat control of all the exchangeprograms be centralized; thatthey be more educational; andthat they receive more money tocarry out their projects.Probst in his testimony onMarch 27, stated, “The stance, orposture, of the ‘Voice of America’is a commercial salesmanshipframework that puts us into acompetitive shouting contest withthe Kremlin. . . . We are engagedin salesmanship rather thanfriendship. We do not achieve credibility. Our friends and po¬tential friends do not appreciatebeing the target of Americanpsychological warfare.”After pointing out the lack of in¬terest of European radio officialsin using “Voice of America” pro¬grams, he offered suggestions fora radical revision of the wholeproject. He recommended that a“Listening America” operation t*coupled with the “Voice of Amer¬ica.” “One of the things the Rus¬sians do not ever do is to giveany of the peoples of WesternEurope a chance to present theirthoughts and expressions of theircultural achievements to the peo¬ple inside Russia.”Probst illustrated the possibili¬ties of such a program by citingthe success of the National Asso¬ciation of Educational Broadcast¬ers which has recently set up sucha project. Radio broadcasters inItaly and France exchange educa¬tional and cultural programs withthe NAEB. This helps to gratify“an interest and eagerness tolearn about America which the‘Voice of America’ does notsatisfy.”In his recommendations Probstadvised that “Voice of America’’work more closely with educa¬tional and cultural institutions inorder to achieve'credibility. Hestrongly urged that present poli¬cies of using the project for psy¬chological warfare be repealed,and that a “two-way conversa¬tion” between American and Eu¬ropean cultures be substituted intheir place.Probst is the only person whohas taken a position against usingthe program for psychologicalwarfare.EASTER GIFT SUGGESTIONSay your Easter Greetingswith a gift of MRS. SNYDER'SHOME MADE CANDIES1-Lb. Fresh Packed AssortmentIn Special Easter Wrappings15$1GRADUATE ENGINEERSAn invitation to go places• inAERONAUTICAL • MECHANICAL • ELECTRONICSTRUCTURAL - PRODUCTIONENGINEERINGA secure future, exceptional opportunities foradvancement, and an excellent starting salary await you atFaikchild, if you are one of the men we are looking for.We have openings right now for qualified engineers anddesigners in all phases of aircraft engineering; we needtop-notch men to help ns in our long-range militaryprogram: turning out the famous C-119 Flying Boxcarsand other projects for the U. S. Air Force.Fai>chiu> provides paid vacations and liberal health andlife insurance coverage. We work a 5-day, 40-hour weekas a base. Premium is paid when longer work week isscheduled.mm (MINI MS MiftANE COMMOTIONFairchildHAOIRSTOWN. MARYLANDApril 3, 1953 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5Threats to freedom harm mind: Wright Teachers rights defended;“Threats of war and threats to freedom are hostile to the life of the mind which our A ^ • ■ ^rfivitincprofession regards as the fruit and test of civilization,” Quincy Wright, UC professor of in- WIQGF1S 3CTIY11 IGSternational law, told the 39th annual meetingof the American Association of University , , , . . ,. A„_ , tj. • . _ . . With only one negative vote and two abstentions, the All-Professors. His speech, opening the conference last Thursday, reflected concern with the Campus Civil Liberties Committee, Wednesday evening,ever-increasir\a number of reports of alleged academic freedom violations reaching the AAUP. passed a detailed statement authored by George KaufmanOn the problems of war and threats to freedom, Wright stated that “We realize that these upholding the right of teachers not to be disqualified solelytwo threats are related to oneanother. High internationaltensions tend to convert allstates into garrison prisonstates and garrison prison statestend to be aggressive and to aug¬ment international tensions.“We want to maintain consti¬tutional liberties, freedom ofopinion, freedom of initiative, dueprocess of law, and equal protec¬tion of the laws for ourselves andfor everyone else. We deplorethe threats to these libertieswhether they come from com¬munists or from congr~":onalcommittees.Alarm suppresses liberties“We realize, however,” Wrightcontinued, “that a public opin¬ion alarmed by the destructivepower of atomic bombs, by theaggressions and threats of Krem¬lin imperialism, and by the ad¬vances of communist ideology,inclines to subordinate constitu¬ tional liberties to what are deem¬ed defense necessities.“We can recall other times andplaces in man’s history where thesudden emergence of new ideas,new weapons, and new conquestsinduced hysteria, demogoguery,-superstition, and witch hunts.Universities must be in front line“In this situation, our organi¬zation has a task of unusual im¬portance. If balance cannot bemaintained in universities, it isnot to be expected anywhere. Itis up to us to see the world clear¬ly and to see it whole, to formu¬late the relations between inter¬national tensions and individualfreedoms, to inform the rising on Academic Freedom and Tenurereceived 55 new cases of allegedviolations of academic freedom inm r> • .last year; and according to Dr. ACCLC against theRalph Himstead, the Associa- Broyles Bills, read the state-tion’s general secretary, a flood ment she presented before thefor invoking the Fifth Amendment at legislative inquiries orfor being members of the Communist party.Caroline Lee, who testifiedof reported violations since thebeginning of this year will prob¬ably increase the 1953 figure sub¬stantially.Himstead gives reportMost of the recent charges,Himstead told the meeting, stemfrom Congressional investigationsinto subversive influences in edu¬cation and came from teacherswho had been discharged for re¬fusing to answer questions aboutCommunist party membership ongeneration and the general pub- the basis of the Fifth Amendment.lie on our conclusions and tomaintain conditions within thecolleges and universities them¬selves favorable to the perform¬ance of these tasks.”The Association’s CommitteePuerto Rico follows UC,state Schwab and McKeon At a 'meeting of the Associa¬tion’s council preceding the con¬ference, the council members de¬cided that the dismissal of teach¬ers who had invoked the protec¬tion of the Fifth Amendment wasnot “in and of itself” justifiable.Reading contest on state Senate’s hearings on thebills.ACCLC passed two bills to in¬itiate two conferences, one aregional conference of groupsconcerned with education, tounify efforts to fight the BroylesBills, and the other a conference,to be held in June, of student liberties,groups from at least fifty uni¬versities to coordinate the effortsof groups similar to the ACCLCon the issues of academic freedomand civil liberties.A report was given by AlbertSciaky, who spoke with variousRepresentatives in Washingtonwith Marc Galanter and SolHirsch to determine Congres¬sional attitudes on the investiga¬tions. Sciaky stated that both theHouse members of the Un-Amer¬ican Activities Committee arenow keeping closer tabs on Rep- as with the two conference bills,was known as a “group bill,” thatis, these bills were sponsored bya group of individuals: MikeBrennan, Nina Byers, NormanCrandus, Jerry Graff, Nancy Lee,Joyce Nevis, and Jill Schwab.The debate is to be publicized byACCLC to “further the dissemina¬tion of” information regardingthe Broyles Bills and their threatto academic freedom and civilA motion was made by MartinOrans to have the ACCLC standon the AAU statement be sent toall universities where professorshave been fired as a result of therecent investigations. Orans’ mo¬tion was passed, but MarlinSmith requested reconsiderationof the bill.The Kaufman statement defin¬ing the ACCLC stand on academicfreedom was essentially a refuta¬tion of the recent statement madeon the same subject by the Asso-resentative Harold Velde so that ciation of American Universities.Senator William Jenner, whoheads the Subcommittee on In¬ternal Security represents themain threat to education.Many Democrats, according toSciaky, oppose the investigationsin heart but not in vote, whereas The ACCLC statement will bedistributed to the campus and toother schools.The statement that will receivedistribution on the UC campuswill mention that ChancellorKimpton has signed the AAU pol-A first prize of $50 and a sec¬ond prize of $25 will be awardedin the annual Florence JamesAdams Poetry Reading Contest.The University of Puerto Rico today resembles the UC The preliminary competition willbe held on April 17, at 3:30 incollege during the early forties. Thorndike Hilton Chapel. TheThat is the opinion held by Professors Richard P. McKeon contest is open to all University the Republicans have no choice icy stand and that the ACCLCand Joseph J. Schwab, who have just returned from a week’s students aged 17 to 26 who have but to support them. disagrees with Kimpton s view., - completed at least two quarters A bill to cooperate with Student The statement to be distributedseminar tnere. Gf residence and are registered Forum in the presentation of a to other campuses will omit men-“Exciting” is how both professors described their expert- for two or more courses in the—-— present quarter; those wishing toRico enter the contest must registerofence at the UniversityPuerto Rico; McKeon wasparticularly impressed by the“excellent job frame of mind ofthe faculty members in whichthey are able to discuss programas such,” having les sof a tend¬ency to be interested solely withthe affairs and problems of theirown departments, but insteadwith problems pertaining to alldepartments of the university.According to Schwab, the co¬operation between UC and theUniversity of Puerto Rico hasbeen going on for several years.Dean Quintero of the Universityof Puerto Rico took his Ph. D.degree under Schwab. Also thereare currently two professors from the University of Puerto\#>rking with the division of So- by April 10 in the English Office, debate on the Broyles Bills was tion of the ACCLC disagreementalso passed by ACCLC. This bill, with Kimpton.cial Science at UC.The program of the GeneralStudies department of the Univer¬sity of Puerto Rico correspondsin purpose and is similar in or¬ganization to the UC college pro¬gram. The department of Gen- Wieboldt 205.it tends toward the developmentof romantic historic generaliza¬tions; Schwab cited the teachingsof Shakespeare, which is nottaught as drama but as an ex¬ample of the “greatness of theeral Studies there is divided into human spirit.” According to Mc-the “four areas of knowledge” as Keon there is a false antagonismEARN 1000 this summerInvestigate this opportunity forsummer employment with a Mar¬shall Field owned organization.Many college men and women havefound this a profitable and pleas¬ant occupation working in or nearthetr home cities. Complete train¬ing is given. For full details writeto College Placement Office, Dept.GQ, Box 3585, Chicago 54, III. at the UC college. The program ofGeneral Education covers, how¬ever, a shorter period of time atthe University of Puerto Ricothan it does at UC; the Human¬ities sequence for example is onlytwo years long, and there are nointegration courses in the pro¬gram. “The faculty there consid¬ered the integration courses toodifficult for the college studentsand therefore did not includethem in the program,” said Mc¬Keon.Speaking to the influence ofSpanish culture on education inPuerto Rico, Schwab stated that in Puerto Rico toward what hecalled “American culture”; anantagonism which manifests it¬self in their maintaining thespiritual superiority of Latin cul¬ture to the “materialistic Amer¬ican culture.”Both McKeon and Schwab weregreatly impressed by the PuertoRican progress toward independ¬ence. Since the assumption ofgovernorship by Munoz the islandhas become more self-governingand now has the comparative posi¬tion of a dominion in relation tothe United States. McMillen resigns post in CHA;attacked by Legion over oathsWayne McMillen, professor in the school of Social ServiceAdministration, has informed Mayor Kennedy that he willnot accept reappointment for a new five-year term as a mem¬ber of the Chicago Housing Authority. Although his termexpired in mid-January, McMillen is remaining on the boarduntil Kennedy names his re- : :— ~r~nliippmpnt Wlth McMillen in rejecting thepidceinem. oath. The proposed oath wouidThe request that he not be have been similar to the one pre¬reappointed resulted, McMillen scribed and required by the Quinnsaid, from unforeseen responsibil- congressional amendment for allities that will not permit him to tenants in federally subsidizedretain the time-consuming job housing. The Quinn amendment isand a forthcoming trip that will now being challenged in thekeep him away from Chicago for courts.five months.. However, McMillen later votedThe American Legion has re- jor a weaker loyalty oath that hecently subjected McMillen to sajd "avoids the principle of guiltmuch criticism for voting againsta loyalty oath for CHA employes.A majority of the board agreed by association.” This weaker oath,which was opposed by the Amer¬ican Legion, was approved by theCHA and has been taken by everyemploye except one, who refusedto take it on principle and re¬signed.McMillen said that his actions,both in requesting that he not beGENUINE MOROCCOHANDBAGS$450 $4Assorted Simand ColorsINDIA HANDICRAFT981455 E. 55thMU 4-6T63 Just ReceivedA Shipmentoff JewelryFrom AilOver the World SU sponsors spring carnivalA Spring Carnival will be held submit the ideas to the SU- office,in the Field House on the evening More than 85 organizations haveof April 11. Organizations and received letters of application, ac- . . , . . .. ,residence halls, under the coordin- cording to the chairman of the SU reappointed, and in voting for theation of Student Union, will build Carnival Committee, but any or- j^yalty oath, were not influencedand operate money - making ganization lacking the formal ap- by Legion attacks. -booths; the profits will go to the plication can state merely theUniversity of Chicago Settlement, type of booth they wish to oper- Two UC studentsSU suggests that individuals in a*-e an<^ how they can be com act- . ,, .the residence halls and fratemi- ^ Although the responsibility rgreiv© Fll DriGntSties with particular ideas for ior construction and operation ofbooths should clear the ideas withtheir house presidents, and thenSUMMER JOBSinISRAELforAdvanced ProfessionalandTechnical StudentsJuly throughSeptemberfor details write to:PATWA SUMMER WORKPROGRAMDepartment CThe Jewish Agency for Palestine16 East 66th StroetNew York 21, New York the booths will fall upon the in* Wendell B. Swanson and Phillipdividual groups, SU has stated h. Lewis, UC students, have justits willingness to offer whatever received Fulbright Scholarshipsassistance it can. for study at the Australian Na-In the spring of 1952 a carnival tional University in Canberra,on a much smaller scale than the Lewis is a student of anthropol-one planned this year was held in ogy and is particularly interestedthe back of Burton-Judson. Pie in the study of New Guinea na-throwing, brightlights, and noise tives in this field. Swanson isdominated the scene. planning to study geology.>aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa/SALEBooks of General and Specialized Interestin the Social Sciences: Political Science,History, Sociology, etc.THE Red Door BOOKSHOP1328 E. 57th StreetChicago 37, IllinoisTTTTWTTrrrTTtTfTTrTfrrrtr»TtTTT?TTtt»»tHPage 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 3, 1953Andelson claims raw deal Hous!"® * * *"Peace, pure and simple"—Robert Maynard HutchinsIssued once weekly by the publisher, The Chicago Maroon, at the publicationoffice, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: EditorialOffice, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1010, Business and Advertising Offices. Midway3-0800, Ext. 100S. Distributed free or charge, and subscriptions by mail, $4 per year.Joan Brennard Jerry Exeditor-in-chief business managerManaging Editor: Robert Peters Production Manager: Robert MarchExecutive Editor: Jan Majde Copy Editor: Georgeanna PughPage Editors—News: Thomas Thorner, Richard Ward; News Features: ArthurBrown; Features: Daniel Queen; Sports: Harry Hirsch.Editorial Staff: Naomi Birnbaum, Paul Breslow, Ann Brooks, Jay Chidsey, SandraEpstein, Eugene Gendlin, Perry Goldberg, Sherrard Gray, Doris Hanes, DeanHelmbach, Sam Jafte, Rene Jonas, Arlene Kramer, Frank Kirk, Bruce Larkin,Mayer Margolis, Myrna Mauch, Pat Morrow, Aryeh Motzkin, Arlene Petersen, JoelPlcheny, Karl Rodman, Lawrence Shaderowfsky, David Sher, Joy Smith, NellieStoneman, Howard Sherman, Herbert Schwartz, Lenna Schweitzer, Robert D.Sliver, Warren Roy Spachner, Ethel Spector, David R. Storey.Copy Staff—Assistant Editor: Barbara Vogelfanger; Staff: Barbara Kaplan, RogerKallen, Jack CarloyePhotography Staff: Joe Wolf, Robert Sbarge.Business Staff: Don Ginsburg, Nan Hochberg, Mala Deitch, Mario Bauer, HowardTurner.Personnel Manager: Allen Janger.Cartoonists: Jock Godler, Radell Nelson.AAU scuttles freedomThe policy statement on “The Rights and Responsibilities of Uni¬versities and their Faculties” issued by the Association of AmericanUniversities (AAU) and signed by Chancellor Kimpton for the Uni¬versity of Chicago is both self-contradictory and acquiescent to thecurrent reign of fear in this country.Defining the “real meaning of ‘academic’ freedom” the AAUdeclared:“A university must be hospitable to an infinite variety of view¬points, relying upon the open competition among them as the surestsafeguard of truth. Its whole spirit requires investigation, criticism,and presentation of ideas in an atmosphere of freedom and mutualconfidence.”However, it would appear that either the communist point ofview, is not a point of view at all, or that all points of view shouldnot be protected by academic freedom, for the AAU unequivocallystates that membership in the Communist party “extinguishes theright to a university position.”Ex-chancellor Hutchins provided an answer to this reasoning atthe Broyles Committee Hearings of 1949. “The University does notbelieve that an individual should be penalized for acts other thanhis own. The University believes that if a man is to be punishedhe should be punished for what he does, not for what he belongedto or for those with whom he»has associated.”Enumerating further on the specific role of the scholar the AAUadmonishes:“Timidity must not lead the scholar to stand silent when he oughtto speak, especially in the field of his competence. In matters ofconscience and when he has truth to proclaim the scholar has noobligation to be silent in the face of popular disapproval.”Not only should a scholar not be timid in expressing his convic¬tions the AAU emphasizes that “it is even more definitely his dutyas a professor” to answer for his views “Refusal to do so onwhatever legal grounds cannot fail to reflect upon a profession thatclaims for itself the fullest freedom to speak. In this respect invoca¬tion of the Fifth Amendment places upon a professor a heavy burdenof the proof of his fitness to hold a teaching position and lays uponthe university an obligation to re-examine his qualifications formembership in its society.”It is really difficult to determine whether the AAU believes thata teacher has fewer or the same rights as an ordinary citizen, forits stress on the scholar’s supposed duty to answer legislative in¬quiries on his views seems inconsistent with a previous warningfrom the AAU saying: “When the speech, writing, or other actionsof a member of a faculty exceeds lawful limits, he is subject to thesame penalties as other persons.” If the AAU believes that theteacher is subject to the same penalties as an ordinary citizen it isdifficult to understand why at the same time it advocates deprivingthe teacher of certain Constitutional privileges.The AAU view of the usage of the Fifth Amendment before legisla¬tive investigating committees assumes that the teacher must beguilty of something—in this case, believing in communism. But aperson invoking the Fifth Amendment is not necessarily guilty ofanything. He is simply protecting himself from proceedings similarto those of a witch-hunt. An observation on the Salem trials isrelevant:“On June 10, 1692, Bridget Bishop was hanged from the branchesof the great oak tree atop Gallows Hill in Salem. She could notdisprove that she was a witch.”Similarly, the AAU solemnly pronounces that on the professorlies the burden of proving his innocence, when he has not even beenaccused of crime in the legal sense, but by innuendo.At this time, when congressional inquiries make no pretense ofbeing motivated by a respect for the rights of “Academic Freedom,”it would be expected that the AAU would at least oppose the cur¬rent inquiries, but instead they state that “it is clearly the duty ofuniversities and their members to cooperate in official inquiries.”Chancellor Kimpton has informed us that the AAU statement wasreleased over his name without his seeing it previous to release. Ifthis is the case, it should be his duty to promptly take a positivestand for academic freedom for all, for as Laird Bell, chairman ofthe UC board of trustees, stated recently: “If freedom is extinguishedin the universities, it is on its way out everywhere.”Letters . . .I Ini net fn Anrlelcnn? action, liberals have no choice but tovmjusr TO anoeison. defend him. The defense of the aca-If Bob Andelson has, in fact, prevari- demic freedom even of its destroyerscated or made false statements in his is the high trust of those who trulyAmerican Student article in cases where place their confidence in many and inXacts were readily available, his faculty democracy.committee's decision to deny his petl- Let us get the facts! The Studenttion for MA candidacy would seem Jus- Government Civil Liberties committeetilled. If, however, the distortions evl- should appoint a sub-commission todent in his article arise not from dis- investigate Andelson’s protest in thetortion of fact but from his point of ught of the guarantees in the Studentview, or the selection, and lnterpreta- Bill of Rights and the concept oftion of data, the committee s action Academic Freedom■would seem to violate the clear lan- T, . . . ' . . . . . .guage of the Student Bill of Rights. Andelson has indulged in sig-Though Andelson’s kind and And el- niflcant distortion of the truth, theeon himself attack freedom, those who MA-PhD committee has a right to havebelieve in the open society and the thl3 ma<le be bas ,n°t* bl*tAmerican principle—that freedom is for on^ engaged In opinionated and ob-everybody, even those whose words and noxl°U3 innuendos, then the principleIntentions are anti-democratic — must be upheld that there is an open-be certain that their sense of fair play ??d.ed?ess. ,to, , academic freedom, andand their devotion to democratic prln- ^he shield of its protection, unlessclples are not overcome by their nausea. £ndel?on 3 cobor^s Baln , tb?ir. way, isIf Andelson’s ideas and not his vera- h°th broad and strong, sheltering alikecity or his ability to handle data ade- tbe unjust and the Just,quately are the basis of the committee's Joy Cnidsey Alas! We now hear that Robert Andelson is being persecuted!The UC divinity student who recently attacked the University foralleged “leftist tendencies” now charges that a conspiracy has beenorganized against him because of his article in the “American Stu¬dent.” His petition for candidacy for a master’s degree in the DivinitySchool has been denied because, according to Andelson, he accusedthe University of fostering communism.The statement by Bernard Loomer, Dean of Students in the Divin¬ity School, that Andelson’s qualifications, both academic and moral,do not measure up to the standard for master’s candidates beliesAndelson's allegations. Dean Loomer has pointed out that accordingto the findings of a faculty committee, Andelson received a “D” inthe basic course in religion, as well as “incomplete” in two coursesin ethics.In addition, the committee felt it could not as yet recommend An¬delson for a master’s degree under the published requirement thata candidate must be found suitable for a position of religious lead¬ership “on the basis of his moral and personal integrity.” DeanLoomer said the committee considered lack of integrity was indicatedby loose handling of data and interpretation in Andelson’s article.We think the committee was right in forming its decision on thebasis of the facts, and not succumbing to a dread of the controversywhich Andelson was bound to stir up over its action. We suggest thatMr. Andelson learn a sufficient amount of ethics to pass his coursesbefore presuming to judge the ethical fitness of his dean, his school,and his University.The “Tribune” article on this latest chapter in the Andelson affairalleges that the MAROON “refused” to print his letter to the editorand “made” him pay for it as an advertisement.However much we may dislike Andelson’s views, we neverthelessrecognize our ethical responsibility as journalists to print dissentingopinions. But unless we have extra space, we do not print letters ofmore than 250 words length. Andelson’s communication was a mere1,000 words long! We did not “refuse” to print if; he simply rejectedan offer of an opportunity to cut it down to printable size.Andelson then accepted the same privilege which is open to anycampus group, namely that of buying an ad to print his letter. Hethereby joined the ranks of such diverse groups as the UniversityBookstore and the Labor Youth League.He has paid his bill, and we consider the matter closed. (from page 4)the neighborhood. The Dean com¬mented “you sound like a de¬bater.”Score leaflets notedKirk interjected that every¬thing which isRfrup posed tofrighten discriminatory landlordsis going on anyway, mentioningreal estate scare leaflets and thereality of Negro migration.Strozier suggested that JulianLevi of the South East ChicagoCommission ought to be con¬sulted. Levi had been invited tothe meeting but was unable to’attend.Lichtenstein commented as themeeting adjourned that it wasinvariably “dangerous to actagainst discrimination.” He addedthat people have “got to do whatthey believe in” and that he, asa student, "had a strong interestin eliminating discrimination.”Degrees ...(from page 4)4) The Humanities division proposal for its own four-year BAdegree. (MAROON, March 13,page 2.)Object is agreementThe subcommittee is attempt¬ing to come to an agreement thatwill be acceptable to the wholefaculty.The committee in the physicalsciences division which was towork out the detailed curriculumfor a bachelors’ degree in physi¬cal sciences will be set up nextweek. The organization of theCommittee was delayed duringthe interim.Editor’s columnTwo views on general programEverybody has been talking recently about general education. General education is necessary if one is not to be narrow-minded, if one is to be a \Sell-rounded individual, they sayBut in what sense well-rounded? Does a knowledge of a few facts in political institutions,mammalian physiology, mechanics, English literature and abnormal psychology add up toa well-rounded education?Controversy about disagreementThere seem to be at present among the faculty, two different conceptions of general edu¬cation. And from these twoconceptions stem many of themajor disagreements aboutthe location and function of bach¬elors’ degrees.One view, held mostly by divi¬sional faculty members, conceivesof the main value of general edu¬cation as being preparation forspecialized work, in that it insuresthat the specialist will not be toonarrow-minded. General educa¬tion would thus consist of takingcourses in many different fields,so that one would be acquaintedwith humanities and social sci¬ences, as well as physics, forexample.Since the emphasis in this tech¬nically advanced age is on spe¬cialization, courses offered in dif¬ferent fields tend to be “special¬ized,” e.g., deal with 19th centurynovels rather than with literatureor humanities, and thifs in effectare fragments of a larger subjectmatter. Connection between 19thcentury novels and other subjectmatters such as history or phi¬losophy is usually accidental, be¬cause the course is set up as thefirst step toward specialization inliterature, rather than to give abroad view of the humanities.Thus taking courses in different departments amounts to gettingfragments here and there of alarger unknown structure, for thestudent not majoring in that field.College view of conceptThe other conception of generaleducation, whose practical coun¬terpart is the program offered inthe College, is that its function isto prepare the student to dealwith the problems that confrontall members of society alike.If courses deal with the generalproblems of a given intellectualdiscipline, e.g., social sciences,rather than being the first steptowards specialization in somedepartment,, e.g., political science,then the student gains a clearerperspective of the problems of thesocial science. Moreover, Collegecourses emphasize skills andmethods of thinking, rather thanthe content of any particularcourse.Integration something "extra''Already the picture is differentfrom that of the "conventional”under-graduate program.But there is one further aspectof the College’s conception of gen¬eral education—commonly knownas integration. This is what con¬nects the many facts learned sothat they become meaningful to the student—a rare phenomenonat a “conventional” college. Thisis what makes clear the relation¬ships between the differentfields studied, the different skillslearned, the different methodsused. This is what gives the stu¬dent the ability to turn a hodge¬podge collection ot various* andsundry facts and opinions into acoherent body of knowledge thathe can use.And it is exactly this elementthat will be destroyed if the’ Col¬lege faculty is not able to deter¬mine the general educational re¬quirements for the four-yearbachelors’ degrees.—Joan BrennardRepair YourBICYCLES1VOWWe specializein light-weightrepairAce Cycle Shop819 E. 55th Ml 3-2672Save on TextbooksEVERY BOOK FOR EVERY COURSE!!!6,000^000 Books in Stock——6 Floors—k ast Service-Free ParkingCASH IN YOUR OLD BOOKS WE PAY MOREUIIU0X a F0LLETT n.1247 s. MBD5N • IRICK0SPHOIIE HHrrison 7-2840THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7April 3, 1953Calendar ...Friday, April 3rood Friday Service: A series of medi¬ations on “The Seven Last Words,"the Reverend Dr. William Nes, Profes¬sor of Preaching, Seabury-WesternSeminary, Evanston. RockefellerChapel, 12 noon-3 p.m.Lertuie: Jean Piaget, Doctor Professorof the Faculty of Sciences, Universityof Geneva, “Le Developpment desperceptions.” The lecture will be de¬livered In French. Preceding tne lec¬ture brief summaries in English willbe available in Soc. Scl. 103. Soc. Sci.122, 2 p.m.Humboldt Club: Film on student lifeat University of Frankfurt, Germany.Commentary In English by HansErnst, exchange student from Frank¬fort, Wieboldt, 3:30 p.m.Statistics Seminar: “The OperatingCharacteristics of a Multiple Com¬parisons Method,” Henry Scheffe,professor of Mathematical Statistics,Columbia University. Eckhart 203,4:30 p.m.I niversity Theatre: G. B. Shaw’s “Armsand the Man.” Reynolds Club Theatre,8 p.m.••< horeo ’53”: Lester Horton Dancers,sponsored by SRP. Mandel Hall, 8 p.m.Admission $1.50.Saturday, April 4Holy Saturday Service: Choral Vespersfor Holy Saturday. Rockefeller Chapel,7 p.m.Cniversity Theatre: G. B. Shaw’s “Armsand the Man.” Reynolds Club Thea¬tre, 8 p.m."Choreo ’53”: Lester Horton Dancers,sponsored by SRP. Mandel Hall, 8 p.m.Admission $1.50.Sunday, April 5Channing Club: Open House, First Unl-Students wanted to help inoffice on a port time basisAlice Toch NursesEmployment Registry5227 S. Cornell, Chicago 15, 111.Telephone FAirfax 4-6087 tarlan Church, 1174 E. 57th, 7:30 p.m.SRP: Caucus on NSA Elections. IdaNoyes Hall, 7:30 p.m.University Theatre: G. B. Shaw’s “Armsand the Man.” Reynolds Club Thea¬tre, 8 p.m.“Choreo ’53”: Lester Horton Dancers,sponsored by SRP. Mandel Hall, 8 p.m.Admission $1.50.Monday, April 6Intervarsity Christian Fellowship:Luncheon, speaker, Rev. Carl Lund-qulst, "The Significance of Christ'sResurrection.” Ida Noyes Hall, 12:30-1:30 p.m.Walgreen Lecture: Robert M. Hutchins,Associate Director, Ford Foundation,“Hazards to Education in the UnitedStates: Industrialization.” RockefellerChapel, 8 p.m.Movie: “Open City,” Int. House, 8 p.m.,55 cents.Tuesday, April 7Lecture: “Japan and the Two Worlds,”Sterling Tatsujl Takeuchl, Professorof Political Science and InternationalRelations, Kwansel Gakuln Univer¬sity, Japan, Soc. Scl. 122, 4:30 p.m.Doc Film: “Cluny Brown.” Soc. Scl. 1227:15 and 9:30 p.m.Sailing Club: Meeting. Soc. Sci. 305,7:30 p.m.Canterbury Club: Lecture: “ModemRoman Catholic Worship,” Rev. Fr.Joseph D. Connerton. Ida Noyes,7:45 p.m.Walgreen Lecture: Robert M. Hutchins,“Hazards to Education In the UnitedStates: Specialization.” RockefellerChapel, 8 p.m.Wednesday, April 8Baha’i Fellowship: Informal lecture,"This Earth One Country.” Ida Noyes,7.30 p.m.Walgreen Lecture: Robert M. Hutchins,“Hazards to Education In the UnitedStates: Philosophical Diversity.” Rock,efeller Chapel, 8 p.m.Moody Lecture: Louis Mac Nelce, read¬ings of his poems with commentaries.8:30 p.m. Mandel Hall.Thursday, April 9Walgreen Lecture: Robert M. Hutchins,“Hazards to Education in the UnitedStates: Social and Political Conform¬ity.” Rockefeller Chapel, 8 p.m.Society for Social Responsibility in Sci¬ence: Regular meeting. Ida NoyesAlumni Room, 8 p.m.A completely NEW idea in Hat Fit¬ting. No binding around the head.P0RTISThe Toss-Up floats on thehead—you actually donot know it is there.Packed in a strong poly¬ethylene bag . . . toss itin the back seat of yourcar . . . car bumps willnot hurt it.Factory pre-blocked ...it springs back into shapeat the touch of a finger.Chlorophyll treated in¬side head band ... out¬side hat band is stain-proof—goodbye soiledhat bands.la ,our facta# , . .rail If Hi., ofl.i lima . . .• ha TOSS-UP will alwayacama aa Mtlllug.**Taf»“ Far Tro.al ... TatiIf in yaw twlfcaia . . . TatiIf la fha bock a# tha cor.Opaa If—Sprints right hockInta pra-hlackad ityla Andelson ..(from poge 3)dent’s integrity as reflected in hispublic behavior and activity out¬side the classroom.The theme of integrity as super-ceding in certain respects theclassical definition of academicfreedom was discussed at lengthby Loomer. He said the freedomof an individual to attain a degreeat an institution like UC—hr inother words, to receive the stampof approval of those responsiblefor certifying his academic com¬petence, the professors—is, as dis¬tinguished from freedom ofspeech in the society, dependentin part on his integrity. Elaborat¬ing on this concept, Loomer saidintegrity is far broader in its sig-Cambridge ...(from page 2)that but 15 years ago Cambridge(as well as Oxford) was a richman’s school. True, there weresome scholarships, but the classsystem was almost too rigid tobuck. Now, as one student so apt¬ly put it, “You can’t.tell a Lordfrom a miner’s son.” Naturallythis is disquieting to the Lord,but for the miner’s son, state-subsidized education is a godsend.It gives him an opportunity tocross the class barriers so easilypassed over in the United States.Crossing the class line is a dif¬ficult achievement in countrieswithout a high standard of living.And England rates far beneaththe United States on this scale,since the prices of essentials suchas food, clothing, and rent, whileonly about 50 per cent of theirAmerican counterparts, outbal¬ance wages, which are only abouta third of the U. S. figure. Jobsthat would get $5,000 salaries forAmerican college graduates areworth at the most 1,200 poundsfor English graduates, who, how¬ever, must consider themselveslucky if they earn 400 pounds ayear. Then extremely high taxesadd to the burden of making ends nificance than mere honesty orsincerity. It includes the posses¬sion of an integrated view of one’suniverse of experience and action,as well as an open-minded atti¬tude towar dthis and other yiews.But in addition to this, he said,integrity involves a growingframework of criteria in the in¬dividual’s mind by which he canjudge himself and other peopleobjectively. Loomer said in con¬clusion that the entire committee“actively” supported the decisionto defer Andelson’s petition on thegrounds that he did not measureup to this standard.The academic aspect, Loomercontinued, was regarded as lessserious in significance than thequestion of integrity. It was the general feeling, though, he said,that Andelson was doing only“minimally acceptable” work bydivinity School standards, and theaction on the petition would prob¬ably have been deferred on aca¬demic grounds apart from theother question. Loomer addedthat the committee felt Andelsonto be capable of much better-work. It considered the academicaspect as a difficulty which An¬delson could surmount fairlyeasily.Andelson said the Tribune gotahold of the information concern¬ing his petition through a friendof his, a Tribune reporter, withwhom he was discussing the mat¬ter socially. He said the reporterihen decided to publish it.meet, and this in turn leaves lit¬tle extra to buy the heavily taxedcars, washing machines, televi¬sion and radio sets, etc. Mostworking-class families must re¬sign themselves to never owninga car, and were it not for stateaid they could probably nevereducate their children beyond sec¬ondary school.Living not austereBut life in Great Britain is ac¬tually not as austere as Ameri¬cans sometimes say it is. Nationalhealth insurance takes a greatfinancial load off the people. Themiddle classes benefit the mostfrom this institution, since (as isnow the case in America) beforethe Labor Government introducedthis reform, they were earningtoo much to attend the free clin¬ics, and yet too little to withstandthe costs of long, drawn-out ill¬nesses.The food and clothing subsidiesby the government, as well as thewell-planned pension scheme, area great help to most of the peo¬ple. Contrary to American opin¬ion on the subject, the British likenational health insurance andother “welfare state” measures.One thing I have noticed duringmy stay here is that there is agood deal of hostility towardAmericans among the English.For example, people in CambridgeALVIN JEWELRYWatch Repairs1372 East 55th St.BUtterfield 8-8373 Portraits byLOUISE BARKERPhotographer1457 E. 57th St. BU 8-0876Acasa Book StoreChoice Used BoohsDietv Lines in Modern Cards1117 E. 55th St. HY 3 9651 grumble unceasingly about thenoisy antics of American airmenfrom a number of large airbasesnear the town. They indicate greatdisdain for the way in which theairmen—as indeed must be ex¬pected of lonely men away fromhome — are prone to associatewith immoral women, of a typeto shame even South State St.,who camp in caravans next tothe bases. Unscrupulous English¬men try to cheat the airman inevery possible way; and despitetheir sizeable contribution to theprosperity of the town, the Amer¬icans are over-charged and short¬changed by shopkeepers, whoseprobable rationale is, “Oh, they’djust waste it somewhere else.”The airmen are blamed for everycrime, and “respectable” peoplewho invited them to their housesduring the war no longer do this.English resent AmericansUnfortunately the English seemto generalize excessively fromtheir experiences with the air¬men. Some people believe the hos¬tility is traceable to “sour grapes”on the part of the English, whofeel resentment at the opulenceof Americans as compared withtheir own rather austere circum¬stances.But other things, too, help tomake Americans disliked in Eng¬land. Americans often “mouthoff” about how “we own thiscountry,” and in such a case theEnglish attitude must even be re¬garded as patient. Also, in therealm of politics it would seemthat the English—Labor and Con¬servative alike—consider the Re¬publican administration too war-minded, although the recentWashington Anglo-American talksseem to have improved under¬standing between the two nations.The pet peeve seems, indeed, tobe the McCarran-Walter Immigra¬tion Act. This question pops upwithout fail in all conversationsof any length. And further, theEnglish delight in teasing Ameri¬cans about the current “Redscare” in the U. S. “If it weren’tfor the Daily Worker and theCommunists,” said a Welsh friend,“we’d have little to laugh at inthese difficult days.”The Toss-Up$eooActual $10.00 Value GEORGE’SMEN'S SHOP1035 E. 55th St. At GreenwoodOpen Thursday to 9 P.M.HYDE PARK LIQUOR STORE1405 E. 55th PLaza 2-8830BY POPULAR REQUEST!Once Again We Offer OurImported Wine SpecialsASSORTED FRENCH WINES $1.25, FORMERLY $3.29MEDOC, MARGAUX, HAUT-MEDOC, SAINT-ESTEPHE,VALLEE ROUGE, GRAVES, VALLEE BLANCHE,MONOPOL DRY SELECTION, CHATEAUX*SEGUINEASTER SPECIAL!DOMESTIC PORT . . FULL QUART 85cSHERRY AND MUSCATELWE CARRY A COMPLETE LINE OFIMPORTED WINES AND BEERS Campuscaperscall forCokeRehearsals stretch out,for the big Glee Clubtour is ahead. Work and worry callfor a pause—so, relax ...refresh with ice-cold Coke.BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OP THE COCA-COLA COMPANY IYCoca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Illinois“Cok*" h a r*gfef«ro<J hxxf*-mark. 1952, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY(«t |(mtf'IMA Page 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 3, 1953Choir and orchestra presentfine St Matthew PassionOn Sunday, March 29 at Rockefeller Chapel, the University of Chicago Choir, under thedirection of Richard Vikstrom, presented a thoroughly satisfying performance of Bach’s St.Matthew Passion, maintaining the excellent standard of performance which has marked theirwork in the past.Except for one small chorus, whose failure apparently lay in a late entrance, the choirrevealed a thorough understanding of the drama of the work. Its attacks were clear andsharp, possessing, when calledTwo members of Hie Lesfer Horton Doocers who will oppetfl tonightunder the sponsorship of the Student Representative party m Mandel Hallat 8:30 p.m. The program will consist of "SEVEN SCENES WITH BAL-LABILLI or: THE WAYS OF LOVE", "The Beloved", the premiere per¬formance of "Dedications in our Tima", and "Prado de Pena", a choreo¬graphic interpretation of Garcia Lorca's "Yerma". Choreography is byLester Horton who, in 1938 choreographed a performance of Stravinsky's"Le Socre du Printemps". for, an explosive quality. Bal¬ance and tone quality were ex¬cellent particularly in the sopranosection.The performance of the orches¬tra was clean and adequate. Juliu~Klein performed well on the viciada gamba in the difficult bass ariaCome Healing Cross. He success¬fully met the problem of playingthe old thing in tune, a problemwhich has prevented its commonuse today.Of the soloists Elizabeth Brown,with her fine, rich contralto voice,was notable, particularly in hersensitive performance of the ariaO Pardon Me, My God.Although the barrel-like, unfo¬cused quality of Andrew Foldi’s voice sometimes detracted fromthe music, the sensitive phrasingand thoroughly respectful ap¬proach more than compensatedfor the distraction. As Jesus,Rheinhold Schmidt presented arich and particularly dignifiedperformance. The tenor in theperformance did not possess thelyric quality one hopes to findin a naria such as I Would BesideMy Lord Be Watching.Carl Honzak unfortunately tried to impart an operatic quality tothe difficult role of the evangelistwhich demands a more relaxeddelivery. The delivery was miti¬gated because of frequently poorintonation.Marion Davis did a fine job,though perhaps some parts of herarias were sung a little too lightlyout of balance with the orchestra.Mr. Vikstrom is to be commend¬ed for his good selection of tempi,•ee "Chair," page 11HOUSEHOLD RADIOService and SalesSociety to exhibitrecent sculptureAn exhibition of sculpture —with preliminary sketches anddrawings—by thirty-one contem¬porary Chicago artists will be pre¬sented by the Renaissance Societybeginning Monday in the Good-speed Hall galleries.The selections for the exhibi¬tion were made by three sculptoimembers of the Society, FreemanSchoolcraft, who is director of thecreative arts studio in Burton-Judson courts, Ivy N. Steele, andEgon Weiner.JOBBER'SCLOSE-OUTTHE NOVELLIBRARYA collection of novels ofexcellence, chosen fromEnglish literature an^ifrom the principal liter¬atures of the world, inan elegant and eminent¬ly legible format.30 Titles5 to 25 copies of eachtitle available at theclose-out price75 C EachI mportant novels by Bal¬zac, Charlotte Bronte,Emily Bronte, Constant,Defoe, Dickens, Field¬ing, Flaubert, Gautier,Gogol, Gorki, de Mau¬passant, Merimee, Mur-ger, Peacock, Scott, Ste¬venson, Swift, Thack¬eray, Tolstoy, Turgenev,Voltaire.CLARKANDCLARKBOOKSELLERS1204 E. 55th StreetHours -—10 A.M. to 9 P.M. Knishes - Chopped LiverJ. B. American and Blintzes - Gefilte FishMU 4-9123 Kosher Restaurant1004 E. 55th Street 1217 E. 55th FAirfax 4-1960Free Pick-up and DeliveryComplete TV Service — Sales and Rental^ for W***gpssssu 1 is aAn*. fjTft '"V*^ carfo"-Sb*B&&WeSWSon FranckNothing-no, nothing-beats better tasteAsk yourself this question: Why do I smoke?and LUCKIESTASTE BETTER!Cleaner, Fresher, Smoother!You know, yourself, you smoke for enjoyment.And you get enjoyment only from the taste of acigarette.Luckies taste better—cleaner, fresher, smoother!Why? Luckies are made better to taste better. And,what’s more, Luckies are made of fine tobacco.L.S./M.F.T.—Lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco.So, for the thing you want most in a cigarette...for better taste—for the cleaner, fresher, smoothertaste of Lucky Strike . • •Be Happy-GO LUCKTj ■ So heres « itrtior*—-COLLEGE STUDENTS PREFER LUCKIESIN NATION-WIDE SURVEY INation-wide survey based on actual student in¬terviews in 80 leading colleges reveals moresmokers prefer Luckies than any other cigaretteby a wide margin. No. 1 reason—Luckies’ bettertaste. Survey also shows Lucky Strike gainedfar more smokers in these colleges than the na¬tion’s two other principal brands combined.OA.T.C*, PRODUCT OF AMERICA'S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIOARBTTBSimApril 3, 1953 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 9DocFilm Group to present avante-garde seriesby J. M. Kossock, ,On Friday, April 10, the Documentary Film Group will begin its sixty-first series of films with a programentitled The Atonte-Garde in France. The title of the series is Experiment in the Film — and is to be a thor¬oughgoing survey of the avante-garde cinema.Aside from a few examples of primitive and off trail77 film making, the experimental films, the cinemaon the fringe, began ~inFrance during the 19207s.]t started in connection withmodern trends in poetry andpainting in all the intellectualmovements and fads of the pe¬riod: cubism, dadaism, surrealism,orphism, futurism, expressionism,impressionism, etc. The film ap¬peared to the artists of the periodas a new provider of ideas andimages, images that were giftedwith a special character, and thatcould group themselves in accord¬ance with rhythms that no othermedium could accomplish.A new claim was advanced forthe movies as well as poetry andpainting, to break away fromboth realism and didactism, tocreate forms and movements in¬stead of copying nature. Theseearly experimenters discoveredthat when elements of the visualworld are used^there is no neces¬sity to imprison them in conven¬tions, whether logical, utilitarian,sentimental, or rational.The most productive and suc¬cessful period for the avante-garde cinema were the lateJ920’s and its greatest develop¬ment took place then in Franceand Germany, where the filmamateurs created new tech¬niques and made films of greatartistic merit.The experimental cinema suf- feied a marked decline in the five programs embracing sixteen the experimental use of sound.S,2!Si,b!aU“ °f fPresfiv,e *ilms- rfnfing from 1924 to 1951. Time in the Sun represents Mariemeasures in many countries, lack Some of the outstanding films in- , . . T. . . ,of funds, and because the far eluded are: Rene Clair’s Entr- ^eton s version of Eisenstein s un-greater expenses involved in the ’Acte, a classic of surrealistic ab- finished classic Que Viva Mexico,production of sound films limited surdity that achieves something The Late Matthew Pascal is anfree and easy adventuring in more than a farce: a cold, ealeu- attempt by l’Herbier, one of thetechniques and ideas. Aside from lated, detached burlesque. Le leading experimenters, to make athe sporadic efforts of various Chien Andalou, directed by Salva- commercially sponsored featureAmericans, the most important dor Dali and Bunuel, a brilliant film. This filming of a Pirandellodevelopment in the 1930’s was the work of aggressive and naked vio- novel was one of the first enter-experiments of the Soviet director lence. Walter Ruttman’s Berlin, a tainment films to communicateS. M. Eisenstein, who made films cinematic version of a day in Ber- ideas bf some intellectual weight,in France and Mexico. lin that merits its subtitle, “The This series takes place in So-Since the war there have been Symphony of a City.’’ John cial Science 122 and will run forFlory’s Mr. Motorboat’s LastStand, a neat satire on a depres¬sion ridden country. RomanceSentimentale is a recently discov-a great many films in theavante-garde tradition producedCanada and the Unitedinstein, and is an early example ofStates. These recent films havebeen competent, but, with a few .. ered experiment by S. M. Eisein-outstanding exceptions, theytend to reproduce not only thetechniques but the content ofthe films of the 1920^. Most re¬cent American films seem to becharacterized by a hardening ofthe mental arteries, and a soph-omoric and unfounded sense oftheir esotericness.The most active experimentersare Norman McLaren and JamesBroughton, McLaren's hand-drawn films and “synthetic five successive Fridays begin¬ning April 10. Showings are at7:15 and 9:30 and ticket holdersare invited to attend a discus¬sion in room 106 following each7:15 showing. The study fee for Robert Wilde — the Nicola ofthe Tonight at Eight-thirty Playersproduction of Bernard Shaw's "Armsand the Man", to be presented byUniversity Theatre tonight, tomor¬row night, and Sunday night, andFriday, Saturday, and Sunday ofnext week at 8:30 p.m. in the Rey¬nolds Club Theotre.the series is $2 and by agree¬ment with the Museum of Mod¬ern Art single admissions arenot permitted.^Political science in US disappointing,concludes David Easton, UC professor'The Political System," by David Eoston. Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1953.Mr. Easton, Assistant Professor in Political Science at UC, concludes in his new book,The' Political System, that “. . . in spite of th e fact that every year there are millions ofvaluable and talented man-hours devoted to political research and its communication to oth-sound tracks are innovations of ers> the condition of American political science is disturbing and disappointing . . .” He saysgreat promise and Broughton has “that today we are confronted with growing disillusionment about the whole of scientificbrought fresh insight and great reasoning as a way of helping us to understand social problems”; that this growing pesse-satire to a jaded technique.The Spring series consists ofHow to bring onSpring FervorActually, you slip it on, because theweaker sex has a strong yen for theman in a Manhattan gabshire sport-shirt. This good-looking gabardineis deftly tailored — styled as onlyManhattan can style it with pick-stitching on collar and pockets.Available in a wide range of smartcolors, equally handsome with orwithout a tie. mism and irrationality of U.Spolitical science results in“greater dependence uponemotion or faith . . . upon tradi¬tion . . . upon the mood of theday”; that “it is in Candide’s tu¬tor, Pangloss, not in the hyper¬critical Greeks, that we see theimage in caricature of the mod¬ern political scientist.” problem, but reaches neithercause nor cure. In the 19th Cen¬tury, he says, Comte, Spencer andMarx, “whose generalities have,of the three, longest held the in¬terest of men,” advanced massiveoptimistic theories of social trans¬formation; but present U. S. po¬litical “science” merely collectsUnfortunately, Easton’s book is g°ods • • • have a special reason to1 '' ‘ k ' look askance at this probing intoWhile validly attacking the content and method? Only in afew pages does Easton indicatethat the reason why there is “de¬cided reluctance” to probe relent¬lessly “into the fundamentals ofthings” is that “Entrenched pow¬er groups in society, those whohave a firm hold on a particularpattern of distribution of socialitself’interesting only as a socio- theory’ to a few moralists.logical antique, as an example ofthe state of decay. He states theGuarantees noink-stainedhandsor clotheseveragain...No capto lose,. thereis nocap. Pushbuttonretractablepoint.can’tleak,transfer,smudge,smear orfade-ink ispermanenton paper.70,000 word refills only 494Always a clean point main trend of pure empiricism,relativism, “historicist” fact-finding; Easton ends up at theopposite pole of calling for eter¬nal, unhistorical, absolute"laws”—which puts him rightback in the sham battle that theacademicians have fought forso long. Incidentally, he doesnot even ask whether to con¬struct a theory of social evolu¬tion it is necessary to abandonthe pseudo-science of “politics”and return to the classic politi¬cal-economy.But why this present decay of nature and sources of their socialposition and activities.” Eastonquickly drops this fruitful line ofinquiry, and returns to considerthe more “basic” (sic) methodo¬logical troubles. Apparently Eas¬ton did not continue to probe re¬lentlessly into fundamentals inorder that he wouldn’t have todecide that the only remedy forsocial science is a practical fightagainst those “entrenched powergroups” as well as a clear theoryto guide the fight. Because thenthose very vested interests, viafor example the Un-Americansee "Easton," page 11J. Paul Sheedy* Switched to Wildroot Cream-OilBecause He Flunked The Finger-Nail TestPOOR PAUL felt down under when his girl said, “Your sloppy hair kangaruinsour friendship. Never pouch your arms around me again until you high tail it toa toilet goods counter for some Wildroot Cream-Oil. Contains Lanolin. Non-alcholic. Relieves annoying dryness. Removes loose, uglydandruff. Grooms the hair. Helps you pass the Finger-NailTest. Get it or you’ll kangaroo the day!’’ Sheedy tried WildrootCream-Oil and now all the girls are hopped up about him.Better reach in your pocket for 29< and buy Wildroot Cream-Oil in either bottle or tube. You kangarong cause it puts realpunch into your social life. Ask for it on your hair at anybarber shop too, and get a jump ahead of all the other guys !* of 131 So. Hams Hill Rd., Williamsvillt, N. Y.Wildroot Company, Inc., Buffalo 11, N. Y.THE CHICAGO MAROONPage 10 April 3, 1953Classified ads ...WANTEDPeople willing to pay $1.50 for a roastbeef dinner.Wanted: Second hand set of FrenchLinguaplione records in good condition.Zimmer, Int. House 535.Radio Technician. Full or part time.Apply in writing, stating qualifications.The Disc, 1367 E. 57th st.FOR SALE Voice placement and coaching. TrldaSavlql, 1465 E. 40th St.Covered buttons, buckles, buttonholes,monogTamming done while you wait.752 E. 51st St., northwest corner, 51stand Cottage. AT 5-6860.Will exchange my baby sitting for yourtyping time. NO 7-7888.Spanish lessons, Mondays, Wednesdays,7:30-9:30. Spanish teacher. InternationalHouse, Room 408.FOUNDA Greek war orphan named Wassllllkl. Apartments to ShareWorking girl will share attractive base¬ment apartment with University stu¬dent (female). Near campus; privateentrance, lots of room; low rent. 5219Ingleside, HY 3-8707.Who wants to share a fully furnishedapartment? Exceptional opportunity.Near campus. Call HY 3-7189 preferablybefore 10 a.m.FOR RENTRooms at Phi Delta Theta fraternity.5737 Woodlawn, BU 8-9856. Jobs with a futureEvery year hundreds of college girls use Gibbs secre¬tarial training to get the right job and assure quickpromotion.Special Course for College Women. Five-school per¬sonal placement service. Write College Dean for “GibbsGirls at Work."Katharine GibbsBOSTON M, 90 Mirlboroudi Stmt NEW YORK If. 230 Part AmosCHICAGO 11, 01 E. Superior Strmt PROVIDENCE i. 159 Ati(«R StrsutMONTCLAIR. N. J, 13 Plymouth Strsst2.A »J..S •*••••••*••*►•• **» v %- -I- •** V *•* *•*'t* *1* .J..Emerson table model radio. AM, excel'lent condition, $10. Green, room 38.Spring issue of ANVIL AND STUDENTPARTISAN on sale at University andRed Door Bookstores. Eisenhower liber¬alism — Russian anti-Semitism — Cath¬olic left — and other articles.% Length navy blue winter coat, size12-14, $5. Call Foster 7, Ext. 1040.Rink roller skates, size 6'i, excellentcondition, $8. Contact Foster 7, Ext. 1040.Woman’s English bicycle; Rudg?; usedtwo summers, $40. NO 7-0473.Motor bike, good condition, $70 or bestoffer, 100 miles per gallon, MU 4-0314.Pool table, complete, automatic return,balls, cues, etc. Phil, MU 4-0314.Long-sleeve blue turtleneck sweater,red stripes, size 32-34, $1.50. Buzz, Fos¬ter 7.1941 Hudson, good condition. Call RA6-8000, Ext. 392, Kumb.Pink boucle-beaded sleeveless sweater,size 32 (small), $2. Telephone Foster 7.Picture frames, all sizes, reasonable.RE 4-0159.Radio-phonograph, Zenith AM-FM. LPconsole. C. W. Gillam, Haskell, room 1.V* Length black belted Spring coat,size 12-14, $4. Ring Foster 7, Ext. 1040.Tennis racket, used once. C. W. Gillam,Haskell Hall, Room 1.Brown and white, college heel specta'tors, size 6, $2. "Phone Foster 7.Tickets to V&sslllikl Dinner. Contactyour nearest Mortar Board.Pony Boots, size 61a, $2. Proszeadzwoqlc,Phone Foster 7, Ext. 1040.SERVICESGerman educator and wife wish to ex¬change German lessons for English les¬sons. Mr. Bittener, after 6, OA 4-3199.Sewing, alteration, bachelors’ repairs,appointment only. Mrs. Edna Warinner,5625 S. Dorchester, MU 4-4680.ALL TYPES OF HOUSECLEANINGWALLS, WOODWORK, INSIDEWINDOWS, ETC.Try My Specialties—Non-skid Floor WaxCall Beilis KE 8-07586 to 8 A.M. or After 6 P.M.TRAVELthroughout Israel.LIVE2 weeks in agriculturalsettlements.LSARNabout Israel in Jerusa¬lem from faculty ofHebrew University andleading personalities.7 weeks in Israel —Stopover in Europe.APPLICANTSBETWEEN IB-35IO!Local andLong Distance MovingStorage Facilities for Books,Record Cabinets, Trunks, orCarloads of FurniturePeterson FireproofWarehouse, Inc.1011 East Fifty-fifth StreetBUtterfield 8-6711DAVID L. SUTTON, President IF YOU CAN WINTHESE WINGS YOU CAN EARN OVER*5.000 A YEAR AFTER GRADUATIONImportant facts about the opportunities for YOUas a Commissioned Officer—Pilot or Aircraft Observer—in the United States Air ForceMust I be a college graduate to take Aviation Cadet Training?No. But you must have completed a minimum of 60 semesterhours or 90 quarter hours toward a degree. In addition, underthe new Aviation Cadet training program, you must be be¬tween the ages of 19 and 26years, unmarried, and in goodphysical condition—with high requirements for eyes, ears,heart and teeth.How long before I get my commission?60 calendar weeks. You will receive the finest aviation trainingin the world—training that not only equips you to fly modemmilitary aircraft but prepares you for executive and administra¬tive work as well. At the completion of your training, you willhave acquired a commission as a 2nd Lieutenant and thecoveted silver wings of the United States Air Force.Where do I take my training?Pre-flight training will be at Lackland Air Force Base, SanAntonio, Texas. Primary, basic and advanced training will betaken at any one of the many Air Force bases located throughoutthe South and Southwest.What happens if I flunk the training course?Every effort is made to help students whose progress is unsatis¬factory. You can expect extra instructions and whatever indi¬vidual attention you may require. However, if you fail tocomplete the course as an Aviation Cadet, you will be requiredto serve a two-year enlistment to fulfill the minimum requirementunder Selective Service laws. Veterans who have completed atour of military service will be discharged upon request if theyfail to complete the course.What pay do I get as an Aviation Cadet? And after?As an Aviation Cadet you draw $109.20 a month pay. Inaddition, you get summer and winter uniforms, flight clothes,equipment, food, housing, medical and dental care and insurance... all free. After you are commissioned a 2nd Lieutenant youwill be earning $5,300.00 a year—with unlimited opportunitiesfor advancement.Are all Aviation Cadets trained to be Pilots?No. You can choose between becoming a Pilot or an AircraftObserver. Men who choose the latter will become commissionedofficers in Navigation, Bombardment, Radar Operation, orAircraft Performance Engineering. Do Aircraft Observers get flying training, too?Yes. Aircraft Observer Cadets receive approximately 200 hoursof "in the air” instructions. The primary phase of AircraftObserver training is the same for all branches (navigation,bombardment, etc.). The basic and advanced phases of trainingvary, depending on tKe specific course you pursue.What kind of airplanes will I fly?You will fly jets. The Pilot Cadet takes his first instructions ina light, civilian-type plane of approximately 100 horsepower,then graduates to the 600 horsepower T-6 ’’Texan” beforereceiving transition training in jets. You then advance graduallyuntil you are flying such famous first-line aircraft as F-86 Sabre,F-89 Scorpion, B-47 Stratojet, B-50 Superfortress. ObserverCadets take flight instructions in the C-47 Dakota, the T-29Convair, and the TB-50 Superfortress before advancing to first-line aircraft such as the F-89 Scorpion, B-47 Stratojet.Will my commission be in the Regular Air.'Force or Reserve?Aviation Cadet graduates, both Pilots and Aircraft Observers,get Reserve commissions as 2nd Lieutenants and become eligibleto apply for a regular Air Force Commission when they havecompleted 18 months of active duty .How long must I remain in Service?After graduation from the Aviation Cadet Program, you aretendered an indefinite appointment in the United States AirForce Reserve and are called to active duty with the UnitedStates Air Force for a period of three years.What recreation and leisure time will / have as a Cadet?Discipline will be rigid—especially for the first few weeks.However, it is not all work. You’ll find swimming pools, handballcourts, movies and other forms of recreation on the post.Where will I be stationed when I get my commission?You may be stationed anywhere in the world ... Hawaii, FarEast, Europe, Puerto Ricp, elsewhere. During your tour of duty,you will be in close touch with the latest developments in newflying techniques. You will continue to build up your flyingexperience and later should have no difficulty securing a CAAcommercial pilot or navigator rating.Your future is assured if you can qualify! Here's what to do;* *"/Take a transcript of your college credits and a copy of your birth certificate to your nearestAir Force Base or Recruiting Station. Fill out the application they give you.If application is accepted, the Air Force will arrange for you to take a physicalexamination at government expense.Next, you will be given a written and manual aptitude test;If you pass your physical and other tests, you will be scheduled for aoAviation Cadet training class. The Selective Service Act allows youa four-month deferment while waiting class assignment.WHERE TO GET MORE DETAILSVisit your nearest Air Force Base, Air Force Recruiting Officer,or your nearest Air Force ROTC Unit. Or write to:AVIATION CADET, HEADQUARTERS, U. S. AIR FORCEWashington 25, D. C. IT.S. AIR FORCEApril 3, 1953 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 11Ballplayers resume practiceBaseball coach Kyle Anderson expressed hopeful expecta¬tions for this year’s Varsity team staffed by several returningletterman. Co-captains John Frankenfeld and Smokey Garcia,as well as first-baseman Dave Utley, catcher Gill Levine, out¬fielder Mike Gordon and pitcher John Scandalios return fromlast year’s squad. Pitcher Lew Hamilton returns from thearmy after a two year absence *to bolster the mound staff. George Gray. Wendell MaramotoThe squad boasts depth for promises to give Frankenfeld athe first time in several years run for second base, and Levineinwith several men battling foreach position. Bob Mann, MortKaplan, and Jerry Menken areout for shortstop, while thirdbase is a toss-up between San¬ford Krantz, Bruce Colby and won seven games in his last sea¬son at UC), Scandalios, JohnBroyles, Tarr, Bud Nussbaum,Gray and Jerry Siegel are alltrying to make the mound staff.The team will compete withChicago area schools as well asplaying out of town colleges suchas Washington of St. Louis. Theyhope to improve on last year’srecord of three victories, andeleven defeats, and their experi¬ence should help them bolsterthis record.and Byron Ayne are fighting forthe catching spot. The outfieldwill consist of Gordon, Garcia(when he isn’t pitching), BuzzTarr and any of the prospectiveinfielders. Garcia, Hamilton (who Choir ...GRADUATE STUDENTSNeeded With a General Educationomiivcs ivBusiness Administration Human DevelopmentPublic Administration PlanningPsychology BiologyPhysicsStmlenta to Help in Preparing ExaminationsA boat $4,000 per Year to Start — 35 Hours a WeekSend Applications to Box 85, Chicago Maroon (from poge 8)and for the dramatic continuityhe managed to achieve. Particu¬larly notable were the tempi se¬lected for the first and finalchoruses. These works are usuallyplayed so slowly that much of thecontinuity is lost. The slightly in¬creased tempo which Mr. Vick-strom chose developed the musicto a much fuller extent, makingcertain rhythmic accents possiblewhich give the work greater con¬sistency.USAF visitsCaptain Sheppard C. Cummingsof the US Air Force Air WeatherService will visit UC next weekto meet with students interestedin applying for post - graduatetraining as Air Force weather of¬ficers. Captain Cummings will bein Reynolds Club 200 from 10 a.m.to 4 p.m. Tuesday.Anyone here named “Cannonball” Frobis her?Bases full. Fat part of the opposi¬tion batting order coming up. Themanager needs a new pitcher — fast!So he did what most everybody doesin an emergency— reached for thetelephone. It connects bull pen anddugout. “Cannonball” was elected toput out the fire.Ever wonder why people place somuch faith in telephones in time ofemergency? It’s because they knowit is dependable —a real friend. This dependability is a tribute tothe men and women of the Bell System.They are forever working on new ideasor improving old ones to give thenation the best telephone service inthe world.The interesting and rewarding workthey do could be yours as well. YourPlacement Officer will be happy togive you details about the many op¬portunities for employment in theBell System.Bell Telephone System UC'ers in News meetFour UC track men competed last Saturday in the 17thAnnual Chicago Daily News Relays. The Relays, rated asthe climax of the American indoor track season, featuredtwelve Olympic competitors from the U.S. and Canada, andrepresentatives of the Big Ten and Big Seven athletic con¬ferences. ~~~~■The Maroon’s mile relav 01ymPic champion Mai Whitfield,team, composed of Frank LeRoy Ebert of Iowa, Ted BaarsLoomos, Ken Stapley, Dave of Marquette, and Ben Youtseyof Purdue. Whitfield, out to es¬tablish a record, set the pace, andStapley battled with Baars forsecond. Stapley was third on thefirst and second laps, took secondon the third lap and was nippedby Baars in the last two yards fora third place and a time of 1:13.Whitfield set a new Chicago Re¬lays record for the 600 yard runof 1:09.7 and tied his own world’s500 meter record of 1:02.9. Whit¬field became a double winner bytaking the 1000 yard run.Another record was brokenwhen Ken Weisner of the GreatLakes Naval Training Station seta new world’s indoor high jumpmark with a leap of 6'10%". Har¬rison Dillard was a two-event win¬ner, taking both the 60 yard highhurdles and the 50 yard dash.Review ...(from page 9)Committee, might have ProfessorEaston ousted from the academicstudy of “political science” at UC.Instead he spends two chap¬ters to develop another lovely,academic definition of what po¬litical science is. And thencomes out with a new (?) gen¬eral equilibrium theory of poli¬tics analogous to that of eco¬nomics—so we may have, notone, but two formally perfectand equally sterile “sciences.”Besides the equilibirum of sup¬ply and demand in price on theimpartial capitalist market, Isuppose we will now find theequilibrium of individual free¬dom and dictatorial efficiencyin the value decision by the im¬partial mechanisms, e.g. voting,juries, etc., of the impartialdemocratic state. Thus we getthe most freedom in the best ofall possible worlds (Hail Pan¬gloss).Howard ShermanKen Stapley in the 600 yard run,Youtsey of Purdue in rear.Shephard, and Carl Dalke ran inthe College Mile Relay eventagainst Loyola University, Whea¬ton College, and Beloit College.Loyola won the race with a timeof 3:27.5, Wheaton was second,Beloit third, and UC fourth.Loomos, running the first legof the relay, fell back to fourthafter an early lead. Stapley tookthe baton from Loomos, andthough he gained on the field wasstill fourth when he passed toShephard. Shephard brought thecrowd to its feet as he ran hisleg in :50.7 and passed to Dalkein second place. Dalke could nothold his position and fell backto last. Although the team camein last, they ran their fastest mileof the season, 3:30.Stapley runs in 60CStapley later competed in theFrank Hill 600-yard run againstThe TX •Dm1375 E. 57th St.Record of the WeekAksel SchiotcTenorBach Cantata 189Pablo CasalsConductor Watch forThe UniversityMission TeamApril 17-21Sponsored byPorter FellowshipEaster GreetingsREFLECT TOIIR GOOD TASTEWITH THESE ROOKSHoly Bible—Revised Standard Version $6.00% The new modern trdnslotion thot everyone is talking‘ about.The Seven Storey Mountain. $1.98By Thomas Merton. This classic of o Trappist Monk.The Reconstructed Carmelite $10.00Missal by Margaret Rickert.Biblical Authority for Today $4.00Edited by Alon Richardson and Wolfgang Schweitzer.God, Jesus and Man $3.75The religious life. 2 volumes, boxed.The Easter Story $2.50Felix R. McKnight.Roman Painting $15.00A comprehensive ond authoritative study of ancientRoman pointing. 84 outhentic color plotes.A R ide Selection of Children** Rook* for EasterAmanda, Amelia, and Abigail $2.00^y Ruth King.Tell Me Little Boy $2.00Pictures by Roger Dunoisin.Scrambled Eggs Supper $2.50By Dr. Seuss.University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE.Page 12 THE CHICAGO MAROON Jr*April 3, 1953eastern meetPlacing 24th in a field of 37,three of UC’s best varsity fenc¬ers exceeded expectations in theNCAA fencing championshipsduring the spring recess at theUniversity of Pennsylvania.Against the tough competitionof Big Ten and Eastern schools,Ernie Dunston placed 25th in thefoils while Don Raer and AlexShane finished 23rd in their divi¬sions. the sabre and the epee.Each the top man in his respec¬tive weapon for the Maroons,Dunston, Baer, and Shane hadbeen selected to represent UC atthe Philadelphia meet.The regular varsity fencingteam ended its regular seasonwith four wins, six losses, and onetie, a considerably better recordthan last year. Coach Alvar Her-manson expects the team to im¬prove its record still further nextyear.Major letters were awarded toall three sabre men: Baer, DaveKarcher, and Joel Farber. Duns¬ton and Shane, top men in theirweapons, also won major letters.Bill Zavis and Mort Tennenberg,in foil, and Ed Svenson in epee,won minor letters.Fencers vie inMen spring intramural start Acro sel,s hckets .Contrary to what was reportedSpring Quarter Intramural competition gets under waywhen the College House Volleyball season starts Mondayafternoon in Bartlett Gym. Snell will be defending its 1952crown against Dodd, Mead, Chamberlain, Vincent, and Hitch¬cock in the Judson league, while Coulter, Mead, Linn, Salis¬bury and Beecher battle in the Burton league.The Fraternity league com-petition starts Tuesday after- 15. The doubles entries closenoon. DU, Psi U, ZBT. Phi April 15, and play starts the 20th.Gam Beta. Phi Delt, Phi Sig. and Winners of these divisions willAlpha Delt will compete in this receive medals,league. DU is the defending cham¬pion.The “B” league will be madeup of teams from Snell. Linn,Coulter. Beta, Alpha ~'elt. andPsi U.Entries for the Intramural soft-ball season close on April 15 andcompetition starts April 20. PsiU is defending its 1952 Fraternity crown, while Hitchock willtry to keep its College Housechampionship.Entries for the All-UniversityTennis Singles competition closeApril 10, and play starts April in the last MAROON, general ad¬mission and reserved seat ticketsare now being sold for Acrothea-tre's production of “Acro Antics.’’They are being sold for $1.50 and$1.85 each, respectively, at theAthletic Office in Bartlett Gym.$1 student rate tickets will con¬tinue to be sold there until April17th.Jj/te fjdtSum PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREET A retail store within easy walking distance of the campus wouldlike to secure the part time services (20 to 40 hours per week) ofa student, or resident of the University community, who plans to be inresidence during the summer quarter and for the next two years.Race, political opinions, sex, and religion are immaterial if non¬militant. The work is general work in a retail store. Hours can bearranged to fit changing academic schedules. Work will include stockarrangement, dusting, waiting on trade, and such other duties as youmay prove adaptable to. Ability to type on a mono or multi digit basiscan be occassionally utilixed, as can almost any special training orability.If you are interested in a job of this sort, we shall appreciate yourinforming us of your age, sex, previous employment if any, maritalstatus, knowledge of languages other than English, academic interests,ultimate vocational or professional intentions, and of course, wagesrequired. A picture may be helpful.Address inquiries to Help! c/o MAROON, Box 50We Feature the BestLEICAR0LLEI FLEXSTEREO REALISTB0LEXEverything inPhotographic SuppliesMODELCAMERA1329 £. 55 thGUYS, GALS & GRADS:INTERESTED INPUBLISHING?Fob Opportunities for1. EDITORIAL ASSISTANTTRAINEELearning all phoses of produc¬tion, layout & editing. *2. SALES PROMOTIONASSISTANTLearning to write copy & con¬jure up ideas likely to help sellbooks.3. CORRESPONDENTKeeping university educators allover country in touch with newtextbook developments.For information on these and manymore positions, call Jane Steele atRoiandEmploymenf Service1 16 S. Michigan FRanklin 2-0320(Where 2/3 of staff are UCers) CHESTERFIELD contains tobaccos^of better quality and higher price thanany other king-size cigarette... thesame as regular' Chesterfield,« MriftS i)6<>m t MrissTowccocoChesterfield first premium qualitycigarette in both regular & king-size kBmtfat YOU!TXTHEN you are asked to try a cigarette* * you want to know, and you ought toknow, what that cigarette has meant to peoplewho smoke it all the time.For a full year now, a medical specialisthas given a group of Chesterfield smokersthorough examinations every two months.He reports:no adverse effects to their nose, throator sinuses from smoking Chesterfields.More and more men and women all overthe country are finding out every day thatChesterfield is best for them.Syoif tfowt Qmo&myfTry Much Milder Chesterfieldwith its extraordinarily good taste.