McMichael callsdemocratic rexolution i49By DICK DeHAANUniversity of Chicago, May 13, 1949 31 A call for the enactment of President Truman’s “FairDeal” legislation, abandonment of the Marshall Plan andNorth Atlantic Alliance, abolition of racial segregation andthe futherance of equal rights for women was issued bySunday morning’s Rockefeller Chapel speaker as “the com¬pletion of the democratic revolution for which Christ gavehis life,”Morgenthau, Schactmantrade words on Atlantic Pact The Rev. Jack R. McMi-chael, executive secretary ofthe Methodist Federation forSocial Action. New York City, con¬fined his sermon on **Jesus and he outlined with the celebration ofMothers* Day.Pr«Mnf society is immoralLabeling our present society“immoral, unbrotherly and sick,**the Democratic Revolution” large- Mc^ichael blamed the deviationly to secular topics and linked up of Christ'sthe needs for the social reformsBy GEORGE SI DERIS democratic revolution*' for thehigh divorce rate and juvenile de¬AVC’s last membership meeting of the quarter, May 5, featured a rousing debatebetween Hans Morgenthau and Max Schactman on the question: “Can the Atlantic PactPrevent War?” Morgenthau, formerly on the faculties of the Universities of Frankfurtand Madrid, now professor of Political Science at UC, was to have upheld the affirma¬tive; Mr. Schactman, leader of the Independent Socialist League, a Trotskyist faction,argued the negative.Morgenthau declined to answer the question with a simple “yes.” “No pact canguarantee international ,, i°.... world war ... a thinly disguisedpeace . . . (just as) no mar- J^iu^^ary alliance . , . designed toriage contract can guaran- sheep to slaughter . . . thetee domestic peace.” He character- Atlantic Pact is just the counter-part of Russian imperialism.”He attacked the pact as a fraud Ex CommunistClub head getsAEC fellowshipized the pact as “the direct logicalconsequence of the Truman Doctrine;” and decried the adminis- fallacy; he characterized itstration measures to make the signers as “either idiots or liars Administrationrefuses replyto MAROONpact acceptable to the Senate and Only one of the five prin-(how else explain their pre- cipals in The MAROON’Sthe pe^le vious attitude toward Stalinism).” Jast week article entitled‘Book prices — a secret steal?’pact simply means that “there is jg g fraud because the signersa point beyond which we will not gj.g champions of democ-let Russia expand.”Poet not intelligent was available for comment on theracy the pact purports them to be; article this week.because “the Stalinists will not beitself, Morgan thau stopped by a piece of paper;” be- S. Walker Findley, office man¬ager of the University Press’ Pub-The pactP^twiU transform Eu. Sio;;*«mrnl ‘“w;Blligent foreign policy. It rope into an armed camp, and studying this question longan intelligentincludes countriesu/A rannnf rfpfpnrf P^vriiiriM^roun^ in his right mind ]rjgfQj.g yQ^j, editorial came up. Wewe cannot defend, excludes coun- think that this will bring peace ,, rontinup this studv ”tries we are bound to defend. “It dospr ” ® continue tnis stuay. Hans Freistadt, a former presi¬dent of UC’s Communist Club,confirmed this week that he wasoffered and has accepted a $1,600fellowship from the Atomic En¬ergy Commission.Freistadt, 23, received his B.S.and M.A. from the University, thelatter in 1948. He is now workingfor his Physics Ph.D. in generalrelativity at the University ofNorth Carolina, Chapel Hill, wherehe has announced he will continuehis “regular graduate work”.While at UC, Freistadt was Com¬munist Club president in 1947 and1948, and the first editor ofthat club’s quarterly journal, “OnGuard”. Swan SongWith this issue, the MAROONceases publication for the re¬mainder of the Spring Quarter.The prospect of comps is noless terrifying to our staffmembers than to other stu¬dents, and the MAROON leaveslittle time for study.We will be back on the standsin October.linquency. He cited “liberty, equal¬ity and fraternity” as embodyingthe principles of this revolution.creates the kind of thinking akin based on fallacy James A. Cunningham, Univer-to Maginot Line psychology.’ The pact is based upon a fallacy sitl vice-president in charge of‘"The real defense of Western created by the military mind, “the business affairs, declared himselfEurope is the potential and actual fallacy that the burning social “too busy” to comment at thismilitary might of the U.S.” The questions which underly U.S.-Rus- time. F. Champion Ward, deanarms shipments called for in the sian relations can be disposed of the College, replied “no com¬pact are not enough; Europe’s by a scrap of paper is grotesque n^ent” to a MAROON reporter’smoral recovery must be complet- , , , (these are) two social sys- inquiries.ed; Germany must be rebuilt— terns in historical conflict, not Both Willian T. Couch, Pressthough “I have great doubts on two bad boys.” Europeans will not director, who was out of town,which side the Germans would fight for capitalism, would rather and Miss Myra Iwagama, anotherfight.” Russia must be told point have the alternative of Stalinism. PressIt is Freistadt said the fellowship hasa value of $1,600, and is for aperiod of one year, beginningJuly 1.At present, he is supervisingphysics laboratory work of ChapelHill students.Freistadt is a native of Viennaand came to the US in 1941. Hebecame a citizen during his twoyears of Army service from 1944to 1946. •blank that any further advancewould be considered an attack on that the implementation requiresthe U.S.Merganthau would vote for poet official, were unavailablefraudulent, moreover, in for comment.MAROON Reporter Mitchellmore than is stated in the terms. Taibleson, who uncovered theSince the European workers will story, has been retained in em-Prof. Morganthau closed the not fight, a huge American mill- pioyment by the University Press.first half of the debate with the tary force will be required; fascist The article showed that Pressremark, “If I were a senator, I like regimes must be instituted to markups on syllabi ranged up- towould vote for the pact with the drive the people to war. The AEC in Washington saidstudents selected for the awardsare chosen by the National Re¬search Council, a semi-govern¬mental scientific agency, and thatno investigation of the scholarsstimulate for security purposes un¬less they are to be entrusted withatomic secrets. Illustrates points from life of Christ^Repeatedly illustrating hispoints with facts from the life andtimes of Christ, McMichael statedthat the “double standard ofmorality” must be abolished ifequal rights for women are everto be realized. He recommended, incase of adultery, punishment forthe man rather than for thewoman. He cited Jesus’ recogni¬tion of Mary as an equal in sup¬port of his suffragist contentions.“We must end our fear of free¬dom,” McMichael said in castigat¬ing the “cold war which may verysoon turn hot” and the state ofworld affairs today. “We must re¬capture for the United States ourlost leadership. Such a nation (asI have described) could lead theworld into prosperity, democracyand peace.”neatest misgivings that it would Mr. Schactman concluded with 192 per cent. Must strengthen the UNMcMichael also called for astrengthening of the United Na¬tions, and a multilateral disarma¬ment, under the control of UN,rather than unilateral rearmamentoutside its control.do very little to preserve peace or the statement, “The only road tobring about war.* peace and order of the world isMr. Schactman called the pact the establishment of a world force“another milestone in the third independent of Stalin or the U.S.” YPA request for UC coed chosenVAAAA V4 4 V4V ISVt VS A V KJVCIfAAAA \fA USAV Wperation among culturesill possible, says McKeonitlon can be achieved not been clearlv stated, he said open hearings onstatus is refusedCooperation can be achievedbetween Russia, the United States,and the other countries of theworld, declared Richard McKeonin the final lecture of his Cultureand World Community series,“Moral Ends and Political Insti¬tutions.”McKeon began by breakingdown the problem of applying thevast amounts of knowledgeamassed in recent years to moraland political problems into twoparts: that of applying scientifictechniques to human problems,and that of the relation of moralsto politics.Nof a complete oppositionIn its opposition to the East,continued McKeon, the West hastacitly accepted conflict on East¬ern terms, in a simple oppositionbetween the two. The first ques¬tion has resolved into an agree-nient on specific words such as“democracy,” he said, but intoextreme disagreement as to whatthey mean. The second has be¬come a debate between “dogma¬tism and relativism” when moralsare introduced into politics, bothsides being certain that they areright.Actually, said McKeon, the Westmust recognize that it consists ofnot one but a plurality of cultures,and its opposition must be recaston the basis of its cultural founda¬tions, and not those of the Rus¬sians. Our cultural beliefs have rot been clearly stated, he said,since the time of our forefathers,and the “problem of the impactof the social doctrines of the lastcentury” on Western traditionshas made it necessary to expressthem as clearly as those of Marx¬ism.Abolition of fearBut the tremendous advance inUS recognition of its obligationsto these other cultures, and theprovision of some of the meansof their subsistence is not enough,he said. We must be “somehowrelated by a common doctrine”while fear is abolished by under¬standing, or else conditions mustbe such that each culture canpursue “mutually compatible, in¬dependent aims”.Only fear can block this under¬standing, either fear of domina¬tion, or fear of the lack of mini¬mum subsistence, a major causeof the three great revolutions ofmodern times, India, China andRussia. Of the two means toeliminate this fear, said McKeon,arriving at a concensus of opinionis not likely. Force would be toocostly, and persuasion too im¬probable. In the absence of agree¬ment on principles or meaningsof words, agreement on the level,of action must take place.“There is still time,” he said,“for there are natural tendenciesto a peaceful solution within thetwo ideologies.” A request from membersof the UC chapter of theYoung Progressives of Illi¬nois for open hearings and areconsideration of the recent sus¬pension of that organization wasturned down at a meeting lastThursday.SA seeks hearingsIn its regular meeting lastnight, the Student Assemblycame out in support of therequest of YPA for open hear¬ings. The Assembly also wenton record as requesting theAdministration to reconsiderits suspension order until suchtime as- open hearings havebeen concluded. Miss Goldie Lipshutz, 16, studentin the College, was Mayor of Chi¬cago Tuesday.Nineteen Chicago teen-agerstook over the city government onthat day in observance of Na¬tional Youth Week. Miss Lipshutzwent into office on a platform ofgraft and gambling cleanup.She conferred with otherwiseMayor Kennelley and many cityofficials during her one-day tenure. He harshly criticized the world'scolonial systems, with particularattention to that of the Nether¬lands. “It is time to supplant thepresent heyday of individualisticcreed with the peacetime machin¬ery of democracy,” he said.Christ's a “people's revolution"Calling Herod “a sly fox of apolitician in league with Rome,”McMichael pointed out howChrists revolt was, in fact, a “peo¬ple’s revolution.” He described thetwo sides as “the little men,” thosefor individual and social revolu-(Continued on page 8)Robert M. Strozier, dean of stu¬dents, John L. Bergstresser, assist¬ant dean of students, Rexford G.Tugwell, faculty advisor to YPA,and former executive board mem¬bers met last week to discuss theruling of the administration. Itwas pointed out in a letter fromthe YPA’ers that the distributionof leaflets, for which the organiza¬tion was suspended, was done “onthe basis of established precedent... in terms of how the rules (for¬bidding literature distribution) hadbeen construed up to the time wewere accused.”Contend rules limit freedomThe YPA’ers also contended thatthe intent of the rules was to“limit freedom of political expres¬sion on campus” and that the “un¬justified suspension has arisen(Continued on poge 9) Cfioncellor and Mrs. Hutchins^ The MAROON offers its heortiest congrotulotions to Chancellor ondMrs. Hutchins on behalf of its staff members and the student body. Theformer Vesta Sutton Orlick ond the Choncellor were morried last Tuesdayevening in o condlelight ceremony ot the home of the bride's mother, Mrs.William Sutton, of Washington Heights.The ceremony, ottended only by members of the immediate families,was performed by like Choncellor's fother. Rev. William J. Hutchins, formerpresident of Bereo College, Berea, Kentucky. The bride's only attendont wotBarboro Karen, her 6-year-old daughter.Mrs. Hutchins was the Choncellor's secretory in his copocity os choir-mon of the board of editors for the Encyclopoedio Brittonnica. Her firstmorrioge to Raymond I. Orlick ended in divorce in 1943. Mr. Hutchins^formerly married to Moude Phelps McVeigh, wos divorced in July, 1948.Immediately ofter the ceremony the Hutchins' left for o honeymoonin the south.,'e-VIM GLAD I/VUDETHESO-DAVMILDNESS test;DON. CAMELS 'ARE grand! ITS CAMELS^ WITH ME, TOO,PAUU-FOR TASTEAND mildness!For Lilt ^ Lyrics singing ''Jdhnny Get Your Girl(A COLUMBIA RECOBD)In a recent coast-to-coast test of hundreds of men andwomen who s"’''’''"d Camels, and only Camels, for30 days, nc 'pecialists, making weekly ex¬aminations, repv>x«.«.vANOT ONE SINGLE CASE OFTHROAT IRRITATION due tocokingSongstress PAULA KELLY and discjockey DON OTIS agree on Camels formildness and flavor. B. J. Beynolds Tobacco Company, Winston- Saluu. N. CL# Paula Kelly, rave-fave vocalistwith the star rhythm group, "TheModernaires", goes for rollickingrhythm in a song. And for smokingpleasure, Paula says: "It’s Camelswith me! I like their cool mildnessand that rich Camel flavor.’*Tim * -it- '■ 'tr-r-snip ■'Vage 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, May 13, 1945UC placement office Harris Institute to sponsorreports iob prospects Isctures on southeast Asia® ® ® 'D/xori o li cwt V^CXinT^ O T^yiPriniUPriOn Tint^ Sf Votaw to appealcase if adversedecision is givenGreg Votaw, student in the HU'‘Nationalism and Regionalism region, a phenomenon not ^en -f rw • <Job opportunities for University ers. In secondary education the south Asia’’ will be the subject s^^ce the tremendous migrations wiamties Division now being trieiof Chicago graduates • are not shortage is manifested only in ^ , i..-* from India to the East of 1000 failure to register for selectivta series of four public lecturesnearly as lush this spring as they certain fields, with the fields of " years ago. ^mce, sTOted yesterday that hiirere during the war and have English and the Social Sciences ^ week from Wednesday sponsored cm^atpr will be J S appeal his case in thibeen for the three years since that actually being overcrowded at the by the 1949 Norman Harris Insti- p,,rnival advisor to the eovern- ^ adT^rse judgmenttime, according to the concensus present time. tute, a foundation for the study -.--f Burma and author of ^ raise thiOf University placement officials M concern teachi^ opportu- of problems in international re- .-colonial Policy and Practice”, a “^TOTma^hM been on thas reported to the Maroon this nltles in higher education, gradu- lations, now in its twenty-fifth oomparison of the philosophical 'i’"week. ates will have to scratch awfully year. bases of colonial rule in British since late 194g and aEssenUally two factors seem to hard to find a desirable one. The question to be considered mdu and the Dutch East Indies, itn *”■***be responsible for the tightening Woellner declares. The shortage concerns the rising nationalism According to Phillip Talbot. Pro- -rn. hriif vLup of placement opportunity. The over toe past few years has been apparent in India. Burma. Thai- ,essor in the Social Sciences Divl- ‘ ™first is the general deceleration caused by many teachers leaving land, the Philippines, and toe gion. he is one of the few men in S!" ‘ i.^h a iri . ,of business expansion and the ^e profession for more lucrative indies, whether they will be bene- the world today who knows toe J tcaution of business men. fearful war-time jobs, but most of them ficial for the area, and whether economic problems of the regions 1“! ^of lower prices, throughout toe have returned by now. and. sec- the group can be knit together gnti the only man on the spot " decision will be hande<entire national economy. The sec¬ond its the alleviation of most ofthe abnormal shortages of person¬nel resulting from war-time dis¬organization.Not until OctoberEighty per cent of last year’sJune graduates were placed injob positions as soon as mid-July,but according to estimates made (Continued on poge 6)Need for a liberal bar groupfilled by UC Quild: Epstein The decisioninto a solid cultural and economic analyzed* its^'problemrrn Campbell June 7.a scholarly fashion. He is beingbrought in cooperation with theInstitute of Pacific Relations.In addition, Cora DuBois, an¬thropologist in the Southern AreasBranch, Division of Research forPar East, Department of State,“Filling the need for a liberal bar group, the UCbrthroffke^rvrcauonli Quid- chapter of the National Lawyer’s Guild prepares inemoran- development. Brigadier Generalance and Placement as large a Civil rights cases, holds seminars on legal ethics and Carlos P. Romulo, Philippines Rep-part of this June’s graduating investigates the legal issues involved in many government resentative to the UN, will speakclass will probably not have been measures,” said Elliott Epstein, UC organization president, on the militaiy aspects of theplaced in jobs by the month of in an interview Wednesday. He further added that the problem in an address, "National-October. * guild does not take sides in political fights but is only Communism and RegionalismThe Office of Vocational Quid- interested in the legality of ’mnce and Placement is having to the iSSUes.do much more this year to learn in South Asia.”the formation of chapters atNorthwestern, Minnesota, Wiscon-orf /xwi foa/vbina cfaffc anH guild is now develop- sin and Illinois. Robert Silverstein,to business and industry! accord- open a legal aid UC student, is ^in charge of much “DRINKand be merry,for our time on earthis short, and deathlasts forever."—Amplis;Fragments, 330 B.C.Jimmy’s . . 55rii . .ond WoodlownJng to Robert C. Woellner, assist- Station for lower income of this work in his capacity asAMERICANBUS LINES»nt dean of students in charge groups near 63rd street. Its national secretary and youth dele-of toe office. Woellner reports members are working on gate to toe board of toe nationalthat the much-publicized shortage campus to secure the help of UCof teachers exists only in certain professors for the project. Otherdivisions of the educational field activity at UC includes its acting»nd that there are no severe as mediator in disputes betweenshortages of teachers in the type student factions,of work in which the largest part An Illinois F.E.P.C. is supportedof Chicago U. graduates who are by the group which has workedheaded for teaching jobs want against the Broyles Bills, sectionsplacement. of the Taft-Hartley Act, and theShortage In schools UC administration’s stand towardThe critical teacher shortage Is the United Public Workers. TheIn elementary education, and, al- Guild has investigated the legalthough well over 50% of those issues in the Communist trial inwho receive higher degrees at Chi- New York and submits researchcago go into teaching of some on many similar matters to thekind, a very small part of them city chapter,become elementary school teach- uC guild members are aiding in Chorter Buses for Ail Occasions.See poge for the all-compus bustrip contest, using on AmericanBus Lines ^us.Gerald Schwab, MU. 4-3287F. J. Toft, FA. 4-93926270 Stony Island Woodworth’sBOOK STORE1311 E. 57Hi StreetShelves and Tables Loaded withNEW and USED BOOKSTo Fill Your Every NeedOpen Evenings — Mon.-Wed.-Fri.Friday, May 13, 1949 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3I JOHN SCHENCK and MARY BATTLEPresentJAZZArt Hodcs’ Back Room Boyswith Wild Bill Davisonand Pee Wee RussellBrad GowansHerb WardTony SpargoFOLKBrownie McGheeMama YanceyJimmy YanceyClub Silhouette1551 Howard St. $1.50^Monday, May 16—8:30 P. M.lliiiiiiGivo yov oil the greatest dance hitsby famous and favorite bonds!Roll up the rugs! Nothing will inter¬rupt your dancing pleasure. Up to 25minutes of music on one record I Hoursof continuous music on automaticchangers!JUST RELEASED!All These Great “DANCE PARADE’*Records! 6 to 8 full-length hits by theband that made them famous on eachrecord—and only $2.85 each.(Fed. 7ax IncL)Harry James Gene KrupaFrankie Carla Duke EllingtonXavier Cugat Uenny GoodmanLes Brown Woody HermanClaude ThornhillHeor These New Records—You'llmarvml at thoir magnificont tonal ffi/iliiilliifiswiithe ultimate in Recorded Music . . . the finest phonographrecord ever manufactured.k4a'lu a/mmIm#" •!•«/ <8* t.g U ♦ •<.♦ UC profs sparkfight to legalizeuse of pound dogsTwo UC professors areleading the fight to legalizethe use of impounded dogsand cats as subjects for medicalresearch. Dr. A. J. Carlson, Emer¬itus Professor of Physiology, andDr. N. R. Brewer, Lecturer in Phy¬siology and superintendent of an¬imal quarters are sparking a cam¬paign directed at the public healthand safety committee of the stateHouse of RepresentativesThat committee recently failed,by a nine to twelve margin, to re¬port out and recommend a billauthorizing medical schools to useunclaimed, impounded animals forresearch purposes.Carlson and Brewer issued astatement claiming that 96 percent of the dogs impounded an¬nually in Illinois are killed. Theuse of these dogs, they say, wouldsave the medical schools $1,400,-000 and constitute a valuable con¬tribution to the fight againstdisease.They quote several of the com¬mittee members who voted againstthe bill as saying that they reallyfavored it but lacked visible sup¬port in the form of letters fromconstituents.“We’re sure that if the peopleindicate their support of themeasure, it will pass,” Dr. Brewertold the MAROON.He urged Chicago students towrite to these committee members;Leon M. Schuler, Louis G. Ber¬man, Charles M. Sky les, and FredJ. Smith.Koser gets Pasteur prizeDr. Stewart A. Koser, professorof bacteriology at UC, has beenpresented the annual Pasteuraward of the Society of IllinoisBacteriologists. Dr. Koser is knownfor his studies on the paratyphoidgroup of bacteria, food poisoning,and the growth of bacteria. Harry joins AVCat DC conferenceThe national AVC Housing Conference held in Wash¬ington, D. C., May 8 and 9 was highlighted by encouragingprospects for the passage of the Spence and Mitchell hous¬ing bills by the House of Representatives, by unanimousadoption of five resolutions calling for further action tosolve the housing shortage, and by the signing up of Presi¬dent Truman as an AVC member.Urges Jewish exodusto found Israelite state“Jewish people from all over theworld should accept the moralchallenge of the founding of thestate of Israel and immigrate tothe Jewish Holy land,” Dr. NathanRotenstreich, philosophy professorof the new University of Jerusa¬lem, told an overflow crowd at theregular Friday evening Hillel Fire¬side meeting. This meeting markedthe first anniversary of the found¬ing of the state of Israel.Quoting a statement of WinstonChurchill, to wit: “One must lookon the establishment of the stateof Israel from the point of view ofworld history.” Dr. Rotenstreichsaid that from the Jewish point ofview the founding of Israel is therealization of a dream centuriesold. “Furthermore, it has shakenthe mythological sources of anti¬semitism which have been builton two now-refuted points. Thefirst myth is that the Jewish peo¬ple should remain inferior in orderto prove what happens to thosewho don’t accept the true faith—Christianity. The second myth isthat there would be no Jewish hisi-tory after the destruction of an¬cient Israel and that Judaism wasonly a link in an historicalchange.” Six delegates from the UCchapter of AVC attended theconference, the largest dele¬gation from Illinois. Patrick Foley,chapter housing chairman, headedthe delegation, which also includ¬ed Patricia Dilworth, CharlottaEvans, Jean P. Jordan, RuthWedge, and Gerhard Weinberg.Weinberg served on the confer¬ence resolutions committee.Conference opened SundayThe conference opened with aplenary session Sunday afternoonat which Raymond Foley, HHFAadministrator; Lee F. Johnson,executive vice-president of theNational Public Housing Confer¬ence; Rep. Brent Spence, chair¬man of the House Banking andCurrency committee; Sen. IrvingIves of New York, and John Hilder,executive director of the NationalCapital Housing Authority spoke.Session followed by tourThe session was followed by atour of Washington .slums. Thatevening six workshop sessions onspecific housing problems wereheld. Subjects were public hous¬ing, the new rent control law, co¬operative housing, local housingsurveys, building and buying ahome, and city planning.Delegates spent Monday mor¬ning visiting Congressmen fromtheir home states, urging them tovote for the Spence and Mitchellbills.BOSTON INSTITUTEGRADUATE SCHOOL OF^lealCOMMERCIAL • RESIDENTIAL • INDUSTRIALINTENSIVE ONE^YEAR DAY PROGRAMProfessional careers throughout America are open toyoung men and women in banking, business and govern¬ment in the real estate fields of appraising, management,mortgage lending, brokerage and home building.Enrolment limited to graduates of approved colleges,Co-educational. Classes admitted in September only,15 Commonwealth Avenue • Boston • COpley 7^0336 Resolutions adoptedAt the final plenary session, res¬olutions were adopted calling forlegislation forbidding racial orreligious discrimination in pub¬licly financed or aided housing,urging construction of IV2 millionhousing ,units annually, askingAVC chapters to set up tenantadvisory centers, urging legisla¬tion providing for federal guar¬antee of municipal bonds for lo¬cal housing projects, and askingthat the “fair net operating in¬come” formula be repealed and nofurther blanket rent increasesgranted.The Chicago Area council ofAVC has called an area housingconference for May 21, in whichother civic organizations will par¬ticipate, to translate these pro¬posals into action at the commu¬nity level.^ OutdtcutdcH^Webster automatic, 256-7.Plays standard and micro¬grove records. Ten 12-inch ortwelve lO-inch records con beplayed at one load-= mg.^ for only ^ J ^ 95PLUS your choice of$10 worth of records= Regular price of ployer alone is 49.501217 E. 55th St. PL. 2-4361Open every eveningPag^ 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, May 13, I9490Books and ReadingCONFUCIUS, THE MAN AND THE MYTH. By H. G. Creel. New York. John Day, 1949.$5.00.To most of us, Confucius is only a name in the history books, a part of a jokein the “Confucius Say” wisecracks. Yet his influence through the past 2500 years ex¬ceeds that of any man except Mohammed, Buddha, Jesus, and Moses. For the last nineyears Professor Creel of the Department of Oriental Languages and Literatures hasbeen working on this book, an attempt to show Western man for what Confucius andConfucianism really stand. ... , . » . , tt ^iiTu 4 V. A A u early American music is good ecanposers. He further dis-Wh^t he has produced such included together with an inter- cussed a hypothesis of the rela-a brief review as th^S can in- esting anecdotal discussion of such tion of nationalism to the compos-dicate only sketchily. ^ Paganini and Moussorg- ing spirit. Such contentions in aOnlv Piffht of thP Sixt,een chan- author does a very cur- sense are difficult to deal withters are directly concerned with discussing two serious and present a strong dilemma toTiv»v crMirooc problems: the lack of great com- some intellectuals.sor Creel has gone directly to the country and the The book is very simply written.modern versus classical music perhaps too much so. If you wantto know all about music in anComments on 9ood eorth hour read it. If you have moreOn the first issue Taylor gives a time you can certainly find someAnalects, written by Confuciusand his immediate disciples, and _ ^to Mencius, written about 150years after Confucius’ death.These he considers the only really nod of approval to the theory that more worthwhile works,authentic materials for the facts lack of political freedom produces —Ckorles Gorvinof the sage’s life and the exactwords of his writings.Confroversy comes lostOf the remaining eight chap¬ters, three deal with the back¬ground of Confucius’ life and fivewith the “myth” of Confucius—what happened to Confucianism jand to China when self-seeking jinterpreters appropriated and F>er- jverted the original philosophy of IChina’s “First Holy One.” These |latter sections are perhaps the imost interesting — and the most jcontroversial—in the book. }Unencumbered with footnotes!(relegated to the appendix*, clear- ;ly and forcefully written, this is awork to be read slowly and !thoughtfully, a welcome guide to iwhat is behind the headlines from |China. Professor Creel may well be !proud of this, his magnum opus. !—Eli M. Oboler Organ mars beauty of Bach,Purcell in concert: CriticThe Spring Concert of the University Choir was givenon both Sunday and Monday evenings at Rockefeller Chap¬el. The works performed were the Cantata No. 61, “ComeRedeemer of Our Race,” Cantata No. 161, “Come, ThouBlessed Hour of Dying,” and the Motet, “Be Not Afraid” bvBach; Palestrina’s “Stabat Mater”; and the Motet, “JehovaQuam Multi Sunt Hostes Mei” by Purcell. ’The only great fault of thejjerformance lay in the use foJJo^h'R the Palestrina, but theof the organ in place of an merits of each work areinstrumental ensemble in the Bach unim^rtant considering theircantatas and the Purcell motet, overall excellence.Besides sounding extraordinarily The Bach Cantata No. 61 was ashrill, especially in the upper short, less than inspired examplerange, it was played without suf- of Bach's work, and the perform-ficient legato. The result sounded ance of it contained noticeableunfortunately close to that pro- flaws in intonation, as did the pei-duced by a calliope. Beyond this, formance of the Bach Motet, Buthowever, the performances were the latter was a far more complex,excellent, and were admirable pre- contrapuntal work, and was sungsentaticns of one of the best group a capella, adding to its diflicult.v.of selections the choir has ever The Cantata No. 61 was performedgiven us. with two obligato flutes, considei-Boch beots Purcell ably relieving the effect of theThe Bach Cantata No. 161 is organ. Of the soloists, Theodoresurely one of his best, and the Rail’s rich bass voice and HelenPalestrina Stabat Mater is a sub- Marchbank’s pleasant sopranolime masterpiece. The Purcell were outstanding.Motet struck us as anti-climactic, (Continued on poge 61Confucius sends me: Oboler;Qarvin says Taylor stompedDeems Taylor tells oilMUSIC TO MY EARS. By DeemsTaylor, Simon and Schuster, 1949.9*3.00.Deems Taylor, composer andcritic, has drawn on his many tal¬ents to give us a book of opinions,anecdotes and technical interpre¬tations more or less dealing wdthmusic. Although supposedly forthe amateur as well as the con¬noisseur, the book is rather slant¬ed toward the former. Discussionof its style can be eliminated byreferring the reader to the au¬thor’s talks on the Sunday sym¬phony—Standard Oil of New Jer¬sey.Praise can well be directed atthe manner in which Taylor ex¬plains the problems that the,com¬poser of symphonic music meets.He presents, for instance, theimage of the comjxi.ser writingthousands of notes of orchestra¬tion (most good composers dotheir own) who then finds thatmost orchestras are unable to af¬ford the number of bassoon play¬ers which he has included.Discusses musical dilemmaAlthough very sensitive to theproblems of the American com¬poser, Taylor can offer no solu¬tion. Faced with the fact thatopera cannot be written for otherthan the Metropolitan and thatgood orchestras for new piecesare few in number, he can onlysuggest that the unknown be pa¬tient and play for parties offriends if necessary. His beliefthat few undiscovered geniuses liein their graves is firmly stated.Although much excellent ma-SPANISH - FRENCHRUSSIAN - CHINESEALL LANGUAGESCofiYcrsotiaii, Grammar, SpanishShorthand. EnpKsh for foreign born.Native, fraduated, experiencedteachert. Day and evening. Officeboars 10-4 P. M.FERNANDEZ SCHOOL64 E. Lake St., AN. 3-3865 a/efcyLuckies’ fine tobdicco picks you up when you’relow a a a colms you down when you’re tense—putsyou on the Lucky level! That’s why it’s so impiortantto remember that Lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco —mild, ripe, light tobacco. No wonder more independ¬ent tobacco experts — auctioneers, buyers and ware¬housemen—smoke Luckies regularly than the next twoleading brands combined! Get a carton of Luckies today!^.S./AI,F.T —AucAff Sfitike Ateana fine TiAaeeoSo round, so firm, so folly packed — so free and eosy on the drowaarx.. lie. icco eourAH*^THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5Friday, May 13, 1949Art and Artists The Music StandBohemians swarm to 57thstreet for artists'With the springtime airs of “Gaite Parisienne” causingall hearts to rejoice, ye painters, poets, and art-lovers willcome forth tomorrow and Sunday to view the SecondAnnual 57th Street Art Fair. From 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. eachday there will be paintings, handcrafts, and sculpturefilling the sidewalk between Kenwood and Kimbark on57th Street.Started last year by MaryLouise Womer of Little Gal¬lery and former MAROONart editor, John Forwalter, thecommittee has grown this year totwenty well - known artists andleaders of art groups. The fifty ex¬hibitors of last year are expectedto number over a hundred, andadded to the affair will be a puppetshow, street dancing, and wander¬ing musicians. On Sunday after¬noon there is to be an auction ofpaintings by many of the artists.When Mrs. Biesel and Mrs. Galeof the Renaissance Society joinedthe fair group they revealed that57th street has had an outstandingart colony since the ColumbianExposition of 1893, with manyworld-famous painters and writers.A history of the fair will be avail¬able.Egon Weiner, winner of threeawards this year in sculpture, has promised a good showing of sculp¬ture, which will include a demon¬stration of stone carving. HaroldHaydon of the University will leada contingent of oil painters, whilepaintings in water color and othermedia will be shown by such well-known craftsmen as Emil Armin,Gertrude Abercrombie, and OliveZielonka. Sponsoring organizationsinclude the Renaissance Society ofthe U. of C., Hyde Park Art Cen¬ter, Little Gallery, the MAROON,and the Art Fair committee.This year’s Fair coordinator willbe Mary Louise Womer, who hasinvited all those who have not yetregistered to go down early Satur¬day morning with their paintings.She stressed that the order of theday would be gay costume and gaylaughter. In case of rain anima¬tion will be suspended until thefollowing weekend.—John ForwoUerISBELL’S > sBESTILRIIIn>' AI 1435 E. 51st STREETLOUMGE ADJOlIVllVO^WWVVVWVWWWVWv VVWVWVWlsummerbreezecatchers 0imade fromfabrics withwide openwindowsEast wind, west wind, no wind at all, it’s always fairand cooler in Van Heusen **Air IFeafe.” By actual test,these open-window fabrics let in twice the air thatordinary shirtings do! You’ll find ^*Air Weave'^ tailoredwith custom-airy Van Heusen magic in regular shirtsand sport shirts in styles acclaimed on campus, and off.Tested fabrics—a new shirt free if your Van Heusenshrinks out ofsize! Bre^ into your dealer’s, $3.65, $3.95.^ Other Van Heusen shirts $2.95 and up.Van Heusen* i.,shirtsthe world’s smartestPHILLIPS-JONES coar., NEW YORK 1. N. Y. Qoldman gives Handel pat onhead, Qebert crack on wristThe concert performance of Handel’s opera^ Julius Caesar in Mandel Hall Fridaynight was unusual in one respect. It was, at the same time, very good and very bad.Such a state of affairs is made possible because there are two factors which must beconsidered: the performance of Gebert’s concert version of the opera (the one em¬ployed Friday) and its relation to Handel’s, which appears in the Handelgesellschaft.The performance of Gebert’s Julius Caesar was excellent. Donald Gramm, asCaesar, is a singer who should rise to the top of his profession. His voice is clean,-pleasant and well controlled, their function so reduced that they omit the middle sections and re-his diction excellent and his border on being absurd. With one peats in an apparently arbitrarymusicianship of top quality, half of the roles nearly or com- manner. In Sextus’ first aria theEleanor Limbach s Cornelia was pletely omitted the dramatic fab-appropriately broken-hearted and ric assumes a somewhat motheatenaltogether well done. Her singing appearance.is smooth and the way she is ableto sustain a phrase is a source ofconstant wonder to me. EleanoreWarner, as Cleopatra, was as love¬ly to look at as to listen to, or, ifyou wish, to listen to as to look at.Harold Brindell, as Sextus, sang,as he has in the past, stronglyand rather indelicately.Siegmund Levarie’s conductingwas in every way praiseworthy.The tempo were admirably chosen,the phrasing and dynamics sensi¬tively executed.When evaluating the Gebertconcert version, two questions mustbe answered: how effective is itdramatically and what has it doneto Handel’s music. The first part of the concert ver¬sion comes to a somnolent con¬clusion with four cofisecutive largoarias. The second part opens withtwo largo and two andante arias.(When compared to what one canonly surmise to be the comparablesection of the original, it is foundthat fast and slow arias are equal da capo is present but four of thesix final orchestral bars are cut.Sextus’ recitative which followsCornelia’s first aria is of the samelength in both versions but Geberthas changed both the harmonyand melody. The reasons for mak¬ing these changes, if they everexisted, must have been occult.Limitations fade colorThe original orchestration callsfor strings, oboes, flute, bassoon.in number.) The result is a shame- harp, theorboe and viola da gamba.i h Action lost to efficiencyThe principal reason for makinga concert version wjas, in this case,to shorten a long work in order tomake it dramatically persuasive.With what result? All feeling ofaction is lost. The recitative be¬comes a dramatic hash. Arias areabsent at places where they areall too plainly called for. Twocharacters are omitted altogetherand two others are retained with ful dramatic sagging, well com¬municated to the audience, whichleaves the opera with the dramaticresiliency of a plate of spaghetti.Coesor suffers cuMingGebert’s treatment of those por¬tions of Handel’s music which hechose to retain is even more high¬handed. Eighteen bars are rippedwholesale out of Caesar’s openingaria and one bar, written by some¬one albeit not by Handel, is in¬serted. Caesar’s next aria is averitable patchwork. After an al¬tered orchestral introduction thefirst three bars are kept intact,the next seven cut, the next fourunaltered and the following fiveomitted. One can forgive the absence ofgamba and theorboe but to usestrings alone, as was done Fridaynight, sacrifices most, if not all,of the typically Baroque tonecolor.The problem created by da capoarias has led Gebert to include or It is granted that the problemsof presenting a Handel opera areconsiderable. One must, however,find an adaptation which is bothsuccessful in its own terms andfaithful to the original. If such aversion cannot be found (or made)it would be better to avoid thework altogether or to present itsimply as a series of arias. At leastin the latter case the transcriptionwould not pretend to be somethingwhich it is not.—James GoldmanKleiglightsWest Side to getcultural cinemaThe Circle Theatre, about 3100west on Roosevelt Road, has an¬nounced a new policy parallelingthat of the World Playhouse, butwith more frequent programchanges. Admission prices havebeen scaled down, too.For those who might havegained the impression last weekthat the art of the documentaryis in utter decay, it is recommend¬ed that they see Native Land, awell-done and tremendously vitalAmerican documentary, which willbe shown in these regions in thenear future.A.Page 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, May 13, 194$Retiring Fleet^Streeter writes Bach, Purcell... Paperswill enable us to compare the or- served, say 7*30^ to Fourth Estate careerBy DAVID BRODER Choir arrangement excelisA few words should be saidabout the Stabat Mater. The w'orkw'as composed for double choir, atechnique we connect more with chestral “Elegie Francaise,” a 1movement from his Tenth Sym- SVlUpOdYlCiCCt pYOfsphony, with his chamber music.Schumann’s Concerto for FourHorns is written for a unique com-If a preoccupation with history and reminiscence is, Venetian than Roman practiceas Oswald Spengler suggests, a certain symtom of a de- choice of a small choir of one bination of solo instruments, andcaying society, then the MAROON S bequeathing me 10% voice to a part against a slightly partially for that reason is littleinches for an autobiographical obitu^y is an event of no ^hoir seemed highly appro- heard today. Schumann is becom-small significance to students of cultural obsolesence. Lest p^jate. The true richness and clar- ..rrt.r^tood as an orchestralthe muckrakers of malaise in the Reynolds Club attach uy of such music is only achieved urderstood as an otoo great importance to this scribbling, it should be pointed in intimate, modestly scaled per- composer, despite the fact that Seven UC professors were votedsubpoenas by the Broyles Corn-mission this week. They are tcbe quizzed on alleged differencesbetween their affidavits and thetestimony of Howard Rushmore,a New York reporter.out that each editor, after theatre gave the students a swelleditorially sizzling his last show in Magic Rope and Bill Mor-Dean and flinging his green genstern some welcome “goodeyeshade into the arms of one of press.”the eager candidates for his job,has, to coin a phrase, taken penin hand and written his memoirs.Usually, these swan songs con¬sist entirely of a recitation of theeditor’s accomplishments or thelist of hot stories he has covered.I am not going to do either ofthose things — but not because Icouldn’t. I could, for instance, gmije,point out that under my editorshipthe MAROON went from twice aweek to once a week publication;that its staff decreased from 135to 80; that, after only six monthsof my term, the entire crew of ourprint shop quit their jobs; thatthe MAROON’S relations with theAdministration and other studentorganizations have steadily de¬teriorated; and, most important,that my policies forced the crea¬tion of a second campus publica¬tion!Nor have I missed my share ofbig stories. Early in the Fall Quar¬ter I scooped the city press withthe flash that when Bill Biren-baum learned that the women hadmoved out of Snell Hall, he said,“Damned—always a step behind!”Following this up with exclusivereports of the showdown match inthe all-campus Chinese checkertournament and the supposedlyiron-curtained caucus between EliSnitzef and Hank Latimer, I wasable to tell MAROON readers ex¬clusively that Chancellor Hutchins,on the train to Springfield, atea wilted lettuce salad—with thou¬sand island dressing.Rather than crow over these tri¬umphs, I would like to pay my re¬spects to the other men who havedone as well as I have in the pastyear.For the Best Work in StudentOrganizations—Alex Pope and theothers, who transformed StudentGovernment from a windy wasteof time into a useful, functionalgroup.For the Best Student Politick¬ing : The boys who swept two elec¬tions with ISL; and Bud Bloom¬berg, who did yeoman work inholding the various anti-Broylesfactions together.For Athletes — Sherry Rowland,who sparked the best basketballand baseball teams in many ayear; and Bud Beyer, whose Acro- For the Years’ Best Surprise—Paul Douglas’ senatorial victory.For the Year’s Best Performance—Hutchins on the witness stapdin Springfield.For the Best Guy to Have onYour Side — Dean Strozier, whoforgets a regulation easier than aprinciple; and never forgets toBut most of all, to the guys andgals on the MAROON who alwayskept it good and kept it fun.And, finally, to next year’s edi¬tor, whose name would be my big¬gest scoop—if I knew! formance such as this.One more concert remains onthis quartet’s agenda. The Uni¬versity Symphony orchestra willperform in Mandel Hall on Sun¬day, May 22.Concert feotures faculty workTheir program will include Bal¬let Music from Rosamunde bySchubert, Six Fanfares for ThreeTrumpets and the “Elegie Fran¬caise” by Ernst Levy, the Over¬ture to Loreley by Bruch, andSchumann’s Concerto for FourHorns. The music of Ernst Levy, amember of our music faculty, hasbeen heard once before on cam¬pus, at a special chamber recitallast March.The coming orchestra concert his music is less superficially bril¬liant and vivid than that of aBerlioz or Tschaikowsky. The or¬chestra will be conducted byClarke Kessler and SiegmundLevarie. The concert, at 8:30,free to the public.—Morfin Those to be called are Profes¬sors Harold C. Urey, James Lu-ther Adams, Ernest W. Burgess,Robert J. Havighurst, Wayne Mc-Millen, Malcolm Sharp and Rex-ford G. Tugwell.IS As this paper went to press nopapers had been served and theuniversity asserted it knew onlyPicker what the newspaper accounts hadstated.Oboler accepts Idaho postEli Oboler, book reviewer forthe MAROON and currently headof Harper Reserve Library, hasaccepted an appointment as chieflibrarian of Idaho State College.Mr. Oboler will leave for his newpost in July. FLY BY DC-3"CLUB LINER"Authorized Charter ServiceOne-third Below Airline RatesL. A.—10 hours $80.90FLORIDA—6 hours 45.00PORTLAND—10 hours 81.19DALLAS—5 hours 37.'2Tax included on all pricesFor Informotion Coll Ml. 3-3810Job prospects.ondly, the great need for collegeand university teachers resultingfrom the influx of veterans study¬ing under the G.I. Bill of Rightsis dissolving because many of theveterans are graduating or leav¬ing school. College enrollment atpresent is quite significantly lowerthan that of the past two years,with fewer freshmen coming inthis year and even fewer yet ex¬pected next year.Jobs slockA decline of desirable placementopportunities is also seen in thefield of law, reports Burton Young,placement director of the LawSchool. During the war whenthere was no deferment of law¬yers and potential law studentswere in the services, a seriousshortage of lawyers developed, butthis situation has now been essen¬tially remedied. Whereas a lawgraduate of a year ago could ex¬pect to start earning $300 or morea month if he could obtain a posi¬tion with a large city law firm, agraduate of this year can hardlyexpect to start at more than $200a month in a similar position.The greatest opportunity forlawyers at the present time exists(Con^wad on page 8) Johnny VeUGHTS DOLORES WITH VEQTI&NOUSVISTAS OFftNAPSOOIC RECOGNITION/SHE CERTAINLY ISAGORSEOUS GOMOM/ O PLEASE, RAe7\/V*//THROAT feels'LIKE A oesic-CATCO NUTMEG!ANOMyMOLITH'SALL STALE ANOSMOKED-OUTDOLORES THERE’S «NO CIOARSTrE HANGOVERWHEN >OU SWITCH TOPHILIP MORRIS/ WHYNOT GIVE THEM A TRIAL? PLEASE DO,DOLLY/ PHILIPMORRIS IS THE DMiE CIGAR¬ETTE PROVED DEFINITELYLESS irritating/ DOLORES, THAT DIVINE GOWNAVU<eS YOU LIKE THE BREATHOF SPRING ITSELF^ AND >DULOOK SO HAPPYUse These Words with ToHgue-in-Cheek!^ (Plan to (iM ONE every week I)DESICCATED (4esi-ikHi-teil)-drie<l-ap.OORGON (gbr-gon)—o mythical •ke-mon.iterwith tnakee for hair.METAMORPHOSED (m^t-oliHnor-fesee) •traniforme4.NEPENTHE (naa-pan-tlia)—o poften to bfov*i«h pain or mitery'.NO CIGARETTE HANGOVER - no Btole^ emoked-out totfe; no tight dry feeling inw your threot due to smoking.RHAPSODIC (rap-s^ik)—chorged with erne- }tion, usvolly of delight. iSHARD (shard)—a broljen piece nr frogment. iVfRTIGINOVS (viNr^iHn-«s)-giddy, diuy. 'Ml IHfiARFITF HAIHMUrnRw lilviiwliilllii iljflRwvWiHRwhgii you sitieke ’PHILIP MORRISPROVED DEFINITELY LESS IRRITATINGthan any othnr loading br.andlmmmmmFriday, May 13, 1949 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Letters to the Editor. • •To the Editor:I would like to make a few com¬ments on the article by Walt Free¬man in the MAROON of April 22covering my speech at the UnitedNations Association luncheon onFriday, April 15.The headline of the article aswell as some of the contents mighteasily lead to a misunderstandingof what I had hoped to try toavoid in my speech. After the ter¬rible experiences of World War IIand the unfortunate circumstancesof four-power control of Berlin,many Berliners are far fromthinking and acting in national¬istic terms.Prom the headline one might getthe impression that only the Uni¬ted States was considered respon¬ sible for the present difficult con¬ditions in Berlin. The problems in¬volved seem to be international,problems of mutual responsibilitycalling for extraordinary patience,frankness, and recognition of eachother’s strong as well as weakpoints. It was this mutual respon¬sibility of the various groups, notjust one nation, that I tried tostress in my speech.In mentioning efforts to rebuild“national culture” there are over¬tones of nationalistic motives..After World War II and the recog¬nition of mistakes which led tothat war, many Germans are notthinking of rebuilding nationalculture as a priority for our post¬war world. Quite the contrary, theeffort to find a “common outletfor creative energy” is a search for a world-wide project with an in¬ternational philosophy whichmight provide *the possibility ofcooperation between all countriesincluding the United States andthe USSR.“True German interest” mightsuggest a nationalist interest.Among many Germans today an Issued once weekly by the publisher. The Chicago Maroon, at the publicationoffice, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: EditorialOffice, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 351; Business and Advertising Offices, Midway 3-0800,Ext. 1577. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions by mail, |2 per quarter,$5 per year.audience. The only purpose servedby such a debate is to provide theinternational, world point of vi^ representative of an intellectually,might well express the attitude of morally, and politically bankruptthose who are thinking of Ger¬many’s long range interest. It wasthis long range interest that Iattempted to discuss.The population of Berlin’s West¬ern Sectors and the “Battle inwhich they do not believe theyhave any interest” is also men- movement with an audience at- To the Editor:In the story on May 6 aboutthe Student Republican Club, th«MAROON appears to have devi¬ated from its usual impartial cov-tracted by the respectability of the erage of news events. The longsponsoring organization and of theparticipating faculty membersrather than by the enlightenmentto be expected from the embittereddemagogy of political leaders withtioned in the article. In my talk a following. Political leaders of theGood QUEEN LIZZIEwould’ve had’em in a tizzy,** I had hoped to clarify some of thiskind of withdrawal. Many peoplefeel they don’t want to follow apolitical line which seems to beleading once more to war. Al¬though directed slightly different¬ly, they recognize a dogmatism anda prejudice with which many Ber¬liners do not care to be associated.Of course the political picture is avery complex one. Certainly, thegreat energy needed in tacklingthe problems of day-to-day sur¬vival has no small relation to theproblem.Franz GaylTo the Editor:I participated on May 5 with Mr. kind ought to sail under the flagof the political movements theyrepresent and should be satisfiedwith the audience which the qual¬ity of their program and theirown intellectual ability can com¬mand. It cannot be the purposeof respectable campus organiza¬tions to provide such political fig¬ures with a mass audience fortheir low antics, political fairytales, and demagoguery under theguise of sponsoring a responsible,informative, and enlightening de¬bate.I am confident that the Ameri¬can Veterans Committee could quotation by Jordan deserves ananswer.Jean Jordan himself is respon¬sible for the amendment to theClub constitution requiring thateach new member be voted on bythe Club. Jordan, in an attempt to•pack the Club during the proceed¬ings against him, brought somethirty-five persons, most of whomwere not, never had been, and hadno intention of becoming Republi--cans.We are in no way a group of ex¬treme rightists, as charged byJordan, although we agree thatour orthodoxy is somewhat greaterthan Jean’s.As to his last charge that nohave found a faculty member who, liberal or moderate may honorably__ , i.,. , j in his criticism of American for- belong to our Club: he ought toMax Shac^man, the leader of the policy, could have risen above know. He was suspended by theAmerican Trotzkyites, in a debateon the North Atlantic Pact heldunder the auspices of the Ameri¬can Veterans Committee. I ac¬cepted the invitation with a gooddeal of hesitation and find afterthe event that such debates area total waste of time on the partof the faculty members and the Mr. Shachtman’s remark thatRoosevelt and Churchill wereeither “liars or idots” because theydid not treat Stalin as an outcastduring the second world war.Hans J. MorgenthauAssociate Professor ofPolitical Scienceif she’d worn aSee Them at Marshall Fields • Carson Pirie Scott • WieboldtsFrii boekitt: “WAMIOBE TUCKS”. Vriti Idy MM, In., Bipt R. 137S Brudway, Haw York 18^^^^W^J^VWW^iV.V.■AWW^AWd^rti^V■WlW.W■V.^V■F.i Speaking of "FINALS" ExclusiveHOUR ODORLESSCleaners 1331 E. 57Ml 3-06021442 E. 57Ml 3-0608Resting Is More RestfulWhen You Add Coca-Colaif ARROW’SPUNJARAIs the last word in a cool,silky, handsome and wash¬able sports shirt.PUNJARA comes in severalcolors and looks well with orwithout a necktie. See yourArrow dealer today for PUNJARA.Long sleeves . •. $5.95 Short sleeves ... $5.00ARROWSHIRTS and TIESUNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTS Ask for it either way ... bothtrade-marks mean the same thing.ROniED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COU COMPANY BYCOCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF CHICAGO, INC.O tV49, Dm Coeo-Cola Cempoier membership for his failure to be¬long honorably.C. Barker Rhodes, PresidentStudent Republican ClubTo the Editor:I would like to congratulate theRepublican Club for their suspen¬sion of Jean Jordan. Needless tosay, their forthright and courag¬eous action is a barometer of theirkeen insight into controversial is¬sues. Their commendable decisionshould serve as an inspiring indi¬cator to the campus organizationsthat there is no room within anyorganization for heretics or anykind of independent thinkingwhich may not be in accord withthat organization’s catchism.Surely Mr. Jordan has been just¬ly rewarded for his blundering at¬tempts to introduce any elementof unqualifiedly honest and search¬ing thinking into the RepublicanClub. Again, let me congratulatethis Little Band of NeophyticFascists and wish them every suc¬cess in the future.Chuck StoneTo the Editor:The suspension of YPA by theDean of Student’s office raisesquestions that should be noted*byall students. Involved in the caseare the following:1. How far can the administra¬tion go in arbitrarily defining thedomain of student activity espe¬cially with respect to dissemina¬tion of political views throughhandbills?2. Is the Office of the Dean ofStudents responsible only to theadministration for the interpreta¬tion of student regulations, or arethey also responsible to the stu¬dent body? (Why the refusal ofopen hearings on the YPA caseby the Dean of Students?)3. Do students have a right tohave a vital say in the writingand amending of student regula¬tions?4. If we are interested in NSABill of Rights becoming a realityon our campus how long are wegoing to wait before this is done?We submit that these are ques¬tions of the day for the U of Cstudent body. How we answer themwill determine whether studentrights will continue to be subjectedto a creeping paralysis of restric¬tions or whether student righUwill be extended on our campus.P»«l l>erniaNTed FlnmanHgt 9 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, Moy 13, 1949Struve discusses stars;studies solar systemsDr. Otto Struve of the U. of C.’s Yerkes Observatorywill present a new theory of stellar evolution in an openlecture on the Quadrangles, next Friday, May 20.He will describe “A New Theory of the Origin of Stars”at 8 p.m. in Kent 106.Dr. Struve was invited to speak here by the office ofphysical sciences in the College following publication ofa summary of his theory inthe April 29 MAROON, con¬current with its presentationto the annual session in Wash¬ington of the National Academy ofScience.Theory of wide interestStruve’s theory has aroused wideInterest in astronomy and cos¬mogony. Turning on studies of theW Ursae Majoris eclipsing bina¬ries, more numerous than all othereclipsing variable stars together,it suggests the steady evolution ofmillions of solar systems much likethe one we live in.Comic speed kingsThese twin stars circle eachother at very close distances andterrific speeds, within the samegaseous envelope. The latter’sasymmetry suggests the starswould eventually unite or growfarther apart. might thus produce its own solarsystem, with the loss of angularmomentum by the parent twinsthrough prominence separation ex¬plaining the slower rotations ob¬served in our “resulting” singlestars.Finds new soi'elfiteDiscovery of a possible new sat¬ellite to the planet Neptune onMay 1, has been announced byGerard P. Kuiper, U. of C. as¬tronomer.The heavenly body was seenfrom the McDonald observatory.Fort Davis, Texas. Kuiper de¬scribed the new body as a milliontimes fainter than the fainteststar which can be seen with theunaided eye. Job prospects . . .Campus committeeprepares pamphlet onUC investigationPlans for publication of apamphlet on the LegislativeInvestigation into allegedsubversive activities at UC, wereannounced this week by BudBloomberg, head of the All-Cam¬pus Committee Opposing theBroyles Bills and the UC Investi¬gation.The pamphlet, titled “The GreatInvestigation,” is now at the print¬ers and will be ready for campusdistribution within two weeks. Itsprice has been tentatively set at35 cents.Included in the 72 page brochureis a complete transcript of thetestimony and cross-examinationof Chancellor Hutchins and DeanThompson, as well as excerptsfrom the evidence given by EliSnitzer, John Madigan, Rep. Hors¬ley, and Howard Rushmore.Included, too, is the full text ofthe Broyles Bills, a commentaryon them by Prof. Donald Meikle-john, and a short history of theinvestigation. in rural areas and smaller com¬munities, where the demand forlawyers has not as yet been aswell satisfied as in larger cities,but even here the gap is beingswiftly closed.Low jobs downThere are only about 180,000practicing lawyers in the UnitedStates, and during the school year1947-48, the peak year, there were50,000 law students throughout thecountry. “Although the oversup¬ply of lawyers will not be as criti¬cal for some time as it was during1936 and the worst of the depres¬sion, opportunities are beginningto be definitely limited for the lawgraduate,” Young concluded.Opportunities for men in busi¬ness and industry reflect thewhole general picture of a slow¬down of business activity, reportsLowell Calvin, University place¬ment counsellor for men gradu¬ates interested in business jobs.The greatest curtailment is inheavy industry, where it is mostdifficult to get a job at the pres¬ent time, but the situation isaffecting all fields, with no spe¬cific business or industry beingparticularly eager to secure menat the present time. These condi¬ tions are not in any way uniqueto the Chicago area, says Lowell.Women out’According to Miss Betty Orrin charge of women’s placementin business positions, placementin business positions is even moredifficult for women graduates atthe present time than it is formen. “The heyday of the war pe¬riod when a woman could get al¬most any kind of a job anyplaceis over,” says she.Over 60% of the opportunitiesfor women just entering businessconsist of secretarial, stenographi-cal, and general clerical position.s,which aren’t exactly what a grad¬uate in international relations ormarket research wants. Yet, toaccept such a job is often the onlyway a woman can gain a toehold,and often there is much oppor¬tunity for later advancement fromsuch a position into work forwhich the graduate is specificallytrained. Miss Orr explained.The best job opportunities forwomen at the present time prob¬ably, exist with service organiza¬tions, according to Miss Orr, therebeing some good positions avail¬able in the spring of almost everyyear.Struve thinks that uniting starswould have great streams of flam¬ing gas torn from their faces asthey approached each other, thuslosing both mass and angularmomentum.Stars were once joinedThe stars, once joined, wouldform the sun of a solar system.Lighter elements of the free gasare thought to float off into space,while it is calculated that oversorr« 100,000,000 years the heavierelements would condense to formbodies much like our own nlarrts.Each of millions of binariesMe Michel talkstion, “the people from across thetracks versus the “vested inter¬ests, who nailed Christ on thecross for trying to liberate man.”“It is a characteristic of thesepowerful people that they do notlike to cross the tracks if they canhelp it.” He cited India and theSouthern United States as two ofthese places in the world of todaywhere “the powers that be refuseto -cross the < tracks to liberateman.”Dean John B. Thompson, ofRockefeller, is to be this Sunday’sspeaker at the services which beginat 11 a.m.Business success for collegewomen starts with Gibbs secretarialtraining. Write College Course Deantoday for opjxjrtunity booklet,“Gibbs Girls at Work.”KATHARINE GIBRS230 Park Avt., NEW YORK 17 90 Marlborough St. BOSTON 16SI LSuperior St,CHICAGO 11 155 Angell St, PROVIDENCE 6HOLIDAYAn Adventure inGood Smoking\ro'0^ HOimY K AMERICAis the one place where they haveever existed in coinhinalionw..•Free g’orernmenf—®f llie p«>o|il«-—by the iieople—for the people.’'These arethe SymbolsofYour Future! we talk about ourcaii system, we’re talking aboutsomething more productive, morepromising, more thrilling than anysystem the world has ever seen.And we’re strong because we en¬joy the unique combination of qual¬ities that moke our nation the mostproductive of any country on earth.Why?First, because we’ve built ourwhole system on. a solid faith andbelief in the dignity of the in¬dividual.Out of our belief in the dignityof the individual has evolved thewonderful pattern of America. Ourpolicy of free markets and free oolleotive bargaining. Our belief Ineompctitlon. Our adherence to theprinciple of constantly better qual¬ity at consistently lower cost.Our emphasis on research—oninvention — on new and bettermethods.Our faith in the future and ourdesire ever to advance — ever toimprove the lot of everybody, re¬gardless of race, creed or color.These— in combination — arcAmerica. And nowhere else in theworld is there such a combination—that’s your U.S.A. Let’s keep itthis way. Sure our system has itsfaults—hut in correcting those, andwith even better teamwork, thefuture is unlimited.**Mor« goods of better quality atlower co$t$, paying higher waget.”**Labor*a right to organhe anUhargaim,*'^'REWARD for iniliaitve.”approved for the PUBLIC POLICY COMMITTEE of The Advertising Council by:EVANS CLARK, Executive DirectorTwentieth Century Fund PAUL C. HOFFMAN, Formerly President,Studebaker Corporation BORIS SHISHKIN. Economist,American Federation of LaborPublisheditnhetubutinttr€$tbyPURE OIL COMPANY, General Offices, ChicagoFriday, May 13, 1949 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page yYPA protGst. . • $980 collected byCARE in Aprilsays Birenbaumfrom ambiguous and restrictiveregulations.” They called for a"reformation of student regula¬tions in a pattern consistent withthe tl. S. Constitution and withthe NSA Bill of Rights.”Strozier pointed out that the"haze of technicalities” surround¬ing the issue would not reverse theadministration’s decision. He addedthat he approved Dean Bergstres-ser’s decision on the grounds ofthe continuous complaints againstyPA and their general “lack of aspirit of cooperation.”Tugwell, faculty advisor to YPAand also present at the meeting,concurred in the administration’sdecision. Although he affirmed hisbelief in freedom of speech and ex¬pression, he declared that he, too,was in “total agreement with thesuspension decision,” and that theposition of the administration wasclear.PRICES THAT MEET STUDENT BUDGETSOpen 6 Q.m. — Closes 1 a.m.Breakfosts, Brunches, Lunches, Supper and SnacksSUIVDAY DtYYERS A SPECIALTYJIFFY GRILL 6246 KimbarkMost Likely to Succeed...Choose a Champion to sharbyour future.Have this able assistant atyour finger tips... always readyjto transfer your thoughts andinspirations to paper ... readyto help in your progress and ad¬vancement. ♦Your Underwood ChampionPortable is a complete personaltypewriter . . . with every fea¬ture you need to assure finestquality work.Count on your Underwood tohelp get things done quickly,easily, and accurately. Count onthis Champion to boost yourchances of joining those “MostLikely To Succeed.”Have Dad see your Author¬ized Underwood Portable Type¬writer Dealer in time to ordera Champion for your gradua¬tion. 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G.units in PhillipinesThe CARE drive on cam¬pus collected $980 during themonth of April, ChairmanBill Birenbaum announced thisweek.Pinal breakdown of the cam¬paign indicated that the driveamong students was sparked bythe women’s residence halls, whereunit chairman Alice Meyer and herassistants collected $136.47 out ofthe total of $980.25. Close behindwere the men’s residence halls,where the unit headed by BillWatts took in $118.25, and thestudent organizations, which wereprodded into giving $107.25 byJacquie Frazier and Suzon Swan¬son.The faculty and the employeesof the University held up theirend of the drive with a total of$340. George Morrison andThomas Strauss were win¬ners of the $50 and $25 firstand second prizes in the FlorenceJames Adam's poetry reading con- by Louis Silverman feels that economic justice is lack*Driven by his belief that “the i^& most of Asia,test last Wednesday in Hilton world is confronted by two alter- He cites Shanghai, where he hadchapel. Morrison read “Intima- natives: world federation or world a seven course dinner for 80 cents,tions of Immorality by Wo^s- gui^ide,” Sal Gene Marzullo, 22- as a city where “food was plentl-ot’s “East Coker.” Judges were year-old UC student, founded re- ful and inexpensive. The peopleDavis Edwards and W. E. Garri- cently the Phillipine World Fede- who die there each day in theson, professors at UC, and Mary ralists. Marzullo left the College midst of plenty do so because ofAgnes Doyle, Associate Director of jag^ June but did not start his the terrible mismanagement ofthe Goodman theater. journey to the Phillipines until relief funds by government offl-The English department also an- December. cials.” In one of his letters to thenounced that sev^ He leisurely made his way via Maroon, he relates the opinion of^en entered in the ^vid Blair ^j-my transport, visiting Honolulu, a Chinese army captain. “TheMcLaughlin contest with a prize Yokohama He snentof $60, and 64 entries have been New Vea?s In ShaAehai and reconciledmade in the John Billings Fiske x ^ themselves tO' a Communist vic-indue m tne jonn oiinngs r^xe g^opped at Hong Kong before ar- . rommimicm nntpoetry contest with a prize of $100. divine at Manila on Jan 6 There u tnumphed notThe iudges Alan Tate J V Cun- Manila on jan. o. e e ijecause Democracy failed, but . . .in . juages, Alan late, J. V. uun embarked upon a rigorous becau«;e Demoerarv ahnmgham, and David Daiches (of schedule of speaking and writing ‘ ’ ^^^ocracy was ab-nemeii iTniver=ifvi will fheie e„gagc,„ents. necessitating 14hours of work a day, work which HUK fight slows recoveryhe hoped would build “an effec- In Japan Marzullo spent mosttive World Government group in of his time with the workers onthe Phillipines.” the docks, “who seemed well fed^ Aand healthy.” He reports that “re-Wert A..a habilitation proceeds rapidly.-‘ It IS tragic that the Western However, in the Phillipines “the, nations have minimized huK fight against the govern-editor selected will serve from portance of Asia in international . .y,; „ ^ p - . «Cornell University) will make theirdecision in two weeks.Maroon electionThe MAROON elections foreditor-in-chief will be held to¬day at 3:30 in Rosenwald 2. Thethe beginning of the Summerquarter, 1949, through theSpring quarter of 1950. All staffmembers are required to attend.This is the second session of theelections. affairs,” writes Marzullo Today ^hese dissident groups fightingthe East IS astir-it will become "plunder and ter!demwratic or communist andmuch of what they d® d®P®"ds torture,” continues Marzullo.Though he finds most Philliplnosdealings with them.” MarzulloEimbark JflotoersAnnounces the opening oftheir new shop ot 1506 E. 57thMU. 4-4700Artistically designedliIIIiI5 corsages,3! arrangements, andg wedding bouquets..... also, cut toj fit your budget,ATIIiII 922 E. 63rdMl. 3-44461409 E. 63rdMU. 4-2414We Send Flowers hy Air sympathetic with HUK aims, they“do not condone the means usedto achieve the end.”The island people associate theUniversity of Chicago with theWorld Government movement.“The proposed World Constitutiondrafted in preliminary form bythe Chicago Committee has beenstudied carefully by constitutionalexperts of this country,” writesMarzullo, a former president ofthe UC Student Federalists.Middle world growsFederalism, he feels, can makethe “middle or third world . . .aware of its existence and poten¬tialities as a world force. If allthe small nations of the w’orldwith India were to unite as apressure group, they could causeRussia and America to sit downand reason their differences outthrough peaceful means. The mid¬dle world does not like to be buf-fetted about either by America orRussia, but is helpless until itbecomes aware of its power,” heconcluded. .Marzullo writes that UC Is pop¬ular with Phillipine educators.“Chancellor Hutchins is consid¬ered to be the outstanding educa¬tor in America along with Conantof Harvard. The university,” hefeels, “can well be proud of itsPhillipine alumnae . . . and of themanner in which they contributefunds, energies and talents to theliberal movements of this nation.”Exclusive Factory HealerCARSTRUCKS Parts! andAcces!S!ories— IN HYDE PARKMore Students Ride InFORDS Than In Any Other CarBe sure to place your order nowfor early delivery of yournew FORDService and Repoirs on All Mokesof Cars in Our extensive, com¬pletely equipped shop. Body and Fender WorkEngine Repair and AdjustmentSimonizinig — LubricationRITZ teHTRAl5518 $. Lake Park Aveaue PLaza 2-8880aPoge 10 THE CHICAGO MAROON Fridoy, Moy 13, 1^9Review years athletic activitiesBy BEN CHAPMANSince this is the final issueof the quarter, it’s time werecalled a few of this year’saccomplishments of the variousvarsity teams here on campus. Inspite of the relative lack of ath¬letic emphasis at UC, Athletic Di¬rector T. Nelson Metcalf, hiscoaches and athletes deserve ahearty pat on the back for theexcellent showing of Maroon col¬ors.At a good many other schools,the sports setups hint at shades ofprofessionalism. However, as weare all well aware, the student atChicago gets out on the athleticQolfers split twoweekend matchesThe golf team split twoweekend matches to retaintheir .500 percentage. Theseason record iS now 3-3. There isone team match left, with North¬ern Illinois Teachers. On May 20,the linksmen will wind up the cur¬rent sesison in the Chicago Inter¬collegiate.At the Cog Hill course, Satur¬day, the UC squad defeated Ill.Tech, 14-10. Best local scores were77s turned in by Flink, Gawthrop,and Fitzgerald. Short had 79, Ris-ley 81, Taylor 80, Rydin 81, andJerberg 93.A very strong Beloit golf squadcrushed the visiting locals, 17-8,in a match played at the BeloitCountry Club on Monday. Lamband McGavock, both of Beloit,shot 78; lowest Chicago scoreswere made by Fitzgerald (82) andFlink (83).ON SALEMOISDAY...1IIAY 16The Parker "21"—Parker'snewest, medium-pricedfountoin pen and pencil, de¬signed for easier, neaterwriting. Durable, stylish,easy to write with. ... Achoice of four beautifulcolors.Parker "21" pen. .. .$5.00Parker "21" pencil. . 3.75University of ChicagoBookstore5802 Ellis AvenuefUCfNT O'HtlU $mi "Tlfpktun I htnr* mm."TU THEATRE GUILD pnmuLAURENCi;OLIVIERh wan—“Henry YM TfeMCHN • IM Bn kM AtIMiWED.-THURS.—May 18-19Special Student Price1^ THEATERriVV/l-IVK SSra & ELLIS ffWILKRNESSIn Superior WildernessQuetico Lake RegionComplet* ontfittinc Mrvice$3.50 a day with Grum¬man aluminum canoca.Food, your choice—extra.Basswood Lake Lodge ^on Minn. - CanadianBorder. Main Lodgeand 20 log cabins.Modem bath roomfacilities. Ameri¬can Plan rates^$8.00 and up.V|U.DERME»aY.. MINNESOTA field, not because he has to ful¬fill a scholarship requirement, butbecause he enjoys it. This factbrings to mind a statement madeby former football coach ClarkShaugnessey after a Maroon“eleven” had received a severedrubbing at the hands of a “BigTen” football institution. He said,in effect, that his boys were realcollege athletes, because they werescholars and competed solely forsportsmanship and enjoyment.The fact that we have an activerather than an overly emphasizedprogram certainly is not beingused as an excuse for a poor sea¬son, for the record speaks for it¬self.Basketball:The hoop quintet, mannedmainly by boys who came upthrough the JV ranks, concludedthe eighteen game season with arecord of ten wins as against eightsetbacks. Bill Gray was votedMost Valuable Player and Captainfor the season. Gray played atotal of 668 minutes for the eigh¬ teen contests. Geocaris, Hansen,Sharp and Boise also saw actionin all eighteen games.Cross Country:Led by standout harrier, KenMulcahy, the cross-country plod¬ders breezed through the fivemeet schedule by whipping Wash¬ington University 40-21, Minne¬sota 38-17, Western Michigan 43-35, DePaul 35-20, and Marquette41-19. Mulcahy also placed 2ndin the Illinois Normal Invitational,and 8th in the Central A.A.U.Fencing:The fencers, studded with Olym¬pic stars, cut their way througha season of eight matches withfive wins and three losses. Thevictories were over Northwestern,Wayne, Michigan State, IllinoisTech, and Wisconsin. In the Na¬tional Collegiate Meet at WestPoint, Chicago placed third onthe heels of Army and Rutgers.Gymnastics:Bud Beyer’s gymnasts performedmuch better than their two winsand four losses would indicate. They outscored Wisconsin and In¬diana, while losing to Michigan,Minnesota, Navy Pier and Illinois.On April 2, the UCer’s placed fifthin the Midwest Open at NavyPier. They also took part in thefamous UC production, “TheMagic Rope.”Soccer:Coach “Well, first you kick theball” Hermansen’s soccer teamstarted slowly but ended the sea¬son with a 3-3 record. Perhapsthe outstanding feature was a 6-1win over Notre Dame.Swimming:The mermen splashed over allopposition for a perfect slate often wins and no losses. Not con¬tent with mere dual meet vic¬tories, the natators won the 2ndAnnual Chicago IntercollegiateSwimming Championship onMarch 4 and 5.Wrestling:Starting pretty much fromscratch, the grapplers succeededin pinning the opposition only once in six matches. The competi¬tion included such teams asNorthwestern, West Virginia, andNavy Pier’s Illini.Track:Ned Merriam’s thinclads racedto four triumphs in six starts inindoor competition, and won the2nd Annual Quadrangular Meet.The indoor team also placed sixthin a field of 25 schools in theNorth Central Invitational Meet,and fourth in a field of 23 schoolsin the Illinois Tech Relays (Col¬lege Division). Pole vaulter JackChristopher made the outstandingvault of 14 ft. 3 in. in the ChicagoDaily News Relays.Handicaped by Injuries, trans¬fers, etc., the outdoor team lost toMilwaukee State Teachers College,placed eighth in the Rose Poly¬tech Invitational, and rolled inthird in a triangular meet behindWashington and Oberlin. Due toNed Merriaqj’s recent illness, Ath¬letic Director Metcalf took overthe chores as track mentor.(Continued on iKi^e 12)ACMPUS CRISES \iiiWhen you f‘nd your "steady- heerMhnhy0iJhe bi^ eoUege athlelei.ison,sli^gi^yda ihe ViB(nili6(r Tha& your cue to.Chicogo students know that Old Goldgraduates with high honors when it comesto sheer enjoyment. For Old Gold is summacum laude in smoking pleasure at its smooth¬est and mellowest. It’s the cigarette witha college education, as you'll learn whenyou try one. Why not do that today?l^aTkiM instead Giyfe yourself a TkEXT! Cheerup:—lighhup.:.,an OLD GOW^dbr aIREfTinsle^ ofMTREim^lofa1kE$0feyrFriday, May 13, 1949 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 11]Tracksters capture thiBy JACK SPILLMANIn an outdoor triangular meet at St. Louis Saturday,UC trackmen were able to salvage third place trailingWashington and Oberlin. Washington’s grand total ofsixty-seven points was good enough for first; Oberlin tooksecond with fifty-nine; the Chicago aggregation achieveda score of thirty-six.Ken Mulcahy won easily in the mile with a neat 4:31.2.Adams placed third with in the last half mile. The winning4:34.8 after having trailed early time was 10:07.3.In a very close 220 low hurdlein the race. In the 100, HerbRothenberg took third despite the race, Fisher bested a Washingtonrunner on - the last hurdle andhandicap of an injured fwt His j Chicagotime was :10 5 Kirk of Washing-ton won . . . :25.2. Pole vaulters ChristopherLarry Fisher’s :16.3 in the 1^0 and Meyerling performed wellhigh hurdles was sufficient to se- enough to take both first and sec-cure the runner-up position in ond places. Christopher clearedthat event. Running in the two- the bars at 13 feet; Meyerlingmile, Mulcahy won handily, finish- jumped 12 feet. Other UC points uC's Olympic performer Metoing twenty yards well in front. W'ere registered by a second place Elste assumes o typical pose on theAdams also ran but failed to keep javelin toss of Hayes (174' 4") parallel bars at Bartlett Gym. Coach Irish snap five gameUC winning streakup with the field in the first mile and a fourth spot in the 220 madeand was too far back to challenge by Rothenberg.MAN SWEARSBy Better Razor BladePlenty of men swear at theirrazor blades, but here’s a manwho swears hy his!When reporters called on Joe Mul-doon, they found him whistlingin the bathroom. “Boys,” he said,“just tell my public I'm razorblade happy. After years of trialand error, mostly error, I finallyfound my blade —‘just a ‘feather-touch’ and*so long whiskers! Why,shaving with Pal Hollow Groundis as easy as flicking the top offlemon meringue pie.”Mr. M forgot to say that PalHollow Ground still gives you 4for 10^ (or 10 for 26^, 21 for 49^,44 for 98^). He uses Double Edge.Single Edge cost the same.Two things everyCollege msbn should know!• This is a senior. Just in gownfor a few days. Spends four yearstoool-gathering—winds up withsheepskin. Graduated to **Manhattan^shirts years ago. Bud Beyer's gymnastic stor wan theparallel bars 1947 Championship atDallas, Texas.Netmen triumphChet Murphy’s netmen re¬turned to their winning wayson Monday when they de¬feated Beloit, 5-4, on the latter’scourt. Hirschwald, Stratton, andLouis, UC top singles-men weredefeated, 6-0, 6-2; 9-7, 7-5; and6-3, 6-3, respectively. However,Robinson, Shapiro, and Rudolphevened up the singles matches bywinning, 9-7, 6-2; 6-4, 6-0; and6-2, 2-6, 6-1. Local doubles teamsof Hirschwald-Stratton and Louis-Robinson won 6-3, 6-4; and 6-2,3-6, 6-4. Shapiro - Rudolph lost1-6, 6-2, 6-3.Saturday, the team lost a closeone to the highly touted Iowacombine, 5-4. On Tuesday, theyshut out Lake Forest, 9-0, fortheir seventh victory against onesetback. by Ken KoenigNotre Dame’s Irish snapped afive game Maroon winning streakwhen they defeated the Chicago¬ans, 8-2, Saturday on Stagg field.However, the UCer’s bounced backto whip Great Lakes, 17-4, Tues¬day at the Naval Training Station.The Maroon record (including thespring trip—2 wins, 2 losses) nowstands at 11 games won and 4lost.Against the Bluejackets, the An-dersonmen collected 3 runs in the1st, 1 in the 2nd and 3rd, 5 inthe 4th, 3 in the 5th, 3 in the 8th,and 1 in the 9th. Art McKinneyconnected for 3 singles in 4 tries,and Bill Gray got 3 hits, includinga double, in the 5 attempts to pacethe attack. Mike Flaherty also got2 singles.Gray was starting and winningpitcher. He was relieved, thoughnot in trouble, by Hamilton in the7th.Totals: Chicago, 17-13-0; Great Lakes,4-4-6.Box Score: ChicagoAB RGecarls 2b 4Panos, cf 5Hamilton, p 1Flaherty, rf 3Golan, rf 1Rowland, lb 4Gray, p-cf 5Govorchln, 3b 4Stitt, 3b 1Sharp, ss 6Mankowski, If 2Koenig, If 2McKinney, c 4Hansen, c 0The Notre DameNemes, Irish righthander, and anairtight defense hold the Maroonsrunless for seven innings while theSouth Bend boys were scoring oncein the 2nd and twice in both the4th and 7th. They added one in the8th off Hamilton, who relievedstarter Borowitz, and got two moreoff Gray in the 9th. Martin’sR RBI22030432010000affair 01020131011120saw triple over Pane’s head and Koz-lik’s three-bagger to right center,both in the second inning, werethe longest blows of the afternoon.On the brighter side of the led¬ger, Borowitz fanned seven beforehe left the game when Koblashand Petrzelka opened the 7th withline-drive singles.The Maroons wasted two hitsin the 2nd. With one out Mankow¬ski singled, stole second, and tookthird on Govorchin’s base hit.However, Mankowski was tossedout at home when Sharp groundedto Nemes. McKinney went down’2nd to 1st to end the threat. Graywalked, Rowland singled in the6th, but there were two gone, andMankowski grounded out to re¬tire the side.Chicago broke the ice in the8th. Geocaris walked with onedown. After Panos had fiied out,(Continued on page 12)INTRAMURALSoftball standingsCOLLEGE HOUSE SECTION(Final Standings)BURTON LEAGUE Won Lost1. Coulter 02. Salisbury 13. Manly 24. Linn 35. Mathews 4JUDSON LEAGUE Won Lost1. Chamberlin 02. Woodlawn 13. Mead 24. Vincent 4*5. Dodd 1 46. Snell 4ORAD SADGLADS-t-r-e-t-c-h those dwindling dollarsby GREYHOUNDthe low-cost, convenient way home COLLEGE HOUSE PLAYOFF SCHEDULECoulter, 20; Woodlawn, 4.Chamberlain, 14; Salisbury, 5.May 16, 3:30—Third place.May 16, 5:00—Championship. 'FRATERNITY SECTIONWOODLAWN LEAGUE Won Lost1. Phi Psi 3 02. D. K. E 1 03. D. U 1 14. Phi Delta 0 15. Sig Chi 0 16. Phi Sig 0 2UNIVERSITY LEAGUE Won Lost1. Psi U 1 u2. Beta 1 03. Phi Gam 1 14. Z. B. T 1 15. Alpha Delt 0 16. D. U. No. 2 0 2INDEPENDENT LEAGUE Won Lost1. Wolves 4 02. Int. House 2 03. Euhas 2 04. Ells 1 05. Erratics . 0 16. Frosh Medics 0 27. Legal Eagles 0 2Seminary pupilsconfer in IllinoisStudents from eleven midwest-ern seminaries conferred lastweekend at Camp Hi-Ridge, Illi¬nois. The program included a gen¬eral discussion in an effort toclarify points of agreement andunderstand differences so as feestrengthen the religious ties andspirit at the seminary level.The forty delegates at the con¬ference came to the basic agree¬ment that it is unfair to say thatthe Christian ethic as expressedin the “Sermon on the Mount’*has failed when, in truth, it hasnever been tried by the world asa whole.GREYHOUNPage 12 THE CHICAGO MAROON Fridoy, Moy 13, 1949I The MAROONHIGH GRADE ROOMS for universitystudents. Accommodations for men or'women at Ingleslde Manor, 5125 Ingle-side. MU. 4-9407.EXPRESS AND LIGHT HAULING —Willing and courteous service, reason¬able rates. Bordone, PL. 2-9453.SEWING, ALTERATIONS — Mrs. EdnaWarrlner, 5625 Dorchester. MU. 4-4680.TYPEWRITERS FOR RENT—$2.50 permonth. Livingston 8-3877.STUDENT TYPING given careful atten¬tion. WAgner 4-8046, Mrs. Ishlbashl.DEAR J.—Sorry I missed you. Howabout another try. Build medium. Box13, Maroon, Classified Ads |LIVING QUARTERS FOR WOMEN. In¬expensive co-operative living. Immedi¬ate and summer openings. Apply per¬sonnel chairman, Woodlawn Woman’sCO-OP, 5711 Woodlawn, MU 4-9510.FOR SALE: Zeiss Ikoflex, f,-4.5 Novar,case, 3 filters, pola-screen, filter case,sunshade, adapter ring. $70.00. MUseum4-3798.VET AND FIANCEE desperately needunfurnished apartment to be married.MUseum 4-3798,ONE LARGE ROOM with two closets.Call HYde Park 3-8460.SLIGHTLY BATTERED year-old Yorktrumpet for sale. Contact Dick De Haan,Maroon office or Manly House.HUSBAND AND WIFE—Both employed, LOST: Black Sheaffer pencil, gold band,■wife with university, two teen-agers fac- initials M. M. S. Reward. Box 99,Ing eviction, urgently need two-bedroom MAROON.apartment in Hyde Park. Call HY.3-5734'after 5 p. m.EXPERIENCED TUTORING by M. A. inmathematics. Call Galler, PLaza 2-9608.FOR SALE—1949 Renault; excellent con¬dition; 50 miles per gallon. Call AN.3-6977 or EN. 4-6288.DAY BED FOR SALE, $15. Call Pat,PLaza 2-4361.EVANSTON—Dally driver would like toexchange rides occasionally. Phone T.M. Switz, Campus extension 201.LOST—Parker 51, blue bottom. PrankMabee, 1156 E. 57th, PL. 2-9815. Reward.STUDENT, WIFE and baby desperatelyneed apartment near UC. Call MI.3-2261, evenings.WANTED—Baby sitting In return forattractive room. Call PL. 2-8848.GRADUATE STUDENT, wife and twochildren desire apartment for 3 or 4months starting in June or July. Fur¬nished or unfurnished. Phone LakeForest 2611 or write in care Mrs. E. F.Harlan, 230 N. Mayflower Rd., LakeForest, Ill.TWO WOMEN graduate students de¬sire room, bath, in exchange for babysitting services. Summer quarter. CallBU 8-9246, 7-9 p.m.WILL SUBLET large furnished apart¬ment to four graduate students oversummer. Near campus. Phone MU 4-4480.VERY ATTRACTIVE 21/2 ROOM UNFUR¬NISHED APARTMENT, 67th and EastEnd, $46 monthly. Will trade for smallerplace nearer campus. Box 84, Maroon.LEARN TO WRITE headlines on a type¬writer. Rosenwald 2, 3:30 today. LAST THREE DAYS to get your dollarin. Guaranteed worthy cause.Athletics...Tennis:Chet Murphy’s racqueteers havethus far seven wins and only onedefeat, the only loss being to astrong Iowa team by a 5-4 mar¬gin. At the outset of the season,the net outolok was anything butencouraging. However, by gettingout and working with his boys,Murphy has succeeded in field¬ing a very commendable squad.Golf:At this writing the golf teamhas a record of three wins andthree losses. The duffers have de¬feated Lake Forest, North Cen¬tral, and Illinois Tech, while los¬ing matches to Northern IllinoisCollege of Optometry, Navy Pier,and Beloit. Most of the linksmenare shooting in the high seventiesor low eighties.Baseball:Boasting an outstanding moundstaff and a timely hitting outfit,Kyle Anderson’s Maroon nine hastucked away eleven successes infifteen starts. Outstanding hurler,lefty Gene Borowitz, has contrib¬uted two no-hit performances, in¬cluding his 3-1 taming of North-W’estern’s Wildcats.Gray also drew a pass. Rowland’sdrive to right center sent Geocarishome.Govorchin led off the 9th withhis second hit. Sharp singled onthe ground between 1st and 2nd,but second-baseman Kozlik madea terrific stop and threw out Go¬vorchin, who was racing for 3rd.McKinney’s hit put runners on 1stand 3rd, and Flaherty’s singlescored Sharp; but Geocaris filedto Garofalo and Panos groundedout to end the game.Totals: Chicago, 2-9-3; Notre8-11-0.Box Score: ChicagoAB RGeocaris, 2b 3 1Panos, rf-cf 5 0Gray, cf-p 2 0Rowland, lb 4 0Mankowskl, If 4 0Govorchin, 3b 4 0Sharp, ss 4 1McKinney, c 4 0Borowitz, p 2 0Hamilton, p 0 0Flaherty, rf 2 0 Dame,R RBI0 00 00 02 11 02 02 01 00 00 01 1 LOCAL ANO LONG DISTAMCt HAULING60 YEAMS Of DEKMDA6LSSaVICE TO THE SOUTHSIDEASK FOR FREE ESTimATEButterfield 8-6711DAVID L. SUTTON, Pres.55th and ELLIS AVENUECHICAGO 15, ILLINOISt teielMy ■ ■ W ;;|l|';v tsrt? mess-—ivy, ..;;-46aded down^ 'With;IuggageWhich should go "'RAILWAY tXPRSSSexPRESSHAflON-WlOi .AIR SERVICI Present checkA $31,106 check was pre¬sented to the Chicago Lying-in Hospital and Dispensaryof UC by the Mothers’ Aid Societyat thehr annual Mothers' Dayparty last Monday at the StevensHotel.The check, which for the sec¬ond successive year more thandoubles the voluntary annualpledge of the Mothers’ Aid to thehospital, was presented before agroup of 500 guests to Mrs. HarryGibbs, president of Mothers’ Aid.Now in its 45th year with morethan 1200 members, the Mothers’Aid Society has become almostsynonomous with the Chicago Ly¬ing-In Hospital.SEVEN TALES FORSCIENCE-FICTIONFANS... ALL IMPOSSI¬BLE, ALL FANTASTIC,BUT ALL FASCINATINGThe Other Sideof the Moon. . $3.00by August DerlethAn anthology of 20 of the mostblood-curdling tales ever written.Skylark Three . . 3.00by Edward E. SmithSlaves of Sleep . . 3.00by L. Ron HubbardA fantasy story straight out theArabian Nights.Who Goes There. 3.00by John Campbell, Jr.A collection of science-fiction talesby o veteran writer.Triplonetory . . . 3.00by Edward E. SmithThe Wheels of If. 3.00by L. deCampSeven well-received and well-re¬membered fantasy stories.The World of A. . 2.50by A. E. von VogtUniversity ofChicagoBookstore5802 Ellis Avenue WAAfT TO £Am^9000 A YEAR?Then here’.s your chance toenter a busine.ss offering anopportunity for unlimitedearnings . . . plus the satisfac¬tion of rendering a worthwhilecommunity service. Many ofour representatives earn $4,000to $9,000 a year, and more!To find out more about theopportunities offered to you ina life insurance selling career,send for our free booklet,■“The Career For Me?” whichincludes a preliminary test tohelp determine your aptitude.If your score is favorable, ourManager in or near yourcommunity will explain ourexcellent on-the-job trainingcourse and the famous MutualLifetimeCompensation Plan,which provides liberal com¬missions, service fees and asubstantial retirement incomeat 65.THE MUTUAL LIFEINSURANCE COMPANY .f HSU YORKMNcuMiStrMi 9|/ NMVaihS.N.VFIRST IN AMERICArOB TREE BOOKLfr—“THE CAREER FORMET” ADDRESS DEFT. TNAME — ■ APR.CITYTHECHICAGO MAROONIssued weekly by the publisher.The Chicago Maroon, at the publi¬cation office, 5706 South UniversityAvenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Tele¬phones: Editorial Office, MIDway0800, Ext. 351; Business and Advertis¬ing Offices, MIDway 0800, Ext. 1577.Distributed free of charge, and sub¬scriptions by mail, $1 per quarter.SPALDING•R4»8 1$0366^GO'PiCtC troofOFTH WAT ACC IVE ODDS ^AOAf^fST A KOlC-hfQKE PlMi4Y«AS28CrTHEKY:Vi»2(X>TCU5aSAM HOCe-M-<m TD<)iKiicv46rd30SffanriAVEBCEM TAK£»rJUID 5 ACES V£sunsp.^THAT 1$ 9^366701/ fPSliU.GBCYAgrol/'Improve your game in ’49 lighter, stronger shafts,with these new Spalding Golf Spalding golf balls offer aClubs. Precision weighted selection for every type offor power with a choice of player.SPALDING SCTS THE PAC8IN SPORTS nmer/ca'sIn anybody's book, one of themis Marion Harper, Jr. of Adver¬tising's McCann-Erickson. SaidTIME—late last year:1Just ten years ago, Marion Harper,Jr., fresh from Vale, got a job as otViceboy at McCann-Erickson, Inc., one ofthe six largest U.S. advertising agen¬cies. Tall (6 ft. I in.), strapping (rqolbs.) Harper was far from the out-Bill Watton, Cal-Pictuf«tAdman HarperHe energizes people.sider’s idea of an advertising man. Hewas quiet and studious; he did notwear hand-painted ties, didn’t smoke,showed not a single huckster char¬acteristic.But he had been an office boy onlythree months when he was moved intothe copy research department wherehe could put his liking for market re¬search to work. Not long after, Harperwas made manager of copy research:at 28, only seven years aher he hadleft Yale, he was vice-president incharge of research and merchandising.By bearing down on market studies,he helped boost the agency’s billingsfrom $46 million in 1946 to a 1948 rateof more than $50 million. Last week inManhattan, at 32, Marion Harper wasmade president as Founder H. K. Mc¬Cann, 68, moved up to board chair¬man. Said an awed agency director, insummarizing Harper’s rise: “He ener¬gizes people . . . he’s got so much en¬ergy himself. The agency has neverhad such good teamwork before.”On Harper’s team is his wife Vir¬ginia, whom he met while she was aclerical worker at the agency and mar¬ried in 1942. She is now assistant di¬rector of McCann-Erickson’s copyresearch department. Having no chil¬dren, Mr. & Mrs. Harper sometirnesstay at the office until 2 a.m., workingtogether. Says Mrs. Harper: “I thinkhe’s quite bright.”m Successful admanHarper reads TIMEeach week—as domore than 1,500,000other U.S. college graduates whoBnd in TIME the news they can'tafford to miss.To enter YOUR subscription to theWeekly Newsmogozine, see any ofTIME'S representotives of Universityof Chicogo — University of ChieogoBookstore—Internotioiiol House BookBeekstor#*‘RMe a BikeFor Fun and Health”Group ond PartiesAccomodatedA-1BIKE SHOP133ZE. 54S». Ml. 3-3836on your way homeGo HOME by TRAIN . . . there’erelaxing comfort and plenv'y ofroom to roam about in pleasantsurroundings in today’s air-cooledtrains. You’ll meet pleasant peopleon the way. And don’t forget, youcan check 150 lbs. of luggage FREEin baggage service on your RAILticket!on next year’s travelGet a "COLLEGE SPECIAL" Ticketnext Fall. It gives you the advantagesof a regular reduced fare round-tripticket. PLUS 10-day transit limitspermitting stopovers in each direc¬tion. PLUS a time limit long enoughjto cover the Fall term or both se-Imesters. In other words, the ticketjthat brings you back to the campus'takes you HOME for Christmas ...with savings both ways! Your rail¬road ticket agent at home will have"COLLEGE SPECIALS” for stu-dents and teachers from August 15to October 15.For a Time andMoney-Saving TripGo by trainIT'S CONVENIENT—COMFORTABLE—SAFEAMERICANRAIIROADSRattier Fly Tkon Ride a TrainLook This OverAuthorised Charter ServiceFare to N. T $32.91 by DC-3Fare to N. ¥.........$31.40 by coachTax IncludedFor information on this andother aiuhts call Ml 3-3$10 COLUMBIA L P.Record Player AttachmentRegularly 29.95NOWWith Purchase of 10 ColnmhiaLong Playing RecordsYl> Will Hooh JVp Plmyer to Your floidioFREE/With Purchase of3 JLF Columbia 12-tnch RecordsRADIO CENTER1514 EAST 51st STREETDRpxel 3-eill Open 11 to 7The ohovc otter applies only upon prcsenlotion of this od ot timeot pnrehoseYoung man with good connectionsIN a Bell telephone central office, this WesternElectric installer is connecting thousandsof wires to new equipment to provide moreand better service.He’s one of 18,000 trained Western Electricinstallers who do this job for Bell Telephonecompanies. Crews are working in some 1,600central offices to connect new equipmentwhich, like your telephone, is made byWestern Electric.• Western Electric is part of the Bell System—-has beensince 1882. This assures closest cooperation betweenpeople who design telephone equipment, people whomake it and people who operate it. Their teamwork hasgiven this country the best telephone service on earth.Western ElectricA UNIT OF THE BELL system since iaB2 MARILYN KOLBERAfter comps, you’ll want somediversion to lighten your spiritswhile you return to normal so ifyou haven’t taken inventory onyour summer possessions andneeds by then, you’ll find adequaterecreation by snooping at storesin this vicinity. When you do shopin stores that you’ve read aboutin “The Eye,” give your merchanta little extra satisfaction by tell¬ing him that you saw his ad in thecolumn.You’ll have a wrist to be proudof if you encircle it with a newwatch on graduation day. Witheach glance at your fully guaran¬teed, well-known time-piece you’llhave a clear recollec¬tion of this big mo¬ment and if you pur¬chase that timerfrom a full selectionat Scott’s JewelryStore, 854 E. 63rdSt., you will be givena special 10 per centdiscount on yourpurchases. For thosewho like to carry their radio pro¬grams with them, Scott’s has alarge variety of portable radios,too.It isn’t every day that you re¬ceive a degree so if you want tocapture that gradua¬tion expression, makearrangements to haveyour photograph tak¬en in cap and gownby The Album, 1171E. 55th St. .Moder¬ately priced, theselikenesses will besnapped for you withgreater care if youarrange to have the picture takenbefore graduation, thereby avoid¬ing the last minute rush.•Ideal for beach and sport wearare the long wearing woven strawsto be found at the Factory Out¬let Shoe Store, 1521 E. 55th St.Due to bal-» ance suppliedby a wedgeeheel, comfortfor stridingbesides enjoy¬able foot cool¬ness underlightweight material are advan¬tages to be gained by wearingthese three buckled strap crea¬tions. Woven in a mixture of col¬ors with red, green, or blue dom-inent, these slip-ons are priced atonly $5.50 the pair.•Bolero and sun-back combina¬tions that can be worn for dressas well as forplay are indis-i pensable articlesfor any girl’ssummer ward¬robe and at thenewly openedPeggy Lou Shop,1355 E. 63rd St.,these Sanforized fashions may befound in abundance. In additionto these, tissue chambrays, andginghams in the new gauchochesses and other styles as fea¬tured in outstanding women’smagazines may be purchased with¬in the low price range of $5.95-$12.95,•Kreisler wants to let you in ontheir newest secret in answeringthe problem of how to match cuff¬link stones with shirts and suits.At Berns Store for Men, 1233 E.63rd St., their latest in change-o-color cuff links are at your dis¬posal. With just a magic twist orslide, these marble shaped, oblong,or variations on the oblong shapesbecome oneof two pos¬sible colorsand elim¬inate thenecessity ofbuying somany separate sets. In a varietyof color combinations at $3.50, thelinks come in cases suited for con¬version into cigarette containersafter cuff-links are removed.I Perfectly suited for graduationor Father’s Day gifts is the SwankJewelry on displayat the Betz Jewel¬ry Store, 1523 E.53rd St. S o m e •thing really differ¬ent in key chainor money clipshapes is obtain¬able from $1.50and up besidesconservative, well-styled tie clips andcuff links thatstart at $1.50 also.•On the beach or in a fk>o1 thissummer, all eyes will be focusedupon you when you wear a onepiece strapless bathing suit. Beingshown by ParkClothing, 853 E.55th St., theselastex satin gar¬ments with zip¬per back closuresare included inthe large collec¬tion of two piece,one piece withstraps, and onepiece strapless.styles in a fullchoice of colors within a pricerange of $5.95-$9.95.•Spend your leisure afternoonhours in sunny tennis courtsswinging a famed Wilson tennisracquet that you’ve purchased ata special reduced pricefrom Hermans’ Sport¬ing Goods Store, 935E, 55th St. Made forfellows are the medi¬um weight Don Budgeracquets at $4.95;while in the lighterweight for girls, MaryHardwick versions areavailable at $5.95. Forthose who are hard onracquets, a prompt re¬stringing service for $3.50 and upis offered by the store. P. S.—Besure to stop by for your free Wil¬son catalogue featuring their com,plete line.•Pack your belongings in attrac¬tive suitcases from the UniversityLuggage Shop, 1110 E. 63rd St.,when you prepare to‘return homeor leave for avacation thissummer.Priced especi¬ally for stu-dents whoread “TheEye” is a 26"Pullman bag with a choice ofeither 15, 18, or 21 inch overnightbag to match for only $15, Thebags, leather bound with leatherhandles and rayon lining, are aregular $25 value.For your added convenience inflower purchasing of graduation,weddings and the After - CompDance corsagesand bouquets,Kimbark floVistshave recentlyopened a flowercenter at 1506 E.57th St., in addi¬tion to their oth¬er two locationsat 922 E. 63rdSt., and 1409 E.63rd St. Serversof the foremostpersonalities oncampus, theshops are knownfor their ability to satisfy econom¬ical student budgets with corsagespriced at $1.50 and up.GREGG COLLEGEA School of Rusinotc—Proforrod byCoHogo Mon ond Womon4 MONTHINTENSIVE COURSESfCRETARIAL TRAINING FOR COLLEGESTUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough, inteoMTe course—starongJune, October, Februar.r. Bul¬letin A on request•SFEOAl COUNSROR for G.L TRAINtNO•R^uUr Dtf and Eveoing Schools*nroughout the Year. (Catalog•Directoi, Paul M. Pair, 31.A.THE 6RE6G COLLEGEgr S. mrmmrntm mm., CM«asa t, tWtualaaTERESA DOLANDANCING SCHOOL1208 E. 63d Sh (Nr. Woodlown)Let us make you a good dancer Inless time and at less cost. Thousandsof good dancers testify to our 35years of leadership. Our experienceIs your gain.PRIVATE LESSONS. Strictly Private,Progress Quick, Sure and Pleasant.No Embarassment. Let Us Help You.BEGINNERS GROUP LESSONSMon., Wed., & Fri. Evngs., 8:00>ll:0012 LESSONS—110.00Single $1.00HYde Pork 3-3080curopeROUND TRIP ^280 UPTickrti ovciilobl* nowcummer 1949UNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq., Cambridge, Mass. Fun! Relaxation! Sightseeing!ESCORTED BUS TOURSTulip Festival-Holland, Mich., May21 22Old-world pageantry, castumes, dances, parades amid a setting ofbeautiful tulips combined with the scenic beauty and vacation activitiesof nearby Saugatuck, Michigan. Time to roam; stay at Hotel Casa¬blanca; inexpensive varied meals. Enjoyable drive via luxury-liner air-conditioned bus. Leave Chicago Saturday morning, May 21 — returnSunday evening, May 22.Price includes transportation and hotel occommodations $9.95 inc. taxMemorial Day Week-end atSaugatuck, Mich. . . . May 28-29-30Complete lake resort facilities; boating, cycling. Dune-hiking, shuffle-board, sun-bathing, tennis, golf, etc. Visit famed art colony; stoy atHotel Casablanca; inexpensive varied meals; Planned activities andPrivate exploring. Leave Chicago Saturday morning, May 28 — returnMonday evening, May 30.Price includes transportation and hotel accommodations $12.95 inc. taxFor information and reservationsVarsity Ticket ServiceI WOODWORTH’S ROOK STOREI 13nEAST57th MUseum4-1677^ 2 blocks east of Mandel Hall CANANDAIGUA, NEW YORK invites you to enjoy the^FINGER LAKES“AMERICA'S SWITZERLAND"10-doy escorted, all expense vacation, 27^9 tax inc.Yes, there Is •’something new anddifferent” In vacations . . the Fin¬ger Lakes Region of New York State!Richly steeped in tradition, historyand romance, this delightful »potwith its emerald lakes, fertile val¬leys and rolling hills offers you morevacation pleasure than you everdreamed possible. This is the firstyear that Vacations Unlimited isoffering you this all expense, es¬corted, modern motor coach vaca¬tion. See every worth while historicand beauty spoi in the entire Finger Lakes Region, Watkins Glen Park,Taughannock Falls, the famousWldmer Wineries, early Americanforts and other historic shrines. Allthis plus such various activities asawimming, horse back riding, rollerskating, movies, barn dancea etc.all Included in one low-price tour.Stay at fine hotels, enjoy good foodMake early reservations; tours startJune 4th. leave every other Satur¬day till Labor Day Ten daya allexpense, expertly conducted Only1127.50 including taxFOR FULL DETAILS: WRITE . . . PHONEvacations unlimited6270 Sfony Island Avn., CkieogoPliona FA Irfax 4-9392 OR COME IN PERSON TOTops with the Top Stars in Hollywood and with colleges too—When you smoke CHESTERFIELDyou get a Milder/ cooler smoke.Thot’s why it’s My Cigarette."STARRING IN"'BRIDE OF VENGEANCE^^A PARAMOUNT PICTUREOopftifjM 1949. LKcerr ft Mms Tosaoco CatViECHICAGOMAROON Friday,May13***ChicagovsDeFauwtennismatchwillbeplayedat2p.m.onthevarsitycourts.*•*TheHumboldtClubofthegermanicsdepartmentmeetsat3:30p.m.inWie-boldtCommons.**«HiUelGroupmeetseveryFridayforSabbathservicesat7:45p.m.intheHillelhouse.«**LutheranStudentAssociationholdsadinnermeetingeveryFridayeveningat5:30p.m.atChapelHouse.«**TheCompCapers,adancesponsoredbytheBurton-JudsonCouncil,willfea¬turethiseveningentertainment,re¬freshments,andtwobands.BillPrice’sandLowellSiff’s.TobeheldintheBurtondiningroom.Admissioniswith¬outcharge.41**PoliticsClubandUnitedWorldFed¬eralistspresenttodayat3:30p.m.adebate-symposium,TheAtlanticPact:DilemmaofSovereignty.Speakersfrombothorganizationsare:SaulMendel-sonandLeonHurvitzfromthePoliticsClub,andBernardKahnandDonaldLevinefromUWF,Classics10.*<t>***TheHolySpiritandtheChristian’*willbethetopicofatalktobegivenbytheRev.HerbertPalmquist,underthesponsorshipoftheInter-VarsityChris¬tianFellowship,at7:30intheEastLoungeofIdaNoyes.***“TheTrial,’*byFranzKafka,thefinalpresentationofthe1948-49seasonbytheUniversityofChicagoTheatre,willbegiveninLeonMandelHall,at8:30tonight,Saturday,andat3:30onSunday.***HillelFoundationishavinganexhibitof_illuminationsanddecorationstakenfromthemagazine“Rimon”andthe‘‘‘UniversalJewishEncyclopedia.”Tues¬daywillbethefinaldateoftheexhibit.•*•Saturday,May14TheSocialScienceIQualifyingCom¬prehensiveExaminationwillbegiventoday.Friday,May13,1949PageIS57thStreetArtFairwillexhibitpaintings,sculptureandcrafts.ThefairbeingsponsoredbytheChicagoReviewwillcontinueSaturdayandSunday.ForfurtherinformationcallMaryLouiseWolmer,FA4-5873.***TheInternationalSocietyforGeneralSemanticswillmeetintheReceptionRoomofIdaNoyesat2p.m.fordis¬cussion.**4WaltzNight,undertheauspicesofSUFolkPrograms,willbeginat8p.m.InIdaNoyes.Admission35c.***AStreetDanceinfrontofHitchcockHallisbeinginitiatedbytheresidentsofHitchcockandSnellHalls.Abon¬fire,refreshments,andsingingarein¬cludedinthedancewhichisscheduledtobeginat8:30p.m.Therewillbenoadmissioncharge.***TheJ-VTennisTeamwillplayinaPrivateSchoolLeaguetournamentinVarsityCourtat10a.m.«♦«Sunday,May1557thStreetFaircontinuestoday.ForinformationconsultSaturdaycalendar.***Rev.JohnB.Thompson,deanofRockefellerMemorialChapel,willpreachatthe11a.m.worshipservice.FrederickL.Marriott,chapelorganistandcarillonneur,willplayacarillonrecitalfrom4to4:30p.m.•*•InterchurchCouncilwillholdabreak,fastat9:15a.m.inChapelHouse.Thebreakfastwillbefollowedbya‘‘GreatBook”discussionoftheBible.Therewillbea20cchargeforbreakfast.***“Goethe’sDrawingsandArtofGoeihe’sTime”isthetopicofalecturetobedeliveredbyDr.ErnstScheyer,Profes,sorofArt,WayneUniversity,at4p.m.inClassics10.Followingthisillustratedlecture,theGoetheexhibi¬tioninGoodspeed108willbeopentothepublic.Thelectureisbeingpresent¬edundertheauspicesoftheRenais-QsanceSocietyandtheGermanicsDe¬partment.Noadmissioncharge.444“Spring,”aRussiancomedyfilm,and“Sweden,”aMarchofTimeshort,willbeshowninInternationalhouseat8.Admissionis$.35.ontheoriginsofscienceandproblemsofearlyastronomyat4:30inSocialScience122.444“TrinitarianismandtheModernMind”isthesubjectforadebatebe¬tweenChanningClubandIntervarsityChristianFellowshipintheFirstUni¬tarianChurch,57thandWoodlawn,at6p.m.Dr.LesliePenningtonwillserveasmoderator;KenSmithandRalphPragerwillspeakforChanningClubandRayHollyandJamesMunroforIntervarsityChris^anFellowship.ThedebateisbeingsponsoredbyChanningClub.444ABirdHiketoOrlandPark,Forest*Preserve,willleaveIdaNoyesat7:30a.m.Themaingroupwillreturnona6:37bus;therewillbeoneleavingat4:15also.InterestedstudentsareaskedtosignupattheSUOffice.Costofroundtrip,75minutebusrideis81c.Hikersareurgedtobringfieldglasses,cameraandtheirlunch.♦♦•SUFolkProgramispresentingaSongFestat8p.m.inIdaNoyes.TheFestOisopentoeveryoneinterestedinlearn¬ingandsingingfolksongs.444SUNoyesBox—thelastoneofthequarter—opensat8p.m.andcontinuestill11p.m.inIdaNoyes<Admissionformenis25c.Duringthesummerquarter,theNoyesBoxwillbeheldontheIdaNoyespatio.*•*AUniversityForumbroadcastfeatur-q ingProfessorThomasI.Cook,GeraldJ.O’Farrell,MissRoseFriedman,and-JDonaldRichardFaithinadiscussion^of“IstheFairDealaGoodDeal?”will^begivenbyStudentForumatradiosta-uutionWOAKat4.444Monday,May16“IsAmericancollegeeducationslant¬edtowardtheclassviewpointofbigbusiness?”willbethetopicofdiscus¬sionattheCommunistClubmeetingintheAlumniRoomofIdaNoyesat3:30.444CollegePhy.Sci.studentsarebeingaskedtohelpinrevisingthecoursefornextyearthroughquestionnairesforstudentcomment.BlankswillbehandedoutatthelecturestodayandTuesday,inclassesWednesdayandThursday,andlaterinCobb215.EachstudentshouldreturnhisquestionnairebyMay23.444TheJ-VbaseballteamwillmeetwithConcordiahighschoolat4inWood-stock.444®Tuesday,May17UnitedStudentFellowshipisgivingasupperat5:30withabusinessmeet¬ingfollowing.At7DeanGarfieldCoxoftheSchoolofBusinesswillspeakon“FreeEnterprise—ItsRelationtoChris¬tianity.”Suppercosts$.60.Anyonein¬terestedisaskedtophoneChapelHouseforsupperreservationsbefore3:30p.m.Monday.*««MaynardKruegerwillspeakon“Re¬centSocialistTheory”atameetingsponsored*bytheReligiousSocialistClubinMeadvilleHouse,57thandWoodlawnat10p.m.***ChristianScienceOrganizationwillholditsregularweeklymeetinginThorndikeHiltonChapelat7:30. oI-o“TheHumanitiesinaDemocracy”willbethetopicdiscussedbyHenry RagooftheHumanitiesIIIstaffandagroupofstudentson“InsidetheCol¬lege,”aStudentForum-RadioMidway broadcast,whichistobegiveninBur¬tonLoungeat8:30.Admissionisfree.444DeanParsons,DeanofStudents,willconductthefourthinaseriesofLec¬ture-DiscussionsforCollegestudentsin¬terestedinenteringaDivisionorGrad¬uateSchool.**«Nominationsfor“MissUniversityofChicago”mustbefiledinReynolds203bynoon.ThewinningcandidatewillbepresentedtothecampusattheSpringsemi-formalC-Dance,andthenwillenterdirectlyintothe“MissChicago”finals.StudentUnion’sDanceDepart¬ment,whichissponsoringthecontest,hasannouncedthatthegirlwillbechosenonthebasisofherappearance,personality,poise,andtalentinmusic,dancing,art,orpublicspeaking.Candi¬datesmustbestudents,betweentheagesof18and28,whoarenotandneverhavebeenmarried.Thewinningcandidatewillreceivea$275scholarshipinmodeling,television,ordramaticsfromPatriciaStevensInc.,andwillalsobeeligibleforadditionalprizesifshedoeswellinthe“MissChi¬cago”contest.Wednesday,May18FrederickL.Marriott,chapelorganistandcarillonneur,willplayacarillonrecitalfrom4:30to5.444“ExecutiveAptitudes”willbethetopicofaspeechbyProf.Wm.E.HenryatameetingsponsoredbytheBusinessClubinHaskellHall208at4.Todayisthedeadlineforplayingoffirstroundsinglesanddoublesmatchesinthewomen’sall-campustennistour¬neysponsoredbytheWomen’sAthleticAssociation.ThefullscheduleofmatchesispostedinIdaNoyesbase¬ment.OWillyHartner,professorofthehis¬toryofscienceattheUniversityofFrankfort,andvisitingprofessorattheUniversityofChicago,willgivethe OfirstoffiveTuesdayafternoonlectures“VitalizingOurFaith”willbedis¬cussedbyDeanWilliamF.HawleyoftheDivinitySchoolatameetingspon¬soredbyCanterburyClubintheEastLoungeofIdaNoyesat7:30.ThefinalcontestfortheMiloP,JewettPrizeforBibleReadingwillbeheldinBondChapelat4:30.mm*TheJ-VTrackteamwillholdameetwithConcordiaandLutherat3:30inStaggField.*m*Thursday,May19Avolley-balltournament,sponsoredbyStudentUnionGamesDepartmentwillbeheldfrom7to10inIdaNoyesGym.ParticipantsshouldsignupattheStudentUnionoffice.••♦TheUCChessClubwillmeetwiththeAustinChessandCheckerClubinaplayoffmatchforthechampionshipofGreaterChicagoChessLeagueintheChessClubofChicago,185W.Madi¬sonSt.,2ndfloor,at7.Admissionisfree.444“BrainWavesandCorticalDevelop¬mentinNewbornandYoungInfants”willbethetopicofaspeechbyDonaldB.Lindsley,ProfessorofPsychologyatNorthwesternUniversity,whoisbeingsponsoredbythePsychologyClubinLawNorthat4:30.“ProgressUndertheMarshallPlan,”adiscussionbyHenryB.Arthur,econ¬omistofSwiftandCompany,willbesponsoredbythePoliticalEconomyClubinJuddHallauditoriumat7:45.♦•*CollegeregistrationinadvanceforthesummerquarterwillcontinuethroughJune10.Registrationforthedivisionsandgraduateschoolsareasfollows:SocialServiceAdministration,May31-June17;DivisionofthePhysicalSci¬ences,May31-June3;SchoolofBusi¬ness,May31-June3;GraduateLibrarySchool,May31-June3;DivisionoftheBiologicalSciences,June6-10;DivisionoftheHumanities,June6-10;Federa¬tionofTheologicalSchools,June6-10;LawSchool,June6-10;DivisionoftheSocialSciences,June13-17;SchoolofMedicine,June13-17.StudentsaretobeginregistrationintheofficeoftheappropriateDeanofStudents,thengo¬ingtotheRegistrar’sofficetohavefeesassessed.Maroonwishesyouluckoncomps!Page 16 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, Moy 13, 194Sfore Hours, 9 15 to 5 45