University of Chicago, January 19, 1951 Symposium conveneson Human RelationsThe second annual Symposium on Human Developmentwill be held in an all-day session tomorrow, January 20, inroom 126 of Judd Hall. The symposium, sponsored by the UCCommittee on Human Development, will consider the topic,‘Goals and Problems of an Interdisciplinary Approach to theStudy of Man and Society/Educators assemble here,\20 draft draft resolutionsAn appeal to the government to halt voluntary enlistments and to rely on the currentdraft setup for military manpower supplies was drafted here this week by the deans of stu¬dents of twenty midwest colleges and universities.The appeal came as part of a program designed by the deans to minimize confusion andlow student morale caused by the current uncertain draft situation. The special meetingwas held here Monday in the offices of UC dean of students Robert M. Strozier in an effortto discuss the attitudes the deansought to take in regard to thedraft.Information lackingThe deans discussed the lack ofdefinite information on the draft.Lack of information has prevent¬ed the fullest use of availablemanpower, curtailing the effec¬tiveness of educational institu¬tions.Neither college students of pre¬induction age nor advanced stu¬dents know exactly where theystand in relation to the draft.Seek enlistment holtThe deans decried the lack ofcoordination between present en¬listment and selective service pol¬icies which add to the uncertaintyof students and their parents. Itwas recommended that the armedforces halt voluntary enlistmentand use Selective Service channelsonly in the securance of per¬sonnel.Draftees should, they think, begiven their choice of service “in sofar as possible.” The deans alsourged a "more complete and uni¬form interpretation by local draftboards”- of present draft laws tosee Educators, page 5 MAROON plans coursesin all journalistic skillsA six-week course in journalism, open free to all students,'will be presented as a public service feature of the MAROON Dr.beginning February 1. Preliminary details of the program,now in its final planning stages, were unveiled this week byCharles Garvin, MAROON Editor-in-Chief.The program, originally set up to train MAROON staffmembers, has been expandedLevy replaces 'Quartet'Because of serious injuries sus¬tained by two members of theLowenguth String Quartet in anauto accident, the quartet will notappear in this week's chambermusic concert.Ernst Levy, professorial lecturerin Humanities will perform in theirplace. He will play Beethoven'slast three piano sonatas, opus 109,110 and 111.Levy has been heard at the Uni¬versity previously, playing worksby Beethoven and Lisxt. He hasalso appeared as a conductor ofsmall chamber groups.Student Forum needs newdirector as Ladd resignsDavid Ladd, director of Student Forum, UC’s debate andforensic organization, has resigned.Ladd, who led last year’s team to top place in the BigTen, said in submitting his resignation, “It is impossiblelor me to continue in this rewarding work with any hopeof being able to remain in the Law School.”In addition to his Forum ac¬tivities, Ladd is head residentof Snell Hall, and a memberof SDA. He was also a delegateto last summer’s NSA congress.Ladd will continue in an advi¬sory capacity to Student Forumuntil a new head is named by theDirector of Student Activities,William Birenbaum._ Plans announced by com¬mittee chairman Robert J.Havighurst reveal the sympo¬sium will be divided into two mainsessions. The first session, from9 a.m. to 12 noon, will considerresearch reports from the field ofhuman development. The after¬noon session, beginning at 1:30p.m., will feature a round tablediscussion on the symposiumtopic.An evening program will aug¬ment the day sessions. Followinga 6:30 p.m. banquet in the Quad¬rangle Club, participants willwind up the evening with a “mix¬er,” beginning at 9 p.m., also inthe Quadrangle Club.Speakers will include Dr. M. L.Haimowitz, Dr. Ruth Albrecht,Richard Wortgington, Dr.Henry S. Mass, Dr. Robert J. Hav¬ighurst, Dr. Franz Alexander, Dr.Esther McGinness, Dr. FredaKehm, Dr. Ralph W. Tyler, andDr. Bruno Bettleheim.R-C councilbeing revivedHilary Fry, director of the Rey¬nolds Club, in co-operation withStudent Union has announced amovement to revive the old Rey¬nolds Club Council.The council’s duties will involvebroadening the scope of activitiesin the club. Any student wishingto become a council member mayobtain a petition at the ReynoldsClub desk. These must be signedby ten persons who are in someway using the club’s facilities.The first meeting of the coun¬cil will be held Tuesday at 3:30p.m. in the South Lounge of Rey¬nolds Club. Those wishing to filepetitions and anyone else inter¬ested are invited to attend. Elec¬tion of a chairman, who will holda permanent seat on the SUBoard, and -a discussion of theactivities and potentialities of theReynolds Club will be on theagenda. Eighth defeatof season forUC cagemenIt’s eight straight losses for theMaroon cagers now. They did itagain in Saturday’s contest withIllinois Tech, 57-53.Jack Karush came off the dis¬abled list for the first time thisseason to contribute 18 points onsix field goals and six free throws.His return had already been off¬set when A1 Binford, regular cen¬ter, injured his ankle last week.So the addition of Karush wasn’tenough to stop the likes of Leiser,McCue and Gorgolka, who got18, 14 and 11 points, respectively.Dave Dickman with six field goalsand Spence Boise with two bas¬kets and six free tosses were theother scorers worth noting.The game followed the familiarpattern of most of the other sev¬en. The Maroons were constantlyon the short end of the total.They managed to whittle theTecnawk lead to three points at54-51, but succumbed quietlythereafter.'The Road to Life’is tonightDon't forgetThe MAROON staff party willbe tonight—8 p.m. to 1 a.m. atthe Alpha Delta Phi House, 5747University Ave.The party is open to MAROONstaff members and their datesonly,SG asks bidsfor food salesAcceptance of bids for negotiat¬ing a proposed sandwich conces¬sion at the bookstore will be ter¬minated at 6 p.m. Tuesday, theStudent Needs Committee of Stu¬dent Government announced thisweek.The Committee wishes esti¬mates from interested studentsas to costs and material and thetime involved in making sand¬wiches, comparable in price tothose now on sale at the Book¬store. The best bids will be usedin negotiations with the Book¬store. Those people submittingthe best bids will be awarded thejobs if the concession is granted.Forms and instructions for thebids are available at the SG Of¬fice, 3rd floor, Reynolds Club. to allow all UC students desir¬ing a brief survey of the fieldto attend, Garvin stated.Plans call for six lectures, oneeach week, touching on the mainfeatures of journalism. Each lec¬ture will be presented twice dur¬ing a given week, in order to al¬low as many as possible to attend.Sessions will last one hour each.The course will consider newswriting, headline writing, make¬up, interviewing, feature writing,and other important phases ofjournalism. Emphasis will be onthe campus level, particularly insections of the course whichdeal with recognizing news andgetting the facts for a news story.The course will end March 9,one week before the closing ofthe Winter quarter.Supervising the program is MA¬ROON staff member John V.Hurst, former assistant editor ofthe Peacock Newspapers, Chi¬cago.Social groupholds confabThe Committee for Social Co¬ordination held its second meet¬ing last Wednesday night in theoffices of Student Union. WilliamBirenbaum, director of studentactivities was among the par¬ticipants.The CSC is not a formal organ¬ization; its only purpose is to dis- , , .,v .,cuss social activities occurring funds for its aid program and to acquaint the student bodythroughout the campus. with the aims and purposes of its organization.Organized to enable Ameri¬can students and teachers toshare materially and intellect-tually with the students of othercountries, WSSF already has arelief and educational programfunctioning on a broad scale. Un-Symphony performs50 cent student tickets for theChicago Symphony program of2:15 p.m. Friday, January 26, willbe on sale today in Mandel Corri¬dor, International House, and theSG office.Leonard Bernstein will conductthe following program:Bach. . . Concerto No. 5 for Piano,Violin, Flute, and StringOrchestra (Bernstein soloist)Mohler Symphony No. 2in C MinorPlot student service driveto spearhead fund raisingThe World Student Service Fund will conduct a large scaledrive on campus during the week of February 5-9 to raisePlanforNegroHistory WeekPlans for a citywide campaignto erect a monument to Negrohero and Civil War leader, Fred¬erick Douglass, were launchedlast week at the 26th annualpreparation meeting for NegroHistory Week. It will be observedthis year from February 11 to 18.In response to an invitationfrom the National Negro Museumand Historical Foundation, for¬merly led by the late G. CarterWoodson, noted Negro historian,the MAROON sent a delegationof three staff members to themeeting in preparation for Negro The tickets will be distributed at the Information Desk of der this Pr°eram funds are disHutchins to bid farewell atRockefeller to studentsChancellor Robert M. Hutchins’ farewell to the studentbody will be given in Rockefeller Chapel at 8 p.m. next Friday.4-;^1^4-^. „,;ii j _ j. _ -rr K i ?History Week on campus.Proposals by the Negro HistoryWeek Committee included a por¬trait exhibit of prominent Negroleaders and an observance meet¬ing. Letters to the Governor andMayor are being prepared callingfor official Negro History Weekproclamations as in past years.Superintendent of Schools Huntwill be called on to direct eachpublic school to have cbmmemora-tive assemblies.Members of reservecomponents, note!Members of Reserve Compon¬ents may see the Registrar, Ad¬ministration Building, Room 103,for information concerning tkeirmilitary and/or academic status.E. C. MILLERRegistrar the AdministrationJanuary 25.During the last month, theChancellor has made hisadieux to the Board of Trusteesand the faculty; his farewell ad¬dress to the students will be madeunder the auspices of the Dormi¬tory Planning Committee.Chancellor Hutchins indicatedto the Planning Committee lastquarter that he thought a fare¬well to the students would be verymuch in order. The DPC is pre¬senting this in line with its pro¬gram of expanding the aims ofgeneral education in the College,commonly considered the Chan¬cellor’s greatest contribution tothe University.Robert M. HutchinsBuilding after 8:30 Thursday, tributed to needy students of allcountries by the World StudentRelief, an international organiza¬tions located in Geneva, Switzer¬land.Medical aid, aid to refugee anddisplaced students, supply ofbooks, publications, and otherequipment, encouragement of stu¬dent self-selp projects, and thedistribution of emergency foodand clothing all have a place onthe program.WSSF whose UC chapter iscomposed of representatives fromCalvert Club, Hillel, Inter-ChurchCouncil, Inter-Club Council, Stu¬dent Christian Association, andStudent Government, operates un¬der the sponsorship of such or¬ganizations as UNESCO, CARE,and the American Council of Edu¬cation.Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON January 19, 1951Offer statistics on UC peace pollwith revealing detailed commentsDetailed report of the comments provided by many persons who replied to the recentMAROON opinion survey, the MAROON feels, will provide a better picture than the barestatistics. This week we present a detailed analysis of Question 1 on students and the draft,the first of a series.Question 1 read, “Do you think all students, some students, or no students should bedeferred from the draft?” Of our 129 replies, 18, or 13.9 per cent, checked “all students”;90, or 69.8 per cent indicatedthey felt some students should response and commented. Threebe deferred; 13.2 per cent, said listed the tvpe of students they IjZno students; and four, or 3.1 per . , . ■ , , ■will iCa Tv^ had m mind for deferments. Four 'cent had no opinion.Break-down made indicated they felt that students, - | £ I ISixty-two respondents, 48.1 per as such, should receive no special |©I !-■“ il©3CIcent, commented on this question, consideration in the event of full ... ^As in all the questions, a -break. moblli2atlon, but should be treated br Nancr 9ateIdown of these comments was , „ »ii „ nfmade: each questionnaire with a “Just like everyone else. Two Allan D£?plP”’comment on this question was stated that it was impossible to }ne inter-* ratei nity '-ouncu,separated according to how the defer all students. Two specified is one of the busiest studentsrespondent felt about the defer- that the number to be deferred on campus, and he doesn’t planment question. Then the com- should depend on the military sit- to give up the title. The twen-ments in each response category uation. One feared that schools ty-year-old senior in the Lawwere classified according to the would become draft dodger hav- School will be one of the young-type of comment made. ens if all students were deferred. est graduates in its history. AfterAll students should be deferred: One cited the value of an educated graduating in June and takingTwelve respondents made com- person to society; one stated the bar examination in Septemberments on this ^part of question “Even in emergency or war”; and he will go into law with his uncle,one. Seven indicated they were one said, “but only temporarily.” Barnet Hodes, 5th ward commit-against the draft or any other Of the 30, who listed what type teeman. An active member of theform of military conscription, of students should be deferred, Young Democrats, Dropkin is in-Three qualified their choice by 14 indicated students studying for terested in politics as well as law.specifying the deferment was to “vital occupations” should be de- (All this and the draft too?)last to the end of the school year ferred. Five specified students The IF Council’s main functionor beyond, depending on war con- showing high promise or schol- js to act as a go-between for theditions. One cited the difficulty of astic rank. Five more mentioned administration and the fraterni-resuming studies after an inter- both of the preceding types of ties. The officership rotates andruption such as the draft would students. Four felt that veterans jn this way all fraternities areimply; and one stated there was should be deferred. One stated equally represented and equallya need for an intellectual back- “brilliant students doing graduate important. Every year I-F Cour-log or reserve. work”; and one wrrote a terse “ad- cil awards a cup to the fraternitywith the highest scholastic rat-Some students: 42 checked this vanced students.’Prize-winning Bachis 'no Raskolnikov'by Charles GaulkinReaders of “The Dabbler” might expect its author to bea morose, melancholy, world-weary cynic looking at life witha sardonic leer and one raised eyebrow, and wonderingwhether to end it all. But author Emmon Bach, whose above-named masterpfece was printed as the top short story in thispaper last week, shattered illusions by seeming alarminglynormal in an interview.We regret to report that Mr.Bach is “generally happy.”No Raskolnikov he. His responseto the questions that are relishedwith glee by Dostoievski - typephilosophers - in - anguish all overthe world was simply, “You askthe damndest questions.”“Are you as bitter about life asthe end of your story would im¬ply?” we asked. “No,” he said,“not for myself.” This qualifyingclause sounded like a possible hintof sombre things to come, butwhen pressed for elaboration, hepondered for a moment andchanged his answer to an un¬adorned “No.” As for the story’send, “it just seemed to fit.”We remarked that the style andconstruction of the story seemedWHERE THE U of CMEETS TO EATJV FINE F 0 0 I1 32 l' East 57»h StreetEvery Monday Night“BATTLE OF THEBANDS’’Bop vs DixielandJay Burkhart's "Jaybirds"andThe Mason - Dixie Six somewhat confessional. Bach re¬plied that “The Dabbler” is notautobiographical. He said that thestyle was probably “too general¬ized and distant.”Despite our valiant attempt tostimulate a flood of bitterness,the only pessimistic notes, ar¬ranged in anticlimactic order,were: The world situation is“messy.” “I wasn’t satisfied withmy story.” “Your paper mis¬spelled my name last week.”ACTORS COMPANY218 South Wabash3 ONF-ACTS byTe: asee WilliamsFridays - Saturdays - SundaysThrough February 24Student RatesPhone WEbster ,9-7265 SHOE REPAIRComplete shoe service, anythingyou wish to be done to a shoe.“IT MUST BE DONE RIGHT”HOLLIDAY’S DELUXESHOE SERVICE1407 East 61st Street(at Dorchester Ave.)Phone Normal 7-8717Two blocks from Inti. HouseWhile-U-Wait or One-Day ServiceDR. A. ZIMBLER1454 E. 55th St.DO 3-9442N.S.A. Discount 15%QuickServicePrescriptions FilledImmediate Duplication ofBroken Lenses and FramesHours: 9-6; Mon. Or Thurs., 9-9 Similar offenders on Ellis avenue were finding little yellow cards (REALones) under their wipers last week. A word to the wise. , , ,WUCB-640 kcProgram listingsThe WUCB schedule will beprinted regularly in the MA¬ROON. Station WUCB can beheard only in the dormitories andin International House.FM Monday through Friday from 9:30a.m until 7 p.m., Saturday 9:30 a.m.until 8 p.m., and Sunday 9:30 a.m. until11 p.m. unless otherwise noted. Fridoy, Jon. 197:00 News7:05 Hotspot7:30 Dancing with your Ear8:15 Student Forum9:00 Hindemith Society11:00 Chesterfield Contest Time11:15 Time to Da De Da De Do1:00 A.M. Sign OffSaturday, Jon. 208:00 Saturday Evening Concert12:00 Sign OffSunday, Jon. 212:30 Invitation to Faith3:00 Dormitory Planning CommitteeMonday, Jon. 227:00 Newsse« WUCB on page Iing. If enough talent can be lo¬cated, the Council will sponsor theUnited Negro College BenefitFund Show this spring, the pro¬ceeds of which will be distributedto the Negro colleges throughoutthe country. The Council alsosponsors two of the most im¬portant social events on campus,IF-IC mixer and I-F Ball.Dropkin graduated from U-High and from the college in 1948.'jiiiiiiimiimmiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiriiiiimiiu sm mm ■■mm mm JJJS Get Your Hair Cut as You Want It at i E[ LOUIE'S BARBER SHOP j Ii 1110 E. 55th St. FAirfax 4-3878 | fE Louis Cortez E ESIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHUExcerpt E“The PERIOD of DINOSAURS was at a time when, in the £course of the PRECESSIONAL EARTH MOVEMENT, there £was along the line of earth rotation a CONTINUOUS AREA 35 of LAND of about one hundred and fifty degrees WITHIN 3£ the TORRID ZONE.” zIRON EI COSMOGRAPHY 1930 Worksheets |8 “Copyright ~3 The Philosophers Worksheet (a supplement) Thomas Maciver j»B This is MODERN THEORY in the field of SPECULATIVE zg PHILOSOPHY. TIME and PUBLICITY will DETERMINE z- the TRUTH. zHowe\er, ASK THIS of a professor—does he know if it is TRI5E 5= or FALSE that in times BEFORE the GREAT FLOOD there 33 was an unbroken stretch of ten thousand miles of land 33 along the line of earth rotation at the equator. DO NOT g3 press the matter; TIME has the ANSWER. “COSMOGRAPHY 1930 Worksheets was sent, free of all charge, 33 to college and public libraries of all English-speaking coun- 3£ tries in 1944. (About twenty per cent, only, were acknowl- 3£ edged and in many places it may not have been put on the g£ library shelves.) The Philosophers Worksheet, a supple- ££ ment, — in 1949 — was sent, free, to nineteen hundred li- £3 braries. It is not a text-book affcl the author does not permit £3 its use for classroom study or discussion. «*3 NOW OUT of PRINT. NO CORRESPONDENCE WANTED. £■iACCEPTANCE by present day teaching professors is not import- £3 ant. COSMOGRAPHY 1930 is something entirely new—// B3 “The time of earth rotation would change, but this would not S3 be anything new, and it, perhaps, would not be new that Bg people could not live in the torrid zone.” //“This would g£ mean more water and less land in the temperate zones, g£ ajid a slowing up in the speed of daily rotation because of g£ the absence of heavy right-angle mountain ranges to receive g£ the propulsive force of the ENERGY RAYS of the SUN.” gB //“The CYLINDER of REBOUNDING SUNLIGHT would £g then move CLOSER to the EARTH.” //“The NIGHTS £3 would be cold and damp, and the break from steaming day- S3 time to freezing night-time would come so fast that no S5 place of habitation could be made with sufficient insulation g£ to furnish mankind with the protection against bodily re- 3™ actions that is needed to prevent bodily metamorphosis.' g//“The family of human beings that remained in the tropics gwould become the progenitor of the gorilla. The elephant gwould slowly grow into the mastodon. Reptiles would all £grow into mammoth size.” //“The day of the dinosaur £will again arrive when the present nmetieth degree of ■»longitude becomes the equator of the earth." //—that, 5perhaps, will be freely accepted by grandchildren of present 3day philosophers. 32 Chairs! - Vo Waiting! £ = Published at the cost of THOMAS MACIVER ££ 3 P.O. Box 763 £■■ K mm£ £ Washington 4, D. C. 3■■2 ■■nmiimmimmuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiimmiimiimimimiirc nliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniRtitfSDANNY ALVINAND HIS KINGS OFDIXIELANDNOB HILL5228 S. LAKE PARK PaintingsEtchingsWatercolorsPrintsand FramingTtt* O A1168 E. 55th St.ME. 4-8388January 19, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Fag« 3Peace delegate tells LYL:no war hysteria in USSRA glowing picture of what she saw in the Soviet Union andthe Peace Congress she attended in Warsaw was painted Mon¬day before a Labor Youth League audience by Dorothy Bush-nell Cole, chairman of the Chicago Council of American-SovietFriendship.She and 18 other Americans spent ten days in the USSRas the result of the implemen¬tation of a resolution passedby the Peace Congress urgingexchanges of people between thecold war antagonists.Mrs. Cole found no war hys¬teria in the Soviet Union. Empha¬sis in building is on apartmentsfor workers. Particularly impres¬sive, she said, were the large “pal¬aces of culture” attached to allthe factories, where workers andtheir families attend classes, puton plays, do art work, etc. Warsaw Congress for peace, Mrs.Cole told of the colonial delegates'repeated assertions that, “SovietUnion or no Soviet Union, thisis not going to go on. We arethrough being second class worldcitizens.” Were it not for Amer¬ican repression of the liberationmovements of these colonial peo¬ples, said Mrs. Cole, the Congressmight not have been necessary.Forum announcesFile for chessteam at B-JThe official College Chess Tour¬nament will be held in the nearfuture. The loumament, whichwill be open to all college stu¬dents, will determine the cham¬pion as well as the team which isbeing organized to represent UCin the Chicago City Chess League.Entries for the tournament willbe accepted through January 24.Those interested should contacteither Richard Greenbaum, room453, or James Philips, room 136,both in B-J, for further informa¬tion.The team’s first match will beagainst the Illinois Institute ofTechnology on January 28 andwill be played on the UC campus.Sell ballet ticketsThe premiers of two new bal¬let^ will highlight the dance pro¬gram to be presented at 8:30 inMandel Hall on January 27 by thePage-Stone Ballet, under the spon¬sorship of the UC SettlementBenefits Committee and StudentUnion.In addition io the new danceswhich are ba-ed on Music fromVerdi’s "II Trovatore” and onBeethoven’s Sonata No. 8 in CMinor the program will also in¬clude a ballet based on the folkmusic of Stephen Foster.Tickets are on sale at the Rey¬nolds Club desk and the SU office. Chesterfields begin saleBuy 'em by the carton ! I That'sthe motif of the Chesterfield cig¬arette sole to be inaugurated atthe UC Bookstore next week. Foran indefinite period the Bookstorewill have on hand an adequatesupply of distinctly marked ccrtoniof Chsterfields. Persons buying acarton of Chesterfields who re¬ceive as their purchase one ofthese special cartons will be award¬ed a second carton of Chester¬fields FREE ! !The sale begins Tuesday, Jan¬uary 23; winners will be announcedweekly in the MAROON.Expert speakson EsperantoRalph Halvorson, lecturer inEsperanto, is slated to speak hereby the University Baha’i Fellow¬ship. The lecture entitled “OneWorld Needs One Language” willbe given Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.in Ida Noyes, North ReceptionRoom.Halvorson, who had experienceas group leader in Esperanto andserved as president of RooseveltCollege Esperanto Club advocatesthe adoption of an auxiliary inter¬national language to be taughtuniversally in all the schools ofthe world, as a step to greaterworld unity and understanding. Autumn CARE driveaided by groupsJerry Greenwald and Dan Levin, chairmen of CARE, theonly campus organization personally sponsored by ChancellorHutchins, say they are “dubiously thrilled” with the resultsof their autumn quarter drive.To help CARE with its purpose of supplying Europe andAsia with much-needed clothes, food, and books the follow¬ing organizations have given UT schedulesplay by Ibsena box: all women’s dorms withthe exception of Green andBeecher; all men’s dorms with theexception of Salisbury, Dodd,Snell, and Hitchcock; all women’sclubs with the exception of Mor¬tarboard; Delta Upsilon and ZetaBeta Tau; the Dames Club; ISL;and the MAROON. The MA¬ROON, DU, and ZBT have eachgiven two CARE boxes.Betters rec-roomAs a part of its plan to insti¬tute a series of improvements inBurton-Judson, B-J Council hashad a sandwich machine installedin the recreation room.Resident students as well ascommuters will be benefited bythis innovation. The Council hasalso provided two new ping-pongtables and new billiard equipment,as part of a long range programfor general improvement. Tryouts for Ibsen’s “HeddaGabler” will be held next Mondayand Tuesday afternoon, January22 and 23vfrom 4 to 5 p.m. in 306Reynolds club. This UniversityTheatre production, scheduled forMarch 3 and 4, will be the firstIbsen given on campus in fouryear. “Ghosts,” in 1947, was thelast play by the Norwegiandramatists presented here.“Hedda Gabler” contains a goodnumber of excellent women’sroles. The stress in recent UTproductions has been more on themale actors than the female. Thisshow provides the gals with anunusual opportunity.Meanwhile, rehearsals of UT’s“Richard II” have passed thehalfway mark. This Shakespear¬ean drama opens in two weeks, onFebruary 3 and 4, in Mandel Hall. WSSF asksfor donationsof UC bloodThe World Student ServiceFund Committee, realizing thedifficulty which many studentsmay have in raising money forthe coming WSSF campaign, hasmade arrangements with St.Luke’s hospital at 18th and Michi¬gan, whereby students from theUniversity may donate blood, andpayments of fifteen dollars a pintwill be made directly to the WSSFcampaign fund.For the information of thosewho will want to take advantageof this means of contribution, anyblood type is acceptable, mendonors must be over 21, womendonors must be at least 18, donorsmust have had no serious illness(tuberculosis, m a ; a r i a , yellowjaundice, etc.), and donors shouldneither drink nor eat for fourhours before giving blood.Arrangements have been madewhereby those students wishingto donate blood may call ChapelHouse (Ext. 1080) to make areservation for any week-dayafternoon. Transportation, leav¬ing at 1:30 p.m., will be providedbetween the campus and the hos¬pital.Discs to spinThe music department of SU issponsoring daily record concertsin Social Sciences 122 from 12:30to 1:20 p.m. Monday through Fri¬day. Programs are planned forthe benefit of both classical andpopular enthusiasts," to afford alla chance to relax between classes. SU sponsors hikeThe Student Union outing de¬portment is sponsoring o hike tothe Morton Arboretum this Sun¬day. Those interested in the greatoutdoors should assemble at 9:30a.m. at Ida Noyes Hall. Everyoneis asked to bring his ovn lunchand $1.15 for train fare. The partywill return by 6 p.m.All those who intend to goshould sign up at Ida Noyes Hall.For information about the eventcall Irma Arenz (Ext. 1032).Drill NightfFrom a point high on the campus, a radar beam searchesthe sky. Lights burn in classrooms. Khaki replaces tweed andcovert for the night as college men assigned to Reserve unitsstudy the machines and methods of defense.Preparedness is the order of the day.And the Bell System stands prepared. In five busy years,we have added more than 12,500,000 telephones. Many improve¬ments have been made in the quality and speed of service. Ourforce of highly skilled, experienced men and women has beengreatly enlarged —and now numbers more than 600,000.A nation in a hurry goes by telephone. This country hasthe best telephone service in the world.BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM While emphasizing the greatneed of all the nations and theoverwhelming demand of thePositions open inweather bureauWeather bureau positions inAlaska and Washington, D. C. areavailable to candidates who passthe Civil Service examination.Candidates must have experiencein a field of physics, engineering,technology, or their equivalent ineducation.Application forms for the ex¬amination must be received in theUS Civil Service Comission officenot later than February 6. Thesalaries for the work range from$2,650 to $3,100 a year. tourney teamsStudent Forum will engage !nthe first of three tournament de¬bates tonight and tomorrow whenTerry Lunsford, Herbert Caplan,Michael Field, and Harris Hartl-zer argue in the Great Lakestournament at Bowling Green,Ohio.On February 3, the Forum willbe represented in the Purduetournament by Ernest Blum, Her¬bert Werlin, William Scott, andDavid Green. The two teams willbe coached by Alex Polikoff, alaw student.For the Miami tournamentlater this quarter, Lunsford, Field,Roy Greenaway and a fourth manwho is yet to be named will travelto Florida.LEX THEATRE^ 1162 EAST63rd St.Wed. fir Thurs., Jan. 24 - 25 — (Adults Only)Spoken in French — English Titles$Ufi is a tickling affair. Asweet air of innocent naught*iness hangs over all." &•Boslfiy Crowfh£r, N Y. Tirr>o$ ^SSEr*/age 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON January 19, 1951)A challenge to criticsAmong the inevitable critics of any organization whichseeks to serve a number of diversified tastes, there are thosein our own circle who aver that the general tone of theMAROON is one of juvenility, immaturity. These critics decry“gag” issues of the “Hutchins Out” variety, and in generalindicate that the handling of straight news is a little too flip—too much “like a high school paper.”Now many of these critics are simply automatons, para¬phrasing as their own the opinions of others which best suittheir ends. We are not concerned with these poor imitators,except to wonder in passing if they really feel they are gettingfull value from the money they spend on their education here.However, some who criticize the writing quality of theMAROON know whereof they speak. Whether from actualexperience in the field or from astute observation, they knowgood newswriting from bad. We can only wonder why theychoose to expend effort criticizing which could better beput to use working with the object of their criticism.Membership on the MAROON staff is entirely voluntary.Students of any opinion, religion, color or latent capibilitiesare welcome. Further, the MAROON can always use newmembers. Under these circumstances, may we suggest tocritics sincerely concerned with our writing quality that they“put up,” or “shut up.”Letters . . .Many of the Labor Youth League’sposters publicizing Mrs. Dorothy Cole’sreport oa the 2nd World Peace Congresswere torn down Yet more than 80 stu¬dents heard a moving description ofhow most of humanity, Including thepeople of Soviet Union are activelystriving for peace.Based on the belief that UC'ers andmo6t Americans desire and will work forpeace. LYL will continue to presentsuch meetings. We salute those whoundaunted by the Increasing slanderand intimidation of the warmakers,fight for peace in every way, for truly‘‘Blessed are the Peacemakers.”Executive Committee,Labor Youth League.Praise for supplementI for one would like to praise theMAROON for last week’s literary supple¬ment. The very talented UC writerswhose works were printed, and others,deserve to enter the MAROON's pagesmore often. In my opinion the twoshort stories especially were marked bythe fine use of expressive languagewithin a judicious application of thechosen literary form.I feel, though, that It Is an incrim¬inating tragedy that both stories werevehicles of frustration and despair. I’msure that most of us noted that bothsad histories ended in suicide. It is atragedy of real life that such themesof doom should be dominant in thethinking of many of us, and that youngwriters of talent should attempt to builda creative, healthy and enduring litera¬ture around such material. It is againmy opinion that although we should notbe surprised that our present lives In¬troduce such material Into our think¬ing arid literature. There Is other, rich¬er, material, which we as young peoplehave always made our tradition, andWhich is available to us in the formsPosters down of the themes of optimism which radi¬ate from and reflect a conscious strugglefor a very much possible peaceful fu¬ture.Let us search for and carry out formsof working for peace and a real future,and let us by doing so develop newsources for a literature of life. And letus avoid unwittingly disarming our¬selves by accepting uncritically the lit¬erature of doomed, frustrated surrenderto loneliness, suicide, etc., intentionallyaimed at us by large journals or mis¬takenly formulated by us In our ownpaper.The opportunities are developing forus, togther with the youths of allcountries to assure ourselves the fu¬tures we want, and at the same time toconstruct a literature of inspiration andoptimism.Don FoxPraise from AfricaI have been fortunate enough to re¬ceive a collection of issues of the MA¬ROON published during the AutumnQuarter of this year. Let me tell youthat as an old MAROON reader you areturning out the best paper in years.I felt the real hot breath of the UCstudent life wafted into my compoundhere In West Africa. In this shudderyperiod of history, it is certainly goodto see a paper which Is not afraid ofcarrying a real, hard-hitting controversyabout live political problems in Itscolumns.All of this makes me homesick as canbe, but it’s a good feeling So congrat¬ulations and keep up the good work!Robert Armstrongc/o D.O., Ofurkpo, Idomo div.Benue Prov., Nigeria.Anti 'atomic sense'In your December 1 issue "AtomicSense” describes the hardships of beingan American in 1950. There is much hefinds objectionsble but his specificarguments seldom rest on solid fact.Our "Jim-Crow” army allows whiteand black “to die like heroes.” In Ko¬rea Its units are generally made up of regulars who were under no compulsionto join In the first place. What madethem Join what makes them fight?I agree that a man old enough to fightIs old enough to vote as a matter of civicjustice (Actually it is easier to fire agun than to vote Intelligently, regaid-less of age.) But let no one assume thatgiving the vote to the 18 year old willhave revolutionary results any morethan previous extensions of the suffrageright. It may interest "Atomic Sense”to know that the State of Georgia hasset 18 as the minimum voting age. Ihave heard no fanfares for peace fromthat corner.Our allies include one dreary speci¬men: Chiang-Kai-Shek. This “ally’s”help has recently been energetically re¬fused three different times. Franco hasnot seen an American ambassador inMadrid for several years. A sorry wayto treat an ally! The "tyranny In Tur¬key” was just overwhelmingly defeatedat the polls. I won’t even call thattyranny the day a majority of govern¬ment candidates is first opposed andthen defeated In Russia, Bulgaria, Hun¬gary or Poland. The colonial powers ofEngland and France are not to yourcorrespondent’s liking. Does he preferthat other great colonial power, Russiawhose Far and Near Eastern acquisitions(Including the Caucasus) are of morerecent date than he probably realizes.Slngman Rhea’s "dictatorship” Justsuffered a 100:21 defeat In the Koreanparliament. "No other dictatorship canmake that statement ”Hysterics from the right are not curedby hystrlcs from the left. Tyranny istyranny whether it is of the inquisition,the Gestapo or the Cheka: kindred insti¬tutions, often with identical personnel.H. A. SchmittAre we cold?I have been privileged to read yourpaper for the last quarter, I was im¬pressed by the amazing collection ofcontradictions within it—contradictionsthat added up to one of the best campusnewspapers in the country. It is withmy hat off to a fine example of efficientJournalism that I pose the followingproblem.For as far back as my Investigationshave carried me the MAROON has neveroffered Its columns to the emotionalproblems of the student—the anxieties—conflicts—In any but the cold andmechanical channels of a newstaff. Iknow the newstaff, but I know betterthe questions of a student facing aworld beyond the gry towers of a greatuniversityYou, as a student, sit upon a flywheelwhirling to the right, stopping, whirlingbackwards. You are thrown from wheelto wheel In a world of spilt seconds,and split atoms.You face a draft—and hope of defer¬ments. Many have told me of a futurethey cannot see—or a future they donot want to see. You will ask, "Whatin Hell’er we fighting for?”You are the dreamers, the planners,the builders, caught In a position youcannot undrstand — cannot control —cannot believe. It Is not a question ofdemocracy against communism. It Is toyou a struggle of men against self de¬struction. It is not a question of "Isms”but of genocide.But the MAROON is cold—mechanical.Are those the characteristics of the lo6tgeneration? Can we not hear thethoughts of young people about to undowhat we have undone? Must you muteyourself whenever you show through theshell of academic achievement?Richard SheridanMTHE STUDIO FOR HENRY MILLERHAS A NEW ADDRESS1541 East 57th Street Isued once weekly by the publisher, The Chicago Maroon, at the publicationoffice 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: EditorialOffice, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1012; Business and Advertising Offices. Midway3,0800, Ext. 1011. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions by mail, $4 per jear.MemberAssociated Cb0e6iate PressCHARLES GARVINEdltor-tnChief LEROY WOLINSBusiness ManagerMANAGING EDITORS: Ed Wolpert, La Verne ArmstrongPAGE EDITORS: Gary Steiner, Sheila Briskin, Mervyn Adams. Walt Gerash, JoanLevey, Blossom Weskamp, Arnold Task, Bob Marsh, Vera SamineyCOPY EDITOR: A1 KlmmelTRAINING DIRECTOR: John HurstASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGER: David CanterKODET MODELIt's just load, aim, and shoot.Its -big reflex finder, withHood, makes picture compos¬ing easy. Only $13.95.S“jT0P ,KodakKODAR MODELIn addition to all the features ofthe Kodet Model, this camera hasdouble-exposure prevention andan f/8 focusing lens. (Both modelstake Kodak 620 Film. Negatives,2% x iy4 inches.) $21.95, here.Frictt in<lv«U Federal TaxUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUEd tfdndsThose special hands... the guiding, teach¬ing hands of the occupational therapistOi the physical therapist... the strength¬giving hands of the hospital dietitian ...are the ones Air Force men in hospitalslook to with admiration and respect.Those mending hands are hands to flywith ... the skilled fingers that bring theflying and supporting men of the AirForce back to duty strong and healthy.Graduates and prospective graduatesin occupational or physical therapy, or dietetics, can now have interesting,challenging careers as commissionedofficers with good pay and allowances inthe Women’s Medical Specialist Corpsof the U. S. Air Force Medical Service.Opportunities for further professionaleducation are also available.Regular and reserve commissions are of¬fered to qualified specialists in these fields.Write for details to The Surgeon General,U. S. Air Force, Washington 25, D. C.WOMEN'SMedicalSpecialistCorps U. S. Air Force Medical jerviceDietetic Internships, Occupational Therapy Affil¬iates, and Physical Therapy- Tnumng Coun»are offered to selected individuals. For informa¬tion, write to The Surgeon General, L. S. AirForce. Washington 25, D. C.January 19, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5AEC to give fellowshipsto biology, physics MA'sThe Atomic Energy Commission is offering approximately250 pre-doctoral fellowships for the following year beginningon September 1,1951. These fellowships are available to hold¬ers of bachelor’s degrees in the biological sciences, and toadvanced students in the physical sciences.The fellowships carry a basic award of $1,600 with addi-_ . _ tions of $500 for married hold-f hrIDfil NCWS ers and an additional $250 for MAROONews IUC registration drops;Hans J. Morgenthau, UC pro¬fessor of political science, willspeak on “The real issue betweenRussia and US” at a luncheonmeeting of UC’s Citizen Board.Models, a still life, and lights towork with will be provided by theCamera Club in the studio nightmeeting next Wednesday at 8p.m. in Reynolds North Lounge.Avery Craven, professor of his¬tory, will be one of five speakersat the History Conference to be Draft cuts college 22.5%There are 6,151 UCers on campus as of January 15, 1951the registrar’s office announced this week. This is a net de¬crease of 908 from this time a year ago.The College showed the greatest net and percentage de¬crease from last year. The total college enrollment is almost1,700, but last yar’s total was 2,200. This represents a drop0f 22.5 per cent. The profes-held at the University of KansasCity, January 31 to February 2.each child. The fellowship isunder the direction of the OakRidge Institute of Nuclear Studieswhich is acting on behalf of theAEC.A group of 75 post-doctoral fel¬lows will be appointed in thephysical, medical and biologicalsciences, including agriculture.This group will be awarded astipend of $3,000. The fellowshipsare subject to renewal.Applications and other informa¬tion are available at the appro¬priate university department. Allapplicants will be subject tosecurity clearance before accept¬ance.The Rev. Reinhold Niebuhr, dis¬tinguished theologian and profes¬sor of applied .Christianity ofUnion Theological Seminary, NewYork City, will be guest preacherat Rockefeller Memorial ChapelSunday at 11 a.m.More than 300 Protestant minis¬ters from the Midwest are ex¬pected to attend the TwentiethAnnual Ministers’ Week at theChicago Theological' Seminary,January 22-26, according to anannouncement by A. C. McGiffert,Jr., President of the seminary.The Theme is “The Church andIts People.”On the lighter side, Gamma group will meet at Chapel HouseDelta, the Lutheran Society at at 7:00 p.m. The party is open toChapel House, is sponsoring a all members of the campus com-toboggan party this evening. The munity. SG OK’s UC film society-group elects; plans programDespite a number of obstacles placed in its way, the new canUniversity of Chicago Film Society was formally recognizedby Student Government last week. Although the group andbeen organized in middle of the Autumn quarter, various“mishaps” had delayed the organization’s official recognitionuntil the second week of this quarter.Robert Martin has beenpnacfaQ cum kundry [—White button-down oxford, bcftroll to the collar.Popular an a holidaywith the fellows andthe gals.The Manhattan Shirt Company, makers of Manhattan shirts, neck-wear, underwear, pajamas, sportshirts, heachwear and handkerchiefs. named temporary presidentand Mack Kozloff is the treas¬urer.The group will show a series offour Museum of Modern Ai't Film,Library films later this quarterfree to all its associate members.Associate membership fee is fiftycents. In keeping with its policy ofbringing otherwise unavailablefilms to campus, the society willshow Cecil B. De Mille’s classicspectacle film “King of Kings”next Wednesday evening at 6:30,8:00 and 9:45 p.m. in Social Sci¬ence 122.UCHARLIE CHAPLINCITY LIGHTS“I never laughed so loud and long"—Walter WinchellHAMILTON THEATRE 2150 East H71 st Street EEEE Starts Today — for one week! zjE—— Special discount rates to students — present I.D. cards at box office zz1951 Auto License ServicejVo Forms to Fill Out—iVo WaitingFast9 Inexpensive ServiceVARSITY TICKET SERVICEWOODWORTH'S BOOK STORE1311 E. 57th St. MU 4-1677^OW NfVvty. sional schools showed thesmallest drop from 1,169 to1.100. This was a drop of only 6per cent.The trend of college enrollmenthas been going downward, gen¬erally, in the United States andat the University for some timenowr. As the policy of SelectiveService is uncertain, the trendbe expected to continue itsdownward course. Unless thedraft situation is clarified soon,the University expects a greatdrop in male enrollment nextSeptember.At this time the men on campusoutnumber the women, 4,727 to1,424. This represents more thanthree to one in favor of the men,but the women can expect theratio to change radically withina short time. Open season on menis about to end!Educators . . .(from page 1 )eliminate apparent variances Indraft selection.Suggest examinationsThe deans also stated that IfUMT should become necessaryfor all college age youth, “indi¬viduals be selected for entranceupon, or continuance of, advancededucation by means of competi¬tive examinations.”Ernest C. Colwell, UC Presi¬dent, said January 11 that theonly reasonable answer by edu¬cators to the draft of 18-year-oldsis to get students into collegeafter two years of high school.UC plan desirobleColwell stated that “patchworkand improvization are no answer”to the problems raised by thedraft of 18-year-olds. The max¬imum benefits are not derivedfrom education by splitting it intwo with a 27-month service pe¬riod. He pointed to the College ofUC as an example that college canbe completed by 18.Colwell continued. “It is un¬realistic for education to think itcan continue an organization andattitude of an era we may neverknow again, when everything elsewe are doing in this country isundergoing radical change.”s if mEDAll 0 aE El a a a l ♦ *8 CourtsDo LuxoDinnors from5487 LAKE PARK AYE.Phone Plaia 2-9088Open from 12 to 2 a. m.t Sun. 12:30 to 2 m. m.Fo* you# COHVEMlEUCtKing n»w wi f*« •» k.C.T‘.f*nd prlvafiFor the Benefit of University of Chicago SettlementStudent Union Presents2age=Stone=Carnfofnand the entire corps de balletin a gala pre-European engagementJanuary 27 at 8:30 inLeon Mandel HallGeneral Admission $1.50Tickets Available at Reynolds Club Desk BOYNEMOUNTAINSKI fine ruggedslopesRide the Mid¬west's onlychair liftLocated in Michigan'sLower Peninsula onRoute 131 just outsideBoyne Falls, onlyseven hours from Chicago.A genuine ski atmo¬sphere you will enjoy.SPECIAL RATES TOUNIVERSITY GROUPSOF TEN OR MOREWRITEBOYNEMOUNTAINLODGEBOYNE FALLS,MICHIGANJanuary 19, 1951Page 6 THE CHICAGO MAROONRenaissance society presentsexhibit of architecture by dean Campus co-ops offer economyvariety, convenience and funUntil January 31, the Renaissance society is presenting photographs and plans of archi¬tecture by Pietro Belluschi, Dean of the M.I.T. School of Architecture and Planning.The buildings on exhibit are brothers of the ocean, trees and hills. Here Nature speaksthe same language as Art; the parts of the houses form organic unities akin to the arrange¬ments of cells in living bodies.The interiors show cleanness, smoothness, and efficiency, with emphasis on light and air.This does not come from slick by Dotty Lieber, Personnel Chairman, Whitman Co-opWhere and how do UC students live? In dorms, fraternities,rooming houses, apartments, pre-fabs.There’s one group of about 50 students who have discoveredanother kind of place in which to live. They are members ofthe co-operative units existing near the campus, which seekto provide low-cost food and lodging facilities for students andyoung professional people.uniformity as in conventional met,al- Hf “se?, liBhts Pjotos don’t give adequate ideasnffiop* nr fartnripc- it reunite ously> melodically; he sprinkles a of the buildings; were it not foroinces or iaclories, u resiuis pla|n wan with bright bits the floor plans (of which thereof glass brick. are too few) we might have lostThis is forthright, honest art; the Menafee parlor ceiling andwalls of wood are walls of wood, the Wilson ocean view. Wenot paper-smothered fantasies of would like to see more of- thethe natural world. Columns are Portland museum, but a singlenot over-adorned masses trying to photo of Waddle’s would befrom eliminating superfluous de¬tails and applied ornaments, andsubstituting novel rhythmic pat¬terns of brick, tile, greenery, andwood-panel shapes.Belluschi versatileWhat makes Belluschi distinc- Two of these houses, Whit¬man, at 5721 Kenwood, andWoodlawn, at 5711 Woodlawn,are combined in an organizationknown as United CooperativeProjects, Inc., which is at present making expansion plans. Anotherunit, Southard House, at 5410 Dor-Chester, functions alone.Living co-ops are different fromrooming houses or dorms. Theresee Co-op, page 8tive? He is versatile, designing castrated lengths of tree; theystores, offices, and churches as are tree, revelling in their naked-look like humans, nor are they enough.Despite these slight display de¬well as homes. These last remindone of early Lombard art. both inthe tower and the designs in ness.Photos inodequateWe are disappointed that theRadio—TVTaft defends policy standin second of radio seriesSenator Robert A. Taft of Ohio, not to be outdone by thesenators from Illinois, will be teamed up with Senator Bentonfrom Connecticut to discuss, A Foreign Policy—What’s theAnswer? on the American Forum of the Air this Sunday overWMAQ at 12:30 p.m. Last week, Illinois Senators Dirksenand Douglas tackled the problem and raised quite a numberof questions for Taft to answer. So T a f t becomes theprotagonist in Sunday’s epi¬sode. Hume comparedSextus Empiricus, as the fatherof skepticism, will be comparedAn Invitation to Learning is one with David Hume, whise “Inquiryof the finest college-level pro- Coneeming Human Understand-grams on the air. The title is not in£ ’ vv'ib be discussed on Januarymisleading because the series is 28.concerned with critical discus- Sigmund Romberg’s operetta,sions of books which might be “The Desert Song,” gets the spot-seen on the shelves of Messrs.Adler and Hutchins. An examina¬tion into the skeptical approachto nature will be made on twosuccessive Sundays, beginningwith a discussion of Sextus Em¬piricus’, “Outline of Pyrrhonism”this Sunday on WBBM at 10:35a.m. see Radio-TV, page 8TOOMB’S BOOK SHOPUSED BOOKS BOUGHTAND SOLDSMART CARDSANTIQUESRENTAL LIBRARY1367 E. 57th St.NY 3-6536 Local andLong Distance MovingStorage Facilities for Books,Record Cabinets, Trunks, orCarloads of FurniturePeterson FireproofWarehouse, Inc.1011 East Fifty-fifth StreetBUtterfield 8-6711DAVID L. SUTTON, PresidentATTENTION “MED” STUDENTSMAKE US YOUR HEADQUARTERS EOF.Welch-Allyn Diagnotic SetsTycos Blood Pressure OutfitsBaumanometer Blood Pressure OutfitsPhysicians' Leather BagsStethoscopes — Bowles - FordDissecting InstrumentsAny Needed Equipment forStudents and InternesCentury Surgical Supply Co.6351 Cottage Grove Avenue Phone HYde Park 3-1511Wftjf IVot Study in Mexico?Distinguished Faculty . . . Stimulating AtmosphereMild Climate the Year-round -MEXICO CITY COLLEGEWinter Quarter: Jan. 3 to March 168.A. and M.A. Degrees . . . Approved for VeteransSpring Quarter: March 27 to June 8Summer Sessions: June 11 to July 30July 24 to Aug. 31For Catalogue write . . . Dean of AdmissionsChiapas 136 ... Mexico, D. F. fects, we find the best of archi¬tectural techniques in this exhibit.—Noreen Novick 3/ie PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREET.he class clown went out on a limb and tried to provecigarette mildness by the quick-trick method! He tried the fast inhale, fastexhale test—a whiff, a sniff—and they still left him up in the air!But then he got his feet on the ground. He learned that there isa reliable way to discover how mild a cigarette can be!And that test is .. •The sensible test... the 30-Day Camel Mildness Testwhich simply asks you to try Camels as a steady smoke—on apack after pack, day after day basis. No snapjudgments needed. After you’ve enjoyed Camels—and only Camels—for 30 days in your “T-Zone” (T for Throat,T for Taste), we believe you’ll know why . . .More People Smoke Camelsthan any other cigarette!-January 19# 1951 Page 7THE CHICAGO MAROONSwim team Varsity thindads toptops Detroit Monmouth in openerCoach Bill Mayla (left) congratulates co-captains Ralph Aptonter) and Ash Krug (right). (cen-Sports CalendarFriday, Jan. 19JV Basketball—3:30Harvard p.m. Bartlett— JV Track—3:30 p.m. Fieldhouse—Phil¬lips and Mt. CarmelSaturday, Jan. 20Varsity Gymnastics—2:00 p.m. Bartlett—NorthwesternVarsity Track—2:00 p.m. Fieldhouse—De Paul Coach Bill Moyle’s VarsitySwim Team extended their stringof consecutive victories to 25 lastFriday when they soundlydrubbed Detroit University, 55-19in the Bartlett Pool. Detroit fin¬ished second in the Missouri Val¬ley Conference last year.Tonight, the swimmers travelto St Louis to face the strong St.Louis University team, 1950 Mis¬souri Valley Conference cham¬pions.Official 1951 Varsity SwimmingRosterFree Style—David Clarke, DavidHelmle, Warren Morril, GeorgeRiver, Charles Schneider, PhilipScholly, Richard McConnell,Nils Swanson.Breast Stroke—Ashton Krug, Har¬ry Olin, Mel Sutker, HowardKaminsky, Ralph Apton, JacobDickinson.Back Stroke — William Smith,Gordon Ralph, John Sutcliffe.Divers—Gaurang Yodh, Allen Mc-Allester, James Jackson.Co-captains—Ralph Apton andAshton Krug. The Varsity Track Team opened its 1951 indoor seasonSaturday, afternoon, January 13, with a 59-45 victory overMonmouth. This meet was the first under the direction ofthe new track coach, Ted Haydon.The Maroons were paced by hurdler Vern Gras, who wonthe high and low hurdle events, and by Co-captain Dick Cot¬ton, who won the quarter mileevent and anchored the MileRelay.Chicago will face DePaul to¬morrow afternoon at 2:00 in thefieldhouse, 56th and University.Admission is free.Results:Mile run—1st, Carlsten (M); 2nd,Brodkey, (C); 3rd, Baptist (C). Time—4:34.Two mile run—1st, Smith (C); 2nd,Richards <M); 3rd, Riley (C).440 yard run—1st. Cotton (C); 2ndRiggs (C); 3rd, Smallwood (K). Time—51.5.60 yard dash—1st, Brooks (M); 2nd, , ... . ,Santucci, (M); 3rd, Rothenberg (C). week with victories over Whea-Tlme—06.7.70 yard low hurdles—1st, Gras (C); T 1C2nd, Brooks <M); 3rd, FI asset (M) Time 55-27 on Jan. lb.(ties record set by Robert kinche- jn t^e Wheaton game, at Whea*70 yard high hurdles—i6t. Gras (C); ton, Pete Carlson paced the team2nd. Schweitzer (M); 3rd, Goff (C). in scoring with 17. In the ToddBroad jump—1st, Brooks (M); 2nd, . , . , T11 _Goff (C); 3rd, Beghe (C). Distance 20 game at Woodstock, Ill., Carlsonft- *4 ln- . again led the scoring parade, thi*High jump—1st, Goff (C); 2nd. Riggs Shot put—1st, Norcross (C); 2nd, Gray(C) and Santucci (M) tied. Distance—40 ft., 10 in.Mile relay—Chicago (Cotton); Roth¬enberg, Wyatt, Dahlke). Time—3:34.9.J'V five wins2 road gamesJoe Stampf’s J-V cagers rantheir victory streak to seven lastweek with victories over Whea¬ton, 48-33 on Jan. 12 and Todd,(M), and Beghe (C) tied. Height—5 ft.9 in.Pole vault—1st, Zimmerman (C); 2nd,Lauter <M); 3rd, Case (C). 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Here’s America’s largest and finest low-priced car—the newest of all newautomobiles—as trustworthy as it is thrifty to buy, operate and maintain.New with that longer, lower, wider big-car look! New in its strikinglysmarter Fisher Body styling and beautifully tailored Modern-Mode inte¬riors! New in safety, new in steering ease, new in feature after feature!Moreover, it’s thoroughly proved in all things, from the finer no-shiftdriving of its Powerglide Automatic Transmission,* or the finer standarddriving of its Synchro-Mesh Transmission to the fleet, frugal performanceof its Valve-in-Head engine.Come in—see and drive America’s largest and finest low-priced car—Chevrolet for ’51—the only car that brings you so many big-car advan¬tages at such low cost!PLUS TIME-PROV1P POWER £7lic£e-AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION—proved by more than a billion miles of performance in the hands ofhundreds of thousands of owners. *Combination of Powerglide AutomaticTransmission and 105-h.p. Engine optional on De Luxe models at extra cost.^CHEVROLETMORE PEOPLE BUY CHEVROLETS THAN ANY OTHER CARISee it at your local Chevrolet Dealer’s time with 21.These victories give the team a3-0 record in PSL contests thiayear. Today they face HarvardSchool at 3:30 p.m. in BartlettGym.Wheaton 9 8 9 7—33University 21 3 6 18—48Todd 3 4 11 9—27University 14 12 14 15—59Acrotheatreplans showAlthough Acrotheatre is hard atwork rehearsing for its big showin April, many of its members stilltake time to perform for com¬munity organizations.Last Saturday night, during thefew minutes between halves atthe basketball game, the audiencewas thrilled and pleased by theexpert juggling of Earl Robertsonand the spectacular acrobatics ofJean Katzmark. They were well-liked by the audience as was evi¬dent by the enthusiastic applausegiven them.Next Wednesday evening, Janu¬ary 24, many Acrotheatre mem¬bers will give a show at HinsdaleHigh School for the Parent-Teachers Association. The showwill inclde hand-balancing, uni¬cycle, parallel bars, solo acro¬batics, free exercise, juggling,adagio, and the trampoline. Stu¬dents in the show include ThanRisley and Twila Richmond, co¬presidents of Acrotheatre, RuthGrulkowski, Aerotheatre’s secre¬tary, Jack Crosby, Bill Texter,Nancy Brues, and Dave Jenkins.Su£FOtAMO** AT DIVISIONThe amusing antics ofan eccentric youngdreamer, a pretty girland a wealthy tipplerweave a happy newcomedy pattern.jSPage 8 rHE CHICAGO MAROON January 19, 1951Classified AdsDeadline: 5 p.m.. TuesdayFOR SALEREMINGTON 5 postable, reconditioned,excellent shape, $30. Call PL 2-0596.ELECTRIC HEATER, large, $1. CallFrank Springer, HY 3-2780.WOMAN’S WHITE Johnson hockey iceskates. Size 9, $6. Call M. Levine DO.3-1270. Apt. 602 After 6 p.ro.3-SPEED RADIO-phonograph Traveler.Good condition, two months old. table'model. $30. See or call Wm. Sinclair,B-J 348. MI 3-6000.2-SPEED PHONOGRAPH motor andturntable with cartridge. Plays througnradio. Good condition, very reasonableprice. Call Sally Morris, MU 4-6662.1939 CHRYSLER ROYAL sedan. Goodcondition, new paint job. Chapman,5752 Dorchester, MI 3-7752.TYPEWRITER, special Underwood port¬able, excellent condition. Will acceptbest offer. Call Mrs. Wilkins, CA 5-1700,9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. or MU 4-4195, 6:30 p.m.-11 p.m.'39 CHRYSLER ROYAL, radio, heater.Fine condition. See T Larsen, 5546Drexel MI 3-4521. P.M.DIRILYTE, 52 pieces and chest servicefor C, used; will sacrifice. Call FA 4-4230,Saturday or Sunday.'41 OLDS CLUB coupe 6, hydramatic.Good car at reasonable price. Call MI.3-0750.WILL SELL J. C. Higgins hockey skates,size 9, used twice; or exchange for size8 figure skates. Majde, CO 1-8789.SUNBEAM MIXMASTER. two bowls andiulcer, older model, excellent condition;18-inch hall runner Reasonable priceson both items. Call BU 8-0867, evenings.-SAY IT IN FRENCH, "Sa> It In Ger¬man,” each language consists of phono¬graph record and complete conversa¬tional guide. Get both for $1.50. Quan¬tity limited. Berkow, Rm. 618. B-J.WUCB...from page 2 1935 PACKARD 4-DOOR sedan, 6 verygood radio and heater, new Sealed Beamheadlights. Very clean. Call FA 4-5770.PHONOGRAPHS and radios at low pricesaf Dans 36 Radio Shack. Phone Manly36. Extension 1053 after 6 p.m.FOR PENTROOM WITH private bath. For malestudent. KE 8-3846.TYPEWRITERS for rent *2.50 month.RE 7-0339.RENT AN electric refrigerator. $4.50-*5.50 per month. CO 4-9231.HELP WANTEDREWRITE MEN; headline writers andcopy writers wanted. Page 7. BlossomWeskamp.PUBLICITY CHAIRMAN for Dance Dept.SU, some experience necessary. Con¬tact Bob Elhart, BU. 8-9022.HAVE OPENING for 2 men who wishto add $60 to $150 per month to theirIncome, collecting monthly newspaperaccounts. Woodlawn Newspaper Deliv¬ery. 6224 Greenwood, office In rear.BUSINESS SERVICESFLY TO New York,' $24.95; Miami, $39;California, $75; plus tax. MI 3-2136.EXPERT THEME typing; fast accuratework; reasonable rate; prompt service.MI 3-2136.MURPHY MOTOR Service Express andlight hauling. Over 30 years of know¬how. DO 3-0822.ONLY 36 DAYS till WASH. PROM,Feb. 24. Who’s you’re date?ROOM AND board for a woman, withprivate family in exchange for baby¬sitting three evenings on week-days andon alternating Saturday and Sundays,and dinner dishes on these days. Addi¬tional pay for some light housework ifso desired. 7807 Oglesby, SOuth Shore8-1010.EXPRESS: Light and heavy moving;willing and courteous service; reason¬able rates. Bordone, HY 3-1915.RADIO OUT OF WHACK?Bring It to Dan’s 36 Radio Shack PhoneMI 3-0800 Ext. 1053, room 36, ManleyHouse after 6 p.m. (Zamtrty &ve*tl& caFriday, Jan. 19PARTY-fP A Night. Singing( dancing,skits, chess and cards. Ida Noyes, 7-10 p.m. All welcome.DISCUSSION — Hillel Foundation pre¬sents Oneg Shabbat* with Arthur Co¬hen on The Weekly Portion of theTorah. Exodus 13. 17-17, 16. 5715 Wood-lawn. 8:30 p.m.SABBATH SERVICE—Hillel Foundation.7:45 p.m.MOVIE — International House presents“Thunder Rock.” An English film withMichael Redgrave, 8 p.m. Adm. 55cents.MEETING—Politics Club.' Discussion ledby Dick Fredrickson on "Methods ofWar Resistance." 6122 Greenwood. 8p.m.TOBOGGAN PARTY — Sponsored byGamma Delta. Meet at Chapel House,7 p.m.UNIVERSITY CONCERT — Ernst Levy,professional lecturer In HumanitiesDivision, piano, soloist. Leon MandelHall. Adm. $1.50.MOVIE—French Club present "Farre-bique,” Ida Noyes. Adm. 20 cents.LECTURE—Intervarsity Christian Fel¬lowship present Dr. A1 Brightblll,Bethany Seminary, on ‘‘Personal Pray¬er.” Sun Parlor, Ida Noyes Hall. 12:15-1:20 p.m. -Saturday, Jan. 20MOVIE—SCA presents “The Lady Van¬ishes,” starring Paul Lukas and Mar¬garet Lockwood. Soc. Scl. 122. 6:45, 8and 9:45 p.m. Adm. 44 cents.Sunday, Jan. 21SERVICE-^-Rockefeller Chapel. The Rev¬erend Reinhold Niebuhr Professor ofApplied Christianity, Union Theolog¬ical Seminary, New York City. 11 a.m.SPEECH — Wrangler's Club sponsorsJames H. Nichols, Associate Profes¬sor of European Church History, onLOST AND FOUNDLOST: Navy blue felt cap. Please re¬turn on account of deep sentimentalattachment. Call Anita Schoveder, NO7-0855, evenings.LOST: Remington portable typewriter,model I-C. Black, old style, namepainted on machine. W. L. Porter. Num¬bers keys have chemical subscripts. CallBuildings and Grounds. Campus Police. “History of Christianity — 1650-1950.”Uhiversity Church. 6 p.m.SPEECH—Socialist Youth League pre¬sent Murray Wax on “The Myth of theTotalitarian State.” Refreshments. IdaNoyes. 4 p.m.HIKE—Outing Dept, of Student Union.To Morton Arboretum. Bring lunch.$1.15 lui ti&USportatiOu. Meet av IdaNoyes, 9:30 a.m. For further inform¬ation see bulletin board—SU office,3rd floor, Ida Noyes.NOYES BOX—Student Union presents.ecords, hostesses, and entertainmentby Mortar Board Club and Phi KappaPsl. Ida Noyes. Men 35 cents, others10 cents.LECTURES—Student Youth League on“Myth of the Proletarian State” and‘‘Analysis of the FBI.” Ida Noyes Li¬brary. 4 p.m.SUNDAY TEA—Home room of Interna-tinal House. Professor Quincy Wrightwill be the speaker. Members and resi¬dents free. Guests 25 cents.Monday, Jan. 22SEMINAR—Hillel Foundation, PhilllDpFehl on “Synagogue Architecture.”First in a series of four. 5715 Wood-lawn. 8 p.m.LECTURE—Charles R. Walgreen Foun¬dation presents Eric Voegelln, profes¬sor of political science, LouisianaState University, on "Theory of Repre¬sentative Government.” First in aseries. Social Science 122, 4:30 p.m.LECTURE—U. N. Association and Amer¬ican Society for Public Administrationprsent Mr. David H. Popper, Officerin charge of General Assembly AffairsOffice of U. N. Political and SecurityAffairs. Department of State, on "Cur¬rent Issues Before the General Assem¬bly.” Home Room, InternationalHouse. 7:30 p.m..RECORD CONCERTS — Student UnionMusic Department, Soc. Sci. 122. 12:30-1:20 p.m.LECTURE—UC University College pre¬sent Dr. Lester R. Dragstadt, chairmanof th department of surgery, UC. on"Treatment of Peptic Ulcers.” ThirdIn series. 5:30 p.m , 19 South LaSalle,room 809. Series $3.60. Single admis¬sion, $1.Tuesday, Jan. 23LECTURE—UC University College pre¬sent Leon Carnovsky professor of li¬ brary science, UC, on ‘ library Post,war Standards Reconsidered.” SecondIn series. 19 South LaSalle, room bckiSeries $3. Single arm. 75 cents 7 isp.m.DISCUSSION—“Dollars and Sense ” vocatlonal opportunles in educationsponsored by Inter-Dorm Council7 p.m.. Kelly Lounge.LECTURE—Calvert Club sponsors FrThomas B McDonough on "The Chrh'tlan in an Atomic Age: Problems ofWar, Patriotism, and Conscience’’7:30 p.m., 5755 University.DISCUSSION — Intervarsity ChristianFellowship on the book of MarkNorth Reception Room, Ida Novo*Hall. 7:30-8:80 p.m. *Wednesday,. Jan. 24MEETING—Hillel Chorus, under the di¬rection of Max Janowski 5715 Wood-lawn, 4 p.m.LECTURE—Charles R. Walgree\i Foun¬dation presents Eric Voegelln, profes-sor of political science, LouisianaState Univerlty, on “Theory of Repre¬sentative Government.” Second In aseries. Soc. Scl. 122. 4:30 p.m.LECTURE—UC University College pre¬sent Sunder Joshl, assistant profe.,.sor In the division of adult educationIndiana University, on “Women ofHistory.” Fourth in series. 19 SouthLaSalle, room 809. 6:30 p m. series, $3Single admission 75c.MOVIE—Film Society sponsor Cecil BDeMllle’s “King of Kings.” Soc. Sci122. 6:30, 8 and 9:45 p.m. Admission50c.ILLUSTRATED LECTURE—Baha’i Fel¬lowship sponsor Mr. Ralph HalvorsonEsperanto lecturer, on “On WorldNeeds One Language.” Ida Noyes,North Reception Room. 7:30 p m.STUDIO NIGHT—Reynold’s Club NorthLounge. Models. 8 p.m.Thursday, Jan. 25DISCUSSION—Methodist Student Fei-lowshlp on "The Church and the Com¬munity.” Chapel House, 6 p.m. Sup¬per 50c.WOMEN'S GOLF TEAM—WAA with firstmeeting in the golf cages, Ida Noyes,4:15 p.m. Instructions will be given.TOURNAMENT—Student Union GameDepartment sponsors IntercollegiatePreliminary Duplicate Bridge IdaNoyes Library. 7 p.m. Admission 35cnets.7:05 Classical Disc Jockey8:00 Inside the College8:15 Live Jazz9:00 News9:05 Concert at Nine11:00 Sign OffTuesday, Jan. 237:00 News7:05 Dream with a Theme7:30 Religion on Campus—Lutheran7:45 March of Dimes8:00 Drama Workshop—Pot Luck'. 8:45 Folkways9:00 News9:05 Hayden, Handel, Mozart11:00 Sign OffWednesday, Jan. 247:00 News7:05 Listen with Nat7:30 Return to FM (WUC3 StaffMeeting)11:00 Sign OffThursday, Jan. 257:00 News7:05 Ycur Very Own7:30 Religion on Campus—RomanCatholic7:45 Words of Inspiration8:00 B-J Round Table of the Air8:45 SU Presents9:00 News9:05 Classical Concert11:00 Sign OffRadio TV ,.,from page 6light on the Chicago Theater ofthe Air tomorrow night on WGNat 9 p.m. Nancy Carr and ThomasL. Thomas will sing the leadingroles.Nose-ticklers trimmedGoing back to discussions, oneof the most pertinent discussionsof the day is scheduled for theFaye Emerson Show, WENR-TVat 6:15 tonight. The problem ofallowing a controlled outgrowthof i\xzx to adorn the upper labrumwill bring on Prof. Jerry Colonna.whose experimental research inthe field has brought him fame.All those who are hasty witli theGillette would do well to listen.—Arnold TaskCo-ops...from page 6are no hired maintenance crews,so members find themselves pok¬ing drains, cutting trees in theback yard, or scrubbing floors aspart of their regularly assignedhouse jobs. Regular house meet¬ings take place for making policydecisions, quarterly elections ofhouse officers, and thrashing outof current problems,dents at even lower cost.sTERESA DOLANDANCING SCHOOL1208 El 63rd St.Learn to dance nowBeginners Ballroom ClassesMon., Wed., Sat. Eves.* * *Rumba, Samba, Tango, etc.Tues., Thurs., Frl. Eves.Private Lessons—the quick, sure,and inexpensive way to become agood dancerAny day 12 noon to 11 p.m.Phone HY 3-3080 eair*vj:£o°,ra"'pcOCR., THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANYENJOY YOUR CIGARETTE!...If you’re not happy with yourbrand (and a 38-city survey shows thatmillions are not), smoke Luckies! You’llget the happy blending of perfect mild¬ness and rich taste that fine tobacco—and only fine tobacco—can give you.Remember, Lucky Strike means finetobacco. So get complete smoking enjoy¬ment. Be Happy—Go Lucky today!La— - DonaId ^ebra3kaUniv- ofLS/MF.TLuekyStrikeMeans Rue Tobacco