Crowd NegroHistory Wk.with eventsThe campus Negro HistoryWeek Committee, formed bymany organizations at the initia¬tive of NAACP has mapped outa full program for the Week.There will be two main exhibitsrunning all week; a meeting withfeatured speaker on next Friday;and a gala social to top off theWeek on Saturday night Feb. 17,committee, chairman WalterAugustine announced.The exhibit in the UniversityBookstore will include a wideselection from all fields of litera¬ture concerning the Negro whicharc available at the Bookstore.The exhibit in the NorthLounge of the Reynolds club willbe composed of literature andposters from many sources. Thevarious organizations will con¬tribute pictorial material con¬cerning all aspects of currentNegro life as well as outstandingevents and achievements of theNegro people in the United States.Exhibits of unusual types are ex¬pected on Africa. JV Cagers score tenth win;vie with Christian for title bidby Bob MarchThe JV Basketball team last Friday defeated Chicago Latin37-35 on the Bartlett floor to extend their win streak to tenstraight and take over undisputed first place in the PSL.Both teams were nervous in the first half. Chicago fellbehind on sloppy free throwing, but Latin’s butterfingeredball handling prevented them from rolling up too great a lead.Change to double pivotAn amazing transformation close, neither team leading byin the Chicago team took place more than three points at anyin the second half. In the open- tir”e* ,,ing minutes of the^third quarter Center Parker Hall led the Ma-they rallied to go ahead 19-18. roo?s m scoring with six fieldFrom that time on the game was f°als and tbree free throws for15 points. Guard Pete CarlsonU - ■ _ __ | scored 10 and Roger Golde scoredrlola ■ 1OriTldl 3T eight, with Dave Utley scoring 4# . to complete the total of 37.Int.-Hse. tonight’ Face Christian, ^ T ^ Tonight the Jayvees go on theThe dance committee at Inter- road tQ face Christian( the lastnational House has completed serious hurdle in the way of theirdecorations for tonight’s semi- title bid.formal. The theme, “The Thread- Box score:bare Thirties.”Tickets at the door will go onsale at 10 p.m., at $1 per person.Phil Walsh’s orchestra will playspecial arrangements of top tunesof the thirties. Free corsages andrefreshments are included in theadmission price. Amended Dan Fox reportpasses Student Assemblyby Ed Wolpert \ ^By a vote of 21 to 6, Student Government accepted;anamended version of the Dan Fox suspension committee reportlast Tuesday night. The meeting lasted past the regular ad¬journment hour.The amended report concludes, on the basis of testimonyby Dean Strozier, Dan Fox and others, that:“1. Disciplinary measuresWere Called for . . .” “2. Pun- List amended recommendationsishment was too severe . . ” ^ firs} °f the committee’s“3. In view of Fox’s actions be- recommendations was voted downfore the review committee . . . the assembly, the second wastheir actions to uphold Dean expanded In their place on theStrozier were justified . . motion of A perm and Bierman,was substituted:ReP°rt, T+li f 1. Every student at the UC has“ »e that^vioiaTion —52ed, it is possible that a violation ag tQ form 2 AU reguiationsUNIVERSITY (37) LATIN (35)G. F. I*. G. K. P.,T*ley 2 0 2 Otis 6 2 3VanderVeer 0 0 0 Robbins 1 1 3Hall 6 3 1 Shultz 1 0 2Carlson 4 ! 3 Nob - 0 0 3Golde 2 4 1 Bowr 6 2 4Colby 0 0 1 Grant 1 0 4Totals 14 9 8 Totals 15 5 19UNIVERSITY 4 5 16 12— 37LATIN 7 8 11 9— 35 of civil liberties occured in thatthe individual’s right to petitionwas abridged. However, the as¬sembly feels that there is no evi¬dence that the University attempt¬ed to violate civil liberties by de- should be clear and explicit . . .3. That students be made awareof all possible disciplinary actionsfor the various offenses.”Dean to report'4. To the effect that suspend-University of Chicago, February 9, 1951MacDougall speaksMale lead in UT’s to MAROON‘Richard IF is tops nymg the right of Dan Fox to ed students ought t0 be ailoWedcircujate the Stockholm Peace to defend themseives before thePetition. The attempt to make campus. 5. To the effect that thethis an example of the same was Dean of Students should send, inill advised and in poor taste It is written form> a statement of hisapparent that this attempt was interpretation of given regula¬rs*1 on conclusions reached tions to both the students affect-without reference to pertinent ed and the student assembly.I30iS •This amendment climaxed longhours of debate over the question,“Was Dan Fox’s suspension acase of insubordination of a stu¬dent to the administration, or wasit a case of the abridgement ofstudent liberties?”Name RMH'1950 Chicagoan’Robert Hutchins was named“Cicagoan of the Year” by theChicago Sun-Times. A board ofjudges consisting of Mrs. ByronHarvey, society welfare leader;John Balaban, president of Bala-That Francis Weaver is University Theatre’s most extraor¬dinary actor can hardly be disputed. To a impressive list ofprevious successes is now added his performance as RichardII, which would in itself mark Mr. Weaver as a man of excep¬tional dramatic ability.In a role which demands of its performer that he run agamut of emotions, from un-scrupulousness to indecisive- parison with Weaver, in that itness to despair, Mr. Weaver would have been difficult for any-was always convincing; in scenes one to appear the man of strengthsuch as the one at Coventry, the and action next to Weaver’s Rich-arrival at Wales, and the soldo- aid. But in some scenes, notablyquoy at the end, he was magnifi- that with Mowbray, and the finalcent. This writer thinks that his one, Mr. Hassilev showed definiteexcellence lay primarily in the ability.fact that he obviously had a clear in the role of John of Gaunt,conception of the role, and that Hugh Weideman, Jr., was genhe was not fettered by this intel- erally acceptable.lectual understanding. This was Virion Margarisnot a reading and an interpreta¬tion; it was the fullest acting ofa role which alternates turbulencewith pathos.In a sense it was almost un¬fortunate that Weaver was sogood. Beside his inspired perform¬ance, several actors who mightordinarily be considered as ratherable, paled. Paul Sills, as the Earlof Northumberland, and ThomasStrauss, as Henry Percy, wereamong these.Alex Hassilev as Bolingbrokeprobably suffered most in com- Latimer speaks todayIra Latimer, executive directorof the Chicago Civil Liberties Com¬mittee, and Independent candidatefor alderman of the 4th word, willspeak this afternoon on 'CivilRights Issues in Chicago Today.'Scheduled for 3:30 p.m. in So¬cial Sciences 122, the address issponsored by the Liberal and Con¬servative Coalition.SG to distribute newNS A store lists next weekOn Tuesday and Wednesday, February 13 and 14, thenew NS A Purchase Card lists will be distributed. On thelists are 41 stores of many different types at which studentscan receive 7-20 per cent discounts by showing the PurchaseCard distributed earlier in the school year by SG.The lists will be given out in Mandel Corridor between 10:30and 2:30. Arrangements arebeing made for distribution in dents who had not received athe Law School, International Purchase Card earlier can obtainimonmuouu. one Qn Monday and Tuesday. HeHouse, the Fraternities, and SSA. stated that 4,500 Cards were al-Dormitory residents will receive ready in circulation. A new rec-their lists by Faculty Exchange Grd. However, the NSA chairmanon Tuesday. hoped that the 1,500 students whoSander Levin, chairman of the had not a card would soon be ableNSA Committee of Student Gov- to take advantage of the Purchaseernment, announced that all stu- Card plan. Curtis MacDougall, professor atNorthwestern University's Schoolof Journalism, will be guestspeaker when the MAROONholds its scheduled open househere Feb. 16.All UC students, in particularmembers of the February enter¬ing class, are invited to attend,the MAROON announces. Re¬freshments will be served. Theopen house is set for 4:30 p.m.Feb. 16 in the MAROON office,room 201, Reynolds Club.Film expertspeaks Tues.Marie Seton, personal friend ofBasil Wright and Sergli Eisen-stein, will speak before Docu¬mentary Film showings in Soc.122, at 7:15 and 9:15 on Tuesday,February 13, of Song of Ceylonand Time in the Sun. Marie Setonis the editor of the Time in theSun cutting of Que Viva Mexico;she has also recently finished abiography of Eisenstein that isis being brought out by JohnLane in London this Spring.To sell ticketsfor 'Phoenix'Eight hundred tickets go onsale Tuesday for the “Tonight at8:30” performance of A PhoenixToo Frequent and The Shoemak¬er’s Prodigious Wife. These un¬reserved tickets will be sold atthe Reynolds Club desk each daynext week and in Mandel Corridorand Ida Noyes at lunch time.The performances, scheduledfor Fridays, Feb. 16 and 23, aswell as Sundays, Feb. 18 and 25,will be performed in the IdaNoyes Theatre. Admission is 70cents. Hutchins text insideThe full text of the farewellspeech of Robert M. Hutchins, ex¬chancellor of UC, will be found onpage 5.ban and Katz; Dr. Karl Meyer,medical superintendent of CookCounty Hospital; LawrenceKimpton, vice president of theUniversity of Chicago; WalterPaepcke, chairman of the boardof the Container Corporation ofAmerica, and A1 Weisman of theCommunity Fund made thechoice.Nominations for the honorwere received by Irv Kupcinetthrough “Kup’s Column” andturned over to the committee. Set deadlinefor ‘Miss UCActivities for the “Miss UC”and Wash Prom go into high gearthis week as deadline for thenominations was set for Tuesdaynoon, while bids went on saleyesterday. Wash Prom, now inits 45th year, will take place atthe Shoreland Hotel’s CrystalBallroom, Saturday, February24th. Bids, reduced from $4.50 to$4 each, are on sale at MandelCorridor between 11-2 each dayand at the Reynolds Club desk atall times.Names of all contestants (allstudent organizations and livingunits may nominate) must be inMiss Saunders’ office by noonTuesday. Those rushed for timemay phone in the names. All con¬testants must attend Wash Pi’omand will be guests at the B-J OpenHouse, Friday, September 23House, Friday, February 23where they will be presented toand interviewed by the Board ofExperts, now being picked up bythe SU Dance Department andthe MAROON Public RelationsDepartment, co-sponsors of thecontest.Wash Prom will climax a weeksee Wash Prom, page 3Committee for Merriamschedule meeting next FridayFormation of a Campus Committee for Robert Merriamwas announced this week by David Broder, acting chairmanof the new group.Merriam, candidate for re-election as Fifth Ward alderman,will address the initial public meeting of the organization,scheduled for 3:30 p.m., next Friday, February 16, in SocialScience 122.A UC alumnus and son of\A/I irR Distinguished Service Profes-" I VJIVJv7l CVJ sor Emeritus Charles E. Merriam,the 32-year-old urban planning ex-l.i Lw C.r'r* pert was elected to the City Coun-SnUl D/ cd *n 1947, with Democratic and7 independent liberal support.Charging that W U C B was whl be opposed in the Feb-“over-radiating,” the Federal ruary 27 election by Irving Bein-„ ... „ ■ en> Socialist Labor candidate.Monday"1 ortjered ?h°“em" The executive board 01Monday ordered tne student campus committee includes, in ad-operated radio station to suspend dition t0 Brod foperations until adjustments in ROON editor, Ann Davis, secre-its transmitter power output can tary. Gerhard Weinberg, Studente‘t J . , Court judge; Roger Woodworth,Although no definite date has SG president; Stanley Barron SGbeen set for the operating of the Civil Liberties chairman- Merrillstation, Richard Karlin, WUCB’s Freed, chairman of the Illinoistechnical director said that as Region of NSA, and Jack Siegalsoon as the leaflet of regulations president of the campus Youngcame from FCC the equipment Democrats. swould be fixed so WUCB couldreturn to the air.When FCC was contacted verylittle was told except that WUCBhad been “over-radiating” andthat an agreement had beenreached for them to continuebroadcasting when the changeshad been made. Special supplementToday's issue of the MAROONcommemorates Negro HistoryWeek, Feb. II to 18 with specialinterest articles and interviews.The special supplement will befound on page 2.Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 9, 1951iTension in air as seven areexecuted in Virginia’: witnessby Mervyn Adorns“You felt the obvious tension in the air and that at any point anything might happen,”said Marcia Millard, Civil Rights Congress delegate from UC to Richmond, Va., in behalfof the Martinsville Seven, seven Negroes sentenced to death for the rape of a white woman.In the last forty years over forty Negroes have been sentenced to death for rape in Virginia.Not one white man has suffered that penalty.Over 500 people, half Negro, half white, the majority trade unionists, converged on Rich¬mond Tuesday morning, Jan. 30,from eighteen states to make amiss protest against the deathsentence.The 500 delegates elected elevenrepresentatives, Negro and Wtiite,of the various states and occupa¬tions, which called on the Gov¬ernor.They questioned him on thewhereabouts of the raped house¬wife who had made her accusa¬tion and then disappeared. Ac¬cording to Miss Millard, the Gov¬ernor affirmed her “sterling char¬acter” and stated that the victim was under medical surveillance inanother county. The fact that thewoman had been under mentalcare previously seemed to cast nodoubt on the reliability of heraccusations.Meanwhile, Tuesday afternoon,the 500 delegates tried to attendthe hearing in the Federal Court.The hearing was held in a smallcourtroom. Only 100 could enter.Four hundred people, therefore,stood in the hall of the FederalCourt Building for the threehours that the hearing lasted.“Armed policemen with guns and clubs and bullets around theirbelt,” according to Miss Millard,kept this crowd at bay. “Severaltimes,” she said, “the police wereon the verge of violence.” Thehearing refused a writ of habeascorpus.However, “500 Negro and whitepeople walking together in thestreets of a Jim Crow city,” saidMiss Millard, “is at least some¬thing constructive.”Friday, Feb. 2, and Monday,Feb. 5, all sources of appeal beingexhausted, the seven Negro menwere executed in Virginia.Radio blocksNegro artistsThe role of the Negro in radioand television is a difficult oneto describe because it is improv¬ing, but very sporadically. Quitea number of Negroes have gainedprominence for themselves in thisfield in the realm of comedy andmusic, but very few have beentrained as dramatic artists. Inradio, training is gained by ex¬perience. When the experienceis not possible, there can be notraining.Radio executives are gradu¬ally recognizing the acute prob¬lem of the Negro and are tryingto do something about it. NBChas been holding a series of con¬ferences in various cities withthe Negro press concerning em¬ployment of Negroes. The manyprograms dedicated to Negroachievement, such as DestinationFreedom and The Quiet Answer,do not solve the problem, al¬though they do come one stepcloser to solution. While theireffectiveness on the public is onlyof a mild and instantaneousnature, they do give the Negro achance to participate in dramaticradio broadcasting.Perhaps someday radio andtelevision will allow the Negrogreater freedom to participate,resulting in a pleasant blendingof voices and colors.—Arnold TaskSeparate haircuts, med school quotas,and NU molehills from Hither and Yon*>y " Cuddles" EricksonSince this is Negro History Week, Hither and Yon will be devoted to an admittedly sketchyview of the Negro and discrimination on other campuses.A Negro student in East Lansing, Michigan was recently refused a haircut in that collegetown. Pleaded the barber to the Student Council Civil Liberties Committee, “I told himI didn’t know how to cut his hair. I’ve never cut a Negro’s hair, and didn’t know how.”The Pitt News of the University of Pittsburgh recently asked the Medical School therewhy racial and religious questionswere included on the applicationform. The very clear and logicalanswer given was: “they havebeen in the form since 1909.”The Daily Texan of the Uni¬versity of Texas has come outwith an editorial plea to end dis¬crimination on their campus. Theeditorial asked that the legisla¬ture make “no attempt to pro¬vide segregated graduate and pro¬fessional training in separate Negro institutions beyond that inexistence on October 1, 1950.”Slowly but surely, eh?Of late the Northwestern Dailyhas been camDaigning for an endof discrimination in the frater¬nities and sororities on the cam¬pus. One of the members of theI-F council asked “When are yougoing to cut out the ballyhoo, andrealize that discrimination is be¬ coming an issue on campus onlybecause the Daily is making itso.”Clark and ClarkSellBOOKSat1204 East 55th StreetBooks that- speak forPE L"AN AMERICAN LOOKSAT RUSSIA"by Claude Lightfootexecutive secretory.Communist Party ofIllinois 5cCommunity Book Shop1404 55th Ml 3-0567 Surprise Your SweetheartOn Valentine's DayThat's Wed., Feb. 14 . . .So HURRY and Buy her Flowers fromMITZIE'S FLOWER SHOP1301 E. 55th (corner Kimbark)Open till 9:00 P.M.Student Discounts,\S\N\\\\\\\VN\\\\\\\\\\VV\\\\NS\>>\NVS%\\>\\N%\S£ Ml 3-4020£ Fine Corsages Negro publications up—particular needs fulfilledby Hillel BlackIn a recent issue of The Commonweal, Roland W. Wolseleysuggests that Negro newspapers will disappear as its readerslose their identity.Giving warning to Negro editors and publishers, Wolsleycomments in his article “The Vanishing Negro Press,” “it jstraveling in the direction of the foreign language press, whichgrows punier by the year.”The author’s own statistics journalistic techniques, Wolseleyfor Negro publications belie writes* Although Negro newspa.his expectations. Negro maga- Pers are n°t blessed with the richines and newspapers are multi- presses and plants of papers likeplying, not decreasing. the New York Times, the NegroQuoting the new Negro Hand- press brings out personalities inbook, Wolseley notes that its edi- the news as well as an affluenttors were able to track down 300 use of photography,publications. Qne often finds crusading poll.Negro newspapers can teach cies in Negro newspapers that aretheir white counterparts some lacking in White publications.■aNEGRO HISTORY WEEKTHIS IS RACE 7.50Edited by EARL W. COUNTAn Anthology selected from the International Literatureon the Race of Man.KILLERS OF THE DREAM 3.00LILLIAN SMITHDeals with the tangled complex of sin, sex, and segre¬gation that is stifling the dream of freedom.THE NEGRO IN AMERICA 3.75ARNOLD ROSEA condensed edition of the Modern Classic "AnAmerican Dilemma" by Gunnor Myrdol.THE NEGRO HANDBOOK, 1949 5.00Edited by FLORENCE MURRAYA manual of facts, statistics, and general informationconcerning the Negro in America.SOCIAL PROBLEMS 4.00FRANCIS E. MERRILL et olAn illuminating analysis of crime, mental deficiency,divorce, and racial discrimination.SENSE & NONSENSE ABOUT RACE 25ETHEL ALPENFELSA little pamphlet packed with facts and good sense byan anthropologist.See Special Window DisplayUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenuej aunmmnrLowe s RadioChicago's Largest andMost Complete Stoeh ofLp Re cor its★CUSTOM-BUILT EQUIPMENTWEBSTER-CHICAGO RECORD CHANGERSPRECISION AMPLIFIERSALL TYPES OF SPEAKERSCUSTOM-BUILT CABINETSRadio Repair WorkCome In and Look AroundLowe’s Radioand Lp Records1217 E. 55th St. PL 2-4361■ l . L *February 9, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3Hit play to cometc campus stageSI range Bedfellows, a formerBroadway stage hit, is coming toInternational House Theater,Saturday, Feb. 17, 8:30 p.m.Produced by the Barnum Play¬ers, the satire on the suffragemovement, can be seen by stu¬dents at a special rate of 80 cents.Identification card needed. $1.20tickets will also be sold at thedoor. Student Forum team winssecond in Miami debateMiss UC... A youthful UC Student Forum debate team overcame theage disadvantage and the disillusionment of a Florida coldwave to place second in the annual tournament at Miami lastweek. First place went to the University of Texas.Mike Field and Harold Ward on the negative of the propo¬sition “Resolved: That the non-communist nations shouldform a new international or¬ganization” defeated Navy, 13/wy* Tirirtx)Notre Dame, Florida, Miami, Mil JJXXi IStetson, Georgetown, and Noyes Box cancelledThe Noyes Box Sunday eveninghas been cancelled because of theimpending coal shortage. Sunday,February 18, the New Noyes Box,as the first event of Student Un¬ion Week, will present an orches¬tra and a floor show starring PhiGamma Delta and Wyvern Club. Tickets offeredto pop concertsSU trip to dunesset for Sunday(continued from page 1)of activities which will be cele¬brated with Open Houses at B-Jand Phi Sigma Delta Fridaynight. Saturday morning dormi¬tories and fraternities will com¬pete for prizes for the best out¬door decorations. Saturday eve¬ning, the Prom night, MartyGould’s orchestra provides dancemusic and will accompany thecrowning of “Miss UC.’’ Georgia; while dropping one toTexas. Terry Lunsford and Her¬bert Caplan on the affirmativedropped Georgetown, Stetson,Navy, Notre Dame, and Georgiaand yielded to the oratory ofFlorida, Miami, and Texas. in MichiganTribune to featureInter-Club's formalClassified . . . “Youth in the News,” a ChicagoTribune column, is doing a fea¬ture on the Inter-Club Ball, whichwas held January 26 at the Shore-land Hotel.A1 Rapp, of Delta Upsilon Fra¬ternity, nominee of the Quad- A ski trip party will leave forBoyne Mountain, Michigan, Fri¬day night Feb. 16, and returnlate Sunday night Feb. 18. Thegroup is limited to 37 people andwill travel by chartered bus. Adeposit of $14 is necessary.Boyne Mountain is operated bythe Boyne Mountain Ski Club.There are 10 ski runs and theonly chair lift in the middle west.Slopes from the 500 foot peakvary in length from 1800 to 3000feet.Reservations should be made bycalling Sam Silbergeld at NO The SU Outing Department issponsoring an all day hiking andtobogganing trip to the IndianaDunes State Park at Tremont.The party will leave at 8:30 a.m.Sunday, and will return in timefor supper.Transportation by South Shoretrains or car will cost $3. Allthose interested should leavetheir name on the sheet outsideSU office, Ida Noyes Hall, or call The NSA Committee of StudentGovernment announced Wednes¬day that it would begin sellingtickets for the Chicago Sym¬phony’s Saturday evening PopConcerts. Under arrangementsmade with the Symphony, thesetickets will be sold to studentsand faculty members at reducedprices, ranging from 55 cents forgallery seats to $1.80 for boxseats.The Pop tickets will be on saleat the same time as those for theFriday afternoon concert. Pur¬chases must be made at least twoweeks in advance of the concert.Charming Club to beginnew series of lectures(continued from page 8>RIDESCOMMUTERS ATTENTION — A registerts available In SG office, 3rd floor. Reyn¬olds Club, where they can list theirnames either requesting riders or desir¬ing transportation. ranglers club, was crowned king 7-3007 or by leaving your phoneat the ball. number at SU office, MI-3-0800ext. 1009.WANT RIDE to Ithaca and New YorkCity this week or next Can't drive, willshare expenses. Matsunoba. BU. 8-9019,after 8 p.m. know any smokers?LOST AND FOUND“CHICAGO” Spiral note book with own¬er s name and address, entitled “Evi¬dence Book I.” If found please return.Sentimental attachment. A1 Paifl, MI.3-9154. give them the newPMERqFLAMINAIREMADE BY THE PARKER PEN CO..U.S.A.5 VOLS. of “Science” and “Journal ofNutrition” taken from bicycle rack on59th st. near International House. Re¬ward. Please contact Biology Libraryor Room 218, International House IN SMART GIFT CASEPERSONALWILL THE PERSON who advertisedabout the ride to Cincinnati please con¬tact E. L. Berman.TUTORING in pre-med and basic med¬ical sciences by teaching assistant InAnatomy. Call DO. 3-1270, apt. 602. after8 p.m., M. Levine.CHICAGO COUNCIL Arts, Sciences andProfessions Theatre Workshop needsOne Act plays and skits for April pro¬duction and other engagements. PhoneBU. 8-8165. No F»d«rol Exclj.ToMUSIC-LOVERS, dancers, lonely people—due to the Impending coal shortage,there will be no Noyes Box Sunday-Watch for the special program Feb. 18.VIOLIN ENTHUSIAST, modest talent,wishes to find partner for violin duetsor from a trio-quartet. Just for fun.John M. Romanyshyn, 6009 University,FA. 4-7822. Only pocket lighter that gives you6 months of lights without re-fuel-Ing or re-flinting! Lights clear,clean, hot with cold butane gas.COMMITTERS ATTENTION: A registerLs available In SG office, 3rd floor, Reyn¬olds Club, where they can list theirnames either requesting riders or de¬siring transportation. NO FOOLING WITH RE-FUELINGNO FIDDLING WITH WICKSNO FUSSING WITH FLINTSHELP WANTEDWANTED—People to work long hoursunder sweatshop conditions for con¬temptible bosses and very irregular, vir¬tually no pay. Person with car preferred.Apply MAROON Advertising office. BRANDT’SWANTED—By graduate woman student,room and board, job near University;experience carelng for children, goodreferences. Contact Rustemeyer, KE.6-7458. 1223 E. 63rd St.Midway 3-1671Member NSA AssociationTEACHING COUPLE studying at Uni¬versity desire room in exchange for anysort of housework or baby sitting: willpay certain amount. Call PL. 2-6054after 8 p.m.SEWING MACHINE—Singer, round bob¬bin; new motor, newly overhauled; ex¬cellent condition. Call MI. 3-4679 lateeves. ACTORS COMPANY218 South WabashKING LEARFri. and Sat. Evenings, 8:00Sunday Matinee, 2:30February 9 thru March IIStudent KatesPhone WEbster 9-7265DancingTonight11and Every Friday MteDelightful Ballroom Music byJIMMY McSHANE and his OrchestraJENNIE PATTON, VocalistLots of FunAmple ParkingLIBERTY HALL BALLROOM92nd Street at Cottege Grove Avenuem SINCEwe are beginningOURfourth yearin the bookBUSINESSwe are holding ourusual spring saleof books whichINCLUDESremainders,shelf copies, andother items for lessMONEY,you are cordiallyinvited toBUYMonday throughSaturday, from 1 1 to1 1, twelfth to theseventeethATTheRED DOORBook Shop1328 E. 57th StreetPLaza 2-6445 “Study of a Liberal Religion” is the theme of a new seriesof Thursday evening discussions, beginning Feb. 15, led byDr. Leslie T. Pennington and sponsored by the Channing Club.The series is the outgrowth of several earlier discussions onUnitarianism and is the result of many requests for morecomprehensive and intensives55§S.U/e kave cortptoi discussion of the issues.The subjects include “TheJudaic Background of Unitar¬ianism,” “The Christian Back-Majors infine per¬formance.Includesmany fa¬mous “51’features.$io°°( No F ttat) «2i”Outstandingin style andperformance.Super-smoothOctaniumpoint.Parkette ground of Unitarianism,” “OurUnitarian Heritage,” “CurrentUnitarian Beliefs,” and “Unitar¬ian Worship and Action.”Dr. Pennington is president ofthe Hyde Park Community Con¬ference, and recent president ofthe Hyde Park-Kenwood Councilof Churches and Synagogues, aswell as minister of the First Uni¬tarian Church of Chicago.Coffee will be served at 7:30,the discussion beginning at 8:00p.m. The Meetings, open to thepublic, will be in the parlor ofthe church at 57th and Woodlawn.Red Cross requestswomen volunteers$500( No F. E.tat)Amazing newParker. TrueParker precisionand beauty f/omtip to clip.*300 (No F. E tax)University of ChicagoBookstore5802 Ellis Avenue War conditions have increasedthe demand for all Red Cross vol¬unteer services. The Chicagochapter, ARC, is making anurgent plea for women who cangive two days a week in the HomeService department where prob¬lems of servicemen, veterans andtheir families are handled.Only students in residence hold¬ing a degree and alumnae will beconsidered. Detailed informationmay be obtained at the SocialWelfare Aides office at 529 S.Wabash Avenue or by callingWA 2-7850, extension 167.Tour campusA guided tour of points of in¬terest on campus, including Rock¬efeller Chapel and the OrientalInstitute, will be conducted Sat¬urday afternoon at 1:30 p.m.The tour, sponsored by SU, willleave from the Reynold’s Club.Everyone is invited withoutcharge.CLARK and CLARKSellBOOKSat1204 East 55th StreetToujourVamourtonightfor sure11Wm ask herto WASH PROMFoil. 24 — Shorelaud Hotel$4.00 per couple — tax included f.illHiIf!*Page 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 9, 195]Peace, pure and simple"—Robert Maynard HutchinsIsued once weekly by the publisher. The Chicago Maroon, at the publicationoffice 570b 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 year.\\ Peace, pure and simple”Today the struggle of Man’s spirit is against new and curiousshackles. Today a new monstrosity has shown itself on earth, a sevendays’ wonder, a new child of tyranny—the almost religious beliefthat peace can be achieved through force and war. But even in thethick of war preparations, the struggle for peace goes on despitegreat odds.Last week the Chancellor said this, bidding farewell:“Yet the goal toward which all history tends is peace—not peace throughthe medium of war, not peace through a process of universal intimidation,not peace through a program of mutual impoverishment, not peace byany means that leaves the world too frightened or too weak to go onfighting, but peace pure and simple, based on that will to peace that hasanimated the overwhelming majority of mankind through countless ages.”“Peace, pure and simple”: can anyone be deaf to the sound of hopein this man’s call?The inquisitive Ben Franklin, testing the lightning with his kite,found in the storm’s noisy violence the glimmerings of a secret whichlater illuminated the world. His example suggests that good newsis sometimes hidden in bad weather. Today, in the storm which ragesacross the country, men are sending up their kites to the new light¬ning, to try its possibilities and to prepare for clearing skies.Peace, pure and simple: here is a call, a pledge, a task. As longas the love of peace shows in the eyes of men and women, it willshow also in their deeds. Again from the Chancellor:“Since men of good will can regard war as conceivable only as a lastresort, they must be convinced that all channels of negotiation have beenkept open till the last moment and that their government has sought ingood faith, and without consideration of face or prestige, to prevent theoutbreak of war. Men of good will must be convinced that they are notfighting to maintain colonialism, feudalism or any other form of en¬trenched injustice.”The MAROON in response to the Chancellor's call adopts as itsslogan to be posted under its masthead till the day of its realization:“Peace, pure and simple”—Robert Maynard Hutchins.Civil libertiesIn spite of thousands of impassioned pleas from all over the worldto Governor John Battle of Virginia to stay the hand of the execu¬tioner, the Martinsville Seven are dead. How long must legal lynch-ings continue throughout our land?Along with the Sacco-Vanzetti case the Martinsville Seven willremain a cancerous mole in our body politic, but both will remain arally cry to those Americans who continue to struggle for freedomand equality.The case of the Martinsville Seven indicates that other civil liber¬ties are threatened. Student Government recently constituted theAll-Campus Civil Liberties Committee whose purpose is to fight thenew Broyles Bills’ threat to academic freedom and civil rights ingeneral.We believe that the All-Campus Civil Liberties Committee oughtto fulfill the name it bears by fighting for all civil liberties.Meeting the gang to discuss a quiz—a date with the campus queen—or just killing time between classes—Brooks Student Store at Still¬water, Oklahoma is one of the fa¬vorite gathering spots for studentsat Oklahoma A & M College. AtBrooks Student Store, as in collegecampus haunts everywhere, a frostybottle of Coca-Cola is always onhand for the pause that refreshes—Coke belongs.Ask for it either way ... bothtrade-marks mean the same thing.iOTUED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BYCOCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF CHICAGO, INC.me cuwu-v.oia company NSA region plansanti Broyles programHigh point of the regional assembly of NSA held lastweekend at the University of Illinois came with the adoptionof a resolution opposing the Broyles Bills and providing forRegional action against them. The resolution outlined a sixpoint program for the implementation of the policy adopted.This program provided for publicizing the policy, offeredNSA testimony before the leg- "islature, sponsored a tour by suggested “Each male citizenregional representatives to en- shall upon graduation from highlist other schools in the fight, school (or at the age of 18 if heurged member student govern- has left school) be liable to serv-. . ... ice. This stand recommended dif-ments to adopt a similar policy, leremial servlce wlth mon soi„Kinformed the national governing jnt0 that area where there talentsbody of NSA of the Bills and so- can best serve. Student defer-licited money to operate the pro- ments would be given only to£ram* those whose educational programThe assembly also took a stand would contribute substantially toon the military program of the their ability to serve in nationalcountry. The adopted resolution service.If you buy "The Waters Reglitterlzed" by HENRY MILLERat M, The Studio for HENRY MILLER1541 East 57th Streetfou might be the one to receive a free copy of “Into the NightLife," the famous $’ V0 book of 80 silkscrecns. Books that speak forT"NEGRO LIBERATION"by Harry Haywood$|00Community Book Shop1404 55th Ml 3-0567America's Foremost EntertainingInstrumentalist450 N. CLARKBILL RUSSO QUINTET Xuo*.Clark and ClarkSellBOOKSat1204 East 55th Street WHERE THE U of CMEETS TO EATFINE FOOD132 1 East 57th Street Square DancingCALLING ANDINSTRUCTIONTEXAS STYLECONTACTIRV SARNATPL 2-5064FOR EASIER WRITING THIS QUARTERnewNew Parker “51” and “21” Pens “write dry”with Superchrome Ink. No blotters needed!(They also use any ether ink.)Copr. 1951 by Tht Parktr P»n CompanyIt’s precision-built bythe makers of world-famous New Parker "51”.Offers the smart style... smartfeatures... of pens selling attwice the price.It’s the low-cost pen that will never let you down!scratching! No skips! No blots!New “21” has the smooth-gliding Octanium point... apatented ink control... new fast-action filler. The ink sup¬ply is visible ... and you get real protection against leaking.Ask your favorite pen dealer now to show you the newPacker “21”—the most popular $5.00 pen. It’s the “what’snew in school.” Lustraloy cap. Choice of points. Colors:blue, green, red, black. Set — pen with matching pencil—$8.75. You’ll do better with a New Parker “21”!And—when it’s lime to hint for a gift-hint for the finest of all: New Parker "51through as the 21'sPli-glass reservoir.'\February 9, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Pas* 5Text of RMH's Farewell SpeechOne of the saddest aspects of my lifeIs that I have not organized it so thatI could Know the students better. Itwould be outrageous presumption on mypart to suppose that my presence herev>!is anything to do with yours or thatmy departure can make the slightestdifference to you. I cannot even claimthat I have been what Mr. JusticeHolmes said the common law was not,a brooding omnipresence In the sky. Ihave had little chance to brood, andcannot by any extension of the wordhave been said to be omnipresent un¬less it means being present everywhereelse, and I have spent more time in WallStreet than in the sky.Yet, though seldom nourished by thesight of you, and sometimes not evenby the thought of you, I have perhapssome right to say farewell to you, be¬cause you have been the inspiration ofmy life and have given to It such mean¬ing as it has had. Here I do not referto you as Individuals sitting here to¬night, but to the hundreds of thousandsof young people who have passedthrough these halls while I have pre¬sided over the University and who have difficulty of the enterprise upon whicha model university embarks and thestrength of the tide against which itsstudents have to contend, it is obviousto me that you are very superior andthat you come from very superior fam¬ilies. Otherwise you could not havecome to or stayed in so independent aninstitution. Some of you and some ofyour predecessors have tried occasionallyto divert the University from its courseand make it more like other universities.This I attribute to the contagion of thereforming spirit of the University itselfand not to any desire on your part foran easier life. All students should wantto reform their university. If the Uni¬versity is already unconventional, theonly way to reform it is to make it con¬ventional.Your views on other matters through¬out the years I have fully shared. I wishit were possible to eliminate the mech¬anics of Institutional life. In a largeinstitution, for some reason, the roomscan never be nice enough, the food can The MAROON wishes to extendthanks to the Central Administra¬tion ond to Dan's 36 Radio Shockfor making possible the reprintingof the Chancellor's speech.never be good enough, the lights cansymbolized for me the rising generation * never be bright enough, the buildingsand the hopes of mankind. If it had are either too hot or too cold, the pro-not been for you, and what you stoodfor, I should never have had the im¬pulse to carry on my modest and Inter¬mittent efforts in higher education.I must confess that this process ofAbstraction whereby some thousand ofdifferent Individuals each with his in¬dividual constitution, background, anddesires become equivalent to the risinggeneration and are treated as such, how¬ever valuable it is for the person makingthe abstraction, may not be so agree¬able to the individuals abstracted. Wehave been struggling to create here amodel university. A model universityis not one that asks, “What is good forthese individual students?”, but “Whatis good for all students?”; for a modelis useless unless it can be imitated.Some aspects of this are not perhapsas serious as might at first appear. It ismore than a verbal twist to say that amodel university will do its best to seeto it that each individual student hasthe greatest opportunities and thechance to make the most of them. Butother aspects of the effort to create amodel university are as serious for thestudents as th^y seem to be. If a modeluniversity is needed, it must be becausethe educational system and the publicattitude toward it need in some degreeto be changed. The students in such auniversity come out of the educationalsystem and the public attitudes thatexist. The student in the College of theUniversity of Chicago comes from theAmerican high school and may go intoan American graduate or professionalschool. The University of Chicago istrying to change the American highschool and the American graduate andprofessional school. So far it has beenwholly successful only in changing itsown. The result is that Chicago stu¬dents may encounter difficulties thatthose of other institutions seldom hearof.A model university in America at thistime is necessarily at war with the pub¬lic, for the public has little or no Ideawhat a university is or what it Is for.I don’t need to tell you what the pub¬lic thinks about universities. You knowas well as I. and you know as well as Ithat the public is wrong. The fact thatpopular misconceptions of the natureand purpose of universities originate inthe fantastic misconduct of the univer¬sities themselves is not consoling. Itshows that a model university is need¬ed; it hows how much one is needed;but it also suggestes the tremendousDR. A. ZIMBLER1454 E. 55th St.DO 3-9442N.S.A. Discount 15%QuickServicePrescriptions FilledImmediate Duplication ofBroken Lenses and FramesHours: 9-6; Mon. & Thurs., 9-9 cesses of registration, examination, andgraduation are too protracted and toocomplicated. I have carefully studiedthe various expressions of student opin¬ion on these subjects as they have ap¬peared since 1929 and have agreed withthem all. There must be something re¬fractory about the material out of whicha university is made, or perhaps my ef¬forts have been too modest and too in¬termittent. As any rate I have conclud¬ed that there is something about Insti¬tutional life, at least on a large scale,that makes It Impossible to do anythingabout it, Just as I have concluded thatthe food in the various faculty clubs isidentical, even though the clubs are asfar apart as New York and Palo Alto,and that nothing can ever be doneabout it either. One of the reasons whyI would favor the development here ofthe Oxford and Cambridge system ofsmall residential colleges that are fed¬eralized into a university is that I be¬lieve the smaller the unit the less Insti¬tutional the Institution.Perhaps the greatest difference be¬tween your time in epllege and my ownis the popularization in the interveningyears of the works of Freud. Far be itfrom me to decry the significance ofthis writer. But I must say that he hashad, as it seems to me, an unfortunateeffect upon your conversation and anequally unfortuflatf effect upon thestandards by which you judge yourselvesand others. A graduate student in psy¬chology told me last year that in heropinion 99 per cent of the people of thiscountry were abnormal. In addition toproviding an interesting definition ofnormality, this suggested to me that theordinary difficulties of growing up andbecoming human, from which the racehas suffered for a million years, hadtaken on a kind of clinical characterthat I could not help hoping was exag¬gerated. Whenever I have visited withstudent groups. I have been impressedby your determined Insistence that youwere neurotic and I have been equallyImpressed at your resentment at mysuggestion that you looked perfectlyall right to me.On the principle laid down by Gilbertand Sullivan that when everybody issomebody, nobody is anybody; if every¬body is abnormal, we don’t need toprepared to admit that a serious interest in being educated, the charactertistic that distinguishes the students ofthe University of Chicago from all oth¬ers, is necessarily neurotic. It may bein these times and in this country some¬what eccentric, but it seems to me anamiable eccentricity, and one thatshould be encouraged. The whole doctrine that we must adjust ourselves toour environment, which I take to bethe prevailing doctrine of Americaneducation, seems to me radically errone¬ous. Our mission here on earth is tochange our environment, not to adjustourselves to it. If we become malad¬justed in the process, so much theworse for the environment. If we haveto choose between Don Quixote andSancho Panza, let us by all meanschoose Don Quixote. The flat conform¬ity of American life and thought, to¬ward which all pressures in this countryconverge, raises the only doubt one mayhave about democracy, which is whetherit is possible to combine the rule of themajority with that independence ofcharacter, conduct, and thought whichthe progress of any society requires. photo by ZimmermanAutographing miss Lo-Shu-Fu'sbook is Mrs. Hutchins while theChancellor ond Dean Robert M.Strozicr assist.One of the most Interesting questionsabout the higher learning in Americais this: why is it that the boy who onJune 15 receives his degree, eager, en¬thusiastic, outspoken, idealistic, reflec¬tive, and independent, is on the follow¬ing September 15, or even on June 16, , . . ., -except at Chicago, dull, uninspired, tP*s wa® true in less enlightened daysshifty, cautious, pliable, and attired in ^hen ,the ,3es*' we could do was toa double-breasted blue serge suit? Why ■da'ughter one another with TNT, it isare the graduates of the great American plaln as now, when, thanks to theuniversities indistinguishable, even by Progress of the higher learning, we cantheir grammar, from the mass of the )v,:p„®, f’Ti„... °}Isa,n,ds °? innocent peoplecharacters that you would shudder tothink of now.My observation leads me to tnink thathappiness lies in the fullest use of one’shighest powers. Of course it is follyto talk of the fullest use of a man’shighest powers if he is starving todeath. You are In little danger of starv¬ing to death, at least you are if a worldcatastrophe can be avoided. Your ad¬vantages are such that you have a de¬cided superiority over the great major¬ity of your fellow-citizens when itcomes to the sheer business of stayingalive. Your problem lies in the moraland intellectual realm, in achieving thefeeling that you have made the most ofyourselves, that you have done the best,you cotild, and that you have not letdown yourselves or your fellow-men.Here I hope that you will follow theexample of your university. For I stillthink, as I have thought for many years,that the motto of the University shouldbe that line from Walt Whitman, “Soli¬tary, singing in the West, I strike upfor a new world.” _ w __Now our lives are overshadowed by the itoiy better than that which my gener-threat of impending doom. If you were ati°h. the generation that now rules theneurotic, I.could not blame you. To worl(L had open to it. You have hadwhat extent the threat of impending tlle chance to discern the purposes ofdoom grows out of our ignorance and human life and human society. Yourimmorality, and to what extent it grows predecessors in this place, now scatteredout of the ignorance and immorality of aU over the world, give us some warrantthe Russians I do not pretend to know. for hoping that as you go out to joinI confess, too, that I have a life-long them you will bear with you the samehatred of war that, perhaps makes It im- spark that they have carried, which, Ifpossible for me to have a rational view carefully tended, may yet become theof the present situation. War has al- light that shall illumine the world. Iways seemed to me the ultimate wick- shall always be proud and happy thatedness, the ultimate stupidity. And if "'e were here together.contemporary civilization that produce*a sense of aimlessness. Why do univer¬ity presidents cheerfully welcome thechance to devote their institutions tomilitary preparation? They are ofcourse patriotic; but in addition I thinktney feel that education is a boring,confusing, difficult matter that nobodycares very much about anyway, whereasnetting ready for war is simple, clear,c?efinite, and respectable. Can it be thatmodern men can have a sense of pur¬pose only If they believe that other men..re getting ready to kill them? If thisis true, western civilization is surelyneurotic, and fatally so.You are getting an education infin-population who have never had theiradvantages? Their grammar may per¬haps be accounted for by the defic¬iencies of the American schools, theineradicable marks of which are borne Await 2nd piano-clarinet test hereReginald Kell, clarinetist, andat one blow, and be wiped out ourselvesin the same way. I am not a pacifist.I would echo the sentiments of Pat- ~ , ,lick Henry. I grant that when a great IVliPCZVSlaw Horszowski aimeracucaoie maras oi wmen are uorue P<^Y?£ As loosa in the world seeking . .. inturnatinnolli. f ' ^ ’by our fellow-countrymen to their dy- whom it may destroy, it is necessary to notn mternatlonally-ianiOUS rnfl¬ing day. But what about the intellect- prLpar®.t0 defend our country against it. sicians, will present theil' firstual interest, the willingness and ability . AjA goal towar<i which all history it..:™™:*,, * /^u;„orr„ r* „ *•to reason, the independence of thought tends is peace, not peace through the Ljlliversitji of Chicago Concert atand character, theSpirit of youth, alive, unchanging,Under whose feet the years are cast,Heir to an ageless empire rangingOver the future and the past—what about that? Why are the alumniorganizations of the country, exceptthat of Chicago dedicated to the affec- medium of war, not peace throughprocess of universal intimidation, notpeace through a program of piutual im¬poverishment, not peace by any meansthat leaves the world too frightened ortoo weak to go on fighting, but peacepure and simple, based on that will topeace which has animated the over¬whelming majority of mankind through 8:30 p.m. tonight at Leon Man-del Hall.Their university concert, thesecond program on the winterquarter series, also marks thefirst appearance of the two to-tionate perpetuation of all the wrong countless ages. This will to oeace does (yptViPT' jr. F’ViipaP'nthings about their universities? Why do not arise out of a cowarcUyPdesire to b -- Chicago.things about their universities? Whythe massed graduates of American universifies behave in the same way on thesame kind of occasions as the massedfollowers of the most celebrated cul¬tural institution of my native city, theDodgers?The answer must lie in the relativeweakness of higher education comparedwith the forces that make everybodythink and act- like everybody else. Thoseforces beat upon the individual fromhis birth up on almost a twenty-four-hour-a-day basis and constitute thegreatest obstacle with which the schoolshave to contend; so that, it can now beseriously argued that since educationcannot cope with the comic book itshould absorb It and substitute elevat¬ing and instructive comic books fortextbooks. The horrid prospect that Horszowski, who has also madeguest appearances with ArturoToscanini, is a member of theNew York Quartet, which willpresent the March 6 UniversityConcert.Law clerkshipsgo to two hereC. Richard Walker (UC Law’50), past editor, and Abner J.Mikva, present editor-in-chief ofanvbodvWVNor‘shouw A be television opens before us, with nobody military establishment. By endless reit- .he rjr law review have been an-w orry a pout any Doay ^ ^ in or snouia oe SDeakinc and nobodv reading, suggests eration of the slogan. “America must he lnA it view na\ e Deen ap¬pointed law clerks to SupremeCourt Justice Hugo Black andJustice Sherman Minton, respec¬tively, announced Dean H. H.detected But" surely the essential ingredients of Levi today. Law clerkships areZ something that looks like moss grow- strength are trained intelligence, love umiallv errantod to hiobptjt honoring on Mars. I am convinced that Mars of country, the understanding of Its , ^ ° " . ,uroc nneo inlvahitorl htr rotinnol hoinwc irfpfll.c flnri ft hrvro oil a COllViCtiOIl Of ^rft(lU3t6S 01! i 0 CL Cl 1T1 ^ lclW SOflOOlS#Since pien Collegium music notesThe first American perform¬ance of the three “ResurrectionMotets” by Johannes NepomukDavid, contemporary Austriancomposer, will be presented at theUniversity of Chicago CollegiumMusicum concert at 8:30 p.m. Sun¬day, February 18, in Leon Man-del Hall.speaking and nobody reading, suggeststhat a bleak and torpid epoch may lieahead, which, If It lasts long enough,will gradually, according to the prin¬ciples of evolution, produce a popula¬tion indistinguishable from the lowerforms of plant life. Astronomers of theUniversity of Chicago have preserve one’s life and property, but outof a conviction that the fullest, develop¬ment of the highest powers of men canbe achieved only in a world at peace.War, particularly modern war, is ahorrible disaster. If this is the destinyprepared for us, we must meet it asbest we can. But at least, we shouldhave no illusions about it. There is acertain terrifying lightheartedness un¬derlying the talk about war today. Eachpolitical party is belaboring the othernot because it is too warlike, but be¬cause it is too peaceful. Men in publiclife are being crucified because they aresuspected of trying to keep the peace.The presidents of the greatest universi¬ties have met and enthusiastically votedto abandon the higher learning so thatthe universities may become part of theeration of the slogan, “America must bestrong,” we have been able to put a stopto ou,r mental processes altogether andto forget what strength is.We appear to believe that strengthconsists of masses of men and machines.I do not deny that they have their role.Reader’stheCAMPUSDRUG STORE61st and EllisOpp. Burton-Judson CourtYour AuthorizedParker PenDealerSee Our Complete Stock of STATIONERYand WRITING SUPPLIES was once Inhabited by rational beingslike ourselves, who had the misfortune,some thousands of years ago, to inventtelevision.The forces th*t beat upon the Ameri¬can citizen from infancy become yeallyserious when he finishes his formalschooling and has to think about earn¬ing a living and getting along in theworld. How will those whp have jobs tooffer and prestige to confer feel abouthim if he does not merge imperceptiblyinto the scenery? How far will he get ifhe does not adjust himself to his en¬vironment? I hasten to say that I amfor tact, politeness, and good manners,I would not for the world be taken asurging you to be offensive or holier-than-thou or carry a chip on yourshoulder or fail to distinguish betweenmatters of etiquette and matters ofprinciple. You may even wear a double-breasted blue serge suit if you find itbecoming. But to adjust yourselves tobrutality, inhumanity, injustice, andstupidity, of which the world is full,though it is easy, and may look profit¬able, Is, I must warn you, habit-forming,and will make out of you -at the last Ideals, and, above all,the justice of our cause. Since iyienof good will can regard war as conceiv¬able only as a last resort, they must beconvinced that all channels of negotia¬tion have been kept open till the lastmoment and that their own governmenthas sought in good faith, and withoutconsideration of face or prestige, to pre¬vent the outbreak of war. Men of goodwill must be convinced that they arenot fighting to maintain colonialism,feudalism, or any other form of en¬trenched injustice. And since It, is ob¬vious to the merest simpleton that warmust come sooner or later to a world ofanarchy,—men of good will would hopethat their own government would pro¬claim its desire to transform the UnitedNations from a loose association of inde¬pendent states into an organization thatcould adopt and enforce world law.There seems to be something aboutClark and ClarkSellbooksat1204 Eost 55th Street UC BookstoreChesterfield WinnersDuring the past week, the fol¬lowing students in purchasing acarton of Chesterfields received acarton marked "red" ond therebyreceived a second carton FREE!!This UC Bookstore sale is contin¬uous for an indefinite period. Thewinners were: J. Hahn, ZinaKiziufh, A. Morgan Maree III.Local andLong Distance MovingStorage Facil'ties for Books,Record Cabinets, Trunks, orCarloads of FurniturePeterson FireproofWarehouse, Inc.1011 East Fifty-fifth StreetBUtterfield 8-6711DAVID L. SUTTON, President (Advertisement)ELECTION FORUMSfor Irving Beinin, SocialistAnti-War Candidate1."How to Stop the WarDrive." Speaker, BertDeck. Sunday, February2. "Civil Liberties and theGarrison State. "Speaker,0. Robbins. Sunday, Feb¬ruary 18.At Campaign Headquarters;5558 S. Ellis Avenue7:30 p.m. Admission FreeQuestions and DiscussionSocialist Workers PartyCampaign Committee from MONTEVERDIto STRAVINSKY★from ADAMto WEILLYen'll find a completeselection of I,p*s atTheRecordChest5112 Lake Park Ave."IT PAYS TO WALK AFEW MORE BLOCKS!"Exhibit of Student WorksFeb. 4 - 12New Studio Galleryand School1551 E. 57th St.Ml 3-1630Enroll for classes in Lifedrawing and paintingThurman Nicholson,instructorPage 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 9, 1951Oust all racismfor democracy Negro peaceeffort discussed Tell of Negroes’ problemsin American law field“The Negro in Peace Move¬ment,’’ will be the subject of alecture by Harold Ward, delegateto Warsaw peace conference,Monday at 7:30 p.m. in Soc, Sci.122.V*.***.* *. .T.-mT,-.. . This is s second of h. senes of -Among the most dangerous of these is the perversion of the four free lectures, sponsored by outgrowth of the legal fight by the NAACP, four Southernrole of Negroes in history. Although it will be denied by polite YPA for the purpose of “alleviat- law schools have been forced to admit a few Negro students,historians that such a distortion exists, the fact that a special inS the lack and misrepresenta- The paucity of Negroes in law ,,tn he cpt aside each vear to attemnt to disnlav the tlon cf the NeSro history taught schools is perpetuated under the onty in college attendance; theyweek has to be set asiae eacn year to anempi io aispiay tne ^ TTr,,» «r>r,r,rtnnitipc for nrcna- must often assume the hnrripntrue role played by Negroes•»y Richard Cotton, guest writerThe most crucial task faced by Americans today lies indestroying certain, practically unchallenged historical myths. by Howard ShermanUntil recently, there have been no non-segregated lawschools open to Negroes in the South. Predominantly NegroHoward Law School is open to the lucky few. Now, as theresult of the long struggle for equal education, and as anin history belies such denials, era civilization was laid byIgnorance of Negro problems costly Negroes or peoples among whomNegroes have almost invar- Negroes were heavily assimilated,iably been depicted and stereo- The wheel, the recognition of thetyped as inferior participants in value of and the establishmentthe making of world and Ameri- of written language, the essen-can history by orthodox histor¬ians. Such propaganda, presentedas “true” history over long pe¬riods of time, has made it impos¬sible for most Americans, bothwhite and Negro, to know w’hatreally happened. Their resultantignorance is costly. It threatenstheir ability to give the answersto the unprecedented problemsposed to them today. It has en¬crusted the thinking of the aver¬age American in a framework ofwhite supremacy. It exerts acontinuous pressure in all spheresof the infected persons’ thinking.Thus it is that United Statesdiplomats and policy formers ap¬proach international problems interms of American racist orien¬tations. Their insistence, for anexample, that China is not run¬ning its own destiny may beunderstood more clearly in thelight of their ignorance of howNegroes and other non-whiteshave shaped the world’s destinybefore — independent of whitemanipulation.There can be but little doubtthat our diplomats are severely,and seemingly disastrously,handicapped in never havinglearned to respect non-whites asmen equal, in every respect, tothemselves. The United Statessoldier in Japan, the Philippines,India, Korea and the like, is dis¬abled in a similar manner. Theirignorance of the Negro’s past islargely the reason. The impend¬ing, complete alienation of Asiawill be a partial result.Must know accomplishmentsWhite Americans will neverknow that the Negro is theirequal until they know that theNegroes’ accomplishments equaltheir own. They will have toknow that the very basis of mod- unequal opportunities for prepa- must often assume the burden ofration afforded under a dual edu- family leadership very earlycational system. Qualified Negro Associations foster segregationtials of mathematics, the discov¬ery and wide usage of iron smelt¬ing processes, scientific agricul¬ture, and the like, all reflect theNegroes contribution to civiliza¬tion. Americans do not know this.Nor that during the height ofthe Negro-influenced or domi¬nated cultures the present dayEuropean type dwelt in a virtualstate of nature. When Americanslearn these things they will seethat things have not always beenas they are today. It will dawnupon them that things as theyare do not have to be.Crusade before world necessaryThe world’s people are watch¬ing the United States with in¬creasing suspicion. They mustfind it a real democracy if theirfriendship is not to be sacrificed.Yet unhypocritical democracy inAmerica will not come in time ifwhite Americans continue to betold that the Negro has donenothing to deserve democratictreatment. It is plain, then, thata veritable crusade to end theconcealment of Negro history isessential to a successful Ameri¬can foreign policy. If such a cru¬sade is not undertaken the UnitedStates will pay dearly. However,Negro history week is not theanswer, for the distortions of anentire year cannot possibly beoffset in one week. Find 5,651 -yr-oldtips to plowsmenA 3700 year old farm bulletin,the earliest detailed account ofagricultural techniques, has beendiscovered by the 1950 joint ex¬pedition to Nippur, Iraq, spon¬sored by the U of C Oriental In¬stitute and the University ofPennsylvania. The document waswritten in cuneiform script in theSumerian language on a claytablet. The earliest such reportspreviously known were “Worksand Days” by Hesiod and “Geor¬gies” by Virgil. students are forced to go to workto supplement the family income,instead of seeking higher educa¬tion.Quota system operatesIn Northern universities, forthose with sufficient money andthe necessary educational back¬ground, the “quota system” op¬erates to limit or disqualify theremaining potential students.The UC Law School has no quotasystem, but their economic andacademic limitations operate withfull force.On top of all these problems,Negro women face special diffi¬culties in getting an education.They are forced into low-paiddomestic service; sons have pri-Negro leaderspeaks for LYLOne of the leading campus or¬ganizations, the Labor YouthLeague, is offering as their con¬tribution to Negro History Week,a lecture by an Illinois Negroleader, Claude Lightfoot. It willtake place in Social Science 122,on Wed., Feb. 14, at 3:30 p.m.Lightfoot, as executive secre¬tary of the Illinois Communistparty, will speak on The NegroPeople as a Nation. He will applythe Marxist analysis in tracingthe history and roots of his peo¬ ple. L.Y.L. spokesmen hope that“Mr. Lightfoot’s speech willclarify the Marxist position inreference to the charges of ‘BlackSoviet,’ recently issued by JeneJordon. This is our answer tosuch charges.” Many state bar associationstotally exclude Negroes frommembership. The American BarAssociation, in September, 1950,refused to amend its constitutionto admit members without refer¬ence to race, creed, or color. Jobopportunities for Negro lawyersoutside of the Negro communityitself are almost negligible. MostNegro attorneys must practice ata great disadvantage before all-white judges and juries.A few of the great Negro law¬yers who have overcome all ofthese difficulties are MagistrateJane Bolin and Herbert Miller;Circuit Court Judge WilliamHastie; Thurgood Marshall, headof the NAACP legal staff; andWilliam R. Ming, UC Law Pro¬fessor.RMH to the barFormer Chancellor Robert M.Hutchins spoke before 100 LawReview alumni at the annual jour¬nal reunion, held last Monday atthe Congress Hotel.The alumni also included mem¬bers of the Illinois Law Reviewon which UC students served aseditors until the establishment ofChicago’s Law Review in 1933.OT2EDorian Hotel4545 S. Woodlawn&/e i/Mitm PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREET ATIantic 5-1310Permanent and TransientLow Rates Convenient LocationEvery room newly decorated and with private bathRestaurant in HotelClark and ClarkSellBOOKSat1204 East 55th Street‘Well, lie’s not the perfect butler. . but at least he never forgetshe Angostura* in a Nanliattanlaromatic bittersMAKES BETTER ORINKStp.S, You shouldn’t forget cither—that he•iid es adding zest and tar.g to a Manhattan,just a dash or two of Angostura brings out thejull Jlutor of soups and sauces. New! ARROW "GARANARO”with revolutionary '\ARAFOLD”COLLAR*6.50THE FIRST SPORTS SHIRT THATREALLY LOOKS GOOD WITH A TIE lThe Gabanaro, America’s favorite washable gabardinegports sbirt, has the new Arafold collar with “built-in”space for your tie knot. This new collar has a naturalroll, looks swell open or with a tie. We have it in yourexact collar size and sleeve length. Rich solid colors.fOR ARROW UNIVERSITY STYLES Which "Joe” has the"GABANARO”?Both, of course! The new Arrow“Gabanaro” sports shirt can beworn two ways. Because of thenew Arafold collar, it can he wornwith or without tie ... looksperfect either way. In your exactcollar size and sleeve length (sizedto fit all shapes and sizes!)Washable rayon gabardine.$6.50 vARROWshirts &TIESARROW 7 UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCH'*fS • SPORTS SHIRTSFebruary 9, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Negroes find democracy, Records fall,equal opportunity in sports runners winby Bob MorchAlthough unable to participate in many of the arts andsciences because of jimcrow practices, the Negro has beenable to gain recognition in athletics. Sports have a greatdemocratic reputation; in the locker room, the color of aman’s skin is forgotten. Right here on the UC campus, manyNegroes have distinguished themselves in athletics. Wherejimcrow practices have existed insports, they have been perpetu- Negro track and field stars asated by promoters, and not the jesse Owens, Herb McKenley,athletes or fans. and Harrison Dillard have cut aJoe Louis, perhaps the greatest swath through the recordNegro athletic figure in modern books. Track is traditionally onetimes, earned the hopes of his of most democratic sports,people with him every time he _stepped through the ropes into Trotters und,sputed bes*the ring. When Louis beat the The most amazing team in pres-arrogant Nazi “superman” Max ent-day athletics is the famousSchmeling to a pulp in one round Harlem Globetrotters basketballin 1938 he scored a great victory team. This all-Negro quintet isfor democracy and for his people. so ^ar superior to any other pro-Poige challenged champions fessional cage team that theyA “gentlemen’s agreement” have to clown to make theiramong clubowners long kept pro- games interesting,fessional baseball a lily-white Not all sports, however, aregame. “Satch” Paige, who pitched open to Negro athletes. In manyday in, day out for over 25 years parts of the South, Negroes areto become a baseball legend, re- not allowed to participate in anypeatedly challenged the World athletic events with white men.Series champs to play an exhibi- In tennis, golf, horse racing, protion game with a Negro all-star football, and auto racing there areteam; he was never taken up. very few Negro athletes. ThePaige finally got his chance with American Bowling conferenceCleveland in 1918. Tired and only recently ended its diserim-nearly fifty, he added the extra inatory policy. But through thepunch that drove the Indians to continued pressure of fans anda pennant. athletes, sports will become moreThe swift feet of such great democratic. The JV Track team last Fridaydefeated Tilden Tech 49 2/3 to361/3 in the Fieldhouse.Jim Purdie broke the mile rec¬ord for the second week in suc¬cession, lowering it from 4:42 to4:38.2. Ken Stapely performed asimilar feat with the half milerecord, lowering it from 2:02.2to 2:01.8. Varsity thindads rollover Morton, WilsonChicago won its fifth straight track meet last Saturdaywhen the Varsity thinclads blew by the representatives ofMorton and Wilson, scoring 69 points to 39 for Wilson and20 for Morton. Furthermore, they earned the victory with¬out the aid of such stars as Cotton, Killough, Gras, Zimmer¬man, Norcross, Rothenberg, Brodkey and Smith, all of whomparticipated only in exhibitionrelays.Bob Baptist was the top scorerfor Chicago with firsts in theMile and the Half Mile. Art Reillywas second in scoring with a firstin the tw« mile and a second inthe mile. Chicago showed a greatdeal of depth, coming up with Cagers lose12th to KnoxThe Varsity Basketball teamthe first three places in several l°st its twelfth straight game toevejits. a tough Knox team last SaturdayWayne and Butler invade the night at Galesburg, Ill. TheFieldhouse tomorrow afternoon Maroons scored 51 to 60 on theat 2:00 p.m. for the first in a part of Knox,series of three really tough meets Dave Dickman paced the Ma-with the top teams in the Mid- r0ons with eight buckets and awest. The Maroons face Loyola free throw for 17 points. Jackand De Paul on the 17th and Karush was second with 15. Lun-Western Michigan on the 23rd. deen led Knox in scoring with 24photo by SherJim Purdie Sports calendarFriday, Feb. SJV Gymnastics—3:30 p.m. Bartlett—SennJV Track—3:30 Fieldhouse—AustinSaturday, Feb. 10Varsity Track—2:00 p.m. Fieldhouse—Wayne and ButlerVarsity Basketball—8:00 p.m. FMeld-house—St. Joseph’s, , tWe *o4ay'. *te a surely o®ake 4°rGar^yof C°nrt‘ENJOY YOUR CIGARETTE!...If you’re not happy with your presentbrand (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!LS/MFT-LvckyStrikeMeans Fine TobaccoCOP*.. THf A M C PIC AN TOBACCO COMPANY.caUs® y°u points.Tomorrow night the Maroonsface St. Joseph’s College (Indi¬ana) on the Fieldhouse floor at8:00 p.m. Admission free onpresentation of ID card.Box score:CHICAGO (51) KNOX (60)F. P. G. F. P.Dickman 8 1 3 Johnson 2 0 2Karush 7 1 1 Hill 6 1 2Binford 1 1 1 Hanks 5 0 2Boise 3 2 2 Miller 1 0 2Philon 0 1 0 Lundeen 10 4 5Raby k 0 0 Dredge 1 0 1Sears 0 2 1 Doolen 1 1 0Johnson,J. 1 1 2 Pacek 0 1 0Conklen 0 1 0Totals 21 9 12 Totals 26 8 14IM track meetset for March 1The Athletic Office announcedTuesday that the annual indoorintramural track meet has beenscheduled for Thursday, March 1,in the Fieldhouse.All college house and fraternityteams have been invited to enter.Entry blanks are in the mail.All independent commuting stu¬dents are eligible to participateas associate members of collegehouses. Anyone who desires toenter should see the intramuralmanager of his house.--- -3rd ‘''Jc-tv* o*»,( OVtMURE02PRINCEIGORAldous Huxley's’i ffelucleto fame’Jeremy Spenser's per¬formance is o joy to thediscerning eye andthe sound track o delightto the ear in this storyof the malevolent influenceof a woman's warpedpersonality on ayoung musical genius.Today at: 6:00, 8:00, 10:00TERESA DOLANDANCING SCHOOL1208 E. 63rd St.Learn to dance nowBeginners Ballroom ClassesMon., Wed., Sat. Eves,a a *Rumba, Samba, Tango, etc.Tues., Thurs., Fri. Eves.Private Lessons—the quick, sure,and inexpensive way to become agood dancerAny day 12 noon to 11 p.m.Phone HY 3-3080. :™:vSHOE 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 Servicei'umMMSTMWI MCAMPUSleadinKINseller If*AMERICA'SCOLLEGESlPage 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 9, I951Classified AdsDeadline: 5 p.m., TuesdayFOR SALE FOR RENTCONVENIENT, Inexpensive housing forgirls. Kitchen, living room privileges, allthe joys of co-op living yours for only$21 a month. Woodlawn Co-op, 5711Woodlawn. MU. 4-9510. t*t !100', PURE maple syrup. Positively de¬licious. Money back guarantee. Free de¬livery. Price reduced. 85c pint. BobCoolidge. Ex. 3456 or B-J 829. RENT an electric refrigerator. $4.50-$5.50per month CO. 4-9231.TUXEDOS — Winter style, size 38 - 40.Price less than two rentals. Almost new.Room 220, B-J. Before Wednesday. ROOM, private bath; exchange for babysitting. KE. 6-3673.NATCO 80" motion picture screen—new.Beaded complete $30. Call PL. 2-2492,eves. HOUSEKEEPING and sleeping room, $5up weekly. Refrigerator. Near UC. 6017Woodlawn.BUSINESS SERVICES1939 PONTIAC SEDAN. Recently recon¬ditioned, extraordinary. Radio, cold re-sistent heater, chic slipcovers. Reason¬able. Call T. Blocker. HY. 3-5452, after8 p.m. DRESSMAKING, sewing alternations,bachelor's repairing; reasonable rates.For appointment call Edna Warriner,MU. 4-4630. Friday, Feb. 9MOVIE—Human Development StudentOrganization present Margaret Gam-per, R.N., showing film on NaturalChildbirth. Judd 126. 4:30 p.m.MOVIE—American Film Series present“The Love Parade,” directed by ErnstLubitsch. Soc. Sci. 122, 7 and 9:15 p.m.UNIVERSITY CONCERT—Reginald Kell,clarinet, and Mieczyslaw Horsowski,piano. Mandel Hall, 8:30 p.m.CHAMBER CONCERT — AIMS presentchamber works. Ida Noyes, 3rd floortheater.LECTURE—MAROON sponsored news¬writing course. (Repeat of Feb. 8).Second in series. Eckhart 207. 4:30 Oriental Institute an I the Chapel.Meet at Reynolds Club. 1:30 p.m. Evolution: Some Recent OpinionsDeSales Center, 7:30 p.m. P C lsSunday, Feb. 11MEMBERSHIP PARTY—Hillel Founda¬tion. All are welcome 2:30-4:30 p.m.DISCUSSION — Interchurch Breakfastpresents Jean Jordan on New Testa¬ment. Chapel House. 9:15 a m. LECTURE—University Baha'i Fellowshipand Negro History Week Committeepresent Horace Holley, National Ba¬ha’i Secretary, on “The Gift of Godto this Enlightened Age.” Introduc¬tion by Dr. G. A. Borgese. JamesBreasted Hall, Oriental Institute. 4:30p.m.SPEECH —Roger Williams Fellowship LECTURE—SCA sponsors Dr T Meartpresent Mr. Ernst Hixon, Asst. Dean of on “Thoughts About Love.” Secondin a series. Adm. 30 cents, series tick.*1 n-tn .. — tj- **MEN'S ICE SKATES, size 10‘i. $4. Prac¬tically unused. Call Orville McMillan,FA. 4-8200, room 466. Satisfaction ormoney returned. EXPRESS—Light and heavy moving;willing and courteous service; reason¬able rates. Bordone, HY. 3-1315. p.m.DANCE “The Threadbare Thirties.” Students, Ill. Inst. Tech, on “CivilLiberties in the United States.” HydePark Baptist church. Supper, 50 cents,6 p.m.; Worship service 7 p.m.; speak¬er 7:15 p.m.REHEARSAL — Channing Glee Club.First Unitarian church. All are wel¬come. 5-6 p.m. et $1. 7:30 O.m. Ida Noyes Library.MOVIES—Documentary presents “Timein the Sun,” “Death Song,” and “Songof Ceyon.” Soc. Sci. 122, 7:15 and 9:15p.m. Adm. 35 cents.RUG. 9x12. Good condition, $20. CallMendelson, MU. 4-0458. RADIO OUT OF WHACK?Bring it to Dan's 36 Radio Shack. MI.3-6000 or Extension 1053, 36 ManleyHouse, after 7 p.m , Mon., Thurs. Semi - Informal. International House LECTURE—Channing Club present DaleAuditorium. 10 p.m.-l a m. $1 per per- — —son.MEETING—Calvert Club. DeSales Cen¬ter. 8 p.m.VINCENT CANTEEN — Judson Library,B-J. Every Friday night. 8-12 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 14MOVIE—Science Fiction Club presentH C Well's “Invisible Man” -*—1CHEAP—Like new, baby buggy and MURPHY MOTOR SERVICE. Expresssturdy highchair. Phone LA. 1-5817. Mrs. and light hauling. Over 30 years ofRalph Novak. knowhow. DO. 3-9822.COMPLETE living room set: sofa, loungechair, and tables, radio, coffee table forsale cheap. Phone TR. 4-8903.THREE-SPEED phonograph in bargaincondition, at bargain price. For thisfull-sized table model with Websterchanger. Call PL. 2-0536. TYPING — Accurate, fast. Experiencedand reasonable. Knowledge in SocialScience and rewrite work. Also short¬hand dictation. MI. 3-0473, 61606 S. Uni¬versity, Apt. 206. Women free, men 20 cents.ONEG SHABBAT — Hillel Foundationsponsors Hillel Drama Group in “AHasidic Tale,” an Eternal Light radioscript. 5715 Woodlawn, 8:30 p.m.LECTURE—The Liberal and Conserva¬tive Coalition presents Ira Latimer,M.A. on “Civil Rights Issues in Chi¬cago Today.” Soc. Sci. 122. 3:30 p.m. Pontius on “Toward Synthesis—U. S.Foreign Policy." Supper, 50 cents, 6p.m. Program, 7 p.m. John Wool manHall, First Unitarian church.CAMPING TRIP—Student Union spon-sors hiking and tobogganing in In- FENCING TOURNAMENT — SponsoredClaude Rains. Soc. Sci. 122, 6 :3o! k9:45 p.m. Adm. 50 cents.dlana Dunes. Leave 8:30 a.m.—returnby supper. $3. Leave name in SU of¬fice or call Rinehart Baron WH.4-0057. by SU. 3:30 p.m., Bartlett gym. PrizesNo admission.VERSATILE PORTABLE radio. G-E. self-charging. never needs battery replace¬ment. Good condition. Reasonable. CallPL. 2-0586. BEAUTIFUL photographs of your chil¬dren make valued gifts for proud grand¬parents. Choose from TWELVE proofsmade in your home. Phone Arthur Par¬sons, MU. 4-5220.FOR THE next two weeks only we areselling a large selection of secondhandpsychological journals. Room 109. Psy¬chology bldg., 5730 Ellis. PIANO and Theory lessons for adultsand children. Reasonable rates. CallMU. 4-3360.Clark and ClarkSellbooks1204 East 55th Street PIANO INSTRUCTION, beginning andadvanced. Reasonable rates. Teacher hasoutstanding training. Reasonable rates.Call HY. 3-1039, evenings. Saturday, Feb. 10PARTY—Faculty - Graduate Committeefor Peace invites members and friends.Adm. 75 cents. Alpha Dleta Phi base¬ment. 8-12 p.m.MOVIE—United World Federalist pre¬sents “The Man Who Could Work Mir¬acles.” Judd 126, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m.OPERA—Humboldt Club presents Wag¬ner’s Ring Cycle Libretti projected onscreen in German and English duringMetropolitan broadcast. German textexplained. Cobb 406, 1 p.m.TOUR—Student Union presents tour of Monday, Feb. 12DISCUSSION—New Testament Club pre¬sents Prof. Amos N. Wilder on Im¬portance of the Church in the Inter- LECTURE—Negro History Week. ClaudeLightfoot, Exec. Sec’y. Illinois Com¬munist Party, "The Negro People as aNation." Soc. Sci. 122. 3:30 p.m. LaborYouth League. No admission.Thursday, Feb. 15pretation of the Bible.” Swift Hall LECTURE—SCA present Mrs. ImogenernmmnnQ fl n m Pithlin Vnumr An **T ot'o Tollr cT . ..Commons. 8 p.m. Public invited.DISCUSSION — YPA sponsor HaroldWard on "The Negro in the PeaceMovement." Soc. Sci. 122. 7:30 p.m.SEMINAR IN MAIMONIDES — HillelFoundation present Arthur Cohen on“Laws concerning idolatry: Indica- Young on "Let's Talk About Sex.Third in series. Ida Noyes Library, 7:30p.m. Adm. 30 cents.DISCUSSION—Channing Club sponsorHerbert Vetter on "Whitehead's Eth¬ical Theory.” Parlor, First Unitarianchurch. 7:30 p.m.tion of the Jewish concept Of evil.” SPEECH—Methodist Student Fellowship«... O n 1 1 17- TT 1 *5715 Woodlawn. 8 p.m.Tuesday, Feb. 13LECTURE—Calvert Club presents Fr.Thomas B. McDonough on “Adam and present Garland E. Hopkins on "PeaceProjects for Individuals.” ChapelHouse, 6 p.m. Supper 50 cents.LECTURE—Second in a MAROON spon¬sored series on Journalism. 4:30 p inEckhardt 207.WATCH REPAIRING service. One yearguarantee. No overhead charges. AllenRebhan. 1364 East 61st. PL. 2-1121 orLaw SchoolWANTED CAMERAMAN wanted for group plan¬ning to shoot 15 minute Documentary inSpring and Summer. Share any profits.Callenbach 6122 Greenwood, BU. 8-4160. USED COPIES of Vol. I, Fundamental WANTED—Small bedroom apt. (furn.Mathematics, 3rd Ed. needed desperately or unfurn.) near U, by co-ed and moth-at Student Book Exchangeyear Math I class. for mid- er. HY. 3-1554. Perm. only.BABY BUGGY and 18-ft. hall runner.Call MI. 4816. WANTED—Two bedroom apt., SpringQuarter. Sublet desired, have children.Call Westley, DO. 3-2379. YOUNG PHYSICIAN, wife, expectingMarch 1. desperately need 5-6-7 roomunfurnished apartment. AT. 5-2817.AS IT MIGHTBE SEENIN LIFE “EASIEST TEST IN THE BOOK’TULANE STUDENT JIM OWENS ’52 MAKES TOBACCO BROWERSMILDNESS TEST, THE TEST YOU CAN MAKE YOURSELFIWHIIF _ THREE or four room apartment for newfaculty member, married. BU. 8-9867,evenings.see Classified, page 3OPEN A PACK of Chesterfields. Comparethem with the brand you’ve been smoking. SMELL CHESTERFIELD’S milder aroma.Prove—tobaccos that smell milder, smoke milder.SMOKE CHESTERFIELDS-they do smokemilder, and they leave NO unpleasant after-taste.CHESTERFIELDCopyright 19M Loom & Myu* Tokvsoo Co.