- 1951 —UJohn 3.■It Pm,en. rtee,UC Salt*nas’ "On.1 Hou.su,4 WITH,p m. Soc,»w Birridel H.|l.er, 8 p m.nt.”7:15 and122. Doc.Lounge,SCA ad.res 6 p m.e In WINNoyes,Do lorthe Phil-chaser of;) care toCall Ed>at takenom Com-ralskl, 42•*cco Co Schwab blasts MAROON,calls for investiaatioby David Zimmerman“We have no concept of what’s on the minds of the peopleof this planet.” With this characterization of U. S. attitudeand foreign policy, Stringfellow Barr, founder of the Feder¬ation for World Government, went on to describe various y c 5 Garv,nproblems of today’s world, and to show that U. S. solutions to Proposals to investigate the MAROON were adopted Tuesday by the faculty-student-these problems are totally inadequate. administration committee set up to advise the dean of students on university policy. JosephBarr, an ex-president of St. Schwab, chairman of the natural sciences faculty in the college, made the motion followsJohn’s College, ^>oke before 500 gram # # # (whereas) the fact is ing an intense attack on MAROON quality and policy.aLfd Tuesdav in^Mandtd that the Russians have given a Schwab began his statement by stating, ‘‘The MAROON is the worst college paper I’ve1 ’ y solution to the overwhelming seen in my life.” He referred to headlines containing “the syntax of righteous indignation,”Hall.Following in his speech the Problem of the human race.” non - intelligible stories, poorsame pattern employed in .his response to the question, writing, and makeup which testimony of MAROON quality, attracted to the MAROON, or ifbest-selling pamphlet Let’s Join “Just what can we do to solve the made pages “invisible.” He The ACP scored the MAROON attracted, are not elected. In laterinvisible.”the Human Race, Barr pointed problem?” Barr conceded that he further charged that paragraph- with 915 points, 35 points short statements he further accusedout that the greatest problem of did not have a solution, but that ing was for effect only and had of the highest class, the “All the MAROON, which had six staffihe world today is the poverty, his j°b at the present was to pre- no relation to rules of grammar. American Superior,disease, and under-development in sent the problem to the American The layout was non-understand- Schwab contendedmuch of the non-American world, people. able.Discussing US failure in meas- His only specific suggestion MAROON quotes ACPures to solve this problem, Barr was, “a type of world-wide pro- In reply, the MAROON admit-said: "Point four is a feeble chirp gram resembling TVA, and re- ted some errors yet quoted its re-. and Congress would never put sponsible to the General Assem- cent “first class” rating by theup the money for the needed pro- bly of the UN.” Associated Collegiate Press asUniversity of Chicago, May 4, 1951 that theMAROON had no idea of what to“applaud.” He gave examples,among them being “leftist” bookreviews. He likened biased cover¬age to what he felt was typicalof the Chicago Tribune. He quotedmembers of his classes answeringhis questions about the MAROONby their chorusing the MAROONis controlled by “commies.”Charges political baitingLeRoy Wolins, MAROON busi¬ness manager, charged thatSchwab had not given proof ofhis charges. Wolins added thatthe essence of Schwab’s attackwas political baiting.As to the causes of MAROON“quality” Schwab stated thateither competent people are not members present, of packing themeeting and of attempting to takeover the chairmanship of DeanStrozier. The MAROON notedthat permission had been grantedat the previous meeting to bringexperts in its various phases ofoperation. Schwab was not pres*sec Investigation, page 3Varsity nine wins two su to swingto sweep Pier series western sty^errU7111 Kn iirQC’tom of Blast in Kent;assistant hurt How committee votedThe rollcall of those memberspresent showed the following:FOR: Schwab, Woodworth, Lo¬gon, DePorte, Felker, Brodkey,Savas, Collar.AGAINST: Birenbaum.NOT VOTING: McCarn, Stroz¬ier (Chairman).ABSTENTION: Garvin.ABSENT: Barry (who wouldhave voted against). Finer, Mac-lean, Apter (who would have votedagainst).The mood will be western at to¬ by David SherA fire broke out Friday in thesolution room, third floor of Kentlaboratory, badly burning Jim Second 'Venture'to be publishedweek from todayVenture, the MAROON literarybySeventeen hits and 16 runs subdued Navy Pier Tuesday on morrow night’s Spring Folk Fes- wilt, the assistant in charg&e. The this mTvvTStagg. Added to Saturday’s 5-2 conquest of the Illini, this tival in the gym of Ida Noyes. For fire was caused by the explosion ghort stories and Panof a bottle of ether, which Wilt poems canbarrage gave the Maroons a sweep of the two game series. the first folk program of this “ uuu:'- still be entered jn the iitei.ary sup.Freshman hurler Norm Anthony breezed to his first victory quarter, its sponsor, Student Un. W Afte^thSnitial explosion Wilt Plement contest if they areTuesday as he surrendered only one hit in seven innings, then ion, has procured the services of ran out o£ the solution room to the brought t0 the MAROON office,■vised up to allow six runs on six hits in all. Mel Lackey turned experts in folk dancing, Pete newly installed shower to put out Reynolds Club 201, by May 7. Two~ the fire on his person. He then *10 Pnzes are offered’in another fine performance Sat¬urday; this was also a six-hitter.Send Holmes to showersIllinois started Willie Holmesw as the victim of the deluxe. Hewas tagged for one run in thefirst and three in the second be¬fore he was flattened by a six-hit, six-run assault in the fourth.Maroon outfielder Dick Garcialed off with a walk, Saturday.Koenig forced him, but advancedon a fielder’s choice and scored onRowland’s line single to right.This flurry canceled Navy Pier’srun in the top of the inning.Pull double stealFour hits and an error account- (Saturday)AB Chicago:R H RBI1 1 1lb 0 0 0cf 0 1 1. . .4 1 1 01 1 0. . 4 1 2 2:ld, 2b . .. .4 1 1 0, 3b .... 0 0 0..32 5 8 5SC calls for student tradeto further universal peaceSmith’s band and Jim Lackey., ..r, ■ „ ' . . ‘ ' rushed to the fire extinguishersExhibition folk dancing, in ad- and put out the fire Dr< Jamesdition to student participation, b. Parsons, dean of students, Phy.will be presented by the Country Sci. division, commented thatDancers and the SU Folk Dancers. Wilt s presence of mind saved_, ... . „ . . . 0,oa „ Kent lab from probable destruc-The first call begins at 8:30 p.m., ^ ^and gals and fellas without dates wilt is now in Billings hospitalare invited. Admission is 75 cents, recovering from first and seconddegree burns. The hospital reportshim to be in fine condition. Give facts for photosAll fourth year College studentswhose pictures were taken forEcho: Midway should come to thatpublications' office, Reynolds Club304, between next Wednesday andMonday to give facts essential tothe printing of the pictures, editorGary Steiner announced today.Artists offer Schubert, Mozartin Fine Arts Quartet concertSchubert, Mozart and Kauder will constitute the programby Alan KimmelStating its belief that greater student understanding couldfurther the chances of world peace, Student Government on , „„«***„ Trili wlloulult lllt icuiiotflrJnn0amr^hirmi° Tamms April 19 passed a bil1 to expedite the exchange of students to be pTelenteTb^the Fin^Trte Quakerne7tTues^y at"8"30between the University of Chicago and seven other umversi- p.m. in Mandel Hall. The proceeds of the concert, sponsoredties outside the United States. The schools are the Umver- by the UC Settlement Benefits Committee and SU, will go tosity of Bologna (Italy). University of Calcutta (India), the settlement.Charles University (Czecho- The Schubert quartet in G major, opus 161, was written inSlovakia), the Free University ot £bose universities which have ac- 1826, two years before Schubert’sthe second. Casey and Tammsexecuted a delayed double stealfor one more in the third. Tamms’single and Lackey’s double weregood for the last run in the sixth.Box score (Tuesday) Chicago:AB R HGarcia, rf 3Huntsman, rf-cf ....1Koenig, If 5Baum, IX .1Gilbertson, If 0Lackey, 3b-cf 4Frazier, rf 0Rowland, cf-lf 6Casey, ss 5Miles, 3b 0Borowltz, lb 3Welnraub, 3b-ss ..2Tamms, c 6Frankenfeld, 2b ....3Zoller (P-run) 0Margolis. 2b 0Anthony, p 6 RBI2■010020210300300116 ' 17 16 ^ ®?rlul JiG®^nany Umver- cepted the SG invitations . . . ; death at the age of 31. It is, to- larly exciting. Abraham has saidsity of Grenoble (France), Umver- (d) report regularly to SG and gether with the D minor, (Tod of it, “It is neither formal-norsity of Moscow (Soviet Union), the student body on the progress und das Madchen) quartet, the C pretty. It is a mad rondo violentand Zagreb University (Yugo- of its work.” major quintet, and the C major in rhythm and wild in harmony.”slavia). Sander Levin, chairman of SG’s symphony, one of Schubert’s late The Haydn Quartet, opus 20, no.The bill directs SG to send an NSA committee, stated that the great works. The inscription on 4, in D major, is the most popu-inquiry to the student bodies of letters have not yet been sent be- Schubert’s tomb, “The art of mu- lar of the six opus 20 quartets. Itthe seven schools “as to the pos- cause 0f the word “invitation” ap- sic here entombed a rich pos- is in Haydn’s most comic vein,sibility of exchanging delegations pearing in the original proposed session but yet more beautiful except for the relatively short,of students . . . for one academic text. According to Levin, Director hopes,” must certainly have had slow movement, a pathetic themeyear at the beginning of the fall o£ student Activities William Bi- reference to the G major quartet with four variations,semester, 1951.” It specifies that renbaum said that since the let- which merits the most extrava- The performance of the Kauderthe SG-NSA (National Student £er “invited” the foreign students gant hopes. Quartet, No. 11, will be a worldAssociation) committee, in coop- to attend UC it had1 to do with of- The last movement is particu- premiere.Totals 45eration with the UC.Administra- fioial UC admission policies andf 7p mv\ PPYt ^on an(* re^ona^ an(t national so had £o gG through the Admin-tUHLCi k NSA should do the following:Will send representative UCers“(a) Receive the replies fromthe above universities; (b) if thereis interest among foreign univer¬sities to make the necessary ar¬rangements, financial and other-to include songsof five centuriesUniversity of Chicago Choir/di¬rected by Richard Vikstrom, willpresent a varied concert at 4 p.m.,Sunday. May 13, in RockefellerMemorial Chapel. The programwill be a collection drawn fromlive centuries of choral composi¬tion. Included will be GiovanniGabrieli’s In Ecclesiis, RandallThompson’s The Peaceable King¬dom, Igor Stravinsky’s Mass, andLila Boulanger’s Psaume 24.Tickets to this concert are onsale at $1.20 in Mandel Hall corri¬dor, the choir office in Ida Noyes,wr at the Reynolds Club desk. istration.Will arrange with* State DepartmentThe current amended text haseliminated this objection by stat¬ing that “this letter is inquiringwhether your student body wouldwise; (c) to accept applications be interested in such a programfrom UC students and select dele¬gations representative of UC toMAROONelects KimmelAt its annual election meetinglast Friday, the MAROON electedAlan Kimmel to be editor nextyear. Kimmel has been known tothe MAROON since 1948 and isa student in the geography de¬partment. He served as copy edi¬tor this quarter. (of student exchange). If there isinterest, then this committee shalltry to make the necessary . . .arrangements with the Universityand the U.S. State Department.”Levin noted that the committeeis now waiting for final Admin¬istration approval before it sendsthe letters.He further reminded the cam¬pus that the regional NSA con¬vention held here April 22 passeda resolution in favor of studentexchanges. Fine Arts Quartet of the American Broadcasting Company. From left toright: Leonard Sorkin, Joseph Steponsky, violins; George Sopkin, Cello;and Sheppard Lehnoff, viola.YPace 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 4, 19!Friday# May 4LECTURE sponsored by Calvert Club.Dr Frank Brown will speak on "In¬dustry-Council System.’’ De Sales cen¬ter at 8 p.m. Free.INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOW¬SHIP sponsors Dr. Karl Olsson. Tospeak on ‘‘The New Testament Con¬cept of the Church.” Sun parlor—Ida4 Noyes, I':30 p.m.VINCENT HOUSE CANTEEN, JudsonLibrarv. 9 p.m. to 12 p.m.INTER - DORM FORMAL. Turnabout.Wlndemere East.Saturday, May 6SPRING FOLK FESTIVAL In Ida Noyesgym at 8:30 p.m. Folk dancing to PeteSmith's band and Jim Lakey's calling.KITE FLY sponsored by Student Chris¬tian Association. 3 p.m.—Ida Noyesstep6.Sunday, May 6BIKE to Palos Park at 8:30 a m. Backat 7 p.m. Leave from in front of IdaNoyes. Transportation 85 cents. Bringlunch and pioneering spirit. For in¬formation call PL 2-9087.BOX LUNCH PICNIC. Meet at De Sales UCsr goes to UN inParis on peace goalJoseph Polowsky, 1663 S. Cen¬tral Park, taxi driver and UC stu¬dent took Wednesday, April 25off to celebrate a one-man “holi¬day for peace.” He is one of sixGI’s who met a Russian patrol onthe banks of the Elbe river in1945. The men from the two arm¬ies took the “Oath of the Elbe,”an informal promise to help pre¬serve the peace for which theyhad been fighting.In November he’ll go to Parisfor the General Assembly meet¬ing. He hopes that they will com¬memorate, with appropriate cere¬monies, the anniversary of April25, when UN armies met at theElbe in Germany as friends toopen a peaceful world. 5 UCers hurtin gang attacksTuesday, a gang of hoodlumsarmed with kitchen knives, brassknuckles, and belts surrounded agroup of 24 South Side students,including Ef UCers.The students, members of theUnited Jewish Synagogue Youth,were surrounded and threatenedat thte “Point,” 55th Street andthe Lake. When two of the youthsattempted to escape and phonethte police, they were beaten withbrass knuckles, and although theyescaped, Gilbert Cornfield, UCstudent, was slightly injured.A Hyde Park High School stu¬dent was badly beaten, and re¬ceived near-fatal injuries to hishead and eyes. The students werefinally freed when police arrivedat the scene.center at 4 p.m. Free.INTERCHURCH BREAKFAST. FrankNelson In group discussion of NewTestament. Chapel House at 9:15 a.m.20 cents.LAS! NOYES BOX. Floor show, dancing,sandwiches and new records. 8 to 11p.m. Men 25 cents; women free.Monday, May 7EXHIBITION by artist members of theRenaissance Society. Goodspeed 108.9 a.m. - 5 p.m. through June 17.MOVIE—“Die Fledermaus,” in German.International House 46 cents. 8 p.m.Tuesday, May 8 Arthur, sponsored by the Rocket So¬ciety, Soc. Sci. 122. 7:15 p.m. end9:15 p.m.Thursday, May 10FINAL CONTEST for the Milo P. Jew¬ett prize for Bible reading. BondChapel. 3:30 p.m.TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT, free.7 p.m. Prizes. Ida Noyes.UC WIVES FOR PEACE meeting. Soc.Sci. Common Room. All invited. 8:30p.m. In a statement Wednesday,Dean of Students in the Collegesaid, “We will get in touch withHyde Park High School, and workwith them to stop these gang at¬tacks.”Other UC students involved inthe incident were: Barbara Perl¬man, Paula Silver, Roy Alpert,Jerome Kastril, and Sholom Hur-witz.FINE ARTS QUARTET—Mandel Hall.8:30 p.m. Admission $1.50.PERSONAL GROWTH COMMITTEE,SCA meeting. Ida Noyes, 7:30 p.m.INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOW¬SHIP discussion on the Book of James.7:30 p.m. Ida Noyes Hall. tj/te PHOTOGRAPHERSWednesday, May 9MOVrE—“Mr. Smith Goes to Washing¬ton” with James Stewart and Jean MIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETHINT NOW FOR THE BESTI"Graduate toNewBrkerSI"FOR THIS PEN YOU’LLDISCARD ALL OTHERS!Graduation is your day! Tomake it extra wonderful,hint now for r New Parker“51”. This is the world’s most-wanted pen—favored by leadersin every field. The only pen withthe Aero-metric Ink System, itbrings new writing pleasure.A 14K gold point, tipped withPlathenium, glides satin-smooth.., ink meters out into a perfectline. The reservoir is Pli-glass.(There are no rubber parts!) Itstores more ink visibly. And fill¬ing this pen is simplicity itself!A New Parker “51” will makeyour graduation the commence¬ment of new pride, new writingsatisfaction. The Parker PenCompany, Janesville, Wisconsin,U. S. 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A SPORTS MOOTS-i ■ -May 1^51 Page 3THE CHICAGO MAROONAction Urged NOWto Obtain Benefitsof Faster ReadingTake Advantage of SpecialStudent Rates — Save Moneyby Enrolling Before May 31If you have thought about betterreading training, now is the timeto do something about it!Save money by enrolling now atthe Foundation for Better Reading.You take advantage of special stu¬dent rates in effect until May 31.You may start the course imme¬diately, or begin just as soon asyour present school term is over.Foundation Training Easy,ConvenientThrough easy, convenient trainingat the Foundation for Better Read¬ing, you learn to read faster, toachieve greater understanding ofwhat you read, and to concentratebetter. Average results show im¬provement of over 150% in readingspeed, with improved comprehen¬sion. Eight per cent of cases quad¬rupled their reading speed. Youget your work done faster, and in¬crease your reading enjoyment too.Only a few short weeks of Foun¬dation training brings you thesevaluable benefits. No long hours ofstudy. No advance preparation nec¬essary. And, you can set your ownhours — day or evening. There is real satisfaction and fun in finishingyour lessons quickly and knowing that you arelearning more too.You will read faster and speed up your abilityto learn through easy, convenient training atFoundation for Better Reading.Here Arc Recommendations from PeopleWho Have Taken Foundation TrainingErnie Kartell, midwest universitysophomore: “I was amazed to find outeasily my normal reading rate wasraised from 325 to almost 1200 wordsa minute. Because I now do my read¬ing in far less time, I find that I havemore time left for other activities.”Gerald R. Gorman, Chicago attorney:‘‘The Foundation course satisfied aneed I have felt for a long time. Mypleasure in reading has greatly in¬creased, and my work has been madeeasier as a result.” Michael A. Geraghty, midwest uni¬versity junior: ‘‘It is an experience tosee reading-speed grow lesson by les¬son . . . comprehension increasedsteadily with speed . . . now an indis-pcnsible aid in my studies.”Edward A. Fischer, Press Officerwith U. S. Army, former Professor ofJournalism: ‘‘I developed such smootheye movement that I can now readtwice as long without eyestrain. Dur¬ing the next year I will probably readas much as I totaled during the pastfour years.”Come In NOW ... Get Free BookletRemember, it pays to read better . . . and it pays extra tostart Foundation for Better Reading training now. Special rateuntil May 31 only. Come in for reading survey . . . and besure to have a copy of "You Can Read Better." It's yoursfor the asking.3oundation flor d^etter l^eadin^100 East Ohio Street Chicago 11, IllinoisTelephone: Ml chigan 2-3863To: Mr. Steven Warren, Executive DirectorFoundation for Better Reading100 East Ohio Street, Dept. C-3Chicago 11, IllinoisQ Please send me your 10-page booklet, "You Can Read Better.| | I would like to arrange for a reading survey.MissName MrsMr.Street AddressCity and State(Please Print) Box ends seasonThe lost Noyes Box of the quar¬ter will be held in the Ida Noyesgym from 8 to 11 p.m. Sunday.A floor show will include singingand adagio dancing. Sandwichesand drinks will be served. Admis¬sion will be 25 cents for men,nothing for women.Investigation...(from page 1)ent at this previous meeting.Schwab calls for trialSchwab further called for for¬mal trial proceedings by SG whichhe said might result in reform ofthe MAROON and/or revision ofits constitution. This was not partof the committee resolution final¬ly adopted.The MAROON also quoted bothits own constitution and the stu¬dent bill of rights. Schwab admit¬ted he was not familiar witheither document. The 10th provi¬sion of the bill of rights reads inpart: “In cases, however, wherea publication enjoys a monopolyof University facilities and fi¬nances, the recognizing authoritymay properly insist on adequatesafeguards in the constitution ofthe publication to insure that therequirements for membership belimited to interest, activity andjournalistic ability.“The staff of the publicationshall administer these safeguardsand shall be the sole judge ofthese qualifications.’’As the meeting ended, Schwabchallenged the MAROON to printan accurate account of the pro¬ceedings.Strozier picks boardThe committee consists of stu¬dent, faculty, and administrationrepresentatives chosen by DeanStrozier in consultation with SGpresident Roger Woodworth.Members present for this votewere: Ann Collar, Hugh Brodkey,Frank Logan, Manny Savas, Mol¬ly Felker, Roger Woodworth, An¬ton DePorte and Charles Garvin.Faculty and administration mem¬bers were Dean Strozier, RuthMcCarn, William Birenbaum andJoseph Schwab. Not present wereBunny Barry, Professors HermanFiner, Norman F. Maclean, andDr. Nathaniel S. Apter.The MAROON questioned theright of the committee to initiatean investigation and whether itwas in any way representative.Strozier answered that the com¬mittee was not legislative but onlyadvisory. Because of his opinionof the jurisdiction of the group,Garvin subsequently withdrewfrom the board.MAROON fears for freedomGarvin said the MAROON waswilling to admit its errors but Palos sceneof SU outingA trip to Palos Park near Wil¬low Springs has been planned forSunady by the SU outing depart¬ment. Students will leave fromthe porch of Ida Noyes at 8:30a.m. and return about 7 p.m.Cost will be 85 cents. Individ¬uals will provide their own lunch¬es. Further information can beobtained from Barbara Rohrke,PL 2-9087.Phi Deltas gatheringto have 'time' theme“Journey Through Time” willbe the title of Phi Delta Theta’sannual open house tomorrownight at the chapter house, 5737Woodlawn. The party, which isfree, will start at 8 p.m., andbeer will be served.Various parts of the house willbe decorated in styles rangingfrom cave-men times to the post-atomic era.felt strongly that this kind of in¬vestigation might threaten ^tsfreedom of expression. The paperwas also concerned about the roleof the administration in any in¬vestigation of a student paper.Voting for the proposal withSchwab were Ann Collar, HughBrodkey, Roger Woodworth, An¬ton DePorte, Molly Felker, MannySavas, and Frank Logan. WilliamBirenbaum voted against the pro¬posal. Mrs. McCarn and DeanStrozier were not voting. CharlesGarvin abstained. Bunny Barryleft the meeting before the votebut would have voted against theproposal. Dr. Nathaniel S. Apter,also absent from the meeting, re¬corded adverse opinion to theSchwab proposal. Professors Mac-lean and Finer had no comment asthe MAROON went to press.The full text of the motion fol¬lows:“An investigation of all the stories ofall issues of the MAROON during 1950-’51 be made by a group of judges whovould be able to analvve the MAROONin the light of its own experimentaltendencies as well as traditional jouf-nalistic practices.“The analysis would be passed uponfive criteria:“1. Choice of what to report.“2. Knowledge of what to say aboutwhat one reports.“3. Background knowledge of what isreported.“4. Ability to write in good style.“5. Ability to present intelligent andpleasant appearance.”“A. A survey of the existing condi¬tions is the first step.“B. The investigation of the conductof the MAROON represents the secondstep and is to be based upon the re¬sults of the survey as material evidence.“C. A subcommittee from the Stu¬dent-Faculty Advisory Board is to beappointed to ascertain the manner inwhich the investigation is to be madeand to report back to the Board at itsnext meeting.”SCHOOLS & COLLEGESBusiness Careers MAROON policy is to reject discrimina¬tory advertising. Please report violationsof this policy to us.COLLEGE4-MONTH INTENSIVE COURSESECRETARIAL TRAINING forCOLLEGE STUDENTS and GRADUATESStarting June, October, FebruaryBulletin A, on request.■ Registration now open.NEXT COURSE STARTS JUNE ItLifetime Placement ServiceWrite Admission CounselorCo-Educational • G. I. ApprovedTHE GREGG COLLEGE37 South Wabash Avenue, Chicago 3. IllinoisPhone STate 2-1880 TERESA DOLANDANCING SCHOOLLearn to Dance NowPrivate and Class LessonsBacked by 35 Years ExperienceDaily 12 noon to 10 p.m.1208 E. 63rd St. Tel. HY 3-3080To Your AdvantageCollege women specially trained for es¬sential jobs are much needed. It will payyou handsomely to add Gibbs secre¬tarial training to your college course.U'rile College Course Dean for catalogKatharine Gibbs230 Park Ave., NEW YORK 17 33 Plymouth St. MONTCLAIRSI E. Superior SL. CHICAGO 11 1SS Angell St, PROVIDENCE 690 Marlborough St. BOSTON 16 CHICAGO COLLEGE ofOPTOMETRYFully AccreditedAn Outstanding Collegein a Splendid ProfessionEntrance requirement thirty se¬mester hours of credits in speci¬fied courses. Advanced standinggranted for additional L. A. creditsin specified courses.Registration Now OpenExcellent clinical facilities. Rec¬reational and athletic activities.Dormitories on campus. Approvedfor Veterans.1845-X Larrabee St.CHICAGO 14, ILLINOISifglljf5s>avaSfijSSjgS«3°5t:s£■Bpsb|os5$S&3**§g0®2®2t"S3**d~_.2*p &v-.eq■*13^1**^6£OX^iiwV g«|Sas-| J?I3$2aS-j^S^gfc;^tJfliS1*e!—*jd••» laSflsrScia,;«u«. ?"Za£'OZ2-~vG'pSv'j*g;°as3|!:ai;Bg_>><g2fl:<u°.2*"S^-c2~g* §5®SS*«53l*4*£5«»dS».9|°IIIsSt*aj2,d".S^SgfcsBl^a aI||ssc1a*s&^oSs H.c;~r-«*-•w*-t'w_,to«sfcrtS„s?‘Oa'*“Oa3HS,^{JH©sgsc”2§*rtS355.3ftgsa2«-S«ifl®gMS-2S8flo2Soa8►5*8.3-8-§&§►<**sifl0^c/)C8ft)??*",'o£3&b.A■g*3~.2s“SbSo^-2*v'S.'Sp^fflCS§.«“3°g«^5o3oSuo«u£>£23»r;BcSflflai; comSa5■s,5“§'hs°“ S3ii^£CH«3SS2«5iJ«"S,,2s»Sopfifl/sS«,3i*os<0«{E5ggw5o^|fto&3 £.--ag33s-o««§g»a<uc ^SSsSoSgBS-gg^gsg^-—•Or,uC3*J4JiHc8oocaS4(HJ+jp!il|lis|lgig3as.£o°Swq^l^^3<2®^0g2*44«*3Sirflsa,£»2«> 3-5-.|sS5„gS;E«8=llS5#x,%ga-3&g<o:W“uO^S'SS*ils&il^||l||■**o2§’3o>>J5>443*-3.23-“a.2I-5g«-S8a2sSsso^^«Sgfls£3st 3m*1aft«2*XM3*.*%*2S|S3 ««S3PS#. H'~a&>«.3m Co22 v22 J3-C0J3_uvu“2fi«oSjist ^M_-4).^Z•C^4*t3—■oSm -•R”-^bcQ0^32rt2‘'iio•S“’g35^5.ouSS^g-B^S-«3s5213wSpo^?SiSKd^q“gp^B-^c2*3ts 0°t»acS^E^maS-^eSoQs», aft)*rtofi,2*»cA*0e&2ft)S2"**^”3M3fi3§^.s£p*"osPsS2s&s^g5L!!£3o2aaac^j-ga*S-MohS<u3«^Bc1Hu)•fl•tIIIIrt4)•£f§S«SS2«S2 1'£3Scow«|.sj°#SSS?ow»2LOining 331SzS?:5M*u>hEh«vui5fcSb"^ OftIQog'BS’SSB'g2,i^t-ge;?*ill'5TS35«"P 8"a<uEp25%jjSa^"ii&'§Ha-21«E'a!2«asga*g»°j2*33c"3S§-2*>2fcto°i:"3Sg13")g-ooW2-g£2£!00|§:o 22-2E§«o3ag.bS30B0o?NittnCArfift*tL.T*.v>intQ)•rq>■ga-gE3.2E~C°i;*-On5!-15P.xHjllllllllllllllllllllllimillllllllllllllllltllllllllljlllllllllllliillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHjsOOOOLAIAIAIA•-00SO0000IAOQ)V':«x&;a>^>oZ|c-•tO32ci^gV°5&£22nC°“■o>Is «^o2h. S^2xBS>flIw•btS3in MHH >:«a«O)CO£Lko*■■2«aoc*o„ C"S£-o^2#%«i»«OC^cSoX Cfi5.5se3ua**«wg3.-^1• gxqSfSlmrnm<-vs-rottwus;(IMCjj^ O-rfStSS.,•2o§2«see^oaOa *3S3k5.3Ul2.S®«^«,goIi£§sl^>-rji5§!otfbSl*hi23*o ■a•*3»«>•omt8*5sSi3B3O“15ra3E<CCS3g2«-T^jja1*Ui^pi*©ssft)—5iuucmw«asMt«ti 5«4l-S-3•So-aa 5.1a>**s«.§ v§*>—E**5aao3<8*=*;2$■«*k^5-s.^s ^t«.2i^ iO=<&«,2C3k3KXO3UCB_lEcoM__9E2S®•SuS^13£3-So>S°Sa^*8iisEio=!iimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimi!2T3a>ioaica«-IS’SS-oS.E^'gr.o>*a2-s:oSc81a»^r5^os«nZX'io Bwi,3 CBO2S^I“■8"Sji’S EEjc.■?09^soO2 «S <23-E2 c—5■-■52oehB a*1»«<I5"qV3S-kUO«<"kflaaOX!73^3*J”Sr-J?XSu«T©-<UW©•IS*ag? uOnq ^2gg?gss! £3SaS«M*S•<?u3Cl w<BaE©;Jk’’*a5n^So3 2.>M^gWS2t:iz;KJS41X) Kwfl33ft£3S<8g rTj*-<>2 S5sa.2<Am.5^-COw!CKA2^2all SS°lS” 331wos<'♦H.o>>CcoEc$RQ3MW)JJ^SuSIS1 l«£“11i P5w»-r; MV5ft).2ft)^17E»2<<2^hS“c.|b8| SbSJ'B”|^l'£,'fk^csSi3asrt a;.aa°|“||P^..3.2AO O-e«oCS)Q8b-•c3cS_j“K 'g^^Efk5>£>g22vojsvm“cqmmOo«30>o-gSag>Jo©s3MM^°8w^^2•iPQ§gg Oy.0>«*Hfrt 5oSc?■oSOow5-|-gm.»cgg.-aoc/}tflnj!w3o_eO'O•o0»^2o“■H§|W)iI?OCo «H"O4-»,COCua;oson6€.s<UC•“Csocoe+j*4)Ec«CO•-C^3£:9«£0)C40sc2JLi *!sCM£>Ooi^'MCOg°o38SH>*-O>10^o..<4Hr-*^0 2S3>>£e«o-syS-.'Hhog'S g•£o“aocc.2wq,S,SgSgMoM8qJ PuV..-J34>40o>3.2SSi He**>ho>2 >£ag'.'OpeOcBHCbjO)Hort«uLUV'U)ga>t3o a;3540j)HH•1)W)O*MHCOjoa;g*3•3*S_,"E3sc5 CflJO£2•«to OrO•a'^CJ^^■jr%1—11£ &s!°l=ii|2s:e§a.2^So8Ergh^W. 4>2<U5-S+3•WT3SQ,S3—°Oc«w,§wt_>».tig*”3woct3S.ti5ct3*SawS•S-0‘8c•-««eIIm^-ocEfts'?4BQMHMk■*“**,‘r*-r*..r'-.'...-:rfti-M0--.-*CT-*S.*■■fr;-:"-1 —M*y 4, 1951 Page 5Mtw W>»t a./ \tnttaM mmn..tlO«VnO!»'S'0»mutsmmoonWEEKTodov ntond dynamic k 00, 8:00film"— MatIC 00Tire#Better see It from the beginning! Offer Summer To lecture on Chinawater awardA scholarship to the NationalRed Cross Aquatic School atCamp Heffernan, Tawanda, Illi¬nois, will be awarded May 9 at10:30 in Reynolds Club 202. Thescholarship covers the total ex¬pense of $45 including room,meals and instructional suppliesfor the course which lasts fromJune 10 to 20.Any student who holds a WaterSafety Instructor's Certificate China will be discussed by MissMaud Russell in a talk at 4 p.m.today in Rosenwald 2.Miss Russell has lived andworked in China for 25 years asa staff member of the YWCA.She is presented under the aus¬pices of the UC Committee forInformation on China.will be eligible for the competi¬tion. The person receiving thescholarship will become the Safe¬ty Services Chairman of the UCchapter of the Red Cross for thecoming year. Warn UC driversThe University community iscautioned concerning a marked in¬crease in recent thefts from carsin the area. Drivers are urged notto leave articles of value insidecars where they may be seen. Ahigh percentage of the thefts haveOccurred during cchoul hours.Businessmenhave guests1 :MIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMI»»llltlllllimilllimiimmillllllllimilimmil||||||immi||||||||||fi Acting Chancellor Lawrence“ " Kimpton, Senator Paul Douglas,who will talk on ftHas FederalReserve Policy Fed Inflation?”,and Dean Garfield Cox will beamong the guests at the annualdinner of the School of Businessthis evening at the Cloister Club.The program of the evening willinclude presentation of variousawards to the outstanding mem¬bers of the Business School, andannouncement of the names ofthe students elected to Beta Gam-S ma Sigma, the school’s honoraryhaydn, D major, opus 20. no 4 g society.university of Chicago settlement benefits committeestudent unionpresent'fine arts quartet UC Pressappointmentsare disclosedThe University of Chicago Pres*has announced a number of recentappointments to top editorial posi¬tions. Rollin D. Hemens, who hasbeen associated with the UC Pressfor 27 years, including the lastsix years, as assistant director,has been named acting director.J. A. O. Larsen, professor ofAncient History at the University,and editor since 1939 of the schol¬arly review “Classical Philos¬ophy,” has been named editor ofhumanities and social sciences,and Haydon Carruth is the newacting associate editor.The election of Dr. Franklin C.McLean, M.D., as secretary of theCommittee on publications in bi¬ology and medicine has also beenannounced.«/ 7 O 7 ' —*' — ”schubert, G major, opus 161kaudor, no. 11, world premiere8:30 p.m.1.50 tax inc.taesday, may 8 8:30 p.m.mandel hall 1.50 tax inc.iimmmmummmmnimmumHuimmumimmmnmimmmmmmmmmmmimlgMu teaser !"the thmqSo now when-*. l.... V>m u.tustuff Help exam latecomersAll college sludents who failedto get their comp material thisweek, or whose material is notcomplete can obtain it at *heBoard of Examiners, Room 304,Administration Building.So now by the carton.\ buy em oyBarbara PjlteTHoustonl/niversity oWm blue eyes;j r.Wes my^r^UaSWOOn'LUCKIES TASTE BETTERTHAN ANY OTHER CIGARETTE!Fine tobacco—and only fine tobacco—can give youa better-tasting cigarette. And L.S./M.F.T.—LuckyStrike means fine tobacco. So, for the best-tastingcigarette you ever smoked, Be Happy—Go Lucky!How about startin’ with a carton—today?LS./M FT- Lucky StrikeMeans Fine TobaccoCOP*, THr AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANYLoiS ^ UniversityWayne L/mv.-v- . I a -fellow wKo,a-4'uXy^.ofrrse-ar»--Arnold Friedman”pr„tl Inslil“l‘ SF to participatein Big Ten meetA team of Student Forum de¬baters is being sent to the West¬ern Big Ten Conference to be heldin Iowa City on May 11 and 12.The topic to be debated is “Shouldthe United States Support the Re¬armament of Western Germany?”Office to giveaid to typistA typing room for commutingstudents has been established inReynolds Club 303 under the su¬pervision of the Student ActivitiesOffice.Mr. William Birenbaum, direc¬tor of student activities, has an¬nounced that students may signup in Reynolds Club 202 to use atypewriter there for one hour pe¬riods during the day. Students willbe held responsible for the ma¬chine and the condition of theroom while they are using thesefacilities. Typewriters will be fur¬nished by the Activities Office.UC Veep todiscuss billsA public meeting to discuss theBroyles and McClintock Bills willbe held Tuesday, May 8, 8 p.m.,at the First Unitarian Church,57th and Woodlawn.One of the speakers at the meet¬ing, sponsored by the South SideCouncil to protect American Free¬doms and other civic organiza¬tions, will be Lynn Wililams, vice-president of the University.Terming the proposed Broylesand McClintock bills a “challengeto your American freedom,” theCouncil urges all citizens to op¬pose thought control in Illinois.Local andLong Distance MovingStorage Facilities for Books,Record Cabinets, Trunks, orCarloads of FurniturePeterson FireproofWarehouse, Inc.1011 East Fifty-fifth StreetBUtterfield 8-6711DAVID L. SUTTON, PresidentPage 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 4, 1951Stars of ballet Actors ploy the port Great skill in pacing marksnu One of the most unfortunate features of past University . *j_| !^OYl tOd Theatre productions has been an apparent tendency of the OTCJ3n TOOlcll I PI lxOCK0T0l|0rOne of the greatest things thathas hit Chicago in a long time isthe New York City Ballet with itssparkling, brilliant young corps deballet, plenty of good soloists and18 new ballets. The dancing shouldbe good since the company rehearses five hours a day and co¬operates to the fullest extent.Miss Maria Tallchief, the primaballerina of the company who in One of the most unfortunate features of past UniversityTheatre productions has been an apparent tendency of theactors to assume that because they are amateurs they areentitled to a certain lowering of standards. It was thereforevery encouraging that with John Webster's Duchess of Malfineither Paul Sills, its director, nor the cast allowed themselvesthis license. The result was Last Tuesday evening William Teague played a mixture ofeighteenth and twentieth century compositions in an organrecital at Rockefeller chapel. His program included worksof Handel, Bach, Thomas Arne, Mozart, Marcel Dupre, andseveral other moderns.1that a Dlav which mieht nor- good. As the Duchess, Janet Good- Through his recital Teague exhibited much musical compe-man, was seriously handicapped tance and understanding. His ~ —■^ ^ ^ by an inadequate voice which seri- phrasing was well thought out simply constructed and undis-slow and tedious was only slight- ^ jagiveness and meticulously executed, tinuished. Mozart’s Fantasy in FW so- -. . . . Especially pleasing was the rea- major is unequivocally Mozart—In a way the acting was almost As Antonio, Paid Sills was very f .. B . Preiude lyric and classicly formed,too careful, too'selfconscious. Ad- good. Francis Weaver as Bosola sonable pace of the Bach Prelude compositionsprivate life is Mrs. George Balan- mittedly it is difficult to be spon- was unfortunately over-interpre- and Fugue in a minor, a piece oft- "omprised the s^idchine, works on her dancing all taneous and natural with such a tative, but he was undoubtedly en given virtuoso horse-race per- of the pro„ram with the possiblethe time and says that the most play( but when an actor appears effective. formance. His technique was with exception of Dupre’s Prelude andcomfortable position is on her to have carefully calculated where The play was difficult; in the minor exceptions adequate for fuRe are banal stylized, and non¬toes, although it is not exactly be will life an eyebrow, while the final analysis it can be said that the demanding program. communicative,natural. man at the switches is playing despite its several shortcomings, Of the eighteenth century Finally, the chapel organ soundsWhen asked how long she sentimental mood music with the the production deserves congrat- pieces, the Bach works are well a hopelessly unmusical pedalwould continue dancing, she said lights, the effect is inevitably ulations for rising out of the rank known, the typical Handel Con- point. It is otherwise not discon-"as long as anyone’s willing towatch me.” Similarly, HughLaing, one of the principal danc¬ers in the company and the hus¬band of dancer Diana Adams,said, “I’ll dance until I breakapart.’’ The only advice both ofthese dancers could give to thoseinterested is, “don’t look to rightor left; watch your own techniqueand go slowly while workinghard.”The ballets are interesting, andLincoln Kirsten, the director ofthe company, hopes to make ourcity their second home and comehere twice a year.At the reception given for thecompany Sunday afternoon at In¬ternational House by the ChicagoBallet Guild, Kirsten offered the cloying. One could only wish thatsome of this care had been direct¬ed to the players’ enunciation.With the exception of Ferdin¬and, where there was no discern¬ible development, the interpreta¬tion of the roles was unusuallyentire costume department andmaterials for any production theGuild puts on.The most outstanding ballets inthe company’s repertoire are Fire¬bird, Prodigal Son, Age of Anx¬iety and the Sylvia pas de deux.By the time this article is readthere will only be four perform¬ances left. Go see this company;they are well worth it and deserveyour support.Barbara Perlman amateur category.Vivian Margoris certo No. 10 less well known.Arne’s solo for flute is pleasant, certingly imperfect.Harry C. Maguire, Jr.DR. RIELS R. NELSONAMD ASSOCIATES1138 E. 63rd HY 3-5352OPTOMETRISTS and OPTICIANS—o—• Discounts to NSA purchase card holders• Eye examination and glassesexaminationRapid and accurate optical repairinga feastfor the eyesNext best thing to living in Hawaii—is living inVanuana—new Van Heusen sport shirt that will haveyou humming sweet Leilani all season long. Plentysoft, plenty smooth—the shirts, that is—and they’reas cool as a night in Waikiki. $365 and $4500 Van HeusenREO. T. M."the world1 s smartest” shirtsPHILLIPS-JONES CORP., NEW YORK 1, N. Y. y xy Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests p7Y VY Number 18.. .THE RACCOON •£“They can't trick anold grad like me!y •’f=V?V'P s hades of the roarin’ Twenties! All duded up inhis ancient benny — but he has modern ideas on testing cigarettemildness! He’s tried every “quickie” cigarette test inthe book — and they’re not fooling him one bit! He knows for dang-sure thatcigarette mildness can’t be determined by a cursory sniff or a single, quickly-dispatched puff. He doesn’t have to go back to school to know thatthere is one real test — a test that dispels doubt, fixes fact.IVs the sensible test... the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test,%which asks you to try Camels as your steady smoke—on a pack-after-pack, day-after-day basis. No snap judgments needed.After you’ve enjoyed Camels — and only Camels — for30 days in your “T-Zone” (T for Throat, T for Taste), wcbelieve you’ll know why ...More People Smoke Camelsthan any other cigarette l yyyy'May 4, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7What college papersare sayingby Horry C. Moguire, Jr.Illinois Institute of Technology“Pictures of the ugliest of the ugly went on display Tuesdayin the Student Union. After a one day delay,‘Caused by thefailure of the cafeteria to provide jars for collecting penniesas promised, the annual Ugly Man contest got rolling . . .Votes are cast for contestants by dropping money into thejars to which contestants’ pictures are attached. Each centcounts for one vote ... contest . . ^ , ■UC trackmenchairman stated that thisyear’s trophy has a two-quartcapacity.”Cavalier Daily—U. of Virginia.“In a release yesterday, the Stu¬dent Council stated that they wishto remind students that the lawsof the State of Virginia prohibitthe drinking of beer in publictheaters. The local court has beenquite severe in dealing with viola¬tors of this law!“A check of the police court bythe Cavalier revealed that a stu¬dent was arrested an<j fined $25for drinking beer in the Para¬mount Theatre last week, and thata similar case was reported in theUniversity Theatre a few weeksago.”Los Angeles Collegian.“The Los Angeles Police De¬partment-is recruiting on CityCollege campus and qualifiedgraduates and undergraduatesmay fulfill long-cherished ambi¬tions to out-Spade Sam or Queenit over Ellery.”Michigan Daily.Economics instructors were giv¬en a little advice the other day ina lecture by Prof. William B.Palmer. “An instructor must getthe subject matter across to thestudents rather than just gettingthe subject matter out of himself.Of necessity, he must have asense of humor. ... It is notenough that a teacher know hissubject matter; he must be inter¬ested in it himself. .. . An instruc¬tor must be able to interpret andsupplement the text book ma¬terial.”The De Patilia Letters to theEditor.The doctrine of giving two testsa semester and grading the stu¬dent on the result of these twotests seems to be impregnated inthe very walls of this university.. . . For two weeks out of the se¬mester students suffer from nerv¬ous exhaustion, poor digestion,insomnia and cold sweats. . . .“They fall back into the habit ofaccumulating great blocks of un¬studied material until the nightbefore the test.” win, 72 to 59Taking their third straight winof the season, UC varsity trackteam Saturday beat LawrenceCollege of Appleton, Wis.f 72-59.Marc Goff, Van Gras, and PaulMichael each won two events asChicago piled up nine first places.Other firsts were scored byCharles Norcross, Hugh Brodky,and the one-mile relay team.Goff of Chicago and Halleck ofLawrence tied for meet highscores, each taking 16 points.Luther Institutebeats JV, 5 to 4The JV basebal lteam droppeda game to Luther Institute lastWednesday by a score of five tofour.Th Jayvees were leading, goinginto the last half of the seventh,but Luther, despite having twoouts, managed to sneak two runsacross home plate.The L uther team led the Jay¬vees in hits, having collected nineto U High’s six.CorrectionPleaseLost w«»ek our odvertisementoffered lightweight biycles forsale ot $47.50. This wos 6nerror, os the price should havebeen $47.50 and up. We apolo¬gize to the many people whowere misled by this error andpledge thot it will not occurin the future.Jackson ParkBike Shop5333 Loke PorkRIDE ALightweightBICYCLEFrame. Ugf'wej* Hand Brakes.TwO**ee Narr0wT.res•****TZ Spnng Saddleromlortab' ' -*C, Pump.Tools. Toolcase. ^NEW 1951 MODELSEquipped with 3-Speed GearMake Your Selection from thesefamous brand namesSchwinn - Rudge - RaleighDuneh-Armstrong-Hercules30-Day Free CheckupComplete Line of Parts for All ModelsBeg. $65.00NOW!SAJSOand upJACKSON PARKBIKE SHOP5333 Lake ParkWe Service What We SellNOrmal 7-9860DOrchester 3-7524 Jazz historytold by JellyRolT MortonMister Jelly Roll, Alan Lomax,Duell, Sloan, and Pearce, NewYork, 1950, $3.50.Here is the history of jazz, astold by the self-styled “originatorof the theory of jazz,” Jelly RollMorton. The book is mainly atranscript of interviews with JellyRoll, conducted and recorded byAlan Lomax, working in connec¬tion with the Library of Congress.Although reading books aboutjazz is second best to either listen¬ing to it or playing it, this storyof jazz, as told by one of theworld’s greatest jazz pianists, isgood reading for both theenthusiast, and anyone looking fora well written, and fascinatingbiography of an American artist.In addition to transcripts fromrecordings, Lomax has personallyvisited many of the haunts ofJelly Roll Morton, and has cap¬tured the feeling of “Storeyville”30 years after anti-vice-crusadersand time had closed down on NewOrleans most famous section.The appendix contains wordsand music to many of the jazzcompositions of Jeiiy Roll (Ala¬bama Bound, Jelly Roll Blues),and a complete listing of his re¬cordings.The illustrations, done by DavidStone Martin, are in themselvesworthy of note.—Dave Zimmerman Tennis team wins 2;doubles top strengthby Bob MarchThe Varsity tennis team last Friday gained revenge forthe 1950 squad, opening their season with a 5-4 victory overDe Pauw, the only team to defeat them last year, in a meeton the Varsity courts. Tuesday the netmen traveled northto Lake Forest-and continued their winning ways with a 6-3victory over Lake Forest. :In both meets, the Maroons and Euttenweiser, and Maree andsplit even in the six singles douM^ ££matches, gaining the margin of 0rans and Coh ,ost , ,he ^victory with doubles wins. Pauw mee, and won ,)ver u,kjOrcns wins fwice ForestMarty Orans, number one Chi- ” *cage singles man, won over R. a - bit of'TiTeup - shuffling oo-Bastion of De Pauw 6-2, 6-2, and curred ^ J Bm <?ohende.eof cor°, l ,V ruining from the number twoest, 8-6, 6-0. Larry Buttenweiser, sln les t because ofland, with number six singleswon in both meets, beating Cum- man Sparks out with a fracturedmings in the De Pauw meet and showerKannenwurf in the Lake Forest Tomor'row the Maroons facemeet., , Marquette at 2 p.m. on the Var-The number two and number sjt Courts ^and University.three doubles teams, Dalenberg JSports CalendarFriday, May 4JV Baseball—3:30 North Field—Chi¬cago ChristianVarsity Track—3 p.m., Stagg Field—DePauwSaturday, May 5Varsity Tennis—2 p.m. Varsity CourtsMarquetteWomen’s Varsity Tennis—1:45 p.m.Kimbark Courts—North CentralTuesday, May 8JV Tennis—3:30 p.m. Varsity Courts—Morgan Park M. A.hat can-be you as a Serv¬ice Representative for theIllinois Bell Telephone Com¬pany. We have desirable open¬ings in this important workfor a select group of collegetrained girls — openings inwhich you can use your collegeeducation to good advantage.You’ll like it. A lot of responsibility ... a lot ofopportunity ... and an excellent salary go with this job—$44 for a five-day week to start ($191 a month) andregular increases every three months for several years.As a Service Representative, you’ll have personalcharge of the accounts of a great many telephone cus¬tomers. In fact, you’ll be “Miss Telephone” in yourdealings with them.The work is never dull. Everything you do will bea new challenge, a new experience, a chance to gainstature and move up to even more responsible, highlypaid positions. You’ll like the people you’ll workwith, too.Now’s the time to act. June commitments are nowbeing made. See Miss Allan, Employment Office —Women, 309 W. Washington St., Chicago, Illinois, oryour own Collev'* Employment Bureau.Illinois Bell Telephone Company Photo by SherMarty Orans serves in number onesingles match.JV trackmenfourth in racesCoach Paul Derr’s JV trackmenlast Saturday placed fourth inthe class B Wheaton Relays.The Jayvees accumulated 38points, winning three relay racesand placing in four -individualevents.Relay victories were in the 2-mile relay (Williams, Smothers,Purdie, Stapley), the sprint med¬ley (Lyons, Harvey, Johnson,Purdie). Bruce Johnson took thirdin the shot put and fifth in the100-yard dash, Bob Appleman tiedfor second in the pole vault, andCyril Harvey tied for fifth in thehigh jump.SHOE REPAIR*Substantial Discountsto Students“IT MUST BE DONE RIGHT"HOLLIDAY'S1407 East 61st Street(at Dorchester Ave.)Phone NOrmal 7-8717Two blocks from Inti. HouseWhile-U-Wait or One-Day ServicrPage 8 THE CHICAGO MA.ROON May 4, 1955YOURSELF!Classified AdsDeadline: 5 p.m., TuesdayFOR SALEJAPANESE FLAG, framed 27x40; solidwalnut oval dining table, 36x40; two 10-gallon crocks; 3 pairs copper rust satindrapes, lined; black formal, pink andblack, print., both sire 10; black after¬noon dress, navy shortle coat, both size14. Phone PL 2-6742.TWIN BEDS, 1 year old, Fairfax mat¬tress, slip covered, back rest, now usedin studio arrangement. BU 8-3070.FURNITURE FOR SALE, in A-l condi¬tion. Bedroom and living room set; onedesk and coffee table, both glass cov¬ered. Call Thursday, Friday, Sat., andSun.. BU 8-0232.BEFORE YOU BUY a radio or tape re¬corder come see us on our prices. PhoneExt. 1053 after 7 p.m., Mon.-Thurs. Dan’s36 Radio Shack.WASHING MACHINE, in excellent con¬dition. Reasonable. Phone BU 8-0682.X FLAT ALTO saxophone. Make; FrankHolton. Condition: Perfect. Priced forquick sale. MI 3-5598.NO. 1 NOLAN PROOF PRESS, perfectcondition, $80. Kapan, HO 5-4871. Print¬ing bed is 13" x 26".4x5 MERIDIAN Model B 135mm, F4.7Raptar in X shutter. Heiland SolinoidKalart range finder, 9Cmm P6.8 lens,wide angle Raptar in Alphax Synchroshutter $350. HY 3-8280 evenings. AlsoKodak 35. range finder, case, coatedlens, built-in flash; also flash gun, $65.CHICAGO PEACE DIRECTORY, pionee^work by Albert Bofman, peace-researchspecialist. Lists 39 peace organizations,adresses, and phones; with other litera¬ture. Only 25 cents. U. S. CommitteeAgainst Militarization, 6329 S. May, Chi¬cago 21.SLIGHTLY USED Parker 51 pen in excel¬lent condition. Sells for $13.50 new;wil sell for $8. Johnson, MI 3-9849.TWENTY DOLLARS buys an excellent35mm candid camera. Very sharp, clearpicture. f4.5 lens. Leather case. CallNedzel, B-J..MARIS BALLOON tire bicycle. Goodcondition. Cheap. Call BU 8-2436. SWAP CIRO FLEX Camera Model B forenlarger of like value. John MacGahan,MI 3-7141.HALLICRAFTERS television, 7 - inchportable with enlarger and indoor an¬tenna, $40. John MacGahan, MI 3-7141.HIGH FIDELITY speaker, 12" GE PMtype. Dirt cheap. Room 618, B-J. PL2-9176.PAlJf BIRD watching binoculars, 6 to 8power, center focusing. S. Banks. CallMI 3-7787, evenings or weekends.SUNBEAM MIXMASTER, perfect condi¬tion, new model, cannot be told fromnew. with attachments. Priced for quickgale. MI 3-5598.BEDROOM SET, 3 pieces, matching,single bed, dresser, chest. Reasonable.Phone RA 3-7695.TROMBONE. “King” slide trombone ingood condition with new case. $25. SeeBob Bain, 5714 Woodlawn. PL 2-9648.33 RPM RECORD plajer, plays throughradio. H. Goldfield, GR 2-0542 after7 p.m.CHRONOGRAPH, gold, expandible band;12-hour recorder, 1 hour recorder time,stopwatch, moon-phases, telemeter, date,day of week, month: worth $288, one-year guarantee. $60. DePillls, HY 3-4575,evenings.UNUSED ARGUS C-3 camera with car¬rying case and photoflash attachments.$50. Jim Pearson, BU 8-9022.SAILBOAT, Class E scow, 28 ft., withor without racing sails as you prefer.Bob Sweet, Int. House, FA 4-8200.PONTIAC, $325, new battery, excellentengine, low mileage, 1940 model. HYdePark 3-9805.DAY BED for sale. Call BU 8-5343 after6 p.m., $15 without slipcover, $25 withslipcover.WANTEDCLASSICAL MUSIC GROUPS, musi¬cians, composers, interested in money¬making recording deal. Call PL 2-9176,or visit 618 B-J.ANYONE OVER 21 who wants to drivea car west between quarters please con¬tact MAROON, Box 116.WANTED—STEKY camera and ampli¬fier. Berkow, 618 B-J.WISH TO rent size 38 dinner jacket forweek-end of May 12. Call MU 4-7354.HAVE YOU VACANCIES?Rooms, housekeeping suites, furnished apartmentsHAVE YOU SOMETHING TO SELL?We list these items and others in ourBIG CORNER WINDOW where HUNDREDS PASS DAILYfor only $1.00 week or $3.00 monthly"KINGS”5500 Lake Park Avenue, Southwest Corner WANTED—WOMAN driver over 21 toshare driving with 2 girls to Californiaat end of quartre. New car. Gas paid.Call Marian Yeh, Foster.RIDER WANTED, driving to Bethlehem,Penn. (90 miles from NYC). Leave noonMay 16, share expenses, driving not nec¬essary. Sawyer, 6122 Greenwood, BU8-4160.WANTED—USED LADY’S English bi¬cycle in good condition. Call ElfiSchmetterling, Gates 89.LOST AND FOUNDFOUND—One gold wedding band in thevicinity of 59th and Ellis Avenue, onMonday, April 30. Initialed D. G. B. toO. H. T. 12-21-46. 14K. Owner may clr.imin Mr. Alex Soil’s office, 5610 Ellis Ave¬nue, Accelerator Building, Room F-109.WILL THE PERSON who took the wronggabardine topcoat at the Phi DeltaTheta smoker Monday, April 23, pleasecome to 5737 Woodlawn and exchangecoats. Fred Weedon.LOST — a blue Parker pencil in theReynolds Club, Tuesday, May 23. Pleasecontact Dan Rosenfleld, MU 4-2234.Reward.PARADISE LOST has been misplacedagain. If red-bound, public library edi¬tion is found, please call MI 3-7426LOST — LADY'S gold Clyclne wristwatch. Worn black band. Please callESsex 5-7039 after 6 p.m.LOST: Lady’s wrist watch, Wittnauer,gold with black band. Reward. CallHYde Park 3-9410, evening or weekend. FOR RENTHAVE THREE rooms, large porch, begin¬ning summer quarter. HYde Park 3-8460.TO SUBLET: 5-room apt., new facultybuilding. Fully furnished. May 20 toSept. 20. Prefer UC prof, or grad stu¬dent. MU 4-4926.WHY RENT a piano? For $5 montnlyown a Strack reconditioned, modernupright. Fine tone, beautiful finish.Cost $260. Now $150. Phone Hogan,MUseum 4-1823. .APT. TO SHARE: Graduate student,male, wanted to share attractive 5-roomapartment on campus. $50 a month.Available June 1. Call PLaza 2- 116 after7 p.m.DO WE CARE if you’re leaving a 2‘ior 3 or 4 room apartment? You bet wedo. Reward for calling us at KE 6-6496.WANTED —MAN’S lightweight* bicycle.Will pay up to $25. Contact Stan Zahler,Ricketts North.FURNISHED 2-ROOM, private bath. 3rd*floor of home. $60 month. Near I. C.Oakland 4-6393.BUSINESS SERVICELESSONS in piano and theory for chil¬dren and adults. Call Miriam Rhoads,MU 4-3360.ALTERATIONS, remodeling. Lowestrates, FA 4-7646.EXPRESS. Light and heavy moving.Willing and courteous service. Reason¬able rates. Bordone, HY 3-1915. TYPING. Fast, accurate, reliable, expcr.lence in social science and rewrite woi*Also shorthand, dictation. 6106 Untverlslty, Apt. 206. Midway 3-0473.SEWING ALTERATIONS. Bachelor’s r7-pairing. Reasonable rates. For appoint-ment call Edna Warlner, MU 414680.SPANISH conversation practice with n7tlve Latin Americans; will pay reason,able rates. MI 3-9522 after 6 p.m., PaulHamos,TRAVELGOING WEST? Would you like In TT-pensive transportation to west coast?Dr ve a new 1951 car to west coascities, as your own. gas paid Tran*portatlon Lease Co., 188 W - ns'St., Room 1416. FI 6-3422.Hear Studs Terkel andWin StrackeTV Stars in“I COME FOR TO SING’’Folk Song Show of Ballad*and BluesFULLERTON HALLART INSTITUTESaturday, May 5that 8:30 P.M.For Referred Seats, $1.80Phone Michigan 2-6401r PHILIP MORRISIn Waterville, Maine, there is alwaysa friendly gathering of ColbyCollege students at the Colby Spa.And, as in college campus hauntseverywhere, ice-cold Coca-Colahelps make these get-togetherssomething to remember. As a re¬freshing pause from the study grind,or when the gang gathers around—coke belongs.Ask Jor it either way ... bothtrade-marks mean the same thing.BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY IYCOCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF CHICAGO. INC.© IVCil, The Coca-Cola CompanyColby SpaColby CollegeWaterville, Maine Don't test one brand alone...compare them alllUnlike others, we never ask youto test our brand alone. We say...compare PHILIP MORRIS...matchPhilip Morris...judge Philip Morrisagainst any other cigarette!Then make your own choice!TRY THIS TESTITake a philip morris —and anyother cigarette. Then, here’s allyou do:1 Light up either cigarette. Take apuff—don't inhale—and s-l-o-w-l-ylet the smoke come through your nose.'2 Now do exactly the same thingwith the other cigarette.NOTICE THAT PHILIP MORRISIS DEFINITELY LESS IRRITATING,DEFINITELY MILDER IRemember.. •NO CIGARETTEHANGOVERmeansMORE SMOKING PLEASURE!