p —University of Chicago, June 8, 1951 Honor foremost UCersat Quad Club banquetFifteen students were today selected by an all - campusCommittee as outstanding student participants in the extra¬curriculum during the academic year at the University.The Committee and the Dean of Students Office will honorthe students at a banquet to be held at the Quadrangle ClubWednesday, June 13.The students selected are:Spencer Boise (Captain of theBasketball Team, Owl and Ser-Mme. Pandit Track, President of Student Un¬ion, Iron Mask). Allen Dropkin(retiring President of Interfra-pen,, Hugh Brodkey (Varsity "JSfiof Student Orientation). CharlesGarvin (editor of the MAROON).Ashton Krug (twice captain ofthe Swimming Team, 4-letterman). Hugh Lane (for generalleadership in campus student po-. litical affairs). Frank Logan (pastThe forty-first annual Inter-Fraternity Sing, sponsored by the Alumni Association of UC, audience^^Mande^Hal?1^heard JJ[f*ident of student Governmentwill be held tomorrow at 8:45 p.m. in Hutchinson Court. Five thousand people are expect- Madame Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit, ,Od to attend. Indian ambassador to the United Mittlebeeler (ChairmanThe I-F Sing, founded in 1911 by S. Edmund (’“Ned”) Earle, will be under the direction States, give a lecture on the sub- Co^nci1of Arthur Cody, class of ’24. Planning was done by the Alumni Association in conjunction Ject “A New Democracy in the (Preside of Woa" ri ffhwidwith an I-F Sing committee consisting of one representative of each of the twelve active °ld World,” under the auspices of Associati Major c winner Fos-,, .. , the Gertrude Dudley Lecture ‘ Vt ,, T ‘’ ,c hapters on campus, the president ©He, *C* blankets!-F Sing's annual flingto rock Hutchinson Court tells of Indiaof the Inter-Fraternity Council,the president of the Alumni Asso¬ciation, and Mr. Cody.To award cupsIn 192?, awarding of Qualityand Quantity Cups—the one tothe best singers, the other to themost numerous singers — wasfirst instituted. Phi Gamma Deltawon last year’s Quality Cup, Delta “C” Blankets to all graduatinglettermen, will complete theawards.At the close of the Sing, theMitchell Tower Chimes will ringout with the Alma Mater, folow-ing which the entire assembledgroup will be asked to join insinging, Award leading Foundation.dorm actives ure in the achievement of Indianindependence, first traced the'great role of Mahatma Gandhi.Ghandi's main ideasThe two basic principles ofAt a private dinner and recep- Gandhi s leadership, she said,tion held in Burton-Judson last were U) that the means must beToday we gladly sing Tuesday, special awards, repre- Pure as the ends, and (2) that. ” senting outstanding work in Dor- freedom, when achieved, must beWith the end of the 41st annual mitory activities, were presented ?hared by all the people of India ter Hall athletics). Alexander.. . _ ... . .. .. Pope (past President of StudentMadame Pandit, a leading fig- Government, Law Review, Chair¬man of NSA Illinois Region). Man¬ny Savas (B-J Council retiringpresident). Gary Steiner (activityin the MAROON, Editor of theYearbook). Nancy Wong (Inter¬church Council, Student ChristianAssociation). Roger Woodworth(President of Student Govern¬ment).The committee, chaired by Rob-Upsilon the Quantity Cup. No fra- jnter.Fraternjty g j n CT Alumni to thirteen residents of the Men’s in a spirit of friendship with the . „ Strozier Dearfnf Stiidpntaternity Is eligible to compete for wniny b , n Aiumn w , resldence halls. people of Hie rest of the world. ** “• Students.:i the cup it won the year before,but any fraternity winning a cupthree times may retire that cup,and replace it with a new one.This year’s I-F Sing sees twoinnovations: An inactive UC chap¬ter, Kappa Sigma, will join theactive UC fraternal chapters insinging, and a chorus composed ofmembers of various women’sclubs will open the festivities. Informer years the winner of theInter-Club (Women’s Club) Sing. opened the festivities, but thisyear the I-C Sing was not held.Kaup to five priseEach fraternity $ i p g s twpsongs, one entering the court," theother around the fountain in thecenter of the court. The winnerof the previous Sing’s QualityCup, by tradition, is accorded theprivilege of singing last, and theright to sing a third song.After the last fraternity fin¬ishes singing, I-F President PaulKaup will award the I-F CouncilScholarship Cup to Phi SigmaDelta. Kooman Boycheff, directorof Intermural Athletics wil lthenaward an inter-mural athleticscup. This will be followed by theawarding of the Quality andQuantity Cups for this year’s-Sing.Yearbookoff press Week wil lcome to an end. PhiSigma Delta, however, is holdingits annual ‘.‘Strawberry Festival”immediately after the Sing.Registrationjobs offeredStudents who would like to workduring Central Registration tor theSummer Quarter on June 25 shouldsee Mrs. Burril in the Registrar'soffice on Monday, June II, from8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Women’s residence halls.Included among the award win¬ners were Manny Savas and JackSparks for their work as Chair¬men of the B-J Council and partici¬pation on the Dormitory Coordi¬nating Committee; David Kliotfor his activity on the B-J Coun¬cil, Coordinating and OrientationBoard; Esther Milman and ArthurSolomon, Chairman and AssistantChairman of the Dormitory Plan¬ning Committee; and Janet Stew¬art and Bunny Barry, Chairwom- Madame Pandit stressed thefact that political freedom in it¬self is meaningless unless it iscombined with economic and so¬cial freedom, which is the goaltoward which India is striving.Looks to US for moral leadershipPointing out that democracy isan ancient concept in India, Mme.Pandit said that it must be devel¬oped there on the basis of Indiantraditional, historical and culturalbackground, and cannot be arbi¬trarily patterned after or be im- selected the student leaders forthe honor. The Committee consist¬ed of: Miss Ballwebber, Directorof Women’s Athletics; Mr. Biren-baum, Director of Student Activi¬ties; Mr. Blair, Director of Uni¬versity Theatre; Mr. Davey, Deanof Students in the College; Mr.Fultz, Director of InternationalHouse; Mr. Grip, Director of Uni¬versity House System; Mrs. Me-Carn, Assistant Dean of Students;Mr. Metcalf, Director of Men’sAthletics; Miss Saunders, Assist¬ed .Awards were also received byGeorge Daynes, Kenneth Tollett,and Tony Kasanoff for outstand¬ing worok on the &J Council andMolly Felker, Jo Holden and San¬dra Friend for their leadership inInter-Rorm activities.en of the Inter-Dormitory Coun- p0sed upon by any other concept ard Director of Student Activities;...— ™—mA v.,. of democracy developed by Mr. Scott, Assistant Dean of Stu-another country under different den*s’ Mr. Thompson, Dean of thekistoricai conditions. Chapel; Mr. Woellner, AssistantEmphasizing a plea for patience Dean of Students,and tolerance on the part of In announcing the honor stu-Americans in understanding India dents selected by the Committee,and its problems as a newly bom Robert M. Strozier said, “It is ourThe presentations were made democracy in these critical times, feeling that student contributionsby Carl Grip, Director of the Res- Madame Pandit also stressed the to the community through the ex-idence Halls, and Arlen Christ- fact that India, together with the tra-curriculum should receive of-Janer, Allan Austill, and Janet rest of Asia, expects the United ficial recognition and honor.”Lovett members of the Residence States, in its capacity as a leading . This is the first year that suchHall Staff which was the sponsor world power, to exercise the moral recognition has been accordedof the awards. and spiritual leadership needed to a campus - widehelp build a world of justice,equality and happiness for allmankind.Lost MAROONThis is the last MAROON of theyear. Several issues will be pub¬lished during the Summer Quarter. oncampus - wide basis, and theCommittee hoped it could becomea tradition at practice at the Uni¬versity.ECHO: MIDWAY, first UC yearbook in over ten years, will appear Sen. Johnson's planIron Mask society inducts for Korea urgedleading College students Appealing for support of Senator Edwin C. Johnson’s(Dem., Colo.) resolution for a Korean truce on June 25 andeventual withdrawal of all foreign troops, the Faculty-Grad-J J ... Initiation of new members to Iron Mask, the College Honor uate Committee for Peace has addressed letters to all UCWednesday. The 132-page pub ica- were held here last week. All students above their faculty members.editor as^More than a yearbook wcond year in the College are eligible for admission to the > letters sent Monday with copies of the resolution,one vou don’t have to wait 20 society based on outstanding participation and leadership siate tnat ine steps proposed —- —years to enjoy.” in extra-curricular activities, good scholastic standing, and a Dubli^oDinion* and af*Object of the staff at all times combination of personal characteristics which contribute to foVnrahiP tn J whereas the people or the united states•s been to make the book “as good character. an™ genu ne ~a«mS AndThose students chosen for ad- they would haliTh?Tairy s!augSmission into the Society are: Jo- er of American, Korean, and Chi-5000alumnipack campushaslittle like a yearbook as possible,keeping the issue of interest toothers besides those whose facesappear.”Contents are, among otherthings, a pictorial review of theacademic year, numerous featuresdepicting various aspects of the Along with the I-F Sing and theUniversity, and “all the pictures Mme. Pandit lecture, many other £ooree' Daynes ’ Leonard Velzen-m to print.” special activities mark this year’s i c h a e lTheme is “Hutchins—21 years alumni week for which five thous- ~ £{ . , 'T , v ,of" consisting of nostalgic as well and former students have re- SfcW Srge Fuller Jim Garas timely sections dealing with turned The festivities end ^yden WuSS,me ex-Chancellor and his effect day night. Jon the University. Acting Chancellor Lawrence A.Students who have made de- Kimpton will be presented to theposits and are leaving the city are alumni tomorrow at 3 p.m. aturged to complete payment before a special assembly at whichdeparting and to supply mailing Chancellor Robert M. Hutchinsaddress. All books subscribed to will be the principal speaker.without balance due collected will Kimpton spoke at the traditional _ _ .be mailed, COD, to the address ap- Order of the “C” banquet Thurs- ^v^d Saffer^ Manny Savas, Jackpearing in the student directory.A limited supply of volumes,over and above those subscribed<w, is available. These will be dis¬tributed on a first-come first-served basis. nese lives.’Tiie full text of the Johnsonresolution (S. Res. 140), follows:RESOLUTIONWhereas to permit civilization to be de¬stroyed by World War III is utterInsanity and unworthy of the men ofthis century: andWhereas the Korean War has every ap¬pearance of being a hopeless conflictof attrition and lndeclslveness and abreeder of bitter racial hatreds; andWhereas a limited war, like a limitedor smoldering fire, is gravely danger¬ous, for It may burst forth Into aworld-wide conflagration at any mo¬ment; andWhereas the North and Soutb Koreans,the Chinese, and the United Nationshave suffered more than one millioncasualties, with the only tangible re¬sult, so far, the Indescribable miserywhich has been heaped upon theKorean people; andWhereas tremendous strides have beenmade in the development of hithertoHa*/ nirrht at the OnaHrancrla f’lnh oparks, and Gary Steiner. unused lethal and destructive weaponsaay mgni at me v^uaurangie ciud. Df war with potentials of unbelievableToday is set aside for the classes As a parting gesture by the new fUry and horror; andto meet for reunion dinners. The alumni members a picnic is being whereas by slaughtering additional mii-class of 1S01 will celebrate its fif- held this Sunday at Promontory might °m hume“nbe a£>rc^eauponPethetieth anniversary at 6 p.m. at the Point for all members of the So- ^™v***^«* of the united statestraditionally have held the people ofseph Baum, Jack Been, RenatoBeghe, Russell Block, HenryBlumberg, Larry Buttenweiser,Herbert Caplan, Pat Carey, DickCoggeshall, David D i c k m a nGoldberg, Clive Gray, DavidGrossman, John Grimes, Jim Huf-fer, David Johnson, Fred Kraen-zel, Sander Levin, Robert LeVine,Terry Lunsford, Jan Majde,Walter Pozen, Gordon Ralph, Her¬man Richey, Leonard Rutstein,Quadrangle Club. eiety and their guests. the principles of the Monroe Doctrineso eloquently portrayed by the sloganAsia for Asiatics” if it were to beapplied to Asia: andWhereas it has long been the policy ofthe American people that no nationshould seek to extend Its form ofgovernment over any other nation orpeople, but that as an Inherent rightevery people should be left free todetermine its own form of govern¬ment and it3 own way of life, un¬hindered, unthreatened and unafraid—the little along with the great andthe powerful; andWhereas the traditional policy and de¬sire of the people of the United Statesof America Is now and has been ajust and enduring peace; andWhereas it is never too early for God¬fearing and peace-loving peoples toearnestly endeavor to stop needlesshuman slaughter; Now, therefore, beResolved, That it is the sense ofthe Senate that the United Nationscall upon all nations and all groups'now engaged In the w^r In Korea tocease fire and declare an armisticeeffective at 4 antemeridian (Koreantime) June 25, 1951; and that priorthereto the United Nations forces re¬tire to points south and the opposingforces retire to points north of thethirty-eighth parallel; and that be¬fore December 31, 1951, all prisonersof the Korean War shall be exchangedand all non-Korean persons, militaryand non military (except the ordinarydiplomatic representatives), shall de¬part from North and South Korea.Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON June 8,• sr5t class graduates Five UCer’s awarded prizesin three convocations for literary arts, sciences tionized modern physics. ]been awarded annually simmiddle twenties.Convocation next week will see one of the largest classesin the 59-year history of the Midway university receive theirdegrees. Convocation Sunday services will be held 11 a.m.June 10 in Rockefeller Memorial Chapel.There will be three convocations held for the graduatingstudents. Graduates of the College will hear Ernest CadmanColwell, president of the univer-'After comps'C-Dance setFriday evening, June 15, will seethe presentation of the final C-Dance of the year on the patio atIda Noyes Hall,known as “After sity deliver the convocation ad-'dress Wednesday, June 20, 10a.m., before Chancelor Kimptonconfers the degrees at the Wed¬nesday convocation.Bochelors graduate at 10:30Graduates receiving the tradi¬tional bachelor degrees and mas¬ter’s degrees will receive theirTraditionally diplomas 10:30, June J5. Chancel-Comps,” this lor Kimpton will confer the de- Prizes totaling $1,200 have been awarded by the Univer¬sity of Chicago to playwright Mildred Kuner, student poetL. Ross Garner, and to Carl Eldon Wcnnerstrom for excel¬lence in reading the scriptures.The 1951 Charles H. Sergei $1,000 drama prize was coppedby a 29-year-old Hunter College English Teacher, MildredKuner, for her comedy play Thedance has always been semi- grees and R. Wendell Harrison,formal in nature and puts the fin- vice-president in charge of facul¬ties, will deliver the convocationishing touches to the school year,Jim Barclay’s Orchestra willsupply the music for dancing andthis year the admission price willbe the same as for regular C-Dances, 75c per person. address.Students receiving master’s de¬grees in the professional schoolsor Ph.D.’s will be graduated at3 p.m., June 15.Michigan prexy vetoesstudents' anti-bias planPresident Ruthven of the U. of Michigan on May 29 vetoedan anti-bias proposal made by the Student Legislature, whichprovided for the withdrawal of recognition from any organi¬zations that had not removed discriminatory clauses from itsconstitution by October, 1956.This information was contained in the May 30 issue ofThe Michigan Daily, the Univer- ““ ~ ~—7—tv.. Proposal jeopardized the propertyaity paper, which carried also the rights of the fraternities threat-following reasons advanced by the ened with withdrawal of recog-President for his action: 1) “No nition.individual has an inherent right The President’s action drewto membership in any particular s^arP criticism from the editors” anti-bias “ 'r°mSQ sends lettersto seven schoolsfor exchange plan Peace groupmeets hereStudent Government has dis¬closed that letters were sent offlate last month inquiring aboutthe possibility of exchanging dele¬gations of students between UCand seven other universities out¬side the United States. The in¬quiries were mailed to the studentbodies of the seven schools. Theyare University of Moscow, CharlesUniversity in Prague, Universityof Calcutta, University of Bologna,Free University of Berlin, Uni¬versity of Grenoble, and ZagrebUniversity.The action was taken in accord¬ance with an SG law passed Apr.19 which stated the belief thatgreater student understandingwould further the chances ofworld peace. If favorable respons¬es are received and the govern¬ments and Universities concernedOK the action, student exchangeswould start at the beginning ofthe fall semester, 1951, accordingto SG.Dispatch of the letters was de¬layed because of Administrationobjection to a phrase concerning“invitation” of foreign studentsto UC, because invitations had tobe approved by the Board of Trus¬tees. Administration gave the go-ahead after the obpectionablephrase was deleted. Robert Morss Lovett, professoremeritus of English at UC andformer governor-general of theVirgin Islands, is one of manysponsors of The American Peo¬ple’s Congress and Exposition forPeace. This national gatheringwill meet in Chicago June 29, 30,and July 1, 1951.The first day’s program willinclude round table discussions onthe crucial issues of the day thatface men, women and children inrelation to the question of war andpeace. The evening program willculminate in a public rally andpeace pageant.The discussions will continuethe ..next morning and afternoonand will end with an evening con¬cert and cultural displays. Thedisplays will be based on previouscompetitions in posters, emblems,photography, songs, and writing.Interfaith service and worshipwill be held Sunday morning. Thelatter part of the day is devotedto a Young People’s Festival andField Day that will include sportand cultural events. New Alcetis.Garner earns Fiske prizeFor his poem, Donatus, L. RossGarner was awarded the $100Fiske poetry prize. Garner holdsa master’s degree from the Uni¬versity of Hawaii and is presentlystudying for his doctorate here.Paul Carroll, the winner of thelast Venture poetry contest, wasawarded honorable mention forhis poem The Glass Church. Stan¬ley Rosen also received honorablemention in the Fiske competitionfor his poem Three Variations onan Egyptian Theme.Award Jewett prizeThe $100 Mile P. Jewett Prizefor scripture reading was award¬ed to Carl Eldon Wennerstrom.A student studying for hisPh.D. in chemistry was awardedthe 1951 Elizabeth R. NortonPrize in chemistry at UC. Theprize winner, Kowalsky, gradu¬ated from Clarkson College ofTechnology.Franck gets Planck awardThe Max Planck medal, highestaward of the German PhysicalSociety, has been given to JamesFranck, professor emeritus ofphysical chemistry, in the UCInstitute for Radiobiology andphysics. Among others who havereceived the distinction in the pastare Albert Einstein, Otto Hahnand Lise Mettner, noted for theirstudies in nuclear fission, andMax von Laue, who first discov¬ered that X-rays could be detract¬ed by passing through crystals.Franck, who jointly with Gus¬tave Hertz won the 1926 Nobelprize in physics for the discoveryof the laws governing the colli¬sion of the atom with an electron.Business Schoolpresents awardsVeteran's NurserySchool open for fallThe Veteran's Nursery School,which is operated by the Labora¬tory School of the University, isnow registering children (.<>9es2V2-4) for the fall 1951 quarter.Tuition is $10 per month. Thechildren of students who ore vet¬erans ore eligible to ottend thisnursery school.Registration blanks may be se¬cured in the Office of the Lab¬oratory Schooi, on 59th St. be¬tween Kimbork and Kenwood Ave. Certificates of completion willbe awarded to the seventh groupto complete “The Executive Pro¬gram” in the School of Businesson June 13, at 8:00 p.m. in LeonMandel Hall. Chancellor Kimp¬ton will award the certificates.Fairfax Cone, Chairman of theBoard of Foote, Cone and Belding,will deliver the address, “Mobiliza¬tion—For What?”HHhmMBBV New York $24.00Miami . . $43.74I—■ Y California $75.00I HI I Plus taxin-r e> ecretarialI HA O ERVICE & TRAVELTUDIO. Hrs. 9 a.m.-lO p.m.1442 E. 55th Ml 3-2136WANT TO TAKE A CANOE TRIP?Adventure into Quetico Provincial Park of Canada andSuperior National Forest. Canoes, tents, blankets orsleeping bags, packsacks, axe, cooking and eating uten¬sils and excellent food for your taste only *4-50 and |5.00per man per day. ($3.00 and $3.50 without food.) Forillustrated booklet and map, write toFishermen's Headquarters and Canoe OutfittersEly, Minn. WOODLAWNPIzzER1A 1231 East63rdStreetMUseum4-7264Hours4 p.m. to3 a.m.<3?andWe alsoserveHamburgersand otherdelicioussandwiches SpAGHET is the second American in twoyears to receive the medal.Named for quantum founderThe medal was named in honorof Max Planck, founder of thequantum theory, which revolu- Reopen draft- examsStudents who through cirstances beyond their controlprevented frqm taking the Stive Service College QualificTest given May 26 are beimfered another opportunity to 1for the test, it was announceCol. Paul G. Armstrong, Statilective Service Director.They may write immediatethe Selective Service ExamSection, Educational Testingice, P. O. Box 586, Princeton,Jersey, explaining the circstances and returning the tickadmission if available.LONG DISTANCE MOVINfLOW RATES - Bonded - Insured612 No. Michigan Ave.SUperior 7-3484ShirfS. drAduAteIn^ha cum ^ Ifoundry [IHOUSE z?The Manhattan Shirt Company, makers of Manhattan shirts, newear, underwear, pajamas, sportshirts, beach wear and handkerchvJune 8/ 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3tu're returning thisbuy a round-tripet and SAVE anAlbany, N. Y. . e $15.75 $25.20Albuquerque . . • 24.40 43.95Asheville, N. C. . 13.90 25.05Benton Harbor, Mich 2.35 4.25Boston, Mass. . # 19.90 31.90Buffalo, N. Y. . . 10.65 17.05Butte, Mont. . . . 29.60 53.30Cincinnati, O. . e 6.15 10.80Cloveiand, O. . # 6.95 11.85Columbus, O. . . e 6.05 10.80Dallas, Texas . . • 17.05 30.70Denver, Colo. . . e 20.30 36.55Dos Moines, la. . e 7.00 12.60Detroit, Mich. . # 5.75 10.35Duluth, Minn. . . e 8.50 15.30Effingham, III. . • 3.50 6.30El Paso, Toxas . e 23.40 45.75Erlo, Pa . 9.13 13.30Grand Rapids, Mich. 4.25 7.65Holland, Mich. . 3.8S 6.95Indianapolis, Ind. . 3.9S 7.13Jacksonville, Fla. • 19.45 33.05Kansas City, Mo. • 8.20 14.80Lima, O 4.20 7.60Louisville, Ky. . . 6.60 11.25Ludington, Mich. 6.20 1 1.20Madison, Wise. . • 2.4S 4.45Memphis, Tenn. . • 9.50 17.10Miami, Fla. . . . # 25.55 46.00Milwaukee, Wise. 1.55 2.80Mpls.-St. Paul, Minn 7.30 13.15Muskegon, Mich. e 4.50 8.10New Orleans, La. . 14.95 26.95New York, N. Y. • 17.25 27.60Omaha, Neb. . . e 10.05 18.10Philadelphia, Pa. • 16.50 26.95Pittsburgh, Pa. . • 9.45 15.40Portland-Seattle • 40.53 66.35Rockford, III. . . • 1.65 2.75St. Louis, Mo. . . • 4.95 8.95Salt Lake City . e 28.65 51.60San Francisco-L A 36.85 *66.35Scranton, Pa. . . • 15.75 25.40Sioux Falls, S. D. . 10.30 18.55South Haven, Mich. 3.05 5.50Springfield, III. . . 3.30 5.95Toledo, O. • . . 4.85 8.75Tulsa, Okla. . . • 12.85 23.15Washington, D. C. . 15.50 24.80Winnipeg, Man. • 16.70 30.10(U. S. tax extra)ftA GREYHOUNDREPRESENTATIVEwill be at theJOHN STOCKSTRAVEL BUREAUMonday, Juno 11h> tell tickets and give informationJOHN STOCKS TRAVIL BUREAUAdministration Bldg. 3801 S. Bills Aye.Phone Midway 3-0800 Illinois Tech beatsMaroons in five hitterby Ken KoenigIllinois Tech’s senior right-hander, Bob Leiser, twirled afive hitter to beat the Maroons, 3-1, in the Memorial Dayfinale of the Second Annual Greater Chicagoland CollegeTournament. The loss gave the Maroons a 10-10 record forthe 1951 season.Lefty Gene Borowitz turned in a creditable performanceto end his four year career withChicago. Gene surrendered eight grounding out, and scrambledhits and only four walks but was home when Cassel’s snap throwhampered by erratic supportafield.Score clinchers in last frameThe winning runs broke up a1-1 pitching duel in the ninth. Zi-ros lined out a double and Connorswangled a pass. Lokay’s perfectbunt that hugged the third baseline loaded the sacks. Maatman’sinfield hit scored Ziros, and Con¬nors raced home while Sverakwas being tossed out.Leiser personally drove inTech's first run in the fifth. Maat-man walked, Sverak pushed himalong and then Leiser sent a shotto left center for the score. Leiserwas on via a walk in the top ofthe third too. But Smoky Garciastaved off a rally by going upagainst the Stagg Field score-board to haul in Frel Cassel’s longpoke.Fronkenfeld runs wildThe Maroons effected a tie inthe sixth thanks to a piece ofslick base running by Johnny“Little Monster” Frankenfeld.Johnny singled to open the frame,and promptly swiped second. Heheaded for third as Rowland wasDistinctive ResidenceFor Sale8 Rooms—Greenwood Ave.Near 53rd,Near U of C.Finest construction. Modern Englishdesign, all lace brick, gas heat, slateroof, copper flash, gutters; 3 bathsand powder room, ceramic tileshower stall. Modern tile kitchen,beautiful lawn, garden, trees, verylow maintenance cost, excellentshopping. Price $33,000.DAVID HORWICH & CO.RAndolph 6-5545Evenings: DOrchester 3-8787 back to third got away from Lo-kay.Lokay made up for his lapse bycutting off the Maroon’s buddingrally in the ninth. Rowland andCasey had both singled to startthe inning. After Sherry wasforced on Tamms’ attempted sac¬rifice, Borowitz drove what lookedlike a sure hit to left, but Lokayexecuted a gloved hand stab andturned it into a fast double play.Five starters graduateBesides Borowitz, who will beremembered for two no hitters,one against Northwestern, fourother Maroons ended their com¬petition with the game. SherryRowland, John “Fingers” ‘T'asey(whose homer won last year'sNotre Dame hassle), Mel “TheMole” Lackey and your reporterhave all finished their eligibility.They will receive C-blankets atthe Inter-Fraternity Sing, tomor¬row night.Johnny Frankenfeld, Dick Gar¬cia and Howie Tamms also gotmajor “C” awards for the season,while Jim Weintraub, Norm An¬thony, John Kunstman, Fred Mar-golis, Rus Frazier, Leo Miles,Ralph Baum, Jerry Gilbertson,Howie Levine, Bill Loewe, SamMalkind, and Jules Zoller got mi¬nor awards.Organize summer squadCoach Kyle Anderson an¬nounced that he will run an infor¬mal summer team to build fornext year. Prospective Fall stu¬dents as well as actual summerstudents are invited to consult theAthletic office for details.season recordsPlaver All It If Avg.Rowland 79 13 26 .329Casey 9 20 .278Frankenfeld 10 16 .253In Salt Lake City, Utah, there isalways a friendly gathering ofUniversity of Utah students in theAnnex Cafeteria. And, as in univer¬sities everywhere, ice-cold Coca-Colahelps make these get-togetherssomething to remember. As a pausefrom the study grind, or on a Sat¬urday night date—Coke belongs.Ask for it either way ... bothtrade-marks mean the same thins.BOmEO UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COIA COMPANY BYCOCA-COLA BOTTLINC CO. OF CHICAGO. INC.© 1951, Th« Coca-Cola Company As a child I was dominated by my mother. What's your excuse?Phi Sigs present Phi Sigs smartstrawberry fiesta fraternity; get cupPhi Sigma Delta will present itsStrawberry Festival following theI-F Sing tomorrow night at itshouse, 5625 Woodlawn. The Straw¬berry Festival, an annual occur¬rence at the Phi Sig house, willbe the twenty-fifth anniversary ofthe affair.The program will include danc¬ing to the music of Grady John¬son combo, and strawberries forall. The event is open to the cam¬pus as is the rule at the Straw¬berry Festival. Master-Frater Al¬len Dropkin extends his personalinvitation to attend, saying, “Wehope as many as possible will beour guests following the Sing.”AIMS offersEurope travelMedical and non-medical stu¬dents wishing to travel to Europethis summer have an opportunityto go at reduced rates, $385 byplane, and $300 by boat, roundtrip, through the Association ofInterns and Medical Students.Last year the group of studentsunder the auspices of AIMS visit¬ed medical centers in England,Holland, France, Belgium, Italy,Switzerland, and Czechoslovokia.This year’s itinerary will be de¬cided by the travelers themselves. Phi Sigma Delta will receive theScholarship Cup tomorrow nightat the I-F Sing. During the threequarters ending in March 1951,Phi Sig compiled an average of2.78 for the highest score of allthe fraternities competing.The Phi Sigs led in the Autumn1950 and in Winter 1951, whilefinishing second in Spring 1950.The high score for the Winterperiod was 2.93, almost a B.In overall averages for the en¬tire year-the lineup was as fol¬lows: Phi Sigma Delta, 2.78; Al¬pha Delta Phi, 2.66; Deke, 2.61;Sigma Xi, 2.60; Phi Gamma Del¬ta, 2.58; Delta Upsilon, 2.46; BetaTheta Pi, 2.42; Psi Upsilon, 2.41;Phi Kappa Psi, 2.35; Phi DeltaTheta, 2.33, and Zeta Beta Tau,2.25.Non-medical students may go asfar on the trip as they wish at thereduced rates.Externships, most of which sup¬ply room and board, are availablein the Scandinavian countries,France and Belgium, Italy, andEngland. These are availablethrough AIMS because of its pastprogram of sponsoring studenttravel.For detailed information send anote through the faculty exchangeto AIMS foreign travel committee,Billings Hospital.SCHOOLS & COLLEGESMexico City CollegeWHY NOT STUDY IN MEXICO?Distinguished Faculty — Ideal Climate — Reasonable Living CostsQuarterly SessionSUMMER—Mid-June to Mid-AugustFALL —Late September to Mid-JuneWINTER—Early January to Mid-MarchSPRING —Mid-March to early JuneM.A. and B.A. DEGREES inSpanish, Art, Philosophy, Anthropology, Economics, Geography,History, Latin American Studies, International Relations.B.A. DEGREES also in:English, Creative Writing, Drama and Speech, Journalism,Education, Psychology.Summer Bulletins ISow AvailableApproved for VeteransWrite for Catalogue:Dean of Admission Chiapas 136 Mexico, D.F.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, ILLINOIS Business CareersCOLIEGE4-MONTH INTENSIVE COURSESECRETARIAL TRAINING forCOLLEGE STUDENTS and GRADUATESStarting June, October, FebruaryBulletin A,on requejt.Registration now open.NEXT COURSE STARTS JUNE 11Lifetime Placement ServiceWrite Admission CounselorCo-Educational • G. /. ApprovedTHE GREGG COLLEGE87 South Wabash Avenue, Chicago 8, IllinoisPhone STate 2-1880Plan for a bright futurethrough MAROON School andCollege advertisements. TERESA DOLANDANCING SCHOOLLearn to Dance NowPrivate and Class LessonsBacked by 35 Years ExperienceDally 12 noon to 10 p.m.1208 E. 63rd St. Tel. HY 3-3080Page 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON June 8Issued once weekly by the publisher, The Chicago Maroon, at the publication•nice, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: EditorialOffice, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1012; Business and Advertising offices, Midway3-0800, Ext. 1011. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions by mail. $4 per year.CHARLES GARVIN LEROY WOLINSEditor-in-Chief Business ManagerEditor's columnby Charles Garvin /This being the last of 35 papers of my administration, it isappropriate that I discuss some of the issues which developedduring the year. To be perfectly frank, last spring when Ithought through the kind of problems which would be in¬cumbent on my regime, it was hard to believe that I wouldsurvive the term. To attempt to speak fearlessly in 1951would certainly be a task inview of the hysteria sweeping a comprehensive account of my, A . & analysis of this area but rather athe country, the war in Koiea few comments might make myand the volatility of everyone’s position clear. I, of course, un¬political tempers. qualifiedly rejected the idea of anTo be sure, the UC campus was investigation. I agree with thea little different; the administra- position expressed by the editor-tion would not interfere directly eiect jn the last issue in which hewith publication, no one would saw> as j did, a danger of in¬throw any bombs and the students crease(j administrative pressureswould defend free speech in a on the MAROON. The followingStrong manner. Nevertheless, any js my additional thinking on thiswriting of political import m the subject.MAROON was bound to stir up *" , ........more controversy than in recent Sf no doubt ";at ,beyears. I was aware that any editor MAROON wA a source of prob¬ind especially one left of campus l™8 »° ,he administration. Con¬center, would be on the spot. tent dossed safely m the class-Charge bias room can cause difficulties whenDuring the fall quarter some of broadcast to the communitythe first questions were raised by through the MAROON. The ad-campus politicos about MAROON ministration also had to ward off“bias.” These were specifically a Broyles investigation and dealrelated to the SG elections. I do w*th some faculty members whonot think that I need deal exten- were unsympathetic to the paper,gively with this topic. In an edi- Under these pressures, it wouldtorial on December 1 and in many he to the best interest of the ad-Other writings I clearly discussed ministration, so to speak, to havewhat the goals of the MAROON a harmless paper especially inwere as far as content choice, these times. It seemed possibleWhere these goals were negated that the faculty and administra-by practice, I tried to indicate tion would be willing to use awillingness to correct the wrong technical criticisms of the MA¬ROON to create a situation which*nd to admit the error.The criticisms that I had of the would tone down our point ofMAROON were not those spoken v*ew-by our critics. I disagreed withtheir characterization of the MA- Peoce importantWe in turn have recognized theBOON as biased, and felt that this importance to students of the is-was being grossly exaggerated, sues of peace, discrimination andWhere we were biased I feel we economic pressures. Our discus-showed a great deal of inconsist- sion of these areas certainly wouldency. Some weeks our errors ran put us beyond the conservativein directions favorable to such pale. This means the administra-groups as the NPSL, others to tion must either accept a certainISL. I was most disturbed, though, degree of trouble from the out-because we were not always doing side or control the MAROON, ora thorough job. We gave conclu- go somewhere in-between. I do notsions without adequate fact-find- think that this latter is the besting. These conclusions, called bi- way to train students to thinkased, might have been acceptable and I certainly have resisted ten-with a better research job. While dencies in this direction,recognizing our errors, I still feel On the other hand I have beenthat many of the articles were appalled at the students who havesound ana interesting. been too ready to allow the admin-Blast paper istration to do their work forAffecting the MAROON are the them—to alter the MAROON orseries of recent plans and criti- decide its policy. I almost wondercisms beginning with Professor if they felt they were a minoritySchwab and ending (for the mo- and needed an administration toment) with Dean Strozier. It do their work. This is similar towould be worthless for me to give see "Editor's Column/' p. 10FOR GRADUATION!RIDE ALightweightBICYCLENEW 1951 MODELSEquipped with 3-Speed GearMake Your Selection from thesefamous brand namesSchwinn - Rudge - RaleighDunelt-Armstrong-Hercules30-Day Free CheckupComplete Line of Parts for All ModelsJACKSON PARKBIKE SHOP5333 Lake ParkWe Service What We SellNOrmal 7-9860DOrchester 3-7524 ALL-EXPENSE sMARTINIQUETRINIDADVENEZUELACURACAOHaitiJAMAICA PROGRAM AN!LEADERSHIPMORE THAN JTOUR — INCHON THE SPOT .OF PEOPLE andEUROPEAN TOlMAROON bigwigs study post yeor's product. They might paraphrase •famous statement by a famous ex-Chancellor: "Not a great newspaper—simply the best there is." Left to right ore: Ed. Wolpert, managing editor;Charles Garvin, retiring editor; Alan Kimmel, editor-elect; and La VerneArmstrong, managing editor.YOURSELF!Don't test, one brand alone...compare them aliiUnlike others, we never ask youto test our brand alone. We say...compare PHILIP MORRIS...matchPhilip Morris...Mg® Philip Morrisagainst any other cigarette.Then make your own choice^TRY THIS TEST!Tak* O .Hill. *o««U-and ony„h.r clgoi.tl.- Th.n, h.r.'. «»you do;1 Light up cither cigarette. Take apuff—don't inhale—and s-l-o-w-l-ylet the smoke come through your nose.Now do exactly the same thing2 with the other cigarette.NOTICE THAT PHILIP MORRISIS DEFINITELY LESS IRRITATING,DEFINITELY MILDER]Remember. ••NO CIGARETTEHANGOVERmeansMORE SMOKING PLEASURE)CALLFOR PHILIP MORRISTHE CHICAGO MAROON Fane 5June 8/ 1951Fowlie biog revealsWallace Fowlie gives to us in Pantomime (Regnery $3.50)not only a superbly written autobiography containing manyinsights into modern French letters, but also an interestingview of the artist as an Orphean singer “who looks at theworld without being able to act in it.”Mr. Fowlie’s story is that of a boy who finds French tobe a more personal language thanhis native English, only to dis- people as artists Jacques Mari tancover, later in his life, that poetry an(* Andre Gide, for he grew.... __ .. _ . through contact with them, andis a still more native language. we may grow—understanding ourThroughout Fowlie s life certain own experiences more clearly inimages are of central importance, the light of his experiences—later images, chronologically shad- through contact with his booking into earlier images. The ka- which, by the way, is aptly sub-leidoscopic character of these images, with all their permutations,reminds one, at times, of MarcelProust.Speaks to Psichari's Jster titled “A Journal of Rehearsals.Artist "views" or 'acts'*The picture of the artist as a"viewer” rather than an “actor”has had a long history, and is not.It seems that chance forever in- unique with Fowlie. For Prousttroduces Fowlie to people closely it was only after man withdrawsconnected with art and artists, from the world that he is able toThus it is, that unknowingly, Fow- be an artist. It would seem, how-lie enters a little bookstore on the ever, that the artist need not him-left bank of Paris to discover him- self withdraw from the world toself talking to the sister of Ernest write in a cork-lined room. ForPsichari. This leads Fowlie to Fowlie, the artist does not with-abandon a projected thesis on draw from the world; in the endSainte-Beuve’s poetry in favor of he is the union of the man whoone on Psichari. views the world and the .man whoWe are to be thankful that acts about, but not in the world,chance introduced Fowlie to such •—Edward WolpcrtRussia describedby a RussianI Spied for Stalin, by Nora (Korzhenko) Murray. (Wil¬fred Funk, $3).Russia described by a Russian who spent her whole lifein the country is a subject which attracts attention on thenewstand even in this age when so many personal remi¬niscences about memorable events and places are being Tells storyof our timeThe publication of “The Eyesof Reason” ($3.75) by StefanHeym showed great courage, per¬haps not so much for the authoras the publishing house, Little,Brown, which brought it out.It is a controversial novel de¬fining with great dramatic effectthe most important concept thatman has tried to understand, theconcept of freedom.Heym tells the story of thethree Benda brothers who arereunited in Czechoslovakia afterthe second world war. It is atale of intrigue and suspense, ofJoseph Benda, a glass works own¬er, Thomas, a well-known writer,and Karel Benda, a doctor, whoalone of the three remained inCzechoslovakia during the war.The controversy with whichHeym deals is one of our time,hqw Joseph plots and plans tokeep his glass works from beingsocialized, how Thomas is tornbetween freedom in a collectivizedsociety and a society that is oftenthreatened by economic anarchy,and how Karel Benda sides withthe workers whom he fought within the underground.But the most important part ofthis book is that the episodes andcharacters are not puppets in aPunch 'and Judy show, but arewarmly human.The author has a point of viewwith which the reader might notagree. But he will be moved tothink as he might never havethought before.Hillel Slock\\ Real-life jungle novela good job for UllmanRiver of the Sunby James Ramsey Ullman (Lippincott, $3.50)Though he has but recently achieved favorable notice fromthe critics, Ullmans work well deserves the praise. In hil“White Towers” he gave an excellent character novel. Nowwith his “River of the Sun” he presents an excellent andvivid picture of the seemingly hopeless struggle of men withnature in the steaming Amazon jungles.On this background the author —draws a picture of intense human tions- This was probably thedrama. The plot is interesting, year’s outstanding achievementeven if sdmetimes too intricate *n of civil liberties, butand hard to follow. Characteriza- ^at committee, under Stanleytion too is surprisingly convinc- Baeon> also has to its credit aing, though the dialogue is some- thorough investigation of the Foxaffair, and in inquiry into the“Vanguard” case.Form committeeThe main event of the year,however, in the area of academicfreedom, was the formation of anAll-Campus Civil Liberties Com¬mittee. The organization of thistimes a little strained. This, how¬ever, might be explained as anattempt at local color.—Jan MajdeSG leaders...from page 6mittee on Recognized Student Or- group by SG, and the election ofganizations, under Robert J. the SG President as its Chairman,Alperin, to bring the Statute to indicate the great strides whichlife by establishing procedures for SG has taken since the All¬recognition and investigation and Campus Committee of 1949. Theby passing on all proposed rule 5th Student Government haschanges. Among the latter, SG’s taken its place as the one all-“Fourteen Freedoms,” a series of campus representative body, andamendments to the Student Code has increasingly been recognizedand Regulations, was partially as such by the student body andvetoed by the Administration, but the Administration. Its successorsenough remained to broaden sub- have the opportunity to serve andstantially the rules on petitioning to represent the student com-and distribution of literature, munity as never before, if theMost important in this area, prob- student body will utilize its rightably, was the adoption of a rule to vote in the next SG elections.denying recognition to any cam¬pus organization which, on Octo- and if those elected to office pos¬sess the ability to pursue theher 1, 1952, retains discriminatory lines of development which haveclauses in its membership regula- been laid down.//published. »Though Mrs. Murray’s bookdoes not reveal any revolutionaryinformation, it is outstanding bothbecause of the author's positionwhich is at least unusual (Mrs.Murray is the daughter of anNKVD official who fell fromgrace, and so she has the point ofview of the privileged few as wellas that of the masses, and, mov¬ing even lower down on the rela¬tive social scale, the point of viewof the victims of the system), andbecause of the realistic mannerin which she paints the country’sday-to-day life. She thus succeedsin showing the failure of the to¬talitarian system as exemplifiedby today’s Russia better thaneither an impassioned haranguewithout any appeal but that ofemotion, or a cold statement offacts which by their very enor¬ mity crush the reader to theground.The success of the work is byno means completely dependenton factors outside the author’scontrol. Mrs. Murray has an abil¬ity to look through Western eyesand at the same time not to loseperspective of her experiences asshe draws away from them. Shetreats her subject in a familiarway, in some respects reminiscentof the chicken-every-Sunday, I-remember-mamma type of book—an easy to read story of a girl’slife, but she dramatically presentsa new lot of settings which finallydetermine the overall characterof the book.The result is easy to read, butleaves a general impression in thereader’s mind rather than a massof disconnected details.—Jan MajdaWoodwinds’ performance lacksenthusiasm, inspired directionWhat has often seemed the better part of our symphonyorchestra registered a disappointing performance two Sun¬days ago. The woodwind section of the orchestra, conduct¬ed by Clarke Kessler, played Gounod’s Petite Symphonie,D’Indy’s Chanson et Danses, and Mozart’s Serenade No. 11,in E flat major.r- CrmnlinniA was played. Credit must be givenGounod s Petite Symphonie (he for thejr near masterydoes not have much to lose 0f the intriguing rhythms of thethrough bad performances; Danses.there are obvious and unsuccess- treatment of Mozart’sful attempts at the drama of serenade was perhaps the mostgrand opera, the folksiness of disappointing, if only because itBeethovenesque scherzi, and the was the one work we would havewoodwind writing of Mozart It liked to hear played well. Theseemed as though the composer group was rarely in agreementwas being overly cautious in, as to timjng and pitch until thewhat was for him, an unfamiliar impetuous Rondo, which was car-medium. ried off more successfully.Vincent D’lndy's Chanson et Rather than to any lack of abil-Danses is, in spite of occasional ity of the individual musicians,dull moments, a pleasant work, the failure of the evening must beThe perhaps overly long Chan- attributed to the absence of in-sons became definitely so through spired direction,the dragging tempo at which it —Leo Treitler Peace-inspector" bookstandout for fact-backingYou Can Change the Course of History, latest publication by alumnus Albert Bofmin,peace-promoter of the U. S. Committee Against Militarization, was released on MemorialDay at the Peace Workshop sponsored by the Illinois Committee for Peaceful Alternativesat Hull House. This somewhat autobiographical selection of materials will inspire everypeace-minded student, faculty member, or citizen at large to continue to be more activein promoting peace. Unlike manuals on how to do it, this booklet does not describe. Instead,it illustrates with specific exam- propagate coid war myths bdt do innovations that Bofman is intro-pies from a peace-practioner’s nu- not answer his questions for facts ducing to peace-workers through-merous letters to congressmen, to support their assertions; pre- out the USA: for example, hisnewspapers, and officials of many sents a hitherto unavailable tab- one-page letter of January 24 tonations. It furnishes diary-type ulation of USA-USSR military Senator Douglas, which will teachdescriptions of organizing a new expenditures from 1932 to date; you more than a text-book on thecommittee to “Get the Yanks Out anc* addresses Congressmen and subject of writing letters to Con-of Korea, Alive and Safe, NOW” officials of all nations with a post- gressmen and officials of othera venture that since has received car<^ calling for support of the nations.publicity from organizations Johnson resolution for cease-fire This unusual publication re-throughout the USA, a venture an^ armistice in Korea at the 38th tails for only 60 cents. Its 39 pagesthat stimulated a reader of one of Para^el °n June 25, one year after 0f peace - promotion techniquesthese descriptions to organize the *he beginning of a police-action merit reading. No member of athat already has cost the USA peace committee can do without70,000 “battle” casualties, not to it. it may be secured from themention 73,000 “non-battle” cas- author at 6329 S. May St., Chi-ualties. cago 21, and remittance may beThe reader may learn all the by postage stamps,techniques and peace-promoting LeRoy WolintUniversity Wives for Peace.The publication furnishes de¬tails of “A Typical Day in thePeace-Trenches”: how the authordirects another peace committee(U. S. Committee Against Mili¬tarization), issuing suggestionsfor peace-action immediately asworld-shaking developments likethe MacArthur ouster occur, sothat hundreds of peace-promoterson his mailing lists may swinginto action with letters to theirCongressmen and other officials.He exposes the “7500 Percent¬ers” now stealing America’s re¬sources with $75 billion in mili¬tary appropriations for 1952 com¬pared to $7 billion in 1938; cross-examines a Congressman and aGovernor of another state who iiiiimiiiiimiifiiiiviiMiiiimiiiiiMmiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiimiiiitviiiiiiiiiiiiiimtiiiitimmiiminiiiiMiiiiiiiHOT PA STROM I SANDWICHESCHOPPED LIVER - LOX & BAGEL SANDWICHESKREPLACH - KNISHES - BLINTZESJ. B. KOSHER STYLE RESTAURANT1004 East 55th St. WE DELIVER MU 4-9123,v\ .‘-‘.v.lpfe Cater to Group Luncheons and Dinners Bon VoyagelCARAVAN MEMBERSCollege: =Caravans4749 Cottage Grove 1i IAve.OAkland 4-1000m-m For Dear Old DadBARBARY SHORE—Norman Mailer $3.00An excellent novel about the post-war world by the author ofAmerica, narrating the clash of the Westerner with the alien worldTHE NAKED AND THE DEAD.THE DELICATE PREY—Paul Bowles $3.00Seventeen stories set in Arab North Africa, the Far East, or Latinof the East.THE AGE OF LONGING—Arthur Koestler ' $3.50The dilemma of our time translated into human emotions and thewill to resist total enslavement—Paris in the mid-fifties.RETURN TO PARADISE—James A. Michener $3.50An informative and critical evaluation of faraway people andplaces by the author of TALES OF THE SOUTH PACIFIC.MY LIFE WITH DREISER—Helen Dreiser $3.75The intimate story of a literary giant by the woman who knewhim best.COLUMBIA ENCYCLOPEDIA $35.00A splendid gift of enduring value that Dad will cherish and usefor years to come.See Special Father’s Day Displays —at.The University of ChicagoBookstore5802 Ellis AvenueTiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiMiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiftiuiuii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiuiiii— ~Page 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON June 8,Comedy, tragedy, andtumbling seen at UC Social calendar highlightedby Wash. Prom and two ballsDramatic entertainment for the UC campus was provided over thepast year by three student groups, University Theatre, Tonight at8:30, and Acrotheatre.University Theatre opened its season October 21 with a comedy,Be Quiet My Love by Bruce Brighton, winner of the Charles H. SergeiDrama Prize for 1949. Their second bill included Faust, A Masqueby UC professor Elder Olson, and No Exit by Jean Paul Sartre.During the winter and spring quarters UT presented Shakespeare’sRichard II, Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler, and Webster’s The Duchess ofMalfLGeorge Lazarus and Paul Sills rehearse for UT's production of Elder Olson s'Faust, A Masque."Tonight at 8:30, a new group organized in the fall quarter underMAROON sponsorship, gave three productions during the year.Their first program, presented in December, included Chekov’s TheBoor, Williams’ This Property Condemned, and Shaw’s Man of Des¬tiny. For its winter quarter production, Tonight at 8:30 gave GarciaLova’s Shoemaker’s Prodigious Wife and A Phoenix Too Frequent,While in the spring quarter they gave Shaw’s Androcles and theLion and Yeats’ Purgatory.All of this group’s plays were given in theatre-in-the-round styleIn Ida Noyes Theatre. Outstanding on this year’s so¬cial calendar were three formals:the Washington Prom, the Inter-Fraternity Ball, and the Inter-Club Ball.At the Inter! raternity Ball,which was held November 22 atthe Congress Hotel, Dolores Ras-bid, a member of the Wyvemwomen’s club, was crowned queen.Winning laurels as “Miss Uni¬versity of Chicago” at the annualWash Prom was Agnes Turngren,a student in the College. Thisyear’s prom, sponsored by StudentUnion, was held at the ShorelandHotel and featured the music ofMarty Gould’s orchestra.The Shoreland was also thescene of the Inter-Club Ball onJanuary 26. ,Eddie James and hisorchestra provided music for thisevent.A special feature of this dancewas the crowning of an Inter-ClubKing, chosen from a field of sixcandidates nominated by theclubs.In addition to these “big-three”balls, numerous C-Dances weresponsored by Student Union, andinformal Noyes Boxes were giventhroughout the year.In addition to these dance activi¬ties, several folk dancing organi¬zations sponsored dances through¬out the year, offering fold dancesof all nations. MAROON reviewsIf is traditional forMAROON to present in itsissue a general survey ofportont and unimportant c<pus events which were recorin its pages during the yeoiOn these two pages we hattempted to represent os mtypes of events and activias possible.Maroon hiby 2 attacAgnes Turngren, Miss UC This year saw the MAIfall under attack by studentuity and other members cuniversity community. Onday, May 1, a portion of theof the MAROON met witstudent • faculty • administcommittee to talk over chthat the MAROON was notsentative of what UC ougproduce. During the course imeeting, Joseph Schwab,man of the college natural s<faculty, proposed an investqof the MAROON.Dolores Rashid, Inter-Frat Queen Although this proposal wjaccepted by Dean of StiiStrozier, who listed six recondations of his own—includi]campus election of the MAPeditor—much campus debatstirred up. Mail addressed 1editor increased manifold, iring that the campus was thiover this important problThe MAROON replied toattacks, both through stalproved editorials, and the an:of individual members.SQ leaders list successes,bigger student servicesRoger Woodworth, Anton W. DePorte, Jerome GrossIt was the object of the 5th Student Government, elected in October, 1950, to conthe three lines of development inherited from its predecessor: service to the student tconsultation with the Administration; and the opportunity to become a real governrby putting into effect the* Statute of Powers and Student Bill of Rights, adopted irspring of 1950.In the service area, SG was sometimes checked by administrative forces beyond itstrol, as when tuition wasTonight at 8:30 features "a battle of the sexes" in scene from Shaw's'Man of Destiny."In early April Acrotheatre put on the stage of Mandel Hall their“Midnight Phantasy.” The show was two years in the making, andthe efforts of over 200 people went into its production.“Midnight Phantasy” filled Mandel Hall for four performances,drawing the biggest audience of the year. The production arousednational interest, as did Acrotheatre’s “Magic Rope” of 1949. Theproceeds went to the UC Settlement House. raised despite its efforts to rate Chicago symphony tickets; Finance Committee, Henry 1find ways whereby the Ad- and the maintenance of the Sum- berg Apart from putting•^ mer Travel Bureau. Bob LeVines complex business routine cmintsti ation couid save money Student-Faculty Relations Com- on a sound barfs, SG’s effoiand obviate the need for an in- mjttee carried out an investiga- find independent sources ccrease. But its positive record in- tjon Qf t^e c0pege Advisory sys- come have resulted in the <eludes the expansion of former tem (Wjth results surprisingly lishment of two new and siservices, and the establishment of faVorable to it), and made the cant services: the Mandel°nes; *!\us\ Davld first attempt (not overly success- concession service, and theKliot and the Student Needs com- fui) to establish an inter-depart- dent Government Ticket Agmittee continued cut-rate interim mertfal committee to co-ordinate which next year will be attravel service; placed the Book the interests of divisional stu- offer tickets to nearly all caExchange on a sound basis and dents in their relations with their and downtown events,broadened its service; established divisional administrations. Simplify ballottravelers and communters reg- The Activities co-ordination The Elections and Rulesstudents*takiSp° the^raf^De/e/ Committee< under R°ger Prager, mittee, under Herman Riche:students taking the Draft Defer- has made plans for an improved carried through a campaigZLrnT,!? ?t "ght Activities N*ht an“ a mudl penditures limitation bi7 aconege. broadened Activities Handbook, simplification of the ballotDistribute Cards* which is to be distributed by mail has otherwise perfected theThe NSA Committee, under to new students. cedures of SG operation wSander Levin, not only distributed Among the most remarkable though little known to the sti4,000 NSA purcase cards (free, for achievements were those in the body, are the basis on whicithe first time), but also arranged field of finance, under the guid- organization rests,for distribution of the Atlas Buy- ance of the Treasurer, Jerome it has been the duty of theing Service cards; the sale of cut- Gross, and the Chairman of the See "SG leoders," pUC makes strides in expansioUC expansion took new stridesthis year. vLate last summer the GoldblattMemorial Hospital, dedicated toresearch in cancer, was formallyopened at a ceremony attended byMrs. Goldblatt and Mayor Ken-nelly.During the same period con¬struction was started on the Ar-gonne cancer hospital which nowstands three floors above its foun¬dation.V/ork on the Midwest universi¬ties’ library on Cottage Grove isnow in its last stages, and on May16 Chancellor Kimpton officiallyopened the 11-million dollar atom¬ic research laboratories on EllisAvenue.Adele Frank and Jim Jackson perform unusual "Snake and Charmer"number from Acrotheatre production “Midnight Phantasy." The University also plans tobuild its own new library in thenear future. Nevertheless, girlsare not getting new dormitories. Now under construction is the Midwest Library on Cottage Grove AJune S, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROONHutchins provides biggest storyPage 1Acting-chancellor Lawrence A. KimptonHugh Brodkey looks overpast year of SU activitiesby Hugh Brodkey, SU presidentIn the past year, Student Union has continued to cater tothe social, cultural and recreational needs of the campus, andin so doing has managed to keep its members plenty busy.In 1950-51, SU sponsored some 140 events involving morethan 18,500 participants. (It is suspected, however, that somestudents participated in more than one event).High spots of the year in- ‘eluded such perennial favor- Groundwork was laid for futureites as Night of Sin, the Christ- activities - advising of Reynoldsmas Wassail party, Washington ^lub redecorating, organizing theProm, and the Spring Folk Festi- materials for next fall s Studentva. Musical Show, making arrange¬ments for a television set soon toSU receives chonceliors be available for campus use, plan^SU also gave receptions for njng organization and encour-both the outgoing ana incoming agement of small choral and in¬chancellors at which students and strumental groups, and so forth,members of the University com- ... .munity were able to meet the *ho* 'ner3y , ..much discussed and seldom seen ^ *ota listing of the yearsMr. Hutchins and the then-un- atllv'? “ not possible here, butknown Mr. Kimpton. t,tudc"t V,m°a men?berA . * , tell you about the work whichAll thirteen Student Union de- went jnt0 planning, publiciz-partments kept up a steady anc| execution 0f the events,stream of events and services for The actjve workers brought withthe campus trips to Colorado for tjiem the energy and ideas neces-skiing and to Texas for camping, g^y for serving the campus andNoyes Boxes with floor shows and took away knowledge of the tech-refreshments, skating parties, a niues 0f working with people, andmadrigal sing, a circle party, skills ranging from coffee-makingmonthly C-Dances, a campus tour orchestra-contracting.service, etc., etc. The problems of administrationUnion aids settlement of campus groups forced them-SU helped arrange and boost selves upon the attention of bothihe Settlement Benefit Shows (in- the secretariat and officers, buteluding performances by the the past year has particularly im-Page-Stone Ballet, Acrotheatre, pressed us all with the many so¬und the Fine Arts Quartet) and cial and recreational gaps in thewas involved in the conception of lives of many stpdents. The pastthree new all-campus organiza- an<l coming years’ programs arelions (the University Glee Club, unified by an attempt to fill theseEcho: Midway, and the Student gaps and to discover and satisfyCommittee on the Frankfort Ex- similar needs of the entire cam-change). pus. RMH leavingmerits extraThe biggest news story of theyear broke December 19 whenRobert M. Hutchins announcedhis resignation as chancellor ofthe University to become associatedirector of the Ford Foundation.In its special issue covering theresignation, the MAROON re¬corded comments from membersof both the faculty and the stu¬dents. Typical of these were thestatements of Ruth McCarn, as¬sistant dean of students, who said,“It will be difficult to think thatthe University will be withoutHutchins,” and of Toba Letwin,the College, who commented,“How can a myth resign?”On February 2 before a capacityaudience in Rockefeller Chapel,Hutchins delivered his farewelladdress which he concluded bysaying, “I shall always be proudand happy that we were here to¬gether.”The final follow-up story onHutchins’ resignation came April12 when Laird Bell, chairman ofthe Board of Trustees, announcedthe appointment of Lawrence A.Kimpton, former vice presidentin charge of development, as newchancellor. Farmer chancellor Robert M. HutchinsHUTCHINS OUT!t predictedit all/ saysD. PredicterWith Ihe osBouftceeMote otButch la* ten via*, the first etprediction* regarding UC he* to¬ by Cbavlto "Scoop" DorwhiChancellor’s quick exitleaves educators gasping Editorial» tarue of the Daily BeraM■earn. IfifiT, r«u will reamnberthat 1 said. "Predicted, that at*ome time In the future, a certainDnirtrstij will receive, lire, or hire.Bute hi ns is out! AsWave past wilt retunheroes ot the gridironhelix hired—that Se arhV the hundred* By tl"great man' downsCausers, tlC teams will Ifie victory aealnsi Educational circles ticked this week to the newt that kobert M.Hutchins—for 11 years Jhancellor ot the University of Chicago—was out.On the CC caatpui, s tocked, dosed students wandered aimlessly aboutasking themselves and *ch other, "X« It true?" EmDty-eyed professorsconducted half-hearted lectures before empty clamr&ms. Rumors andhalf-truths flew from ear to ear.One report stated that more than half1- ...,_ J 1/v- . the staff to UC’s new administration build*\VdTTVCCl yOt€ tng had left work out of sympathy to the, m Chancellor.v. Kaltendead Inspiration to our ideals, a rose amidst thedandelions of the meadow of education. Itmay truly be said, with no holding back of.emotion, that he is the prince among “thosewho know.”May this period of mourning be one tit•oul searching also. God be with him in thistime of his anxiety.iTkii sSSorM was gosssS ly fw NUd. *4 a vs<»> Union striketies up UCStudents went hungry and theadministration fretted when fourAFL locals struck against the Uni¬versity last December.The strikers picketed Universitybuildings, halted deliveries offood and coal, and caused the ad¬ministration to issue an 11-dollar-a-week food dole to dormitory res¬idents.The strike, which threatened toclose down the University entire¬ly, was settled when the adminis¬tration granted higher wages, ex¬tra pay, compensation for nightMAROON gag issued proved prophetic when it reported Hutchins' resigna- Work’ and nine “fringe” benefitstion on November 24, o month before the official announcement. to the strikers.Noted- lecturers appear during year;Eliot, Kerensky, Barr among speakersOutstanding among lectures given during the past three quarters were those presentedby T. S. Eliot, Alexander Kerensky and Max Schachtman, Canon Charles E. Raven, String-fellow Barr, and Mortimer J. Adler.,Beginning October 10, T. S. Eliot delivered a series of four talks on “The Aims of Edu¬cation” under the sponsorship of the Committee on Social Thought.Under the auspices of Inter-church Council, Canon Raven, former vice-chancellor of Cam¬bridge University, presented aseries of lectures on “Religionand the Bases of Peace” onOctober 24, 25, and 26.Kerensky and Scachtman de¬ bated the question “Was the Bol- Peace” on May 1 under the spon-shevik Revolution Democratic?.”for the Politics Club February 8.Stringfellow Barr, author of thepamphlet Let’s Join the HumanRace, spoke on “The Path to sorship of the MAROON, and Ad¬ler, professor of philosophy oflaw, gave “The Defense of ManAgainst Darwin” May 21 for Cal¬vert Club.THE CHICAGO MAROON June 8, 19!Page 8Leftirers...Letter to LebanonIt has been the tendency of the freenations of the world ever since theidea of self confinement has .been aban¬doned, to create a common understand¬ing among the various citizens of theworld which will lead to an interna¬tional apprehension of each other’*opinions and thoughts.Al-Urwa al-Wuthka, a society of Arab•tudents in the American University ofBeirut, founded since 1918, had thehonor to work for that ideal which theDree.nations of the world have adopted.This letter is intended to be a call toOur fellow students for a world-wideproject of International correspondenceto receive and transmit the problems ofoach other’s nations.I would be obliged if you wouldpost this letter on your bulletin board,eo as to give the chance to the largestnumber of students in your institutionto acquaint themselves with its con¬tents.In case of response to my call, I en¬close herewith a number of member’sAddresses of al-Urwa al-Wuthka SocietyWho at the same time are students ofthe American University of Beirut.Ahdwl-Jabbar Abdul-RahmanP. O. Box 306American University of BeirutBeirut, LebanonMontasim Bilbisit. O. Box 68American University of BeirutBairut, Lebanon Husayn MandilP. 0. Box 448American University of BeirutBeirut, LebanonIbrahim MuhtasibP. O. Box 442American University of BeirutBeirut, LebanonIbrahim YakubP. 0. Box 252American University of BeirutBeirut, LebanonBacks Berlin FestivalIn India end France, Nigeria andChina, Brazil and the Soviet Union.Great Britain and Italy, and on allpoints on the globe, tens of thousandsof young people are preparing to travelto the third World Festival of Youthand Students for Peace to be held inBerlin. August 5-19 this summer.To American students, the Festivaloffers an unequalled opportunity tomeet and make friends with students ofother countries through the culturaland sports programs, conferences andspecial activities. Here is an opportunityto meet a French psychology student, aViet-Namese chemistry student, a Sovietlaw student or a Chinese agriculturalstudent, a Nigerian economics student.You will see brjlliant cultural pro¬grams of nations: dance ensembles,choirs, soloists in song and dance,drama and ballet. Competitions forpeace prizes in folk-dance, choir, solosinging, piano, violin, etc., will be held.Competitions for the best song, poem,short story or photograph for peace have already begun. An internationalart exhibition will show the best workof youth in painting and sculptor.The doors of the Festival are opento all students and youth regardless ofcreed, race, religious beliefs, politicalconviction, organization or nationality.Conservative, liberal, socialist and com¬munist will participate. Unified by thecommon need for peaceful interchangeof opinions, young people meeting inBerlin can take into their own handsthe task of finding answers, settlingdifferences. As American students, re¬flecting the widest variety of opinion,Negro and White, Jewish, Protestantand Catholic; Democrat, Progressive, Re¬publican, Communist and non-partisan,we nevertheless share the common needfor peace. And certainly at this time,with war already raging in many landsand threatening to destroy all lands andcultures, we must seek actively allmeans of settling differences peace¬fully.I therefore appeal to you to Join withthe hundreds of thousands of youngpeople in many lands who will partici¬pate in the Festival. For further in¬formation call Committee for WorldYouth Friendship, a Cultural Exchange,c/o Anne Davis, WA 4-0223.—Chester Davislauq/iReports on the fight for academic freedom|y Fred Gearing and Martin Orans“Hangf tough” was the advice given by an AFL laborJournalist to the University of California faculty during theirfight over the Regents-proposed loyalty oath.To us, “hang tough” means stick together and fight un¬compromisingly for civil liberties and in particular for aca¬demic freedom. During this past quarter we have reluctantlycome to the conclusion that the Torch Burns BrightSuperficially, the current MAROONcontroversy seems centered on the Issueof the* paper’s Journalistic quality.Testifying on this superficial issue asNews Editor of the Roosevelt CollegeTORCH, I must call the MAROON ahighly successful venture into the haz¬ardous field of collegiate Journalism.I was particularly Impressed by theMAROON’S on-the-spot coverage ofLak’s ascent to the presidency. Furtherrelevant testimony: Of all the collegepapers which flood the TORCH officethe MAROON is the one most soughtafter by staff memberse and visitors tothe office: it usually gets stolen withinhours (I took it home with me to writethis missive). But, my impression, Yar removed asI am from the scene, Is that the jour¬nalistic criticisms of the MAROON arevery largely motivated by disagreementwith its supposed left-wing or evenstallnbld line.It would be a crime against freedom(and where can we expect more free¬dom than on a university campus?) touse unfair pressure and machinations tosuppress the views expressed by theMAROON editors, whatever those viewsare. Even if the MAROON’S present po¬litical policy, whatever it is (and it’s notobvious to me when I read single is¬sues), were patently and palpablywrong (and what does it mean for anadvocated social policy to be "wrong?”),I should think that the right of theeditors to pursue it would be as pro¬tected by the University as is the rightof any 13th Century philosopher to bepatently and palpably wrong In mattersof scientific biology.Thirdly and perhaps of greatest prac-tcal import, the idea of electing theMAROON editor at large is ludicrous,even IT, or maybe because it came froma dean.If you define democracy simply as therule of the majority (which, I’m sure,U of Cers. subjected as they are to somuch profound philosophical analysisof such concepts, would not do), thensuch a procedure of editor selectionmight be called democratic. But it wouldbe a retrogressive sort of democracyleading back to primitive, irresponsiblecampaigning for spoils. Consider, for amoment the effect the popular election,writers, movie and play producers, etc.,would have on American culture*?)."Milton Berle for editor of the NewYork Times!”The MAROON’S present system of edi¬tor selection seems, though I don’tknow how it works out in practice.Ideal. F*-st, it’s comparable to a sortof lnduilrlal democracy in which theworkers elect their bosses and In which,I presume, anyone is free to become aworker. And second, who could possiolyknow better which of several candidateswould make the best editor than those who have worked with them on tpaper?The signifiance43f the MAHOON's scposed monopoly as am' argumentpopular election -of-tne editor is greadiminished by the fact that: 1.) tMAROON is self-supporting; 2.) me:bershlp on the staff is, I again pisume, open, with only certain equal aelementary requirements, to all, a3.) the administration does have enoureal power to cope with any -tmus\situation on the MAROOfT.Well, If freedom of the press Is dirmlshed at the U of C, the TORCH y,have to burn all the brighter. HowevI feel somewhat confident that yctradition of freedom and will tofree will be the deciding factors in tcontroversy.Morris ShonfieldNews EditorRoosevelt College TORIBaseball...from page63 212 1656 13 14Koenig ...Lackey ...73 61510 71616Anthony ..KunstmanMilesJVelnraub .rrazier .... 270610 331200Margolls .. 0 10 00GilbertsonZoller ....Loewe .... 000 000 000TOTALS 612 105 140RUNS BATTED IN: Casey, 20; Rowlai14; Garcia, 13; Tamms, 11; Frank<feld, 11; Borowltz, 10; Lackey. 8; K<nig, 3; Weinraub, 3; Anthony, 2; Frazl1; Gilbertson, 1.PITCHING: Lackey* ST-2; Borowltz, 4Anthony, 1-1; Garcia, 0-1.University of Chicago is manifest- journalistic standards. Or has theIng the first signs of infringe- aim of the proposed reformsinents of this freedom. The Uni- changed?versity of California faculty sub- Earlier, concern for editorialBlitted to a series of seemingly opinion and staff-makeup wasminor compromises; in each case stoutly denied. Now we are beingthey felt that the compromise asked to make changes in elec-would preserve the essentials of toral procedures to the end thatfreedom, but the final results the MAROON editorship be(save only the amelioration by placed in the hands of personsjater court decisions) were of more in agreement with campusdrastic consequence for academic opinion. That the response of theendeavor at California. Restric- student body has been generalfive proposals have likewise come consent does(not seem to us theto UC in small doses and in dis- best of omens,guises palatable to this univer- Reputed “Reds” are easy pick-ings these days. But precedentsFirst we were asked to concern are funny things; they are gen-©urselves with the poor journal- erally established in respect toIstic qualities of the MAROON, groups which are for one reasonwith a proposed investigation as or another unpopular, but theythe way out. Now it is suggested often rebound on their propo-that the investigation was ill-con- nents.ceived and that an all-campus If should profit us- to realize©lection would somehow’ raise f^at the overwhelming majorityof UC students (yea even Logan Surveys college press situationin light of attacks on MAROOhby Leroy WolinsLet’s take a brief look at America’s college press with one eye cocked on the recent prposals to investigate and do other things to the MAROON.In content, the majority of papers surrender any function of dealing with broad sociissues immediately. The student floats in a make - believe world. The key problemschool spirit (there’s never enough of it) or the University Seal (it’s always being descrated by someone’s brogans because architects always put it where people logically shouwalk). for “not attending to his duties.” dents without administrativeA rare species indeed is the col- Thig meant that he Was carrying faculty supervision.”lege paper which takes the oppor- Qn an g^Qj- campaign against the Though the MAROON has htunity on occasion to run news jocal Broyleses. According to the as mUch freedpm as any pafmaterial designed to shake the May 17 story> one Qf the people could reasonably ask, pressuiworld view of smug righteous- interviewed by the Times was have been felt for conforminess. How many papers, for ex- saari. Nothing about what Saari the recent events being far freample, would run the article in ha(j lo say was in evidence. the first.this weeks MAROON on the At UCLA the Dai,y Bruin is Outstanding was the suggestbeing put out by a scab staff, from Lynn Williams, vice-prtFrench electoral law? The Michi-ffi som’e’.ther^buffar^too’few The whole staff ,'uit when, after dent of the University, thatto put all the farts m front of the regular semeaterly struggle ref rain from prinUng things tlstudents,row.” ‘the leaders of tomor- with a Student Executive Council would arouse the ire of ton which two administration Broyles minds in the legislatu. SUNGLASSESGround to YourPrescriptiono*$T45BRANDTS1223 E. 63rd St.Ml. 3-1671SO Years of ProfessionalEye ServiceDr. A. J. BergerDr. K. BerksonDivided PaymentsIf Desired and Pope) are “suspect” to some¬body off campus. And it is off-campus sentiment .which mustrightly concern us here. The pres¬ent sentiments of the Dean ofStudents do not spring solely oreven primarily from the studentbody. That office is not insulated;it is subject to constant pressuresfrom the trustees and these, inturn, are subject to all the pres¬sures pervading the society as awhole. If those pressures are towin out on this campus, no onecan assume himself immune.Groups considering themselvesnon-left might well hesitate tocapitalize on the present anti-redsentiment for the sake of immedi¬ate political advantage. To the de¬gree that precedents are estab¬lished allowing the manipulationof investigations or electoral pro¬cedures to gain advantage overany particular group, to thatsame degree will the advantagegained be insecure.Is there any group so invinc¬ible that they can “hang tough”alone? members sit, the staff choices for He characterized (hem as afnNo amount of dispute about the various major editorial positions of the imminent arrival of bolslmerits and demerits of the big were thrown out and it was de- vism, not sharp enough to dissue of our time, communism, ci(jed that an administration-run criminate between (l)a classifipacks the wallop contained in the board would do the choosing from ad for a short wave set “just tfact that election laws are jug- now on. thing for radio Moscow” and (gled to reduce chances of a Corn- Brooklyn College’s Vamruard a cal1 for world revolution.»<■ have already discusf^ a( Even admitting some validitypnvrnirnlpni* anti-Communist some lengthf was abolished for Williams premise, we politely b£ ' disagreeing with the administra- *imdy reject the conclusion tlIf it is assumed that it would tion’s action banning the Labor the way to burn away the evbe best that students be informed youth League on that campus spreading fog ol conformity isof this disturbing fact, then we Here in Chicago we find one admit its omnipotence and 1had better print it, because the lssue o£ the Wright’ College News come conformistchances of its appearing else- nrevented from circulatim? he- ^e should bend our effortswhore are slim. tlook a stand ag3l3ft the ^ assnring the e a m p u sOne reason for the dearth of Board of Education’s action order- MAROON which never has tosuch important facts (and non- ing the faculty to divest them- what the, Western Washingtconformist opinions likewise) in selves of their financial interest Co^leSe Collegian did. Criticizthe college press is the intimida- in tho school’s bookstore. for runr”'ng some material fretion brought to bear through The Roosevelt Torch until re- the International Union of Sthrough threats and acts of direct cently had a policy like the d®nt®« the editor loudly affirmsuppression of college papers. MAROON’s of rejecting discrim- ^is ri&ht to do this and promisThere is sad humor, for ex- inatory advertising. Asked recent- as t°udly in the same arti<ample, in the headline that the ly why an ad »was run for an never to do it again.University of Washington Daily “escort service,” institutions . ^ale Dai,y News editoricarried over its story (May 17, which are notoriously jim crow, *zed recently;1951), about the recent New York the Torch business manager gave can^X^f'^efikuew* toi«Times expose of the eclipse of the MAROON this information. .thls control over youthful lives by loofree thought on American cam- The paper is partly subsidized by ‘loyalty ch^k/wTciSnoV^ueveMpuses: “New York Times Survey the school and a board with ad- this virtual blockade of the markPlaces University Among Schools ministration membership deter- fo^a iifetfme*.to younK men can e°Local andLong Distance MovingStorage Facilities for Books,Record Cabinets, Trunks, orCarloads of FurniturePeterson FireproofWarehouse, Inc.1011 East Fifty-fifth StreetBUtterfield 8-6711DAVID L. SUTTON, President Defending Freedom.’ .. , - --- —*■«- . . . And yet, despite homines advertising policy. They we se* the *ky growing darker, iThe university had fired three insist that jim crow ads appear, fnf we^e^ouSe SSTSSSLJmof its top professors for refusing "They have the purse strings ” *nd more docile, more and more .to discuss their political alalia- said the business manager. S^fiMSSffWKSET'.Si!tions with the local witch-hunt The Torch’s masthead informs ou* w^ere it should flame the brigiest/1committee, and the paper's editor, the reader that it is “Published Li„htnine flashed in that daLen Saari, was recently kicked weekly from September through sky Monday whe^the U S «=out by an administration board May by Roosevelt College stu- preme Court Sanctioned the ^01June GraduatesMake Your Appointment NowFor that Graduation PortraitGowns Available •9Ae PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREET lawing of political advocacy,the nation is headed for a “fcblow,” it will not fail to penetrathis and other campuses. 'It looks like the orders whave to go out: “Batten down thatches—and the typewriters!!SHOE REPAIRSubstantial Discount.to StudentsIT MUST BE DONE SIGH’HOLLIDAY'S1407 East 61st Street(at Dorchester Ave.)Phone Normal 7-8717Two blocks from Inti. HouseWhile-U-Walt or One-Day SenJune 8, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 9ICH.254.250.250.246.219.130•111.067.059.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.225land,ikeu-Koe-azler,4-6;Mpro-ocialm isiese-louldve ors hadpaper;suresrmity,fromestionprtsi-at wos that>f theature.afraid>olshe-;o dis-ssifiedist thend (2).dity inly butn thatever-y is tond be->rts to*E> u s as to dolingtoniticized1 from>f Stu-firmedomisedarticlelitorial- Continue ad policy discussion Exstaffers describeFrench election lawsat darkS. Su-the out-:acy. I*a “bigmetrate;rs willown theiters!!!"iGHT"useService if it's aBOOKor (Continued from April 27)by LeRoy WolinsA particularly vicious aspect of American advertising is the fact that the ads themselvesare jim-crowed. Search as you will through this or other issues of the MAROON, you willnot find Negroes pictured in the ads. (Often stereotypes are employed of Negroes in menialjobs; these we could not accept.)UCLA in 1949 elected a Negro as president of its 14,500 students. A large local depart¬ment store always had hired the president to use his or her name as campus representa¬tive. The job includec) modeling —clothes for ads. To meet this “crisis” the store added two other pened.campus politicians to its campus Dialogue like this warmed therepresentative force. A11 three wires for half an hour.* Finallymodelled the store’s clothes for the Chesterfield representativeads in the UCLA Bmin, a unique had to catch a plane,experiment in interracial adver- We suggest that individual stu-tisement—too unique. dents may have some commentsLetter sent that they would like, to forwardIn order to see what could be to the National Advertising Serv-done along these lines we dis- ice M20 Madison Ave., New Yorkpatched the following letter to the 17) or to the Campus Merchan-National Advertising Service dising Bureau (274 Madison Ave.,(source of most of the pictorial New York 16, N. Y.), with whoseads in the MAROON): representative we talked on the“It has come to the attention of phone. They plan that next year'sthe MAROON that advertising ap- campaign in June. He told us hepearing in a number of Negro col- would bring up our idea at thatlege publications . . . contains the time. We suggest that one of thepictures of Negro celebrities and most effective ways to get itstudents. We refer in particular adopted is to let these peopleto the advertising put out by know that we are ready for a lit-Chesterfield cigarettes. We feel, tie democracy in advertising,that it is unfortunate that ads Meanwhile, we of the MAROONdepicting Negroes are limited to will continue to work on the localpublications intended fof Negro level. We will need the coopera-audiences only . . . the MAROON tion of students. We want to knowhopes that you will route one or when you come across cases ofmore of the Chesterfield ads men- discrimination so that we can stoptioned to us. We see no reason any ads that get through ourthat this should not be possible, routine checkup. This is especial-If other such advertising becomes ]y necessary in the case of adsavailable, we would also be glad to for such things as jobs, livingreceive it. quarters, schools.“Your early reply and coopera- Measures suggestedtion are eagerly awaited.” You might also think about tak-There was no reply. ing measures to clean up theA second letter was sent to the housing bureau, the ReynoldsNAS and alsp a letter to the Ches- Club bulletin board, and perhapsterfield representatives along.sim- other forms of free advertisingilar lines. The latter contacted us around the campus which haveby phone.Chesterfield’s schedule, said therepresentative, is made up on ayearly basis, so that the earliestpossible time that the suggestedchange might be made is next fall.The planning conference will bein June.Appeal to massesCiting the Chesterfield account ROON staff proposed Wednesdayas one of the most advanced in that all action on Dean Robert M.breaking down jim crow barriers, Strozier’s recent proposals dealinghe stated that Chesterfield never- with the paper be postponed un-theless felt that they must ‘ap- til the full staff can considerBOOKSyou wish toBUYorSELLit'sWISEto seeCLARKondCLARKBooksellers to three generationsof University students ond faculty.1204East55thStreetThe University Area's largest storedevoted exclusively to the sale ofbooks.Summer Job?c<JMake hay while thegun shines!”Good Humor ice Cream Companyhas high-earning established routesopen for the summer. Can placeboth drivers and non-drivers.Contact the bronch neorest yourhome.Good Humor Corp.2736 Arimtoge Ave., Chicago, ill.6844 Wogner Ave., Detroit, Mich.25 James St., New Haven, Conn.664 So. 15th St., Newark, N.J.115 E. 3rd St., M. Vernon, N.Y.426 Long Beoch Rd Oceanside,N.Y.322 Rutledge St., Brooklyn, N.Y.818 Bleigh Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. by Daniel Joseph and Robert Blouner(Ed. Note.—The following is a condensation of an ar¬ticle on the new French election law by two former MA¬ROON staff members studying in Paris. The law, defeatedonce, was re-submitted and enacted in early May aftertwo governments fell in the process. With the importantFrench elections coming on June 17, the law’s provisionsshould be of special interest toUC political scientists, profes- New low explainedsional and amateur alike.) According to its sponsors, theParis—There are about a dozen new election procedure is do-political parties in France rather signed to reduce Communist rep-than two or three as in America, resentation. Here is the actualSince no one party is strong mechanism of the new law:enough to elect a majority of dep- It replaces proportional repre-uties to the National Assembly sentation by a majority systemand form its own government, the (winner takes all) and—this isgovernment is always formed by the crucial thing—provides fora coalition of several pafties, apparentements at the nationalwhich, together, have a majority, and local level. The new law al-The present government is a coali- lows the lists of each party totion of three large center parties: s’apparenter or unite among them-the radical socialists, socialists, 'selves in a coalition on the ballotand MRP (Catholic Party). in each election district (there areTwo major parties are not in over 100) in order to gain the ma-the government. jority and exclude other partiesThe Communists are the largest from all representation. They thenpolitical party with 850,000 mem- divide the seats among them-bers and with about 30% of the selves,popular vote in the last national Paris excludedelection. They have the most dep- Where there is no coalition or,uties, about 180 out of 600. They despite a coalition, no maority,proportional representation stillholds. Paris area, where the Com¬munists are expected to poll ahave not been a part of the government since 1947.DeGaullists gainingnot yet applied active measuresagainst jim crow.Strozier invitedto staff meetingAn informal meeting of the MA-peal to the masses.” When themass of students is white all theads will show all white persons.Otherwise a carefully laid cam¬paign would be upset.The MAROON thinks UCerswould be able to take the shock;might they even appreciate Ches them.Strozier was invited to attenda MAROON staff meeting inautumn quarter to discuss theproposals with the staff.Basis for the postponement re¬quest was the fact that the MA¬ROON constitution prevents pol-terfield’s advance over other ad- icy decisions being made exceptvertisers? by two-thirds vote of an officialCan’t take the chance of a flood staff meeting, which in turn en-of protests, or of bad reaction to tails a quorum requirement ofwhole campaign. one-half plus one of the staff, un-Would Chesterfield stop using obtainable at the present,any ads with Negro people in *them if there were no more seg- T T/^i . TT% XT Tregated school markets?Wait and see ^They’d have to see when it hap- n f #Swift portraitsTwo portraits, one of Robert M.Hutchins, the other of Charles H.Swift, were donated to the Uni¬versity recently and are now hang-ign in Hutchinson Commons. TheChancellor’s portrait was paintedby Lawrence Beall Smith in 1949.Smith is a UC graduate of 1931.The portrait was secured by aCommittee of the Board of Trus¬tees.Charles H. Swift, a benefactorof the University, and brother ofHarold H. Swift, former chairmanof the Board of Trustees, who diedon September 30, 1948, had hisportrait painted by Dorothy Vi-caji, an English artist, in 1941.The portrait was donated by hiswidow, now Mrs. Hans von derMarwitz.Summer Formalsfor theAfter Comps DanceSpecial $6Complete Line ofAccessoriesGAMP’Swhere fit is foremost1530 East 69th St.Tel. FAirfax 4-9550open evenings The RPF is the party of Gen- maority, is specifically excludederal DeGaulle. Formed after the from the provisions of the law, solast elections, it has only a hand- that proportional representationful of deputies in the present will hold there.Assembly. It is expected to draw Concretely, the law might workabout 20% of the vote in the com- like this in an election districting election, making it the second which has 10 deputies to elect,largest party. Suppose the vote is CommunistsThe present Assembly was 40,000; Socialists, 15,000; MRP,elected in 1946 and 1948 according 12,000; Radical Socialists, 12,000;to the system of proportional rep- RPF (DeGaulle) 22,000 (quiteresentation provided in the 1946 likely to be a typical result). Un¬constitution. The idea is simple, der the old proportional represen*If a certain electoral district has tation law, the Communists would10 deputies to elect, the 10 seats get four seats, RPF two, Socialistsare distributed among the various two, Radical Socialists one, MRPparties according to the propor- one.tion of votes received by each Under the reform the four mi-party in that district. nority parties could count theirAlthough present indications votes together, and having moresuggest that the Communists will than 50% of the total, they wouldget about 40% of the votes in this take all the seats. Thus it wouldyear’s elections (not enough to be RPF four seats, MRP two, So*assume power), it is feared by cialists two, Radical Socialists two,the government that they would Communists non. The parties withbe in a position to demand a coali- 12,000 votes would have represen-tion government if they also re- tation while the one with 40,000ceive 40% of the seats. would have none.Foldi-Rose concertdulled by pianoAndrew Foldi, bass, and Edgar Rose, pianist, presented arecital, May 4, consisting of songs of Schubert, Debussy, andBartok. Added seasoning were arias of Mozart and Rossini*Eight songs from Die Winterreise opened the program.Foldi performed them with a pleasant, if not beautiful, voiceand a thorough understanding of the required phrasing, butthe emphasis which he injectedinto the songs was often too sub- rnent characteristic of Hungariantie. This fault was enhanced by songs. The piano was again defi-the pallid piano playing, which cient.had all the strength and flavor of Mozart, Rossini spiritedcoffee-shop coffee. The pianist,aside from lack of rhythmic in In the arias of Mozart and Ros-sini the under-emphasis evident incisivness was sometimes deficient the previous portions of the pro¬in his timing. gram was discarded. They weresung with good spirits. Here thepianist cannot be criticized for hisPiano suited DebussyThe Debussy songs were rather....... , , , .. accompaniment, since it would^ of.pot!1 have required Horowitz for somesinger ahd pianist was excellent. semblance of the original orches-The dilute type of piano playing tral soundwhich was c°mpletely unsuited The en’core numbe „Thlor Schubert was at home in De- Shadow,” by Schubert, was thly* " best performed item on the pro-The group of folksongs by Bar- gram. It was sung with deep feel-tok were fairly straight-forward ing, and the piano, fortunately,arrangements of Hungarian had 3. very easy part, consistingsongs. They were sung with the only of background chords,beautiful changes of tempera- —Fred WinsbergjAAAAAAAi |Our special checking accountis the best answer to the stu¬dent's financial requirements.ASK OUR OFFICERSABOUT ITWatch for the Opening of Our New QuartersUNIVERSITY NATIONAL BANK“A Strong Bank”1354 EAST 55TH STREETMember Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation JOBS OPENFOREIGN AND DOMESTICSalaries $3,000 to $12,000. Immediateneed for office help, payroll clerks,timekeepers, engineers, draftsmen,skilled and unskilled workers alltypes, on large Government and pri¬vate contracts In United States,Hawaii, England, Belgium, Italy,Germany, Iran, South America, ParEast. Living quarters, transportation,high pay. Men and women, both.For information on these job con¬tracts and application blanks, send$2 mailing charge to: EmploymentInformation Center, Dept. COL 68,P. O. Box 4, Brookline 46, Mass. Noother fee or charge of any kind. De¬livery guaranteed. We are bonded.Members of Brookline Chamber of.CommercepPage 10 June 8,Close successful sports year;32 athletes awarded first ‘C’by Bob MarchChicago’s “Unsubsidized Wonders” have had a rather good year of it. Varsity and JVteams, operating without highly-paid “ameteur” athletes, have occasionally made sportseditors sit up and take surprised notice.The Varsity Soccer Team had faced toughest schedule of any UC team this year. Withnine foriegn students in the starting lineup, coach Alvar Hermanson’s booters posted anexcellent record in games with the best teams in the midwest.Harriers second in AAU —" ”The Cross - country Team gccdt Bond Medal as leading scor* Derr leavesplodded the regulation dis¬tance in fast enough time toplace second in Central AAU.Coach Bill Moyle had to rebuild er of the season. Paul Derr, whose name hasbecome synonymous with JVNine breezes along track at Chicago, is leaving theThe baseball team had a fine University. As an alumnus of hishis Varsity swimming team from year, running up a long list of teams, I would like to remark thatthe ground up. The mermen still wins Kyje Anderson’s hard-hit- never has a coach done more forting nine did not face such top «jan MrDerr. Helearnedmanaged to place second in thecity meet, although their threeyear win streak was broken.Cogers fadeI imagine the Varsity basket- tea As as Northwestern, Notre for bim. jn bjs stay as jy coacjliDame, and Bradley this season, he turned out some of the bestfor the defeats these teams suf- teams in the state. I hope I amball team wbuld prefer to remain. fered at the hands of our boys in speaking for all of “Derr’s boys”anonymous this year. They posted in wishing him good luck at hisa nineteen-game streak—only the the Pasl two ^ears cooled their n0W post ag North CaroIina Uni.streak was in a negative direction, enthusiasm. They had originally versity physical education direc-The team was ypung and short, taken on Chicago expecting a tor.and should show a lot of improve- breather, and found that they got Bill Koll, Varsity wrestlingfannri oo „ the wind knocked out of their coach, is also leaving the Phys.The gymnasts faced as tough a sai]s Ed. staff. A likeable fellow andlanc'dUnotaquitCeSasCwcllTs Their Speaking oi sails, the Sailing ^1°,! ^e -UC; <'°?nheS'steel-footed brethren, but made a club expanded activities greatly ?heJMidwav'Sname for themselves with the this year> and s a i 1 i n g showed ear sta^ on the Mldwa^memorable Acrotheatre show. siSns o£ becoming an important P*' U fop IM winnerMany guest members of Aero- sP°rt on the Midway. Psi U posted the outstandingtheatre turned in excellent indiv- Netmen look to future Intramural record of the season,vidual performances in the Cen- The Varsity tennis team closed , de- W.°J1 £be Fraternity “A”tral AAU. Jim Jackson earned the up shop this year with a 6-3 rec- Jea£ue Idles in touchball, basket-Dan Hoffer Trophy in gymnastics ord. Most of the top players have bad’ tra°k, softbal, and volleyball,for 1951. plenty of eligibility left, so watch *hey tied for first in the fratFencers improve for some strong teams in coming swimming meet with the DU’s,Alvar Hermanson’s fencers had years. who won t£ie table tennis crown.a very good record this year, and * The Varsity rifle team took the , In the College House “A”are climbing back toward the loss of its two 5est piayers in lea£ue' Chamberlain won theheights they achieved in the years stride and had another bang-up touchball and softball titles andimmediately foilowing the war. season. The rifle squad is the only ?odd won in tennis and volley-e \ arsitj tiack team has the one on campus in which both men ball to become the only doublelongest season of any UC team. and women compete together on vy,nners of the year. Vincent wonIn dual and triangular contests, an equal basis. the table tennis championship,the thinclads had a 12-4 record in- . ’ Hitchock won the s wi m m i n gdoors and a 5-3 record outdoors. oy**e tcams ol1 red-hot crown, Coulter won in basketball,Vein Gras was defeated but once ^ teams as a group had an and galibury took thein the high and low hurdles amazingly successful year. They title.the respect of every boy who ranevents. Marc Goff earned theEditor's column...(from page 4)the dangerous trend where stu¬dents who disagreed with MA¬ROON editorials and appoint¬ments quit the staff. An extremeexample was the student who quitin November because we ran aneditorial against the McCarranAct of which he was in favor.This is certainly a unique and un¬fortunate trend in UC history. Ihope that next year’s studentshave a little more backbone tostand up for what ideas theyhave and to be a little more will¬ing to listen to the other fellow.Nothing that I have said shouldlead people to think I have nothad the utmost faith in everymember of the MAROON staff.In such thrilling work as digging Vultures, Chamberlain alumni winIndependent compeition was of¬fered in basketball and softball,the Vultures winning the formerand the Chamberlain Alumni thelatter.Tomorrow night at 6:15 in theQuadrangle Club, thirty-two UCathletes wil lbecome members ofthe Order of the “C,” an organiza¬tion of all major “C” winners.New “C” men are: R. Baptist, Y.Baskin, J. Binford, D. Bostwick,L. Buttenweiser, R. Coggeshall,W. Cohen, R. Dalenberg, C. Dalke,J. Dickinson, J. Frankenfeld, G.Fuller, R. Garcia, C. Gray, W. Hal-perin, M. Hoyt, J. Jackson, C.Jenkins, J. Johnson, J. Kelly, A.Maree, J. Morgan, W. Morrill,R. O’Toole, A. Reilley, N. Risley,D. Saffer, A. Smith, D. Steele, H.Tamms, H. Wulf, and P. Wyatt.First digressionDuring the current year I havemenPaul Derrmaterial on the Kimpton appoint- . - - +Vl(1 PQT 5n r9„tpt curing tne current year Jment cr producing a “Hutchins ™ restncted myself solely to -Out” issue, we have worked well bad' tlon of camPus sports. As a re-together. Such people as La :^h^n a'liTut th? Ward for my tireless effort'1 amVerne Armstrong and Ed Wolpert J* hlPs 1in all b^tthe lat' giving myself the luxury of de-have done wonderful jobs taking indo^r track s o c c^r fencing Parti+ng this policy for a fewover in my absence. Editor elect mdoor track, s o c ce r, fencing, short column inches.Kimmel has gone beyond his copy wrestling, go , and gymnastics The Chicago White Sox haveeditor’s job to put out a good tne .yoyn.g a 1 n 1 e. ,t.e s c°mpeted surprised many people with apaper. LeRoy Wolins did, by ad- against teams with up to ten rather unusual performance onministrative recognition, a tre- £imes tbe enrollment of the first the diamond. The best aspect ofmendous job of putting the MA- ^ *trST°^ this problem is its effects on Chi-ROON on its financial feet. A wblcb Jayvees draw their tal- cago-born UC’ers, who now needword should also be put in about entl Respite this disadvantage, the no longer listen in mute silenceDavid Canter who rose above in- combmed average of these teams to the boasts of natives of Newtense political criticism to teach was over the mark. York. I sincerely hope that stu-even his enemies many useful The women’s teams drew most dents will be distracted from theirjournalistic devices. Such page of their talent from the same age studies in the fall quarter by theeditors as John Grimes have made group as the Jayvees. Intercolle- hoopla that surrounds a Worldthe paper a pleasure to work on giate compeition was offered in Series (Don’t say it can’t happendespite many anxietiesHas faithThroughout the year I have con¬stantly gained in faith in the abil¬ity of my fellow students to standup for what they believe to beright, to work for what theywant and to fight injustice. Theletters I have received, too numer¬ous to print,' show that many stu¬dents while not entirely agreeingwith us will stand up for us. Inthe many difficult times I had, Ialways realized this. It is withthis feeling that I am able to lookback pleasantly on the year’s ex¬perience. I have even enjoyedworking with the administration! hockey, tennis, and bowling. here.)Books that speak forPEACEMARXISM and NEGROLIBERATION byGus Hall10cCommunity Book Shop1404 55th Ml 3-0567Specializing in Marxist-LeninistLiterature DR. KURTROSENBAUMOPTOMETRIST 'NSA Discount of 10 - 20%Immediate Repair Service1132 E. 55thHYde Park 3-8372 “A little forwmethy stomach’ssake atJimmy sot 55th and Woodlawn Next Stop.VacatioTimeWithin the next few wemost of us will be inmidst of our Summer pi.Whether it is to be aSummer of Vacation cweekend snatched whentime permits, let's recorin snapshots.XLet us, here at the PIcounter answer your qitions and relieve youVacation picture taking vries.The University iChicago Booksti5802 South Ellis AverJune 8, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 11AMUSEMENTS-Great l,ady"~DAVThe newBillie t*™*- 'S^ssrASP enters into greot debote:Peace or War?Peace Meet inJune 158 p.m. Adm. 75cRev. Mas6ie Kennard and culturalfestival. See ‘'Amphytrion’’ June 10,splendid movie. Mat. 3 p.m., 50c and75c plus tax. Eve. 8 p.m. 75c and $1plus tax. Children 25c. An eveningon lithography, June 8; film andcommentary.ASP CULTURAL CENTER946 N. Clark St. Classified AdsDeadline: 5 p.m., TuesdayLOST & FOUNDFOUND ON campus, chain with circularlock. Identify by calling NO 7-6334.GREY TOPCOAT. Please contact JimHllldale, B-J, Room 19.FOR RENTCLEAN, LIGHT room for woman, nearcampus. 1229 E. 57th St. FA 4-5770, Gra¬ham.3-ROOM APARTMENT with view of Lin¬coln Park and the lake. Will sublet lorone year, starting about Sept. 1. PhoneAR 1-0354, evenings.FOUR-ROOM apartment, private bath,starting July 1, $90. Harold Wade, 6028Blackstone, after 6 p.m.MALE ROOMMATE wanted for pleasanttwo-room apartment, near I. C. $7 perweek. Contact Leo Subotnik, 1510 E.61st, MI 3-7319.COACH HOUSE for university coupleand child, will convert if necessary. CallMU 4-5551, evenings.LOVELY FURNISHED home in ruralMichigan. All or part of summer. 300miles from Chicago. Private lake, alsonear Lake Michigan. Ideal for children.MI 3-5521,ROOM IN exchange for baby sitting.6940 S. Constance, DO 3-4398, Mrs.Cohen. JOB OPPORTUNITIES TRAVELI n«pn EARN MONEY fast and easy, full orpart time sales canvassing. No previousexperience; no deposit; no obligationson your part necessary. Call PL 2-1338.STENOGRAPHER-TYPIST, excellent ex¬perience and wages. Work a week ortwo or all summer. 22 West Madison,Room 900, FR 2-9511.COLLEGE MEN, summer work, $2-$3per hour. Full or part time. RepresentRealsilk Hosiery Mills. FR 2-0797.EARN MONEY fast and easy. Full orpart time. Sales canvassing, no previ¬ous experience, no deposit, no obliga¬tions. Call PL 2-1338. Reliable Sales Co.,P. O- Box 3318, Merchandise Mart, Chi¬cago 54, Ill.BUSINESS SERVICESMOVING, HAULING, light trucks orvans. For better rates, BU 2-6210.EXPRESS. Light and heavy moving.Willing and courteous service. Reason¬able rates. Bordone, HY 3-1915.LESSONS IN piano and theory for chil¬dren and adults. Call Miriam Rhoads,MJJ 4-3360.FRENCH LESSONS at reasonable ratesby experienced, well-trained native Pari¬sian; conversation, grammar; all levels.NO 7-6703.TYPING — FAST, accurate; reasonable.Experience in social science; also short¬hand dictation and rewrite work. MI3-0473, Apt. 206. 6106 University.Campus Interviews on Cigarette TestsNumber 21...THE PELICAN- .3- V-/UR easy-going, big-billed friend has learned to say “No’to these hurry-up, one-puff, one-sniff cigarette tests! ‘‘Why”, says he,“they don’t even give you time to finish the cigarette before you’re supposedto decide tvhich is mildest!” Millions of smokers have come to the same conclusion—there’s just one real way to test the flavor and mildness of a cigarette!mmpp MJlV the sensible test . . . the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test,which simply asks you to try Camels as a steady smoke-on a pack-after-pack, day-after-day basis. No snap judgmentsneeded! After you’ve enjoyed Camels—and onlyCamels—for 30 days in your “T-Zone”(T for Throat, T for Taste), we believe you’ll know why ...Mere People Smoke Camelsthan any other tigarette! GOING WEST? Would you like inex¬pensive transportation to west coast?Drive a new 1951 car to \yest coast citiesas your own, gas paid. TransportationLease Co., 188 West Randolph St., Room1416. FI 6-3422.DESIRE RIDE to or near Appleton,Wisconsin, latter part of June; willshare expenses and conversation. CallBob Rosenthal, MU 4-9368, If not homeleave message.LOS ANGELES bound. Would like oneor two riders. ’49 Plymouth. Leave aboutJune 15. BUI Pryor, Room 415, BurtonJudson, MI 3-6000.WANTED—RIDE from New Orleans backto Chicago. Around end of June. Drive,share expenses. MI 3-0473.ANCHORAGE, ALASKA. Leaving afterJune 10. Persons interested in a rideup the Alcan Highway contact A1 Lang-mayer, Vincent 443.DRIVING TO Huron, South Dakota,June 16. Call Strlln, BU 8-9750.„ . ~rEXPERIENCED DRIVER wishes ride toWashington, D. C., around June 15-18.Call Sam Phillips, Rm. 55, Snell Hall,Ext. 1072. ^WANTED—RIDE to New York for two.June 14. Share expenses. Contact HarryMaGuire, International House, or Ron¬ald Suter, Burton-Judson.WANT SOMEONE to drive my 1948 Oldsconvertible to California; middle ofJune. Failing that, want passenger;leave, about June 20. Call W. Karush,Ext. 2617 or HY 3-3087, evenings. SuCftteWANTEDTO TEACH ADVANCED students InFrench, German. Italian and English.European professor. Box 170, MAROON.SOMEONE INTERESTED In obtainingroom and board in exchange for babysitting and doing evening dishes. CallMI 3-1998 at about 6 p.m. References.BABY SITTER days for summer, eitherIn my home or yours. Call MI 3-0800,Ext. 3654, Mrs. Guthrie.RIDE TO Boston or vicinity. Share ex¬penses, driving. Must arrive June 19.Leave after June 15. Rudenberg, MI3-6455, evenings. Please leave messageIf not home.POSITION AS senior life guard, swim¬ming teacher or sports companion forchildren. Call BE 7-1714.3-ROOM APT. for couple anytime be¬fore Sept. 1. Furnished or unfurnished,Sta member. Ginsberg, MU 4-9383, after5 p.mWANTED: Several clear-thinking in¬dividuals to Join me in developing newtechnique In the study of human rela¬tions. Analytical type minds with engi¬neering or scientific background pre¬ferred but not required. No cost to you.Well worth while. For details call S M.Esler, DO 3-4383 evenings.MAN’S BICYCLE, preferably with bal¬loon tires. Call BU 8-2249.ROOM IN exchange for baby-sitting for’51-’52 term. Must be close to campus.Mature student; references if desired.Call MI 3-2556.MAN, WIFE, need 2-room or larger apt.for June 30 to August 30. Have ownsilver, linen, etc. Karl DeLeenin, IN3-3222.STUDENT DESK with several drawers;reasonably priced. Gardner, UniversityExtension 3563 or FA 4-3041.SMALL APARTMENT, kitchen or kitch¬enette. Preferable unfurnished. Lessthan $40. Call NO 7-0855.GIRL TO share 4-room apt. with 2others. One block from campus. $36.50per month. HY 3-6194.FOR SALELIKE NEW Remington electric shaver,retail $23, will take $12 or best reason¬able offer. Call Bob Rosenthal, MU4-9368, if not home leave niessage.FOR SALE—one lady's Rosenblum suit,size 16 and one black strapless dinnerdress at $10 each; one gabardine play-suit at $2. Call P. Leano, MU 4-9550,evenings.TWO BICYCLES—man’s, woman’s, goodcondition, $15 each; ice skates, $3.50pair. Call MI 3-3881.KODAK 35 WITH leather case; newin appearance and operation. Purchasedrecently for $100; will sell for $65. Herz-feld, Room 125, Juones Laboratory, Ext.2387; evenings MI 3-8682.GIRL’S BALLOON tire bicycle, $10; 78r.p.m. records (Mozart, Schubert, Ippoli-tow-Iwanow, Gershwin). MU 4-5610.CHEVROLET 1949 deluxe five-passengercoupe, fully equipped. $1,250. Mr.Sprowls, School of Business or MU4-8576.MODEL A COUPE, good tires, very goodmechanically, may be seen evenings ex¬cept Friday and Saturday. See Merisalo,5535 S. Kenwood, Apt. 2B.STEAMER WARDROBE 4-drawer trunk,large size, fair condition. Ideal for tripabroad, $45; Holllwood broiler-fryer,good condition, $5; loafer coat-sweaterGREY set, beige, grey fleeze, 36-38,never worn, $8. Harold Weinstein, 6051Woodlawn. Friday, June 8SEMINAR: Division of Biological andMedlsal Research, Argonne NationalLaboratory, Conference Room, BiologyBuilding, 6111 University Avenue. 4p.m. "Comparative Biochemistry ofHydrogen Metabolism.” Dr. Perry Wil¬son, University of Wisconsin.REVELS OF 1951 (Alumni Association),Leon Mandel Assembly Hall, 8:30 p.m.Tickets are available at the AlumniOffice, 5733 University Avenue.Saturday, June 9INFORMAL ALUMNI TENNIS TOUR-NAMENT, Varsity Courts, 1:30 p.m.ALUMNI ASSEMBLY, Leon Mandel As¬sembly Hall, 3 p.m. Chancellor RobertM. Hutchins will be the speaker.ALUMNI RECEPTION for the incom¬ing Chancellor, Mr. Lawrence A.Kimpton and Mrs. Klmpton, Hutchin¬son Court, 4 p.m.FORTY - FIRST ANNUAL INTERFRA-TENITY SING, Hutchinson Court,8:45 p.m.Sunday, June 10EPISCOPAL COMMUNION SERVICE,Joseph Bond Chapel, 8:30 a m.CONVOCATION PRAYER SERVICE ANDSERMON, Rockfeller Memorial Chapel,11 a.m. The Reverend Joseph Sittler,Jr., Professor of Systematic Theology,Chicago Lutheran Seminary, May-wood.LUTHERAN SERVICE, Thorndike Hil¬ton Chapel, 11 a.m.RADIO BROADCAST, University of Chi¬cago Round Table, WMAQ and NBC,12-12:30 p.m.CARILLON RECITAL, Rockefeller Me¬morial Chapel, 4 p.m. Frederick Mar¬riott, Carlllonneur,Monday, June 11EXHIBITION (Renaissance Society):Paintings, drawings, prints, and sculp¬ture by Artist-Members of the Re¬naissance Society. Goodspeed 108,dally except Sunday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m*through June 17.Tuesday, June 12SEMINAR: Cowles Commission for Re¬search in Economics, Law Court, LawBuilding, 7:45 p.m. "Testing Signlf-iance in Cases Where There Is Auto¬correlation in Residuals of Time Se¬ries." M. G. Kendall, Professor ofStatistics, London School of Eco¬nomics.Wednesday, June 13AWARDING OF certlfllcates for comple¬tion of the Executive Program, Schoolof Business, University College, LeoaMandel Assembly Hall, 8 p.m. Law¬rence A. Klmpton, Chancellor of theUniversity, will award the certificates.The address: "Mobilization — forWhat?” Falrfay Cone, Chairman of th#Board of Foote, Cone and Belding.Friday, June 15THE TWO HUNDRED FORTY-SIXTHCONVOCATION, Rockefeller MemorialChapel, 10:30 a.m. First Session: TheConferring of the Bachelor’s Degree in.the Divisions and of the Master’s, Degree. Chancellor Lawrence A. Klmp¬ton, presiding. The Convocation Ad¬dress: "Retooling for the Jobs Ahead.**R. Wendell Harrison, Vice-Presidentand Dean of the Faculties.THE TWO HUNDRED FORTY-SIXTHCONVOCATION, Rockefeller MemorialChapel. 3 p.m. Second Session: TheConferring of the Professional De¬grees and of the Degree of Doctor ofPhilosophy. Chancellor Lawrence A.Klmpton, presiding. The ConvocationAddress: ‘’Retooling for the JobsAhead.” R. Wendell Harison. Vice-President and Dean of the Faculties.SEMINAR: Division of Biological andMedical Research, Argonne NationalLaboratory, Conference Room, BiologyBuilding, 6111 University Avenue, 4p.m. “X-lrradiatlon Effects onChlamydomonas.” Robert D. Bo.che,Assistant Professor of Zoology, Depart¬ment of Zoology and Institute ofRadiobiology.QONVOCATION RECEPTION. Ida NoyesHall, Garden Court, 4:30 p.m.Saturday, June 16THE SPRING QUARTER CLOSESWednesday, June 20THE TWO HUNDRED FORTY-SIXTHCONVOCATION, Rockefeller MemorialChapel, 10 a.m. Third Session. TheConferring of the Bachelor's Degreein the Colege. Chancellor LawrenceA. Kimpton, presiding. The Convoca¬tion Address: “Is Adventure Still Pos¬sible?” President Ernest Cadman Col¬well.CONVOCATION RECEPTION. Ida NoyesHall, Garden Court, 11:30 a.m.Sunday, June 24QUARTERLY RECESSMonday, June 25REGISTRATION FOR THE SUMMERQUARTERTuesday, June 26CLASSES REGULARLY SCHEDULEDFOR TUESDAY will meet for the firsttime; other classes will meet accordingto their regular schedules.BED FOR sale. Large, solid maple, boxsprings and lnnerspring mattress, goodcondition, rather Inexpensive. Call PL2-5339.MODEL "C” Fotolarger with DeJurf 4-5 lens; enlarging easel; contactprinted; daylight developer reflector;other darkroom accessories. $50 takesall. W. Wickllffe, Apt. 526, 5519 S. Ken¬wood, evenings.PIANO, ITURBL- Wouldn’t think muchof it but for $35 and a tuning. It reallydoesn’t sound bad and all the notesplay! See Harry Buck at 5827 Marylandwithin 10 days. UNDERWOOD Standard typewriter with26-inch carriage, pica type, $30. CallExt. 3465.WHITE SUMMER formal Jacket withwhite trousers, about size 39; almostnew; $15. DO 3-4236 before 10 a m.1169 East 55th Street 24-Hour Service PLoxa 2-3246_ nUniversity GarageTHORNTON ROGERSExpert Service on All Cors• COMPLETE SPRING TUNE-UP• WASHING - GREASING• BRAKE SERVICENSA Student Discount on Ports, Gas and Oil••Page 12 THE CHICAGO MAROON June 8, 1951Store Hours, 9:15 to 5:45,-amou9 romance?{.hat wentall for the wantof a giftfrom Field’s!Chopin thought it very suite whenGeorge Sand, the lady novelist ol note,mack love to him under valse pretenses,nocturne after nocturne. It wasn’tuntil etudes later he learned about her alterego and then he feared Sand would runout on him. Altho symphony was herforte, Sand had a fortissimo fight with himand after the finale, Chopin died broken*hearted. And all because he didn’t know tinscore on this simple point* a gift fromField s can make any consort better.a -ter* tiie overture, ijour best; movement 19 a gift from j— ieU 1\