A PAPE* (Flip (ElitranolattL) JTitmtt*THE WORLD’S SLIGHTEST NEWSPAPER 4,628 PAGESUniv. of Chicagoland★ ★ ★ ★★ ★ ★ ★ FINALVOL. ? - NO. ? (WE FERGXT) ^ fWgJgg"®.,, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1951 ™ ofP^Hc5'ionISTS NOTHING - PAY NO MOREFOOTBALL BACK AT UC!Discover Real Site of Eden Was in MidwestCHICAGO SETTENTATIVELYAS LOCATIONFibune Study EeveelsOld Manuscripts NEWS SUMMARYOF THE FIBUNE(And Historical Scrapbook)Friday5, Nov. 30, 1951The Garden of Eden, con¬trary to previously held be-leefs that its site is in theMedcterranean Sea area, ac¬tually was located in thehart of America’s Midwest,it was reveeled hecr yester¬day.The announcement camefrom a groop of outstandingM.dwest scientists who havebeen bizy studying previous¬ly undiscovered relijus man-uscrips as part of a FIBUNE-financed project to dis-kover the reel locashun ofPa rad ice.| God’s CountryAltho the study is incomplete, tenative findings indi¬cate that Eden was locatedsomewhere on the NorthBank of the Chicago River,near Michigan ave. LuciousX. Blotzbomb, white, projectdirector, sez the manuscripsalso reveel that Adam andEve, on being ejected fromParadice, were banished tothe British Empire.Commented FIBUNE pub¬lisher Corporal Romberg R.McReaper, white, “This sup¬ports what I have alwaysfelt to be tru—that we Mid-westerners are living inGod’s country.”Drunks Peepul,Just Like Us,Sez Drowning>v BY FORMA LINEDROWNING(First of a Series)I spent 25 years amongthe derelicts of Chicago’sskid row, and my overallfanpreshun is that drunkardsARE nice, deep down.The first thing which im¬pressed me was the gentle¬ness and child-like simplic¬ity of the drunkard’s mind,espeshully when he is, in thequaint terminology of the{roup, “crocked to the gills.”I' Welcomed’ I had hardly arrived at thetow when alcoholic armswelcomed me. “Le’ loosa’lie,” I snapped, but to no»vale. After being pack-roll-id, I saw much more cleerlythat my disgize was inade¬quate.Smearing my face withfilth from the alley and AMERICANUC resumes football after10 yere lapse. Page 1SPORTSAbandonment of soccerweekens Russia. Page 1POLITICALSenator Daft announcesplatform. Pt. 8, p. 4Senor Jose McCarthy in¬terviewed. Page 87Truman's first words wernot English. Page 37Demos present silver sad¬dle to Warren. Back pageGARBAGEThe Lake of the News byArch Precinct Pt. 7, p. 1LOCALCpl. McReaper wins Mc¬Reaper Award. Pt. 23, p. 35INTERNASHUNULRoyal visit made for sosh-alized medicine. Page 1DRAMAClawdya Placidy smashessmash hit. Pt. 16, p. 43 GRID STARS U.C. STYLEerr>K? s>shredding my frowzy coaton a rusty nail, I lurchedforth a much more accept¬able skid. “Get the broad,”a voice said admiringly. Al¬coholic arms welcomed me.Cadges DrinksI sailed past the arms,looking neither to right nor(deleted as bad taste), andA DEDICATIONTo a certain Chicago¬land publisher, who hashelped so much to makeChicago what it is today,this issue of the ChicagoMAROON is intemper-ately dedicated. hastened to a bar. I wasbusy cadging drinks whenDrunkie John, white, en¬tered.“H ’ 1 obabeewhereyabin?”he asked.I froze him with a look.'Around,” I said coldly“Lezgoseedatown,” he saidcrisply, sweeping me to myfeet.He looked around help¬lessly. “Never bin outadisblockinallmelife," he said,and lay down at the curbfor a moment. I waited sev¬eral hours, but John failed(Cont. on page 9, Col. 1)The WeatherFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 195T-CHICAGO AND VICINITY:Weather tomorrow, prob¬ably followed by Sunday.ILLINOIS : Courage! Neithersnow nor rain nor sleet nordark of night nor Acheson andTruman shall keep the FIBUfjEfrom its duly paid subscribers.TEMPERATURES IN CHICAGO3 a.in.... ...20 2 p.m. . ...2125 a.m.... 5 p.m...7 a.m 7 p.m...9 ...-4 9 ..-17811 a.m.... 11 p.m... ..-4591 p.m.... 1 a.m...(Unofficial)THE MOON25c ISC1st quarter 2d quarter•25c 25c3d quarter 4th quarterSunrise, sunset, moonrise, starsshining like blazes. FIBUNE UNVALES2.95 IN. CANNONIN FIBUNE CIRCLEA 2.95 inch (formerly 75m.m.) cannon, mounted ona two - wheel, rubber - tiredcarriage, is the latest addishun to THE FIBUNEShaft guards’ arsenal. Theguards heretofore have hadonly six shot revolvers andSam Browne belts to protectthem in case of attack.The cannon, to be formal¬ly unvaled today, rests inFIBUNE Circle. It is chromeplated and decorated withperis culled from THE FIB-UNE’s own Manhasset oys¬ter beds. The barrel of thecannon has inscribed on itthe McReaper coat-of-arms.Shaped like the state of Illi¬nois, it shows an elefanttrumpeting atop FIBUNEShaft, an American flag inhis trunk, the whole ram¬pant on a field of Chicago¬land FIBUNES.Flag on HubsAn American flag, in fullcolor, decorates the hub capon each wheel of the car¬riage, The hubs were manu¬factured in THE FIBUNE’sown metal spinning plant inOuter Mongolia.The cannon will be usedto defend FIBUNE Circlefrom atom bombs and fromattack by irate communistsunvaled in FIBUNE stories.As a public service, it willbe fired at noon each day,along with the whistle of aMississippi steamboat.Uses FIBUNE PowderThe powder and shot tobe used in the cannon willbe supplied by THE FIB¬UNE’s own munishuns plantin the Fillipine Hands.In the first trial firings ofthe huge gun, the weponwas aimed at the Americanflag which waves proudly REVEEL PLOTBY PRINCESSFoil Try at SocializingU. S. Medicine(Special to THE FIBUNE)Instituting socialized med-isin in the United States wasthe real purpose behindBritain’s royal couple’s re¬sent trip to this country, itwas learned by THE FIB¬UNE last nite.The facts were disclozedby Algeria Hyss, Negro, areformed state departmentemploye now serving a federal sentense for perjury.Miss Hyss stated that inreturn for help with theplan, the U. S. is to pay forBritin’s budget for the nextten years.Final preparashuns wereunder discushun during theconferenses held last monthin Washington. The finisheddrafts of the program weredelivered to the Wite Housein the lining of DuchessBetsy’s mink rap. (In Grate(Cont. on page 9, Col. 1)atop FIBUNE Shaft. Aslight complicashun arosehowever, when the shot fellshort of its mark and rippedthru the offices of FIBUNEpublisher Corp. Romberg R.McReaper, white, strikinghim in the seat of his trous¬ers, blue serge.The cannon now is point¬ed in the general direkshunof Roosevelt road.Avrg. Net Faked CirculationOCTOBER, 1951WEAKLl 930,000in excessTHE CHICAGO FIBUNE GRID SUPRIZEHITS MIDWAYAS REDS HOPRenovashum of StaggFeeld BeginsThe venerable Universityof Chicagoland, long re¬garded as a hot-bed of com¬munism and quixotic edu-kashunal ideas, yesterdayannounced resumpshun ofbig time football after alaps of more than ten years.The announcement wasmade by the University’snew Ansellor, Florence A.Limpton, white, himself acenter of comment for his sofar suksessful efforts tobring the university back onthe path to cherished American ideels.Some ProtestMeanwhile, a number ofactivities were under way onthe south side campus as itprepared for the return offootball. A small group ofdye - hard communists wasreportedly attempting to organize a protest. Billingshospital, the skool’s dispen¬sary, is enlarging its stu¬dent h e 11 h fasilities, andwork has now begun on aspeshal tunnel from Staggfeeld to the hospital’s emer¬gency room.Comment is already por¬ing in to the university’soffices, Limpton told THEFIBUNE. Most of the reac¬tion is favorable, he sez, buthe is reportedly mistifiedover wun telegram. Beringthe simple message, “Ohdarn!” it is signed only bythe inishals R. M. H.Limpton CommentsIn a speshal statement,Limpton sed, “UC’s returnto football is part of a long-range campane to really putthe university ‘on the map.’We have been very disturb¬ed by our growing ‘red’reputashun. When wordreeched us that this repu¬tashun has spred as faraway as Pekin, Illinois, wefelt it was time to do sum-thing.“Obviously, part of thereezon for our ‘commie’reputashun is that UC duznot support good old Ameri¬can institushuns like foot¬ball. Many p e e p 1 e havepointed to our lack of a foot¬ball teem as further evidensthat we are communist andsubversive. In order to as¬sert our Americanism, weare returning to footbal.”Ready Stagg FeeldRenovashun of Stagg feeld,sene of many former grid¬iron triumfs, is currentlyunder way, Limpton sed.Plans call for complete over¬hauling of the feeld in timefor the Honest-Fellows-We-Aren’t - Communists Bowlgame which will formallymark UC’s return to bigtime football ranks on NewYear’s Day. Stagg feeldworkmen are now busy ctis- Sen. R. A. DaftKicks Off 1952Campane HereBy COPPER PENNYFIBUNE Press ServiceSenator Roadblock A.Daft, white, last night thruhis hat (Hart, Schafter andMacArthur) into the De-monaican presidential cam-pane ring. Daft made hislong - awated announcementfor the 17th time at a 37cent blu plate lunchun of the101% Blue-Blooded Ameri¬cans for Daft annual picnicanu ail-day marble and bullshoot.Daft began his politicaltraining at an early age, at¬tending Chicagoland univer¬sity, a skool which he de¬scribed as a “place wherecats and dogs may fightfreely, but where skunkswith long white stripes can’trent rooms.”Wrote LawThe co-author of thefamed Daft - Hartless lawoutlined the following four-point program for the 1952campane:(1) Since U. S. Forin pol¬icy is “cow-towing” to theBritish imperialists who nev¬er finished the Revolushun-ary War, and who, underthe leadership of their newanarchist leader, LoserockChapelmound, white, aremaking inrodes on the verymorals so deer to our harts,Daft favors the eliminationof Grate Britain.Aristotle Out(2) Since Daft cannotspell A-r-i-s-t-o-t-l-e, Aristotleis to be eliminated from thenashun’s skools.(3) Voters who know howto read wuld not vote forDaft, therefore, Daft favorseliminashun of reading,boks, and/or voters.(4) Daft favors elimina¬shun.mantling ekwipment onceused by some obscure sci¬entific project, it is reported.Limpton also indicatedthat Enrico Phermi, white,noted nuclear fysicist, hasbeen named coach of the re¬instated eleven. “Phermi’sobservashuns of atom mo¬tions should have given hima number of ‘wow’ ideas fornew football plays,” Limp¬ton sed. “Besides, we wantto keep him in Stagg feeld.”Ellen Kimmel, red, formerMAROON editor, will definitely not be named teemcapten, he added.LOOKING FOR . . .*25 tons of sheep-dip?*A motorized Kiddy-Kar?*The publisher’s usedKleenexes?•Yesterday’s FIBUNE?Turn To:THE FIBUNECLASSIFIED ADSECTIONBeginning PL 64, Pg. 39,this issue.<Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 30, 1951Demands too great uc Folk group AA- stagg, voicenn tPrtrhfYQ Kt>11 gains approval opinions on grid problemv/f V vLivLI llLs I O 1 1L .LL Folk Union, an all-campus stu-There is today a widespread feeling among teachers thatthey are being required to do so many things that none ofthem can be effectively accomplished.This is the contention of Bernard Iddings Bell, representa¬tive of the Episcopal church at UC, expressed in a recentIssue of the New York Times Magazine.Quoting illustrations fromaome of the 800 letters he has proval and promotion; fourth,received from teachers all Silence in regard to religion; fifth,•ver the country, he complains *he holding back of better thanthat “teachers are grossly over- average students. As a result,Worked in respect to hours and to Americans are becoming “increas-the number of pupils each must ingty a set of dull dogs, standard-handle, notoriously under-recom- *zed in opinion.”pensed,” and “run ragged by This is not because the educa-pupils who are the victims of t°rs do not realize what is hap-exagerated theories of free ex- pening. They are bound by thepression.” wishes of the people, who oftenSuch excessive schedules pre- do not realize what an educationvent them from acting on the really is. Those teachers who darebasic faults of American educa- to speak out are in danger of re-tion. These, according to Bell, are prisals, according to many of thefirst, neglect of proper drill in letters Bell has received. “Thethe use of words; second, lack of schools can be saved,” he says,Insistence on good manners; “but only popular insistence andthird, too little insistence on pressure can bring about the sav-achievement as the price of ap- ing.” Folk Union, an all-campus stu¬dent organization devoted to folkmusic, received official recogni¬tion from the Director of Stu¬dent Activities last week.The only officer of the organ¬ization is Mike Stanley, secretary,a College student. According toStanley, the group has no chair¬man because “we never holdmeetings—we just play.”The Union numbers among itsmembers Pete Stone, Pete Steinand Carl Gottesman, who recent¬ly cut a recording of folk songson the Chicago-International la¬bel. The record will be releasedin the near future.Several singers now membersof the group appeared in the MA-ROON-sponsored folk concert sev¬eral weeks ago.Though many groups on cam¬pus have in the past included folkmusic among their activities, FolkUnion is the first organization oncampus to devote itself exclusive¬ly to folk music.Faculty sponsor for the newgroup is Mrs. Rosalie Wax, asso¬ciate professor of social sciencesin the College. Conflicting solutions to the problems of Inter-collegiatefootball were reiterated again last week by two of UC’s mostnoteworthy football figures, Amos Alonzo Stagg, coach ofMaroon elevens that rate high-up on any list of great foot¬ball teams; and ex-chancellor Robert Maynard Hutchins, theman who abolished football at the UCStaggHither and yonCampus papers discuss nudism, liquor;moonshiners perplex Harvard authoritiesWe hear by way of the North Carolina Tarheel that the president of the American Sun¬bathing Society last week charged Bethel College, Tennessee, with aiding the communistsby firing a professor discovered to be a nudist. Said the sunshine official, “.. . an out-and-out case of intolerance. If the school officials hadn’t made an issue of it, nobody would haveknown the professor was a nudist.”The Queen’s Journal, of Queen’s University in Canada discloses that the police there haveI?*611 ^ univer- prove>» jt "Three stills have defi- er. Other students, defiant as theattit fmthalUtf nitely heen in operation during hillbilly moonshiners, refused toentrance at the football sta- the past two months while four ■ .... ... .dium to “anyone carrying pack- others have been reported but as dlsmantle their stllls- althoughages of liquor or other alcoholic yet have not been uncovered,” the ftie Alcohol Tax Unit in Washing-beverages. In a later develop- Crimson said. The newspaper said has ordered the Boston agentsment, however, the administra- it understood that all the liquor to investigate, the Crimson said,tion emphasized, in response to made was for “home consump- The biggest still is still turningprotests, that “no one was to be tion.” —Jsearched or in any way molested Moonshiner flees. . . those stopped for carrying However late reports have itliquor would be allowed to enter that at least one of the moon-the stadium after they had dis- shiners scrapped his still and“fled to the hills” when the alarmthat “the revenooers are coming”was broadcast. The Crimson saidthe student who operated the stilltook apart the coils and boiler heWith the headline, “Anybody had set UP in his dormitory show- pad for first place?See the Ball?”, the University ofVirginia Cavalier Daily leads off:“Nobody begrudges a man anhonest buck and free enterpriseis truly adorable, but not whenit means running an open air nov¬elty shop in the aisles of ScottStadium stands during every foot¬ball game. ... In place of cheer¬leaders come raucous pleas forpennant purchases that would puta fish peddler to shame. This Sat¬urday afternoon supermarket ef¬fect has been steadily on the in¬crease and if a slowdown doesn’toccur, a special section, probablythe students’, will have to be re¬served for weekend shoppers. Afew coke and peanut kids in theaisles are a welcome asset butthese traveling merchants havegot to go. They are not connectedwith the University (so that’s it,ed.) and are there only to makethat buck.” Well. Looks like some¬one else is earning money in thefootball stadium.The Harvard Crimson has re¬vealed that moonshiners are oper¬ating in the university dormitor¬ies, and carried a photograph "toposed of it.” We eagerly look for-word to reports of the resultsfrom ingenious and sometimeshasty disposals.Bemoan hawking out 150 proof rum and apple jack,as it has since September, thepaper further stated.The Daily Illini reports that oneof the special events of a recentpep rally at Ohio State Univer¬sity was an ice sitting contest.The person who was able to siton a cake of ice the longest re¬ceived a prize. Could be a heatingPANE’S PIZZERIA I1603 East 53rd StreetSouth Side’s TastiestPizxa - Spaghetti - RavioliMostaecioliOpen Doily from 11 A.M.We Deliver5:30 P.M. to 12:30 A.M.All phoaea NO 7-9520 Stagg defended the game ata dinner of the TouchdownClub of Washington, D. C., “Idon’t want to see the game lost,and it must not be.”He attributed the problems nowfacing inter-collegiate football tooveremphasis of football on thepart of coaches and alumni.“There are hundreds of boyswho don’t get a chance to play,”he said, “because coaches andalumni are all making an effortto get the best (players) into ourinstitutions — those who havereached a high standard.”Stagg proposed as a solution tothe problem, the restoration offootball to regular college stu¬dents, and an end to the policyof seeking out skilled players. HutchinsWhat is the best thing Rob¬ert Maynard Hutchins everdid?UC’s ex-chancellor’s answer, asgiven to a lecture audience inSan Francisco, was reported inthe Chicago Sun-Times of Noverrvber 23.“I did not de-emphasize foot-ball at the University of Chicago.I abolished it,” said Hutchins. "Imay say that it’s the best thing Iever did.”He continued: “I do not see therelationship of these highly indus¬trialized affairs of Saturday after-noons to higher learning in Amer¬ica. Football fans demonstratehow badly the Darwinian theoryhas turned out.”felfcraja/ajisjzrarEr^^proudly present the Madison... a distinctive new line ofmen's opperel and accessories.CHICAGOEVANSTONOAK PARKGaryJolietThe Madisona handsome new modelonly *54*0 'to University Estudents =■■complete line of accessories 2CAMPS |1530 E. 69th St. ES FAirfax 4-9550 =iiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimifiiiiiiiiiiimiiimaiiiiiiS In Eastern universities, at North¬western and Chicago ... in thesmart clubs ... on La Salle Street,the men who set the pace in fash¬ion are wearing this elegant newstyle. See how becoming are theeasy lines, natural shoulder treat¬ment, 3-button spacing, and centervent. And note! it's only $54.50.Second FloorShown on figure:Madison Narrow Brim Hat, $10Madison Button Down Collar Shirt, $4.50Madison Silk Repp Tie, $2.50Main Floor-November 30, 1951 V THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3Annual formalis resurrectedfor ChristmasThe dance department of Stu¬dent Union will revive the annualUniversity Christmas Formalnext Friday in the Cloister Clubat Ida Noyes.Music for the dance, which wasa traditional Universty functionuntil a few years ago, will beprovided by Johnny Lewis' orches¬tra, a group of young Chicagomusicians.Entertainment will featureLatin American and moderndance routines performed by theUC Dance Club. Refreshmentswill be served.Tickets for the dance are $2.50per couple. Choir will singHandel oratorioTwo performances of Handel’soratorio, The Messiah, will begiven on December 9 and 10 inRockfeller Chapel by the Univer¬sity Choir under the direction ofRichard Vikstrom.Soloists for the performances,which are scheduled for 3 p.m.,Sunday and 8:15., Monday, areAnita Braude, soprano; BarbaraRussull, contralto; Carl Honzak,tenor, and Andrew Foldi, bass.Accompanying the choir will bemembers of the Chicago Sym¬phony Orchestra and DorothyLane, harpsicordist.Tickets are now on sale at theReynolds Club desk for $1.25.Proceeds will go to the benefitscommittee of the UC Settlement University of Chicago, November 30, 1951 -JMlfrffl *1 3W •SU sponsors singersin folk music concertElizabethan songs as well as modern blues will be featuredin the Student Union sponsored “I Come for to Sing” programtomorrow night at 8:30 in Mandel Hall.Studs Terkel, actor, disc-jockey, and TV star, will be thecommentator for the program.The blues will be sung by Big Bill Broonzy; early Americantunes will be performed byWin Stracke, midwestern ball-adeer. Lawrence Lane, tenor,will sing the Elizabethan tunes.Tickets can be obtained at theSG ticket agency booth in MandelHall, at Woodworth’s Bookstoreand at the door for $1. SG-Strozier peace talks Law conferenceI i i .1 -) scheduled Fridaybegin; who has the power?The status of the Student Code, Bill of Rights and SG Stat¬ute of Powers was discussed by the executive council of Stu¬dent Government and Dean Robert Strozier in the first of aseries of formal meetings held last Friday.The purpose of the discussions is to establish clearly therelationship between the powers of the Dean of Studentsand the powers set forth inthe Code, Bill of Rights andStatute of Powers."I Come For to Sing*SU 'Rodeo' tonight;western theme 'n all“The Rodeo” a square dancesponsored by SU, will take placetonight at 8:30 in the Ida Noyesgym.Nancy Bogue, chairman of thefolk programs department, hasannounced that the theme of thedance is “western,” and will becarried through from decorationsto the entertainment itself.Johnny Sonquist, well knownon campus and in square dancecircles, will be caller. Group sing¬ing and refreshments are includedin the evening.Admission is 60 cents. Int House host-for conferenceUC will be host to over 1,000Latin American students in an all¬day conference and social eventtomorrow at International House.The conference is sponsored bythe Pan-American board of edu¬cation.The event will begin with acoffee-hour conference at 10 a.m.Education chairmen of nationalprofessional organizations willconfer informally with studentsand college administrators onproblems relating to differentfields of study, practical training,scholarship arrangements and im¬migration relations.The program for the afternoonincludes a general discussion ofcareer preparation for LatinAmerican Students and a series ofnine panel discussions of variouseducational opportunities.In the evening there will be areception followed by a dance.Many exhibits from various coun¬tries will be on display through¬out the day. At the meeting Dean Strozierrepeated his position on the MA¬ROON controversy. According tothe report of Sander Levin, SGpresident, the Dean stated thathis action in removing Kimmeland suspending the MAROONwas not a violation of the StudentBill of Rights and the Code.Dean stands by agreementThe Dean said that he had madean agreement with SG to abideby the Bill of Rights and the Codeand that he had not violated hisagreement.The Dean also mentioned thataccording to the powers delegatedto him by the Board of Trusteesthe office of the Dean of Studentshad to co-ordinate the Univer¬sity’s relations with students.SG restates opinionAccording to Levin the SG posi¬tion was presented earlier thisquarter when SG stated that DeanStrozier in the MAROON issuehad violated the Bill of Rightsand the Code and that SG wouldenter formal negotiations withDean Strozier in an attempt toclarify and redefine the status ofthe documents and their relation¬ship to the authority delegated tothe Dean of Students. To elect* judgesElection of judges of the Stu-dent-Factulty-Administration Courtwill be the main item of businessat the next SG meeting, Tuesdaynight at 7:30 in Law north. Corporate activity in light ofthe current defense program, theoperation of American industryabroad, and the changing role ofcorporations will be discussed by16 national authorities at the UCLaw School conference on corpor-ation law and finance Friday.The one - day conference, thefirst in the 1951-52 series confer¬ences on important legal prob¬lems to be conducted by the LawSchool, will open at 10 a.m. in theOriental Institute.Professors Roscoe T. Steffenand Bernard D. Meltzer, both ofthe Law School, will preside.Threat of Sigma Chi Alumsfails to squelch initiationby David ZimmermanPlans to go ahead with initiating a pledge class which in¬cludes a Jewish student were announced this week by SigmaChi Fraternity. The initiation will take place Sunday in spiteof verbal threats by a group of Sigma Chi alumni to sell thefraternity house if the chapter initiates its proposed class.Inter-Fraternity Council Wednesday expressed its sup¬port of the Sigma Chi chapter — ——:—-—— ~when it addressed a letter to 1 ieY reconsider thelr decision mthe Chicago alumni group of tlie li?ht °f the gravity of such aSigma Chi which read in part: S1 ua lon‘‘The Council recognizes their(Sigma Chi’s) problem to be in- The executive council of Stu¬dent Government yesterdayternal. . . . However the ramifi- passed the following resolution incations of such a threatened move regard to the Sigma Chi issue:made it an affair which concerns “The University of Chicago canthe Inter-Fraternity Council and be proud of its tradition of lead-its members. . . . The Council ership in the endeavor to elimi-feels that the order proposed by nate discrimination on the cam-the Sigma Chi Alumni conflicts pus and at large. However, inwith the moral concepts and aims view of present circumstances theof fraternities, and requests that $ee “Sigma Chi," page 4Kay Glickman chosen for royal ranks;becomes queen of Inter-Fraternity BallLYL discussed in hearingson recognitionby Dan SolomonAn open hearing on the recog¬nition of Labor Youth League washeld Wednesday afternoon in Lawsouth by the Student Governmentcommittee on recognized studentorganizations.The committee heard argu¬ments on whether the League,whose legality was recently chal¬lenged in a brief prepared by Pro¬fessor Malcolm Sharp of the LawSchool, should be recognized.Bierman defends groupArthur Bierman, chairman ofLYL, stated that Professor Sharp,in saying that the Supreme Courtdecision puts the legality of LYLin doubt is making illogical exten¬sions on the decision. He also stat¬ed that LYL is not the CommunistParty, has no connection with itorganizationally, and has commit¬ted no act conspiring to over¬throw the American Government.“Attack on LYL is part andparcel,” said Bierman, “of thepressure being put on all persons in this country ... to stifle civilliberties. . . . It . . . would be set¬ting a terrible precedent.”Fisher emphasizes legalityHarry Fisher, speaking inde¬pendently, made the point thatLYL is arguing speciously by con¬tinually referring to a “dangeroustrend,” that the case must beargued on its own merits, thatthe one decisive question whichmust be answered is, “Are LYLactivities illegal?”David Ladd, in the only speechwhich brought applause, said,quoting Professor Robert Red-field, “A University is great onlyif it does not attempt to be whollypleasing.” Ladd continued, “Weshould be grateful to LYL for set¬ting forth their viewpoint.”It was brought out in the hear¬ing that the administration hasdirected three legal experts towork on the case. They will sub¬mit their opinions to the admin¬istration, which can then veto anydecision which SG makes. Kay CSckman, l-F Ball Quee« Sun-Times photo A new figure joined the ranksof UC’s royalty last week whenpretty Kay Glickman, third-yearCollege student, became Queenof the Inter-Fraternity Ball.Blue - eyed, taffy - haired MissGlickman, in an interview withthe MAROON Wednesday ex¬pressed thanks to the Psi U Fra¬ternity which nominated her andto the judges who selected herfrom other finalists for royalhonors.Bacchanalian tributes as wellwere accorded the Queen whosaid, “The various fraternitiespaid me homage with appropriatetoasts.”Still slightly flushed from hertriumph, Miss Glickman deniedexcess excitement at the time ofher election, but admitted that“it was very exciting having somuch concentrated attention forover an hour and half.”Coronated in a red plaid formal.Miss Glickman was escorted byJim Smith.She expressed regret that they“took away my crown.”Miss Glickman, who would re¬veal no other plans for the futureother than the idealistic ambitionto pass her Nat. Sci. 1 comp, plansto finish the college next year,having just recently graduatedhigh school.Hailing from New Jersey, MissGlickman shares an apartment onthe south side of the Midway,where she spends much of hertime concocting such culinary ex¬travaganzas as veal, parmajonand steak, when finances allow.November 30, 1951Pape 4 THE CH ICAGO MAROONFourth of a seriesKimmel tours Soviet UnionComments invitedIn Hie near future the MAROONwill run an article on Hie experi¬ences of students, other than Kim-mel, who were in Europe last sum¬mer. Readers, particularly thosewho were in East Germany or east¬ern Europe, are urged to submitmat^yai to the MAROON, 201Reynolds Club, by Monday, De¬cember 10.by AI on KimmelI was one of 15 young Amer¬icans, students and workers, Ne¬gro and white, who were guestsof the Soviet Anti-Fascist YouthCommittee on a three-week stayin the USSR last September. Iv ant in the belief that peacefulcoexistence between our twocountries was both possible andnecessary; I have returned deep¬ly convinced that it is.We entered the Soviet Unionwith many conflicting stories inour minds and with many ques¬tions on our lips. Our own curi¬osity about this “mysterious”land was unbounded; yet, wewent there not as individual tour¬ists but as responsible reporterswho must see as much as pos¬sible in a very short time. Ourdelegation drew up its own itin¬erary and we were able to walkin the streets by ourselves andtalk freely to Soviet people.Peace is not 'capitalist'In the USSR people are notsmeared* as “capitalist agents” or"dupes” when they assert thatcapitalist United States and thesocialist Soviet Union can existside by side in peace. But it is agrave criminal offense in theircountry to advocate war.Nowhere are there any recruit¬ing posters, military displays,maps of the US showing bombingtargets or Soviet “zones of occu¬pation,” or proposals to drop atombombs on Chicago or New York.Nowhere is war glorified or heldinevitable, either in the newspa¬pers, movies, children’s studies,or the slogans on walls of schoolsand factories.No war pessimismEveryone I talked to—students,workers, farmers, officials, andour interpreters — unhesitatinglycondemned war as the most hor¬rible calamity that could hit theircountry. The government makesno attempts to develop war pes¬simism; on the contrary, every¬one expresses a heartening con¬fidence that war will be averted.All media of communication pro¬claim the heroism of peaceful la¬bor and friendship with otherpeoples.They include the American peo¬ple. Indeed, we delegates wereeagerly greeted everywhere.From the welcoming committeeat Moscow airport to the ear-split¬ting ovation of an audience in alarge Georgian theater where wewere seeing Othello the spirit offriendship was very evident.Stalingrad youngsters cheerI remember a Sunday after¬noon in the central square ofStalingrad where about 15,000youngsters had gathered to seethe Peace Relays in which allthe city’s schools competed. Thisathletic meet was the way inwhich those under 18 could alsodemonstrate for peace althoughthey were too young to sign theappeal calling for negotiation ofa pact of peace and friendshipamongst the Big Powers (everySoviet adult I ever met hadsigned).When the events were over thelines of youth broke on all sidesof the square and thousands rantoward as us if we were goal¬posts at a college grid game. Theyswarmed around us yelling andcheering, some throwing flowersat us and hugging us and pinningpeace doves on our coats. Eachsmiling, laughing youth wantedto get near “an American guest.”It took us a half-hour to go oneblock through the crowd to the"safety” of our hotel steps.Want peaceful negotiationsIt was the same everywhere—a spontaneous enthusiasm for peace and love for us as Amer¬icans, who, like themselves, helddear the cause of peace. The So¬viets recognize the desire of theAmerican people for peace al¬though they accuse our govern¬ment of aggressive plans. Yet,they emphasize that these plansare no reason for going to warwith us; but are even more rea¬son for peaceful negotiation andsettlement of differences.In the Soviet Union, I not onlysaw no preparation of the peo¬ples’ minds for aggressive war,but none of the adverse effects ofa war economy. Instead of infla¬tion and falling living standards,prices are steadily falling andwages are rising. Production offood, clothing, and hard goodslike refrigerators and autos isnow increasing faster than heavyindustry, and there is no unem¬ployment in civilian-goods indus¬tries or rising-taxes.Soviet shops crowdedThis is substantiated for I sawSoviet shops filled with goods—and with droves of customers. Ihad to buck the crowds, myself,in a Moscow department store. Ialso saw workers eating substan¬tial meals in restaurants and peo¬ple in the street were well-dressed.Of course, material conven¬iences like plumbing and high¬ways are below American levels.But it would be a mistake not toremember that America has hada long period of uninterrupted in¬dustrial development while theSoviet Union has been repeatedlydevastated by the post-Revolutioncivil war and foreign interven¬tions as well as the anti-Nazi war.Shellholes oround StalingradMany who talk of Soviet warplans seem to have forgotten theirseven million dead and their lev¬eled cities from that war. Oneof our guides lost his father andanother lost one eye. From theair one can still see shellholesand trences near Moscow andaround Stalingrad, a city whosestreets still show evidence of theepic battle.However, building is going oneverywhere. In Moscow, 12 sky¬scraper apartments, offices, andhotels are going up, and blockafter block of eight-and nine-story dwellings has been recentlyerected and many more are un¬der construction. Current con¬struction is even greater in Stal¬ingrad.New construction everywhereThe extensive new constructionI saw was not confined to justthe big cities or so-called “show-places.” From the air on four sep¬arate trips I saw new schools,palaces of culture, and cottages innearly every town and city wepassed over. Driving throughfarms in Georgia and northeastof Moscow, I saw many newschoolhouses and homes.The Soviets have launched sev¬eral mammoth projects requiringlong-range investments of tens ofbillions of rubles. First was the15-year forest-belt program be¬gun about three year ago to raisecrop production. From the air Isaw many newly planted foreststrips and hundreds of farmponds built as part of this pro¬gram.Irrigation giants underwoyLast year construction began onthe Kubishev and Stalingraddams, each larger than any exist¬ing dam in the world; also beingbuilt are the 800-mile Turkmeniancanal, the N. Crimean, S. Ukrain¬ian, Ural, and Don-Volga canals.In seven years 90,000 squaremiles of arid land (equal to thecombined area of Illinois and In¬diana) will be irrigated to supplyfood for 100,000,000 people.Young people I met in theSoviet Union were especially en¬thusiastic about their own fu¬tures, for which continued peacewas absolutely necessary. Theireducational and recreational fa¬cilities take a large share of theSoviet government budget, fargreater than all similar outlays inour country. Again, such welfareexpenditures would be amongstthe first to suffer under the man¬ dates of expanded military spend¬ing.Schools well-equippedI visited both a Tbilisi Palaceof Pioneers and ,a Moscow highschool where I saw splendidly-equipped and staffed classroomsand laboratories as well as extra¬curricular study circles for inter¬ests from choral work and his¬tory to basketball and mountain¬climbing. I also looked in on oneof the 101 community kindger*gartens in Stalingrad and visitedthe immense 15,000,000 - volumeLenin Library in Moscow (equalin size to our own CongressionalLibrary).Most impressive of all was thenew campus of Moscow Univer¬sity to be opened for classes nextfall. Its main building, over 800feet tall and a quarter-mile long,will hold, in addition to a gym¬nasium, lecture halls, clubrooms,museums, and theaters, 6,000single dormitory rooms for stu- Directories on saleStudent Directories for 1951-52will he on sale today from 9:30a.m. to 3:30 p.m. in Mandel cor¬ridor, Social Sciences and CobbHall. The directories, which arebeing sold by Student Government,cost 35 cents.dents and several professors’apartments.Most students subsidisedRather than colleges shuttingdown for lack of funds, the num¬ber of colleges and college stu¬dents is rapidly increasing. Eachstudent I met was receiving a gov¬ernment scholarship which paidroom, board, and other expensesas well as tuition. Later I learnedthat 90 per cent of the 1,250,000Soviet college students get suchaid, and at Tbilisi University, outof a 52-million ruble annual budg¬et, 15 millions gor for studentaids.(Concluded next week)rfa* ,'....iimir..., ~i i vriii v i Sigma Chi...(from page 3)executive council of Student Gov.ernment believes that renewedand stronger efforts must bemade, by a united student body,faculty and administration tomaintain this leadership.Therefore, the executive coun¬cil commends the UC chapter ofSigma Chi in its determination tomaintain these democratic princi¬ples and pledges to give to Hwhatever support might be ofaid. The executive council alsocommends the UC chapter ofDelta Upsilon for their recentaction in support of their Bow.din chapter’s similar democraticaction.Furthermore, the executivecouncil calls upon the studentbody, administration and facultytao cooperate fully with SigmaChi, the Inter-Fraternity Counciland Student Government.” Vr 'Miiiiiiiifc'-.viaiv;*;*. &-iiaai£ ;No. 29...THE HYENAH.ysteria reigned from the moment he heard thedetails of those quick-trick cigarette mildness tests.First he giggled . . . then he guffawed . . .wound-up rolling in the aisle! He knew that the“single sniff” test or the “one puff”'test didn’tprove anything! Millions of smokers havereached the same conclusion — there’s just onetest that really proves cigarette flavor and mildness!It’s the sensible test. . . the 30-Day CamelMildness Test, which simply asks you to tryCamels as your steady smoke — on a pack-after-pack,day-after-day basis. No snap judgments! Onceyou’ve enjoyed Camels for 30 days in your “T-ZoneM(T for Throat, T for Taste), you’ll see why ...After all the Mildness Tests..,Campus Interviews on Cigarette TestsCamel leads all oilier brands bybt/tionsm >* /thfa, n 4 ? -4'*' 4% * $ ■<- 'UsNovember 30, 1951 Fag# 5THE CHICAGO MAROONBaha'i lawyerto speak onnew educationAlan McCormick, Chicago law¬yer and chairman of Baha’i Re¬gional Teaching Committee, willspeak informally on “SpiritualEducation for a Peaceful Society’’at the weekly open meeting ofthe University’s Baha’i Fellow¬ship Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. inIda Noyes north reception room.McCormick, who has lecturedin Canada and various parts ofthe United States, maintains thata new type of education is vitallynecessary if the varied people ofour one - world - neighborhood areto live together peacefully. Dis¬cussions and refreshments willfollow the free lecture.TV — TV — TV — TV — Tickets forless at SGThe Student Government ticketagency in Mandel Hall now hastickets for events which arescheduled by Kimball Hall, 306South Wabash, and by MaryWickersham Inc. concert man¬agers). The Wickersham agencyschedules concerts principally atOrchestra Hall, Fullerton Halland Thorne Hall.The ticket agency now hasavailable tickets for all events atOrchestra and Kimball Halls andthe Opera House. Also obtainableare tickets for The Master Builderat the Goodman Theater; Meas¬ure for Measure, University The¬ater; the SU songfest, “I Comefor to Sing,” and many otherevents of interest to students.The agency is open 11:30 a.m.to 1:30 p.m. and 5 to 6:30 p.m.,Monday through Friday.II>i-ItIt MIDWAY RADIO(Formerly 6306 GreenwoodAve.)NOW LOCATEDIn New and Larger Quartersat1017 East 63rd StreetPhone Mldwoy 3-6575Specialists in ServicingElectronic Equipment H<H<TV-—TV —TV —TV CM probe startsScope and purpose of the spe¬cial Student Government commit¬tee on the MAROON were thepreliminary topics discussed atthe group’s first meeting held lastFriday.This afternoon the committeewill begin a detailed discussion ofthe MAROON constitution and onthe status of the MAROON in re¬lation to the Student Bill ofRights.PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETEconomical Air TravelSafe, Dependable Worth Star /fir CoachListed Heloiv are Representative FaresOne Way Round TripNew York $24.00 $ 45.60Washington ...... 24.00 45.60Miami 43.74 87.48Los Angeles 75.00 146.10(Plus Tax)5% Discount — Students, Faculty, StaffTo ALL Important Cities — Coast to Coast“DAILY SCHEDULED FLIGHTS99Reservations atVARSITYTICKET SERVICE1311 E. 57th St. Woodworth's Bookstore MU 4-1677Free Ticket Deliveryi. Student Union presentsAn All-Star Program of Folk MusicI COME FOR TO SING JWIN STRACKE - BIG BILL BROONZY - LARRY LANENarrated by STUDS TERKELSATURDAY, DEC. 1 — 8:30 P.M.MANDEL HALL —$1.00I❖**ACASABOOKSTORE1117 E. 55th HY 3-9651Very Special Xmas CardsC. D. Buck - E. Bertholet(formerly with Toombs Book Shop)Open 10:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. SQ to give special discountson train, bus tickets at XmasProvisions for both automobile and train transportation forthe Christmas interim are being made by the student needscommittee of Student Government.Students desiring rides or having rides to offer can postnotices on a bulletin board in front of the Reynolds Club desk.Round-trip train tickets at special discount rates are avail¬able at the Travel Agency inthe Ad Building as follows:New York Central Pacemak¬er, leaving 3:30 p.m. December 21and 22 from the Englewood Sta¬tion, at $41.60, until December 14;for the Pennsylvania Railroad toPhiladelphia connecting to Balti¬more and Washington, leaving 3p.m. December 21, at $38.05, untilDecember 10.If 35 people apply at the TicketAgency in Mandel corridor bynext Friday, the SG committeewill also provide a special bus toNew York leaving December 21.Fare will be $25, round-trip.Navy offers jobsfor next summerThe Navy’s Bureau of Aero¬nautics, in preparation for a Sum¬mer Work Program for 1952, hasannounced that positions are opento students in various fields ofengineering and the physical sci¬ences. The selection of studentsfor the program will be subject totheir competition in appropriateCivil Service examinations.Applicants will be required topass one of the following examin¬ations: No. 276, Junior Scientistand Engineer Exam; No. 301, En¬gineer Exam and No. 305, StudentAid .Trainee) Exam. Applicationsfor No. 305 must be received bythe Civil Service Commission notlater than December 4. The otherexams will be open until furthernotice. Israeli profgives talk hereMartin Buber, professor of so¬cial philosophy at the HebrewUniversity, Jerusalem, will speakon “Religion and Modern Think¬ing” at the University of Chi¬cago’s third annual Charles W.Gilkey Lecture, Monday eveningat 8:15, in Rockefeller Chapel.Buber is one of the most orig¬inal religious thinkers alive todayand has written a great numberof articles, including “I and Thou”and “Israel and the World.” Ad¬mission is without charge orticket.SU initiates UCping-pong groupThe Ping-pong Club, sponsoredby the SU games department, willmeet Tuesday at 7 p.m. in IdaNoyes. The club was founded tohelp ping-pong players at the Uni¬versity improve their games bypractice and instruction.Instruction will be given byBob Myers, national - rankingchairman of the US Table TennisAssociation. Among other activ¬ities the club will hold open andclosed tournaments and possiblyintercollegiate matches. A. Foldi directsoff-campus choirAndrew Foldi, lecturer in hu¬manities in the department ofadult education, and director ofthe University music program,has become head of the newlyformer Choral Society of TempleIsaiah Israel. Membership in thesociety is free and open to UCstudents.Rehearsals are held everyThursday at 8:15 p.m. in the Com¬munity House of the Temple artGreenwood and 51st Street. In¬formation may be obtained fromLawrence West, chairman of themusic committee, 946 E. 48th St.,Oakland 4-1812.Hoselitz talksat Hitchcock“Revolutions in Asia, Colonial¬ism, and American ForeignPolicy,” will be Prof. Bert Hose¬litz’ lecture topic in the first of aseries of lecture-discussions de¬signed primarily for graduatestudents. The meeting, sponsoredby the house governments ofHitchcock and Snell, will be in theHitchcock lounge at 8 p.m., Tues¬day.Hoselitz, who is lecturer in eco¬nomics and chairman of the Com¬mittee on International Relations,has published extensively on theproblems of development of back¬ward areas, the theory of social¬ism and problems of commercialpolicy in international economicrelations. Hoselitz is in charge ofthe Social Scienes 200 sequence,a course in the methodology ofthe social sciences, and lecturesfrequently in social sciencecourses in the College.CTA fares, voting age, student discountsamong topics discussed at NSA meetingby Barbara KaplanWays and means of making the NSA work more beneficial to students in the area wasthe center of interest at the Illinois Regional Assembly of NSA held at De Paul University lastSaturday and Sunday.More than 60 delegates and alternates from UC, Roosevelt College, the University ofIllinois, and other colleges in the area met to discuss such problems as effective coopera-^———_ tion between student govem-TERESA DOLANDANCE SCHOOL1208 E. 63d St. (Nr. Woodlawn)Whether you are a beginner or seekto improve your dancing—you can’tgo wrong In selecting this schoolwhere prestige, experience and econ¬omy insure your learning quicklyand correctly.PRIVATE LESSONS are given any¬time—any day, 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.Just call for your first appointment.PHONE MUSEUM 4-9505Do it now—It’s later than you thinkSquare Dance Class Sun. Eves. 8 p.mVery truly yoursTERESA DOLAN ments in the region, reduction ofrates on the CTA, extension ofstudent discounts, and the broad¬er topics of discriminatory prac¬tise in education, voting for 18-year-olds and legislative activityin the state.Sylvia Bacon, NSA vice-presi¬dent in charge of Student Affairs,gave the keynote speech, in whichshe refered to the editorial inTime Magazine which character¬ized modern youth as “the silentgeneration” and urged that NSA play an important part in assur¬ing that students not be “silent.”A regional student-governmentfile was established by the assem¬bly as a means of exchanging andcoordinating information as tothe position and functioning ofstudent governments. In additionthe assembly recommended thateach member school establish astudent-faculty committee on cur¬ricular matters to give studentsa voice in the working out oftheir own education.In regard to discrimination,NSA will attempt to secure elim¬ination of discriminatory listingsfrom housing and employmentbureau files of member schools,as well as insure the right of stu¬dent publications to refuse dis¬criminatory advertising. The suc¬cess of the Michigan plan willalso be investigated.A Regional Art Festival, includ¬ing representative works ofdrama, music, and art from allschools in the region is anotherproject NSA is working on.No position was taken at theAssembly on the MAROON con¬troversy, as NSA has not yet com¬pleted its investigation.The session ended with the elec¬tion of three regional officers.Specialized Repairs ofBICYCLESLightweight and BalloonComplete Line of Parts forAll BicyclesACE CYCLE SHOP819 E. 55th Ml 3-26721169 East 55th Street 24-Hour Service PLaza 2-3246University GarageTHORNTON ROGERSExpert Service on All Cars• COMPLETE WINTERIZATION• WASHING - GREASING• BRAKE SERVICE• ROAD SERVICENSA Student Discount on Parts, Gas and OilATTENTION FACULTY WIVES IWives of Students, Too £Perhaps you will enjoy doing.occasional interviewing for ^a nationally known market research organization, as a Xchange now and then from your household, social and civic iactivities. Assignments come at infrequent intervals, lastonly a week or two, and are never dull. The money toocan be interesting. Good education and an active com¬munity life are important requirements. Write or phone:S-D SURVEYS, INC.333 No. Michigan Avenue Chicago, IllinoisDEarborn 2-0830Page 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 30, 195$"Peace, pure and simple"—Robert Maynard Hutchinsissued once weekly by the publisher, The Chicago Maroon, at the publicationoffice, 5*06 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: EditorialOffice. Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1012; Business and Advertising Offices, Midway1-0800, Ext. 1011. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions by mail. $4 per year.John V. Hursr David ZimmermanEditor-in-chief Business ManagerManaging editor: La Verne Armstrong.Executive editor: John Grimes.Copy editor: Larry Fisher.Page editors: Bob March, Gary Bahr, Jan Majde, Martin Orans, Fred Winsberg,Peter Gouriin, Charles Gaulkin, Roy Albert.Editorial staff Jay Chidsey, Doris Hanes, Arden Meizer, Tom Connor, RobinJackson, David Kliot, Dan Simon, Dan Solomon, Jerry Stone, Eileen Sullivan,Ed Wolpert, Ed Berkowitz, Charles Fauquher, David Fain, Frank Kirk, ArleneKramer, Bruce MacLachlan, Bob Marcus, Pat Morrow, Ray Nelson, Barbara Perl¬man, Tom Seidman, Enid Sharp, Alan Tritter, Jackie Wilson, Gene Gendlin,Barbara Kaplan, Jay Orear, Nan Hockberg, Marvin Chirlestein, Henry Maguire,Daniel Queen, Barrie Simmons, Rinnie Templeton, Leo Treltler, Leonard Wolfe,Caroline Lee, Hillel Black, Ashby Smith, Bob Peters, Mathew Messelsohn, Mar¬shall Hartman, James Beck, Irene F'riedman.Copy staff: Joan Brennard, Roger Kallen.Photography staff: Editor—David Sher; Bruce Kallick, Roger Severson.Business staff: Advertising manager—Joyce Cowan: Don Ginsburg, LeRoy Wolins.Personnel staff: Barbara Mills, Richard Harelick, Nan Thurber,Cartoonist: Irwin Levinson.Is 'peace/ a bad word?(The following editorial was originally published in leaflet formby the Fellowship of Reconciliation. The MAROON reprints it herebecause it feels the document should be given a wider circulation.)The Communists, here and around the world, are waging whatthe papers call a “peace offensive.” As a part of the struggle betweenRussia and the United States—a psychological part—they are try¬ing to convince the people of the world that Russia and CommunismStand for peace and that the United States stands for war. MostAmericans reject that propaganda, and oppose the so-called “peaceefforts” of the Communists.But does that make peace a bad word? Because the Communistsmisuse the word, are'Americans going to agree that they prefer war?Some Americans seem to think so. They become suspicious, oreven antogonistic, at the mere mention of “peace.” Some newspa¬pers have warned their readers to have nothing to do with any peacemovement, because it may be “Communist-inspired.”Isn’t that rather silly?Americans do care about peace! Though United States forces arelighting a limited war in Korea, Americans are not resigned to theprospect of a global, atomic war of annihilation!Peace is a good word. It is what practically all Americans, andEnglishmen, and Russians, and Koreans, want. It’s what the worldneeds if it is not to go through a new Dark Ages.Real work for peace is not part of anybody’s cold war. It is partof the ages-long struggle for a decent world for decent peopleto live in.Don’t be afraid of peace. Start working for it today. Group may be 'blot'Let’s face it: the LYL stands a goodchance of being one of the worst blotson the good name of the University ofChicago. Amid the crys of "McCarthy¬ite” (which seems to be all the rage asthe epithet of UC extreme leftistgroups) that will slanderously ensue,let the following facts be considered.The LYL states that they do notteach nor advocate overthrow of theU. S. government by force, and henceare without guilt. However, anyone whoattended their meeting in the fall of1949, and heard that the eleven topcommunists were tried in a "court runby the tools of the Wall Street imperial¬ists,” might wonder where the *ruesympathies of the LYL lie. Certainly,the LYL has been openly and posi¬tively in sympathy with Russian com¬munism. While censure is not in orderfor a study of “Marxist-Leninist princi¬ples,” when the LYL sees fit to con¬done and praise the Russian way of lifewith all that it implies (viz.: their“South Korea is to blame” meeting,summer, 1950), they deserve no moreconsideration than did the German-American Bund, to which they showsuch a marked resemblance.An equally repulsive characteristic ofthe LYL is the havoc they have wroughtto the cause of better race relations;they have done more harm than allthe brick-heaving bigots of Cicero. Forwhile they advocate equality of racesfrom one side of their mouth, theypreach the Russian brand of classhatred from the other side. Many peo¬ple have been alienated from this mostworthwhile cause by such pro-commu¬nist groups as the LYL: the middle-of-the-roaders and conservatives, who arein many cases beginning to realize themerit of better race relations, hear theLYL type of argument, take one sniff,and say “Phooey!—commies!”—the LYLonly adds ammunition to the guns ofthe reactionaries, who can point atthem and say, "See who advocatesracial equality?”—even the honest lib¬erals are geting queasy at being classi¬fied along with LYL type teaching.The LYL is guilty of violating no localor federal law under Its present Inter¬pretation. But SG would do well toconsider the LYL in the light of theclause of the UC regulations which per¬tains to conduct prejudicial to the uni¬versity’s reputation.w. j. Pons boards around the campus. During theinterval between public bulletin boardannouncement and actual collectionthree issues of the MAROON appeared—but not a single item about the Amer¬ican Red Cross blood bank. After thecollection another (November 16) Issueprepared, and still there was no men¬tion.This omission seems to be either a’ flagrant refusal to print news of thisnature or an equally serious sign ofnews-gathering incompetence on thepart of the staff. After all, the crew ofworkers, their itinerary, the set-up InIda Noyes, the variety of U. C. studentswho donated blood, the question ofsegregation of blood from “different”races, the next appearance on the cam¬pus of the Red Cross “blcodmobile”—all these gave enough angles for impor¬tant news-worthy coverage.Meanwhile the MAROON has seen fitto grind its usual axes: the Kimmelarticles continue to fill columns ofspace; letters to the editor are publishedat length—even some complaints, itmust be admitted—but no very con¬structive step to meet these complaintsis taken; books and movies are reviewedfrom one point of view—that of "socialuplift”—reg irdless of what else theymay be trying to do (e.g., the review ofThe River” in last week's Issue), andthe "injustices” suffered by the MA¬ROON continue to be elaborated atlength.This pattern—both what is includedand what is omitted—needs severe ex¬amination. It may be that the com¬plaints of those who call the MAROONnarrowly unrepresentative of campusopinion and campus activities are right.It may be that even graver complaintsare Justified. In the light of thesepoints, therefore, I am sending threecopies of this letter: one to theMAROON (for possible publication); oneto the Dean; and one to the StudentGovernment. Each has a stake in thismatter, and I trust each may be ableto use the pattern as a case In pointon the whole matter of the status ofthe MAROON.Theodore S. Oppenhcim there can be no question of one si,«being atrocious, and the other belmiInnocent. Attempts to picture Americans in Korea as barbarians I regardas an evidence against the sincerit,of peaceful desires. It Is obvious tothat such "well-intented” enteVrJ? *like atrocity exhibition is very likefv*^incite feelings of hostility and ve^gence against those who are bewaccused of barbarism, rathei than 5make people recognize atrocity olw!as such All of us should take attltudithat only recognition of the fact th?*it is the war itself, which Is source ^atrocities will provide common basilfor efforts to eliminate present hostiledisaster?11 PrCVent another ™JorW. N.Open letter to campusI wish to announce my resignationfrom the Politics Club. This alone is un¬important, but my reasons for resigna¬tion should be of Interest to all stu.dents taking part In student extra¬curricular activities and particularlythose considering Joining the Politir#In a statement to the MAROON Nov23, Charies Fauquher, executive secre'tary of the Politics Club, says that th*Politics Club "will maintain and de¬velop Its brood socialist anti-war nerspective.”On getting my membership, Fauquherstated, in so many words, that the Poli¬tics Club was not committed to any"Ism” and that there was room forthose who, as I do, not only do notsupport socialism, but oppose It. FnU-quher's Nov. 23 statement proves thatI was lured Into the Politics Club onfalse pretenses.The moral of this story is "don't Joinor sign anything, no matter what propa¬ganda you are handed, until you haveInvestigated It thoroughly!”Roy Nelson'East' from anotherviewpointComments on 'BIT'I am glad to see that you have insti¬tuted the page "Beyond the IvoryTower.” But I think it would be advis-sable to cut down the proportion ofads on this page, in order to make roomfor a little more detailed comments.I would not like to see it thought thatbrief schematic treatments representtypical U. of C. social thought—evenif they do.I thought the idea of printing a seriesof items culled from the back pageswas a good one. also. Perhaps such apage could alternate with pages of stu¬dent comment on this issues raised bythe previous week’s material?Please keep up the good work.Ernest Collenboch Fauquher repliesIn reference to Mr. Nelson’s resigna¬tion from the Politics Club and his rea¬sons for doing so. I believe some clari¬fication is needed.When Mr. Nelson asked me about thePolitics Club I told him It was antl-Stallnlst, embracing all points of viewleft of liberalism and that it served asan arena of the campus for Socialistdiscussion and action. X showed him acopy of Anvil, our anti-war magazine,and he read it. He Informed me he wasan anarchist as in Plato's Republic Iaccepted that on face value, neverdreaming that Plato was anti-socialist.I told him that the Politics Club couldgive him a better arena in which to dis¬cuss anarchism then the ISL, which hehad been considering as an alternative.He came to a meeting on British Social¬ism, listened and Joined afterwardIn so much as Mr. Nelson was seduc¬tively “lured” Into the Politics Club 1would like to .ipologise for doing so.Charles FauquherExec Sec, PCLetters ...Column laudedThank you for your thoughtful and■well-expressed editorial re refusing toparticipate in war. It is a happy occa¬sion when a person in a respons’bleposition, with the opportunity for pub¬lic expression, feels called to analyzeour present international dilemma, andto present it with enough objectivityto indicate that the policies of bothsides are leading the world toward de¬struction. It is also refreshing to findone who, in the face of this dilemma,still has enough faith in his fellowman—and, incidentally, in the studentsof the University of Chicago—to voicea positive hope, however cautiously.However, I want to attempt to clarifyseveral points.I do not believe that full justice wasdone to the position of those whosestand against militarism compels themto conscientiously disobey the draftlaw. Those taking such action usuallykeep the governmental authorities fullyInformed about why, when, where, andhow the law is disobeyed, as did Gand¬hi. Nor is there any attempt to avoidarrest. This cannot be compared withdisobeying prohibition or anti-gamblinglaws, in either procedure or motivation.Moreover, those of us who, for prac¬tical and/or moral reasons, do not seeour way clear to civil disobedience, canstill refuse to participate in war. Wecan be conscientious objectors underthe law, and serve instead in non¬profit, non-military organizations. Thuswe may not only have a voice, but mayunderline our words with decision andaction. A person who investigates thisposition soon finds that he is far fromalone, but is, in fact, a part of a large national and interntional fellowship.F'or an introduction to this fellowship,I would suggest contacting the UCchapter of the Fellowship of Reconcilia¬tion. This is not to say that the wayof conscientious objectors is easy orpopular—but is any way, that offersany hope whatever of changing thecourse of present events, easy or popu¬lar?It Is true that, “In each country, themove has to be begun somewhere.” Butthe move always has to be made by anindividual, and for each individual also,the move must be begun somewhere,sometime. Those who ask, "For theUnited States, could the University ofChicago be that ‘somewhere’?” mustask themselves in turn, "Could thatindividual be me?”John E. TrowbridgeMore on columnThe Chicago MAROON editorial ofNov. 16 well emphasizes the importanceof opposing war. However I should liketo point out that it is not as difficultas Editor Hurst feels to accept the logi-al conclusion and refuse to aid warefforts in any way. We at the U. of C.are in the habit of thinking and act¬ing independently; we are not readilyintimiated by Broyles scares or Mac-Arthur fanaticism. Many of us havebeen thought peculiar for coming tothis notorious institution. Consideringthe results of an atomic war, whichwould be a fight to exhaustion betweenthe U. S. and Russia; considering eventhe horrible cost of tihs “little" Koreancampaign; how can one do less thanrefuse to fight? Someone has got to "bedifferent.” May I encourage EditorHurst and others to do what they feelis right. You are not at all alone.Cal C. Herrmann Soys MAROONunrepresentativeOne of the major claims of theMAROON is that It adequately coverscampus news and events. Yet duringthe first two weeks of November anImportant campus event—and what Ismore an event with local, national, andinternational significance and impli¬cations—has gone completely unnoticedand unmentioned by this “all-campus”paper.The event to which I refer is thecollection of blood by the AmericanRed Cross; the date, November 14 and15. 320 students — certainly a largeenough number to be “newsworthy"—contributed blood, and many otherswould probably have made a donationhad information been spread by theMAROON. “October 25, 1951” is the ap¬proval date stamped on the noticeswhich appeared on various bulletinYou support JimmyInside the door.Jimmy supports yououtJimmy’s1172 E. 55th I believe that presentation of everyobservational experience must bear in¬dications of an insight free from super¬ficial enthusiasm and false Impressions.The articles of Mr. Kimmel demon¬strate thinking in terms of illusionscreated by various faculties of propa¬ganda, and call for more critical inter¬pretation of facts. I shall proceed onthe assumption that the way to findout how people feel and respond, andto what degree a government Is sincerein its claims with respect to certainpolicies is an observation on a broadbasis, and during a reasonable lengthof time, but in no way participation inInternational festivals of short duration.As an individual who in the years1939-41 was exposed directly to an ex¬periment of the Soviet occupation poli¬cies, I feel qualified to comment onthe subject of observations presentedby Mr. Kimmel. Judging from Mr. Kim-mel’s account it is evident that themeans used presently to divert theminds of people from the true realityare very similar to those practiced ina different area at different time. Theonly distinction is that in the case un¬der discussion those means have beenused with respect to the internationalopinion represented by delegates from104 countries.At the time to which I’ve already re¬ferred efforts were being made to in¬corporate entire population into a sys¬tem of cultural and recreational activi¬ties with a variable national, but veryrigid ideologicl content. The aim wasto provide a remedy for bitter discour¬agement over economic shortages, andunfulfilled promises in general. Onewill understand well Mr. Klmmel’s feel¬ings about the fact that antl-semitismIs gone. It remains, however, to bewondered how many Jews are beingpersecuted, merely because of an unde¬sirable social and economic background.Peace meetings, anti-rearmamentcampaigns and parades were anothertype of events common in occupiedareas. In spite of that furious speedingup of military production was in prog¬ress, and people kept wondering whyarmored divisions we-e constantly beingmoved, and heavy planes flown underthe cover of night toward border areas.Mr. Kimmel dwells upon the subjectof war and peace in considerable detail.It is well known that war is an atrocityin its very nature. Consequently everyact committed In war is an atrocity, andtMllimilllllfllllllllllllllllHIItlllHIIIIIIIIIHIIIIilllllltllllllllHIIIimtlllllHlIlllfllllllllllllllllllllMIHIHIMHIlHI**! (liiragolaml Filmitc !i and also lTheDisc1367 E. 57th St.Record ofthe WeekBACH: Cantata No. 80,"Ein' Feste Burg ist UnserGott." Sung by the ViennaAkademie Choir & soloists,conducted by Felix Prohaska.SAVE UP TO 80%ON NEW BOOKSWe are now receiving semi-weekly shipments of desirable newbooks — publishers' overstocks on selected titles which ore beingclosed out at substantial reductions in anticipation of inventory.Fiction - Non-Fiction - Art Books - Children’s BooksCLARK and CLARK let your family be firstin your town to own agenuine Chicagoland Fihunesent free witheach one year subscriptionto the Chicago MAROONat only $4.Come in to the MAROON officeor writeChicago MAROON5706 S. UniversityChicago 37Please enter my subscription to the ChicagoluixlFibunc and Chicago MAROON at combined rate of$4. a year.NAME1204 East 55th Street Hours — IO A.M. to 9 P.IH. I ADDRESSplrnxr incloxr paymentTHE CHICAGO MAROON'ffevotittor to, mr Page 7tJglare-guard screenbuilt-in UHF receptiondependable performancegreater TVenjoyment!MotorolaTIfTV programs arebetter than ever!See them at their beston Motorola TV...famous fordependabilityCONTEMPORARY DiSION CONSOLE - Lifesize17 inch screen ... handsomely styled LimedOak or Mahogany cabinet. Instant “Target”tuning, "Golden Voice” tone, Filtered-Clearpictures with exclusive Glare-Guard."LIFE-SIZE" SCREEN, MODERN STYLING—RichMahogany color plastic cabinet ... 17 inchGlare-Guard screen, instant “Target” tun.ing, razor-sharp Filtered-Clear pictures andthrilling new “Golden Voice” tone. ORDINARY TV SCREEN reflect*flare from its mirror-like surface.ANTI-REFLECTION 01A RE-GUARD—OnlyMotorola TV has the new feature that elimi¬nates up to 98% of annoying reflected glare.Glare-Guard combines a specially-engineerednan-reflecting TV tube and optically-curvedenti-reflection screen that directs light glarereflections downward out of your eyes andout of the picture. GLARE-GUARD eliminates glorefrom the screen and viewers' eyes.MODEL 17K1I$25095Pod. Tax IncludedMODEL 17T5*19595Fed. Tea Included BUILT-IN UHF RECEPTION—You maybuy your new Motorola TV with Ultra-High-Frequency All-Channel receptionbuilt-in at extra cost; or the All-ChannelLIHF Adapter may be added later. MOST DEPENDABLE PERFORMANCEThe "Dependa-Bilt" chos-i, is rugged indesign, better than ever before! Top qual¬ity operation is assured by constont qual¬ity-control and performance testing.SEE TV AT ITS BEST... Razor-sharp pictures edge-to-edge, Filtered-Clearof disturbing spots and flashes ... instantly tuned, with realistic "GoldenVoice” tone... improved Bilt-in-Antenna,available with or without buhmn ultra high frequency reception vnnlSEE YOUR DEALERPage 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 30, 1951Reuel Denny indulges in vaudevilleReuel Denney struck off in the direction of “popular culture” last Friday evening whenTonight at 8:30 presented his jolly new verse-fantasy, Machine of Indolence, in Ida Noyes.I think that Denney’s play is, on its first and strongest level, a kind of vaudeville show,or if you like, a “popular culture” review.Fads and infatuations, cleverly distorted and exaggerated, follow each other across thefashionable bandstand of the Wampum Hills Biltmore and pass on through the dream-lives of the chief characters. Hig.h To|% where Dutch ghosts to have tried. Their playing hasUnderneath the vaudeville haunted a remote promontory been rather heavy-handed andand coming closer to the plot, and wooed the mechanized souls b in the last and Dennev’sthe drama casts back upon the of bank robbers. fantasy gives a number of tal-two national myths which are ex- Gr we glance back 20 years to pntPf1 l_fnlp thp to movepressed as a paradox in its title. Hart crane’s The Bridge and read ented Jh "* ,On one side there is the myth of how «<Rip forgot the office hours more delicately and to be funnythe American businessman, his# # > forgot the pay ...” The sen- without forcing an uproar. Joaninitiative, his impatient self-reli- timental combination is calculated Carmell got better and better asance his hardheaded realism: and to cut deep under the facade of the disnusioned Daisy, and Mikeon the other, the sweet dream of mntpmnnrarv manners and toretirement, of the endless vaca- the extent that the Van Winkle Nichols s^ows cleverly as the hill*tion. of Rip Van Winkle and his myth possesses allure and seduc- hilly baladeer. X wasn t Quite suredeep, beery, bottomless sleep. tion, it is successful. whether James Holland, the nar-Satirists of “popular culture” One myth looks powerfully rator. knew at all times just what Post-criticism Sovietmusic heard hereDmitri Shostakovich’s oratorio Song of the Forests, to htpresented in recorded form on campus at Bond Chapel at3:30 p.m. today and 8:00 p.m. tomorrow, is the first Sovietcomposition to be heard in the U. S. since the 1948 musiccriticism by the Central Committee of the Communist Partyof the Soviet Union. It has received a Stalin prize, first-class.The oratorio deals with thehave always found something re¬vealing in the juxtaposition ofthese two ideas. Bumbling oldVan Winkle rubs the cobwebs outof his eyes and asks—can thisbe Sleepy Hollow, friend? Theprospect has been irresistible. We at the other; the gnomic fancyof Van Winkle becomes thesiren of commercial enterprise,and for all their taunting op¬position they seek an everlast¬ing embrace.Machine of Indolence is an ex-remember Maxwell Anderson’s cellent piece for the 8:30 playersTo do ‘Measure for Measure’A week from today University Theatre opens its ’51-’52season with William Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure. Thisis one of the rarely produced Shakespearian plays, a comicapproach to “an eye for an eye.” There will be three per¬formances, Friday evening, Saturday afternoon and Saturdayevening.iMIUT shews this year will an7 sheldon Patlnkjn. The play isbe give y y produced and directed by Georgedates instead of on the pievi- g]ajr> Director of Universityous Saturday - Sunday schedule. Theatre.Because of the demand for them,reserved seat tickets for the eve¬ning performances are now onsale at $1. General admission onFriday and Saturday nights is 75cents. There is also the “bargainmatinee" on Saturday afternoon,where tickets are all 50 cents.Measure opens UT’s seasonof shows in different comedystyles, and is the first show pro¬duced since the present com¬pany was formed. At the begin¬ning of this quarter UT heldopen tryouts for membership inthe company. After the eom-pan ywfas formed there was aseries of workshops: on acting,on makeup, discussions ofMeasure for Measure, beforethe show went into rehearsal.All of the cast and productionstaff are members of the com¬pany.The Cast: Fred Wranovix asthe Duke, Gene Halboth as An¬gelo, Jon Jackson as Escalus,Alex Hassilev as Lucio, Dick Mayas the Provost, Jerry Cunliffe asClaudio, Estelle Luttrell as Isa¬bella, Janet Goodman as Mari¬ana. and Nancy Mikolic asMistress Overdone, with JamesCamp, Curt Crawford, NancyDaigre, Lois Karbel, Mary Knight,The wackiest crime storyof the year—poking impiousfun at the Bank of England. TYPEWRITERSSit UP • PAYMENT*Wf SUY - SILL • RE NT - Rf PAIR • EXCHANGE* STAR TYPEWRITER CO.ltt W. MADISON ST.- to YEARS ON MADISON AT WELLS —Phone ANdover 3-7373 he was saying, but his suave ut¬terance hits about right as a coun¬terpoint to the main action.Denney’s language remains puz¬zling. The sense simply can’t bemanaged on one hearing and Idon’t pretend to have gotten morethan a tatse of its wit and ro¬mance. However, two speeches dostand out in my mind; both cameat the end of the play and maybethat is the reason.The first is Daisy’s wistfullyprosaic declaration of love toPerry. The second is the Narra¬tor’s heavily-rhymed and allitera¬tive soliloquy, which stunned anddelighted the audience, if my in¬tuition is correct, without in theleast making any literal sense.Marvin Chirlestein| American Conservatory Iof MusicSouth Side Branch1133 E. 63rd St. =S Plano, Voice, Violin and Wind ;InstrumentsClasses day or evening| MU 4-9364 Start Anytime ICiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiii.iii.iin.il mnmi.in: huge reforestation and floodcontrol program currently un¬der way in the Soviet Union andplanned to continue for fifteenyears.One familiar with Shostako¬vich's previous works wouldhave great difficulty in recog¬nizing the composer. His con¬st ructive wizardry remains, butit is applied to music of unmis¬takably popular vein, thoughwithout direct quotations fromfolk tunes.Shostakovich has assembled allthe musical resources at his dis¬posal: inventive melodies, mas¬tery of counterpoint, and a kindof John Phillip Sousa exhuber-ance in which he has always ex¬celled, and fused them in a fash¬ion which does not sacrifice im¬mediate popularity. Harmonic in¬novation is absent.The scoring is of the flashiestkind, strongly reminiscent of suchworks as, say, Mahler’s fourth;in fact, one cannot avoid noticingthat Mahler’s influence, alwaysevident in Shostakovich's music,is now important.The two most prominent as¬ pects of Shostakovich’s previ¬ous music-declamatory tragedywhich draws heavily on nine¬teenth century style, to be foundin the fifth, sixth, and seventhsymphonies and the piano trioand the musical practical jokes,in which one hears trite littleclarinet themes above stringstacattos and swirling violinsimitating a boiling samovar-are absent.Fred Winsberq■ IMiaaMaiMRaatRMRMMMMtllMtaillCMMtRIMliy,!,,',.,7,,, .Best Films of EuropeEvery Fri. b Sot. eveningpresented byFilm ForumPeople’s Auditorium2457 ». ChicagoFri., Nov. 30, 8:00 p.m.Progressive Party Hall306 I. 43rd St.Sot., Dec. 1, 8:00 p.m.'THE GREAT GLINKA"(Russidn)"PAGEANT OF RUSSIA"(Color)Admission 60cA fine quality 4-year-oldVIRGIN ISLAND RUMat the exceptionallylow price of $*>25 FIFTHwhile they lastHistory by ExpertsTHE JOURNAL OF MODERN HISTORYAn indispensable publication for all who are interested inthe latest researches in the field of modern history.. Issues includefeature articles, vital documents, book reviews, bibliographical sur¬veys, and current bibliography.Rate per volume: Regular, $7.50Students, $3.75Subscription is by the volume HYDE PARK LIQUOR STORE1405 E. 55th PL 2-8830 |y largest assortment of trines in Hyde ParkThe University of Chicago Press5750 Ellis Avenue. Chicago 37, IllinoisPlease enter my subscription at the student rate of $3.75 toTHE JOURNAL OF MODERN HISTORY.Volume 23 (1951NAME .$3.75 Volume 24 (1952) $3.75 HAMILTON THEATERhome of prestige entertainment2150 E. 71st St. HY 3-9491lleturn engagement of Walt Disney*sFANTASIAin exquisite Technicolorspecial discount rates for students — present I.D. cards to cashierWADDRESSPlease inclose payment•I—i—i*v*:—r—i-v%— WVVVVTVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVWWSJs Paul Sheedy* Switched to Wildrool Cream-OilBecause He Flunked The Finger-Nail Test'***&*•OCAftBORtt AT 0iViS'OH ALEC 6WMNESJSTANLEY HOLLOWAYAt 6:30, 8:15, 10CHICAGO COLLEGE ofOPTOMETRY(Nationally Accredited’Fully AccreditedAn Outstanding Collegein a Splendid ProfessionDoctor of Optomeiry degree inthree years for students enteringwith sixty or more semester creditsin specified Liberal Arts courses.Registration March 3Students are granted professionalrecognition by the U. S. Depart¬ment of Defense and SelectiveService.Excellent clinical facilities. Ath¬letic and recreational activities.Dormitories on the campus.CHICAGO COLLEGE OFOPTOMETRY1845-X Lorrobee StreetChicago 14, Illinois tot, ferYour stars are strictly favorable if you’re sparklingin a Judy Bond! Big dippers of compliment to the gal whomakes this blouse the stellar attraction of her wardrobe'owL BLOUSESAT BETTER STORES EVERYWHERESee them at MARSHALL FIELDJvdy Bead, lac., 1171 Breadway, New Yerk 18, N. Y. SHEIDY was a big walrus-flower. ’’All I ever get is the coldshoulder,” he blubbered. So his roommate said: "Tusk,tusk, you old soak—try a new wrinkle on that messy hair:Wildroot Cream-Oil! Non-Alcoholic. Contains soothingLanolin, Freeze your hair from annoying dryness and loose,ugly dandruff. Helps you pass the Finger-nail Test!” NowSheedy’s really in the swim! Just sealed his engagement toa pretty young flapper—and he’s aboat to wisker off toan ivory-covered cottage, So water you waiting fur? Get atube or bottle of Wildroot Cream-Oil Hair Tonic at anydrug or toilet goods counter! And ask your barber forprofessional applications. "Now,” you’ll say, "Ice sea whythere’s snow other hair tonic like Wildroot Cream-Oil!”* of131 So. Harr it HillRJ., Williamsville, N. Y.Wildroot Company, Inc., Buffalo 11, N. Y.^ovewbcr 30* 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Pag« 9JJC will debate,controlsfederal Schools offer scholarshipst Debaters of UCs StudentFoi-um will climax their autumnschedule this weekend by attend¬ing the Illinois Navy Pier tour¬nament and meeting separatelywith Mundelein College and theCollege of Complexes, accordingto Terry Lunsford, Forum direc- to interested UC studentsSeveral schools, among them New York University, OsloUniversity, and Oxford and Cambridge Universities, are offer¬ing scholarships to interested UC students.NYU is offering 20 scholarships to its law school in honorof two distinguished graduates, Samuel J. Tilden and ElihuRoot Ballet announcedARACHNE, ballet performanceby the Knights of the Ballet set toDAPHNIS AND CHLOE Suite No.2, with choreography by Guy Bas¬set was previewed last Wednesdayat a meeting of the Ballet Guild ofChicago. Rosen getsliterary prizegiven by CMFOR meetstor.Representing Chicago at thetournament will be Harold Ward,John Young, Robert Kutak, DavidGreen, Gerry Schoenfeld, WilliamWithers, Monroe Ingberman andPaul Horvitz. They will argue thenational intercollegiate question,“Resolved: that the Federal gov-‘ ernment should adopt a perma¬nent program of wage and pricecontrols.”Herbert C a p 1 a n and Harrisi Hartzler wjll encounter a teamfrom the College of Complexes inextemporaneous debate before ajudge of the municipal court whenthey travel to that institution to-, night, Lunsford said. The subject• will be chosen by the audiencejust before the debate. Two students will be select- any accredited college or univer-ed from each of the ten Fed- sity.eral Judicial Circuits and will Students may choose courses inbe chosen on the basis of three f°ur fields: fa) General Surveyoualifications* erades extra cur- of Norwegian Culture, (b) Thequalifications, grades, extra cur Humanities> (c) Social studies,ricular activities and the student s (tj) Education system of Norway.potential for “unselfish leader- For further information the Oslosh‘P-. . Summer School Admissions Of-Successful candidates will re- fice> Qlaf College, Northfield,ceive $2,100 yearly ($1,500 living Minnesota, should be contacted.expenses and $600 tuition) forthree years, contingent on the ^ ^ i imaintainence of scholarship re- pTOD© rOCK©tquirements. «A Proposed Satellite Rocket,”Four American students, either wlU be the subject of a talk at themen or women, will be selected meetmg of the UC Science-for Henry Fellowships to study Fiction Club t0 ^at Oxford and Cambridge Univer- da^ at in Classics 17.sities during 1952-1953. Recent col- *\so on the program will belege graduates and students who d’scuf!°? °f a new, constitution,will be graduating from Amer- the club llbrary> and dues- A training program for discus¬sion leaders for “Steps to Peace,”a pamphlet presenting a criticalanalysis of American foreignpolicy, was initiated last Sundayat Chapel House by the Fellow¬ship of Reconciliation. The meet¬ing was under the leadership ofBob Pickus, Education secretaryof the American Friends’ ServiceCommittee.According to the organization’sown description, the FOR is apacifist group which bases itsconvictions on religious and hu-mantarian grounds.Their pamphlet, “Steps toPeace,” currently on sale, offerssuggestions for change as well asconstructive criticism. The MAROON literary prize ol$25 has been awarded to StanleyRosen for a dramatic poem "TheMerchant of Egypt,” the editor ofthe University of Chicago Review,Joseph Lobenthal, announcedWednesday. Manuscripts submit¬ted were first screened by thestaff of Review and only thosechosen for publication in the nextissue of the Review were finallysubmitted to the outside panelof judges.The judges were Milton Craneof College humanities and theEnglish departments; HaydenKarruth, former editor of PoetryMagazine in Chicago and at pres¬ent on the staff of the Universitypress, and Mrs. Judith Bond, cura¬tor of the modern poetry room inHarper library.The prize-winning poem will ap¬pear in the next issue of theReview, which will come out dur*ing the week of December 10.CORE founder talksin Jim Crow answerJames Farmer, writer and lec¬turer, will appear on campus un¬der the auspices of the PoliticsClub to lecture on "The SocialistAnswer to Jim Crow” at 3:30 p.m.today in the Ida Noyes eastlounge..Farmer is field secretary for<■ the Student League for Indus¬trial Democracy. On graduatingfrom Howard University, hel served as race relations secretary®'of the Fellowship of Reconcilia¬tion. Farmer founded the Con¬gress of Racial Equality (CORE),and for two years served as itsnational chairman. ican colleges in the spring of 1952are eligible to apply for theawards of 650 pounds, which isawarded to each Fellow selected.Applications for the awardsmust be submitted on or beforeJanuary 15, 1952, to the office ofthe secretary of Yale universityor tq the secretary of the Corpor¬ation of Harvard University.A limited number of scholar¬ships is available to the Univer¬sity of Oslo’s summer school tobe held from June 21 to August2, 1952, for American and Canadi¬an students who have completedat least their freshman year in UC law students arguemock case in 'moot' courtby David FainDance tonight A team of four students are representing the UC Law School in the National Moot CourtCompetition being held in Chicago yesterday, today and tomorrow. They are Robert Blatt,David Kahn, Julian Hansen and Maurice Jacobs.A moot court consists of a debate conducted like a real court case, but the contestants arejudged only on their skill in arguing the case.Students from the University of Illinois, Indiana University, Loyola of Chicago, Universityof Notre Dame, Chicago-Kent Col-f A r -o NEWrt Uotta/riedJST0M MADE KftEAR YOUR NAME RROUEHY ipefl.dCo* by »h*o hondtomc Kuy Choin inbeautiful noturol gold finish A PCDffCl GUT fo» svny man Of boy . . .dool for sorvicervton . . potkod in giftbo* Beg $7 95 voluO, NOW ONLY$3 50 POSTPAID , Print nomt do-tired, ond send S3 50 with orderMONIY BACK GUARANTEEROSE REFINING CO The Michaelmas session, adance sponsored annually by theUC Law School Students Associa¬tion, will be given tonight at 9 inthe Shoreland Flotel. On the pro¬gram will be the traditional AllLaw School Review and a studentskit with musical accompaniment,and for dancing there will be BillOtto’s orchestra. The price for acouple is $3 in advance or $3.50at the door.29-CM E.Madison St.Madison st. oid •». <A> ? We Specialize inFINGER TAME PARAKEETSComplete Line of Dog and CatAccessoriesHYDE PARK PET SHOP1370 E. 55th MU. 4-4428 lege of Law, and Marquette Uni¬versity will also take part in thecompetition.The team argued against Loy¬ola in the first round held lastnight in the County Building, 118N. Clark Street. Subsequentrounds will be held at 7:30 in thesame place tonight, and the re¬gional finals will be held 7:30tomorrow night in the US Courtof Appeals, 1212 Lake ShoreDrive.The younger members sectionof the Illinois Bar Assn, is spon¬soring the Chicago competitionand the winning team will go toNew York for the national finals.Witness refuses to testify“The case to be argued involvesthe question of the right of a wit¬ness before a congressional in¬ vestigating committee to refuse witnesses before Congressionalto testify when his refusal is investigating committees havebased on the television and radio d ma„y ot Doe’s objections,broadcasting of the proceedings \ , , , *and other objections to the man- tbeir validity and legal effect hasner in which the investigation is never been decided by the courts,conducted,” said the press release.In this hypothetical case, JohnDoe, the State’s attorney ofMovieland, USA, was called toWashington, DC, to appear as awitness before a Senate commit¬tee’s legal right and authority totee investigating criminal, im¬moral and subversive aspects ofthe motion picture industry.Convicted for criminal con¬tempt of Congress, the case isnow before the "moot” SupremeCourt of the United States.Question still undecidedAlthough a number of actual and the whole subject remains anopen field for heated discussionby the man in the street.All students are invited to at¬tend the moot court proceedings.Students discussjoint committee;will unite clubsTravel Comfort* -VS AIAMMl f OR PLUSSAFETY AND SAVINGSWHIN YOUWSUKGt Go By TrainON YOUR HOLIDAY TRIP1 DOUBLESINGLEEDGEnow in(lear-ViewZipakswith usedblade vaults44fa 98$21 for 494 • 10 for 254Regular packing, 4 for i04I Double Edge GOLD THIN—same low price* IT’S MORI FUNf Plan your holi¬day homecoming by train witha group of friends. Enjoy realcomfort... wonderful diningcar meals ... room to roamaround and relax.YOU CAN DIRIND on gettinghome as planned—and gettingback after vacation as well.Day in day out the railroadsoffer you worry-free travel.SAVE MONIYI Get together 25or more, all heading home inthe same direction at the sametime. You may return indi¬vidually. Then go GROUPCOACH PLAN, and each saveup to 45% compared to one¬way coach tickets![ Also Pol Injector Blades In metol injectors20 for 594 • 10 (or 394 ‘ 6 for 254 Ask your Local Railroad Agont Nowabout group or single round-trip savings!PA \:YovrBestfi/ade Buy EASTERN RAILROADSl i RIDE ALightweightBICYCLEh. Frame De^n.Ugh***'6 Man(J Brake*.Tvro-Whe* fOV, Tires.H.gh-Pressur Sadd,e.Comfort* V’.Tools. Toolcase.NEW 1951 MODELSWHY PAY MORE?DAWES BIKE, with three-speed gear to ease pedalling,$52.50 • • • alsoSchwinn - Rudge - RaleighDunelt-Armstrong-Hercules30-Day Free CheckupDon't make a mistake; see us first. We have 30 years of experienceJACKSON PARKBIKE SHOPBe Service What Be Sell5333 Lake Park NOrmal 7-9860DOrchesfer 3-7524 A group of close to £0 studentsmet Monday night to discuss thepossibility of forming a coordinat¬ing committee of all campus or¬ganizations. The current issueconcerning the committee is thequestion of legality of LYL andSYL.The committee would like topromote discussions on the ques¬tion of academic freedom in thevarious political and non-politi¬cal groups on campus. The nextmeeting will be Monday night inRosenwald 28 at 7:30 p.m.SHOE REPAIRSubstantial Discountsto Students"IT MUST BE DONE RIGHT"HOLLIDAY'S1407 East 61st Street(at Dorchester Ave.)Phone NOrmal 7-8717Two blocks from Inti. HouseWhile-U-Wait or One-Day ServiceIIWNIHtltVBay Her Flowerslor theXMAS BALLfromMITZIE’S |Flower Shop jStudent DiscountsOpen Evenings1300 E. 55th St. Ml 3 4020!—**§• 10 November 30, 1951UC soccer champs Crosscountry Inter-dorm touchball tourneyshut Out Purdue 4-0 team captures reaches final playoffs SundayAT HOME*Dec. 1—Illinois TechDec. 12—Concordia TeachersDec. 15—Coe CollegeJan. 11—Illinois Prof. CollegesJan. 16—Chicago Teachers 7:30 p.m.8:00 p.m.8:00 p.m.8:00 p.m.8:00 p.m.Peb. 6—Illinois-Navy PierFeb. 23—Knox College 8:00 p.m.8:00 p.m.AWAYb Roy AlbertOverpowering Purdue, 4-0, last Sunday, the Chicago varsity•occer squad climaxed an undefeated season by winning itsfirst Midwest Collegiate Soccer Conference championshipsince entering the league in 1947. Two goals by Alberto Pas-quinelli and one each by John Godfrey and Apset Nerijanaccounted for all the points in the Maroons’ fourth shutout ofthe year. Playing without ~ “ . .Dick Coggeshall, who broke HOOp SCHCCIIIIGhis leg in a game againstWheaton, the Maroons completedtheir season with five wins andone tie.Previously the hooters had top¬pled Purdue, 4-2, Wheaton twice, jan 26—North Central College 8:00 p.m.1-0 and 3-2, and Indiana, 2-0, whilebeing held to a 1-1 tie in the sec¬ond Indiana game. Strong bothoffensively and defensively, theMaroons scored more goals thanany other team in the league,while holding its opposition tofewer scores than any other de¬fense. Chicago won all its homegames without allowing the oppo¬nents to score a single goal.A trophy is being prepared andWill be presented to the teamlater. It was a rugged season,played in mud and snow. We con¬gratulate the Booters for theirfine performance. By crushingPurdue the squad joins Ted Hay-don’s cross-country team in win¬ning their respective champion¬ships without loss.Here is the lineup Coach AlvarHermanson used most of the sea¬son: AAU secondThe varsity cross country teamrounded off its season Saturdayby placing second in the CentralAAU 5000-meter Cross-CountryChampionship at Waveland Golfcourse. The team championshipwas captured by Wheaton’s statechampions.Tom Scott and Ashby Smith,Jr., led the Maroon runners, fin¬ishing fourth and fifth in the fieldof fifty runners. John Smothers,Art Reilley, and Ken Stapley fin¬ished eleventh, fourteenth, andseventeenth. The first five Chi¬cago runners received medalswhich were awarded to the first20 finishers. Final playoffs for the intra-mural touchball championshipare slated for tonight and Sundayin the Fieldhouse. Tonight Salis¬bury plays a double-header, bat¬tling Coulter in the 6:30 openerand taking on Snell in the secondgame at 7:30. Sunday Snell playstwo, facing Coulter in the firstgame and Chamberlin in the sec¬ond.In the first night’s playoff ac¬tion Chamberlin was virtuallyeliminated as it battled Coulter toa 0-0 standoff and then fell vic¬tim to Salisbury, 30-13. All fourteams in the playoffs were unde¬feated in regular league play,winding up with three wins anda tie apiece. Coincidentally boththe Chamberlin-Snell game to de¬cide the Judson league and theCoulter-Salisbury tilt for the Bur¬ ton league championship endedin 12-12 ties.Since the playoffs are played on 'a round-robin basis, it is possiblefor them to result in a four-waytie, necessitating a replay of theplayoffs. In case of a two-way tie,the tied teams will play a singlegame to decide the championship.Salisbury has the inside track,already having one win to itscredit, and can clinch the cham¬pionship by winning both ends of *its double-header tonightForm hockey teamAn informal varsity ice hockeyteam is now being formed. Any.one interested In playing maysign up in the Athletic Office inBartlett gymnasium.Dec. 7—Illinois Professional Colleges, atDuncan YMCAJan. 5—North Central College, atNapervilleFeb. 9—Knox College, at GalesburgFeb. 16—Coe College, at Cedar Rapids,IowaFeb. 18—Illinois-Navy Pier, at NavyPierFeb. 20—Illinois Tech, at Illinois TechMar. 1—Concordia Teachers, at RiverForest.•All home games will be played inthe Field House, 5550 UniversityAvenue, Chicago.Jenkins, GShane, LFHanson, capt.,Wyatt, LFHarvey, CH RF Bloomfield, RHStone, LOPasquinelli, LIMerijan, CFGodfrey, RICombiner, RO tlllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllljtE • Cut Films . §Free TransportationWe are sending cars to variouswestern States. All car expensesare paid. Your trip costs you ab¬solutely nothing. Adequate timeallowance. New cars. Fully insured.An ideal way to go on a vacationor to return from one. Return homefrom school. See us for one ofthese all car-expenses paid trips.AAA DRIVEWAYRoom 1419343 So. Dearborn St.Chicago, IllinoisPhone WEbster 9-5298 a • Film Packs| • Flash Bulbs• • 35 MM Color or- Black and WhiteBest Photo FinishingIn Town —One Doy ServiceRELIANCECAMERA & PHOTOSUPPLIES1517-19 E. 63rd StreetPhone Midway 3-0288Free chance on■ New ’51 Dodge with each$1 purchaselllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll HOW MANY TIMES A DAYnnvnn50?LIQUID CREAM SHAMPOOMore than just a liquid, more than just a cream... new Wildroot Liquid Cream Shampoo is acombination of the best of both.Even in the hardest water Wildroot Shampoowashes hair gleaming clean, manageable, curl-inviting without robbing hair of its natural oils. three sizes*29# 59# 98#Soapless Sudsy ... Lanolin LovefylP.5. 7 o keep hxiir meat between shampoos use Lady Wildroot Cream Hair Dressing, 100?- 200?IF YOU’RE AN AVERAGE SMOKERTHE RIGHT ANSWER IS OVER 200!»s, 200 times every dayyour nose and throat areexposed to irritation • • •200 GOOD REASONS WHYYOU'RE BETTER OFF SMOKINGPhilip Morris!PROVED definitely milder >-»-»PROVED definitely less irritating thanany other leading brand . . >CALL PROVED by outstanding noseand throat specialists*YES/you’ll be gladtomorrow • • *you smokedPHILIP MORRIStoday!PHILIP MORRISNovember 30, 1951 HE CHICAGO MAROON Page 11Two persons voice opinionson Supreme Court’s decisionGendlin letterThe American Communist leaders have certainly deservedthe difficulties they are having. Even now they still holdthat free speech must be accorded only those who are right.In their view such freedoms are not human rights, nor arethey universally desirable in living together with others,in respecting them and permitting each to develop. Rather,jn their view, these freedoms areonly for those who are advancing terns was once based on the con-the communist conception of des- viction and success in action oftiny. These communists, there- human dignity, civil rights, and afore, were defending only their system of free interchange ofown civil rights which are grant- ideas and discussion, then weed them by our ideals of a de- have just now ceased to stand onsirable social order as these ideals these ideals. Our opposition toaccidently serve their own. We Communism has been made acci- — Beyond the Ivory Tower -Presents Frankfurters affirmation c<Supreme Court on Communist leadersneed not feel sorry for them be¬cause this advantage is no long¬er accorded them. dental and unprincipled, and ourexperience with a free system hasbeen turned into a failure inHowever, we need to feel sorry which we were forced to give upfor ourselves. Since our ideals our century and a half old ven-and rights no longer extend to ture.this group, these ideals and rights Was this ill-considered surren-have actually been taken from us der necessary? Was it not ratheralso. We are now free to speak true that our people were in noand teach, only because what we danger of being converted to com-teach and who we are is accept- munist teaching or of taking partable to our government and the en masse in the communist con-momentary prejudices of our peo- spiracy. Was it not true rather,pie. If our opposition to Commu- that democracy, as we all knew itnism and similar autocratic sys- here, had been largely successfulV ou can’t beat the Manhattan Gabmont sportshirt for up-to-the-minute style ... and it has all the built-in comfort that every smartcollege man demands. The Gabmont is made of washable gabardinethat lets you save on cleaning bills. Comes in a variety of good-looking colors. And it will serve as an extra dress shirt because ithas long sleeves and can be worn with a tie. $5.95*The Manhattan Shirt Co.,Makers of Manhattan Shirts,Sportshirts, Neckwear, Underwear,Pajdmas, Beachwear, Handkerchiefs•subject to ors regulations and that this was the convictionand experience of the overwhelm¬ing majority of the people; all, infact, except a few thousand?Instead of acting on the demo¬cratic convictions of the people,the government has encouragedand now taken part in a hysteriawhich intimidates everyone, eventhe government. Faith in democ¬racy has been replaced with fearof conspiratory teachings and in¬dependent viewpoints.Legally, the Court’s interpreta¬tion of the Smith Act is admit¬tedly an abrogation of civil rights.It is defended legally by an argu¬ment of clear and present danger.But dangerous spies and sabo¬teurs do not "conspire to teach,”nor can they be apprehended bypublic fear and the jailing ofpublic figures. However, if theclear and present danger is thatwe shall be converted to thewould-be enemy’s point of viewright here at home, then weshould all withdraw from theworld struggle in shame, andstay at home until we are no long¬er so childishly confused that wemust keep everyone silent, whilewe memorize our own slogans.The Supreme Court decisionwould be excusable, were this thecase. I think, however, that weare quite able to defend our rightsand convictions, without havingthem denied in our own country.Not only civil rights them¬selves have been abandoned asan essential part of American De¬mocracy. The traditional assump¬tion of the safe exercise of suchrights is disappearing. Americansare becoming habituated to aclimate of “realism” and fear, inwhich the legal rights and free¬doms are made inaccessible bythe fear of the harmful conse¬quences to be expected from gov¬ernment and public. When the at¬mosphere is fearful, the exerciseof freedoms no longer occurseven where they are granted.Americans have never appreci¬ated this fact enough, preciselybecause they assumed both theirrights and the safe exercise ofthem. A few incidents to the con¬trary can suffice to change a freeatmosphere. It has been changingfor a long time. The change hasnow been legally ratified by theSupreme Court.Kopelov letterAn essential factor which shouldjustify further Supreme Court re¬view of the Smith Act convictionsis the lack of fair trial in thesecases. The Smith act defendantshave been limited in disprovingthe government’s charges as thefollowing points will show.The Supreme Court refused toreview its 6-2 decision upholdingthe constitutionality of the SmithAct. Despite this there-is reasonto believe that they might reviewfurther Smith Act convictions.Jackson said that it was still nec¬essary to prove intent and abilityto bring about the evil feared. Afair trial had been and continuesto be threatened, by bail questionsand other harassments; by ap¬pointment of attorneys not of thedefendants choice; by the reluct¬ance of attorneys to take thesecases; by the setting of high bailand the refusal of bail. In theseand other ways the governmenthas jeopardized the possibility ofpolitical defendants receiving afair trial.The bail question is singled outfor further consideration in orderto illustrate the long standing at¬tack by the government on theassurance of a fair trial in politi¬cal cases.In November 1949, after theconviction of the communists,U.S. Attorney Saypol refused toaccept bail from the Civil RightsCongress pending appeal of theircase. The Circuit Court of Ap¬peals held that CRC 214% U.S.Treasury were proper surety. Im¬mediately after the June 20, 1951,arrests of 17 second layer com¬munists, Saypol again tried torevoke CRC bail. Again he was Last week, Beyond the Ivory Tower carried the complete textof Justice Black’s dissent on the review of the Eugene Dennis case.Following is an abstraction of Justice Frankfurter’s affirmationon the Writ of Certiotari to U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2ndcircuit, No. 336. Eugene Dennis et al vs. U.S., June 4, 1951.The defendants were convicted undersection 3 of the Smith Act (“to organizeor help to organize any society, group decisions. Since the significance Ofor assembly of persons who teach, advo- every expression of thought derivescate or encourage the overthrow of any from the circumstances evoking it, re¬government In the U. S. by force orviolence; or to be or become a memberof, or affiliate With, any ouch society,group or assembly of persons, knowingthe purpose thereof.”) For conspiringto violate Sec. 2 of the Act, which makesit unlawful "to organize or help to or¬ganize any society, group, or assemblyof persons who teach, advocate, or en¬courage the overthrow or destruction ofany government In the U. S. by force orviolence.” The substance of the Indict¬ment Is that the defendants betweenApril 1, 1945, and July 20, 1948, agreedto bring about the dissolution of a bodyknown as the Communist Political Asso¬ciation and to organize In its place theCommunity Party of the United States;that the aim of the new party was “theoverthrow and destruction of the Gov¬ernment of the US by force and vio¬lence”; that the defendants were toassume leadership or the Party and torecruit members for It and that theParty was to publish books and con¬duct classes, teaching the duty and thenecessity of forceful overthrow. Thejury found all the defendants guilty. suits reached, rather than languageemployed, give the vital meaning.. . . These general considerations un¬derlie decisions of the case before us.On the one hand is the interest Insecurity. The Communist Party was notdesigned by these defendants as anordinary political party. For the cir¬cumstances of its organization, its aimsand methods and the relation of thedefenadnte to Its organization andalms we are concluded by the Jury’sverdict. The jury found that the Partyrejects the basic premise of our poli¬tical system — that change Is to bebrought about by non-violent consti¬tutional process. The jury found thatthe Party advocates the theory thatthere is a duty and necessity to over¬throw the Government by force andviolence. It found that the Party en¬tertains and promotes this view, not asa prophetic insight or as a bit of un-wordly speculation, but as a programfor winning adherents and as a policyto be translated Into action.. . . When legislation touches free¬dom of thought and freedom of speech,As thus limited, the controversy such a tendency is a formidable enemyin this Court turns essentially on theinstructions given to the jury for de¬termining guilt or innocence. The firstquestion Is whether—wholly apart fromconstitutional matters — the judge’scharge properly explained to the Jurywhat it Is that the Smith Act condemns.The conclusion that he did so requiresno labored argument. On the basis ofthe Instructions, the jury found, forthe purpose of our review, that the ad¬vocacy which the defendants conspired of the free spirit. Much that should berejected as Illiberal, because repressiveand envenoming, may well be not un¬constitutional. The ultimate reliancefor the deepest needs of civilizationmust be found outside their vindicationin courts of law. Apart from all else,judges, howsoever conscientiously theymay seek to discipline themselvesagainst it, unconsciously are apt to bemoved by the deep undercurrents ofpublic feeling. A persistent, positiveto promote was to be a rule of action, translation of the liberating faith Intoby language reasonably calculated toincite persons to such action, and was the feelings and thoughts and actionsof men and women Is the real protec-intended to cause the overthrow of the tlon against attempts to strait-jacketGovernment by force and violence assoon as circumstances permit."Few questions of comparable importhave come before this Court In recent the human mind. Such temptationswill have their way. if fear and hatredare not exorcised. The mark of a trulycivilized man is confidence in theBit briefsyears. The appellants maintain that strength and security derived from thethey have a right to advocate a political inquiring mind. We may be gratefultheory, so long, at least, as their advo- f0r such honest comforts as It supports,cacy does not create an immediate dan- but we must be unafraid of its uncerti-ger of magnitude to the very existence tudes Without open minds there canof our present scheme of society. On be no ooen society. And If society bethe other hand, the Government asserts not open the spirit o' man is mutilatedthe right to safeguard the security of an<j becomes enslaved,the nation by such a measure as theSmith Act.. . . Just as there are those who regardas Invulnerable every measure forwhich the claim of national survival isinvoked, there are those who find in prom the Daily Compass,the Constitution a wholly unfetteredright of expression. . . . The historic Aug. *5), 11)01antecedents of the First Amendment “The Department of Justice, inpreclude the notion that its purpose rwas to give unqualified immunity to its fifth round-up Since the Smithevery expression that touched on mat- 0ters within the range of political inter- Act was upheld by the Supiemeest. . . . The case for the defendants re- . . - _ ,¥.quires that their conviction be tested Court, June 4, arrested seven pei-against the entire body of our relevant sons -n Hawaii yesterday Oncharges of conspiring to advocatethe necessity of forcible over-Discuss disarmament-The next political forum topicwill be "What should be the con¬ditions for general disarmament?"Letters should be submitted to theeditor of the "Ivory Tower" byMonday, Dec. 10th. throw of the government.The roundup netted: Jack W.Hall, 36-year-old regional directorof Harry Bridges’ InternationalLongshoremen’s and Warehouse¬men’s Union . . . who now be-directed to accept it. "I don’t comes the first labor leader to bethink it is any concern of yours jaiieri under the Smith Act whowho put up the money.” said has denied on oath being a Com-Judge Frank. “If they come to ^ . „you with a negotiable instrument, munist Party member,you have to accept it. It makes * * *no difference even if it were From the New’ York Compass,stolen,” said Judge Learned Hand. ge^f 1951Vinn at “In three months, since the Su-$50,000-$100,000. CRC bail was re- ,, .. c ...yoked including that of 39 aliens Premc Court uPheW ,hc Sm,(hunder deportation proceedings. At Act on June 4, 67 persons haveleast one of these was also a been arrested, indicted or impris-Smith Act defendant. It an un- oned under the 11-year-old sedi-precedented move the Justice De- tion law . . . The last arrestpartment established five qualifi- marke(j the sixth roundup, andcations for bailors in alien cases: , , d editors of the left-they must know the alien, livenear him, reveal the sources of wmg newspaper, the People stheir funds, and must be suffi- World.”ciently responsible. They may"not be a member of the Commu- Smith Act The file has beennist party, an affiliate, or other,related subversive groups” (if the growing for a long time, but of-alien is being deported for being fieials did not do much abouta Communist). The legality of using it until after the Supremethis was questioned by New York Court ruled that the Smith ActJudge Wemfeld. Detroit Judge ... .. ,Lederle accepted CRC bail con- was constitutional. The arrests intending that refusal to do so “Is the last few months may be re-carrying the doctrine of guilt by garded, therefore, as only a sam-association to the extreme length p]e Gf things to come,of charging that government Black’s dissent ends with,bonds become tainted by owner- “There is hope, however, that inship-” calmer times, when present pres-Although the long trial of the sures, passions, and fears sub¬eleven members of the national side, this or some later court willcommittee of the Communist Par- restore the First Amendment lib-ty received considerable publicity, erties to the high, preferred placefurther ramification of the Smith where they belong in a free so-Act have have not. The total ar- ciety.” And the right to bail? Torested, indicted, or imprisoned counsel of one’s choice? To ade-under the Smith Act is 67. quate time to prepare a defense?The Department of Justice is To freedom of communication be-reluctant to discuss its plans for tween the defense and their coun¬future moves, but it is known that sel? How long must we wait fosit has a large file of potential the Supreme court to restore ouicases to prosecute under the "free society”?vPag« 12 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 30, I95J(^amitiy @cUHjbcM Sv&ttd i*tFriday/ Nov. 30MEETING OP THE FACULTY OF THECOLLEGE, Breasted Hall, 3:30 p.m.SEMINAR: DIVSION OF BIOLOGICALAND MEDICAL RESEARCH. AR-GONNE NATIONAL LABORATORY,conference room, Site B, 6111 Univer¬sity Avenue, 4 p.m. ‘‘The BiologicEffects of Ultrasonics.’* Julia F. Her¬rick, biophysicist and physiologist. Ex¬perimental Institute, Mayo Clinic,Rochester, Minnesota.PUBLIC LECTURE SERIES ON "KNOWYOUR CHICAGO” (University College,Downtown Center), club room, TheArt Institute of Chicago, 11 a.m. "Pub¬lic Opinion in Chicago.” John Nuveen,president, Sunday Evening Club; Clif¬ton Utley, news commentator, NBC;Cyril O. Houle, dean, University Col¬lege. (Field trip, December 5 or 12,includes visits to City Hall, NBC, theChicago Tribune, and Lakeside Press.)DIVERSITY CONCERT, Man del Hall,8:30 p.m. Nikolai Graudan, violon-<cello; Joanna Graudan, piano. Theprogram: K. P. E. Bach, Sonata in Gminor; J. S. Bach, Suite, No. 5, in Cminor, for Violoncello Alone; Bee¬thoven, Sonata in D major, Opus 102,No. 2; and Mendelssohn, Sonata in Dmajor, Opus 58.UC LYL presents the campus premier ofShostakovich oratorio "Song of theForest.” Bond Chapel (across fromCobb), 3:30 p.m. Admislson 60 cents.REHEARSAL AND BALLET CLASS.3 p.m. Ida Noyes dance room. Knightsof the Ballet.VINCENT HOUSE CANTEEN. 9:15. Men,13 cents; women free. Judson Library.HUMAN DEVELOPMENT STUDENT OR¬GANIZATION presents motion pic¬ture, Frustration Play Techniques. 4:30p.m., Judd 126. Admission, 20 cents.HUMBOLDT CLUB presents H. StefanSchultz, "Die Sprache und Wirklich-keit.” 3:30 p.m., Wieboldt 408.MOTION PICTURE: The Beachcomber,Social Science 122, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m.Admission 50 cents. Socialist YouthLeague.UC LAW SCHOOL STUDENTS* ASSO¬CIATION presents Michaelmas Ses¬sion Dance. Program: Traditional AllLaw School Review, Satirical studentskit with musical accompaniment.Music: Bill Otto's orchestri. Shore-land Hotel. Admission, 83 in advanceand $3.50 per couple.SQUARE DANCE. (SU) Ida Noyes gym,8:30 p.m. Admission 60 cents.Saturday, Dec. 1STONE - CAMRYN BALLET (ReynoldsClub Council), Mandel Hall, 8:30 p.m.Two world premieres: Alice in Won¬derland, choreography by Walter Cam-ryn, music by Rossini; Les EnfantsPerdues, choreography by BentleyStone, music by Ravel; and Divertisse¬ments. Tickets are available at theMandel Hall box office.VARSITY BASKETBALL, Field House,7:30 p.m. Chicago vs. Illinois Instituteof Technology.STUDENT UNION presents “I Come forto Sing,** a folk music program bynationally famous folk singers: WinStracke, Big Bill Broonzy, I.irry Lane.Narrated by Studs Terkel, star of Chi¬cago radio and TV. Mandel Hall, 8:30p.m. Admission $1.Sunday, Dec. 2EPISCOPAL COMMUNION SERVICE,Bond Chapel, 8:30 a.m.LUTHERAN SERVICE, Hilton Chapel,10 a.m.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE,Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 11 a.m.BalletBook Shop20 West Jackson BSvd.Suite Ml 4 WE 9-5894Books on DanceandRelated Art*Gifts Greeting Cards The Reverend Henry Sloane Coffin,president emeritus. Union TheologicalSeminary, New York City. (December9, the Reverend John B. Thompson,Dean of the Chapel.)RADIO BROADCAST, University Of Chi¬cago Round Table, WMAQ and NBC,12:30-1 p.m.CARILLON RECITAL, RockefellerChapel, 4 p.m. Frederick Marriott,carillonneur."NOYES BOX'* (Student Union), IdaNoyes Hall, 8 p.m.VIENNESE WALTZING, InternationalHouse assembly room, 8-10 p.m.RECORD CONCERT. Alpha Delta PhiHouse, 5747 University, 3 to 5 p.m.Admission free.SOCIALIST YOUTH LEAGUE presentslecture: “Prisoners of the Class War,”by Fred Thompson. Ida Noyes, 4 p.m.LABOR YOUTH LEAGUE presents dis¬cussion of Mannheim: Ideology andUtopia. Ida Noyes east lounge, 7 p.m.Monday, Dec. 3EXHIBITION (Renaissance Society): Anexhibition of contemporary art foryoung collectors, represnted by over70 artists. Paintings in oil and watercolors; lithographs and block printsin black and white and in color; smallsculpture; etchings; drawings; mo¬biles; etc. All items will be availablefor purchase. Goodspeed 108, dallyexcept Sunday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. throughDecember 15.BOTANY CLUB, Botany 106, 4:30 p.m."Geotropism and Geo-growth Reac¬tions in Roots.” Poul Larsen, professorof Botany.PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR, Billings P117,4:30 p.m. "Intracellular Recordingfrom Motoneurones.” Dr. John C.Eccles, professor of physiology anddirector of Physiological Institute,Australian National University, NewZeland.MOTION PICTURE. Farabique (Frenchfilm), International House, 8 p.m.CHARLES W. GILKEY LECTURE. Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 8:15 p.m.“Religion and Modern Thinking.**Martin Buber, professor of social phil¬osophy, the Hebrew University, Jeru¬salem. (Thijd annual lecture.)MEETING OF the Coordinating Com¬mittee of Student Organizations todiscuss campus-wide academic free¬dom program. Rosenwald 28, 7:30 p.m.MEETING OF the Committee for thePreservation of Student Rights tobring expression of opinion to SGmeeting. Law north, 7 p.m. Open toall.Tuesday, Dec. 4WORSHIP SERVICE (Federated Theo¬logical Schools), Rockefeller Chapel,10:30 a.m.CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SERVICE, HiltonChapel, 4:30 p.m,SEMINAR: ZOLLER MEMORIAL DEN¬TAL CLINIC, Billings P117, 4:30 p.m.A motion picture on "The Develop¬ment of the Electron Microscope.”PUBLIC LECTURE SERIES ON SEMAN¬TICS IN MODERN LIFE, 19 South LaSalle Street, 6:30 p.m. “Semantics andPolitical Philosophies.” S. I. Haya-kawa, lecturer in University College,Author of Language in Thought andAction, and Editor of Etc.SPECIAL CAREER TRAINING FORCOLLEGE STUDENTS and GRADUATESStarting December, March, Juneand SeptemberExecutive* are showing preference forcollege-trained men and women in high-level secretarial positions.Registration Now Open.Lifetime Placement ServiceWrite Admissions Counselor•THE GREGG COLLEGE37 South Waba3h Avenue, Chicago 3, IllinoisPhnna CTntn 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 Classified AdsWANTEDPUBLIC LECTURE (Canterbury Club),Leon Mandel Assembly Hall, 8 p.m.*.'Freedom of the Will ” Mortimer J.Adler, professor of the philosophy oflaw, Law School.FOLK DANCING, International House,8-10 p.m,BALLET CLASS: Ida Noyes dance room,3 p.m. Knights of the Ballet.MOTION PICTURE: Poil de Carotte.Social Science 122, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m.Documentary Film Group. Admission44 cents.LECTURE: "Revolutions in Asia, Colon¬ialism, and American Foreign Policy”by B. F, Hoselitz. Hitchcock lounge,8 p.m. Admisison free.Wednesday, Dec. 5PUBLIC LECTURE SERIES "SKEPTIC’SHOUR” (Student Christian Associa¬tion). Ida Noyes library, 4 p.m. “Mean¬inglessness and Significance In Hu¬man Destiny.” Gerald Carl Brauer,assistant professor of church history.CARILLON RECITAL,, Rockefeller Me¬morial Chapel, 4:30 p.m. Mr. Marriott.ZOOLOGY CLUB. Zoology 14, 4.30 p.m."Functional and Morphological Ob¬servations on the Devedloplng SpinalCo-ordination Centers.” Howard Halt-ear, student in the department ofzoology and United States PublicHealth Fellow.PUBLIC LECTURE SERIES ON THEESSENCE O FRELIGION AND VARIE¬TIES OF APPROACH (University Col¬lege, Downtown Center), 19 South LaSalle Street, 7:30 p.m. "Religion andPoetry.” Amos N. Wilder, professor ofNew Testament Interpretation.ILLUSTRATED LECTURE (Oriental In¬stitute), Breasted Hall, 8 p.m. "Primi¬tive Man on the Rim of the FertileCrescent.” Robert J. Braldwood,Oriental Insltute associate professorof old world prehistory, associate pro¬fessor of anthropology, and field di¬rector of the Oriental Institute Iraq-Jarmo project.INFORMAL LECTURE: "Spiritual Edu¬cation for a Peaceful Society” by AlanMcCormick, Chicago lawyer and chair¬man of the Baha’i Regional TeachingCommittee. Ida Noyes north receptionroom, 7:30 p.m. Admission free.UC SCIENCE-FICTION CLUB presentstalk: "Proposed Satellite Rocket.”Classics 17, 7:30 p.m.Thursday, Dec. 6JUNIOR VARSITY BASKETBALL, Bart¬lett Gymnasium, 3:15 p.m. Chicago vs.Wescott High School.STATISTICS SEMINAR. Eckhart 203,4 p.m. “Infection in Mice Treatedwith Coristone.” Dr. Byron S. Berlin,Seymour Coman research fellow.MEETING OF THE CHICAGO CHAPTEROF SIGMA XI, Eckhart 133, 8 p.m."The Nature of Some Protein Com¬plexes.” I. M. Klotz, professor ofchemistry, Northwestern University. GERMAN OR AUSTRIAN student forseveral hours a week in order to helppublishing executive with foreign cor¬respondence. Apply MAROON, Box 199.KITCHENETTE APARTMENT for win¬ter quarter accommodating two or threemale students Must be within walkingdistance of unviersity. Call after 6 p.m,at Ext. 1072. „PERSON TO share driving and expensesto Florida, leaving December 21, after¬noon. Contact Alien Reed. 54, Snell.FOUR-DRAWER legal size filing cabi¬net. Robert Baumruk, Snell, Ext. 1072.URGENTLY NEEDED: Will buy set ofHumanities II and Social Science IInotes to date. Majde, MAROON office.FOR SALEDINETTE, $10; beds, complete, $10;desks, $4; studios, $15; piano. $25; loadsof furniture. McDavid, 1510 E. 55th.BU 8-6210.REMINGTON NOISELESS Office type¬writer; recent model; perfect condition;new ribbons; cover; shipping bolts. Mr.DePillis, HY 3-4547, after 6.SLIGHTLY USED Hoover with completeattachments, excellent condition. Willsell cheap. Robert Rosenthal, 5486Greenwood.TEN-VOLUME SET, hardly Used Ency¬clopedias, 1939 edition; a bargain; $25.Call HY 3-5413, evenings.TUX, new. 42 long, $32. Phone HY3-1398. JOB OPPORTUNITIESGAIN A wonderful knowledg^^l^~7T^,pus byways!! Openings for peopleddeliver posters on campus. Too J L,,Will train. Contact Student Union ^flee, Ext. 1009. n on «-APARTMENTSFURNISHED APARTMENTyoung men. MI 3-3807. lor two■ miscellaneousI AM a graduate of UC. WhuTTtt^ing school, I found I could make »7sto $100 weekly and more during1 eve*nings and weekends. My earnings busgone far beyond the figures mentionedsince leaving schol and I have beenappointed supervisor in this area I »,!personally train one or two seriousminded, responsible Individuals t awork with me. Write Box 144, ChicagoMAROON, with qualifications andphone numbers.FOR QUALITY PRINTING AND DIGVELOPING at quantity prices, see DonGelb. 330 Dodd House, B-6.EXPERIENCED BABY-SITTER dest^room In exchange for baby sitting uV3-0800. Ext. 1040, Room 25.STUDENT SEEKS part or full time jobduring Christmas holidays. Phone nu.8-6931.EXPERIENCED SITTER available" kZcellent references. FA 4-6080.LOST AND FOUNDLOST—One light tan pipe betweenClassics and Mandel. Words. "MiddletonAlgerian Briar made In France,” stamp¬ed on shank. Contact R. Connor, 132B-J. Reward.FOUND—White tom cat. needs goodhome. Mrs. Urry, Ext. 1021.RIDESDRIVING TO Phoenix on or about De¬cember 8th. Can take two or three pas¬sengers to share expenses of car. CallDO 3-2389.COUPLE DESIRES ride to Salt LakeCity, Utoh, or vicinity. Leave December21. return January 5. Call MU 3-1358,evenings. WILL BABY SIT morning, afternoonor evening. Call early In the morningHY 3-8460.UC STUDENT interested in radio-con¬trol and Wakefield models. Wonder ifthere is anyone on campus with similarideas. David Sher, MAROON.giiiimiiiMHUiiiHimimtiiHiiitMitiiiiiiMiimiiiiuiiBj Koga Gift Shop!| Domestic A imported j1 Greeting CardsStationeryCostume JewelryI1203 E. 55th St.MU 4-6856TYiiiiiiiiittmiiiniMMmiiiMiHtmmiuimiMiafMmitids ek Going Formal to the% mnrLSee Logan's and Rent a Tuxedo atSpecial Student RateLOGAN'STUXEDO RENTAL6309 Cottage Grove PL 2-7310To the young ladies: If your date doesnot attend the UC, have him present thisad, and he will receive the same SPECIALRATEMonday and Thursday evenings ’III .9:00student Union Dance Departmentpresents Throw AwayNICOTINEUniversity Christmas FormalRefreshments — Free pins Entertainment by University Dance ClubDecember 7, 19519:30 -12:30 Ida Noyes HallJohnny Lewis, Orch.$2.50 per coupleTickets on Sale:Student Ticket AgencyTickets /I mailable at the Door Flowers OptionalExchange TicketsFor Bids at the Door Switch toMEDICOFILTERPIPES ^ "r*When filter turnsbrown—in MedicoPipes or Cigarette Holders-throw itaway, with the nicotine, juices, flakesand tars it has trapped. Insert freshfilter for cooler, cleaner, dryer,sweeter amoking. Imported Briar.NftV: MEDICO CREST—13.81Medico's Fine,II Kith turf undy II«!*$■medico r.r.o. — f2.NMEDICO MEDALIST-fUNWlds vorlsly of stytsv and ilis*.> I. M. i : S e#., N. tor