For Christmas 1951And many peoples shall go and say, Come ye, and let us go up to themountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob; and he will teach usof his ways, and we will walk in his paths: for out of Zion shall go forth thelaw, and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem. And he shall judge betweenthe nations, and shall reprove many peoples: and they shall beat their swordsinto plowshares, and their spears into pruninghooks: nation shall not* liftup sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more.I »«<«* 2:3-5 Secret USAF projectto use Manly HouseManly House, former veterans’ dormitory behind B-J, ftibeing converted into a laboratory for an undisclosed US AirForce research project, it was learned this week. Dr. ThorfiiiR. Hogness, director of the Institute of Radiobiology and Bio¬physics, said that “security considerations” prevent his re¬vealing the nature of the project at this time.The campus may yet know “*Members ofNSA to meetThe National Executive Corn?No H-bomb, no football, no redsat UC, Kimpton tells MAROONThe University of Chicago has not yet been asked to participate in the development ofthe hydrogen bomb, Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton revealed this week.In a special interview with the MAROON editor, Kimpton also said he did not feel he was - — . .“bonding over backwards” to separate the word, communism, from the name of the Uni- ing at the Illinois Institute of f11 °^.Rlshts implementation, m*versity; indicated the University will not return to big-time football; supported the Hutchins Technology, is associate director coneeiatT AThletiplan and what he termed “the University’s tradition;” outlined some of his feelings on the ofwhat goes on behind the highbarbed-wire-topped fence thathas mystified B-J residents forthe past few days. Dr. Hogness,head of the project, said that theAir Force might divulge the kind mittee of the NSA will meet here*of research that will go on in the from December 27 to Decembernew lab, but that until they de- 31. The Committee is composedcide, the project will be secret, of the chairmen of the 20 Nation*The building was condemned al Student Association districtsfor housing purposes and is be- anfLof *•“ ®lx >«««•»>f \ ' The meetings, which will bemg reconstructed. open to the publiCj will ^ hel<#Dr. John T. Rettaliata, Vice- in the Reynolds Club. The agendaPresident and Dean of Engineer- win include such items as Studentspeeches on the University andcommunism. “I haven’t bent overbackwards. My main concern hasbeen to advocate and advertisethe freedom of speech which ex¬role of the University in racerelations; and expressed de¬light over the MAROON’SFibune edition.The H-bomb disclosure resulted . tffrom a question as to whether the lsts at GC.University has decided yet to par- Comments on Sharpticipate in the bomb’s develop- Commenting on Prof. Malcolmment. Kimpton replied that there Sharp’s criticism of remarkswas no need to press for a de- made in his recent speech beforecision on this because the Univcr- the American Legion, Kimptonsity still has not been asked to said, “I probably did express my-participate in the project, and self somewhat intemperately.” Hethat therefore the question was said he had welcomed and ap-still an academic one. predated Sharp’s criticism. HeSenate informed added, however, that the speech(On Feb. 14, 1950, former UC had not been mainly concernedpresident Ernest C. Colwell ad- with disavowing communism butvised the council of the faculty with explaining what the Univer-senate that the University had sity’s purposes and programs are,not yet formed a policy on this and that he thought the speechquestion, adding that it had not had been rather well received. %been required to face the issue. (Sharp, in a speech to the coun-He indicated, however, that the cil of the faculty senate, recentlyUniversity would perhaps have to took exception to part of theanswer the question soon.) speech which compared commu-“I have simply made the state- nists with skunks and made ref-ment that the University is not erence to treason.)communist,” Kimpton said of his se« "Kimpton," page 9 ‘operation X.’ report, and the MAROON ca*e.University of Chicago, December 14, 1951Nigerian student injured in pubHit on head, kicked outby David ZimmermanAnaliefo Adibuah, a Nigerian UC studentin mathematical biophysics, received injuriesto his lips and mouth last Friday night whenhe was beaten while making a purchase atthe Drexel Pub, 855 E. 55th street.Adibuah, in a MAROON interview Tues¬day, said that he entered thetavern shortly after 11:30 p.m.Friday and ordered severalbottles of ginger-ale from the bar¬tender, John Carrol.While his order was Deing filled,said Adibuah, a customer downthe bar aimed several derogatoryremarks about “niggers” in hisdirection. Before picking up hispurchase, Adibuah turned to seewho was making the comments Action taken on campus "Action on the beating suffered by UC stu¬dent Analiefo Adibuah last Friday night ina 55th street tavern is being taken by severalgroups on campus including the Administra¬tion, SG, the House Council of InternationalHouse and the Committee to Combat RaceDiscrimination Against For¬eign Students at UC, a groupTwo more iudaes formed Monday when a group■ ^ of interested American and fore*named to Court;Kahn made chief American and fore*ign students met at Adibuah'#home.Mrs. Ruth McCarn, assistantdean of students, said, in a MA¬ROON interview, “I assured them(Adibuah and Finck) ... the deanof students office would do every*SG Tuesday filled the remain¬ing student seats on the Student-At this point, the customer Faculty-Administration Court by thing it could to see they werelunged at him saying, Who do e]ectjng Haskell Deutsch (Social treated justly. . . . We are sup-you think you are looking at, mg: , porting them by our presence inger?” He then attacked Adibuah, Sciences), for a two year term and court (William Birenbaum. di*.attempting to push him off his David Kahn (Law) for a one-year rector of student activities, at*feet. Adibuah resisted, until he term. tended the trial as UC administra-saw the bartender coming toward Charlotte Toll, who was elected tion representative and said thatthem. Thinking that the bartend- ,a Frank ^ ander was coming to his aid, he at- ,tempted to pick up his package Herbert Vetter, who retain officeand leave. from last year, are the other stu-Carrol, the bartender, then dent justices,struck him in the back of thehead, and when Adibuah turned .justice.around, Carrol hit him in the face,splitting his lips and loosening afront tooth.Pushed into streetThe blow knocked Adibuah he would also be at the continua¬tion.) We do this for any studentwho is in trouble.” t jSG passes resolutionSG is acting on a resolutionDavid Kahn was chosen chief br^u®ht up b^. James Goodfriendand Arthur Bierman and passedat the Tuesday night meeting.Representing the administra- The resolution states . . thetion on the court will be Mrs. Student Government Civil Libep*Ruth McCarn, assistant dean of t‘^s. Committee in conjunctionwith the Executive Council shallA triangle forms in Philip Barry's Animal Kingdom,The 'Animal Kingdom' is comeThe Symposium Theatre, a new drama group sponsored t ^by the Greek Symposium will perform Philip Barry’s The against the bar. He was then students- The two faculty justices investigate the facts. If the factsAnimal Kingdom tonight at 8, tomorrow at 8:30 p.m. and Pushed into the street b* bave not yet been selected. . . . are determined to be (suffb„ , rzr . * T A x- i tt ,« i Carrol. - The court, which was establish- cient to) warrant student actioiwSunday at 8 p.m. in the International House theatre. (Carrol, in an interview with ^ last year as an agency of the the committee shall consider the*According to Jim Monos, UC student and director of the the MAROON Monday, main- student Government Assembly followin2 remedial measures and1roup, the play, which is a “romantic comedy with many serf- STS has jurisdiction over “ all cases VI**!”".thos*'ious implications,” will featurea company of nine profession¬al actors.Lee Kuhn, the male lead, is agroup, the play, which is a “romantic comedy with many serf- c^pr;tely ,alse ami thait Ad'lbuah has jurisdiction over “ all cases which they "deem~ a^rop^fpmalp lpad has also done radio had started the incident when he arising under the Statute of the (the first three measures includJlfemale lead, has t “called the white guy names.”) Powers of Student Government sending letters to tavern owner*work. (Adibuah, Carroll claimed, put and the operation thereof upon and to Alderman Merriam, andAll members of the cast have down his packages, and “started . , , . „ recommending boycott of the tawhad experience with the Actors’ swinging at him (the customer).” e Sluaent organizations. em by UC students until the pofc’graduate of the Goodman Thea- Company, an organization of Carrol aJ^ saKt that Adibuah hit icy of the tavern is changed.r “ , him, and that he had a scar be- - 4) That any or all of the fobue and has acted with the Lake young Chicago actors who pre- tween his eyes where he had been kjc ▲ . lowing recommendations be sub*Zurich and Elkhart Lake summer sented King Lear and a number hit.) ti* , *7a * a - fitted to the University admini*.theatres. of other plays in their loop Later that night, accompanied Hom *"£**£*•- tration: that the administrationTuulikki Wolff one of the two studio last year. by his roommates, Chimere Ikoku MAROON'S suspansi£Mon- advise the Hrde Park Police cap*uuiiKKi Wolir, one of the twoQ . and Mr. Chuke Arah, and a guest, 2*30 • m who* S»ivi« tain of the position of the Uiri-female leads, ha.-Worked with Tickets lor the Sympostum uc student HenIy KinckS Adi. £. HU STJJhS.’Sversity ... that meadmmis,£Ray Bolger in Three to Make Theatre s performances are on buah returned to the bar in order a# student affairs, will conduct an tion apply . , . ‘social sanctions'Ready and has taken roles at the 8416 at Woodworth’s Bookstore to find out why the attack was booring on campus. Miss . . . against the owners . . . thatMiehianna Thin »a and 1,1 MandeI corridor and will made. k« accompanied by two the administration grant legal aid.... n*» Summer Theatre in ad* be sold at the door. General ad- Upon entering the bar, the bar- •**»?'/•orosontenes from the os- and assistance to all foreign’ |,>n do‘ng radio and televi- mission is $1; student admission, tender grabbed Adibuah by the »*«iet*on. students.”**0*1 work. Randy Ades, the other 80 cents. see ''Nigerian," page 2 ———————————J m* "Action," page 1Action . ..(from page 1)CLC repliesWorking at top speed, the SGCivil Liberties committee lateWednesday night released a pre¬liminary report which reviewedthe verifiable facts in the caseand recommended that UC “offerwhatever legal, moral and finan¬cial assistance is necessary tothese students.”“The committee also wishes toenter a strong proiest against theracial prejudices which exist to¬day, of which this case is an ex¬ample,” the report continued. Thecommittee promised that a fullreport, including testimony andrecommendations for future ac¬tion, will be published "by thebeginning of the Winter Quarter.”Committee takes standThe Committee to Combat RaceDiscrimination Against ForeignStudents, with members from theMAROON, NAACP (UC chap¬ter) and International House resi¬dents, made plans for contactingmunicipal and neighborhoodgroups in order to arouse inter¬est in the case. They passed aresolution which read in part:“. . . such prejudice is ... aviolation of the laws of the Stateof Illinois . . . (and) an insult onthe dignity of the country and thepeoples of Nigeria ... we theundersigned have thought it fitand proper to resolve that thenecessary university and civicauthorities be urged to do all intheir power to guarantee the per¬sonal safety of all students sus¬ceptible to such attacks and to seeto it that all legal aid be accordedthe immediate victim in order tobring the culprit under the ambitof the law.”House actsLate Tuesday evening, theHouse Council of' UC Interna¬tional House unanimously ap¬proved the resolution quoted justabove and further voted to setaside $100 from House Councilfunds for emergency use by theinjured students.Several other campus groups,Including NAACP, are also ex- Nigerian ...(from page 1)coat, forcing him and Arahthrough the door. They werepushed against Finck and Ikoku,who were just entering.Knocked to pavementFinck said, in a statement tothe MAROON, “In order to retainmy balance, I grabbed hold of thefirst thing I could, which was thebartender’s left arm. The bar¬tender immediately struck me aviolent blow on the forehead,which knocked me several feetbackward to the pavement.”According to Finck the custom¬er w’ho had originally started thefight with Adibuah followed themout of the tavern shouting abusesand threats. Brandishing a beerbottle, the customer shouted, “I’llkill all you lousy dirty Commu¬nists. I’ll kill you all. I was in theMarines. I killed you before andI’ll kill you now.”While Finck and Adibuah werehelping each other down thestreet, preceeded by Ikoku andArah, the customer smashed thebottle against the pavement, con¬tinued following them, gesturingwith the ragged remains andshouting threats of murder.Taken to BillingsFinck took Adibuah to BillingsHospital for emergency treat¬ment, and while there they metpolicement Durkin and Ryan whoaccompanied them back to thetavern.The bartender and the custom¬er, according to Finck, at firstpleaded innocence and ignorance,but the customer could not con¬tain his violent opinions and re¬peated his remarks. Finck over¬heard the customer saying to oneof the policement, “Let’s come toan agreement, we’re both white.”The policemen arrested Carroland the customer, taking them tothe Hyde Park police station.Finck and Adibuah filed whatthey were told by the police w’erecomplaints against both the bar-pected to take some action, buthave stated no definite plans asyet. tender and the customer. Later,checking back with the police,Adibuah and Finck found thatthe police had no record of thecharges against the customer.'Lose' recordsA second attempt to file chargesagainst the patron was not per¬mitted on the grounds that thearresting officers were no longerpresent. On phoning later in theday, it was found that the policestill claimed to have no recordsof either Finck’s or Adibuah’scomplaints against the customerand further that they had no rec¬ord of such a person being in¬volved.Calling at various times on Sat¬urday and Sunday, Finck was giv¬en three different stories by thepolice as to when and where thehearings on the case would takeplace. On Monday, Finck and Adi¬buah were informed that the rec¬ords had been found and that thehearing would be Tuesday, De¬cember 11, at the Grand CrossingCircuit Court.Case continuedWhen the case was called be¬fore Cirtuit Judge Fred Slater,Adibuah’s legal advisor asked andwas granted continuance untilDecember 28.At the same time, the attorneyfor the defense brought forth asworn statement of arrest against“victims” for beating his client,the customer.Intellect sagsBiological or native intelligence,as expressed by the functioning ofthe human brain and nervous sys¬tem, begins to decline past thethirty-fifth birthday, a Universitylogical Association,of Chicago psychologist told themeeting of the American Psycho-Ward C. Halstead, professor ofexperimental psychology in theuniversity, discussed the physicalaging of the human brain, basedon the results of a test battery hehas developed in sixteen years ofresearch. Britons want FibunesThe MAROON last week re¬ceived a request for five ''Fibunes''from the British Information Serv-Superb values.17 |«wslt. Smartestmodern styling.Only ELGIN Has theDURAPOWER MAINSPRING"The Heart that Never Breaks"REGAL JEWELERS1161 E. 63rdCONVENIENT TERMSChristmas C^dsthat will betreasured WOODWORTH’SCHRISTMAS STORESuggestions for EveryoneBOOKS...always please ... Fiction, Biography, CurrentEvents, Travel, Beliyion, Art, Dictionaries.Children’s Boohs for all ayes“This Christmas give Boohs99GIFT STATIONERYFOUNTAIN PENS and PENCILSBRIEFCASES - LEATHER NOTE BOOKSHUNDREDS OF GIFTS ON DISPLAYGift wrapped for mailing if you desireUlooduiorth'sBOOK STORE1311 E. 57th STREET 2 BLOCKS EAST MANDEL HALLStore Open Evenings—Monday, Wednesday, Friday December 14, 195'EGGPRICESARE DOWNAT THEGrade A Mediumdozen 53cGrade A Largedozen 59cGrade A Extra Largedozen 95cHYDE PARKCO-OP1464 E. 57th St.■manQc<e»)ber 14, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 1OF SERVICE TO HYDE PARKThis is the first in a series of anniversary sales in observance of the Co-op's twenty years of growth from a $15,000 a yearstore to one which will top $1,000,000 in sales in its current yeci. Any one is welcome to buy at the Co-op.M _ _ _ _GROCERY SPECIALS—20 YEARS AGOTo Start Off Our Celebration,Here are a Feu Prices of 20 YearsAgo—1931.Cheese Spreads, assorted varieties, 5-oz.jar. Reg. price 25c to 35c,special . 10 for $1.00Crosse & Blackwell Date Nut, Chocolateor Fruit Nut Bread, reg. price today21c, 1931 price and your price today 2 for 25cCrosse & Blackwell 8-ox. Jellies, 10 varieties, reg. pricetoday 25c, 1931 price and your price today 2 for 25cVisit Our Big Frozen Food Department:Snow Crop Orange Juice, 6 oz 2 for 33cSnow Crop Peas, 12 oz 2 for 39cLloyd J. Harris* frozen Pumpkin Pie. . .45cLloyd J. Harris* frozen Mince Pie 59cIndian Trail Frozen Orange-CranberryRelish, 1-lb. pkg 2 for 65c Beechnut Baby Foods, strained. . .3 for 29cJunior 2 for 25cCo-op ESberta Freestone Peaches, RipeIrregular pieces, No. 2V2 can. . .3 for $1.00Dole Fruit Cocktail, No. 2*4 can 35cPleezing Royal Anne Light SweetCherries, No. 1 tall 3 for $1.00Libby Colossal Ripe Olives, No. 1 tall. . ,39cLibby Thrown Queen Olives, (ft. jar 59cCal-Trop Dates, 8-oz. pkg 2 for 29cDomino Cane Sugar, 5-lb. pkg 45cRudolph Red Nosed Reindeer Cookies. .39cGrosse & Blackwell FruitCake—Come in andsample before youbuy—2 lbs. (reg.price $2.79) $2.59r^todetee Fresh MixedNuts lb. 43cCranberries . lb. 25cExtra Large Chestnuts lb. 29cLarge Pascal Celery bunch 19cMushrooms box 29cExtra Large Calif. Navel Oranges 3 for 25cLarge Avocados each 19cSANTA CLAUS WILL VISIT THE CO-OP FRIDAYand he will have filled stockings for ONLY the smaller childrenwith a parent from 9:00 A.M. to 1 :00 P.M. and from 6:30 P.M.to 9:00 P.M ^*QUALITYfcChoose your ownTURKEY!With the help of one of our experi¬enced butchers you can choose abeautiful eviscerated turkey froma large self-service display.Tom Turkeys, 22 lbs. and up. lb. 65c14-22 lbs lb. 69cBeltsville Turkeys,4 to 6 lbs. lb. 79cYoung Hen Turkeys,8 to 16 lbs \ . lb. 74c1J. S. Choice StandingRib Roast lb. 78cCaliie Hams (for an inexpensiveholiday treat) lb. 43cTender Beef Liver lb. 79cHYDE PARK CO-OP1464 East 57th StreetA PLEASANT PLACE TO SHOP @Page 4 fHE CHICAGO MAROON December 14, 1951h»*her and yonMunich offers brew course;Federals close Harvard stillsky Dan Sim9!lA student at the University of Illinois is collecting the names of weird courses offered inAmerican universities. A few of the courses, as reported in the Ohio State Lantern: Bowl-ing Green offers college credit for “Dating.” (Wonder what they consider proficiency.) Mis¬souri University has one called “Early Morning Bird Call.” SMU offers a course in the“Art of Casting the Dry and Wet Fly.” Texas University teaches, of course, “Lariat Throw¬ing.” “Backyard Sports” is offered by the University of Illinois.Bcvarrani brew beer 'Here S one, however, to party. Volumes of Information according to the Daily Cavalier,make the imaginations of UC were collected on the subject of a considerable furor has devel-students run rampant: Munich what girls talk, a5?u.t wken. oped over a new university ruling^ „ ... men are around. Girls who had ,Technical College (in Bavaria) of- just left the room were talked that would Put any student onfers a three-year course in gen- about for three hours and 15 min- probation if he cuts any class twoeral beer brewing, according to utes, and talk about the party it- days before or after a vacationthe North Carolina Daily Tarheel, self surprisingly consumed only period.The school even has graduate stu- ^ minutes. Significant, however, Said one student, “I think it’sdents working for their doctors (laU!s.. took up an h0 Jr and a half, a d,r,y tr,ck on the people whodegrees along this unusual line, while only 10 minutes were given have been saving their cuts foraccording to the paper. * to “nice dates.” (the holiday).”Besides their yearly examina- Yale’s president, announcing a joilbreok for examtions, students have to take an- raise in tuition, board, rent, and The Chicago Sun-Times carriedfees to a total of $1,600 for under-other kind of test—beer judgingClearness, color and foam have to Timesbe criticized, as does taste.Harvard moonshiners closed graduates was quoted by the Sun-Hopes to improve“Yale wishes to the the story of a University of South¬ern Illinois student, put in jailfor drunkenness, who broke outof the calaboose and went backto school with the express pur-improveThat last is not to disparage Quality of its teaching, reduce the e of taking his mid-term phys-size of its classes, give more at-home-grown talent. You may re- .. A ...... „ . x ics examination. When he sur-tention to the individual student, rendered himself after the test>Also one way to keep the riffraff out, eh, prexy? out on the test.“I don’t think I did so well,” hecall the Harvard lads who have and jmnrove livine arranee- ienoeren mmseu ine. . .. ... , . ana improve ming arrange- he was asked how he had madebeen taking a self-imposed, extra- ments.curricular course in home brew¬ing. At last report, federal agents —* —. «-—„ - ., ,<T . • .1have destroved the private stills The Iowa State Dai,y lost said- 1 kept worrying the policehave destroyed the private stills frjends b running the following wou,d be P°PPmg into the class-set up by enterprising students. as part ’ of a feature article: room!”One Harvard man gave as the “Witches are common around For-what-it’s-worth department:reasons for his operations, “fun Iowa State, where they appear The Georgia Tech Technique re-and low cost.” He claimed that it frequently as house mothers and vealed that a Georgia Tech pro¬cost only 25 cents to brew a quart instructresses. .They also fill in fessor of mathematics wrote theof liquor twice as powerful as a °dd jobs like grading tests, lyrics to the popular song,$5 quart of the commercial prod- ^pne of the Iowa State coeds are “Laughing at Love.”uct. watches, however; sotheir looks fool you.” don’t letA student researcher at Har¬vard, no doubt inspired by the En<1 vocot,<>n cutsheavy operation in joy-juice athis school, has written a thesisthat appeared in the HarvardCrimson under the title of “TheDrinking Habits of the HarvardMan.” The researcher found thatHarvard athletes and sons of thewealthy have been among the Uni¬versity’s heaviest drinkers. Thedrinking habits of 67 seniors werechecked—and divided as follows:22 social, 16 occasionally, 13 light-heavy, and 9 heavy. A heavydrinker was defined as one whodrinks “almost daily, regularly toexcess, and has gone on a benderof over 24 hours.”Put recorder in johnThe Georgia Tech Technique,“The South’s Liveliest CollegeNewspaper,” reprinted the resultsof yet another survey. An Auburnstudent placed a wire recorderand a microphone in “the littlegirls’ room” during a fraternity LATE BULLETIN: Therewill be no more beer sold dur¬ing the University of LouisvilleAt the University of Virginia, basketball games this year.THE JOURNAL OF NEAR EASTERN STUDIESIts scope includes the whole history of the ancient andmedieval Near East — both its material and its culturallife. Articles present the most recent discoveries in thefield and an interpretation of these findings by theforemost authorities.Rale per volume: $6.00; Students $3.50Subscriptions by volume onlyThe University Press of Chicago5750 Ellis Avenue, Chicago 37, IllinoisPlease enter my subscription to THE JOURNAL OF NEAR EASTERNSTUDIES at the special student rate of $3.50 for Vol. 1 1 (BeginsJan. '52).NAME , .ADDRESSPlease inclose paymentFrom Eli za Cook.Hunger is titter . ..tut tte most accursedof Want’s fell scorpionsis ttirst.MelaiaYet, thirst asks nothing morethan Coca-Cola. If you’re saunteringalong or racing your motor,start off refreshed . . . have a Coke.DRIN1s' L / ■BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BYCOCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF CHICAGO, INC.Col*" i* a registered trade-mark. (g) 1951, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY UECTURIfeNEOurfticCulture- 13/i e cd/l }tif)l PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETOne of the MostDesirable Suits forUniversity MenA suit of Oxford GreyFlannel is a unit ofstyle that every youngman feels he wants toown. It is a stimulat¬ing, suave and endur¬ing outfit — and in thisparticular instance one,of the most remarkablevalues ever offered. Athree button, naturalshouldered, easy hang¬ing model of incompar¬able attractiveness . . .priced within the reachof all seeking the dis¬tinction a Finchleysuit is sure to give,*50OTHER SUITS $55 to 372.50Twted Sport Jack/u f35O.xjcrd Cloth Shirts fS19 E. Jackson Blvd., Chicago ;; 564 Fifth Av«>, JS'ew YorkDecember 14, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Pige 5String trio willplay at frathouse SundayThe Antiqua String Trio will befeatured at the Alpha Delta Phi'ssixth Suqday concert to be heldSunday at 3 p.m. The ensembleincludes Edward Gronke, a UCCollege student, violinist; EvelynBernard, violinist; and SylviaOliva, cellist.Among the pieces to be per¬formed are Fantasia No. 3 byPurcell, Adagio from the StringTrio in F by Haydn, and Preludeand Fugue (Gregorian theme) byBach-Mozart. Following the trio'will be the usual Alpha Dclt rec¬ord concert.The concert will be presentedat the fraternity house at 5747 At right »* Veena of thedancing team VASHIAND VEENA, who willappear in Mandel Halltomorrow night. The pro¬gram, sponsored by theIndio Students Associa¬tion, will feature new aswell os traditional Indiandances. Accompanimentwill be with actual Far-Eastern instruments. Ad¬mission for the event,storting at 8:30 p.m., is$1 and $1.50.Linguists and cadets neededby Army and Navy Air Forces Give informationto Reynolds ClubHilary Fry, director of theReynolds Club annefuneed thisThe Navy announced recently that it is now accepting ap- week that organizations were notUniversity Ave. There will be no plications for the Naval Aviation Cadet Flight training pro- furnishing the Reynolds Clubcharge and no tickets are re- gram. Qualifications include two years of college, an 18-toquired.Club sponsorsChristmas feteThe Political Science Club willsponsor a Christmas party at 8:30tomorrow night at the AlphaDelta Phi Fraternity house, 5747University Ave. On the agendaare games, entertainment and re¬freshments. Admission is 90 centsa person and $1.60 for couples. 27 age limit, and excellent physical condition. Further in¬formation may be obtained from the Glenview Naval Air Sta¬tion, Glenview, Illinois. with information about programsthey are sponsoring. The club’sinformation desk is the campusinformation center after 5 p.m.and should have details concern-The Army Air Force has quired on Mondays at 158 West ing all campus events,sent out a call for qualified Harrison Street, in the office oflinguists to join their Reserve the Volunteer Air Reserve,Training Group. Potential draftees or ^ calling Harrison 7-0730.classified 1A are not eligible, but Radio tickets CARE s Joyspeaks hereDr. Charles Joy, field repre¬sentative of CARE, will speak on“Europe and the Near East, 1951"at a public meeting Wednesday.The meeting, which is being co¬sponsored by Channing Club, theCo-op Committee on CARE, the57th Street Friends Meeting, theFirst Unitarian Church, the UCStudent CARE committee and theYoung Friends, will take place at8 p.Yn. in John Woolman Hall ofthe First Unitarian Church, ’57that Woodlawn.Dr. Joy is widely known as thefriend and translator of AlbertSchweitzer, about whom Joy haswritten six books. Before joiningCARE he was Executive Directorof the Unitarian Service Commit¬tee and European director of Savethe Children Federation. He wasrecently awarded the PalmeApademique, highest decorationof the French Ministry of Educa¬tion, in recognition of his workin helping French school children.others proficient in one or moreforeign languages will be enlist¬ed in the Air Force Reserve withrank appropriate to their abilities.Further information mav be ae- Christmas party, bridge tiltamong current SU concernsnow avalilableproudlyCHICAGOEVANSTONOAK PARKGaryJoliet by Lois GrossCollecting Christmas gifts for the needy children at theUniversity Settlement has been Student Union’s chief activityof the week. Many presents were obtained Wednesday after-The American Broadcasting noon at the Union’s annual Wassail Party held in Ida Noyes;Company of Chicago has made however, many more are needed.tickets for a variety of programs Any contributions from any member of the communityavailable to UC students. This may be placed under thegroup includes tickets for such Christmas tree in Ida Noyes Bridge Tournament preliminariesprograms as the Chicago Sym- during all of next week or mav t0 be held January 17, 24, 31 andphony telecasts on Tuesday be taken to the regular SU coffee Fedruary 7 in the Ida Noyes li-nights. hour meeting this afternoon at brary.*HStUc?teatS °btain ti+Ck!-S„a! 3:30 p.m. in the Union office on A11 students whose status isthe Student Government ticket . , „ pmiivalpnt to thut nf a ehiHpnt inbooth in Mandel corridor and at the third floor of Ida Noyes. The equivalent to that of a student inthe Reynolds Club information coffee hour is open to everyone. a reguIai four-year college aredesk.SHOE REPAIRSubstantial Discountsto Students“IT MUST BE DONE RIGHT”HOLLIDAY'S1407 East 01st Street(at Dorchester Ave.)Phone Normal 7-8717Two blocks from lntl. HouseWhile-U-Wait or One-Day Service In addition to the coffee hour to participate. 7 he tour¬nament’s finals will be held inthe Blackstone Hotel on April18 and 19.invitation, Hugh Brodkey, SUpresident, has invited all studentsto use the newly installed tele¬vision set on the second floor ofIda Noyes.A major item on the winterquarter’s program being plannedby the SU games department isthe National IntercollegiateLECTUREThe Madisona handsome neic modelonly *545°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 “Jesus Christ-World Saviour”Rev. Immanuel Tafel, Resident-Director of the Sweden¬borg Philosophical Centre will present Emanuel Swed¬enborg's contribution to Christian thought concerningthe Incarnation.Siiiulav, December Midi — 7:00 IUW.SWEDENBORG PHILOSOPHICAL CENTRE5710 South Woodlawn AvenueChicagoOpen to the Public Discussion BJ featuresparty tonite“Mistletoe,” a Christmas partyand dance, will replace the usualVincent House canteen at Burton-Judson Courts tonight. The party',which will start at 8:30 p.m., will,feature records, games, and hotpunch.The admission is 50 cents percouple.UNITEDAIR LINEAir Local andLong Distance MovingStorage Facilities for Books,Record Cabinets, Trunks, orCarloads of FurniturePeterson FireproofWarehouse, Inc.1011 East Fifty-fifth StreetBUtterfield 8-6711DAVID L. SUTTON, PresidentCALIFORNIA $110Leave after your last class,at 6:20 p.m.NEW YORK $35Leave after midnight.FLY HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS and saveyourself bof/idime and money. Depend¬able 4-engine planes. Fares plus tax. Secretarial Careers J) V,A Sf?MCOLLEGE 1&SPECIAL CAREER TRAINING FORCOLLEGE STUDENTS and GRADUATESStarting December, March, Juneand SeptemberExecutives are showing preference forcollege-trained men and women iu high*level secretarial positions.Registration Now Open. ,Lifetime Placement Service 7Write Admissions Counselor•THE GREGG COLLEGEST South Wabash Avenue, Chicago S, IUinoliPhone STate 2-1880THEy HADme our ONA LIMB/This nimble-minded nutcracker almosttumbled for those tricky cigarette mildness tests.But he worked himself out of a tight spot whenhe suddenly realized that cigarette mildnessjust can’t be judged by a mere puff or one singlesniff. Smokers everywhere have reached thisconclusion—there’s just one real way to prove theflavor and mildness of a cigarette.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-Zone” (T for Throat, T for Taste),you’ll see why ...After all the Mildness Testsi . 1 1fage 6 December 14, 19;Strozier cooperative Advises ad space increasesays Broyles reportby LeRoy WolinsSome previously unpublieized documents uncovered thisweek indicate possible effects administration review of thecontent of the MAROON might have on the efforts of UCstudents’ to preserve academic freedom.They throw incidental light on the role of Dean of StudentsRobert M. Strozier in the successful campus-wide campaignagainst the Broyles bills and “the investigation of the Uni¬versity which grew out ofthem in 1949.*Quote documentsThe documents follow:Charles E. Kruger, investigatorfor the Broyles Commissionwhich investigated the University,officially reported (Report of theSeditious Activities InvestigationCommission, 1949, pp. 419 ff.):“At the University of Chicagoexcellent cooperation has been re¬ceived from the Dean of Students,W. Strozier (sic) and his assist¬ant, John L. Bergstresser. Thepurposes and aims of the commis¬sion were fully explained to DeanStrozier and the policy as to howthe investigation was to. be con¬ducted. He felt the subcommitteeshould be complimented on itschoice of handling this type of aninvestigation on a high plane.Throughout the many times thecampus was visited, Dean Strozierwas cordial and cooperative . . ."Stroxier helpful''“Dean Strozier has been veryhelpful at the University in keep¬ing publicity or adverse criticismof this investigation at a mini¬mum. At one time the editor ofthe Chicago MAROON, Ed Eng-berg, had written an editorial at¬tacking this commission ,and al¬though he was not required to doso, by the University regulations,he asked Dean Strozier to reviewthe editorial to see if it met withhis approval. Dean Strozier didnot approve of this editorial andalthough the editor was not re¬quired to do so he did re-writeand tone down the editorial andagain showed it to Dean Strozierat which time the Dean thoughtit was properly worded so as notto incite student action.”Representative Velde of Illinois(member of the House Commit¬tee on un-American Activities andinstigator of an abortive investi¬gation of UC earlier this year)speaking of these events said(Congressional Record, 81st Con¬gress, 2nd Session, Vol. 96, Dec.11, 1950, Part 12, p. 16408): “... an antisubservice com¬mittee was set up to investigatecommunism in the State of Illi¬nois, and chiefly the teaching ofcommunism in the University ofChicago and other universitiesand colleges in minois. This com¬mittee was headed by SenatorPaul Broyles . . . the state legisla¬ture had no previous experiencein investigating communism. Ontop of that, young Communistsfrom the University of Chicagocame to Springfield and picketedthe committee during its attemptto ferret out instructors and stu¬dents who were subversive in ourstate schools. These pickets wereable to obtain the sympathy ofa large segment of the Illinoispress and radio news commenta¬tors. As a result of the tremend¬ous opposition to the investiga¬tion, it failed to accomplish itspurpose.”Students lead fightBroyles “anti-subversive” billssThe Broyles “anti-subversive”of 1949 did not receive much attentionuntil a large group of students, includ¬ing UCers representing Young Republi¬cans, Young Progressives, Americans forDemocratic Action and just themselveswent to Springfield to testify againstthem. A quick (and unpublicized) hear¬ing and easy passage for the bills werethe hope of the sponsors. The students,however, not only testified but lobbiedat the Governor’s mansion, paradedwith signs in the streets and staged asitdown in the lunchroom of a hotelwhich would not serve Negroes (theAbraham Lincoln!). The legislators de¬cided an investigation of UC and Roose¬velt College was in order and carried itout. The publicity which attended theinvestigation carried over to the billsthemselves.. Strong statewide oppositiondeveloped and they were defeated. Seethe report “The Great Investigation,”published in May, 1949, by the All-Campus Committee Opposing theBroyles Bills and the Broyles Investiga¬tion, pp. 66-67.TV — TV — TV>I- MIDWAY RADIO(Formerly 6306 GreenwoodAve.)NOW LOCATEDIn New and Larger Quartersat1017 East 63 rd StreetPhone Midway 3-6575TV —H<H<>H Specialists in ServicingElectronic Equipment— TV —TV —TV —TV- i ■»*■*>BOOKS -Pleasant to give-Pleasant to receiveCLOSING THE RING 6.00WINSTON CHURCHILLThe fi*th volume of Churchill's history of the Second WorldWar.MASTER PLAN, U.S.A 3.00JOHN FISCHERAn informal report on America's foriegn policy and the menwho make it.BILL MAULDIN'S ARMY 5.00439 of Mauldin's cartoons — in a large handsome book.REQUIEM FOR A NUN 3.00WILLIAM FAULKNERThis new novel by the 1950 Nobel Prize winner, affairms hisundisputed position os a novelist.THE CRUEL SEA 4.00NICHOLAS MONSARRATA tremendous revelation of perhaps the most heroic battle ofWorld War II — the Battle of the North AtlanticA TREASURY OF WESTERN FOLKLORE 4.00B. A. BOTKIN500 stories, anecdotes, and legends, ranging from the PonyExpress to the Super Chief.Dnn‘t miss the beautifulAIM BOOKS ami PORTFOLIOSSee the IS LOG FT GIFT TABLE —Nothing over SI.OOUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue by Bob MorchThe lucky UC’ers who are privileged to ride the CTA to class have in the past few weeseen glaring forth from the back of their transfers the following announcement:THIS SPACE FOR SALEThis demonstrates how free enterprise expands our economy. Just think! For years tbacks of streetcar transfers have lain fallow—covered with a lot of idiotic prattle about reglations and such. Now commuters may rest their eyes upon announcements telling thehow happy it is to die if The 3) The covers of Comprehen- spot for firearms or rat poisoiGump Chapel manages their sives (ideal for rest-home or liq- gut why stop with p;i]nuor ads). Wouldn’t it be wonderful to ga4) Kleenex (for anti - his- into the faces of your fellow mfamines). and find hair-restorer ads on tin5) The backs of political cam- foreheads, razor-blade ads on tinpaign leaflets (Deep freezes or cheeks, and Pepsodent shinifuneral. *I think the CTA has the rightidea. Look at all the paper thatgoes to waste each year, ungracedby beauteous * advertisements. Isuggest similar steps be taken toinsure that no blank area of pa¬per be left without advertise¬ments. Here are some possiblespots: ,1) Cigarette wrappers2) Confetti tThis will be a boonto the small businessman). mink coats).6) Toilet paper (Serutan).7) Movie tickets (Ads for Tysets).8) Pqper napkins (Wife can’tcook? Try Alfonso’s bar and grill—tasty sandwiches, 24 hours aday.)9) Backs of grade reports (Fine forth in glowing red letters fixtheir teeth? And think of all tsvelte women who could beeoiwalking cosmetic ads? The posbilities are countless.When you look at the backyour streetcar transfer, rem ■her that only in America can ilbe done!Campus Interviews on Cigarette TestsNo. 30...THE SQUIRRELDecember 14, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Velde criticizedby paperfor policy Cite ThelenHerbert Thelen, associate pro¬fessor of educational psychology atUC, was cited this week by theChicago Commission on Humanlotions for his outsanding work inthis field. Thelen has been a leaderin the development of the Hyde9ark - Kenwood Inter-racial Com-munify Council.“Many mixed-up Americansseem to have an idea that a uni¬versity that turns out winningathletic teams is doing its fullduty toward developing goodAmericans. And that, conversely,there must be something suspic¬ious about any university not par¬ticularly interested in athletics,” n. • _said the Chicago Sun-Times in an KeVieW CllOOSeSeditorial in which it deplored theemphasis which most Americancolleges place on athletics, andthe way in which Senator Velde,the erstwhile sponsor of thenever-materialized UC investiga¬tion, used this fact to attack UCand Rosevelt College in Congress. Qroup of prominent men sendpeace appeal to State Deptby Eugene 'Vendlm. ... new peace conference also wasA statement by fifty nationally distinguished men, includ- signed by many other Chicago-ing some UC professors, was submitted to the State Depart- ans, including Professor Robertment, asking it to take the lead in joining with the five other J- Havinghurst, Chairman of themajor world powers in a confer- Committee on Human Develop-ence to study the problems that them!” . . ment, UC, Professor Abbot ofdivide us in order that something War is an activity on the level Hull House, Reverend Joseph H.better than war might be found. the jungle,” Dr. Carlson said, Evans, and Rabbis David Grau-The State Department was re- *£ ™thod;? of the bart and Samuel Teitelbaum.The Chicago Review, in its last quested to forward the statement to the nth degree,meeting of the autumn quarter, to the heads of the governments p*defimt^ly seParate the | |hPiri Wprinp<sHav pWIpH innWnn ti,fl ttq +Vw> c Russian people from their . . . UlCY TO T3IKBurgess for editortbe^ fanatical . . . government. TheyProfessor Harold C. Urey willaddress the Chicago Chapter ofthe American Technician Society‘‘It is a question of intelligence at the Knickerbocker Hotel nexthe said.Use intelligence, not violenceheld Wednesday, elected Jackson of the US,Burgess editor for the spring is- Great Britain, France, China and belong to the same species we do ”sue of the magazine. India. These nations were called long t0 me same sPecies we ao»The literary magazine’s Vol. uPon to agree to “a peaceful set-This rah-rah country club at- VI No x appeared this week The tlement... and guaranteeing self-t‘he Co^e«irona“nRiSrt’y sad MAROON VS was won government for the people of the versus violence, a'nd"wee sl m" R»/2'ntaMve by S,anley Rosen's “The Mer' T f’ 8 “a0"™ T of the finest brains here. There- which Is open to the general pub!1. U „ To fD 1J chant of Egypt,” a poem. Contrib- logical weapons and provision for fore it is up to us» lic wiU feature discussion of theclaimed*V " utors whose material does not ap- The statement filing for the industrial and scientific relation-claimed. pear m tke magazine have been nomic agreements sponsored by . between the United States‘‘It occurs to me that ever since requested to call at Reynolds 302 the UN. and abandonment of war qw, m and Israelthe famous Alonzo Stagg left the for their manuscripts, unless self- as a means of attempting to set- OIL prGSGmS l3lKUniversity of Chicago as its head addressed envelopes were enclos- tle international differences.”coach and the athletic program ed with the material. The maga. Honest try needed The American Technician So-SYL will present a talk and ciety endeavors to help Israeldiscussion on “The Suez Ques- solve her two greatest problemswas relegated to a practical nul- zine is now onen to contributions Copies of the statement were T ~ “ net iwu gicaiesu piouiems*comnuuuons ^ tho tion at Ida Noyes Hall next Sun- by supporting the Hebrew Insti-see Sun-T.mes, page 10 for the coming issue.ate and House5 * * ^ day at 4 pm’ The whole conflict tute of Technology. This schoolII ir f il if , D Anton j Carlson Distin- between the Egyptians and the provides the technicians to re-US sets rorth proposa S for Bulshed Service Professor Emer- British will be discussed. Admis- data the land and teachers toK',vl m,s of Physiology, who helped slon 13 lree- tram the unskilled immigrants.prepare the statement, said, “We b f ■ _ ■ ■must try peaceful alternatives HOS0|ItZ St3T0S DrG0l0ITfe£honestly! We have done nothing " rfiwi r1 1in the five years of cold war.” 0 M U4» ■# a, of US policy in SE AsiaWe have tried to control in- ■ "fectious diseases for a 1000 years. b L FisherThat control is one of the great- ,(T ' , , , v ,, , ...est achievements of man. We are We can have Peace only when we realize that we are Settingnow breeding the germs of these policy for the western world,” said Professor Bert F. Hoselitz,a cooperative peace programby David FainThe council meeting of the IUS, attended by the repre¬sentatives of 6 million students from 86 countries, unanimous¬ly set forth a program of student work for peace, for im¬proved studying and living conditions for students and forincreasing international student cooperation and friendship.“Cooperation between US students and students of other diseases by the billions to spread director of studies for the committee on international rela-lands, especially the millionsunited in the IUS can be animportant contribution topeace, to the well being of all,”said IUS news release. Party sponsored by Phi Gamma DeltasThe traditional Christmas partyfor underprivileged children fromthe University of Chicago Settle¬ment was sponsored last Satur-conclusion of a pact of peace daY hy the Phi Gamma Deltas inIUS proposes actionSome of the proposals set forthby the IUS were:| That all students support thebetween the five great powers.2 That NSA engage in an active conjunction with the Mortarboardand Quadrangular girls’ clubs,exchange of experience with Howard Mort, Secretary of thestudents of other countries. Alumni association passed out the3 That NSA accept the invita- more than 100 gifts contributedtinn nf Tntprnatinnal Student , i , , m,..by local merchants. The childrenRelief to participate in its govern- . . . , , . ,ing bodies and to work with the were entertained by movies andIUS for cooperation between stu¬dent relief organizations on thebasis of relief distribution accord¬ing to student needs.Want exchange program£ That NSA join actively in thecultural program for the com¬ing year.■5 An invitation to NSA to assistUS sportsmen in joining the Reverend Joseph D. Connerton assports program of the IUS.ft An invitation to NSA to facili- filled with food and candy. Atthe end of the party the childrenfiled from the Phi Gam house intothe buses which returned themto the Settlement.Connerton fetedThe tenth anniversary of thew tate the participation of USstudents in the international stu¬dent campus held by the IUSnext winter and summer.In order to carry out the above chaplain for Catholic students ofUC was commemorated December2 at a public reception in De SalesHouse for Catholics of the arch¬diocese of Chicago.Before entering the field of stu- Children joyfully anticipate Santa's gifts at, settlement house.US Civil Service Commissionwill give positions to studentsprogram, the IUS has proposed dent work, Father Connerton wasan exchange program between the assistant pastor in two ChicagoNSA and IUS.SpecialStudent DiscountsonSingle and Multiple SpeedPHONOGRAPHSRADIOSAlso Repair WorkLOWE’SRADIO1233 E. 55th St. The U. S. Civil Service Commission has announced oppor¬tunities for a variety of positions in the federal government,parishes, St. Thomas the Apostle Written examinations will be required in all fields.Mhe'servTasnationaTchiplain The examination to Junior Professional Assistant in Illi-of the National Newman Club nois, Michigan and Wisconsin includes the following options. kave been substantial export sur-Federation. economist, food and drug inspector, legal assistant, social pluses. “Poverty-stricken Asiantions. Hoselitz discussed “Revo¬lutions in Asia, Colonialism andAmerican Foreign Policy,” beforean audience of 50 people in Hitch¬cock lounge December 4.Hoselitz confined himself, ingeneral, to a discussion of theproblems which must be faced bythe US in southeast Asia and bythe framers of our overall foreignpolicy.The western world has long at¬tached economic importance toAsia because of its population. Un¬til recent years, Hoselitz asserted,Asia has been considered as anarea to be manipulated. But sinceWorld War II, the western worldhas begun to consider Asia fromthe point of view of the natives.This change has come about.Hoselitz said, because of the poli¬tical debacle of European colon¬ialism, the rise of independentIndia, and the communist revolu¬tion in China and the removal ofChina from western influence.Colonial development a mythThe development of colonies inorder to provide a profitable out¬let for excess capital is a myth,Hoselitz stated. In developing thispoint, he asserted that “when acountry is growing and develop¬ing, it generally has an importsurplus. “Foreigners must pay fortheir investments with goods.”Thus if Asiatic colonies, whichhave been of service to theirmother countries during the past50 years, were being built up,they should have had import sur¬pluses. But for 50 years thereCHICAGO COLLEGE ofOPTOMETRY(Nationally Accredited)An Outstanding College in aSplendid ProfessionDoctor of Optometry degree inthree years for students enteringwith sixty or more semester creditsin specified Liberal Arts courses.Registration February 25Students 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 Larrabee StreetChicago 14, Illinois sciences analyst and statistician.Appropriate Education or expert- tadta-a*by“ “ ‘°e“8£ -ence is a requisite. The age limits ydependingPon Phe type of posi- Hose,ltz stated,of 18-35 years will be waived for tions). Cartographic draftsmen colonies were contributing to thebuilding up of the richer West/tmust submit samples of theirwork.Will give examsAeronautical Research Internand Scientist examinations forfilling positions in laboratoriesApplicants must have throughout the country are of¬fered to those having bachelor’sdegrees with major emphasis insubjects such as physics, chemis-veterans.Positions for cartographer andcartographic aid are available inWashington, D. C., and vicinity,and there are a few field serviceopenings,Specialized Repairs ofBICYCLESLightweight and BalloonComplete Line of Parts forAll BicyclesACE CYCLE SHOP819 E. 55th Ml 3-2672 Background must be recognizedOne must recognize this histoi>see “Hoselitz/' page 10UC sees TVcolor from LAUC had the benefit of color tele-, . „ vision when the continent wastry, electronics, metallurgy or an spanned for the first time lastappropriate branch of engineer- Friday afternooning. Age limits of 18-35 years are In the uc Medical center aswaived for veterans. Experience well as in a New York studi_either in research or graduate physicians and students watchedstudy is required of those appli- the full-color details of a heartcants applying for the scientist operation transmitted from thepositions. Los Angeles County General hos*Those wishing to apply for the pital over a closed circuit,position of Highway Engineer A small microphone in the sur-Trainee must have completed geon’s mask enabled him to dis*three-fourths of the total number cuss the operation as he pro-see “Civil Service/' pog« 10 ceeded.THE CHICAGO MAROON December 14, 195)?age 8"Peace, pure and simple"—Robert Maynard HutchinsIssued once weekly by tbe publisher, The Chicago Maroon, at the publicationoffice, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: EditorialOffice, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1012; Business and Advertising Offices Midway1-0800, Ext. 1011. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions by mail, $4 per year.John V. Hurst David ZimmermanEditor-in-chief Business ManagerFrom the MAROON Constitution, Article VI: To becomeeffective as voicing the opinion of the Chicago MAROONeditorials must receive a two-thirds majority of the affirma¬tive and negative votes cast at the meeting considering them.Editorials rceiving a simple majority may be printed over thenames of those approving, at the discretion of the author. It is now Christmas morning, and all round the desk,Sits the whole MAROON staff, in postures grotesque.Their bodies are battered and broken, I fear;And they’ve sworn off the booze for the space of a year.They’d wakened to find at eachdesk’s enclosureA new constitution and picturesof Strozier.Now, sadly dejected, each one ofthem sits;A child like belief has been blowr,into bits,And that realization has chargedall the air:Each knows that old Santa has reallybeen there.Now quickly they rise, and forminga lirie,They walk to the wall with expres¬sions benign.Then, all clasping hands, and without any sound,They leap through the windows and sail to the ground.And I hear them exclaim as they plunge out of sight,“Merry Christmas to all and—gahdammit — GOOD NIGHT!”Urge action on slugging |.ove for cheap orangesLast Friday night a Nigerian student Analiefo Adibuah, wasInsulted by a patron in the Drexel Pub at 55th and Drexel whilemaking a purchase and then physically attacked by the bartenderas he prepared to leave with his package. When he returned withtwo other Nigerian students and a white student to identify theassailant, he and the white student were attacked by the bartenderagain and pursued down the street by the patron, who brandisheda broken beer bottle and threatened to kill them.They are attempting to prosecute their attackers through thepolice and the courts.The MAROON thinks that the urgency of action on this issueWill need little pressing with UC students once the facts are known.We urge the following immediate actions:By the Student Government:1. Condemn the act of racist violence.2. Urge the University of Chicago administration to aid the stu¬dents legally in the prosecution of the case.3. Declare a boycott of the tavern until the bartender involved islired and guarantees made that no such acts will occur in the future.4. Reinstate and widely publicize the “Shop at the Sign of the*C’ ” campaign. (Two years ago SG carried on a campaign to “Shopat the Sign of the ‘C’,” i.e., stores that proudly displayed a Univer¬sity “C” to demonstrate that they are non-discriminatory.)5. Demand full cooperation with the students by the police inprosecuting the case.By individual students:1. Go to the tavern in person to protest.2. Call Alderman Merriam and the police and demand that jus¬tice be done.By the University of Chicago administration:1. Give legal aid to the students in the prosecution of the case.2. Announce a firm policy of fighting against discrimination andsegregation in University-owned property in the community.3. Actively join in the work of community groups striving toprevent such incidents.4. Apply pressure to the police to insure their cooperation withthe students in prosecuting the attackers.We feel that since the police have shown indications of apathyor downright obstructionism towards this case, pressure in theform of telephone calls to the police department (Hyde Park Sta¬tion—HY 3-0311) is especially important to insure that justice is done.There has been an act of discrimination, an act of violence. NowIt is up to those who believe in freedom and equality to fight andfight hard for their beliefs.At Christmas Eve’Twas the night before Christmas, and all ’round the deskSat the whole MAROON staff, in postures grotesque;Their stockings were safe on their feet debonair,’Cause they all knew damn well Santa wouldn’t be there.The Christmas edition was long since to “bed”;An alcohol haze filled each staff member’s head.Not one of them sleepy, they’d all had a nap;And each in his hand held a friendly night-cap,When out on the stairs there arose such a clatter,That the editor cried, “It’s Birenbaum—scatter!”Away to their desks they all flew with a crash,Whipped open their copy and typed like a flash;Each innocent brow over late newswas bent,The air with the teletypes’ clatterwas rent,_When what to their wonderingeyes should appearBut a red-suited guy wearingwhiskers so queer . . .With glazed stupefacation andwobbly knees,Each man in the room thoughthe’d got the D-Ts.When one cried, “Well, I’ll be asonovabitch!—It’s Santa, the bastard, as sure as I twitch!”And twitch he sure did, as with magical wrench,He fried to a crisp with a horrible stench.Then roaring with laughter and clawing the air,The others called, “Santa, just pull up a chair.”But jolly old Santa, his teeth making flashes,Smiled, pulled on his pipe, and spat on the ashes.“Come, tell us your angle,” they cried in a chorus;“In that gaudy get-up, you practically floor us.”With nary a word, Santa picked up his sack,And went to each desk with the thing on his back.And each sloping forehead, without any hedge,He lovingly tapped with a 15-pound sledge . . , The University Bookstore charges ten cents for a orange. Tencents is too much to pay for a orange. Do you realize that you canget a orange for five cents at a grocery store? What's so goodabout Bookstore oranges, that they should cost so much? As Ger¬trude Stein says, and I quote, “A orange is a orange is a orange.”If them oranges wuz Sold in a restaurant or something insteadof in a bookstore maybe there would be some excuse for chargingten cents, but in the bookstore there ain’t even anywhere to setdown and eat your orange except in the record booths, and duringrush hours there ain’t even room there. They got no business sell¬ing oranges for ten cents when the orange is worth only five cents.Since the bookstore is supposed to be a service for students, theyoughta charge less than regular price, not twice regular price.Even the regular price is high, for a orange.In conclusion I say, the bookstore ought to lower the price oftheir oranges at least to five cents or vice versa. Student Govern¬ment ought to look into this this if they don’t.Letters ...On college footballI was interested ir last week's articleon Amos Alonzo Stagg s light to bringfootball back to what it used to be.The MAROON is incorrect, however, instating that "Stagg is conducting vir¬tually a one-man campaign." There isa large number of people who wouldlike to see college football de-commer-cialized and played, as Stagg says, “forthe joy of the game.” If Stagg has beenable to prove that this is possible atSusquehanna, then why not at Chi¬cago? A university just isn’t a univer¬sity without a football team; and I sus¬pect that this is the reason for our no¬torious lack of schol spirit at the Uni¬versity of Chicago. I suggest that veryserious attention be given to the ideathat it may be worth a try to returnfootball to UC.Franklin Jay Pepperof Omaha CollegeOffers suggestionIn reading your Letters to the Editorsection, I have noticed that many let¬ters are not signed adequately. I feelthat such a policy has resulted in.manyirresponsible statements being made. Atthe University of California, whichschool I previously attended, the .policyof the paper there was that all letters,to be printed, had to give the name andaddress of the writer. The address ofthe writer was not published, of covtrse,and the name could be withheld if thewriter feared retaliation.I believe that such a policy was inkeping with the principle of free andresponsible speech.I. L. SelkED. NOTE: The MAROON has a poli¬cy of not printing letters from writerswho do not Identify themselves.Raps music criticFred Winsberg’s latest effort in thefield of music criticism is the worst ofa deplorable series. In his review of theGraudan concert, Mr. Winsberg as us-usual seeks refuge in a display of lushverbiage in an effort to conceal hispoverty of thought. This time he goesa step further, apparently hoping thata spray of vapid metaphor will alsoserve to conceal factual errors of akind that would be Inexcusable from acub reporter. ^Mr. Winsberg states that “The per¬formers should have studied the scores,which contain fairly detailed instruc¬tions from which they might haveformed unified conceptions of the works. . . ” Mr. Winsberg would be well ad¬vised to follow his own advice. Had hestudied the printed program he wouldhave found a fairly detailed outline ofwhat was played and could have madean accurate report accordingly. But ac¬curacy is manifestaly of little concern tohim. Contrary to his review, the Grau-dans played; not a sonata in D minorby Mendelssohn, but the sonata in Dmajor, op. 58. In addition to his clearlydemonstrated inability to report cor¬rectly the content of a printed pro¬gram, Mr. Winsberg evidently suffersalso from an inability to distinguishthe major from the minor mode.Nor did Mr. Graudan play an unac¬ companied ’cello suite in G minor byBach. No such suite exists. What he didplay was the suite in C minor, whichis the fifth in the series of six suites.Mr. Winsberg, laboring under the above-mentioned infirmity, perhaps was think¬ing of the first suite in G major whenhe wrote of a non-existent suite in Gminor.Of more importance than these irri¬tating and inexcusable errors, however,is the fact that much of what Mr. Wins¬berg writes is neither apt nor meaning¬ful. He states, for example, that theGraudans played the fugue of the Bee¬thoven sonata “in the fashion of theDance ol the Sugar-plum Fairies." Inview of Mr. Winsberg’s well-known pre¬dilection for Russian music, I supposethis comparison might be taken as aback - handed compliment, otherwisethe statement is an absurdity. It wouldindeed be an achievement of sorts toplay, "in the fashion of" Tchaikovsky'slangorous tid-blt in 4/4 time, a quick-paced Beethoven fugue written in 3/4time. Assuredly the Graudans perpe¬trated no such stunt last Friday. Theydid not, moreover, "hack the works intofragments," nor did they treat theBeethoven sonata “as though the pianowere of no Importance and the cello partin quarter tones.” The absurdity of Mr.Winsberg’s assertions is clear to any¬one who listened to the Graudans withtwo ears and an iota of musical intelli¬gence. The slow movement was not"negotiated with lack of any concep,tion, legitimate or otherwise ..." Ifa conception was lacking anywhere, itwas lacking in the mind of Fred Wins¬berg, who demonstrates here for thenth time that he is unable to distin¬guish a good performance from a badone.In short, Mr. Winsberg’s review is nota criticism at al. It is a crude polemicembellished with factual errors andgross inadequacies of judgment. It isa coarse insult both to the Graudansand to the readers of the MAROON.J. D. FarrellCritic repliesThe factual inaccuracies to whichMr. Farrel refers occurred when thearticle was retyped by a member of mystaff. Such errors are unfortunate, butoften occur, in spite of the best effortsof many newsmen.Actually I felt that I had tried to tonedown my review of the concert. It waswithout doubt the worst I have everheard in the Chamber Music Series. Thefugue, which I said was played "in thefashion of the Dance of the Sugar-PlumFairies,” lost all its roughness in thehands of these performers (save whattechnical errors were made), and thecounterpoint was lost in an apparentattempt to “bring out the melody.” Asa result their pretty conception wasonly compatible with the idea thatBeetoven had in mind heavy-footedfairies. The slow movement was, I think,aptly characterized by a remark I over¬heard at the concert, "there is a pointwhere restraint becomes impotence." Ifall to see how anyone could have beenanything but embarrassed while listen¬ing to them play.I should like to know where Mr. Far¬rell beard of my "well known predilec¬tion for Russian music." I was not awareof any such predilection.Fred Winsberg Ex-editor irkedAs the editor of the MAROON fromJuly, 1950 through June, 1951, I wouldlike to take strong issue with a num¬ber of points about last year’s MAROONmade in the December issue of tlmUniversity of Chicago Magazine in anarticle entitled "The 1951 MAROONHassle."1. The article throughout steaks ofachlne control of the paper and ruling"cliques." I can honestly state that lalways chose editors of the paper onthe basis of their Journalistic abilities.Throughout the year I had many edi¬tors who were in complete or partialdisagreement with my own personalpolitical and Journalistic point of alew.Persons of any belief, as long as theywere interested in journalism, couldjoin the paper. No staff member wasever asked to leave the paper.Although the article speaks of "ma¬chine control” of elections, nowhere isthe actual method of election ol theeditor discussed. For your informa tlonthe editor is elected by a two-thirdsmajority vote of the entire staff onceeach year. Since anyone might join thestaff, there was no way I myself or anymachine might have decided an electioneven if wanting to do so.2. I cannot see how any legal author¬ity could imply that the MAROON oflast year might have been violating alaw such as the Smith Act. The MA¬ROON never advocated any type oiviolence. If the day ever comes thatthe MAROON must refrain from speak¬ing on certain civil rights issues be¬cause the Communists are also con¬cerned, I would hope that the Univer¬sity would resist this basic infringe¬ment on our freedoms.3. In one paragraph the writer refersto the page editor system and notes thatbeats weer not covered and staffs wouldremain idle. Both these charges arefalse. Each news page was organized ona beat basis. The purpose of the system.Itself, was to give the maximum num¬ber of persons executive responsibilitiesand to have the executive in closetouch with all staff members. Therewere, of course, many snags to be work¬ed through in the development of thisnew system. It might also be noted thatmore persons were trained to be capableenough to be nominated for editor thanthe previous year. Three of these per¬sons Ed Wolpert, Al Kimmel and JohnHurst ran for editor last May.4. I particularly resented statementsto the effect that we worked againstfreedom of expression. Manv differingviews were expressed in our column andthe letters-to-the-edltor in particularcontained arguments in extreme critic¬ism of various policies of the MAROON.Our unfortunate and altogether unin¬tentional failure to report the Kennanlectures disturbed me a great deal, asany person familiarizing themselveswlh our thorough investigation of thatomission would know.5. I was extremely surprised at thecriticism of our printing material onthe Willie McGee case. This situationwas undergoing widespread discussionin student government and campus civilrights groups. Many students I spoketo were horrified at this example oi thetreatment of the Negro people in theSouth, summing up my feelings onthis, I would state that the MAROONalways stood ready to take sides in is¬sues of racial discrimination of concernto students. We also consciously stroveto maintain an interracial and inter-group staff and as a result of this hadan interracial editor group. Also, wewould only run advertising for productsand services available to ah students,regardless of race, creed or color. Iwould consider any basic criticism ofthese policies as springing from a preju¬diced source.6. I do not propose to enter into adiscussion of the quality of the MA¬ROON. I recognize that there were weakpoints In last year’s work. I had alwaysfelt, however, that charges were regu¬larly exaggerated to suit the ulteriormotives of the critic. I tried to beamenable to suggestions for improvc-ment. I had very little respect for jour¬nalists who left the paper because oftheir disagreements with vocal personsof different views. Democracy caniiotfunction when people only work on aproject on which they have no oppo¬sition.I feel that the article y<5u printed isas biased an attack as any ever chargedto the MAROON.Charles GarvinCM has wrong policyMany people have voiced their dis¬pleasure with your editorial policies.Much has been said but I know whatis wrong with your paper.Your present policy seems to be pri¬marily concerned with racial equality,freedom of the press, etc. These thingsare very important, no doubt. However,in placing all of your emphasis on thesetemporal matters, you are ignoring themost Important factor in Human Life.I refer to our Lord and Creator.If you would change your policy toHis Policy, you would have a fine news¬paper and also help make for the secu¬lar attitude of most of the U. C. stu¬dents.Charles T. SweenyUrges recognitionWe would like to urge that StudentGovernment act promptly on the recog¬nition of LYL. We feel that SG shouldtake a principled and independentstand on this crucial matter and thatsuffient evidence has now been intro¬duced to enable it to do so; the delaysintroduced by the Administration onlytend to take the decision out of SG’shands. We hope that SG, upholdingthe free tradition of the University,will be bold rather than timid in itsaction.Politics ClubUniversity of ChicogoBIT runs overThe following letters were Intendedfor the Beyond the Ivory Tower page.However, due to the lack of space whenthe topic for which they were intended(the Supreme Court decision on theCommunist leaders’ conviction) was dis¬cussed, they are being printed as lettersto the editor... • see f'Utttn,'/ peg* ▼December 14, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 9Letters ...(from poge 8)To say the least, the recent decisionloy the Supreme Court on the convictionof the Communist leaders has causedsurprise in many quarters. The idealof complete political freedom in theUnited States, it would seem, has beenset aside.The implications of such a convic¬tion are obvious. The Communists havebeen jailed not on the basis of whatthey did, but on the basis of what theythought and said. If hysteria and pres¬sures of war continue, it may be expect¬ed, the conception of what is treason¬able and subversive will grow and ex¬pand. The unenlightened have been re¬inforced for suppressing the rights ofthe few, and it is likely that now theirefforts will become more generalized.Already free education in the UnitedStates has been Invaded, and accusa¬tions of university faculties being Com¬munist dominated and textbooks being•Socialistic” and un-American are be¬coming more numerous.All of the talk about the dangers ofCommunism in the United States, ourfree way of life, etc., etc., carries anovertone of subterfuge and fraud, andfails to impress anyone who looksaround at the facts. The argumentsusually heard are these:1. The Bill of Rights guarantees free¬dom of speech, but the Communists areout to take away our freedom, so theydo not fall under its provisions. It isinteresting to speculate as to what thefounding fathers, if alive today, wouldthink about such talk. The dangers ofn ' freedom of speech, but ...” atti¬tude are obvious. We either have free¬dom of speech, or we do not. If reserva¬tions are made, the opposition to anyminority group will always find reasons,under the stress of the moment, for re¬garding this situation as unique, andthis minority group as especially dan¬gerous.2. The Communists are not Just an¬other political group, but are agents ofa foreign government, dedicated tosabotage and violent revolution. Thediffculty in finding overt acts of trea¬son on the part of Communists and theverbal gymnastics about "conspiracy toteach ...” etc., etc., suggest an answerto this. In Prance about a third of thepopulation, including high public offi¬cials, are Communists. Yet France seemsto survive without witch hunts.All such attempts to Justify politicalsuppression, while at the same timeprofessing to uphold freedom and de¬mocracy are shallow and superficial.The real reason for the Communistconvictions Is clear. Vested Interestswhich fancy themselves endangered byCommunism, anti-Russian feeling, andwar-talk have created pressures whichnow put an end to American traditions.The antl-Communlst elements con¬sistently condemn everything aboutCommunism; yet it Is surprising howclosely they imitate its really obnoxiousaspects. The attitude taken toward freeexpression in economics, social theory,and history, and even science and art,for example, is about the same in bothcamps. In both cases thought must notbe completely free; it must conform toa party line. In one case the party lineis free enterprise capitalism, in theother case dialectical materialism. In America nowadays the American Intel-lectual is a Red and a conspiratoragainst free society, in Russia he Is adegenerate Western idealist.Such comparisons are not far fetched:they are very real. Pear of Infringe¬ments upon liberty is not exaggeratedand unfounded. The growing attemptIn some quarters to convince the publicthat all American education is per¬verted and Communist-dominated is acase In point.The Supreme Court decision is espe¬cially ominous, because It gives legalencouragement to the efforts of thedemagogues. Now that political sup¬pression has stood the test of the high¬est court. Communist witchcraft willbe sten everywhere, and Americanfreedom can be expected gradually todecay.Donald W. ZimmermanIn the Schneiderman case, June, 1943,the Supreme Court of the United Statessaid, after fully examining the theoryand practice of the Communist Party,"A tenable conclusion from the fore¬going is that the Party in 1927 desiredto achieve its purpose by peaceful anddemocratic means, and as a theoreticalmatter Justified the use of force andviolence only as a method of preventingan attempted forceable counter-over-throw once the Party had obtained con¬trol In a peaceful manner, or as a meth¬od of last resort to enforce the majoritywill If at some Indefinite time in thefuture, because of peculiar circum¬stances, constitutional or peacefulchannels were no longer open.” Sincethe doctrine of the C. P. U. S. A. has re¬mained the same on this point, it mustbe that the current McCarthy hysteriahas forced the Truman appointed Su¬preme Court majority to change itsdoctrine.American Marxists have always recog¬nized the historical fact that partieswith advanced social programs cannotsecure governmentl power by conspira¬torial methods or by minority coupsd'etat. They must have with them anoverwhelming majority of the popula¬tion. The danger of violence In suchsituations always comes from the re¬actionary elements, who refuse to bowto the democratic majority will.A classical case in point was our CivilWar. This was, In fact a revolution,as it shifted political power from oneclass to another; from the hands of thereactionary Southern slaveowners tothose of the then progressive NorthernIndustrialists. The war violence occurredwhen the Southern landholders refusedto abide by the democratic will of theAmerican people in electing AbrahamLincoln and took up arms to split theUnion. Naturally, the revolutionary Lin¬coln government defended itself andput down the counter-revolutionary re¬bellion by force. A similar recent casewas Franco's counter-revolution againstthe Spanish Republic, although, un¬fortunately, the latter was not able todefeat Franco's assualt upon democracy,as Lincoln did.If the Italian or German peoples hadby force of arms overthrown the fascistor Nazi dictatorships, this would havebeen a justifiable democratic revolt ofthe majority of the people against gov¬ernments that allowed no peacefulmeans for progress. The war of the op¬pressed Egyptian people against Britishimperialism Is similar Justifiable vio¬lence. The real danger in the UnitedStates is the mad dash of Wall Streettoward Its twin panaceas of war andfascism—war to keep profits soaring;fascism to keep the working class andsocial progress down. The Smith Actand the Dennis case are two steps alongthe road toward complete silencing ofall voices raised for peace; and of endingour Constitutional rights to free speechand peaceful political action for prog- Kimpton ...from page IAgainst big-time footballOn the possible return of foot¬ball, Kimpton said he does notfavor UC’s return to the “big-time” game, “where the emphasisis all one way,” but added that hehas no objection to intramuralfootball.Asked whether he had givenany thought to football in aminor status similar to UC’sbasketball, the Chancellor replied,“No. It would be given consider¬ation, however, if there was astrong demand for it from thestudents.” He deplored the cur¬rent emphasis on football bymany schools, and indicated thatress. Marxists are not fatalists; we be¬lieve that prompt action of the Amer¬ican people by traditional means canstop this mad race before it reacheseither goal.A. Bierman, UC, LYLMore on #R# gradeThe reason for requiring some quar¬terlies is completely obvious in light ofthe scandalous number of "R” gradesreceived last year. No question that it'sdesirable for the student to pace hisown progress; but the large majority ofthose receiving R’s are getting themonly because they never start a quar¬ter's work during the quarter. Giventhis fact, how else can we get -oureducation across to these people thanby moving up the date on which theywill have to read and think about thethings that we think and talk abouthere?Whoever wrote the letter in thiscolumn a week ago Is a Hutchins man,a firm believer In freedom. But in any¬thing Hutchins ever wrote the policyis laid down that freedom is advancedwith (the right kind of) education, andtthat that education can’t be soaked inby a kind of metaphysical osmosis. Theargument that "any change in theUniversity will be toward the conven¬tional” needs to be completed: "gettingdown to business Is one conventionalvalue sadly lacking around here.” There¬fore change Is necessary, and we canonly look for the change that bestcombines our traditional freedom witheffectiveness. Not being able to take"R’s” indiscriminately won’t hurt any¬body (the mark is being kept in use);let's just hope the change Is enoughto effectively stir people out of aca¬demic and related lethargies.In other words, if the Universitywants to abridge our freedom to donothing but sit on our butts and vague¬ly criticize everything about, then Ithink It’s high time.Patrick CareyFree TransportationWe ore 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 oil car-expenses paid trips.AAA DRIVEWAYRoom 1419343 So. Dearborn St.Chicago, IllinoisPhone WEbsfer 9-5298 :wtc««««««««c«««««««tK«tc«i«««x««K«c««tete'ctctctc'CiC«<ctcec«!eec!Cj!Give Flowers For Xmas \We Wire FlowersStudent Discount 20%MITZIE’S> FLOWER SHOPMl 3-1020 1301 E. 55th St.Open EveningsWhat the critics say about _the most violently discussed book of the yearAGAINST"When I sat down to review Mr. Buckley's book,1 was concerned lest my readers refuse to believethat so violent, unbalanced, and twisted a youngman really existed;'—McGeorge Bundy, AtlanticMonthly“...he succeeds in contravening Catholic moraldoctrines as applied to economics and politics onalmost every topic he takes up...Mr. Buckley'sown social philosophy is...obnoxious to a well-instructed Catholic '.'—America, National CatholicWeekly"The Buckley book is characterized by naivete,misinformation, quotations out of context, and thecrassest dogmatism!'— Yale Daily News'McGeorge Bundy demolishes the Buckley book atlength in this month’s Atlantic Monthly .."-At-thur Schlesinger, Jr., New York Post"This book is one which has the glow and appealof a fiery cross on a hillside at night. There willundoubtedly be robed figures who gather to if, butthe hoods will not be acadenyc. They will coverthe face!'—Frank D. Ashburn, Saturday Review ofLiterature D0D00 FOR“(He) writes with a clarity, a sobriety, and anintellectual honesty that would be noteworthy if itcame from a college president."—Selden Rodman,Saturday Review of Literature"From this (book) we learn that...the funda¬mental American doctrine of inherent rights, uponwhich rests the sanctity of private property, i«made light of in the basic Courses of economics...we wholeheartedly subscribe to everything he say*'.'—Catholic Standard and Times"It is a very thorough book, a very thoughtfulbook, a very sincere book...with painstaking atten¬tion to accuracy!’—San Francisco Chronicle"After reading (it)...and Mr. Bundy’s attack...I remain convinced that the students of economic*at Yale are being pretty well indoctrinated... withthe principles of creeping socialism."-Max fast-man, American Mercury"How right he is...to insist that man has a moralnature, that statism threatens it, that freedom de¬pends on the traditional value-code of the Westand that unmoral materialism results in a suicidaltolerahce, debunking all values as equally rela¬tive! ’’-Peter Viereck, Sew York TimesForm Your Own Conclusions... Rood It YourselfGod and Man at YaleThe Superstitions of "Academic Freedom"Introduction by John Chamberlainby William F. Buckley, Jr. $5.50HENRY REGNERY COMPANY • CHICAGO 4, ILLINOIS he himself will not initiate anymove to extend the game’s cur¬rent role at the University.Bound by traditionIn response to another question,Kimpton said he does not feel heis necessarily bound by the poli¬cies of his predecessor, eventhough he is in sympathy withthem. A Chancellor Is bound, how¬ever, by the University’s traditionof academic freedom and educa¬tional pioneering, and “shouldn’taccept the job if he isn’t.” He indi¬cated he does not plan any sig¬nificant policy or administrativechanges.Kimpton expressed completesupport of the Hutchins plan. Hefeels that at least two of its threemajor innovations—the type andplan of courses and the system ofexaminations—have had a greatimpact on the field of general edu¬cation.Give questions and answersRegarding federal aid to educa¬tion, he said, “There is no stigmato government money. But Iwould be sorry indeed if ourmoney came only from the gov¬ernment, or for that matter fromany single source. The more di¬versified your sources of income,the more assured is the univer¬sity’s independence in researchand study.”Following are some other ques¬tions put to the Chancellor, withhis answers paraphrased as ac¬curately as possible:Q: None of the brochures whichadvertise the University currentlyshow any pictures which clearlyinclude Negroes. Is there anyreason for this?A: None to my knowledge.Q: Are the recruiting teams(which visit Chicago high scholsto tell graduates about UC) now going to Negro high schools mChicago?A: I would assume so. I real¬ly don’t know, though. I wouldhope so. Although we do havetoo small a number of recruit¬ers, and they may be inclinedto visit the schools which aremost likely to send the largestnumber of students to the Uni¬versity. I say this with regret,I would hope they go to theNegro schools as well.Q: How many Negroes arethere on the faculty?A: I haven’t the slightest idea.I hope we never keep track ofnumbers in that way. We havealways followed a policy ofpicking the most competentman for the job.Q: Many people seem to feelthat UC is undergoing a generalchange in policy, with a trendaway from the left, since you as¬sumed the Chancellorship. Doyou think this feeling is justified?A: No, I don’t think so. 1question whether you call a uni¬versity right or left. I thinkyou call them good or bad. Iwould feel extremely sorry ifwe were regarded as a politicalinstitution.Q: Do you feel that Strozier’srembval of Kimmel was a viola¬tion of student rights?A: I’m not prepared to an¬swer that. . . . However I willsay I didn’t think the Universitycould ever be in a positionwhere it disclaims any respon¬sibility for or interest in theMAROON. I am chiefly inter¬ested in seeing that the MA¬ROON be free to report newswithout bias or slant. I don’tcare about its editorial position.| ATTENTION FACULTY WIVES| Wire* of Student*, Too£ Perhaps you will enjoy doing occasional interviewing for£ a nationally known market research organization, as aX change now and then from your household, social and civic$ activities. 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, I1VC.X 333 No. Michigan AvenueI*. DEarborn 2-0830 Chicago, Illinois X$X****** ****** ^ *** *** ♦t4 *!♦ **♦♦♦* *** ♦l* ♦♦♦ *♦**♦**♦**** ***ifiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiI GIFTS I| THAT ARE APPRECIATED §E Cameras and AccessoriesPROJECTORS - SCREENSFILM - FLASH BULBSDARK ROOM SUPPLIES £PHOTO FINISHING5 TypewritersNEW AND RECONDITIONED= StationeryFINE WRITING PAPERSFOUNTAIN PENS SMECHANICAL PENCILSBRIEF CASES EDIARIES ELingerie and Personal AppareLNYLON NIGHT GOWNS ENYLON SLIPSNYLON STOCKINGS= BLOUSES - SCARFSGLOVES - PURSES= Novelty itemsU OF C BOOKENDSU OF C ASH TRAYSART OBJECTSDECORATIVE PIECES SCOPPER - BRASS - BRONZELong Playing Records ■* All Labels■ Purchases Wrapped FREE as Gifts and/or for Mailing S= Packages may be Mailed at Postal Station in the Store •| University of Chicago Bookstore j5802 ELLIS AVENUEVIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHUHIIIIIIUIIIIHIIIIIIMIIMHIIUIHIIIIIHIIIIIV*Pjp# 10 THE CHICAGO MAROONHosieJitraPiK •J., •v’ &' \from page;.*?sf y, >. .v.wfVi iMerck fejlowshibsfrdw availableTorlJS^chemistsMbiolopistsmmmM9. ,. 11UCIKC llluvcllltmo,..-^bApplications foriMerck postdoctoral fellowships in the na- ^'^ViVn souVh’iMM Asia, ho ‘.aid. ism.”; With;'iral sciences are^nOw openlfor 1952-53.'' The native leaders«beiieye that ^activity, freemu - f r_n j~s-__._r.t-n.f 4.—Pli:v+v»« ttipcp^nnvprtv At'rft'tceriseburttriesMdle iclass'Swiiiwill:produce s;ocial ,change or jr economic progress. AndirefoSSrwhether social change is- neces-f ers ■ have become ringleade^^nfsary .before 'substantial ;economicj thg ,;communist movement's!ggcause if there are sociaMchaflti' they can seize power.' ,US objectives unclear-tural sciences are’now opensfor 1952.53?».|«»®»!P^»The,nativ#}iadeiSlSeif®f!:tKat2activity, free enterprise,?*!* ««The fenowsh^lareCo^^^; to citbcns of ,1m■United/Sts^ai^iti^t^""""" -x if ‘• ‘ , -| *•-- --- • --■■■-■•■ - v“£ to that|repres^iit^cl\b;andHbioibg^arelmcludSll‘ j-vSN*i*3#~ '■ *CoancilSvvhichadministersrtfeltowshii^-V., ItM^^'^^isSi^iii^^thefimagiHaiibiiyfreelreigh^Bu^Thus' ■ the. pqlicy^jisifiL^.,..iAmerican“|solutioh%must|?be^ able; Hoselitz* said,^because weed Sin ^cpncrete^terms^terms * have vnot t a k e’n ¥*« clear,’- poii-iicnfappcal Jp5iratiqnahahd|intel^; tion as to the^ location of jjsffrBht.tual people^ he said! >*' * '* ' iers, Russian policy .mav^M^jyn Russjan'solution can be put|favrtt.&US policy can be.ma^^iljf.ffect;fiuickly;^tiie • American^ he> asserted, only, if we* he^Satlirelaniyeiyj^slovylinAthisS^pperp^all issues with the Politburo; .■ warned||we!^c$h-irV, difficulty! lies, .inutile?, not expect to negotiate£if? w^ al'-_ a--*• ”■ *’ \ourselves|to be; muddfid^hy' ^whdycharge^hat Jnpdtias^are^treachery:bocause ,;\v<?tytrust the' Russians!; ^Siidi-garposition leaves, war as^the b'nlyfpossible^*}ternati:THk-mHiil. and Sons Saddle {A'fllE AXJH E RtMIOLI nIcASE|IMPORTEDVIOLINBOWS $12.00HILLeand SON?CHIN RESTS 1/5"from $12.00-$15 00 * JI HILL BOXWOOD PECS >.nest.Quol.ty1completed appiopi iate 'col • ('iininhMtm uniil in t‘t her not u e. •s‘o'1 1 rli£*%‘rx»-\ 1 5'£»0 O^V^kov%*tS KLi.ro'* vu* .«|,w « . ... >■ — Tursyvmtirn M-T-rm-Y-n-rr-1 -tm, - , e-nvp-r-ifir-i- •lgl,iR‘;p^d“^«t?!,STRADIVAIp.PEGS^^^^M$2^»'.aj HILUTAILPIECE.IN.BOXWOOD :.. . ,-f. $7 50j;*..< '-mm W ;$8.5qFDecember 14, 1951 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 11Beyond the Ivory Tower.Forum: Conditions for general disarmamentSays we need truth on Soviet proposalsA prime condition for general disarmament is adequate provision forcomplete and vetofree inspection to insure that no one is up to any pi ankssuch as preparing to blow everyone else’s head off.It is precisely on the charge of opposing such inspection as applied toitself that the Soviet Union is accused of not being sincere in its disarm¬ament proposals. This charge is a lie.The Bulletin of Atomic Scien- commercjai paper in thelists’ Minutes to Midnight, pub- jj. S., no radio commentator, haslished in 1950, pointed out that the to my knowledge broken the dead-soviet position on atomic control ly silence on this Soviet stand,. • ro now several years old and sincechanged y P reiterated regularly at all UNspects between 1946 and 1949. It meetings. They continue to chorusquoted a speech by Andrei Vyshin- jn remarkable unison that thesky before the Fourth Session of Soviety Union refuses access tothe UN General Assembly on No¬vember 23, 1949, as follows (p.99):• The soviet Union proposed that general disarmament is lacking,broad powers should be vested in the ° °LeRoy Wolinstion on such and such th^absence^of peace pacts have never been able Urges w^.ance of power to preserve peaceThere is nothing wrong with a balance of power. Indeed, it is the balanceof power, the feeling that aggression will be of no value, that often keepswould-be aggressors from beginning hostilities. Unquestionably it hasbeen the exclusive possession of the atomic bomb by the United Statesthat has been the most effective single force toward the prevention of anactive attack against all of Western Europe by the Soviet Union.Now that the Soviets pos¬sess the atomic bomb, theworld is engaged in anotherarms race. But, while the Rus¬sians are stock - piling atomicbombs, the Western countries, es¬pecially the United States, areworking on, and will probablysucceed in producing a hydrogenbomb. This super bomb, once de¬veloped, will once again act as adeterrent to war; it will only bewhen the United States and theSoviet Union, the two leadingworld powers, both possess ade¬quate stockpiles of hydrogenThe two basic obstacles to a general disarmament are contained in the recent statement bombs’ assuming that they will beproduced, that world peace willonce again be in danger. Barringdiplomatic blunders in the mean¬time, the present state of armedpeace will probably continue.But, because of the almostunique destructive qualities ofits facilities and demands a vetoon inspection decisions.Until the American people knowthe truth, a prime condition for Academic freedom nextThe first port cf next querier Beyond the Ivory Tower will be devotedto the subject of the status of academic freedom in American universities.The Forum topic will be "What are the Principles which Should Determinethe Extent of Academic Freedom?"Letters heve been sent to various universities throughout the countryasking for comments on the status of student ond academic freedom ontheir respective campuses. Several people who have figured prominentlyin these matters will be asked to contribute. Many students ond facultymembers at the University of Chicago are "refugees" from those universi¬ties which hove felt it necessary to vigorously curtail activities and viewswhich might be construed to be subversive. Contributions from suchstudents ore being solicited.‘Finds trust, world law necessary basisInternational control body—In the firstplace, the right of access to any enter¬prise engaged In the production, extrac¬tion, processing, or stockpiling of atomicmaterials, or dealing with the exploita¬tion of atomic energy . . .Two years ago the Soviet representa¬tive made it clear that inspection wouldnot be within periods established in ad¬vance, but would be by decision of the .international control organ in compii- ot our .President: a Bolshevik agreement isn t worth the paper it is written on.”a nee with necessity. _. .Thus, periodic inspection would not r lrst, the use or the emotionally-loaded term “Bolshevik is evidence that, besides themission of th"tepossVbTuty of inspecting political problems, there are certain emotional difficulties in American - Soviet relations.vaisnasn<itemayy dwmWfithlThf nitemi- Two main emotional obstacles are mistrust and hatred.ways say that there will be an inspec Z The second basic problem brought out by the President’s statement is that treaties andor tomorrow, evenconditions which would call for specialinvestigation (which is another mat- _ _ _ter altogether). No veto would be called rules out as solutions, the Soviet and war, then the possible paths still not set for achieving world adequate stockpiling byfor because our proposals say that such ... . ., . , ., , rr.u-~ , ...... adecisions will be adopted by a majority proposals of a five-power peace to this goal are unlimited, lhis law, courts, and police force. The sides, or, assuming a break in the°f This8 position is spelled out in pact and the banning of A-bombs k'aves a large area foi the USA UN must be made into a more. up by a supra-legal mechanism Independent of the troubles"at- *° Preven* war- This immediately whjch can prevent re-armament Russia is giving us, the stage is atomic warfare, it may be that anb o thgreater detail in the Soviet Em- by mere treaties. However suchbassy publication containing pjeces of paper might prove psy-iranslations from the Russian of chologically useful in removingthe above speech and an earlier , ,one (Nov. 10, 1949) before the some °f *be mistrust and in pre-UN Political Committee (The So- paring the ground for the onlyviet Position on Prohibition of realistic solution — enforceableAtomic Weapons and Internaiton-al Control of Atomic Energy, pp.32-39). From the Nov. 23 speech:••. .One has to examine these (theSoviet—LW) proposals carefully to seeperfectly clearly how false and teuden-specting atomic energy enterprises,against giving access to any such enter¬prise to representatives of control andinspection, and so on current East-West dichotomy, allsides, may result in a generalrecognition of the basic useless¬ness of war. Such a conclusion,long in arriv al in world thought,may not be too remote from us.Until that time, however, untilworld law. and the USSR to come to agree- representative body. It is general-ment. ly recognized that the UN isFor example, the American American controlled (“American”plan specifies reduction of con- is used here to include Southventional armaments before Americans also). Also the Asianatomic. The Soviet plan is the re- and African people would notverse. Assuming that neither have confidence in a world or-eountry has great atomic superi- ganization which, besides denyingority (probably now true for them representation, supports we can convince the CommunistsIn the present atmosphere of strategic reasons), the order of colonialism, feudalism and injus- tjiat they cannot possibly win amistrust, it seems that this great weapons reduced is no longer of tice, and essentially does nothing war with we have no choice. , , . , great importance. I he reduction for the two-thirds of the worlds , ,■ - ,, *=oa mal) W1 'ava 0 . e of atomic weapons and even in- population who are living under bul t0 ke0P strong. The lessonsKi’.h. ."“iWIK achleved ?‘eps- Whether sin- specti0„ TOUM be established in a conditions which do not permit of Latvia. Lithuania, Estonia. Po-cere or not. the western powers ^ of gra(lual sleps. K space ,hem to be human.recently proposed a series of s eps iucd various speeific stop Jov 0rc„,which would take US very close £y step p|ans wouW ^ presenled President. Chi<e,eStudent Federalists"The foes of the Soviet proposals seek to this goal. The only thing WrongIn every way to pass these proposals In ... ,, „70ctorn nmrvtcal ic that nere-silence, spreading false statements al- With the western proposal IS tnatlcging that the soviet Union does not jt is unacceptable by Russia. It-*7n^cTVihi,a,iZiv°t! I? oTX is important for us to realize that Says disarmament bad for U SSoviety proposals contains the demand only the final goal is unique, notfor ensuring the international control ,, ■ „<•commission access to any atomic energy the series of steps used to obtain land, Bulgaria, Rumania, Hun¬gary, Czechoslovakia, Finland?Tibet, China, and Korea are onlytoo convincing that our currentenemy in the world ideologicalstruggle will not listen to anyEffective world disarmament can be achieved only within language except force.troierpndeins eUtion ^.slc(s of 33°f4‘ it- If both the USSR and the USA the framework of a universally respected code of interna- Someday, international controlibid.) n P ” PP ’ really want disarmament backed ^jonaj ]aw The genesis of such a code is entirely dependent of atomic energy, and indeed, allupon the willingness of all nations to surrender a substantial armament production, can be re¬amount of national sovereignty to some supranational author- ‘mustPofw 'imity. This voluntary surrender can only come as a result of ternational inspection of produc-generally recognized self-interest. state 0f political and economic de- li,on facilities, e^g under such aSelf-interest in this situation velopment. If the United States pl£*n proposed by Bernard Bar-^_ noli Rn cinop thp ( nmmimisikRIDE ALightweightBICYCLENEW 1951 MODELSWHY PAY WORE?DAWES BIKE, with three-speed gear to ease pedalling,$52.50 • . . alsoSchwinn - Rudge - RaleighDunelt-Armstrong-Hercules30-Day Free CheckupDon't moke a mistake; see us first. We have 30 years of experienceJACKSON PARKBIKE SHOPWe Service What We SeII5333 Lake Park NOrmal 7-9860DOrchester 3-7524 assumes one of two forms. A na- were to claim such a vets power,tion may press for disarmament so w°uld all other nations. This, _ , . , . . would make impossible the set-because it fears for its sa ety in qem^nt 0f any dispute betweenthe event of war, or it njay see in nations by legal methods. uch. But, since the Communistshave indicated their unwilling¬ness to accept such a plan at thistime, it is our duty, if we mean 10preserve our own institutions, vo„ .. . . keep our place in the race fordisarmament the key to a bright- In the predictable future the strengther future through a decrease in possibility of any appreciable fan- ‘ Mutual trust has littIe to dointernational tensions. provemen in le economies o ^jg argument. Free men canWe are citizens of the United °the.r countries or in the arriount neyer fee, *erfectly free to tru9tStates and are therefore primar- 0 C1U . *!. ,j ^ , dictators like the leaders of theily concerned with determining P^Pes 1S so. K ‘ Soviet regime. But we can feelwherein lies American self-intbr- on e non exis en • free to trust in our strength. Nov*est. With this in mind, the ma- ff *s apparent that on (he ques- er should we yield to the viewjority of us can subscribe to this don °f disarmament the United that ^y weakening ourselves westatement by Robert A. Taft: States is confronted with two can rctajn the peace. Maybe by“Fundamentally, I believe the equally unsatisfactory alterna- ]yjng down servilely we couldultimate purpose of our foreign fives. If it relinquishes enough keep the peace—by allowing thepolicy must be to protect the lib- sovereignty to make possible a Commuir • i, whose avowed pur-erty of the people of the United world organization capable of ad- pGse it is i j gain control over theStates. . . . Only second to lib- ministering a code of interna- WOrld, to conquer us. But anerty is the maintenance of peace.” fi°nai law> if also invites certain American, Franklin Roosevelt, byNote that the prime emphasis is destruction of the American way name, has already answered thisplaced upon the preservation of the other hand, if the argument: “rather die on our feetour liberty. We now turn to ex- United States is'not willing to ac- than live on our knees.” Or, loamine those general conditions oept foreign domination of its af- put jt another way: “Then con-fhat must be present -before the fairs> ft cannot be expected that quer we must when our cause isUnited States can safely disarm, other countries will. just, And this be our motto, InWe in the United States must Thus- effective international God is our Trust." The world willbe assured that disarmament disarmament at this time has as be safe for disarmament whenwould endanger neither our indi- consequence the loss by the all free men are convmced that novidual human rights nor our ma- American people of all Ihose qual- other men will insanely attemptcouM beWo“Sed™her by gS the essence of the United States, ultimately sane it will only beJ ° TTVw* 4-hic \\rr% mnct WnPtl Pill PI TP IFPP tiltlt t IPities and institutions which are conquest. Since only freedom islTvnOie?enoEfrworW,reg!|slatU>n0Vaef- “ny serious consideration of world will be safe from aggros-any piece of world legislation a Ara,,rit.an djsarmam0nl as being sion. The price of freedom isinimical to our welfare. eternal vigilance.Don Steele Horry FisherExecutive Booid UC President, University ofYoung Republicans Club Chicago Young RepublicansFor this reason we must oppose when all men are free that thefecting this country, or by creat¬ing those conditions elsewhere inthe world that would guaranteethat no other nation would havecause lo envy America’s advanced*iinmiiiiiitiiiiiiiiifminify —■ —— 1 11,1 N 1 1 mPage 12 THE CHICAGO MAROON December 14, 1951Chapel choir excels Rich collection of documentsSunday afternoon and Monday evening, the UC Choir, solo¬ists and some members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra,all under the direction of Richard Vikstrom, performed Han¬del’s Messiah at Rockefeller Chapel. An overflow audiencewas in attendance.The music heard Monday night achieved a truly magnificenteffect. The choir and orches- of Negro people now availablewere well integrated and con¬trolled, and in such chorusesas “And the glory of the Lordshall be revealed” were able to un- their text with admirable enun¬ciation, e.g. “the people thatwalked in darkness.” We found • “A Jim Crow society breeds and needs a Jim Crow historiography,” writes Herbert Ap-theker in his introduction to this rich collection of documents covering three centuries ofNegro suffering and struggle in America.The proof of his contention is the fact that the appearance of the book is in itself almosta revolution. For in it is collected the irrefutable evidence that almost everything taughtabout the role of the Negro in the building of our nation is either outright falsehood ornearly so.fold the dignity inherent in Han¬del’s music. Foldi's singing particularly sen¬sitive.Some of the fugal passages wewould have prefered taken at afaster tempo, e.g. the AmenChorus, but this was a very minorconsideration when one considersthe clarity and crispness of thechoir’s treatment of music ordi¬narily muddled and confused bymassive choirs.The orchestra played with me¬ticulousness and restraint, thiswithout assuming an academicstyle. Especially noteworthy wasthe brilliant and incisive interpre¬tation of the trumpet solo in theair "The trumpet shall sound”—the finest playing of its sort we’veheard. The score used in these per¬formances was (according to theprogram notes) “intended to ap¬proximate the practices of Han¬del’s time in so far as reconstruc¬tion is possible in the light of con¬temporary knowledge.” Thus, forinstance, the use of a small chorusand chamber orchestra. The re¬sults attained were not only mu-sicologically satisfying, but in¬deed an artistic triumph for theperformers and for this peren¬nial Christmas music of Handel. Aptheker’s 450 documents, half deal with the first great peak of Negro Underground Agents, 1859-million words, almost 1,000 pages, the activity of the Negro people 60 ; The Oberlin - Wellingtonculled from eight times that struggling for freedom, most (Ohio) Rescue Case, 1858-59”;amount of material studied, deals strikingly clash with the outlook an<* "A Negn> Participant Tellsin the flesh-blood-and-bone reality which readers will bring to the °* J°hn Brown’s Raid, 1859.”of slave revolts, petitions for and work. The Civil War section is height-purchases of freedom, demands jt takes 370 pages to cover ened by the striking “Men offor education. This rather than Negro participation in the aboli- Color, To Arms!” appeal whichthe pompous apologist platitudes tionist movement alone, with followed Lincoln’s Emancipationwhich fill the 1 revisionist his- such un-passive entries as “A Proclamation,tories. Public Discussion of Insurrection, Eight pages of documents dealThe sections on the abolitionist 1858”; "A Call to Rebellion, 1849”; with the Negro in Congress dur-period, tjie Civil War and the Re- “Negroes Deal with a Betrayer, ing Reconstruction, somethingconstruction years, in that they 1858”; “Letters from Southern Mc "History,” po9t. 3Bach’s St. Matthew Passion willbe performed by the UC Choirnext Palm Sunday, April 2, 1952.Henry Clinton Maguire Jr. HOW MANY TIMES A DAYThe interpretations of thesoloists, Barbara Russell, con¬tralto; Anita Brand, soprano;Carl Honzak, tenor; and An¬drew Foldi, bass, were general¬ly expansive and carefully con¬ceived. The singers intoned TERESA DOLANDANCING SCHOOL1208 E. 63rd(Neor Woodlown Ave.)American Conservatoryof Music Announces foil openingPrivote and class lessonsSouth Side Branch1133 E. 63rd St.Piano, Voice. Violin and WindInstrumentsClasses day or eveningMU 4-9564 Start AnytimeimmiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiimiiiHiimiiiimiimminmiiiMi Phone MU 4-9505Wanted—young man to teachballroom dancing eveningsSave Up to60% on Lp*§by buying specially priced Remington'sRLP 199-25—Bach—French Suite No. 5Partita No. IRLP 199-58 60—Verdi—RigolettoRLP 199-29—Beethoven—Sonatas Op. 109 &Op. HORLP 149-23—Mozart—Symphony No. 40 INHAL50? < K)0? < 200?IF YOU’RE AN AVERA6E SMOKERTHE RI6HT ANSWER IS OVER 200!Acir and Improved Surfaces!LOWE’S RADIO1233 EAST 55th STREETiStdrY fThere’ll be no bottles for dates when you goplaces in Judy Bonds! These "designed-to-make-history”blouses come through with flying colors every time*(kA; blousesAT BETTER STORES EVERYWHERGSee them at MARSHALL FIELD ' A‘i lJudy Bond, Inc., 13/5 braaaway, Now York It, N. Y. S* '** ■ : Yes, 200 times every dayyour nose and throat areexposed to irritation • •.200 GOOD REASONS WHYYOU'RE BETTER OFF SMOKINGPhilipPROVED definitely milder . . . PROVEDdefinitely less irritating than any otherleading brand . , . PROVED by outstandingnose and throat specialists.EXTRA! ATTENTION ALL COLLEGE STUDENTSEvery Tuesday Evening over NBCTHE PHILIP MORRIS PLAYHOUSEPresents an Outstanding College StudentFeatured with Famous Hollywood Starsin the PHILIP MORRIS Intercollegiate Acting Competitionsi CALLHi FOR PHILIP MORRIS%December 14, 1951 THE CH ICAGO MAROON Page 13■recordingsRecent releases now availableRemington Records, whose attractive prices were often not enough to warrant their noisysurfaces, have shown a marked improvement in their latest releases. The most notable ofthese is a recording by the Austrian Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Kurt Woss, of Mo¬zart’s Sinfonia Concertante in E flat for oboe, clarinet, bassoon, horn and orchestra, KAnhalt 9 (RLP 199-54). Remington doesn’t tell us who the soloists are (perhaps for the samereason that they probably would not name the members of the Austrian Symphony Orches¬tra if asked).The work is performed withgreat clarity, especially in thebalance between wind quartet andorchestra. The recording is atleast satisfactory, and the sur¬faces are nearly inaudible. On thereverse side is a repressing ofMozart’s Thamos - Koenig inAegypten, K345, played by the m conductor as competent asGeorge Singer again impressesus with the amazing rate atwhich fine musicians are turn¬ing up in Vienna. The record¬ing, again, is more than satis¬factory. pages on end, of figures thatstruck the composer's fancy.Perhaps only because of the un¬reasonableness of the task heset himself, Badura-Skoda failsto make the Sonata in^ - ting.Objections must be ...used tothe pianist’s extremes of tempoin the popular Camaval. Further,The Vienna Konzerthaus QuarAustrian Symphony Orchestra ,ias recorded for Westminster the work calls for a greater un-under the diretion of Felix Beethovens Fifteenth Quartet, in leashing than Badura-Skoda per-Cuenther. A Minor (WL5104). Their per- mits himself.formance compares favorably Westminster has released 12with the Paganini Quartet’s re- Harpsichord Sonatas by Domen-cording of the same work for Vic- ico Scarlatti, played by Fernandotor, released several weeks ago. Valenti, protege of Ralph Kirck-Both conceptions of the Quartet patrick (WL 5106). This record-are very much alike, with the dif- jng presents both the finest re¬ference that Vienna Konzerthaus, production of the harpsichord toas always, plays more impetuous- date, and one of the finest per-ly. Westminster’s recording has formanees yet heard, on record orgreater depth than does Victor’s, off, of Scarlatti’s works. It is alsoWestminster’s usually remark- to be appreciated for its presenta-able young pianist, Paul Badura- tion some of the many Sonatas asSkoda, has recorded not so re- yet rarely heard,markable performances of Schu- Valenti has chosen some of the§ mann’s Sonata No. 1 in F sharp most pyrotechnical of the son-| minor, opus 11, and Schumann’s atas, displaying to great advan-| Carnaval, opus 9 (WL5705). The tage both his own technique andI Sonata, except for a very expres- the power of the instrument. The| sive introduction, is rather dull, total effect is exciting.Another Remington releaselias the Austrian Symphonyconducted by George Singerplaying Beethoven’s FourthSymphony (RLP 199-51). The or¬chestra plays with a crispnessrarely heard in performancesof this work. The first move¬ment is especially exciting. Thestrings are remarkably precise,and the woodwinds are given anovel, though welcome promin-ance. The sudden appearance of\ Best Films of EuropeEvery Fri. fir Sot. eveningpresented byFilm Forum■ 3People's Auditorium2157 W. ChicagoFri., Dec. 14, 8:00 p.m.Progressive Party Hall =306 E. 43rd St.Sot., Dec. 15, 8:00 p.mv ="FAME IS THE SPUR" I(English Film)"THE OPPENHEIMFAMILY" I<U.S.S.R.) |’/III III ill 111111111111111111111111111111111111)1111111 III III III III" Throughout most of the workSchumann fell victim to thenineteenth century’s addictionto superfluous repititions, forThe wockieit crime itoryof the year—poking impiouifun at the Bonk of England.the"tL HKC CUtHHtlSITMU.it N0U»*»T 4.,At (,.30. 8.15. IcToSHAMILTON THEATERhome of prestige entertainment2150 E. 71st St. HY 3-9491Exclusive RunSONG OF BEKNAIIETTEWeek of Dec. 14-20Charles Dickens' Immortal StoryA C HRISTMAS CAROLWeek of Dec. 21-27special discount rotes for students — present I.D. cords to coshierVttvv yr ■yr-wwwwwwyr'ww'-vw vttw tv v tv vvv vv wwwww vv t w w Such has often been the easesince the advent of long playrecords.Leo TreitlerHistory . . .(from page 12)covered with casual reference, ifany, to what a shame it all was,in standard works.The book winds up with the be¬ginnings of the still widening anddeepening fight of the Negro peo¬ple for full citizenship coveredin a section titled “The Develop¬ing Negro Liberation Movement,”1901-1910. Here we find the for¬mulations of the Niagra Move¬ment and the early NAACP, withmuch of the leadership comingfrom the sociologist-historian-novelist William E. BurghardtDuBois.It is DuBois himself, in a shortpreface, who best conveys themeaning of this work: UT mixes brilliancewith mediocre actingThe University Theatre production of Shakespeare’s Meas¬ure for Measure last weekend can only be described in termsof contradiction; competence and even brilliance closely juxta¬posed with downright amateurishness in the worst sense ofthe word.It is a hard play to do. The editors of the First Folio pub-lished it with the comedies and —there are enough marriages appropriately hard clarity andat the end to satisfy even the showed her understanding of theJohnston office but the unre- metric demands of spoken blanksolved tragic implications are like- verse.ly to disturb the audiences at any jerry Cunliffe as Claudio failedproduction The central problem, , lve his characler definition;whether the virginity of a girl is . 'worth her brother’s life is evaded a *ac^ of strength in the famousby Ihe introduction of Mariana prison scene with Isabella render-and the same hidden ball trick ing ludicrous what a modern audi-used in All’s Well That Ends Well.The director, George Blair,followed Elizabethan practiceby producing an extensively cutversion. Pompey, Abliorson,Barnadine, et al, were elimin¬ated in the interest of exclusiveconcentration on plot line. Di¬gression is one of the charmsof Shakespeare and it is ques¬tionable whether this play inparticular can survive a cut ofthis type. The admirable per¬formances of Alex Hassilev andNancy Mikolic as Lucio andMistress Overdone made onewish for more bawdry.Shakespeare’s Duke is not muchmore than a deus ex machina andFred Wranovix’ struggle with the Elizabethan drama.' It' carriedpart was handicapped by a tend- with it, however, the attendantency to swallow the end of his danger of a lack of movement dif-lines and by a stylized hand ges- ficuit to overcome in an amateurture which he brought into play production. Perhaps other faultswith every speech. Gene Halboth wjn have to be corrected beforeas Angelo was at his best in the this one; the present constitutiongreat Act II soliloquies but failed 0f University Theatre as a com-to match the intensity of Estelle pany should help in improvingLuttrell’s Isabella in their scenes future productions,together. She gave her role an Aoron A$herence already finds difficult toaccept.Jon Jackson's Kscalus was in-lelligent and consistently pro¬jected but especially praise¬worthy is his musical setting of“Take, O take those lips away”which was excellently sung byLois Karhel with lute. JanetGoodman as Mariana dispat di¬ed her small part ably, while therest of the east was outstand¬ingly had, most of them seem¬ingly unaware of the most ele¬mentary notions of how to moveand speak on a stage.The staging, a combination ofrealistic costumes with sketchyscenery, is most suitable for“We have the record of kingsand gentlemen ad nauseum and instupid detail; but of the commonrun of human beings, and particu¬larly of the half or wholly sub¬merged working group, the worldhas saved all too little of authen¬tic record and tried to forget orignore even the little saved. Withregard to Negroes in America, inaddition to the common neglectof a society patterned on assumedaristocracy, came also the at¬tempt, conscious or unconscious,to obscure the shame of slaveryby stressing natural inferiority which would render it impossiblefor Negroes to make, much lessleave, any record of revolt orstruggle, any human reaction toutter degradation.“Many of us for years haveknown of the existence of wideliterature which contradicted suchassumptions and efforts. I hastento greet the day of the appear¬ance of this volume, as a mile¬stone on the road to Truth.”This book will soon be availableat the bookstore. It certainly de¬serves as wide attention as Myr-dal received. URoy Wolins1169 Eost 55th Street 24-Hour Service PLozo 2-3246University GarageTHORNTON ROGERSExpert Service on All Cors• COMPLETE WINTERIZATION• WASHING - GREASING• BRAKE SERVICE• ROAD SERVICENSA Student Discount on Ports, Gos and OilEconomical Air TravelSafe, Dependable Air CoachListed Below are Representative FaresOne Way Round TripNew York $24.00 $ 45.60Washington 24.00 45.60Miami 43.74 87.48Los Angeles 140.00TIC1311 E. (Plus Tax)5% Discount — Students, Faculty, StaffTo ALL Important Cities — Coast to Coast“DAILY SCHEDULED FLIGHTS”0Reservations atVARSITYI4,MU 4-1677 <►57th St. Woodworth's BookstoreFree Ticket Delivery RECORDS for CHRISTMAS from''•Disc1367 EAST 57th STREETThey Make WONDERFUL GIFTSStretch Your Budget?Mozart Operas—Beecham's "Magic Flute" or the Glyndeboume "DonGiovanni" (3 records)Handel's Messiah by Beecham or Bach's Christmas Oratorio (4 records)Bach Mass in B Minor by Robert Shaw or Herman Scherchen (3 records)Is One Record Enough?Beethoven's Great Fugue by the Vienna Chamber Orchestra or by the PascalCuartet (with Beethoven Quartet No. 16)Bartok's Violin Concerto by Peter Varga with the Berlin PhilharmonicMozart's Sinfonia Concertante for violin £r viola conducted by Felix ProhaskaPoulenc's Mass & Britten's Ceremony of Carols by the Robert Shaw ChoraleMoussorgsky's Songs Cr Dances of Death Gr Ravel's Scheherezade by JennieTourelEconomy Minded?Then investigate the new Remingtons at $2.19Beethoven's 4th Symphony, Mozart's Sinfonia Concertante for Woodwinds andStrings, Haydn's Symphony 104 and Mozart's Symphony 28, Beethoven'sPiano Sonatas 1C9 and 1 10 played by Jorg Demus, and Haydn's Symphony101 played by Fritz BuschThere is also a world of Folk Music and Jazz Classics to choose from.And if ifoil are still in doubt, you can give one of our new GIFTCERTIFICATES and be sure that they yet the record they mostwant.HKk z Page 14 —'. ■ ■ . ;• - ■ ■ ■■., ■ • •■. -THE CHICAGO MAROON December 14, 1951Cagers lose to Concordia;drop 21st straight, 67-47JVs win twoThe UC varsity basketball team ran its losing streak to21 straight last Wednesday, losing to Concordia College 67to 47 in a game marked by three Maroons fouling out anda total of 25 fouls chalked up to our side.Although the varsity has been practising several new plays,they did not use them until the late stages of the game, whenthe seven quick points thatthey got had no influence onthe final outcome. Even so,forward Jack Karush, winner ofa major “C” last year and the Coach Joe Stampf’s JV cagersonly returning letterman, paced opened their season successfullythe team with 18 points before he with a pair of lopsided wins overfouled out Concordia high point , j hi h school t trounc.man was Harry Preston with 16 . ,’ ing Wescott High, 55-29, lastDespite the poor showing that week> and smashing St. Gregorythe Maroon cagers have made in High, 51-27, on Tuesday. The JV’s,their first two games, the team loser in only one game last year,shows promise of a better record battle Calumet High this after-this year. noon at 3:15 in Bartlett Gym.Up serve a cup with t‘ach pot of coffeeCOLLEGE BOWL1425 East 60th StreetSandwiches - Plate LunchesFountain SpecialtiesORDERS TO GO — BU 8-92768 A.M. to 12 P.M. Every DayWe Specialize inFINGER TAME PARAKEETSComplete Line of Dog and CatAccessoriesHYDE PARK PET SHOP1370 E. 55th MU. 4-4428 Submaroonssplash llliniIn their first dual meet againstIllinois, the varsity swimmingteam added another victory totheir string by a score of 50-34.What appeared to be encouragingis that the win was scored byteamwork rather than by individ¬ual standouts.One thing the team lacked, how¬ever, was school support. In factthis lack was so noticeable thatseveral varsity members proposedto put on street clothes and makelike spectators. Today at 4 inBartlett, the varsity faces Loyola. Varsity hoopsters lose, 66-55Spearheading the nationwide de-emphasis drive, the UCbasketballers dropped a 66-55 decision to the Illinois Profes¬sional Schools last Friday night in the Duncan YMCA. TheMaroons, playing without their leading scorer, Jim Raby, whowas sick, kept within strikingdistance throughout the gamebut were unable to close thegap. Jack Karush led the Chi¬cago scoring by bucketing 29 ceded their first battle of the yearp0intg to Loyola Academy. Bob GiedtTomorrow night at 8 the took second i" ,he 100;>’ar<1 ba*Maroon hoopsters face a tall Coe stroke. Mike Lepowski placed inCollege squad in the Field House, the individual 150-yard medleyThe Kohawks have several six- and took a second ir. the fancyfooters on their team led by their diving match. The JV.; also won6' 5" center, Glenn Peebles. the medley relay.JV swimmers loseLosing by a score of 56 to 19,the JV swimmers Friday con-SAVE UP TO 80%ON NEW BOOKSWe are now receiving semi-weekly shipments of desirable newbooks — publishers' overstocks on selected titles which are beingclosed out at substantial reductions in anticipation of inventory.Fiction - Non-Fiction - Art Books - Children’s BooksCLARK and CLARK1204 East 55th Street Hours — IO AM. to .9 PM.If?7 O CCRETARIALlift OiRVICE1442 E 55thNEW YORK $24.00NEWARK 24.00PHILADELPHIA 24.00WASHINGTON, D.C 24.00CINCINNATI 9.00TAMPA-ST. PETERSBURG 37.00MIAMI 43.74SEATTLE 79.00LOS ANGELES 75.00SAN FRANCISCO 75.00SAN DIEGO 75.00FREE TICKETDELIVERYSAVETIMEMOYEYfhrow Away //NICOTINE# M.E.’s AT DU PONT [3]Plant engineering and production supervisionoffer interesting careers for science graduatesSwitch toMEDICOFILTERPIPES AL 't- 'B«« of10 (Won-100When 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 smoking. Imported Briar.NlW: MEDICO CREST-13.88Madico'i Finotfl kick Iwrgvndy finish.medico v.r.o. — 12.88MEDICO MEOALIST-St.58Wldo vort.tr of ifylo* andWrite S. M. Frank • Co , N. Y.. far Sookl.l 0 .MEDICO CIGARETTE HOLDERS . In the past two issues of the Digestyou’ve read of the broad opportuni¬ties that are offered mechanical en¬gineers in research and developmentwork at Du Pont.This month let’s look at oppor¬tunities for men interested in anyof the branches of plant engineering—such as maintenance,power,designand construction—or in productionsupervision.Efficient maintenance is an impor¬tant cost factor in the continuousprocesses of a modem chemical in¬dustry. The M.E. is called upon todiagnose troubles, work out correc¬tive measures, and supervise repairs.Frequently he increases produc¬tion by developing preventive main¬tenance measures. So vital is thiswork that in one division of the Com¬pany, 500 men of all crafts, alongwith a routine maintenance group,spend almost all their time on it.One example of the problems fac¬ing Du Pont engineers is the main¬ tenance of pumps made to tolerancesof0.0001" and operating at pressuresup to 6000 p.s.i.In power work, also, problems re¬quiring applicationof mechanical en¬gineering principles arise. For in¬stance, a metal required in one chem¬ical process is melted at 800°F. byimmersion heaters fired by butane,which is expensive. Conversion tofuel oil presented the problem ofcomplete combustion in the immer¬sion chamber. Du Pont M.E.’s re¬designed the heaters so combustion F. E. SPELLMAN, JR., B.S.M.E., OhioState ’51, and D. A. Smith, B.S.AI.E., Fur-due '40, discuss a change in feed wheel designof nylon spinning machine.Production supervision attracts manymechanical engineers. Men who havethe ability and interest usually moveinto it by one or two routes: they ac¬quire background on all stages of aplant’s operations by helping designthe plant, or by operating on the job.A AMMAN adjusts louvers for the proper com¬bustion of pulverized coal. Blown into furnacethrough pipes, it burns at 250(FF, OVERHAUL on polythene area injection pump issix-hour job for three men. Work must bescheduled for minimum disruption of output.could be complete and the hot gasesrecycled in water to use all the avail¬able heat.In design and construction ofchemical plants, mechanical engi¬neering again is of major importancebecause of the wide variety of plantsbuilt and intricacy of their equip¬ment. Engineers collect basic data,design and select equipment. Theyalso supervise many steps of con¬struction until the plant is operating. MAINTENANCE TEAM making a speedy change ofa methanol valve to minimize production loss.Sometimes students of mechanical en¬gineering feel that in a chemical com¬pany they will be overshadowed bychemical personnel. This is not the caseat Du Pont. Here, hundreds of adminis¬trators and supervisors, up to the rankof vice-president, started as M.E.’s.Opportunities for men and women wi(h manytypes of training are described in the 40-pagebrochure "The Du Pent Company and the CollegeGraduate." For your free copy, address 2521 Ne¬mours Bldg., Wilmington, Del.*£«.U.*.PAT.Off-BETTER THINGS FOR BETTER LIVING. . . THROUGH CHEMISTRYEntertaining, Informative —Listen to “Cavalcade otAmerica," Tuesday Nights, NBC Coast to CoastDecember 14, 1951THE CHICAGO MAROONPage 15(fyftuftp cantftcu eventsFriday, Dec. 14BASKETBALL GAME, Bartlett Gymna¬sium, 3:15 p.m. Chicago Junior Varsityvs Calumet High School.SWIMMING MEET, Bartlett Gymna-slum, 4 p m. Chicago vs. Loyola Uni¬versity.KKMINAR: division of biologicalAND MEDICAL RESEARCH, AR-C.ONNE NATIONAL LABORATORY,Conference Room, Site B, 6111 Uni¬versity, 4 p.m. “Some Recent Ad¬vances in Experimental Surgery.” Dr.Harold Laufman, director of experi¬mental surgery and assistant profes¬sor of surgery, Northwestern Univer¬sity.PUBLIC LECTURE SERIES ON THEWESTERN TRADITION. ITS GREATIDEAS AND ISSUES (University Col-Clege, Downtown Center). 32 WestRandolph, 7:30 p.m. "Plato’s Meno.”Jacob Klein, Dean of St. John's Col¬lege, Annapolis.THE ANIMAL KINGDOM, by PhilipBarry (Greek Symposium), Interna¬tional House, 8 p.m. Performance bythe Actors Company Players of Chi¬cago. (The play will be repeated Sat¬urday at 8:30 p.m., and Sunday at8 p.m.)UNIVERSITY CONCERT, Leon MandelAssembly Hall, 8:30 p.m. Maria Kur-enko, soprano. The program: Mous-sorgsky. Without Sun (completecycle); Stravinsky, Eight Songs; Pro¬kofiev, Song Cycle to the Poetry ofAnna Achmatoxa; and Moussorgsky,At the Nursery (complete cycle).FRIDAY FROLIC, International House,9-12 p.m.THE POLITICS CLUB PRESENTS'WallyNelson, “The Social Content of thePuerto Rican National IndependenceMovements,” Fauquher’s, 1157 E. 61st,8 p m.LARGE DISCOUNTSDan’s University Radio Shack is giv¬ing large discounts on all radios,phonographs and electrical appli¬ances to students bearing N. S. A.or student identification cards. 1126East 55th Street, % block west ofUniversity Ave. Saturday, Dec. 15BASKETBALL GAME, Field House, 8p.m. Chicago vs. Coe College.THE ANIMAL KINGDOM, by PhilipBarry (Greek Symposium), Interna¬tional House, 8:30 p.m. Performanceby the Actors Company Players ofChicago. (The play will be repeatedSunday at 8 p.m.)DANCES OF INDIA, performed by Vashiand Veena (India Students Associa¬tion), Leon Mandel Assembly Hall,8:30 p.m. (Tickets are available at theReynolds Club and at InternationalHouse.)Sunday, Dec. 16EPISCOPAL COMMUNION SERVICE,Bond Chapel, 8:30 a.m.LUTHERAN SERVICE, Hilton Chapel,10 a.m.CONVOCATION PRAYER SERVICE ANDSERMON, Rockefeller Chapel, 11 a.m.The Reverend Wilhelm Pauck, Feder¬ated Theological Faculty. (January 6,1952, the Reverend John B. Thomp¬son, Dean of the Chapel.)RADIO BROADCAST, University of Chi¬cago Round Table, WMAQ and NBC,12:30-1 p.m. “What Future for Japan’sEconomy?” Transcribed from Tokyo.Hiroshi Nasu, professor of agricultur¬al economics, University of Tokyo:Ryokichl Minobe, professor of eco¬nomics, Hltotsubashi University; Hl-saakira Kano, Adviser, National CityBank of New York; and Robert A.Horn, assistant professor of politicalsciecne, University of Chicago. Fromthe University of Chicago: TheodoreW. Schultz, professor and chairmanof the department of economics; EarlH. Pritchard, assistant professor offar eastern history and Institutions;and Norton S. Ginsburg, geography.CARILLON RECITAL, RockefellerChapel, 4 p.m. Frederick Marriott,carillonneur.VIENNESE WALTZING, InternationalHouse assembly room, '8-10 p.m.CONCERT OF CHRISTMAS CAROLS(University Glee Club), First Uni¬tarian Church, 57th Street and Wood-lawn, 8:15 p.m.Tuesday, Dec. 18MEETING OF THE COUNCIL OF THE UNIVERSITY SENATE, Swift 106,3:30 p.m.CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SERVICE, HiltonChapel, 4:30 p.m.FOLK DANCING, International House,8-10 p.m.Wednesday, Dec. 19CARILLON RECITAL, RockefellerChapel, 4:30 p.m. Mr. Marriott.Thursday, Dec. 20THE ARTISTS COUNCIL presents“Christmas in Paree” Party, SigmaFraternity House, 4941 South Park¬way, from 9 p.m. until . . . Music—Richard Crawley Combo. Dancing,games, surprises.Classified AdsWANTEDMAROON NEEDS copies of issues ofOctober 20, 1950 and June 1950. ReynoldsClub 201.WANTED: END OF WAR l Seven millioncasualties in Korea already. See yourcongressman now. Call for cease fireby Christmas. For full details of cas¬ualties phone WA 5-1951.COFFEE TASTERS to taste coffee atthe SU Coffee Hour today at 3:30 in theSU office.TOYS AND gifts for the kids at theSettlement House. To be replaced underthe Ida Noyes Christmas tree.FOR SALE1940 PLYMOUTH for sale—new battery,$225 or best offer. Call HY 3-6194 after6 p.m.FOR SALE: Apartment size Frigidaire,$45. MU 4-4655. CRawford, 919>/2 E. 60th.FEDERAL 4x5 ENLARGER with lens.Perfect condition: seldom vised. Boughtin June of this year for $116.50. Willsacrifice for $75 or best offer. Riverside7-1502.BRAND NEW Marshall Field coat, 16-18, very much reduced. Phone MI 3-6073. also tuxedo, 36, for $5.AUTOMATIC POP-UP toaster, electric¬ally perfect, needs slight mechanical ad¬justment; also man’s lightweight bike,good condition, cheap. Call HY 3-4794after 5:30 p.m. MEN’S AND ladies’ Humber Englishbicycles. Both in excellent shape. Millergenerator lights, spring, * carriers, sad¬dlebags, 3 speed gears, bell on lady’sbike. Must sell at once. Best offer buys’em.LOST AND FOUNDLOST: A BLACK, rectangular, plasticpurse, around the Reynolds Club. Iffound call MI 3-7426.BETA GAMMA SIGMA key inscribed“A. E. Bruggemeyer, University of Chi¬cago 1950,” in Haskell, Harper, or cross¬ing the Midway. HY 3-0273.ONE TRANSPARENT PLASTIC raincoatwith "Franklin Jay Pepper” stamped in¬side under collar. Notify Franklin JayPepper, 125 Dodd, B.-J. PL 2-9526 imme¬diately if you have it.RIDESCOUPLE DESIRES ride to Atlanta,Georgia or vicinity during inter-quarterrecess. Share driving and expenses. CallNO 7-7261.BALTIMOREAN STUDENT wants tosb *re ride to Md.-D. C. area. If you leaveD :c. 20th and desire rider please con¬tact by Monday. HY 3-1932 for details.FLORIDA VACATION, inexpensive<amping vacation on Keys, Dec. 22-J an. 4. Two lay students supply equip¬ment, share driving, expenses, needcompanions and car. Call Marv, ST3-2092 evenings.HOUSINGLARGE ROOM to rent for couple orsingle. Kitchen privileges. Very reason¬able rent. Grand piano. Block fromcampus. MI 3-2956 or MU 4-9398, 850 E.57th, Rose Liph.WANTED—YOUNG WOMAN to share at¬tractive four-room apartment near I. C.transportation. VI 6-6352.ROOM TO RENT. Quiet: space; kitchen.Call MU 4-3256, evenings.LIVE IN A CO-OP! Immediate housingfor men and women in a co-operativeeconomical, sociable atmosphere. Whit¬man CO-OP, 5721 Kenwood Ave. MU4-9268.IMMEDIATE HOUSING available atCO-OP for men or women. Economical$23 per month) and idealistic. 5536 S.Ingleside. FURNISHED APARTMENT foryoung man to share. MI 3-3807.ROOM: PRIVATE BATH, faculty home.Available Jan. 1. $35. DO 3-4473.RETIRED WOMAN lawyer wants one ortwo people to share five room apart¬ment. Call AB 4-2677.LARGE ROOM with kitchen privileges,block from campus. Newly decoratedand furnished. Two windows and twoclosets. $10 week. Call PL 2-8756 after¬noons or evenings.BUSINESS SERVICESWILL BABY SIT morning, afternoon, orevenings. Call early in the morning. HY3-8460.SANTA’S LIST! Santa can call only Ifyou phone Ext. 2536 or MI 3-6073. Yourgifts delivered for $2.50. This Santa hashad kindergarten teaching experience!SEWING. ALTERATIONS, bachelor’s re¬pairs. Call for appointment, MU 4-4680.Edna Warinner, 5625 S. Dorchester.FOR LOWEST service policy rates tokeep your television set in perfect work¬ing condition call H. & H. TelevisionService, NA 2-3377.RADIO OUT OF whack? Hum? Squeal?Scream? Buzz? Take It to Dan’s Unlver-city Radio Shack, 1126 E. 55th.DO YOU need a replacement for yourjob (part or full time) during theChristmas Holidays? Phone BU 8-6931.EXPRESS, LIGHT and heavy moving,Willing and courteous service. Reason¬able rates. Bordone, VI 6-9832 and MI3-1198.MISCELLANEOUSPERSONAL. MARTHA, come home. Allis forgiven. Your beaver stole is athome.THE ARTISTS COUNCIL presents"Christmas in Paree” Party; Thursdayevening, December 20th, 1951, from 9p.m. until . . . Sigma Fraternity House,4941 South Parkway. Music — RichardCrawley Combo. Dancing, games, sur¬prises.JOB OPPORTUNITIESDRIVE SMALL truck, 17-23, nites; $160per hour; must be competant drivers.BU 8-1511.tetfield M o<MQJLXbO/yy!. MANAGERSIGNEDMILDNESSNO UNPLEASANTAFTER-TASTE* \ L/GGCTT♦ FROM THt RtFORT Of A WEll-KNOWN RESfARCH ORGANIZATIONAND ONLY CHESTERFIELD HAS ITCopyright )?51, be«n K V;«»» &10 - ;• -■■ ■ ■ *'. V ■** ' THE CHICAGO MAROON 'December 14, 1951Store Hour*. ©:15 to 5;45lamous romancesthat wentall for the wantaff a giftfrom Field’s!Lohengrin and Elsa got along justline (or a spell alter their swanhywedding, but soon foul playintervened. Elsa asked her husbandone question too many and inone quick opera-tion, Lohengringot the bird and swan-ed away.Actually, it was all Elsa's faultanyway. She should have knownit takes more than soft soap tokeep a husband from floating awayand should have held him spell¬bound with a gift from Field's!morals no swain s song ever turns swan song with a gift from j—ieU s