Louis Wirth, UC's famed I Investigators Applications wantedsociologist, dies .suddenly I may be here for SQ exchangersby Ralph D. FertigThe campus, the community, and the world of students andscholars mourn the passing of Dr. Louis Wirth, University ofChicago Sociologist. After addressing a conference on Com¬munity Relations in Buffalo on Saturday evening, May 3, Dr.Wirth died of a heart attack.Born in Gemunden, Germany, on August 27, 1897, Dr.Wirth came to the United — :—States in 1911 and shortly ®oard (19J5'43_> and asfvlovnnftpr hppan a raiwr nf reglonal chairman for Region 4theieafter Degan a caieer ot (1942-43). in 1944, Professormore than three decades at the wirth was appointed director ofUniversity of Chicago. Upon re- pianning ior the Illinois post-Wareeivmg his Ph. B. from UC in planning Commission. Many of1919 he became director of the publications were written ondelinquent boys division of the this approach, as The Ghetto, Ourbureau of personal services in Cities: Their Role in the NationalChicago. Three years later he re- Economy, Urban Government,turned to the UC for his M.A. urban Planning and Land Poll-(2o) and Ph.D. (26 . He co-au- c|es> an(i Contemporary SocialProblems. His Chicago Commu¬nity Fact Book became an indis¬pensable periodic chart to localstudents of society.As organizer, Wirth brought to¬gether the masses of data and thecountless and oft - duplicatingagencies, authorities, and effortsin race relations and in planning.Thus he became president of theAmerican Council on Race Rela¬tions, and later, director of theprogram of education, training,i*('4 an(i research in Race Relations ofthe University of Chicago. Heserved as President of the Societyfor Social Research in 1932 and’37, of the American SociologicalSociety in 1947, and of the Inter¬national Sociological Associationsince 1949. He has served as as¬sociate editor to the AmericanJournal of Sociology since 1931,edited 1126: A Decade of SocialScience Research, and many otherthored The City (with E. R. Park articles in various journals,and others) and distinguished by Hj>a keen analytical mind and sharp __ , , . ,wit, was appointed instructor in He Procured sponsorship tor in-Sociology in 1926; by 1910 Dr. numerable research projects ot aWirth was a lull prolessor and iundamental nature. He coun-Horn then until 1946 was also as- selled social scientists policy mak-sociale dean ot the Social Science frs’, a"dh administrators at allDivision levels. Thus he wielded far-reach-Combines' reason with realism ^ influence to bring social prac-In Wirth one found a combina- *lc.e lnto *me W1th the best socialtion of the profound thinker, the science knowledge available,uncompromising crusader, and He was a vigorous champion ofthe realistic organizer of men, human dignity. He worked dili-minds, and resources. As the De- gently for the achievement of apartment’s “Theory Man,” Wirth clearer understanding of humanintroduced the Sociology of society. In these endeavors no re-Knowledge — or of Intellectual quest was too distant, no need tooActivity—to America. He edited humble for Louis Wirth. Heand aided in the translation of would cross the continent for aKarl Mannheim’s Ideology and week-end or the sea for a week.Utopia. To know him was to be challengedHe welded theories to reality in to use one’s knowledge for theendless projects and committees realization of social justice. Hison Planning. He served as con- passing leaves the fulfillment ofsultant to the National Resources this task to us. The House Un-American Activi¬ties committee does #^an hearingsin Chicago according to commit¬tee chairman Wood in a ph | leconversation with the MAROONMonday.Asked whether the committeewould investigate activities at theUC, Wood declined comment, stat¬ing: “We will investigate andseek to expose subversive activi¬ties, including communism, wher¬ever we may find them." Hebranded as “unauthorized” aTribune story, which said that thecommittee would be at UC.Although hearing dates havenot been definitely set, they areexpected to take place in June.The committee recently con¬cluded a series of hearings inDetroit. Student Government announced this week that it is askingsfor applicants to go to the universities of Calcutta, Frankfurt*and Zagreb (Yugoslavia) next year as exchange students*Three students will be exchanged with Calcutta, and one eachwith Frankfurt and Zagreb provided room and board ar#rangements can be made both here and abroad.The a d m i n i s t r ation has ; —granted five free tuitions for”, r . . , , , UC students who wish to pap*the foreign students and Student Government has been at¬tempting to provide the room andboard. Various organizations havepledged sufficient room, but sofar board arrangements have beenmade for only two students. Thisleaves three without food unless ticipate in the exchange must nothave received their master’s de¬grees at the time that they wouldbegin work at the foreign uni*versity.SG give* JapeComplete information on appK*cations may be obtained at the> tSG can raise $1200 in contribu- SG office, 302 Reynolds, ext. 1067,tions.Mart pay own transportationOn the other end, Frankfurtcan probably provide one of ourstudents with free tuition, room,and board, but UCers will have on the university phone.A board consisting of three stu¬dents, three faculty members, andDean of Students Robert M. Stroz*ier will select the students to g®abroad.University of Chicago, May 9, 1952 31Louis Wirth Frat men run wild on campus; Comp dates200 raid dorms', besiege policeby Pat Morrow and Georgia PughLast Monday night over two hundred UC fraternity menparticipated in a noisy demonstration of what one termed“real spirit” unlike any seen on this campus since pre-Hutch¬ins days.According to Marc Goff, a member of the Alpha Delta Phifraternity, it began when the Alpha Delts joined with ZetaBeta Tau to serenade thewomen’s dorms. ot^erfraternities soon came uponthe scene and joined the fracas.What began as a group sing police which had just driven up.The group then stirringly demon¬strated their resistance to au¬thority by circling the car in asoon got beyond the control of maneuver commonly known asits leaders and degenerated into “Ring-Around-the-Rosy.”a free-for-all.Dorms prepore for seigeThe call “We want Larry” (re- , , . . . .ferring, apparently, to Chancellor TT*1*? “ ‘e,tl”« some alrKimpton) began echoing around of ,he rlSht lront tire' 1 Wlcampus about an hour later. Re Climb over corSome climbed over the car andoutright front tire. “I wouldsay that so far the demonstration May 31eeptionists^n\l?e*"Ogroup"*wom ls orderly." remarked Sergeant of June 2May 21 Mathematics(Also June 3 t *May 21 Natural Sciences(Biological) ^(Also May 27)May 22 Humanities 3 (All vep*sions)May 23 EnglishMay 24 Humanties 2O.M.P.O.M.P. (Preceptorial)’May 26 Social Sciences 3Social Sciences 3 4 Pre¬ceptorial )May 27 Natural Sciences (Bio*logical) (Also May 2L),May 28 HistoryHistory (Preceptorial)May 29 Natural Sciences (Physfc*cal)Natural Sciences 3PhysicsSocial Sciences 2see Riot, page 3en’s dorms, frightened by the| Jk Wf a -jkLJaiAla sound of marching male feet and tLAlv predicts reoirtn acquitted;sible raid. The group by-passed | | |the Women’s Dorms for the Chan- Q(XT St(XyS CLOSCClcellor’s residence. Two students, Jwho wish to have their names James Wilson, proprietor andwithheld, were assaulted by the co-owner of The Woodlawn Tap atcrowd, which poured beer on 1170 E. 55th street was acquittedthem and their books. on charges of serving minors byWhen elements within the court action last week. Althoughgroup sabotaged Glee Club Lead- Wilson was declared innocent,er Chris Moore’s attempt to or- two of his bartenders were heldganize singing, and it was discov- °n charges of serving liquor to aered that the Kimpton’s were not minor, Donald Wessell, involvedhome, the restless crowd turned in the original charge,its attention to the dorms, yelling, Meanwhile, the tavern remains“Let’s raid the dorms,” “Bring out closed while Wilson and his part-the women,” and “We want sex.” ner, Michael Filz, appeal itsClimbs fire escape status. University of ChicagoSeveral participants boosted an- students may have to wait severalother up the fire escape next to weeks before the 55th Street spotthe University avenue Green Hall is reopened.Entrance. He soon retreated fromof UC sport traditionChancellor Kimpton Tuesday predicted an increase in UC’saihletic activities in the near future; due to an increase inparticipation by members of the student body.Speaking in the Reynolds Club to an assemblage of UCcoaches and athletes, Kimpton admitted that “the athleticshow at the University of Chicago has had a bad time of it,”but prophesied, saying “Werepresent a great athletic tra¬dition . . . and we will get itDecide topic:Race relations back some day.”"Porticipotion” key word“We are,” he said, “going to be¬come the great athletic institutionwe once were in terms of par¬ticipation.”The Chancellor maintained thathe had no specific plans in mindfor increasing the sports program,and said that no one as yet hadapproached him with proposalsfor a football team. Foreign LanguagesLanguage 1June 3 Mathematics (Also MajP21)Mathematics 2Mathematics 111-112-201June 4 Chemistry 105-106-107Physics 105-106-107Biology 201-202-203 fGeology 105-106-107Philosophy 231-232-233June 5 Social Science^, 1Social Sciences 1—Amepican HistoryJune 6 Humanities 1Humanities 1—SpecialArtHumanities 1—SpecialMusic iSlight pauseThe nextwill coma aJune. Hie MAROONfirst week inA Christian Action group piProtestants met at Chice/;o Theo¬logical Seminary (CTS) commonslast Monday evening. The group Footboli oxdecided it should concern itself “If,” however, he said, there iswith social issues which local interest on the part of the studentchurch groups are not able to body in football . . . where it isdeal with effectively. After a uncommercialized . . . with thelong discussion, it was decided consent of Mr. Metcalfe and Mi.that the main topic for research Strozier, I have no objections,and action would be race rela- Continuing the distinction be-tions. tween participation athletics andAn executive committee, con- larger scale sports activities, thesisting of three laymen, three Chancellor reiterated: I have nofaculty members, three ministers, objection to football qua football,and three students, was set up for I would not want to enter the bigone year. Its next meeting will be time game. ’held on the first Monday evening No athletic scholarship*in June. Kimpton was equally emphaticAnother active Christian Action in branding as “fantastic” talk ofcommittee on campus is spon- athletic scholarships. Answeringsored by Westminster Founda- queries on a MAROON articleHon, a Presbyterian group. »ee LAK, page 3 the razzing and protests of thegirls in the rooms next to the fireescape.At this point the crowd dis¬covered a new victim. They sur¬rounded a car filled with campusCrime fightersto meet againA second mass meeting againstcrime in the Hyde Park area isbeing sponsored by the HydePark Community Council forMonday, May 19, at 7:45 p.m., inMandel Hall. Featured at themeeting will be the first reportof the committee of five, whichwas formed at the first massmeeting several months ago. Joan Brennard, next year's MAROON editor in chief, Martin Cronspresent editor and LaVeme Armstrong, managing editor, pose for MAROONphotographer. Brennard was elected editor in the election lost Friday,defeating two other nominees, Barbara Kaplan and Helen Panaretos. j9Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 9, 1952Hy ;<L *•h 'IInIf Billiardist demonstrateClarence E. Anderson, worldchampion trick shot pocket billiard—ist, will present an exhibition inthe billiard room on the secondfloor of the Reynolds Club on May12 at 2 p.m. There is no chargefor the exhibition.Graduate charges pressureon Law Review decisionby Arthur BrownThe Board of Editors of the University of Chicago LawReview, quarterly publication of the UC Law School, was March, 1952, issue of the Univer-charged today with refusing to publish an article solely be- sity of Chicago Law Review ifcause it represented an unpopular opinion and therefore would tbe faculty members, and par-result in adverse publicity for the Law School. Undue faculty ticu’^r,ly Mr' Levi’ had not inter‘interference with the student-run Board of Editors was also 'rhartrpd T pci HptvpI FHitnr- Ed,,Cf «"*wer* chor9e*in ~JLf nf tho t our’pmrioHr by two otber members of the law When informed of these charg-jn-chief of the Law Review, faculty # # # who suggested that es, Editor Herzel replied: “Wedenied both Chaiges. such an article would be analog- rejected Anastoplo’s article forThe allegations were made by 0us to‘contempt of court’conduct two reasons only; first, the qual-George Anastaplo, a graduate of sjnce jt would constitute an inter- ity was not up to our standards;the Law School, in a letter to ference with judicial processes, second, Anastoplo is a litigant andHerzel in reference to Anastaplo’s “(There was not) presented by we make it a practice never toarticle “Philosophy, Heresy, and these professors any evidence in publish an article by a litigant.’’the Illinois Bar. ’ The article is support of their assumption that (Webster: litigant—one who isbased on his experiences before any legal processes, judicial or engaged in a law suit.)the Committee on Character and otherwise, were then in progress. Herzel added that is was not atFitness of the Illinois Bar Asso- “After having been advised by ah unusual for members of theciation, after which appearances, these three faculty members, the Law School faculty to advise thehe was denied admission to the four-man Board decided to recon- Board of Editors in matters per-Illinois Bar. The letter stated in sider its position. Thereupon they taining to the Law Review.Pa^t: - ' voted to reject the article and Anastaplo declared unfit“The Board of Editors consid- sent out a notification to that Anastaplo graduated high in hisered the manuscript (“Philosophy, effect. Law School class but has neverHeresy, and the Illinois Bar”) and |nci-jent un;que been allowed to practice law be-voted, after discussing it, to print “This is the first time since the cause the Committee on Charac-the article in the March, 1952, present editors have been con- ter and Fitness of the Illinois Barissue of the Law Re\iew. nected with the Law Review that Association decided that “you“The^formal letter of accent (a) faculty members hav® in* have failed to Prove that you P°s'o ai ieu% oi accept tervened in this manner or at this sess such qualifications as towhen thl *sta8e in an attempt to influence Character and general fitness asen Dean Edward Levi of the the decisions of the all-student in the opinion of the CommitteeUC Law School, after having ~ „ .* ..b Board of Editors;learned for the first time of thearticle and of the decision of the would justify^ your admission to(b) a decision of the Board of the bar of Illinois.” (Letter fromEditors has been reversed after the Committee to Anastaplo.)members oTthe Board s^ngly aS Board tad once voted to ac While the Committee on Char-in „rnnne on/i Aic cept an article. acter and Fitness never specified“The article would have, in all the reasons for its decision, it isprobability, been published in the see Low, page 4in groups and proceeded to discuss with them the advisabilityand wisdom of such publication.“Mr. Levi relied principally ontwo arguments to support his con¬tention that the article should notbe printed:<a) that this would result in anadverse reflection upon the LawSchool that would be most un¬fortunate and undesirable; in thisconnection he stressed the re¬sponsibility of the editors andpredicted that his ability to coun¬teract the unfavorable reactionthat would follow publicationwould be limited in its effective¬ness;<b) that the local argumentspresented in the article were ob¬viously ill-founded.Levi supported“Mr. Levi was later supported Graduates! For your convenience gowns areavailable for your portrait by—Me Miium PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETAuT*tS°cv; YOU6or.., •ahdTHENSOMEJLocal andLong Distance MovingStorage Facilities for Books,Record Cabinets, Trunks, orCarloads of FurniturePeterson FireproofWarehouse, Inc.1011 East Fifty-fifth StreetBUtterfield 8-6711DAVID L. SUTTON. President THESE STAMINA-TESTED SPAEDLNG-AYAJDE TENNIS BALLS HAVE TOPRATING IN CHAMPIONSHIP TENNIS.ISRAEL1952SUMMER INSTITUTEof the Jewish Agencyfor PalestineJuly 8 - August 25TRAVEL ... In Israel . . .stopover in EuropeWORK ... in agriculturalsettlementsSTUDY ... at the HebrewUniversityApplicants Hettceen 18-35Write NOW for informotion to:ISRAEL SUMMERINSTITUTEc/o Intercollegiate ZionistFederation of America131 West 14th StreetNew York 11, N. Y. the WRIGHT& DITSONIS THE ONLYOFFICIAL BALL OF THEU.S.LT A NAT L CHAMPIONSHIPSSINCE 1987.... OFFICIALIN EVEFV U.S.DAVISCUP MATCH.TOO.WITH ITS "TWIN...theSPALDING....they are played in moreMAJOR TOURNAMENTSTHAN ALL OTHER TENNISBALLS COMBINEDTOR A SHARPER GAME..-PLAY THETWINS OFCHAMPIONSHIP TENNISSPALDINGsets the pace in sportsAll HtW SPORTS SHOW BOOHof Mullin Cartoons published in this book only.WHITE TODAY TO SPALDING—DEPT. C-62Chicopee, Moss. GIVE THE LADY WHAT SHE WANTSBy Lloyd Wendt & Herman Kogan, $4.50A PERFECT GIFT FOR MOTHERS’ DAYCooking and Homemaking Made Easy andInteresting with These BooksElsie's Cookbook $3.00Tested Recipes of Every VarietyCommunity Fare Cookbook $2.95Choice and Unusual RecipesThe Just-a-Minute Cookbook $2.50From Cocktails to DessertSolving the High Cost of Eeating $3.95By Ida Bailey Allen—If you don't save 15% to30% in one month—money will be refunded.Color in Home Decoration $4.95By Effa Brown—Dependable Guidance in the BasicPrinciple of Color in the HomeVogue's New Book for Better Sewing $2.95A complete "learn-as-you-go" course in sewing.How to Clean Everything $3.00Easy instruction for cleaning hundreds of objects,material and finishes.Household Encyclopedia $2.95Over 1000 charts and illustrations.See the Special "Give the Lady" WindowUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue8 A.M. - 5 P.M. - Monday thru SaturdayFavorite subject of coedsYOUC3<8>ShirtsNothing gets admiring glanceson the campus faster than ahandsome guy in a handsomeshirt. To look your handsomest,try on a Manhattan® Vericoolor a Manhattan® Burt.The Manhattan Vericool!A warm-weather wonder withthousands of tiny windowsinviting every breeze, keep¬ing you cool and collected. The Manhattan Burt!Traditional college man’sfavorite. Lustrous Oxfordbutton-down with a natural"soft roll” to the collar. >♦<THE CHICAGO MAROON Pat* 3AIRCRAFTOBSERVERDELTA UPSILON’SANNUAL ALL CAMPUSROSE DANCESATURDAY, MAY 17:9:00STU CLAYTON AND HIS DANDFREE SET-UPS, D Y 0 DAviation Cadet Program Offers Special Opportunitiesfor Collegians Now Preparing for Military ServiceHere is a real man-size opportunity! Youcan choose—immediately—between being aPilot or Aircraft Observer in America’sswiftly-expanding Air Force. The Air Forceencourages candidates to stay in schooland graduate. However, seniors and stu¬dents with two years or more of collegewho anticipate early entrance into militaryservice can insure their future and servetheir country best by applying for AviationCadet Training today. You receive thefinest training and experience when you flywith the U. S. Air Force—experience thatpays off in later years.WHO MAY APPLYAOI-B«lwNn 19 and 26Vi years.EDUCATION—At toast two ysart of college.MARITAL STATUS-Single.PHYSICAL CONDITION-Good, especially•yes, ears, heart, and teeth.HOW TO QUALIFY|. Take transcript of col¬lege credits and copy ofbirth certificate to- yournearest Air Force Base orRecruiting Station. 3* Accomplish FlyingAptitude Tests and en¬list for two years onlyl4* The Selective ServiceAct awards you a four-month deferment whileawaiting class assign¬ment.2* Appear for physicalexamination at your near¬est Air Base at Govern¬ment expense.WHERE To Get More DetailsVisit your nearest U. 5. Air Force Bate or U. S. Army—U. S. AWForce Recruiting Station or write direct to Aviation Cadet, Head"quarters, U. S. AJr Farce, Washington 25, D. C 5* Immediate assign¬ment to Aviation CadetTraining Classes st artingMay 27, July 19, August19 and October 2, 1952.6* Attend AviationCadet Training Schoolfor one year—either asPilot or Aircraft Observ¬er. Get $105 monthly plusfood, housing, uniforms,and other benefits.7. Graduate and winyour wings! Commis¬sioned as 4 second lieu¬tenant, you begin earning$5,000 a year. In addi¬tion, you receive $250uniform allowance and a30-day leave with pay.M«y *, l*5Z.SO briefs.SU sponsorscapers,picnicFor the last time this year allof the facilities of Ida Noyes Hallwill be open free of charge to thecampus at “Campus Capers.” To¬night from 7:30 to 11 p.m. Ida willbe the scene of bowling, swim¬ming (bring your own suits),roller skating, table tennis, cards,social and square dancing, and,to end the evening, a big show,featuring the top songs and rou¬tines from “INSIDE U. OF C.,”a student musical production.SU will sponsor a picnic supperSunday evening in the Ida NoyesGorden. Dinner will be servedstarting at 6 p.m. with dancing tofollow at 7 p.m. Tickets costing50 cents may be purchased fromthe Student Ticket Agency inMandel corridor, the Reynold’sClub desk, and from dormitoryrepresentatives. All tickets mustbe purchased by 5 p.m. today. Riot(From page 1)the Guard, Platt, though visiblyshaken.“There should be more of this.Several more instances a yearwould be a good idea. With a fewyears of intensive study we mightbe able to come up to the level ofthe Big 10 universities,” racked aUC student.Frots “dead"On the other side of the fencewas a young unidentified student,who remarked bitterly, “I don’tknow what’s wrong with the fratsat this school. They’re just dead.I was talking to a fellow fromNorthwestern and he said thatthere they had all sorts of re¬strictions on liquor, on the houses,etc., which they don’t have here.I can’t understand it. Here theydon’t have those restrictions butthey don’t do nothing. They’rejust dead.”One fraternity member, a psy¬chology major, commented, “Ona campus that is generally con¬sidered sedate and devoid of ‘rah-rah’ spirit I am surprised thatthis much spirit can be whippedup so quickly.”^jllllllllHllttllllillllllllHIIIHIIMfHIIHNmiHIIMIItmillll(IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIUIIIinilHtlllllllllllllllllllllllll||||t|||UI THOMAS HIGGINS 1Teacher of Piano • |Diplome superieur Paris 1951 •.under ALFRED CORTOT f| 5338 S. Blaekstone PL 2-9037 |HiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirH Baha’i to hearFarrukh loasMiss Farrukh loas. internation¬al relations graduate of StanfordUniversity and Baha’i author, willspeak informally on “Baha’i: It’sFor You, If You Want LastingPeace” at 7:30 p.m., Wednesday,May 14, in Ida Noyes north recep¬tion room under the sponsorshipof the University Baha’i Fellow¬ship.Miss loas is a member of PhiBeta Kappa and several nationalcommittees and has direct per¬sonal contact with the world wideactivities of her faith through herfather who is secretary-general ofthe International Baha’i Councilat Haifa, Israel. There will be anopportunity for discussion follow¬ing her talk, and refreshmentswill be served.LAK ...(from page 1 '(Dec. 7, 1951) which carried theheadline “UC buys athletes?”Kimpton asserted: “ I have no in¬terest in tramp athletes.”The Chancellor prefaced histalk, in which he reminisced abouthis own athletic activities, withthe remark: “It’s a pleasure totalk to you guys. It’s much morepleasurable than talking to theMAROON and other organiza¬tions on this campus.” Frolic changes policybecomes 'art theater7The Frolic theater, 951 E. 55th st., is starting a new policyof catering to the tastes of the University community, begin¬ning next Monday, May 12. The first program, at standardprices, will be a double feature of two top-notch English com¬edies, The Lavender Hill Mob and Tight Little Island.This change in policy is the idea of Mr. Becker, managerof the Frolic and a UC alum-nus. Feeling that students sion similar to that given by thewould want to relax for a few Surf theater will be offered,hours during the evening at agood movie, and that the Frolic is Becker concluded.The first two special programsthe most convenient theater to be 1 he Lavender Hill Mobthe campus, this change in pro- and “Tight Little Island” runninggramming will run until a defi- from May 12 through May 14, andnite trend is indicated. If the re- “The Browning Version” andsponse to this change in policy “Kind Hearts and Coronets,”warrants it, a discount on admis- from May 20 through May 22.Pol. Sci Club Student walkselects officers 35 miles on betHerbert Storing was electedpresident, and Maurice Townsend,vice-president, when members ofthe Political Science Associationof the University of Chicagochose officers last Tuesday for1952-53.Russel Holcomb will be the As¬sociation’s new treasurer, whileSusan Han will take over theoffice of secretary. All were elect-College Wien!100SE A CAREERthe U.S. Air Force ed unanimously.TV 1 H < 1 H < 1 H < mmmmmms>r MIDWAY RADIO H<1 *ZENITH 1> Sales & Service HH1 Westinghouse, Sunbeam andGeneral Electric Appliance <i1 Dealer 1> 1017 East 63 rd Street HH1 Phone Midway 3-6575 <11 Specialists in Servicing 1>I- Electronic Equipment H<TV — TV — TV — TV George Athanson, a first yearlaw student, last Sunday walked35 miles in 9 hours and 15 minutesto win a bet with members ofChamberlin House. Close to $200changed hands as a result of hiswalk, but Athanson received only$26 or about 74c a mile for hisefforts.Athanson, wearing borrowedhiking boots and shorts, wasdriven to Algonquin by his man¬ager, Werner Grunbaum, andstarted back to Chicago at 1:55p.m. According to the terms ofthe bet Athanson had to do the35 miles in ten hours. After only4 hours 25 minutes he reachedthe halfway point, but his feetwere covered with painful blisters.However, he continued and com¬pleted the last 17\a miles in 4hours and 50 minutes.On the road Athanson wasstopped by police three times andeach time was required to explainthe whole thing before he couldgo on. At last report he is stillrecovering slowly and has refusedan offer of three-to-one odds ona 40 mile walk.1Page 4 THE CHICAGO MAROO M»r *, WBSocialist clubs protest Franco 0-c,u^ musical Group discusses action forI stars funds, LAKwith posters before Consulate “fsus.ss peace, freedom and equalityThe Socialist Youth League and the Politics Club, bothof UC, participated with other socialist groups last Saturdayin a poster demonstration before the Spanish Consulate down¬town, protesting the execution —~—— —— :—by Franco of five leaders of ™the National Confedei ation of movement a month ago in New^bor. York. There, several days of“Our object was to show that picketing and culminating in aAmerican aid to Franco’s totter- public meeting addressed bying dictatorship is a false and James Carey of IUE-CIO forceddangerous approach to the strug- Mayor Impellitteri to withdrawgle against Stalinism,” stated Bill his invitation to the Mayor ofWitthoft of SYL. Madrid to visit New York to im-The demonstration was also prove US-Spanish relations.Law ...'from page 2)suspected that Anastaplo's an¬swers to questions presented bythe Committee, such as the fol¬lowing, may have been respon¬sible:Committee heoringsPortion of the Hearing before asection of the Committee on Char¬acter and Fitness, November 19,1950.Commissioner Mitchell: Haveyou an opinion as to whether ornot a member of the CommunistParty would be eligible to takefhe oath of office of a lawyer inthe State of Illinois, honestly, andbe admitted as a lawyer?Mr. Anastaplo: I should thinkso.Commissioner Mitchell: Youdon’t think there would be any¬thing incompatible between themembership and adherence to thetenet of the Communist Party andthe taking of the oath to supportthe Constitution?Mr. Anastaplo: No, I don’t seeanything particularly contradic¬tory . . .Commissioner Baker: Are youa member of any organizationlisted on the Attorney General’slist, to your knowledge? (No an¬swer.! Just to keep you from hav¬ing to work so hard mentally onit, what organizations—give meall the organizations you are af¬filiated with or are a member of.(No answer.) That oughtn’t tobe too hard.Mr. Anastaplo: Do you believethat is a legitimate question?Kotz testifiesAt a later hearing, ProfessorKatz, former Dean of the UC LawSchool, was called upon to testify.Mr. Katz: ... I have had occa¬sion to have many conversationsLetters...Students vulgar?With reference to Mr. James B. Os¬good's letter (MAROON, April 25, 1952)may I state the following concise fact.If one does not like the Catholic faithhe has the privilege of not changingthe faith of the Catholic Church butthe alternative of several other faiths,or visa versa. The same applies to theUC. We are not sent for; we apply foradmission, therefore we must accept the“standards” of the institution or exer¬cise our privilege to go elsewhere. As amatter of fact, even with the limitedexisting standards set by the University(and approved by the elevated mindsof our country) it has been observedthat the UC students are exceedinglybold and vulgar. In the American wayof thinking a society is a group (i.e.,the socially approved) distinguishableby particular laws, standards of livingor conduct.As to the UC students’ vulgarity pleaseobserve the social conduct of the stu¬dents of opposite sex (imitating loweranimals) along the Midway and in thecorridors. Are we “going to the dogs?”(with all apologies to dogs).Wallace GrahamThanks from StruikI still have to thank you for yourwillingness to organize a meeting onbehalf of my defense, at the Universityof Chicago. It was a pleasure to be withyou and to address the meeting. Ihave turned the collected money overto the Struik Defense Committee, 258Mt. Vernon St., W. Newton, Mass.Dirk J. StruikTERESA DOLANDANCING SCHOOLLearn to Dance NowPrivate and Class LessonsBacked by 35 Years Experience with him (Anastaplo), very manysince this proceeding has started,and many on other occasions. . . .I have a feeling of entire confi¬dence in his deep devotion to thefreedom of the individual, and byfreedom of the individual I meanthe Western style, and his deephostility to the kind of subordina¬tion of the individual to the statethat is represented by the mask offreedom as it appears in Sovietliterature. That is my very deepconviction. . . .Commissioner Owens: Do youknow, Dean, if Mr. Anastaplo is amember of the Communist Party... or any other organization thatis considered subversive.Mr. Katz: I have an opinionwhich is implied in what I havesaid. I should be astonished tolearn if that were the case. “Birth of a Salesman,” a sortof beggar’s opera caricaturingthe University of Chicago’s num¬ber one problem—money—will bepresented by faculty and adminis¬trators in the Quadrangle Clubannual show, the Revels, May 9and 10.A musical burlesque starringChancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton,the 1952 show will open at 8:30p.m. in Mandel Hall.Written by two associate pro¬fessors, Harry Kalven, Jr., of theLaw School, and John O. Hutch¬ens, chairman of the departmentof physiology, “Birth of a Sales¬man” is a take-off on the financialneeds of the nation’s universitiesand their applications to nationalfoundations for support.A third showing will be givenon June 5. The first two will beopen only to Quadrangle clubmembers and University em¬ployees, while the third will beopen to .alumni and students.Included in the cast will be F.Champion Ward, dean of the Col¬lege, Robert M. Strozier, deanof students, and Maynard Kreu-ger, associate professor of eco¬nomics in the college. for work needed to implement the(then pending) SG decision u»Sparked by the recent Madison Conference, 50 studentsmet in informal session last Sunday in Ida Noyes library todiscuss methods of implementing specific actions for academicfreedom, peace, artd equality on the UC campus.Chaired by Bob Peters of the MAROON, those present atthe meeting decided to seek unity through action in threeareas directly affecting UC —students. These areas are: aidin insuring the success of theSG non-discriminatory housing found a new housing bureau,file, action to protest the recent To meet againState Department ban on travel The as yet informal group ofin eastern European nations and students who met last Sunday toChina, and possible’steps in prep- discuss problems of academicaration for the proposed visit of freedom, equality, and peace, willthe House Un-American Activities meet again Sunday at 3 p.m. mCommittee to Chicago.Time limitations prevented fulldiscussion on the later two topics,but the body voted to send a rep¬resentative to SG to offer theservices of members of the group Ida Noyes library. All interestedstudents are invited to attend,according to Bob Peters, last Sun¬day’s chairman. The meeting thisweek will be chaired by ErnestCallenbach of SG.CANOE TRIPSin the Quetico - Superior wilderness.At a price a student can afford. Forfree colored booklet and map, write:Bill Rom, Mgr.Canoe Country OutfittersBox 717 C Ely, Minnesota LOUIE S BARBER SHOPFor Personality Hair CutTwo Expert Barbers1110 E. 55Hi St., Chicago 15LOUIS CORTEZThis book is a guide to your futuresubject: How have collegegraduates made out?Published by Harcourt, Brace. Nowon sale at your local book store.How this book came aboutThey Went to College is based on asurvey sponsored by TIME, whose in¬terest in this group stems naturally fromthe fact that most of TIME’S readers arecollege-trained.TIME is written for you and peoplelike you, people like the thousands ofgraduates of the more-than-a-thousandAmerican colleges who answered TIME’Squestionnaire and revealed many facetsof their lives—from the courses they took,to their religious beliefs.This mountain of data was tabulatedand analyzed by Patricia Salter West atthe Columbia University Bureau of Ap¬plied Social Research, then turned overto Ernest Havemann, a former editor ofTIME and a specialist at making inter¬esting reading out of statistical material.The result is a book of major import¬ance to everyone. IS it true that our colleges are turning outatheists and radicals?How do graduates stack up against the self-made men who battled their way withoutthe help of four years in college—but got afour-year head start in the business world?Are they better husbands and wives? Is asheepskin really worth all the effort?You’ll find answers to your future in theanswers to these questions, questions thatare explored in They Went to College,TIME’S new book about one of America’smost influential groups of peopl e, the U. S.college graduates.In its pages, you’ll peer into the post-gradua¬tion careers of the ex-Greasy Grind, the ex-BMOC, the ex-All-Around Student and theOne Who Just Sat There.How many of them married, how many children did they have, who got divorced,who got the best jobs, what do they thinkof courses they took?These are just a few of the former darkareas of conjecture and folklore lighted up bythis unprecedented study.Low-Down on Higher LearningThey Went to College is required readingfor everybody who wants the real low-downon higher learning.If you’re an undergraduate, you’ll learnmuch about your probable future.If you’re a college graduate, you’ll findout how you stack up against your peers.If you’re a teacher, you’ll discover whathas become of your students.And, no matter what your interest, you’llfind fuel for plenty of debate in this book.Because its audience represents one of the largest concentra¬tions of college graduates reading any major magazine in theworld today, TIME, The Weekly Newsmagazine, undertook thecomprehensive study which is the basis of this milestone book.TIME —to aet it StraiahtMay 9, 1952 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5Echo: Midway selectsAll students interested in work -ing on Echo: Midway ore invitedto attend a meeting today at Ip.m. in the Echo: Midway office,Reynolds Club basement. The pur¬pose of the meeting will be to se¬lect a staff for the 1953book. year- Preston Roberts analyzes'The Brothers Karamazov' Chicago Reviewhits stands soonThe Summer 1952 issue of theChicago Review, UC literaryquarterly, will go on sale theWednesday night an audience in James Breasted Hall heard week of May 27. There will bethe third of four lectures given under the auspices of the stands in front of Bartlett toChanning Club. The title of the lecture, given by Dr. Preston catch students leaving comps, andRoberts was, “Dostoyevski; skeptic and believer.” at other times in Maundel corridorIn pursuing his subject, Dr. Preston Roberts analyzed Dos- t^e °uc SokstoT^will^M ytoyevski’s last and greatest novel: The Brothers Karamazov. the magazine at the 20 cent stu^The problem, as he sees it, is — dent prjce.Politics Clubtalks peace“Is American Foreign Policythe Road to Peace?" will be thetopic of the Politics Club sympo¬sium Friday, May 9th, at 4:30p.m. Taking part in the symposi- ’51 Nobel winnerum will be Elizabeth Mann Bor- .gese, formerly chairman of the Will WOrli Clt UCWorld Movement for World Fed- Glenn T. Seaborg, co-winner of to determine the ‘‘exact nature and the nihilism of Ivan who doeserated Governments and editor of the 1951 Nobel Prize in chemistry, of the relation between faith not believe that there is any such his in the precociously negative(onimon Cause, Hal Draper, edi- will come to the Argonne National and doubt as it is expressed in thing as guilt, for anything goes. Kolya, there is a suggestion oftor of Labor Action, an independ- Laboratory Monday to begin two the novel.” In so doing he showed Thirdly, though the book contains redemPtion; We are not to think. weeklv and Herman nionths of special research work that the novel must be read in a fhot!Q . that the children are bound to es-ent Socialist weekly, and Herman and conference with staff mem. number of ways. Firstly, the read- caPe from the problems whichFiner, professor of political sci- er must re£d}ze that the novel is !heT a^e not sufficien,, th® beset and largely defeated theence at the UC. They will discuss Seaborg was a member of the a mystery story and that the b°°k a. ° contai"s a number of elder Karamazov’s, but for thethe problems blocking the road to UC metallurgical laboratory, pred- author cannot*help but emphasize moment, at least, their fate isa permanent peace and the role ecessor to A?gonne, during World this aspect of it. Secondly, the ^to Dmitri n wisest Dr t*'^, War II Since 1945 hp ha<? hppn novel is a “thematic alleaorv ~ ur1’ 11 1S wisest, ur. out tbat tbe iarger plot, with thewhich American foreign policy professor of chemistry and r^m which points up a sort of Von- ^^ ^sted. to give each murder story, is essentially aplays in removing (or adding to) ber o£ the staff of tbe radiation test” between the faith of Father *1 T but Greek or modern tragedy: thethese obstacles. The meeting will laboratory of the University of Zossima who believes that “The 3 7. , . , er: sub-plot, on the other hand, isbe held in Rosenwald 2. California. guilt of one is the guilt of all,” *££“* * £* theological and essentially a Christian one, with_ literary significance of the book. its underlying thread of forgive-On the whole, however, “if we ness and redemption. Dr. Robertswere forced to decide whether concluded that, “It was Dostoyev-Dostoyevski himself was a skep- ski’s peculiar genius that he wastic or a believer in his heart of able to portray with such unflag-hearts,” there appears to be more ging intensity both a faith (Greekevidence that he was a believer. Orthodox) and a doubt (nihilism).In the sub-plot, for instance, but which are perhaps best to bewhere Dmitri has his parallel in understood as particular aspectsthe sick child Uusha and Ivan has of some larger truth.”_Campus Interviews on Cigarette TestsNo. 41...THE MAGPIEHe’s a chatterbox himself—outclassed by no one!But the fancy double-talk of cigarette tests wastoo fast for him! He knew —before the garbledgobbledygook started—a true test of cigarettemildness is steady smoking. Millions of smokersagree — there’s a thorough test of cigarette mildness.It9$ the sensible test...the 30-day Camel MildnessTest, which simply asks you to try Camels as yoursteady smoke — on a day-after-day, pack-after-packbasis. No snap judgments. Once you’ve tried Camelsin your “T-Zone” (T for Throat, 1 for Taste),you’ll see why .. •After all the Mildness Tests . • •Camel leads all other kmnd$ 6yJb////oj*r ; : SECOND PIONEERS*"* March, April, 1952A new bi-monthly mag. Articles: EGYPT, The Key State; CRETE, Stra¬tegic Isle; TAXES and GOLD; ACHESON and the Jap Peace Treaty:Jobs for Ten Thousand Actors, The Theater Reborn; Poetry. Review ofH. Stuart Hughes’ “Oswald Spengler, a Critical Estimate.” 50 cents acopy. Order direct.THE SEVEN IRONIES OF GOD by ParacelsusA unique correlation of Biblical Prophecy: Daniel (O. T.), Revelations(N. T.), and GREAT PYRAMID TIME CHRONOLOGY. Price reducedto $1. 165 pages with bibliography.THE GIANTS OF PENTAPOLIS by ParacelsusA Book of Verse for Jaded Appetites. Satire, Lyrics, the Poet's LogBook for the Atomic Age. Heaven Has Her Seven Secret Signs Here asWell. 80 pages. $1. Order direct.SOCIETY168 W. 46 St. OF HOUNDS BOOKS, INC.New York City, 19BROOKS BROTHERS' SPORTWEARan interesting new selectionthat's colorful and distinctiveWe have long been noted for sportwearthat has an air of casual correctness... isof fine quality...and in good taste. Thisseason’s selection for college men featuresOdd Jackets of tweed, corduroy, flannelor denim...slacks and shorts...and unu¬sually attractive sport shirts...all madeto our exacting specifications.ESrAftUSHiOWtCjLOTH8NG:8$tna furnishings, flats hots74 E. MADISON ST., NEAR MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO 2, ILL.NEW YORK • BOSTON • LOS ANGELES • SAN FRANCISCO■1N mmmm ■■■Sv.IjS'^^fe'Page 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 9, 1952U S Iron CurtainPeace, pure and simple"—Robert Maynard HutchinsIssued once weekly by the publisher, The Chicago Maroon, at the publication•ffice, 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.Darid ZimmermanBusiness ManagerMartin OransEditor-in-chiefManaging editor: La Verne Armstrong.Executive editor: Dan Solomon.Copy editor: Joan Brennard.Page editors: Robert March, Bob Peters, Caroline Lee, Roy Albert, Tom Thorner,Arthur Brown.Editorial staff: Jay Chidsey, Dan Simon, Frank Kirk, Pat Morrow, Gene Gendlin,Jay Orear, Henry Maguire, Daniel Queen, Leonard Wolfe, Matthew Messelsohn,James Beck, Jan Majde, Karl Welchlnger, Fred Wlnsberg, Mike Gordon, Rich¬ard Sawyer, George Stone, Horace Judson, Robert LeVine, Richard E. Ward,Helen Panaretos, Barbara Kaplan, Georgia Pugh, Enid Sharp, Aaron Asher,Laurel Cohn, Ken Adler, Charles Freudenthal, Bob Ayres, Charles Gaulkin, GaryBahr, Doris Hanes.Copy staff: Roger Kallen, John Grimes. *Photography staff: Editor—L. Glenn Johnson, David Glassman.Business staff: Ass’t Bus. manager: Arlene Kramer; Advertising manager: JoyceCowan, Don Ginsburg, David Sher.Personnel Staff: Ted Levlton.Cartoonists: Irwin Levinson, Peter Gourfaln, Radell Nelson. The NY Times of May 2 contained a story which should raise inour minds the most searching questions regarding our continuancein the liberal traditions upon which our government was founded.The story begins, “The State Department announced today a newban on travel by United States citizens to the Soviet Union and allMoscow-controlled Communist countries, unless permission is spe¬cifically given by the US Government.” The article explains “Actu¬ally, officials said, the new restrictions are designed to curb ‘sneak’visits to the forbidden areas, and travel by persons who might notreally understand the hazards to Americans in the Iron Curtaincountries.”New SG file needs helpAfter much stalling, the UC administration has given grudgingconsent to an SG program which will set up a new, student-operated,jion-discriminatory housing file. This file will run concurrently withthe present Jim Crow administration file for at least its first sixmonths.This plan is no answer to the problem of racial bias in UC housinglistings, for the University will continue to list discriminatory realestate in its own file. What is even more important, the Universityrefuses to use its power in the neighborhood to influence landlordsto comply with demands for non-restrictive housing.More accurately, the proposed second file is nothing more than aSop to Cerberus, for the administration okayed plan possibly containssufficient physical difficulties to doom the new file. While the UCtile is manned by paid labor, and receives sanction and finance fromthe University, the SG file will demand volunteer labor, will have noofficial backing, and will of necessity be self-supporting.Success of a non-discriminatory file can come about only whenthe University is forced to realize that students do not want, andwill not patronize a Jim Crow file. At this time, the UC will eitherdiscard its own file, granting official support to the SG file, or willadopt a non-discriminatory clause in its own housing agreements,thus terminating the function of the SG file.In either case, the first step is to insure the succes of the SGbureau. This can be achieved only if complete student cooperationand aid is given the project by:1. Exclusive use of the SG file, and a boycott of the administra¬tion listings. This entails little hardship for any students, for if SG’sproposed implementation is carried out, all non-discriminatory hous¬ing in the administration file will be included in the new listings.2. Student aid in manning the file. Students able to give time,either during the present quarter or early in the fall, are urged tocontact Harmon Carter of SG’s civil liberties committee and volun¬teer their labor (Phone MI 3-6000).3. Sending notification to SG of any vacant housing in the area.Which could be checked and listed in the file.4. Reporting all violations found in SG listed housing to the SGcivil liberties committee. So far this might seem to be only an extension of State Depart¬ment warnings to travelers that the US could not provide adequateprotection to tourists in certain countries. The new and shockingthing about the new ban is, however, that jail terms up to five yearsand fines are to be imposed upon those who enter the forbiddenareas (Chicago Sun-Times, May 2). This is, to our knowledge, acompletely new precedent in US travel regulations and is certainlynothing more nor less than the establishment of an American “ironcurtain.” This new move, coupled with the widely condemned McCar-ran Act, would have the effect of completely sealing off all travelin either direction between this country and the Communist countries.Does this not indicate the most pessimistic and dangerous kind ofthinking by our national leaders? Does it not imply that they haveforsaken one of the few remaining avenues by which the presentintolerable state of world tension might be redressed? Specifically,there has been justification in recent weeks for great hope that thissummer maqy US students would be able to obtain visas for travelin Communist countries. The National Union of Students (NSA) isto discuss this matter with the International Union of Students (IUS)at a forthcoming meeting called by IUS.Yet, by far the most objectionable aspect of this new ban is thatit commits us to the very policy of closed frontiers which we haveclaimed to be so inexcusable in other countries. How must we lookto the rest of the world when we ourselves deny those very principleswe claim to defend? Let us not bargain away those principles sodesperately needed in the world today for an illusory expediency.We urgently request our readers to protest this unconscionableaction to the Secretary of State and to our representatives inCongress.the fertile brains of fascists and apolo¬gists for fascism. In fact the situation issimple.We are faced with fascism, racism,and human degradation on the onehand (Malan, Smuts, and their collabo¬rators) and a struggle for freedom, gen¬uine democracy and human dignity forALL on the other hand (the non-European peoples, progressive whitesand rational man). The question of thecentury, for each of us to answer un¬equivocally is: "To which camp do Ibelong?”With the facts at our disposal, reasondictates that Malan and apologists forhim are, at best, emotional, at worst,race-baiters and hence war-mongers.The demands of the non-European pop¬ulation of the Union are just and shouldbe met if we must face this issuesquarely.Please, in the interest of World Peace,accept my call to reason and thus helpto save the continent of Africa fromthe greatest conflagration that historymight ever record. For just as it wastoo late to stop Hitler and his collabo¬rators by reason, it might be too lateon the continent of Africa. Time is in¬deed short.Chimerc Ikoku OopsThe letter in lost week's issueentitled "Unity must be workedfor" was printed with Bob LeVineas one of the signers. Bob LeVinedid not sign this letter, nor did hesee it before publication.Protests illegal campaignTwo seizuresThe action of the President in placing the steel industry undergovernment management has occasioned an avalanche of protestfrom many sections of American business. All profits earned by thesteel companies—profits termed “unreasonable” by the President—continue to accrue to the owners. The protest against the seizure,then, is based on the contention that the executive has not the author¬ity to order such a seizure of private property. This question oflegality will, it now seems, soon be decided in the courts.However, no significant national debate has arisen about a recentgovernment seizure influencing not property rights but individualrights. We refer to the extension of the enlistment period of thou¬sands of GI’s whose term of service is about to expire under theoriginal terms of enlistment. Even without commenting upon thepossible necessity of either seizure, we deplore the recently growingpre-eminence of property rights over human rights in the nation.Let the steel owners realize that productive facilities are not endsin themselves but are only good insofar as they further humanwell-being. They exist to serve, not to be served.Walked out Letter to Jan LouwLast week when I permitted my nameto be used as one of the UC sponsorsof the recent Student Conference onAcademic Freedom, Equality, and PeaceI did so in the belief that the conferencemight prove to be one embracing arepresentative selection of liberal opin¬ion which could arrive at a practicalconstructive program of action. I didnot expect that those members of theChicago delegation, with whom Iagreed, would be confronted, when theyarrived, by a conference organized insuch a manner that adequate discussionwas impossible and which, because ofthis and other factors, was unable toagree on resolutions without an extremepolitical bias unaccetable to a personwho maintains a moderate liberal posi¬tion. Yet, though I was unable to at¬tend the conference myself, I have beentold by persons whom I trust completelythat this is exactly what happened.It would appear that the "minimalprogram” which was supposed to comefrom the Madison Conference turnedout to be, instead, an extreme programwith which none but a small and un¬representative minority from the far leftand its followers could agree. It wasfor this reason that the members of theChicago delegation with whom I ampolitically allied walked out of the con¬ference and repudiated the resultswhich came from it and it is for thisreason that I dissociate myself from thisconference and disavow all connectionwith the work done at Madison and theconclusions reached. Any further useof my name in connection with theWisconsin Conference will be complete¬ly unauthorized. Gordon Scott I read, with immense distress, yourview expressed in the Chicago MAROONof April 18, 1952. You propounded thethesis that the position of the govern¬ment of the Union of South Africa hasthe support of the Union’s citizens.Your proof?1. Malan’s party "won a normal andconstitutionally conducted election in1948” on a platform that was well de¬fined.2. “If the measures which are takento put this policy into effect are dis¬agreeable to the majority of the elec¬torate, the usual democratic machineryexists for the replacement of such agovernment.”It does not seem to bother you thatthe constitution disfranchises 75 percent of the population who would nottherefore have access to the use of the“democratic machinery” to effect achange. You thus make a travesty ofsacred ideas such as the words “con¬stitution” and “democracy” evoke inthe mind of rational man.You argue that giving democracy tothe “Natives” (who, according to you,do not understand the rudiments ofdemocracy) will "inevitably result Inthe annihilation of that which it seeksto accomplish.” You do not substan¬tiate your claim that the “Natives” areincapable of understanding democracy.I submit that any rational man whohas been saved an ignorance of thetrue history of the Bantu and otherAfrican peoples will be forced to disa¬gree with your thesis, as I hereby do,that democracy is alien to the African.To you, “the situation in SouthAfrica is more complicated than is gen¬erally believed.” This complexity of theSouth African situation exists only in Blasts mobMonday night two hundred UCstudents, most of them membersof | fraternities, staged a free-for-all at 59th and University. Theysang loud and lewd, attempted tobreak into the women’s dorms,harrassed campus police, andthreatened to raid the chancellor’shouse.This type of “good clean fun,”typical of the behavior of studentsat a frat-run school, is the resultof Mr. Kimpton’s encouragementof fraternities and discourage¬ment of student participation incommunity and national affairs.This policy is converting UC stu¬dents from mature individualswith a sense of social responsibil¬ity and duty as citizens of ademocratic nation into a half-moronic shreiking mob of “Frat-house Freddies.” Such peoplehave as their sole interest in lifegetting liquored up and partakingof “sex,” in the Esquire magazinemeaning of the word. If this iswhat our chancellor wishes to seeon this campus, I condemn himand his super-kindergarten theoryof higljer education.Robert H. March We should like to pntest the cam¬paigning taking place near the polls onthe days of the recent NSA election.We feel that there should be no cam¬paigning allowed during the days ofthe election in order that the voter feelfree to act independently.“I walked into Cobb Hall the day ofthe election and was greeted by half adozen candidates who immediatelyshoved their slates under my nose andproceeded to guide me over to theplace of voting. After picking up myballot, three or four more people of¬fered to assist me in voting. I declinedtheir help feeling capable of doing iton my own. After I had marked halfof the ballot, one more candidate ap¬proached me who asked if I had theslate of his party, and when I repliedthat I was in the process of voting, hetold me his name, that he was a can¬didate, and would appreciate my vote.”We do not know the existing rules inregard to campaigning, but we feel thatit is important that the voted not becoerced on the day of the election.For this reason, we call this matter toyour attention.A Few Who are Trying to beResponsible VotersDefends BookstoreIn his attempt to back up theMAROON’S search fdr political biasin the University administration, FrankKirk concludes that the Bookstore isIndifferent and unresponsive to the“actual needs of the campus” becauseit is “now almost completely devoidof left wing books.”Your reporter should have taken offhis special MAROON glasses beforemaking his inventory survey. The Book¬store is almost completely devoid ofright wing books as well. Did Kirktry to find anything by Father Cough¬lin or Mervln K. Hart? Not even underthe counter. Horrors!But that is not all. During "foreignpolicy week” I tried to purchase a bookby James P. Warburg, a middle-wingauthor. It had to be ordered.Obviously, the Bookstore is not serv¬ing the campus needs. It refuses tostock left wing, right wing, or middleWing books—unless they sell well. Itdoes not even display all the books instock; in fact, one student told me hesaw a BIBLE under the counter.To anyone with MAROON glasses itmust be obvious that the Bookstore’spolicy is politically biased.Ken AdlerFRANZ JOSEF HAYDN’STHE CREATIONPerformed by theISAIAH ISRAEL CHOIRAND CHORAL SOCIETYAndrew Foidi, ConductorFRIDAY, MAY 9. 8:00 P. M.Temple Isaiah IsraelHyde Park Bird, and Greenwood Ave.Admission without ticket and without charge KieltyspeaksThe Rev, J i.hn Kielty, executivesecretary of the British GeneralAssembly of Unitarian and FreeChristian churches, will deliverthe sermon at the 11 a.m. servicein Rockefeller Chapel this Sun¬day.A member of the British LaborParty, Rev. Kielty is well ac¬quainted with members of theLabour cabinet.advertisement •Give full storyabout Siameseniello jewelryThe fascinating story of nieltodates as for bock as the 4th cen¬tury B.C. when niello was used asthe most beautiful and costly per¬sonal ornaments by personages ofhigh rank.Unfortunately the delicate andminute art of niello has almostbecome extinct. It survived in Indiaand Siam and is still practiced to6 vey limited extent there. Onlythe most skilled artisans in Siamatemtp the intricate process ofmaking niello. First the designs areengraved free hand upon the smoothsurface of the sterling silver. Thebackground is tapped down, leav¬ing the design in low relief andfilled with niello, a black metallicamalgam consisting of silver, cop¬per, lead ond sulphur. The pieceis then carefully heated over a char¬coal fire and permitted to coo!. Thesurface is filed down and highlypolished until it presents the ap¬pearance of smooth jet black metalenriched with on exquisite designof vividly contrasting silver.The dramatic designs used to or¬nament Siamese jewelry are variedand unique. Most of the figuresrepresent ancient mythologicalcharacters of the epic of Rama, inwhich Siamese history is so rich.The hero Rama, so the story goes,heir to the Siamese throne, is ex¬iled to a forest by his father theKing, and his wife Sita, who ac¬companies him into exile. Whilethey dwell in the forest, Sita is ab¬ducted by the demon king Ravana,ule of Lanka (Ceylon). Roma ac¬quiring the mokey state of Kish-khinda as an ally, wages wa- uponhis wife's abductor. In this under¬taking he is aided by the monkey-god, Hanuman, vanquished his foeRavana, and S'f° is restored to him.Figures of all these Gods arefound on almost all pieces of niello.The one most shown is that of Ra¬vana, with hatchet upraised, pur¬suing Sita who casts dazzling sparksbehind her both to confuse him,and womon-like, to allure him.Rama is identified by the fact thathe always carries a bow; Hanumanby his flat cap.Consider then, the richness andthe beauty of niello, the intricateond almost extinct hand art andyou will know why the possessorcherishes it ond considers niellothe world's most exotic jewelry.The desire to give somethingexquisite has never been ex¬pressed better than onMother's DayTHE MAUHINI5481 Lake Park AvenueNOrmal 7-4915in ’52?Round Tripvia SteamshipFREQUENT SAILINGS*28<rnAILINGS 1NEW —Tourist R*SS7-W«S£.!Choice of over 100Student Class Tours Cf A£Travel Study Tours J/JConducted Tours upUniversity Travel Company,official bonded agents for ell lines, hasrendered efficient travel service on abusiness basis since 1926.See your local travel agent forloldert and details or write us.UNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.• Lcirflbridqe, Mass. JlMay 9, 1952 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7***★★★★★★★★★★****■*******“iKe.introducing** ALDO RAYWOODSTHEATRERANDOLPH at DEARBORN Beyond the Ivory TowerUniversity newspapers answer BITsacademic freedom status questionnaireDuring the Autumn and Winter quarters of 1951-’52 the BIT page staff sent out to all the major college newspapers in'the U. S. and Canada a letter and a questionnaire. The purpose of the questionnaire was to attempt to ascertain in somemeasure the status of academic and student freedom on the particular campuses. In addition, we requested that the news¬papers reprint this letter and questionnaire so that any student or campus organization rqight also give their reply.The response was most gratifying. We would like to reprint some of the replies we.received on the first three questions.The replies submitted will be grouped together for eachc question and be presented as such.The BIT staff would be veryinterested in hearing your "Two political parties; a stu- “Any student organization, tocomments on this undertaking dent go„vfn(ment (autonomous) be recognized by our institution,° Com nm co/t a f nvnAiitnrn mHiniolDoily Tarheel,Univ. of N. Carolinacomprised of executive, judicial, must submit a copy of its consti-and whether or not, with some and legislative organizations; var- tution to the Student Governmentoutside student help, we might jous clubs, such*3 as the Young executive council. It is referredcontinue this survey and make it Democrats,' etc.” to the ‘organizations committee'and returned with suggestions tothe executive council which thenvotes on it or returns it to theorganization with recommenda-. “I’m afraid there isn’t much in- tions<”.. t> in.^°i it • ^ formation of help to your survey Florida Flombeau,-ere. There are no polt- "• *«>• “«*•tical organizations on our cam- • •pus. There were instances in the ' be recognized by the Uni-more complete.I.Whot political organizations existon your campus?posed of three ‘parties,’ Con¬servative, Third Force, and Labor,These parties hold caucuses, dis- m8 presidential elections when v.ersity authorities, an organizamu *groups organized briefly here but ^on must first have a constitucuss and -formulate policy on po¬litical issues, and choose candi¬dates for election to offices of theUnion. The Union as a whole se¬lect and invites speakers to thecampus about twice a month. TheUnion is recognized by the Uni- none has continued.”Editor, The Doily Reveille,Louisiana State Univ. tion and an advisor. It must thensecure permission from the Stu¬dent Organizations and StudentActivities Committee. From therepolitical organizations must sub-Student political clubs of all m*t for approval to the Board ofversity. There are, temporarily, the major parties in Canada exist Regents.on b lennhmim^.Tnr.nmcinnnt /thin J *an Eisenhower-for-president club ^ T,T. , . -Jiii. on the campus — Liberal, Con-and akefauver-lor.presidentclub. Mrvati c„.operative, Common.Most recently formed an* recog. wealth Federa^ion, Soclal Credltmzed organization is the Student Karl Marx aub (Commu,Peace Group.Yale Daily Hews, Yale Univ. Editor, Ke Leoe 0 Hawaii,Univ. of Hawaii“Only political organization ofrecent times was SDA. It died.”Student, Hunter College nist or Labour-Progressive).”Editor, The Sheaf,Univ. of Saskatchewan Editor's Mote: The other contribu¬tions gave very similar procedures ofofficial recognition if campus politicalorganizations were allowed.3. Can you give an estimate of the BIT uses questionnaireThe following questions outlinethe range of information BITsought in the questionnaire sentout to 160 colleges and universitiesin this country and Canada.1. What political organizationsexist on your campus?2. What criteria must a studentpolitical organization meet in or¬der to be recognized by your insti¬tution?3. Can you give us an estimateof the growth or decline of totalpolitical activity on your campus?4. Have any political organiza¬tions or students been suspended,or have any faculty members beendischarged for political reasons?Please relate circumstances ond de¬scribe the reaction of your studentbody.5. To what extent is the statusof students and faculty membersaffected by their political activity?6. What is the procedure whichmust be followed by a student or¬ganization which desires to sponsora guest speaker or performer?7. Is the content of your news¬paper reviewed before publicationand, if so, by whom?PANE’SPIZZERIA1603 E. 53rd St.South Side’s TastiestPIZZAand other delicatelypreparedITALIAN FOODAll phones NOrmal 7-9520 jority of the students are Demo¬cratic and there wasn’t much de¬growth or decline of total political cision during the last ten years.activity on your campus? A growth of liberalism and Re¬publicanism (not to be used to¬ur . , . , .... , gether in this sense) is now noted.“Ibehevethattotal political ghc S(ate senatorial campaign“No political organizations ex¬ist at Wayne. Present Universitypolicy is to prohibit the recogni¬tion of such organizations. TheUniversity feels \Jiat the presence activity on campus is on the de- , , p,,., ponriorof such organizations might well cline Outside Dolitical activitv on belween Sen- Claude Pepper andinvolve the University in commu- ’ ts ae po cal activity on Qeorge Smathers last year wasnHv Mimes TheS udemCoun. Cam>>USh “ «h,ly °" the„ uf red hot and almost all of the stu-cris“ly worktag twards l M «~the abolishment of regulations prey,dential year There is not a Ifdesigned to prohibit political ac- great deaj 0f outside political ac¬tivity on campus as the generalrule.”Editor, SouthernCalifornia Daily Troiantivity of this sort.”Editor, Detroit Collegian,Wayne Univ., Detroit, Mich.2. What criteria mutt a student polit¬ical organization meet in order tobe recognized by your institution?BE AN AIRLINEPILOTApplications nowbeing accepted fornext training class byUNITED AIR LINESHave a career in commercialaviation with one of the nation'sleading airlines. Pay is excel¬lent, and there are ample op¬portunities for advancement.Retirement-Income Plan, broadInsurance Program and manymore benefits.QUALIFICATIONS —• Age 21 to 30• Height 5' 6 to 6' 3*• Vision 20/20 without correction• High school graduate• U. S. citizen4 CAA valid commercial pilot’s licenseApply now tosUNITED AIR LINESWrite C. M. Urbach, United Air Lines Operating BaseStapleton Airfield, Denver 7, Colorado. Dept. Winter greenfor PresidentIn the last issue of the MAROONbefore the summer vacation starts,the BIT page will feature a Presi¬dential Forum. The page will printletters supporting any of the ten-add presidential candidates. Getyour pre-convention drum-beatingoff your chest and send your con¬tributions to the BIT editor, Chi¬cago MAROON. “Political activity of a sort wasonce tolerated on the campus.Since it is not now, I must con¬clude that political activity is atleast formally on the decline.”Editor, Detroit Collegian,Woyne University is warming up. The presidentialrace is foggy in the students'minds but there is a definite anti-Taft sentiment as a recent stu¬dent poll has shown. There arefew far leftists or rightists (Com¬munists or KKK’ers.)”The Florida Flambeau,Flo. State Univ.‘The Political Union has some¬what degenerated during pastyears into an organization of pet¬ty wranglers, and pseudo big-timepoliticians, but nevertheless the‘Political activity is even moreapathetic than the social activity * communal political expref¬at Hunter College. Hunter Col-lepe is iust one bip set of classes slon and discussion. It also offersand classrooms and that ,s ah " a ‘™"ing ^und for the politic*Student, Hunter College“Student apathy seems to rulethe students politically. The ma- ‘virtues,’ i.e., public speaking, per¬suasive argument, and debate(with the usual ???”)The Yale Daily News,Yole Universityisy,Wlien a man 5 ktwky, leisureStrikes kim asa wonderful pleasureRobert Browning, The GloveNo matter what your work, aleisurely moment’s pause to enjoya delicious Coca-Cola is always apleasure...always refreshing, too.BOTTLED UNDE* AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BYCOCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF CHICAGO, INC.© 1952, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY. 1*#THE CHICAGO MAROON May 9, 1952Page 8UT production found stimulatingUniversity Theatre presentedAdam the Creator, a modern fan¬tasy by Karel and Josef Capek, atMandel Hall in three showingslast weekend. With this, theirfinal production of tlig currentseason, the troupe scored a con¬siderable measure of success.The Capek’s script tells thestory of a modern cynic who, witha magical "cannon of negation”succeeds in destroying the entireworld; all of it, that is. excepthimself. For this act he is givenby God the task and power ofcreating a new world of his owndesign, and the body of the storyrelates how he fails utterly inachieving else than that which heoriginally denied.With the ridiculous failures ofsuccessive attempts to fashion aUtopia from the bare “clay ofcreation” the authors shame anumber of idealist and reformistschemes. Thus they poke fun atthe Nietzschean superman, tran¬quil middleclass domesticity, thenineteenth century’s inevitable"progress in time,” the twentiethcentury’s “mass man,” oppor¬tunistic revolutionaries, etc.The action centering aroundAdam’s first creations — carica¬tures of Nietzsche’s supermanand superwoman—achieved themost brilliant effect of the eve¬ning. Included in the script areall the Lions and Eagles, Mastersand Servants; the Creating, theflight to and from the mountain. and the nostalgia for the nobility matic satirists to interest and toof Classical man, to be found in instruct, that his part succeeds soslightly more serious presenta- well.tion in the original Nietzsche. In Not so with other sections. Thefact, whole sentences are bor- type of vacuous nag Adam cre-rowed from and paraphrased ates for a mate has been exposedafter the lingo of Zarathrustra many times and in this case irri-and the Will to Power, and sub- tates more than entertains. Theplots and numerous allusions “mass man," satirized so devas-derive directly from the fitful tatingly in the Huxley novel, isverses of Zarathrustra. somewhat passe now-a-days and isIt is because the authors real- presented here with nothing newized what vulgarisms, what pomp added to his delineation. Similarand circumstance of ideas, they remarks apply to the progress-wished to illumine, and proceeded mongers and to the insurgentwith a real understanding of the revolutionaries. As to the sig-two levels of their intent as dra- UT Production, page 9| JEFFERY THEATER I= 1952 E. 71 HY 3-3333 £★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★a*****************Now Playing;| “VIVA ZAPATA” |£ Starring ■E Marlon Brando and Jean Peters ;5 m!1 “INVITATION” 1Z — with— £Z Van Johnson and Dorothy McGuire SalHIlimilHHHHIIIIIIIIHIIimmilllllHIHIIIIIIHIIIIIHHIIIIlBmachines are amazingbut men are more so“Young ladies, if you will direct your atten¬tion to the complex telephone equipment onthe left, I think you 11 agree with most folkswho tour our telephone offices that it isexceedingly impressive.”We think so too. But the minds of themen who developed it are even more im¬pressive. Some people use “the human ele¬ment’' to denote weakness. In the BellSystem, we believe our greatest asset is ourpeople. They make headlines in fires, hurricanesand floods. But much more important, theygive the world’s best telephone service allyear round.As the Bell System continues its growth,new and even more amazing machines arebeing created. And along with this growthis the need for college men with the rightqualifications for work and opportunity in avariety of fields — in engineering, research,operating and administration.BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM BARGAINS IN NEW BOOKSAT REDUCED PRICESFREUD, HIS DREAM AND SEXTHEORIES, by Joseph Jastrow.The theories of Freud analyzed bya pominent American Psycholo¬gist. Published at $1. Our price49c.ELEMENTS OF PSYCHOANALY¬SIS. Edited with an introductionand notes by Hans Herma andGerrtud M. Kurth. Pub. at $3.Our price $1.49.THE SHOW OF VIOLENCE byFredric Wertham, M.D. A psy¬chiatrist tells why people kill andhow murder can be prevented.Pub. at $3. Our price 98c.THE STORY OF HYPNOTISM byRobert W. Marks. Pub. at $3.Our price 98e. •FRAGMENT OF A GREAT CON¬FESSION, a psychoanalytic auto¬biographic by Theodor Reik. Pub.at $6. Our price $1.98.SATANISM ANO WITCHtRAFT.A study in Medieval Superstitionby Jules Michelet. Translated byA. R. Allinson. Pub. at $2. Ourprice $1.49.PEACE ON EARTH. Introductionby Robert Sherwood. Articles byTrygve Lie, Ralph Bunche, Elea¬nor Roosevelt, etc. Contains THECHARTER OF THE UNITED NA¬TIONS. Pub. at $3. Our price 59c.STRIKE STRATEGY, by JohnSteuben. Pub. at $3. Our price79c.AMERICA'S DESTINY, by Her¬man Finer. Pub. at $5. Our price49c.THE YEAR OF THE OATH, byGeorge R. Stewart in collaborationwith other professors of the Uni¬versity of California. Pub. at $2.Our price 49c.ON ACTIVE SERVICE IN PEACEAND WAR, by Henry L. Stimsonand McGeorge Bundy. Pub. at $5.Our price 98c. 'THE BENDING CROSS, a biog¬raphy of Eugene Victor Debs, byRay Ginger. Pub. at $5. Our price98c.MR. JUSTICE BLACK, The Manand His Opinions, by John P.Frank. Pub. at $4.75. Our price$1.69.TWO FRIENDS OF MAN, byRalph Korngold. The story ofWilliam Lloyd Garrison and Wen¬dell Phillips and their relationshipwith Abraham Lincoln. Pub. at$5. Our price 98c.BLACK ANGER, by Wulf Sachs.Pub. at $3. Our price 98c.PHYSICS AND POLITICS, byWalter Bagehot. With an intro¬duction by Jacques Barzun. Pub.at $2.75.^>ur price $1.39.LIVING MATHEMATICS RE¬VIEWED, by Hobart H. Sommers.Pub. at $2.50. Our price 98c.HEART SONGS. Over 400 favor¬ite songs reflecting the historyand sentiment of the Americanpeople. Edited by Chappie. Pub.at $2.95. Our price $1.49.THE SYMPHONIES OF MOZART.A critical and hstorical study ofall the Mozart symphonies byGeorges de Saint-Fox. Pub. at $3.Our price $1.49.JAZZ: A PEOPLE'S MUSIC. Ahistory and study of jazz by Sid¬ney Finke stein. Pub. at $3. Ourprice $1.49THE PLAYS OF CHEKOV. Con-ains nine complete plays. Pub. at$2.50. Our price 98c. WORLD'S GREAT PLAYS. Sevenfamous plays complete and un¬abridged with an introduction byGeorge Jean Nathan. Pub. at$1.95. Our price 98c.COLLECTED POEMS OFCHARLES E R S K I N E SCOTTWOOD. Pub. at $5. Our price$1.49.BAUDELAIRE, RIMBAUD, VER¬LAINE. Selected Verse and ProsePoems. Pub. at $3. Our price$1.98.A TREASURY OF THE SPOKENWORD. A collection of familiarpoetry annotated and interpretedfor reading aloud. By Ted Cottwith an introduction by LouisUntermeyer. Pub. at $3.50. Ourprice 98c.VINCENT VAN GOGH, Draw¬ings, Pastels, Studies. Introduc¬tion by Dr. W. Muensterberger.1 14 excellent reproductions. Pub.at $5. Our price $1.98.THE PLEASURES OF SKETCHINGOUTDOORS, by Clayton Hoag-land. The fundamentals of land¬scape drawing. Pub. at $3.95.Our price $1.98.THE WISE ENCYCLOPEDIA OFCOOKERY. Over 1,300 pages tellyou everything you want to knowabout every food and drink youwill ever want to buy, prepareand serve. Pub. at $4.95. Dam¬aged copies $1.98THE WISE GARDEN ENCYCLO¬PEDIA. A complete guide toevery detail of gardening. Pub.at $5.00. Damaged copies $1.98THE WISE FISHERMEN'S ENCY¬CLOPEDIA. Pub. at $4.95. Dam¬aged copies $1.98AMERICAN BIRDS IN COLOR.An encyclopedia of Land Birds.387 photos, 192 in full color.Pub. at $4.95. Damaged copies$1.98YOUR DREAM HOME—How toBuild it for Less than $3500. ByHubbard Cobb. Pub. at $3.95.Damaged copies $1.49CHILDREN'S PICTORIAL ENCY¬CLOPEDIA. An illustrated one-volume reference book for chil¬dren. Pub. at $4.95. Damagedcopies $1.49ERSKINE'S CALDWELL'S JACK¬POT. Five books in one, 75stories. Pub. at $1.98. Ourprice 98cAN AMERICAN DREAM GIRLand Other Stories by James T.Farrell. Pub. at $3.00. Our price98cEND AS A MAN by Colder Will¬ingham. Pub. $2.75. Our price98cDOPPELGANGERS by H. F.Heard. Pub. at $2.75. Our price98cPEACE IS WHERE THE TEMP¬ESTS BLOW by Volentine Ka¬taev. Pub. at $3.00. Our price49cYOUNG LONIGAN by James T.Farrell. Pub. at $1.00. Ourprice 49cTHE YOUNG MANHOOD OFSTUDS LONIGAN by James T.Farrell. Pub. at $1.00. Our price49cJUDGEMENT DAY by James T.Farrell. Pub. at $1.00. Ourprice 49cM M MMMMIfliMlIOidCLARKandCLARKBOOKSELLERS1204 EAST 55th STREETHours 10 A.M.-9 P.M.ttm *. IW THt CHICAGO MAROON Page 9,UT Production...rtrom poge 8)ptfKSUtcc of Woman-of Mysteryjiiot previbusly mentioned) whoappeared for a few minutes in thejetond act, we are in graveClossicol RCA records49c o pieceWide AssortmentNew and in perfect conditionUniversity Radio & Appliance1126 E. 55th MU 4-5776 doubts; however, we feel certainthat the incident had somethingto do with Freud and with theimpact of international spy thrill¬ers on western civilization.Generally speaking, the Capek’spotpourri of critical commentaryheld together both dramaticallyand as satire per se. A lastingimpression was not attained; how¬ever, because they could offer noappeal of their own for the better¬ment of mankind other than afeeble “Adam! Leave it alone!”Henry Clinton Moguire Jr. Recent reissues availableA very gratifying realization on the part of Columbia and RCA Victor of the excellenceof many recordings previously available only on 78 rpm recordings has brought about the re¬cutting of an increasing number of highly desirable performances. Notable among thismonth’s releases are the Columbia recording of the Faure Requiem with the Chanteurs deLyon conducted by E. Bourmauck and the Victor recording of Puccini’s La Tosea by LaScala with Benjamino Gigli and Maria Canilia conducted by Fabritiis.The Faure Requiem itself is —THEATRE 55th & ELLISFROLIC Starts Mon., May 12 For 3 Days"A WILD RIDEINTO A WORLDOF UPROARIOUSFANTASY!"i—$et *♦»<♦« 0< III.ALECGuinness«.ukSTANLEY HOLLOWAYA J Arthur Rtnh Organization Prtscntitio*A Univtrj*! Internitiomi Release THE FUNNIEST PICTURE THATEVER CROSSED THE “BIG DRINK'*!■J. ARTHUR RANK present!BASIL RADFORDJOAN GREENWOOD probably one of the most beau¬tiful of the romantic re¬quiems. Although certainly nothaving the intense dramatic con¬tent of the Verdi or Berlioz re¬quiems (the “Dies Irae” as a sep- achieves a sincerity that can bereached only by purely musicalexpression. No recording of theRequiem but the Columbia hassucceeded in reproducing the in¬trinsic quality of the composition.The tendency is usually to per¬form the relatively simple scorearate section is omitted) itIIHHIlHIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIinillHIIIIISIIIIr HAMILTON THEATERhome of prestige entertainment2150 E. 71st St. HY 3 1121 s as an academic setting of musicto words. Bourmauck has real¬ized the score as it should be, pro¬ducing, for instance, the contrastbetween the serene “In Parade-sium” and the relatively dramaticstatement of the first stanza ofthe “Dies Irae.” Suzanne Dupont,the soprano soloist, actuallymakes the supplication, “PieJesu,” supplicant.The La Scala recording of LaTosca was made during a verit¬able “Golden Age” of singing inItaly when such vocalists as Gigli,Albenese, Caniglia, T a j o , andStigniani were at their best.Daniel QueenNow Playing:= “AFRICAN QUEENwith Humphrey Bogart and Katherine Hepburn »» iZ Special discount rates for students* Present I.D. cards to cashiersHiiiiaiiimiiiiiiiniiiimiiimiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiK• .wi a wh'*At arcb®^ i at 1 x®utwhTte“w*sstr,ke.I smoKelady SctdossetBarnard ColI®8®BeHappy-GO LUCKY!In a cigarette, tastemakes the difference —and Luckies taste better!The difference between “just smoking” andreally enjoying your smoke is the taste of acigarette. You can taste the difference in thesmoother, mellower, more enjoyable taste of aLucky . . . for two important reasons. First,L.S./M.F.T.—Lucky Strike means fine tobacco... fine, mild tobacco that tastes better. Second,Luckies are made to taste better...proved best-made of all five principal brands. So reach for aLucky. Enjoy the cigarette that tastes better!Be Happy-Go Lucky! Buy a carton today!LS/M F.Tr Lucky StrikeMeans Fine Tobaccostill ooj1. *r•■35a wiCIa«r®JP.C.LA- soon’-Brow**ym'i. Record of the WeekDylan Thomas — FivePoems read by thepoet — one 12 - inchrecord - $4.95atTheDisc1367 E. 57th St.HYde Park 3-5151CHICAGO COLLEGE ofOPTOMETRY(Nationally Accredited)An Outstanding College hi aSplendid ProfessionDoctor of Optometry degree inthree years for students enteringwith sixty or more semester creditsin specified Liberal Arts courses.FALL REGISTRATIONNOW OPENStudents 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, IllinoisFLY KLM TO EUROPENEW LOW AIR TOURIST RATESEffective May lit.* ROUND TRIP NEW YORK TOSHANNON Only $433.80LONDON* Only 486.00PARIS Only 522.00FRANKFORT Only 563.60•Via Prestwick or Shannon(fores subject to government approval.Good low-cost meals available on plane.)AHH MlI^ KLM Royal Dutch Airlines I| 572 Fifth Avenue, New York 19, N. Y. |• Please send full Information on new aKLM Air Tourist Rates to Europe. IJ NAME IJ ADDRESS jL— - — — — JP»9* 10 tHE CHICAGO MAROON M*V % 195ZHorsehiders lose two more; Gymnasts place* ^ <-* n '’I "Or»t tc* T\7 nrifmiidfall to Lake Forest, I IT Coach Tom Potts’ JV gymnastswound up their most successfulseason in history last Saturday bytaking second place in the IllinoisInvitational High School Gymnas¬tics Meet at Urbana. The junioraUC’s hardluck baseballers dropped their third one-rundecision in as many tries last Saturday by losing to Lake Maroons' tallied a total of 97Forest, 11-10, in 10 innings, and followed Tuesday by drop- points, second only to New Trierping a 9-6 game to Illinois Tech. The Maroons have now lost High's 190.nine games while winning none this season. The team was represented byAgainst Lake Forest the locals seemingly had the game Fred Bishop, John Davis, Ronniein the bag with a 10-5 lead go- Graham, Bob Herdon, and Herbing into the ninth, but three tbe season at a team meeting Taylor, who all shared in thewalks and four hits, including Wednesday. Top hitters for the scoring honors. Top Maroon per-a homer, tied the score. Two hits squad according to_ the latest formances were a sweep of thesandwiched around a sacrifice adages are Gil Larimer with a side horse event (winning thegave Lake Forest the win in the T420. mark and Gl1 LeVlne at -4°0- first four places) and a win m thetenth frame. Up until the fatal ^nmer 15 also *°PS 1,n.ru"s bat‘ fl>^ng rings competition.ted in with eight while Garcia The JV s might have one evenand Levine have each knocked in better except that Taylor wasseven. Frankenfeld leads the hampered by a sprained ankle,out eleven. At the plate Gil ;ea™ walks haying drawn and Bob Burkhart, Bob Calvin,twelve. Next game for the Ma- and Jim Stone were unable toroons is a rematch with Knox make the trip downstate. Thetomorrow at 1 p.m. on Stagg junior Maroons had beaten NewField. Trier twice in earlier meets. Tracksters tie, loseon Indiana roadtripThe varsity trackmen lost one and tied one on their Indianaroadtrip last weekend losing, 82-49, to Wabash, and tyingDePauw, 65^-65V*.Friday against DePauw the Maroons won 10 of 15 events,but DePauw’s superior team depth enabled them to tie thesmaller Chicago traveling squad. Feature of the meet forninth Dick “Smoky” Garcia hadheld the Forestmen to seven hitsand only two walks while strikingLarimer batted in five runs onthree hits, and Max Fogel knock¬ed in four on a pair of bingles. GilLevine also accounted for threebase knocks.Except for a brief 4-3 lead inthe first inning the Maroons wereon the defensive throughout theIllinois Tech game. Garcia againwent all the way for Chicago, butthe IITers managed to bunchtheir seven hits for nine runs anda 9 6 victory. Lennie Britton andDave Utley paced the Maroonsat bat with two hits apiece.Garcia and John Frankehfeld,sparky second sacker, were elect¬ed co-captains for the remainderSports briefs the locals was the mile relaywon by the Maroon foursomeof Bill Hammon, Carl Dalke,Phil Wyatt, and Ken Stapley intheir best time of the year, 3:28.7.Charles Norcross taking the shotput and discus accounted for Chi¬cago’s only double.Other Maroon winners were the half-mile;for fu¬ll 59 East 55th Street 24-Hour Service PLasa 2-3246University GarageTHORNTON ROGERSExpert Service on All Cars• COMPLETE SUMMERIZATION• WASHING - GREASING• BRAKE SERVICE• ROAD SERVICENSA Student Discount on Parts, Gas and Oil Ashby Smith tiedTrst in both distance eventswith Jim Flynn sharing two-milehonors and John Smothers dead¬locking him in the mile.In Saturday’s meet the Maroonaoutscored Wabash in the runningevents but were completelysmashed in the field events. SmithGerald Czamanski in the javelin, and Smothers again tied for firstTom Wilson in the pole vault, in the mile at 4:36.2; Dalke wonMarc Goff in the high hurdles, a photo finish 440 in 51.8; GoffWyatt in the 440, and Stapley in captured both hurdle events.Remember . • . Next Sunday isMother's Day- WE WIRE FLOWERSSTUDENT DISCOUNTSMITZIE’S Flower Shop1501 E. 55Hi St. Ml 3-4020The JV cindermen capturedtheir seventh straight dual andtriangular track victory by over¬whelming North Park Academy,1074-5%, May 1, at Stagg Field.The junior Maroons took first andsecond places in every event andswept both hurdles, the shot, 440,880. and discus throw. Top markwas Bob Appleman's 12' polevault effort.The varsity golfers droppedtwo tilts last week at Silver Lake,one to Ulinois-Navv Pier, 114-6 4, and one to Valparaiso by an8-4 count. Tomorrow the linksmenbattle Northern Illinois StateTeachers at DeKalb.Valiity racketeers capturedtwo tennis victories, 7-2 over HopeCollege and 5-4 over DePauw, lastw'eek and dropped a 6-0 decisionto Kalamazoo. Most thrillingmatch of the week was the MartyOrans-Parker Hall doubles matchagainst DePauw. The Maroon duowon the first set and had sevenmatch points but finadly lost out.The tennismen host Bradley to¬day at 2 p.m.In intramurals Coulter hascaptured the College House tennistourney downing Linn, 2-1. Insoftball Snell leads the CollegeHouse League with a 2-0 recordfollowing Hitchcock’s 15-14 loss toMead Tuesday. Psi U and ZBT aretied for first in the FraternityLeague with 4-0 records and theLaw School is out in front in theIndependent League with a 3-0mark. THE DU PONTEngineering UnlimitedTraining in many different engineering branchesopens the door to opportunity at Du PontIn recent issues of the Digest, wehave discussed opportunities for me¬chanical and chemical engineers atDu Pont. However, this is only partof the picture. The special skills ofmore than a dozen different branchesof engineering are needed on ourscientific teams. For example:Architectural, civil and structural en¬gineers are attached to the centralEngineering Department which han¬dles most of the Company’s construc¬tion projects. In this work they makesite investigations, lay out newplants, design buildings, determineconstruction methods and specifymaterials and equipment. They alsoassemble necessary labor forces atfield locations and supervise thebuilding and assembly of complexmanufacturing facilities.Electrical engineers aid in designingprocess equipment and facilities forpower generation and distribution,air conditioning and refrigeration.Instrumentation is another impor¬tant phase of their work. Continuous automatic analyzers for cyanides,ultra-violet gas analyzers, multivari¬able recorders, and new photo-multi¬plier circuits are just a few of theirdevelopments.Industrial engineers help developmethods and standards for new orimproved manufacturing processes.This work often serves as trainingfor production supervisors.Metallurgical engineers play an es¬sential part in the central EngineeringDepartment’s program of research.Their studies are aimed at improvingequipment and construction materi¬als, as well as methods of measure¬ment and control.Safety engineers strive constantly toimprove the broad safety programinitiated by the Company’s founder150 years ago. Du Pont is under¬standably proud of its safety record,which in 1950 was eight times betterthan the chemical industry’s as awhole, and fourteen times betterthan the average for all industry. ' Carl Goslina, B.S., Iowa'41,conduct* meteor¬ological engineering studies to help solve plantchimney problems involving smoke and acids.This by no means completes thelist. Every U. S. industry utilizesDu Pont products. Hence there isalso a need for specialists in mining,petroleum, textiles and many otherbranches of engineering.Along with chemists, physicistsand other technical personnel, al¬most every kind of engineer findsopportunity at Du Pont. Your engi¬neering degree is only a door opener.Any man with ideas, imaginationand the ability to handle people willfind plenty of room for advancementin this company that has neverstopped growing.FOR HELP in choosing your career, sendfor free copy of "The Du Pont Companyand the College Graduate.” Describesfutures for men and women with manytypes of training. Address: 2521 NemoursBldg., Wilmington, Delaware.D&(D<>b £lcDGD9v7&3,acnc7&' BETTER THINGS FOR BETTER LIVING. .. THROUGH CHEMIST* YEntertaining, Informative — Listen to "Cavalcade ofAmerica,” Tuesday Nights, NBC Coast to Coast uitNever enough collegewomen with Gibbssecretarial trainingto meet thedemandSpecial Course for College Women,five-city personal placement service.Write College Dean for catalog.I KATHARINE GIBBSBOSTON IS. SO Marlborough St NEW YORK 17, 230 Park Ara.CHICAGO 11. SI E. Suparior St MONTCtAIR, 13 PI,OM«tk St. PROVIDENCE «. It L1SS Angall St Fred R. Struder, B.Metal.E., Rensselaer P. I.*50, examines a pressure strain recorder withAllen R. Fur beck, E.E., Princeton '39. chemicals. Engineers attached to The Du Pont Company's central Engineering Departmentdesigned the plant and supervised the installation of the manufacturing equipment.11THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 11May 9, 1952>I Calendar...Friday, May 9inf<*r - Varsity Christian Fellowship:Luncheon meeting 12:30 p.m. -1:30d m Gunnar Hogland, “The Christianand the Presidential Elections.” IdaNoyes Sun Parlor.Tennis match, Varsity courts, 2 p.m. UCvs. Bradley University.The Committee for International Under¬standing is holding a meeting to dis¬cuss the implications of the MadisonConference Friday afternoon at 3:30p m. In Rosenwald 26.Lecture Series: “A General Introductionto Far Eastern Civilization” (Commit¬tee on Far Eastern Civilization), SocialScience 122, 4:30 j.m. “Japanese Art.”Ludwig Bachhofer, professor of art.Mathematical Biology Meeting, 5741Drexel Ave., 4:30 p.m. “On the Possi¬bilities of Cell Division by ElasticForces.” Irvin Isenberg, AssistantProfessor of the Natural Sciences inthe College.Lecture Series: “The Western Tradition—Its Great Ideas and Issues” (Uni¬versity College, Downtown Center),32 W. Randolph St., 7:30 p.m. "Senseand Nonsense: The Conflict BetweenPhilosophy and Positivism." MortimerJ. Adler, editor of Syntoplcon andGreat Books of the Western World.Hillel Foundation: Oneg Snabbat inhonor of the new Hillel officers, 8:30p.m., preceeded by Sabbath Service,7:45 p.m. Hillel House. 5715 Woodlawn.Saturday, May 10Baseball Game, Stagg field, 1 p m. Chl-Repair YourBICYCLESi\OWLightweight and BalloonComplete Line of Parts forAll BicyclesAce Cycle Shop819 E. 55th Ml 3-2672 cago vs. Knox College.Alpha Delta Phi: Discussion on nuclearphysics led by Morris Scharff, atomicenergy fellow, member department ofphysics.Track Meet, Stagg field, 3 p.m. Chicagovs. Lawrence College. 8:30 p.m. Ad¬mission 45 cents.Sunday, May 11University Religious Service, RockefellerMemorial Chapel, 11 a.m. The Rever¬end John Kielty, Executive Secretaryof the British General Assembly ofUnitarian and Free Christianchurches, London. The ReverendJohn B. Thompson, Dean of the Chap¬el.Socialist Youth League: Hal Draper,“Labor and the Coming Elections.”4 p.m. Ida Noyes Hall.Channing Club: panel discussion, “Con¬troversy in Contemporary Religion:Humanism vs. Theism." Supper at 6p.m., program at 7 p.m. John Wool-man Hall, First Unitarian church,57th at Woodlawn.Monday, May 12Exhibition (Renaissance Society): Anexhibition of paintings by Mark Tobeyand a group of water colors by HorstDe Marees. Goodspeed 108, dally ex¬cept Sunday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m., throughMay 14.Howard Taylor Ricketts Lecture, BillingsP-117, 4:30 p.m. “The Significance ofVariation among Influenza Viruses.”Dr. Thomas Francis, Jr., professor andchairman of the department of epide¬miology, School of Public Health, Uni¬versity of Michigan.Lecture Series: “A general Introductionto Far Eastern Civilization” (commit¬tee on Far Eastern Civilizations), So¬cial Science 122, 4:30 p.m. ■'Tradition¬al Institutions in Southeast Asia.”Robert I. Crane, instructor In ModernHistory. Lecture Series: “Change in the Eastand in the West” (Department ofSociology), Classics 10, 4:30 p.m."Origins of Change.” William F. Og-burn, Sewell L. Avery, distinguishedservice professor emeritus of sociol¬ogy.Botany Club, Botany 106, 4:30 p.m."Comparison of a Bacterial and aSeed-Plant Virus.” Frank WilliamPutnam, assistant professor of bio¬chemistry, Markle Scholar in MedicalSciences.Lecture Series: “Helping People to HelpThemselves— Client-Centered Psycho¬therapy” (University College, Down¬town Center), 19 S. La Salle St., 7 p.m."Group Therapy and TherapeuticLeadership.” Thomas Gordon, assist¬ant professor of psychology.New Testament Club, Swift Hall Com¬mon Room, 8 p.m. “Structure andMeaning in First Corinthians.” HoltH. Graham, assistant professor ofNew Testament Literature and Lan¬guages, Seabury-Western TheologicalSeminary.The Modern Dance Group: Coeduca¬tional and informal, 8-9:30 p m., IdaNoyes Dance Room.Motion Picture: La Traviata (Italianfilm). International House, 8:30 p.m.,admission 45 cents.Tuesday, May 13Westminster Fellowship commuter’slunch: 12 noon to 1:30 p.m., privatedining room of Hutchinson Commons.Maynard Krueger, College social sci¬ence department, "The 1952 Presiden¬tial Election.”Final Contest for the Milo P. Jewettprizes for Bible reading, Joseph BondChapel, 4 p.m.Track Meet, Stagg field, 4 p.m. Chicagovs. Illlnols-Navy Pier.Mathematics Club, 4:15 p.m. “Automor-phlc Functions and Nonanalytic Num¬ber Theory.” Artie Selberg, professorVVTVV*VV*VV<J'l WANTED TO BUY—GOOD USED BOOKS TO SELLFOR SOPHISTICATESNew Line of Hand Print (and Panda) CardsACASA BOOK STORE1117 E. 55th Street 'Chicago 15, IllinoisHYde Park 3-9651AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAaAi of mathematics, Institute for Ad¬vanced Study.Lecture Series: “Tradition and PoeticStructure” (Division of the Humani¬ties), Social Science 122, 4:30 p.m.“Paradise Meter.” J. V. Cunningham,assistant professor of English.Lecture Series: "Underdeveloped Areas—a Challenge to the Free World”(University College, Downtown Cen¬ter), Woodrow Wilson Room, 116 S.Michigan Ave., 6:15 p.m. “The SovietUnion and the Problem of Underde¬veloped Areas.” Seymour Rotter, In¬structor in Modern History.Motion Pictures: "Experimental Films”(Documentary Film Group), SocialScience 122, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m. Moth¬ers’ Day, by James Broughton; La¬ment, by Walter Strate, and Jose Ll-mon; Fiddle-Dee-Dee, by Norman Mc¬Laren; Room Studies, Nos. 1-3, bySoren Melson; Ballet by Degas; Child'sDream, a new Czech puppet film, andBeing and Becoming, by members ofthe Documentary Film Group.Graduate History Club, Ida Noyes Li¬brary, 7:30 p.m. “Medieval Precedentsin the Colonization of America.” Pro¬fessor C. Verllnden, University ofGhent.Lecture (Canterbury Club), BrentHouse, 5540 Woodlawn Ave., 7:45 p.m.“The Idea of the Holy Spirit In Re¬ligion. V. The Holy Spirit and theIndividual.” The Right ReverendCharles Larrabee Street, Bishop Suff¬ragan of Chicago.Political Science Association; LeonardD. White, formerly chairman of thedepartment of political science, “Howto Write a Dissertation.” 8 p.m., So¬cial Science 201.Calvert Club Lecture: Prof. Jerome G.Kerwin, department of Political sci¬ence, “Religious Freedom and SecularPower.” 8 p.m., DeSales House, 5735University.Wednesday, May 14Baseball Game, Stagg field, 3:30 p.m.Chicago vs. Illinois Institute of Tech¬nology.Tennis Match, Varsity courts, 3:30 p.m.Junior Varsity vs. Sullivan HighCARMEN'SUSED FURNITURE & APPLIANCESBARGAINS!WE BUY AND SELLREPAIR WORK . MOVING1127 E. 55th St. FA 4-7954 school.Lecture series: “A General Introduc¬tion to Far Eastern Civilizations”(Committee on Far Eastern Civiliza¬tions), Social Science 122, 4:30 p.m.“Science and Medicine in the FarEast.” Dr. Ilza Velth, assistant pro¬fessor of medical history, department*of medicine end history.Carillon Recital, Rockefeller MemorialChapel, 4:30 p.m. Mr. Marriott.Zoology Club, Zoology 14, 4:30 p.m."Some New Aspects of the Develop¬ment of Llmmea.” Professor CharlesP. Raven, Zoological Laboratory, Uni¬versity of Utrecht, Holland.Lecture Series: “Language and Com¬munication” (University C o 1 le g e ,Downtown Center), 19 S. La Salle St.,6:15 p.m. “Communication as SocialTherapy.” S. I. Hayakawa, lecturer inUniversity College; author of Lan¬guage in Thought and Action, andeditor of ETC.Lecture (Baha’i Fellowship), Ida NoyesHall, North Reception room. 7:30 p.m.“Baha’i: It’s for You, If You WantLasting Peace.” Farrukh Ioas, authorand lecturer.Illustrated Lecture (Oriental Institute),James Henry Breasted Lecture Hall,8:30 p.m. “New Records of an AncientJewish Military Colony In Egypt.”Professor Emil Kraellng, formerly ofColumbia University and Union Theo¬logical Seminary.Lecture (Law School), Law South, Lavjbuilding, 8:30 p.m. “The Scandinavian.Law of Torts.” Henry B. Usslng, pro¬fessor of law, Copenhagen University.University Glee Club: Open air twilightconcert of madrigals, folksongs, andother music. 7:15 to 8:15 p m., GreenHall Quadrangle.Thursday, May 15Psychology Club, Social Science 122, 4:30p.m. “The Role of Motivation inLearning.” Kenneth W. Spence, pro¬fessor of psychoolgy, State Universityof Iowa.United Nations Association: “EconomicDevelopment and the UN: El Salva¬dor.” Bert Hoselltz, director of studies.International Relations Committeeand economic analylst for the UN.7:30 p.m., International House, RoomA.Friday, May 16Seminar: Division of Biological andMedical Research, Argonne NationalLaboratory, Site B, 6111 UniversityAve., 4 p.m. "Effect of Ionizing Radi¬ations on Some Physicochemical Prop¬erties of Proteins." E. S. Guzman Bar¬ron, associate professor of biochemis¬try, department of medicine.’>4 UniberSitpUfountain&trmctSIGNEDPROPRIETORmuch Milder^ Chesterfieldwith an extraordinarily good tasteand NO UNPLEASANT AFTER-TASTE•From the Report of o Well-Known Research OrganizationLARGEST SELLING CIGARETTE IN AMERICA’S COLLEGESPage 12 THE CHICAGO MAROON30§•1' M*y 9, 1952Classified adsFor SaleBass reflex cabinet, oak finished, madeby Lowe’s. Call Kins Collins, MI 3-9920,evenings.Webster phonograph, two-speed, port¬able, automatic, complete unit, excel¬lent condition. Also portable 3-wayRCA radio. Call Blossom Gershten, MI3-0800, ext. 3568 between 12:30 and 1:30. Double bed with inner-spring and goodmattress, very reasonable, $15. Call HY3-3966 any day between 5 and 10 p.m.Mercury ’40 4-dr., 7,500 on engine, bodyperfect, tires excellent, headers, duals,fast highway car. Smith, MI 3-5876.1939 Buick sedan with 1946 motor, radioand heater. Price open. -Call NancyHaas at Foster Hall between 5:30 and7 p.m.Royal desk typewriter, standard key¬board. romance languages accents, $20.Tel. FA 4-8200, Room 564. To buy man’s bike (lightweight or oth-wise). Call BU 8-0374 after 6 p.m.Job, full time summer, afternoons, eve¬nings, weekends, any type. Call JoyceCowan, MI 3-0800, Green Hall. Messagepossible.Tuxedo double-breasted, like new, size38, Max. 20. Box 408 MAROON.Urgently need April 6, 1951 MAROON.Will pay 25 cents. Phone HY 3-1757, askfor Dave.For Rent Found Rides WantedOne black automatic pencil. Call eve¬nings, Don, FA 4-3850.Business Services(r„ Used set of golf clubs In good condi-fchartreuse d"aDes' Cafl^NO 7-5763 tlon- Excellent *>uy for someone inter-™ drapes. Call NO 7-5763 ln starting golf at minimum ex-ai e. 5 p.m. pense. Gene Selmanoff, ext. 2545 day,Singer rebuilt electrified sewing mach- 4-8711 evening.Ine ln excellent condition. Call MI „3-4679. WantedA few 25-ride IC tickets between 53rd- To borrow, a good set of history lec-67th. Reasonable. Robert Hankin. BU ture notes, am willing to pay for them.*-7851. Call MI 3-3879 evenings.AccordionVerdi II,Poste. 1211 E. 58th St.and case, Hohner 80-bass Book wanted: Frink Tashlin, “The Bearnever used. Sacrifice, $70. That Wasn’t.” HY 3-2067 after 7:30,Norm Demb.Will sell or trade 4x5 Graphic View withlens and accessories, $125 or for goodtwo-speed tape recorder. VA 6-9589. eve¬nings.One lady’s, one man’s Benrus Citationwatch. Brand new. Bargain. HO 5-5063.Walnut finish slx-plece dinette set.Royal portable typewriter, three pairssilk damask drapes. All best condition,reasonable. MU 4-0294 evenings. To buy or rent: Used Spanish Lingua-phone records. Call MU 4-4182.15" speaker cabinet, bass reflex, ex¬tended horn or horn loaded. Call KinsCollins, MI 3-9920 evenings.Roommates: Lydia and Phyl desire lib¬eral-minded, responsible gal to sharebasement apartment. Three large rooms,kitchen, all conveniences, furnished.Rent $14 per month. BU 8-7128. Nicely furnished room; private home;light cooking facilities; female preferred.DO 3-1470.Can’t you find the proper room? Youcan ... at the Kimbark Kal-kan. Large,sunny. 6237 Kiinbark, phone NO 7-9746after 6 p.m. or weekends.Furnished apartment to sub-let duringsummer quarter. Private bath, kitchen,kitchenware, dressing room. $50 permonth. Matt Meselson, PL 2-8223.Beautiful furnished modern 3 roomapartment for sub-lease June 15 toSept. 15. All utilities, $75 per month.MU 4-6432.Apartments WantedArtist from India, wife and baby, needimmediately 2-3 room unfurnishedapartment, private bath. Reasonablerent. MU 4-8186. /Two rooms with kitchen wanted forsummer quarter for male student. CallBarrie Summons, PL 2-9778. Drawing made: student with severalyears drafting experience. Graphs,charts, instrument drawings, etc., forpublication or theses. Photographic re¬productions made. Gradolph, BU 8-0710,Campus ext. 2435.Tutoring and translation for Russianand German by advanced student. Rea¬sonable. Call Oren Jarlnkes, 1333 East50th St., BO 8-5074.French tutoring: Call DO 3-7300 ext.509.Light HaulingMcDAVID - BU 8-6210.Express, light and heavy moving. Will¬ing and courteous service. Reasonablerates. Bordone, VI 6-9283 and MI 3-1198.Jobs Available«Baby sitter now through August. Aver¬age three evenings a week. One threeyear-old child. Pay at going rates.BU 8-7861.Classics student: for summer instruc¬tion ln elementary Greek. Terms to bearranged. Telephone HY 3-3192, May 9or 10.Have expense-free summer ln Adlron-dak Mountains. Faculty family, swim¬ming, boating, fishing, climbing; mealtime duties, baby sitting, small weeklystipend. DO 3-5626. To Boston around June 14 will ^driving and expenses. D. ’Queen3-6000. wueen, MlTo New York weekend of May 24 W mshare expenses. Call Blossom Ger'sht, ,MIq3-0800 ext. 3568 between 12:30 at*To New York or in that generaT direc¬tion on May 25 or May 26. All cost,shared. Dick Ward, PL 2-9236, apt Mafter 9 p.m. ' JRiders WantedDriving to San Francisco, leaving abUl8H Uke two$1.50 per Hourto DeliverHyde Park Heralddoor - to - door, Wednesdaysonly, hours open. Must besteady, reliable.Apply 1223 E. 55th St.SPECIALGIVE DAO A GRAND GIFT! York PURCHASEWIN $500.00!C5» FATHERS DAYJUNE 15th-.fa-ont It's the newest, smartestreversible jacket . . . two fabricsin one . ,. two styles in one! Sharkskin Over¬plaid on one side . . . solid-color Sheen Gabardineon the other side. Unisec-processed, the fabrics arestain-resistant, durably water-repellent and Rtfjnkle-resistant . . . even after repeated dry cleanings!Single-needled in the quality Grais manner ... a ter¬rific value ... a grand gift for Father's Day. Differentcolor combinations. .Sizes 34 to 46. • • $1495*$1,000.00 IN PRIZES!Enter this easy, exciting contest —"Wy & a tyuutd (fuyJust tell why in ,»0 words or less and win $500.00 insavings bonds or one of eight other prizes. Entertoday!... gifts for father's day. Also for you as well!This is one of eight other sixes. Come in today for your jacket andipplication blank at our stores. SHORT SLEEVE 100% WashableSPORTS SHIRTSRegularly Sold at $2.95and $3.50 75‘ ValueMen's SOXSixes 10 to J 3A PAIR373 for $1.103 for *570While They LastSPECIAL PURCHASE!LONG SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTNow $2 97Gabs and Club ChecksS-M-L-XLValues to $5.00SLACK SALE $| 25WHITETEESHIRTS89<3 for $2.50Rayon - Gabardine andSharkskins*10” Value *395Nationally AdvertisedMEN'S WHITE ,DRESS SHIRTS2 97Sizes 14 - 17AlterationFreeNot All Colorsin All Sizes 2 pairs for *15°°Sizes 28 to 46 „ *1095Nationally AdvertisedGABARDINEJACKETS(S, M, L, and XL)JACK’S STORES1121 E. 63rd St. for M E N 6709 S. Stoney Island Ave.We accept your NS A card on all merchandise not on saleA