)! X Y„“r AFL strikes on campuslU upcft A fAtC Thomas Neckeles and Mifcholl Schorow "su’s traditional Wassail Party Last Wednesday at 6 a.m., the members of the University of Chicago Council, AFL, went on strike against the Univeivwhich opens the Christmas season sity Administration. The strike was called as a result of a wage dispute.here at the University wul be held The University of Chicago Council, AFL, which is composed of four local unions, at a special meeting held on Nov. 12,next Wednesday, Dec. 13, at 3 p.ro. 1950, voted to reject the final proposal of the Administration to the effect that the contract be renewed without anyin Ida Noyes Hall. increases in the wage rates.Sponsored by the Special Events The Administration has offered 5 cents per hour increase. Social Security benefits will cover striking AFLers ii rovidingthere is a two-thirds vote mEiepartment, the affair will featurecarol singing and traditionalChristmas fare—wassail and fruitcake. Admission will be free toatudents. faculty, and staff.Everyone is encouraged to bringwrapped gifts, indicated either“boy” or “girl” to the party fordistiibution to the SettlementHouse.The gifts, which should cost$1.00 or less, may also be left underthe Ida Noyes ChrisJtmas tree,which will be set up Dec. 12.Conduct pollThe MAROON is conducting apoll regording student opinion oncertain problems on peace. Stu¬dents have been selected at ran¬dom to help the MAROON run thispoll. We urge the co-operation ofthose who have been selected toreturn thier questionnaires as soonos possible to insure the successof the poll. BULLETINS31 University of Chicago, December 8, 1950Annual Hillel Hanukkah festivitiesoffer Thompson, Handel oratorioby Ernest Kahn • r j 4.v. »» -xThe fourteenth Maccabean Festival, annual celebration of Hanukkah, will be presented informed the MAROONby the Hillel Foundation at Rockefeller Memorial Chapel next Sunday afternoon, Decern- three other skilled em¬ber 10, at 3:30 p.m. The Festival will be highlighted by a presentation of the oratorio '‘"Judas Maccabaeus” by George Frederick Han^l.The oratorio will be sung by the Hillel Foundation Chorus, directed by its choirmasterMax Janowski. The Chorus will also sing the traditional Hanukkah liturgy and the can¬dles which symbolize the Fes- the entire 4,500 non-academieemployees.The union demands were for %16 cents per hour flat increase plusIn an emergency session of some nine fringe benefits whichthe Executive Council of stu- represented an annualdent Government, caUed to cost to-the University of approxi-consider the strike of mainte- ——nance men, the Council de-cided: 1) to obtain for the stu- are housed indent hidy the facts in thecase from the parties, or inde-pendently, and the position ofthe Administration and the ashes.Union, which both have thusfar failed to provide to theStudent Body; and 2) to in- continue when he realized hisform both the Administrationand the Union that the Stu- Zellner, BG chief, whodent Body of the University ^^d gij^en orders to do struckwhiclvwas given no warning Tb Thp'ihrppZZrZ'j;of the strike is a third and 3®^* other men arevery important party to thedispute, and that both parties ..According to the engineer,should bear in mind their ob- fP-ligations to the Student Body, ^which is the principal bene- JlStofr practicw ^ficiary of their activities and ^ uniair practices.the principal victim of their ★ ★ ★disagreement. It was reported to theic ic ^ MAROON that Burton - Jud-^. r . - j son has enough food for fourFoster-Green-Kellystruck work, the BG test engi- for three days.The fuel situation for theSee Bulletins, poge 3tival of Lights, will be then four years that it has been in ex- tory. It depicts the uprising in 167lit. istence. Its conductor. Max Jan- B.C. of the Jewish people againstSpeakers feotured « owski, is well known in Jewish mu- Syrians and their victory threeThe principal speaker at the sic circles. He is also the musicFestival will be the Dean of Rocke- director of K.A.M. Temple and afeller Chapel, the Reverend John composer of Jewish apd folk mtfsic.B. Thompson. On behalf of the He has recently published the mu-Foundation, Oscar Kenig, the act- sic for a Sabbath service,ing director, will welcome the au- The Hillel Chorus is composeddience. of 40 members. Soloists with theA unique feature of the Mac- Chorus in its Sunday performancecabean Festival will be a carillon will be: Kenneth Hcnriksen, tenor;concert at 3 p.m. which will pre- Charlotte Handwerger, soprano:cede the program in the Chapel. Harry Swanson, baritone; SallyFor this purpose, the Chapel caril- Kahn, alto; and Ruth Saleen, alto,lonneur, Mr. Frederick Marriott, Miss Thelma Michelson will be athas e.specially adapted a number the organ,of Hebrew melodies for the Chapel Depict Hondel themebells. The oratorio, one of a numberJonowski conducts on religious themes by the ^lermanThe Hillel Foundation Chorus composer Handel, deals, with onehas become an integral part of the of the most significant events inFoundation’s program dui'ing the the non-Biblical era of Jewish his-Theater in the roundgives plays tonight“Tonight at Eight-Thirty,” MAROON-sponsored theatric¬al group, presents its first public performance tonight at8:30 p.m., in Ida Noyes. “The Boor” by Chekov, “This Prop¬erty Condemned” by Williams, and “Man of Destiny” byShaw, will comprise the program. Performances will also beheld Saturday and Sunday evenings at 8:30 p.m. Ticketscost 60 cents and can be pur¬chased at the Ida Noyes boxoffice.The Ida Noyes theater has beenrechristened, for the occasion, the“Theater in the Round.” A theaterIn the round is constructed so thatthe audience sits in a circle aroundthe stage. This gives the produc¬tion a more informal aura.Rennie Anselmo directs “TheBoor,” Alice Snyder, “This Prop¬ erty Condemned,” and Omar Sha-pel, “Man of Destiny.”“This Property Condemned”was given a private showing atlast Sunday’s Noyes Box. The wardpatients at the Illinois Neuropsy¬chiatric Hospital viewed “Man ofDestiny” last Monday. These prac¬tice performances will insure thesuccess of the performances, An¬selmo said.'B«nI« of Hm SaxM^" • Moiia froM ’'Man Photo by KeUlokof Dostinir.*' Reverend Thompsonyears later in a battle for religiousfreedom. The uprising was led byan elderly priest, Mattathias, andat his death was carried on by hisfive sons, led by Judas Macca¬baeus.The Hanukkah liturgy, whichthe Chorus will sing, is part of atraditional candle - lighting cere¬mony takes its origin in the factSet Festival, pag« 8SA elects fiveCourt judgesThe five student judges for thenew Student-Faculty Court wereelected by Student Assembly lastTuesday night. Frank Logan andHerbert Vetter were elected totwo-year terms; David Broder,David Kahn, and Gerhard Wein¬berg to one-year terms.In the race for the two-yearseats, Logan, of the Social SciencesDivision, and Vetter, of MeadvilleTheological School, were the onlyones who received two thirds vote.Roger Woodworth, president ofSO, announced that the adminis¬tration had finally appro|ved the“Student Bill of Rights,” underwhich the Court was created bySA last spring. SQ sponsors proffired in oath caseOusted for refusing to sign the new state-wide Califorijialoyalty oath, a San Francisco State College professor willappear here today with two of his students to warn mem¬bers of the UC community of the dangers to our own liber-^ties growing out of conditions in his home state.Sponsored by Student Government, the meeting will takeplace at 3:30 today in Reyn-olds Club, South. It will fea- controversy flares has re-ture John Beecher, former as- national publicity,sistant professor of sociology at ^.assed by the state legislature andSFCS, and students Joan Stuck, October byjunior, and Leonard Beeclier, ^alifornia governor Earl Warren,freshman from the same school. requires all of the more~ , ,, ... , than 1,000,000 state employees to^th students have withdrawn, s„ear they are not members of anyMon w^ UH »e.r educa- organization advocating overthrow5 fn owS. . ‘he government by force ordecimation of the SFSC teaching violencestaff. They will tell the UC audi- The act further reauires em-Cnlffomh. Ployes to swear they will not be-Califorma situation. a member of any suchThe law around which the Cali- organization.'Cagers lack height,experience'—Coachby Herzog and Jacobs“Height and experience is what UC’s basketball teamlacks,” says basketball coach Nels Norgren.Experience is a factor corrected by time; in spite of itsunsuccessful start, the UC team can be expected to showconstant improvement over the course of the season.The loss of two tall men, Dune Hansen and Van der Wey¬den, both of whom had eligi- —bility remaining, was a §eri- Geocaris, one of the sparkous loss to the basketballers. year’s team, who wa»expected back this season, also hastransferred out. Only Spence Boiseand Dave Dickman, guard and for¬ward, respectively, are returneesfrom last year’s first team. It iseasy to see the mammoth rebuild¬ing program confronting C'./achNorgren.Besides Boise and Dickman, Nor¬gren has two other men returningfrom last year, Guard JeromeJohnson and Center A. Binsford.Transfer student Paul B. Roberts,who plays either forward or cen¬ter, completes the first five. Rob¬erts played for Carleton Collegelast year. Dave Johnson, a guard,was a member of last year’s “B”team. New faces this year are JohnCasey, Jim Philon, and Dave Nel-Photo by KeUick son, guards,’ Wally Cisowski andCeacli NortrM So# CafMV, goga 2iFage 2 THE CmCAGO maroon' - "Asked if he had any definite method of presenting his lectures so that they would be ofsuch general interest, Prof. Kolin said that he was not conscious of any special method butrather suspected that his own interest in what he has to Pay might be contagious.'r«.!ks of student problems ——When asked what s^dent nig^t of the critical abilities to theproblems have caught his at- neglect of exercising their imagin-tention especially, Prof. Kolin ation and creative ability in theexpressed himself as follows: fields of their greatest interest.”“What I find very regrettable is student expression bod ^ 'that students are likely to spend a Prof. Kolin continued with an-very large amount of time on mem- other problem: “In teaching theory work in order to improve their Physics course I became particu- ^larly aware of the difficulty manystudents have in expressing them- ^R^v' f 'selves. This difficulty is not somuch a linguistic one as a lack oftraining in analysis of one’s own ‘ideas and in their clear formula-“In my opinion, discussions onPhysics admirably suited forthe practice this skill which RBshould the storehouse ofskills of a well-educated person. Itis chiefly due to the ease withwhich the meaningfulness of astatement on a physical subjectcan be tested that Physics offerssuch a good opportunity for thedevelopment of this skill, whichonce acquired, could serve withequal effectiveness in other fields.^arnirxg to express oneself clearlyis the first step in learning to thinkclearly.”Begins teochingProf. Kolin came originally tothe College and later joined theDivision of Biological Sciences. Henow divides his time between COlUreEStwi CutsM«u(on27.S5.29.SSPhoto by KellickProfessor Kolinhe learned to read, about 1916. Hewent to secondary school (Ober-realschule) in Berlin and in 1929enrolled at the University and In¬stitute of Technology of Berlin as All outdoor men will welcome the tre¬mendous variety of “campus styled” warmwearables at every Howard store. You'll findquilt-lined jackets in gabardine.-leatherand wool plaids. Mouton collared stormcoats and jackets, leisure coats, slacksand furnishings...all tailored for plentyof rugged outdoor wear, and Howardpriced to warm the cockles of your heartI Howard 5§ Clothes xV X v;. 'y\VVyy>:>220 South Stote Street6345 So. Hoisted Street11121 So. Michigon Avenue1613 Belmont Avenue*Self Portrait'Knowing that drawing was one ofDr. Kolin's hobbies, the MAROONpersuaded him to sketch a self-por¬trait. Notice its extraordinaryness to Dr. Kolin's photo.standing from a B to an A per-like-formance, instead of devoting theirtime and effort to go thoroughly ® research. Beforeinto some isolated questions which of Chi-may have captured their interest taught at Citybut which lie outside their assigned ® York University, andstudy. ‘ Columbia University in New York.“It w'ould be very beneficial for i_ /nfn born in Russiastudents if they would not con- 'j extremelyunsettled condition of that countryfine themselves to the develop-Cagers(from poge 1)Bob Horan, centers; and Darwin during the revolution he had verylittle formal education until hisfamily slipped out of Russia in1922. ^His first interest was in Astron¬omy which originated at the timeCall and Jim Raby.The big S-’^^V^X'rTThrs ?s Pilot. At theHarvard on December • ® conclusion of the first World War,one of Ha^’vai^ds thre Norgren became athletic directorengagements, the others being with Chicago Association ofBiadley University and ^ . Commerce. In 1921 Norgren re-versity of Washington St.^uis ^ ^Said Coach Noigren, Harvard Netball coach and has been hereheight is an unknown factor, but exception ofif we can put up a stiff defense emighty m a ke it interesting for ^^^ing World War II. He coachedthem.” the 1924 team to a Big Ten co-Making things Interesting for championship,his opponents has been Nels Nor-grens job since 1911, the first y^j.y cautious. He points out thatthree consecutive years in whic transfers which so hurt this year’she won major letters in footb^l team are nothing new to him.basketball, baseball, and ® Whereas most teams are formedwas captain of the 1913 big fo t- around juniors and seniors, thisyear’s team is built around fresh¬men and sophomores. But as longas five men will take the floor,Nels Norgren is prepared to guidethem tow’ard victory.ball champions, one of Chicago’sgreater teams.Upon graduation from Chicago,Coach Norgren became athleticmanager and coach of the foursports named above at the Univer¬sity of Utah. His gieatest thrillcame in 1916 when he brought hisUtah basketball team to Chicagoand won the AAU championshipover a favored and nationally rec¬ognized Illinois Athletic Club five.In 1917 Norgren resigned hisUtah post and enlisted in the U.S.Local andLong Distance Moving.Storage Facilities for Books,Record Cabinets, Trunks, orCarloads of FurniturePeterson FireproofWarehouse, Inc.1011 East Fifty-fifth StreetButterfield 8-6711DAVID L. SUTTON, President ARTISTS’ SUPPLIESPICTURE FRAMINGPRINTSFABRICSCeramicby Eugene DeutchUnusual'Greeting CardsEducational ToysSouth SideAri Shop1126 E. 55th StreetPhone NO 7-0393 COMINGSEE MT ATHyde Park Chevrolet5506 S. Lake Park DO 3-8600Professor Kolin fascinates hisstudents with interesiing lecturesby Dodi CaplowAlexander Kolin, assistant profeasor of physics in the college and in the division of Bio¬logical Sciences, is both well-liked by his students, and well-known for his fascinating lec¬tures. a Physics major. In 1934 he re- States in 1935 and went into re¬ceived his Doctor’s degree in Phys- search in Hydrodynamics and Bio-ics from the German University physics. His teaching career beganin Prague. He came to the United in 1941. ,December 8, 1950 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3Bulletins . . .(from pose 1)weekend is^reported to becritical.Dean StrDzier stated thatmilk will give out this morn¬ing (Friday). He stated how¬ever that the administrationwill take care of its dormitoryresidents.According to Dean Strozierthe union and university rep¬resentatives are meeting withthe Federal Mediation andConciliation Service thismorning (Friday). .Strike . . .(from page J )mately $168,000. The Administra¬tion refused to admit an arbitra¬tion clause in the new AFL con¬tract.Concel movies“It's outrageous,” commentedSee Strike, page 6 A-bomb thoughtwins two packsIn case no one noticed, theMAROON ran a want ad last weekoffering a penny for all thoughts.It even offered a prize fov the bestone!The thought that won the twopacks of Chesterfields, graciouslydonated by Charles Cullan, yourcampus Chesterfield representa¬tive, was brought to us by Marga¬ret Parry, room 431 InternationalHouse. Unfortunately, it was toolong to print. (The thought dealtwith the A-bomb.)As promised, w'e now print theother thoughts received.Buck Farris: “Phooie on theA-bomb!”David Ray and Ervin Dunn:“We’ll be dammed if we’ll standfor any more of this guanojournalism.”Gary Steiner: “I hope I yet aLionel train for Xmas; one withREAL smoke!” »imiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiie*I LOUIE'S BARBER SHOP jS For Personality Hair Cut is **i 1110 E. 55»h St./Chicago 15 SB LOUIS CORTEZ S Chicago Review views its staffscontent, writers and charactersOnce every few months, there blooms upon the campus, like an exotic flower, the Chi¬cago Review. The latest afflorescence is currently on sale in Mandel Corridor, the localbookstores and in the Review office in the Reynolds Club.For the benefit of the very young and those of short memory, the Review is “... devotedto the classical editorial principles of the little magazine.” This means that it is ”... amagazine of literature, not a magazine about literature,” and ”... a proving ground fornew talent.” I quote from the lastpage of the Winter 1950 model. Ipresume that the present staff issticking to this weighty obligation.A fair appraisal of the magazine(despite that inviting “literature”label) demands sbme considera¬tion of the problems it is facing.High velocity of personnel is amajor obstacle. Part time opera¬tion and experimental, inexperi¬enced editorship are only two ofseveral others. Recognizing theseproblems, a handy standard ofjudgment is provided by past is¬sues, and on this scale the current,number rates remarkably well.Delete namesA most conspicuous point of im¬provement is discernible in thetable of contents. The Autumn ’49issue had staff members’ namesmentioned eight times in the con¬ tents. The count had dropped tofour last winter and the new issueshows none. The statistics areself-explanatory.On the crass but importantpoint of typography and technicalwork, the improvement is im¬mense.Bios ovoiiledAt the level of policy, the Re¬view seems to have avoided, forthe most part, the sins currently^rampant among “literary” maga¬zines: fanatic political bias, loyaltyto a very narrowly defined “avantgarde” and/or clique spirit.Quite personally, the content ingeneral seems to have improved,particularly tha verse. LouiseSimpson’s Masque adds consider¬able weight with its clean andsubtle craftsmanship and thethree pieces by Mary Dragonettiare adept and sometimes spark¬ling.Prose reodobleIn the prose section, the frag¬ments from Howard Griffin’sOverseas Journal are readable andoccasionally provocative although they might have profited from amore careful editing.On first thought, one wonders atthe absence of any fiction i. e.,short story; the editors are to beapplauded if they had the courageto refuse to publish the leastnoisome of a bad lot.Reviews corngetontThe book reviews were generallycompetent, although reading anexistentialist’s review of a book bySartre is like eating broth with afork.I hope that the present staff canhang together for a few quartersand accumulate some familiaritywith its job, and that the Springissue takes another step in thedirection this one is pointing.—Jackson BurgessOoops . . .Lost weeks' MAROON was in¬correct in stating that Sen. Douglaswas to speok this week. In reolityhe spoke two weeks previous. 'Thismistake wos caused by repeatinga story used before.MONTANA *52PNOTOfiRANISTAKENON CAMPUSMake theTOBACCO GROWERSMILDNESS TESTTOIRSELF...YES... Compare Chesterfield with the brand you’ve beensmoking... Open a pack... smell that milder Chesterfieldaroma. Prnve—toAaccos that smell milder smoke milder.Now smoke Chesterfields—do smoke milder,and they leave NO UNPLEASANT AFTER-TASTE.Page 4 THE CHICAGO MAPOON December 8, 1950Twenty-one schools convene^co-operate to lower CTA fares ^The drive to reduce CTA fares for college students has begun. On Dec. 3 at Ida NoyesHall a meeting was held. The representatives drew an extensive blueprint of future ac¬tion, which everyone thought might culminate in success.The first move taken was the establishment of a sub-committee. This committee con¬sists of representatives from, four schools, including the University of Chicago. Its func¬tion will be to make an extensive study of all data and problems, and then write a com¬plete plan covering all details. SC recounts vote, elects TV/T ^ released from prison after havingJyJLOYTOYd 1/CtLKS served three months for having re¬fused to surrender to the P.B.I.records of the National CouncUfor American-Soviet Friendship,“The Bight to speak lor Peace" "Wch he ls executive secretaryis the title of a lecture to be given petition to bail was refused inby the Reverend Richard Morford spite of the fact that the SupremeDec. 8 at 3:30 in Law South. The Court which was to review his case,Reverend Morford is sponsored by was recessed. This is the first timethe Labor Youth League. that bail has been refused underReverend Morford was recently such circumstances.Haskell. Deutsch officiallysuits of the first meeting. He men- ^tioned that the “task ahead wasdifficult but that SO will makeevery attempt to achieve success.”BJ to featurered death, Poedance themeSynchronizeyour watchesTonight at 8:30'A CLARK AND CLARKBARGAIN21DISTINCTIVE CHRISTMASCARDSBoxed 1950 cards, manufactured tosell at $2.00 to $3.00 per boxOur price 69cCLARK AND CLARK, Booksellers1204 East 55th StreetHours 10 A.M. to 9 P.M.» WAYMKtOi|P#Yia NORTH AMERICANI ^ AIRLINESA-KNOINC DOUOLASAIR COACH PLUS TAXCALIFORNIA?LOSAN^jELES-SAM FMNCISCO-SAN DIEGO$-*B SJIBOSTON SSLIOMIIHI'$39.00 _U 6UARDIA **Of course bewail »ttbver$lvelHe wH' ruGit^ swflie bylneltimg'' kwitbouitonongjb Ango«tar«*r*After the completion of this, allthe schools will convene to eitheraccept or reject the proposed plan.If they accept, the drive will beginto have the proposal accepted bythe CTA Commission and the StateKgisiatuie. The Official returns Of the recent Student GovernmentOpS’mWer/tkSdTthe MAR^N f ections were amended by the Student Assembly, Tuesday,that he was gratified with the re- ^ Correct an error which had been made in bhe tabulationof the original tallies.The new totals give Haskell Deutsch, who has been serving:^ ®!:'P?'"ted member of the assembly, 226 votes insteadOf the 191 indicated by the first — rtabulation, making him an offi¬cially elected representative.Deutsch was an ISL candidatefrom the SociaH^ciences Division.Leon Warshay, an NPSL candi¬date from the Sof’ial Sciences,whom Deutsch replaced in the newreturns has now been appointedto fill the vacancy left by the elec¬tion of Anton Deporte to the vice-“The Masque of the Red presidency of the assembly.Death” will be the theme ofthe dance being presented to¬night at 9 p.m. in Burton diningroom by the B-J Council. It will beone of the most elaborate socialaffairs ever presented by the coun¬cil and represents many hours oflabor by the group, according toinformation released by RogerPrager, chairman of the councilsocial committee.Eddie James and his ten-manorchestra will provide the musicand refreshments will be plentiful.Admission has been set at fiftycents per person. ^Labor lecturesponsoredAuthor of Left, Right, andCenter, Sidney Lens, is go¬ing to speak on “Labor in Eu¬rope” today at 8 p.m., in a lecturesponsored by the Politics Club atthe apartment of Andrew Mills,6337 Kimbark. A party with re¬freshments will follow after thelecture. Admission is free.Sydney Lend has been studyinglabor for six months last summerin England, France, Germany, andYugoslavia, He is a lecturer at theUniversity College, and organiza¬tion director of United Service Em¬ployees Union, AFL. YOU Can Serve 104 Hungry ClubMember* those DeliciousLLOYD NARRISSMINCE, PUMPKIN, APPLEPIESOnly SD.50TAylor 9-3000Pies os Featured atCAMPUS SI^ACK SHOPTHE WHIFFLETREE TERESA DOLANDANCE SCHOOL1208 E. 63rd STREETAnnounces the Opening ofPoll ClassesBeginners—Mondays—Fox Trot,WaltzTuesdays—Rumba, PolkaWednesdays—Fox TrotSaturdays—Rumba, Viennese WaltiAdvanced—Thursdays—MambaTangoFridays—Tango, ^mbaAfternoon Class Fridays—3 P.M.- PRIVATE LESSONS DAY OREVENING11 A.M. - 11 P.M.Phone HY 3-3080For Further InformationCampus^ Interviews on Cigarette Tests• * —Humber 9...the marsh hen//uFor a while they had me swamped P*'eems like this confused fowl got mixed in a metaphor‘AU. lASH rtut TAX'if Free Snacks Enroute A Stewardess onEach Plane A Free $50,000 InsurancePolicy (Lloyd) with each ticket AJAMES LESSLY5701 Kenwood PL 2-0287 AROMATIC BITTRRtMAKIf BITTIR DRINKS*/t’s th9 tetty tang oj Asmu(^ ififfrale in an Old i/raii pUt, in puddingt and and was almost turned into a guinea pig. The story goes shegot caught in a welter of quick-trick cigarette tests ... onepufip of this brand, then a puff of that... a sniff, a whiff — a fastinhale and exhale. And then she was supposed to know all aboutcigarette mildness! Is that the way to treat a lady?And is that the way to judge a cigarette?We think not. That’s why we suggest:The sensible test — The 30-Day Camel Mildness Test,which simply asks you to try Camels as your steady smoke —on a pack after pack, day after day basis. N(L snapjudgments needed. After you’ve enjoyed Camels — andonly Camels — for 30 days in your “T-Zone” (T forThroat, T for Taste) we believe you’ll know why,.,More People Smoke Camels§han any other €igarettelDecember 8, 1950 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 5.your favorites are now better than ever!The air-lanes are ready to bring the world's greatestentertainers into your home for endless laughs and thrills.Don't miss one minute of it! Hear the top starsot their best on...Motorola radiotbeiiu ■All, c«$, "My Favor*Hutbend" Sotvrday, 8.30 p.m.4CST) Sponsored by Centrol..tdedi.Own a Motorolo...an<lyou know you own the best!’s why you’ll enfoy them more on Motorola...DINAH SHOtl, CiS, WmIi-4ay«-6;15 fH (C$T> ISfWit.by Oxydol) Motorola "Goldon Vote*" gives yoatone so rich and pure, you think you'resitting in the concert hall. Motorola’sexclusive new power output is free fromdistortion, assures symphonic tone on ailstations.Motorola Precision Tuning is easier,better than ever. The new, improved"Sweep Station" and "Full Circle" dials putmore distance between stations forinstant, pinpoint tuning.Motorola Full Variable Tone Controlpicks up every shading of tone from thedeep bass to the peep of the piccolo. Anexclusive "Electric Bass Boost" adds tothe concert-tone reproduction.Motorola Furniture Styling gives yonstunning cabinets, recognized by styleexperts as the most beautiful in the worldJACK SMITH, CBS, WmIcdoyt, 6:15 p.m. (CST)Sponsored by OxydoLPOOTBAll BBOADCASTS.OlrKt from Colkp. and FSf.lossionol Cridirom CopiUwHaa BM/AM Badia >lopood taoard dioiieor, hi Nl»-fioeany or Uoiod Oak MOOMtmai.MioHwava AM BaBI* BadhbIn Walmst, Ivary orOlacfc Bah»Hla.lllMplSX2l.Page 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON December 8, 1950Editorial...The MAROON wishes to express its concern over the sus¬pension of the Brooklyn College Student newspaper, theVanguard, by the publications board of that school. ThisDoard consisted of both administration and'student repre¬sentation.According to the Associated College Digest, “The .. . sus¬pension resulted from an editorial citicizing the Dean forhis handling of a student organization called the ‘LaborYouth League of Brooklyn College,’ a group which wasordered to disband allegedly because its views on the Koreanwar coincided with those of the Communist Party.”In these days of super-hysteria, the freedom of the collegepress ha.« apparently been affected along with the com¬mercial press. The MAROON regards this as an alarmingsituation, as we believe that universities of the nation mustbe places where issues can be examined without repressivepressures.We feel, although the MAROON is proud that today itprints Without direct pressure from faculty or student body,that the campus must be aware of the possibility of censor¬ship on this, as on any other campus, in order to resistany inroads on. a free, unfettered press.For world peaceUC students, whose future in the intellectual world is sodependent on the ending of the present bloodbath in thenon-academic world, should certainly give heed to everymove toward peace. Blasted out of complacency by the de¬feat in Korea and by Truman’s A-bomb threat, our EuropeanAllies have come forward with proposals and demands.Our only knowledge of the content of these plans has beenthrough reports embodying proposals such as 1. Peacefulnegoti.'itions of the Korean conflict; 2. UN control of tlieA-bomb; 3. Admission of China to the UN.These rumors have a basis in the reality of the over¬whelming desire for peace of the peoples of the world. In ademocratic society, it is generally accepted that the peoplemust be heard in the formulation of foreign policy. TheMAROON feels that they would be best heard at this dan¬gerous juncture in world politics in a flood of telegramsand letters to the President urging the above plan or anysimilar proposals that would contribute to a solution to thepresent dangers. * Communists*cries theWorldby Gary Sfeiner“SDAers at the U of Chicagosucceeded in making a mess outof the Communist Labor YouthLeague in the recent school elec¬tion” despite the fact that the“fellow travellers obtained controlof the college newspaper” accord¬ing to the November issue of theSDA w'orld.The article also reports that the“SDA-supported ticket took 59 out65 seats” as a result of an “SDAdoor-to-door dormitory campaign”and various other vigorous activi¬ties on the part of campus liberals.No mention was made of ISL orNPSL, who apparently w'ere con¬sidered unimportant to the elec¬tion.The World story was writtenfrom a report submitted by FrankLogan, Vice-chairman of SDA oncampus. Logan’s statements, how¬ever, did mention ISL, reportingthat “ten of the 62 ISL candidatesare active SDAers, and many ofthe rest will be soon.” This w^asapparently the basis for theWorld’s interpretive statementsconcerning SDA mess-making.Logan’s report also mentioned“door-to-door” campaigns, attrib¬uting them, however, to ISL.No ''not," pleaseIn last week’s policy statement,the w’ord “not” tragically appearedin the clause which should haveread: “The MAROON should allotspace solely on the basis of campusimportance. CHARLES GARVIN LEROY WOLINS'Editor-in-Chief Business ManagerIsued cuce weekly by the publisher. The Chicago Maroon, at the publicationoffice, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Xeiephones: Editorii«|Office, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1012; Business and Advertising Offices, Midway3,0800, Ext. 1011. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions by mail, ft per yearStrike . . .(from page 3)Mr. Cunningham in regard to thepicketing of the hospital. TheUnion replied that the pickets per¬tain just to construction workersand in no way interfere withneeded medical deliveries, sen iceneeded for hospital and orthogenicschool. They are only picketingthe new hospital.All movies through Friday havebeen cancelled because, as com¬mented by Miss Saunders, therewill be no projectionists andguards available. Veena and Vashiwill continue in Mandel Hall asplanned as the result of a specialruling by' Dean Strozer. TonightAt 8:30 will also go on.School goes onDuring the strike, the heat forthe University is being supplied bythe supei-visors. “Too tired to com¬ment,” was the reply given by Mr.Whitesick, steam-service super¬visor.When asked to comment, one ofthe strikers said, “I think it’s un¬just. I work as a janitor and getpaid $1.05 an hour.” Anotherunion man said, “We appreciateany help that the students maygive us but we do not wish themto join the picket lines.” “We areemployed as maintainence menbut work on construction projectssuch as, installing a new boiler inthe President’s house,” commentedanother. eiFT SU6GESTI0IISStafioneryFine Writing PopertGreeting CordsXmos CordsFountoiO PensMechonicol PencilsDioriesBrief CosesType writersPorto blesStondordsNew or ReconditionedNovelty ItemsU of C Book EndsU of C Ash TroysArt ObjectsCopper, Bross ond BronxeDecorative PiecesLingerie and PersonalApparelNylon Night GownsNylon SlipsNylon StockingsBlouses - ScorfsGloves - PursesComerosPhotographic Projectors - ScreensFilm - AttochmentsFlash EquipmentDork Room SuppliesPkoto FinishingBlock ond White end ColorPurchases Wrapped os Gifts and/orfor Moiling — Packages May beMailed at Postal Stotion in theStoreUNIVERSITYOF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5802 Ellis AvenueAft-ive home . . . with your gift shopping com¬plete for the man in the family. Come in afterclasses today . . . and let us show you our com¬plete gift line-up. Arrow shirts... sports shirts...ties . . . handkerchiefs! Bring in your Christn.list. . . now.Shirts $3.65 upTies $1.00 up .Sports .Shirts $3.95 upHandkerchiefs 35fi ufCome Here ForARROW S...Best Christmas Gifts We Know! Start Hinting Now For YourArrow GiftsFor giving or getting^. . . no finer choicethan Arrows. Arrow shirts ... in a wideselection of popular collar styles. Sportsshirts . . . tailored to perfection, reallycomfortable. Handkerchiefs, BIG as youlike ’em . . . and wrinkle-resistant tiesthat knot and drape like a dream! Secyour Arrow dealer ... now!Shirts $3.65 up Sports Shirts $3.95 upTies $1.00 up Handkerchiefs 35^ up\\ARROWSHIRTS &TIESUNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEIS • SPORTS SHIRTSDecember 8, 1950 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7iHabla Listed espanol?these reporters didn't Leaders becoming reasonable;Communists receive the creditby Sheila and Gary. We got there at eight. Si. We walked in the door. Si. “Aticket?,” they said, only in Spanish. “Si?” we said. “A ticket,no?” they said, only in Spanish. “A ticket, no! ” we said, onlyin English.It was Jriday, at the annual festival of the Pan-AmericanCouncil given for Latin American students, into whichcategory we fit only by virtue.ofan abnormal fascination for tor- clicked as did vivid heels; handstillas and tangos. The latter were thumped on violin cases substitut-Inadequately supplied, but due to drums, and groups danceda strong attraction for rhumbas ^ colors and(of which there were many) our by Valentin De EricksonWilliam L. Laurence, scienc^e reporter of the New York Times, had this to say concern¬ing world affairs when he spoke at the University of Michigan recently. “In the presentworld situation one may well won(ler if there will be any future, but our possession of thehydrogen bomb can give us enough time for reason to take over the minds of our leaders,so that world catastrophe can be avoided.” How very, very Lockean.Pledge du^?The Silver and Gold of the University of Colorado, reports another insurrection by thepledges of one of their fraterni-faith was not shaken.Drummer beat violintEntertainment there also was,and to eyes accustomed to theusual Norteamericano variety,entertainment it was. CastanetsSuganoQift ShopGifts and Cardsfor AH Occasions1203 E. 55rii St. MU 4-6856 clothes, ranging from tails to coatsto scrapes.Upstairs were exhibits, supple¬mented by punch (Latin punch),of most of the Pan Americanstates. Exhibits we looked at andthe punch was for the asking,Spanish asking. A sheepish smiledid the trick, but the lady behindthe counter, being a good, hostessas they all were, felt that sheought to make conversation whilewe drank . . . (One can’t talkwith one’s cup in one’s mouth).Our cup finally runneth over andso do we.Todos se divitieron! Rhodes leaves;Republicanshold electionsThe University's Red Cross unitneeds help translating letters fromYugoslovio. Anyone interested inaiding the home service departmentmay pick up letters from MissSounders RC 202. ties. A group of pledges kidnapped vote to admit him.” Poor fellas,an active and drove him twenty maybe we can find them an islandmiles out of town. They foolishly with only “select” people on it.left him alone for a few minutes Communists 'get creditand he escaped with the kidnap Arthur Garfield Hays, New Yorkcar. The pledges reported the car lawyer, speaking at the Universitystolen and the police sent out a of Connecticut said about commu-state-wide alarm which soon nists, “We have built the commu-brought in the errant youth. The nists up by all the publicity wepledges dropped the robbery charge have been giving them. Everytimewhen the active countered with a w'e have something out of the ordi-charge of assault and battery. I nary the communists get credit forwonder what else they do w'ith it.” Concerning the law passing oftheir time. - Congress he said, “Congress wouldThe Daily Tar Heel of the Uni- a bill approving small-pox ifversity of North Carolina reported were called an anti-communistthat at a recent conference of He likened the present hys-Southern Governors a suggestion io the woman who screamedw'as made that Negroes be admit- to her husband, “Papa, quick, getSaid Allen, “I shall give myself ted to graduate and professional the hatchet. There’s a fly on baby’sunstintingly to the Student Re- schools south of the Mason-Dixon tiead.”publican Club and to the principles line. Reactions to the proposalof Republicanism in general. We were quite varied. The Governorshall continue to dedicate our- of Georgia, Herman Talmadge saidselves to proclaiming the cause of “absolutely not.” Governor Jamesfreedom, and we shall maintain E. Folsom of Alabama said, “if aour proud position at the forefront Negro applied for admission to oneof the crusade for democracy.” qj our colleges I would have toThe University of Chicago Stu¬dent Republican Club held elec¬tions on Wednesday, November22, subsequent to the resignationof the president, C. Harker Rhodes.Richard Allen, .of the LawSchool, was elected by acclamationto fill the vacant post.Needhelpforwelfare drive- -VTHE DU PONTDIGESTThe Teflon* Problem:* Over 100 workers of the Com¬bined Jewish Appeal campaign oncampus met at the Hillel Founda¬tion last Wednesday to hear May¬nard Wishner, head of the youthdivision of the CJA explain thepurposes of the drive.Campus solicitation for the CJAwill take place early next quarter.Davice Greenblatt and MelvinCherno head the committee plan¬ning the drive. Miss Greenblattstated; “Plans are coming alongwell but we still need additionalworkers. I urge all those inter¬ested in helping out, to contact methrough Hillel, 5715 Woodlawn.”Given a plastic for which there is no known soivent;how would you turn it into a coating? Philip S. Sondort, left, A. 'B. in Chemistjy,University of Pennsylvania, 1944, supervisesoperation of a specUd dipping machine usedto coat wire with "Teflon" enamel in the lab¬oratory. Enamel is "dried" by fusing.Some time ago Du Pont research dis¬covered a new plastic—"Teflon” tet-rafluoroethylene resin. It had tem¬perature resistance beyond the rangeof any previous plastic, excellent elec¬trical characteristics, and the highestdegree of chemical inertness amongcommercial plastics. -But tough-guy "Teflon” wasalmost too tough. It wouldn’t meltand flow like other plastics. Hence,it could be molded only in simpleshapes. There was no existing tech¬nique by which it could be made intothin coatings. Unless this difficultycould be overcome, the very proper¬ties that made "Teflon” so promis¬ing narrowed its usefulnes.s.^'Teflon'^ Won’t DissolveIn the past, problems like this havebeen handled by dissolving plasticsin a suitable solvent arid using themas the base for enamels and similarcoatings. But "Teflon” will not dis¬solve in any solvent yet known. Iteven stands up to nitric acid.At this point Du Pont physicalchemists suggested dispersions—minute particles suspended in a liq¬uid—as the answer. After muchstudy, scientists of the PolychemicalsDepartment learned how to suspend"Teflon” particles about 1/125,000of an inch in diameter. Aided by thefundamental studies of ChemicalDepartment scientists, they devisedtoday’s commercial scale process. Meanwhile Du Pont’s Fabrics andFinishes Department was keepingpace with the development. Theircontributions to formulating the newproducts did much to establish "Tef¬lon” polytetrafluoroethylene coat¬ings and wire enamels in manyspecial uses.In electric motors, for instance,'these enamels are used on wire sothe motor can be operated at highertemperatures and will deliver morepower per unit of weight. Such motorsare more compact and sometimescost less.Other uses include non-stickingcoatings that cut costs when appliedto bakery rolls, rubber molds, heat¬sealing machinery and similar equip¬ment. Corrosion-resistant "Teflon”coatings for special uses are currentlybeing investigated. Numbar ana plastic in resistance to heat,chemicals and moisture, "Teflon" is shown informs of gaskets, coaxial cable "spacers, tape,rod, pipe, flared tubing, valve stem packingbeading as it is supplied to industry.Product of Teamwork"Teflon” finishes are a typical fruitof the close teamwork of Du Ponttechnicalmenofdiverse backgrounds.Organic and physical chemists playeda major role. Physicists participatedby developing fundamental informa¬tion on the nature of the dispersion.Chemical and mechanical engineersdesigned the manufactvuring appara¬tus. Working together,they made pos¬sible this new and important addi¬tion to the Du Pont family of "BetterThings for Better Living... throughChemistry.” • Reg. U. S. Patent Off. ■rl \J^ SAVE1 Y TinE.TfOiVEVf||7 /SecretarialService1442 E. 55th Ml 3-2136EASTNew York .... $24.95Boston 36.10Philodelphia 24.0010% discount rd. tripWESTLos Angeles . . .San Francisco .Son Diego ....PhoenixSeattleSpokonePortlandBillingsKansas City . . .10% discount rd. tripSOUTHCincinnati .... $10.50AtlantaSt. Petersburg .TampaMiamiplus toxIn m tost of heat resistance at 390°F., the"Teflon" rod (right) remains intact while twoother plastics melt or swell out of shape.DID YOU KNOW . ..... 76 students at 47 universities orecurrently pursuing post-graduatework os holders of Du Pont Fellow¬ships in science. Awards for 1950-51total $224,000.Great Dramatic Entertainment—"Cavalcade of America," Tuesday Nights, NBC *ts.u.s. PAT.orr.BETTER THINGS FOR BETTER LIVINGTHROUGH CHEMISTRY CV blendJJiacpiantPIPETOBACCOSUIllfF.TOBACCO CO ;"6S0 F.ff«h St S.E.CotiFHeiNE'S fOBACCP CO., Mamitop, phtoFage 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON December 8, 1950Video offers viewers fog;first piano quartet returns“Round an' round it goes and where it stops nobody knows." The NBC Theatre, movedthree times already, will take up new residence at the 5:30 p.m. time spot on Saturdayover WMAQ. Chances are it won’t last too long at this hour. Another big complaint nowis that the dramatizations have been shortened to half-hour length. Tomorrow nightFlaubert’s “Madame Bovary’’ will be presented. Better catch it while you can.The historic Casablanca conference is included in “The African Campaign,’’ chapter sixof Crusade in Europe to be seenSunday on WENR-TV at 8 p.m. able to tell their video fog from thew T/^ O xa.1 4. This episode of the televised series real thing. Well, hot cinders!based on Dwight Eisenhower’s Back to the sublime, the Firstbook opens with an appraisal of Piano Quartet i«! on the radio. the French politic.' situation in again and three •cheers for NBC.L0\S North Africa following the inva- Forty fingers (count them) resultT sion. The series is an excellent ac- in a remarkable effect for anyPackages of toys not over a dol- count of the events which took musical composition. Sunday onlar in value are requested from all place during the last war in WMAQ at 1:30 p.m. is the timestudents for the children at the Europe. for the broadcast.UC settlement. The gifts should Quite a large number of people —Arnold Toskbe wrapped Christmas style and are making a crusade in Chicago - - , ,marked “boy” or “girl” with the to the Art Institute to see the HsmOTS TOCOIVGappropriate age. Bring your pack- Viennese art exhibit, thus the spe-ages to Ida Noyes to be placed cial program on WBBM Sunday at 9|W9|rrlc foi* *1950under the Christmas tree between 10:15 a.m. when two members ofDec. 13 and the end of the quarter.Festival(from poge 1)A CLARK AND CLARKBARGAINPAUL CEZANNE, by John RewalG.A vivid, magnificently researchedbiography by an authority on Im¬pressionism. Over a hundred iUnstra-tions, a few in color.Published at |5.(N>. New copies $1.9S.CLARK AND CLARK, Booksellers* 1204 East 55th StreetHours 10 A.M. to 9 P.M.the Art Institute staff will discuss The U of C cross-country teamthe masterpieces from Vienna now this week honored eight playerson display at the Institute. with varsity letters for the 1950Peek-o-boo season. Players receiving lettersTurning from the sublime to the are as follows:X, i. ^ W fwo ridiculous, a studio-type fog will Major "C”—Hugh A. Brodkey,^at at ^ ® add to the usual TV blur on the captain, Ashby Smith. Jr., RobertTemple in 164 B.C. only * ° J ^ Dave Garroway show, Sunday at Baptist, David Ray Saffer. Oldsupply of oil was 9 p.m. on WNBQ. It has been English “C”—Angelo Aldana, Ar-reports tell that miraculously this j^ised that viewers will not be thur Edward Reilley, Frank R.supply lasted for eight days^fun- Ysiughn, Roger Burr Wilcox.day, the day of the performance,wiU mark the last day of the Han- PUs are invited to participate inukkah festival which has been these groups, ycelebrated all week. The Foundation on campus isStudents light condles one of 200 in the United States,Student participants in the can- Canada, Cuba and Israel, The di-dle lighting ceremony will be: Faye rector of the local Foundation,Allen, Elaine Bell, Allan Caditz, Rabbi Maurice B, Pekarsky, isHelen Pish, Betty Freed, Jerry presently on a leave of absence toHorowitz, Beverly Lipsky, Walter establish the latest Hillel unit inRoth, and Nat Weintraub. Israel.Excerpts from the liturgy will be All of these foundations have be-read by Adele Rodbard and David come centers for the study of Jew-Kahn. ish culture and tradition whereReview symposium students of all faiths can deepenThe Maccabean Festival Ls the thgjr understanding of the Jew-largest of many events sponsored jgh heritage,regularly by the Hillel Foundationon campus. The Hanukkah cele¬bration at the Foundation also in¬cluded a faculty mock symposiumlast '~'uesday night. At ^hat timeHerman Finer, professor of politi¬cal science, and Louis Gottschall,professor of modern history, dis¬cussed in erudite fashion the rela¬tive merits of various Jewish culin¬ary delicacies. Various other guest“experts” also participated.In a more serious vein, the Foun¬dation also sponsors other observ¬ances of Jewish holidays. EveryFriday night it conducts Firesideprograms at which members ofthe faculty and other outstandingspeakers discuss problems of time¬ly and permanent interest.Offer octivity groupsCornerstones of the Foundation’sprogram are the various activityand study groups w'hich meet reg¬ularly at Hillel. The Chorut is oneof the outstanding of these groupsand after the Festival it will beginrehearsals for a spring concert.Other activity groups are those indrama and puppetry, arts andcrafts, and a folk dance group.There are study groups in suchsubjects as Hebrew, Yiddish, Bibleand others. All students on cam-Nob Hill5228 Lake ParkEVERY MONDAY NIGHT(no cover charge)DixielandMASON-DIXIE SIXChicago's greatestnew Dixieland bandVS. BopJAYBIRDSModern musicat its bestComing: Danny Alvin'sKings of Dixieland SAVE on Greyhound’s low one-wayfares AND SAVE AGAIN—10% or moreeach way—on Round Trip Tickets!’'’One RoundWay TripBOSTON S19.90 $31.90CINCINNATI $.15 10.80CLEVELAND 6.95 11.85DENVER 20.30 30.55DES MOINES 7.00 12.60DETROIT 5.75 10.35DULUTH 8.50 15.30GRAND RAPIDS,MICH 4.25 7.65LOS ANGELES-SAN FRANCISCO 36.85 66.35M.VDISON 2.45 4.45(U. S. Tax Extra)*Good for 6 months (180 days)/ One RoundWay TripMINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL $ 740 $13.1SMUSKEGON 4.50 S.l*NEW YORK CITY, 17.25 27.60OMAHA 10.05 18.10PHILADELPHIA .. 16.50 2645PITTSBURGH .... 9.45 15.46ST. LOUIS 4.95 8.95SYRACUSE 13.20 21.15TOLEDO 4.85 8.7SWASHINGTON,D. C 15.50 2446(U. S. To« ExtrolMr. R. B. Meyer, Greyhound Passenger Agent, will be at the JohnStocks Trovel Bureau, Administration Bldg., (phone Midway 3-0800) Mondoy, December 18, to sell tickets and give informotion.Get full detoiis TODAY • • • visit or phone:JOHN STOCKSTRAVEL BUREAU5801 S. Ellis Are.Ph. Midway 3-0800G R E Y H Research gains impetusat UC Cancer FoundationMore than 115 fundamental cancer research projectsare under way at UC, Dr. Leon O. Jacobson, assistant pro¬fessor of medicine, told the annual meeting of the trustsof Uie University of Chicago Can- —-cer Research Foundation Tuesday, come. Only by research investigaUThest projects range all the way ing many small problems can prog-from studying the basic chemistryof normal growth—cancer itself isa kind of abnormal growth—to thespecific surgical and chemicaltechniques for attacking variousforms of cancer.T’-ie broad attack against canceris necessary because it is impos¬sible to tell from what fields cluesto improved treatment and tho es¬sential nature of the disease willBook Exchangeoffers moreRecord albums and LP’s as wellas old syllabi, text books, and bestsellers will be accepted for resaleby the Student Book Exchangewhen it opens for the last twoweeks of the quarter Monday noon.The Exchange will be activeMonday through Friday fromnoon to 3 p.m. during the firsttwo weeks of the Winter quarter,and will be open Mondays andThursdays throughout the schoolyear. ress be made. Dr. Jacobson point¬ed out.tyARta, P#via NORTH AMERICANI W AIDI IkJBCI WAV AIRLINES4.tNaiNK DOUOLA6AIR COACH rARB M.U$ TAXCALIFORNIAE-lOSkHdElES-SM FMRCISCO-SMIDIEBO‘71 \BOSTON SlLtOMUM! $19.00 *$nmcR*AU FAMi KM TAX*A Free Snmeks Enroute A Stewardess oaEach Plane A Free $50,000 InsurancoPolicy (Lloyd) with each ticket AJAMES LESSLYSee (Eve.)5701 Kenwood PL2-02STFor a treasured and cherished gift. . .Give a portroit of yourselfPHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREETBROOKS BROTHERS' OWNCHRISTMAS GIFT SUGGESTIONa visit to our fine Chicago Storefor unusuol and distinctive men's giftsBrooks Brothers have many unusual an¬swers to the problem of "gifts for him”that are iniJivictual and in good taste. Wemake our own shirts, neckwear, pajamasand luggage... and import many articlesnot generally obtainable elsewhere. As aresult you may select from a wide choiceof gifts that reflect our uncompromisingstandards of quality and workmanship...and that are sold only at Brooks Brothers.Note: Our**2^b**Shop has an excellent selectionof distinctive clothing designed for today*s un¬dergraduate... at moderate fnees.ESTABUEmOMMIf (R'd^mishingB,MADISON STREET AT MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO 2. ILL,NEW YORK ' BOSTON • LOS ANGELES • SAN FRANCISCOSKilllSSsrillllllliiildlllllllllllllfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll o||a.ie^|3pnes|9eduio3 soxoglo.itdjp a asfosPw«spioilllfl•ieA|i4§;§af|.idisi a ono|sq|a|apnepaoniema a laea^pneouo|sau|i|Hg s;.iaiqS|3*U*S*¥"nosno^a snoj[ueuiaaie^-.laifaed;-jeneaqjga ICZZO-CAH4»®J4SH+SS3OOZl !xaptnsfSutpvd'iap<Cjf INOSIVMHf IAa jsuotfsaSSriQf/tf) llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll■llll■llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll■llllllllll■llllllllllllll? iVlIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliq IliadVdBHlJOI sidYd)i3HioNisavdiaHiaas3JJ9)|40JOq9Q Aa|JO^4J9qo)| uosijJOHxaji , •iVUVflilVflHOrVWo pup '9|I!H^P“9M-P«moha'lsaq 6uijj04g 'iiNOIlVNOAdM MVHSaUVNilia|»liouiui| 344fOU3J344UIOJJSSISSOQOMJ_ fri-fIDaa sdnHip«BasM 133aisati£9*37911 atuvmiX31mfi91zz\i M4fig18281 M4SS1L86 MtSS1IMI HJequi!)!0088 PJ8918811 11081 mgs10021 mss18S8 mss19811uinequasogijng-joa S90qSS|M91I StUSUsjaHI lunqivaqi| ‘Aaeuijeqdliexaguiig[ —'OQ^eai^ciouos|9nj doqsjaMOijj jaiaMap‘uos^eM'HT] •\!P0Su!q»O|0qiBdj •doqss^uaims.uoqfoj 3AIOOUVK ianxXIasuHSAavohm aSXM¥H3Hai4[MYTHTSYHTHTH IHHYTXMTOTSia‘VS’M aiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiS'4SOJ39‘IJ34|OM.AiaiA “»HUBO..A^issaoau JOuoijiu3oo3j[ati-tSTxuopaaaj., UBq-jsasBjqdaaug•sti'jnoiu .sasaoqjnojoiijmojj(jTiSiB.i'iS AjoatfjsiTisJaJ3Jd‘jaAOMoq ‘aoMaiAajsitu,‘juaipoxasipaAiaiA -ajapi^jBoijroadsaii*)puBMaiA “*H3X11‘aiSToaSjnoqaq^ uoS3iob;j:}bSuiiPAnapoopMaqosa puBa.in^jBioxiaiuou^sixjbi^ajtBUi.ij -oop-uoujajajdjBq;)asoii^jao,j •BpUBSBdOJtd puBuo^BonpaAquopaiJJBO3uiaq SI‘AnsuiuiBjio^SuipaoooB‘pacjB -idojdxaA^uaoajaqj:jsuib3bai3 -3nj^saqi'A.iBJOdiaa^sipaqsiiqB} -sa;saijSIuisqBioosuaqAisassBp aippiuiaq^)joluopaajjpa^ou^saj ^uB^quioouooaqx•s^msandiBjnqna puBiBnpaqajuiuisb^stapauado SBqspoo3SuipiAiQ'sassaDOidaA^ -onpojdaq^j‘umoApATpanoopuB ‘uiapdpnaBdAqisnjOBaidoadaqj JOsassBui3uTuipqAVjaAOaqj‘Aijs 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auiAuoqdoiAsqW!Js.paqnqos •paddipApadoad 'jaAaAvoq‘a.iBsn«uaa3uijsih •s.iaaui3ua3uip.iooajsiqqjm5ioni IBnsnunpBqSBqzjiavo.ioh'p3xu-toj -jadipM.asiMaspi‘auaosjapuix s.UBiunqossiapis.iaAOaqjuo papj[ooa«ajB^iqSiaApo‘SB2i MBddS01SIJ36Cpo^js.iaaj ^aq(yjgj•suip.iooajjuaoijiu3Bui siqjJBaqo^pa3anAI3UOJJSa.iB UBiDisnuipBqBz^TMOJOH‘jasoduiODajooipauibsiindoqo ^Bq^^suoT^jdaouoDsiuiuim^japun3uuoqBis^iuapti'^g •SBqjnzBUiuidoqojo(^asbpapjooaaSBqzqMOJOHJiuilP^TA 6uipjOD0JpipU0|ClSUI 0qi!zijMOJop)'u|dgL|3 •SuiuBaiusjasuasoiuojbuaqjui ^luopaaaa,,jBqjsppqAsjsuiuibs •suoijBAjasqojoJtaqumuboj-ABJjJOaouauadxasiqjosisBqaqj3uiaasAqjauisbavluaiqojdaqx uo•q'juouijad9$jbiuoojbpauiBj qopuB(oajjuoi-qii'})AjisjaAiun oiuBOaq‘SAiaiAjububaqjmsassBpsapBqoaqjjbpaipju^AsjsuiuibhtU$j|OI30SS33$ •suoijBzqBuoqBJaidunsqjmaaj -unoopuBuoiufijajAOSsqjjouisi -oijuoiiBjoafajsjsiunuiiuooAubui 4Bq:j(^OBjaq:^puBmsqBiooso:j^juauiqoFj^Bpsuonouiaaindaq:^^Buisipq:;iApaA^aiAosiBan •X^jaioos(^sqBiDosblapunuiopaajjjouiaiqojdaq:jsbm.:^iinouiBJBdXqBioadsa'oSbsjBa^Avaj B:^qnop-jias'iBO^pojosisuob^^uaA^japunsaidpuud(jsnBioossiq:^Bq;sppqi^qsuiuiBH •BiqBAoisoqoazouiJBaiCbpaipn:^sSBqoqA^:^uapn!jsAjo-isiqa:^B -npBjSon^St‘i^qsuiuiBHpjBAOH‘Joq:^nBaqj,,.-msiiBi6osJapunuiopaajj,,pannuaapt yjjBUBSBq.puizbSbui!^siiBpos^uapuadaput,,ub‘moiaoh0S6I‘JsquiaAONaqx duize6eyyfsyeioo^ui9||| luopooj}sjopuod4u3pn45•tf9ti{9J93ipuni{punjodduposq*tjJtysjJodt*mumtod^Moauapun **Xuta.'MU »jaiis-t93p>ut*XuDduiojumsam ,S8l •jgjoojaadsuBamqoiqM4/uBjjBquBj\[j,Aqapsp^*JBqoo pBaads-apiMaqjqimqiojopBOjqajiqMaug—OftllDH •osjnooJO„*nBUBquBj\[„y*(^®TPs^ubuia9agooaip) go4IJ09aqiqimjBgoouMOpuotjnqpaojxo—fJAfl ^dwoy^'VLQ ^1/nj.soAnW •wdSo»wv01sanoH 4aaj)SMISSiseafozi sj3||3S400a'jiaviDQNVJIHYIO 862tsaidoDMaNoszit|«paqsnqnd *40(03 u(Zu«iu‘saicidaa&ox’a^np -ojd04auniJO]poo8ai(4P^qscq puc(3u34Bq4su|(ajndjoiaisciu 4sa4caJO»>q)uospueiMOHuaM -41SJiaqso;NOSaNV'IMOHSVWOHi dOSONIMVHQH0103UaxVM3HX Nivoova xaynoonvxavnov *UI|OIAS,AuU3f 4909foA4ison4JiA344Aqpsssod -insA|uoSOM(6ui||Ojuip34S(s ‘'J3d49!4M)lunjp344puo'j36uis S41'puoq344jOA4i|onb34j[, *|onsnSIU0444uas3jd SOMsj3do9sojA6jodnoj6ia||oiuso 'Aopjn40S|so|39uop,,3,,3444y sAo|dui|OiA's||ojlunjQJ3|4!3JX03*1— •qjuouiauojnoqBuipasBapjaqoj sipuB‘laanoxssip^AqapBUiuaaq SBquaqaiuaiJBi\ijo3uipjoaajv •sjBaAjuaaajuihbhPP -UB5^UIpjBaqspunosjsaqouaqj JOauoSIaaioAaanssauaAissa.id -xajBaj8qjiM3ubsjaanoxssipu •BjaiapanquaSuos AiqBjou‘siq-jojsuoqdaoxa azBaaaqxaoioApuBouBiduaaMj -aquoqaauuoaaqjaasoj(qnoijjip uajjosvm.jipuB‘aipajsAuboiuoui -jBqsi!jtjAAOiaqsqBj‘jaAa^oq3unuMouBidaqx '^uanaoxaspqpH0^aonsnCsaopainiibooas.q^qiuapuiH *AjbhuiSjia911^joajqaqjSuiujaa -uoosuiaodJOjasinjjaMods,a>qiHbubj^lauiBHJOSuijps BSt^pi^^3uosaqx*uaqa[uauB]^s.q^^TUiapuiHl^BjSubs ‘iCBpu^ijSBiJOjjaouoohbhppuBj^jaqui‘pinoxaiuuaf ^XdDUODpVUVJ/^UI spjX9djtoapxnoj^ 6»Be4|NOO)iyvyoovDiHOihi0S6I'8rage 10 THE CHICAGO MAROON December 8^ 1950Cagers edged byNavy Pier, 57-55The Marcx)n cagers absorbed their third straight defeatagainst Navy Pier, 57-55, Tuesday. But the Chicagoans puton an exciting show for the spectators by exhibiting a sharpbrand of play unseen in previous contests. The second halfespecially replete with heads-up maneuvers on bothsides, and the outcome was in doubt until the final gun.The initial period, cwnparativelyO^Tople newgym captain JV swimmers open,drills; JV five winshope for 14th PSL crown straightdull, ended with the Illini main¬taining a 27-22 edge. A1 Binford’sall around efforts for the Maroonsand Koziol’s for the visitors stoodout.Dickman deadlyDave Dickman began to hit onhis high long shot five minutes into Coach “Bud" Beyer’s Varsitythe last half. Chuck Beilfuss gymnasts have chosen Bob O’Toolematched him bucket for bucket, captain for the ’50-’51 season, itbut when Joe Johnson and Capt. disclosed recently. He is aSpence Boise started to connect veteran of three years on thealso, the gap narrowed. Johnson Gymnastic team, specializing input the Maroons ahead with four sidehorse, flying rings, and parallelminutes left when he stole the ball bars,in mid-court and soloed. However, Early last week the J. V. Swimming Team began its prac¬tice for the 1950-51 season.Coach Boycheff, working with the 19 man squad, hasgreat hopes for the team this year. .... . . f r* c t®^ ^ ' a thirteen-year strmg of P. S. L.Of the large squad only two letter- championships to maintain,men have returned from last year’s. The team will probably open itsteam: John Ottenheimer and Neil season this year on Jan. 12.'Gaynes, both breaststroke swim¬mers. Of tlie newcomers to theJVs this year, there are manygood prospects for swimming hon¬ors. Among the best of these is 15-year-old Joe Ellis, who is expectedto give the team a lift by very ade¬quately filling out the need for agood diver that has held the JVsdown in the past year or so.13 straight in PSLThe conquering of the difiScultcompetition on the schedule willbe forgotten when P.^ S. L. timecomes around again. The squad has The J-V cagers won their sec¬ond victory in as many startsTuesday when they drubbed Wes-cott Vocational 58-38 in Bartlettgymnasium. The starting lineupwas Utley, vanderVeer, Hall, Carl¬son, and Golde.University 17 12 22 7—58Wescott 4 11 9 14—38FOR DECEMBER:Ceramics by G. & O. NotzlerPaintings by '' E. OppenheimCards - Jewelry - GiftsThe Little Gallery1328 East 57thAfternoons ond Tuesdoyond ThursdOy Evenings A CLARK AND CLARKBARGAINTHE AMERICAN HOSTESS-COOKBOOK, by Ide Lee Dunne. A uniquecook book, hundreds of recipes andmenus, plus photographs, biographi¬cal notes, and party suseestious.Fascinatinir reading and Invaluableto anyone who entertains.Published at S2.95 New copies 9BcCLARK AND CLARK, BookMilers1204 East 55th StreetHours 19 A.M. to 9 P.M.two field goals and a free throw The team is inexperienced, and, • , _ j -4. err eo n w . O’Toole fccls that it may be un-by Koziol made it 57-53 Raby s ^ ^basket cut Uie margin to wo record oflast year’s team. Return-points, but the remammg thu-ty . „ o..,. “r-” -.4.,, mg lettermen are Major C win-seconds ran out before the Ma¬roons could rack up another.Box scoreNAVY PIER 57O PGoldstein,fGlickman.fCahill,fCapp>s,lPeder.fGrosky.fBeilfuss,cPeterson.cDufore.gRussa.gKoziol.gBanovlc.K CHICAGO 55G FDlckman.f SPhllon.f 0Baran.fRobert.s,fCasey.fRaby.fBlnford.cClsowskl.cBoise,gJohnson,g ner Jim Jackson and old English“C” men Risely, Herndon, andHalperin. Other outstanding per¬formers include Yehuda Baskin,Lester Wilson, and Jack Crosby.The gymnastic team is closelytied up with Acrotheatre, all of theteam members being members ofthe group.Totals 21 15 20 Totals 20 15 20SCORE AT HALF—Navy Pier 27, Chi¬cago 22.FREE THROWS MISSED—Navy Pier:Capps 2, Peder, Grosky, Duforc, Bussa 4,Kozlol 4, Banovlc 2; Chicago: Philou,Roberts, Blnford 2, ^ice, Johnson 2.Chicago’s next home game isagainst Lawrence, December 16.The game will be at the field house.Admission free with I. D. card orC pass.Student Government will sell cut-rate tickets for the Chicago Symphonyconcert of December 15, today until12:30, in Mondel Corridor. Ticketscost 50 cents.The program is Haydn—SymphonyNo. 82 in C Mojor; Mendelssohn—Violin Concerto in E Minor, IsaacStern, soloist; Dvorok—Symphony No.1 in O Major. GET IT HEREThe MAROON may be secured utthe following neighborhood stores:CAMPUS SNACK SHOPCITRONS MEN'S SHOPThe Lutheran TrainingParish of the Uaiversityof Chicago,governed by and forstudents, sponsors theCommon Service of theLutheran Church each Sundaymorning ot eleven o'clockin Thorndike Hilton Chapel,58th Street off UniversityPORTABLE FONOGRAFSBYWEBSTER - CHICAGOMODEL L 100-621 — is a complete, portablephonograph that automatically plays 7, 10or 12-inch records at 33 1/3, 45 or 78 RPM.$83.25MODEL 130—Plays oil three size records at allthree sp)eeds manually. Comes in handsomecarrying case ...... .$49.00MODEL L 100-601—Table Model. An entirelyautomatic phonograph for all three speeds.Open top. High performance—low cost.$59.50Come in Today for DemonstrationLowe’s Radio1217-1233 E. SSth St.*Trade Mark Registered U.S. Patent Office PL 2-4361 THEM AU!Philip Morris challengesany other leading brandto suggest this testHUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OFSMOKERS, who tried this test,report in signed statements thatPHILIP MORRIS IS DEFINITELYLESS IRRITATING, DEFINITELY MILDER!1. .. Light up a. PHILIP MORRISJust take a puff—DON'T inhale—ands-l-o-w-l-y let the smoke come throughyour nose. Easy, isn't it? And NOW... 2... Light up your present brandDo exactly the same thing—DON'T-INHALE Notice that bite, that sting?Quite a difference from PHILIP MORRIS IOther brands merely make claims ~ but Philip Morris invites youto compare, to judge, to decide for yourself.Try this simple test. We believe that you, too, will agree • • •Phiup Morris is, indeed, America’s FU^ST Cigarette!HO CIGARETTEHANGOVERmeans MORE SMOKING PLEASURE IPfllUP MORRIS■'-v. . "f .. .December 8, 1950 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 11rciassified Ads' FOR SALEfur jacket — White fox-dyed lynx.Very good condition. Will sell reason¬ably. HY. 3-1234.LARGE LP record collection for sale atlarge discount; also high-fidelity ampli¬fier. Breslow, PL. 2-9176, room 618 B-J.WOMAN’S WHITE figure skates, size 6.Call Donna Gardiner, No. 26 Kelly Hall.DR. A. ZIMBLER1454 E. 55Hi St.DO 3-9442Prescriptions FilledQUICKSERVICEImmediate Duplicotion ofBroken Lenses and Frames*1ours: 9-6; Mon. fir Thurs., 9-9 BOLSET 35 mm. camera and case. Likenew. In original box with all lustruc-tlons. $40. Gordon Berkow, PL. 2-9176,618 B-J.TAKING LATIN I? I have a completeline of text books and supplementarymaterials In excellent condition at rockbottom prices. Phone Thomas G. Kern,MI. 3-6000.CIROFLEX '’C,'* some accessories. CallE. H. White HY. 3-8750 evenings or MI.3-0800, ex. 1541 during the day.RECONDITIONED ‘PRIGIDAIRE’ refrig¬erator, porcelain Inside and out, veiygood shape, large size. $70. HU. 3-5234.PONTIAC — Slightly used, in beautifulcondition, 5 good tires, excellent body,low upkeep, $125. Call T. Richmond,Green Hall, after 6 p.m.PHONOGRAPHS AND RADIOS at lessthan Atlas’ low discount prices at Dan’s36 Radio Shack. Phone Manly 36 exten¬sion 1053 after 6 p.m.MAPLE SYRUP—The best, 100% pure.Makes a nice Christmas gift. $1 per pint.Free delivery. CE. 3-6659.NATCO motion picture screen, new, 80In. wide, $30. Call PL. 2-294, evenings.1935 PONTIAC 8. 4 doors, $40 or bestoffer. Gaulkln, MI. 3-6000.JENSEN WALNUT speaker cabinet. Abeautiful piece of furniture. Sacrifice.WA. 4-2005, Friday and Saturday.CWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWHl* 4i Hobby House ijI OUR HOBBY ... TASTY FOOD ||I — Honorably Priced — <;STEAKS - WAFFLES - CHEESEBERGERS* Open Dawn Till Dawn \* 53rd at Kenwood 63rd at Dorchester < I* Stony Island at 67th S FRENCH LINGUAPHONE course, com¬plete With phonograph records. WA.4-2005, FTl. and Sat.LATE MODEL Remington portable type¬writer, $30. Contact Shad Homan, Snell8, BU. 8-9537.ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA, 1940 ed.,perfect, reasonable. Joseph, 1151 E. 61stSt., BU. 8-7853.PRICES SLASHED on books, novels, so¬cial science, philosophy. Must sell fast.Joseph. 1151 E. 4)lst St. BU. 8-7853.RIDES WANTEDDESPERATELY NEED a ride to Arizona.Leaving at the end of quarter. Will shareexpenses. Tommy Connor, MI. 3-6000,room 727.FORMER STUDENT desperately needsride to and from campus dally fromFV)ster-Clark area. Call RA. 8-6241 after7 p.m.RIDE to New York or Philadelphia. Willshare driving and expenses. Leave onDec. 22 Call MU. 4-7354.STUDENT FAMILY desires ride to andfrom Grand Rapids, Mlqh., for Xmas re¬cess. Will share expenses, etc. V. H. But¬ler. 854 E. 59th St.RIDE WANTED to Harrisburg, Penn, on21st or 22nd. Share expenses and drivingall or part way. Experienced in snowand stuff Callenbach, BU. 8-4160.RIDE WANTED to N.Y.C. on 21st or22nd. Will share expenses. Call BarbaraGcr, Gates Hall.RIDERS WANTEDRIDERS WANTED to share driving andexpenses to Dallas, Tex., leaving Dec.22; back Jan. 3; call Fred Gearing, DO.3-6131.1 AM driving to Dallas, Tex. for Xmasvacation. Want 2 riders. Bill Pryor, Bur-ton-Judson cts., MI. 3-6000.SKIERS: STILL have room for a coupleof fellow enthusiasts to fill car for tripto Colorado. Leave Dec. 25. Call HY.3-0498 after 7 p.m. or before 9 a.m.WANTED: RIDERS to Cleveland. Ohio;share expenses; leave Friday evening,return Xmas night. Phone PL. 2-3830.BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM Friday, Dec. 8SWIMMING MEET—Bartlett gym, 3:30p.m. Chicago vs. Illlnols-Navy PierBranch and Illinois Institute of Tech¬nology.LECTURE—Division Of the Social Sci¬ences, "On Human Understanding.’’Gustav Ichhelser. Social Science 122,4:30 p.m.MEETING — Mathematical Biology,"Some Attempts to Derive ThresholdPhenomena from a Chemical Mech¬anism of Permeability Changes.”George Karreman, Fellow In Mathe¬matical Biology. 5741 Drexel Avenu.e,4:30 p.m.MOVIES—Young Progressives of Amer¬ica present "Things to Come,” by H. G.Wells. Social Science 122, 7:15 and 9:15p.m.DEBATE MEET—Student Forum spon¬sors University of Illinois, Lake ForestCollege, and University of Chicago,"Resolved, That the Non-CommunlstlcNations Should Form a New Interna¬tional Organization.” Law Building,7:30 p.m.LOS ANGELESDrive 1951 Chevrolets to California, takefamily or friends, select your own route,leave any time. Call WA. 4-9160 between4 and 6 p.m. weekdays, 1-5 p.m. Sat.LOST AND FOUNDLADIES WRIST-WATCH, yellow goldWlttnauer 8-slded with xpandlble bandlost In vicinity of pre-fabs, Klmbarkand 58th St. or Ray school. Reward.Kearney. 1225 E. 58th, BU. 8-8495.LEFT, LEATHER furllned glove lost.Finder please return to lost and foundor contact Charles Smith, room 737, B-J.$5 REWARD WILL be given for returnof wallet lost Nov. 29. Contains 3 un¬signed checks. Roger Anderson, room628 B-J.HELP WANTEDLIVE-WIRE cinema enthusiasts to par¬ticipate In new UC film society. Allwelcome. For Information contact Far¬ris, 6038 Dorchester, NO. 7-5329.YOUNG LADY wanted for baby-sittingand light duties In exchange for boardand freshly decorated private room andboth. MI. 3-4808.ROOM, BOARD, private bath in attrac¬tive home, 49th and Klmbark for girlstudent or employee exchanging babysitting. DR. 3-6363.GOOD WAGES for part time work!SG will pay $1.25 an hour for studentsto make sandwiches to be sold in Book¬store. Jobs will be awarded to studentssubmitting best bid. Get form for bidsand additional Information at SG office,3rd floor Reynolds Club. Bid deadline,5 p.m. Jan. 3, 1951.WANTEDCHRISTMAS TREE, used or new, to beused for SU all - campus Ice skatingparty, Dec. 22. Donor contact SU office,extension 1009.SANTA CLAUS suits for SU all-campusIce skating party, Dec. 22. Lender con¬tact SU office, extension 1009.SITUATION WANTED—Mature, marriedstudent desires part-time work. Variedmechanical and executive background.Competent, responsible. Justin Gross-man, FA. 4-.';'30.CAR WANTED for rental between.quar¬ters. Will give references and best care.Call ES. 5-3542 and ask for Brant.PERSONALSSLEEP LEARNING: Recent scientific in¬vestigations demonstrate mind canmemorize while asleep. Languages andother courses mastered rapidly. Forfurther Information call J. Butterfield6038 Dorchester, NO. 7-3529.YOU CAN make history! UC studentsand alumni proposed the new Interna¬tionally discussed North Korean bufferzone plan. Send Ic postcard for yourfree copy. U. S. Committee Against Mlll-tsrlzatlon, 6329 May, Chicago 21.FOR RENTYOU CAN rent an electric refrigeratorfor $4-$5.50 per month. PU. 5-8824.LEWIS SHOESI 1328 E. 55th Street Ii Butterfield 8-7484 :I 10% NSA Discount =ntlllllllltllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIilllliillDllliilin PLAY—"Tonight at 8:30.” Three one actplays—The Boor, by Chekov; ThisProperty Damaged, by Tennessee Wil¬liams; and Man of Destiny, by Shaw.Ida Noyes Theater, 8:30 p.m.DANCE — (Burton - Judson Council)“Masque of the Red Death.” BurtonDinning Room, 9-12:30 a.m.SERVICE — Hlllel Foundation, RegularSabbath service, 7:45 p.m. InformalOnegs, 8:30 p.m. 5715 Woodlawn.SERVICE—Hlllel Foundation, HanukkahCandle Lighting Service, 4 pm 5715Woodlawn.PARTY—NPSL, dancing and singing;food and drink. 6338 Cottage Grove(rear building^ 8:30-1 a.m. Donationvoluntary.CfIRISTMAS PARTY—Lutheran StudentAssociation. Members of Gamma Deltawill be special guests. Chapel House,6 p.m.BUSINESS MEETING — Calvert Club.Breasted Hall, Oriental Institute. •p.m.DISCUSSION — Labor Youth Leaguepresents Rev. Richard Morford, Exee>utlve Director of the National Coun¬cil of American Soviet Friendship.“The Right to Speak for Peace.” LawSouth, 3:30-5:15 p.m.DISCUSSION — Intervarsity ChristianF’ellowship. “Personal Evangelism.”Ida Noyes Hall, Sun Parlor, thirdfloor. 12:30-1:20 p.m.HAY RIDE PARTY—Student Union Out¬ing Dept. Square dancing and refresh¬ments after ride at Stalford Stables,La Grange. Ida Noyes, 7 p.m. Adm.$1.50.LECTTURE—Politics Club present SydneyLens, author of "Left, Right and Cen¬ter,” on "Labor in Europe.” 6337 Kim-bark, 8 p.m.Saturday, Dec. 9MOVIE—Socialist Youth League presenta“Son of the Shlek,” starring RudolphValentino. Social Science 122, 6:15,7:45, and 9:15 p.m. Adm. 50c.PLAY—"Tonight at 8:30” presents threeone-act plays: The Boor, by Chekov;This Property Condemned, by Tennes¬see Williams, and Man of Destiny, byShaw. Ida Noyes Theater, 8:30 p.m.Sunday, Dec. 10MACCAEEAN FESTIVAL—Annually heldby the Hlllel Foundation. Handel'sOratorio ‘Judas Maccabaeus’ w'lth Hll¬lel Chorus, K.A.M. Temple Chorus,Max Janowskl, choirmaster; FrederickMarriott, organist, and CarlllonneurRockefeller Memorial Chapel, 3:30 p.m.LECTURE—Socialist Youth League pre¬sent Fred Thompson, recent editor of‘The Industrial Worker,’ on “FromMooney to Minneapolis: The Story ofthe General Defense Committee(IWW).” Ida Noyes, 4 p.m.PANEL DISCUSSION — Wranglers Clubon “Social Change and Disorganiza¬tion.” University Church, 57th nUl-verslty, 7 p.m.REHEARSAL — Channing Glee Club.Basses at 4:45, everyone else 5 p.m,Unitarian church.NOYES BOX—Student Union present*the last for the quarter. Dancing—Hostesses — New Records. Men 35c.Others 10 cents. 8 p.m.Monday, Dec. 11MEETING—New Testament Club. Prof.Allen P. Wikren on “Four HundredYears After the Textus Receptus.”Swift Hall Commons, 8 p.m.Tuesday, Dec. 12SKI CLASS—Men’s and Women’s Divis¬ion of Physical Education. Someequipment available; open to students,faculty, and fulltime employees of UC.Field House, 4:30 (until snow van-ish0s).DISCUSSION — Intervarsity ChristianFellowship on Book of Mark. IdaNoyes Hall, North Reception Room.7:30-8:30 p.m.APT.—3 rooms, 2 blocks from Hutchin¬son Commons. 2 young ladles or acouple. HY. 3-8460. Call Monday.PRIVATE ACCOMMODATIONS In Mex¬ico City. Good rooms, $22 monthly. WriteSra. DeMartln, Mlnatitlan 29 Mexico,D. F.BUSINESS SERVICESDRESSMAKING, sewing alternations,bachelor’s rep.alrlng; reasonable rates.For appointment call Edna Warrlner,MU. 4-4680.EXPRESS: Light and heavy moving;willing and courteous service: reason¬able rates. Bcrdone, HY. 3-1915.LOOKING FX)R a used car? I can getyou one at under market price. IN. .8-2871 after 6 p.m.RADIO OUT OF WHACK?Bring It to Dan's 36 radio shack. PhoneMI. 3-0800, ex. 1053, room 36 Manleyhouse after 6 p.m.BEAUTY CULTURE counselling given bystudent expert. Cheap. Gary Steiner,any afternoon In MAROON office.ZIGGIE’S ZIGGIE’S ZIGGIE’S83RD and SOUTH CHICAGOZiggie’s Gridiron Proudly PresentsSTARTING DECEMBER 17EVERY SUNDAY AFTERNOONFrom 4 to 8 P.M.GIBSON’S MASON DDdlThe Great New Dixieland BandDecember S, T9S0Tke Store oC tke CKrietmae Spicilamou9 vomance?wentmoral 8 lioU tnc^t all for the wantof a gift\from Field’s!Joaepliine kaJ a proklemtkow to kold tke kand of a manwko always kept It tucked into ktsvesL Ske and Napoleon kotk madetke same kasic mistake. He over*extended kis kattle line and skeoverextended ker neckline and witkso muck kear territory, tkey kotkkad a'cold winter. So tke Boneparteeparted. And all kecause ske forgotone principle of strategy—if youwant a Field marskall, marskalla gift from Field's!me wiitii a from ■(—ieU ?!