SQ Co'Op decision delayedconstitution review asked Yale may follow UC planA committee at Yale University, including president A. Whitney Griswold, issued a report. . 0. , , , , , . ,_. last week which recommended an undergraduate educational plan which in many respect*Robert M. Strozier, dean of students, and William Biren- is similar in purpose to the Chicago plan used in the College,baum, director of student activities, will not hand down the The Yale group, known as the Committee on General Education, spent the past yeardecision on the university housing co-op until after the Student in formulating its report, according to an account in THE NEW YORK TIMES last Sun*Government election, it was announced at the SG meeting day. The TIMES summarized the program as having two main parts:Tuesday night. Vera John (SRP), who made the.announce- “The first, a transitionalment, stated that this act by the university administration has one, to develop a stronger un- classes once a week and lectures, the Yale plan “comes as the cli*effected a further delay in the - ; — dergraduate course for the Students treated maturelyopening of the co-op. stituti°n, by--laws,^Student Bui ot freshman and sophomore Also, “superior” high schoolyears; the second, a permanent juniors would be admitted to theplan that would reverse existing program. Compulsory attendancecollege patterns ard return, to a and other similar academic regu-. ,. ,, u. , Rights, and student code.Action on the Michigan plan * ’ . .Will take place at the next SG Fertig stated that there is ameeting. 1 he Michigan plan states nee(j for a student governmentthat organizations which discrim- Which would be able to communi-inate or have discriminatory ca£e more effectively with theclauses in their constitutions student body. He declared thatthrough a reorganization of theconstitution, SG laws, and studentcode, SG could be made more re¬sponsible to the student bodyrather than to the University ad¬ministration.The bill provides for a commit¬tee of 30 members solicited fromvolunteers. Of the 30, ten are toshould not be recognized by SG.CORSO requests petitionThe Committee on RecognizedStudent Organizations (CORSO)is requesting that the one dis¬criminatory fraternity on campuspresent its petition for* recogni¬tion by that time. The decisionwill then be made whether togrant or withdraw recognition be past or present members offrom the discriminatory fra- student Government, and tenternity. A year s probation was shall represent student organiza-granted to this fraternity on the tions.terms that it would take steps An amendment authored byto comply with the requirements paal Breslow (SRP) provides forof the Michigan plan. a campus-wide “town-meeting”Ralph Fertig (SRP) spoke for for the purpose of a discussiona bill calling for a campus-wide on the proposals of the consti-committee to review the SG con- tutional committee. large degree to the system usedat Oxford and Cambridge . . .”Same studies as in CollegeThe areas of study recommend¬ed by the Yale Committee are nat¬ural sciences and mathematics,the social sciences, history, andthe arts. The committee felt thatthis course of study would pro¬vide the undergraduate with anopportunity for a “broad” but nottechnical intellectual development.The Yale plan would also placegreater responsibility on the stu¬dent for securing his education.Instead of individual examina¬tions for each of the proposedcourses the student would be ex¬pected to take and pass a generalexamination at the end of twoyears of study. The method ofstudy would include discussion max of a series of plans and stud«ies” in which “The University ofChicago pioneered.” Dean of th®College, F. Champion Ward wasquoted as commenting, “its goodto have such distinguished corappany after all these years.”Give C-shopevening hoursThe C-shop is again open in theevening this quarter. The hourson weekdays are from 8:30 to 11p.m. The Hutchinson Commonsoffice announced that these hoursare going to be kept all year.'Returnby Chancellor at UCNot a jokeThe following account, with theabove headline, was published Sep-tcmber 29 in the Evening World-Herald of Omaha. Only the sub¬heads are ours. was inaccurate.The interview took place inOmaha during a recent trip ofKimpton and Strozier. Thepurpose of the trip was to ex-, .. _ _ plain to high school principalsV\ hat s more, said Dr. Lawrence an(j alumni the changes in. Kimpton, “I’m a pretty fair tbe couegefootball fan, myself. Tolked on educationComing from a Chicago leader, According to Strozier the Chan-Ihat is startling news indeed. cellor talked at length about UC’sIngraciously booted educational system to the re-For football was ingraciously porter. Then the reporter asked lations would be revised. “Thestudent will be treated as a think¬ing, independent individual . . .he would not be prodded orpushed into an education, norspoon fed,” stated the TIMESwriter.The plan is reported to be sup¬ported by a large number of thefaculty members and the presi¬dent and is therefore expected tobe adopted.UC called pioneerThe TIMES story stated thatGraduates of UC College givenadvance Soc. Division creditsStudents, at present in the College, who are consideringentrance into the Social Science Division, should be awaresthat as of last fall the following departments are givingadvanced standing to UC College graduate: Anthropology,Economics, History, Human Development, International Re¬lations, Nursing, Political Science, Psychology, SocialThought, and Sociology. Oth¬er departments may makesimilar changes within thecoming year.The standard requisite for ad¬vanced standing to be conferredvaries between different depart¬ments; within each departmentthe particular course exemptionsgranted depend on the records ofindividual applicants.Poly Sci exempts minor fieldIn the Political Science Depart¬ment, acording to Mr. H. Pritch¬ett, Department Head, an appli¬cant from UC College will beexempted from the Divisionalrequirement of a minor field,provided that he has passed oneof the following combinations ofby Allan Coleman related College Comprehensives“Big time intercollegiate football is definitely not favored with the grade of c or better: So-by the Chancellor” despite the report carried in an Omaha cial Science 2 and 3; Humanitiesnewspaper, stated Dean of Students Robert M. Strozier. ^ and ^ Social Science 3 andStrozier, who was with Chancellor Kimpton at the time of cial sdenreTSd ffiLtOTv^OMPthe interview which led to the story, said that the report 1 d Humanities 3- and OMP and who plans t0 enter the Social• ^ ana humanities O, ana UMr ana rUl/ioirm will nrocnmaWifUniversity of Chicago, October 9, 1953Football back at UC?°f football favored Mjsunc|erstancling, says Strozier last fall it is possible for theaverage UC College graduateto receive his MA in PoliticalScience approximately two yearsafter his BA, rather than three^as formerly.Soc division likes present BA-In regard to the new BA systemin the process of evolving thisyear, the Soeial Science Divisionas a whole has ruled to leave thoCollege curriculum for studentsplanning to enter their Divisionentirely under the control of theCollege Committee. According toRobert D. Hess, Dean of Studentsin the Social Science Department,the new BA will result in no addi¬tional total saving of time forstudents working toward an MA,though the technical status ofUC College graduates upon en¬trance into the Division possiblywill differ. If the College requiresthat students specialize in theirlast year of the College, a studentSocial Science 3.The Chancellor of the Univer¬sity of Chicago candidly admittedTuesday that he thinks football“is a grand old game.”WA small scale intercollegiate foot¬ball started here.'Small league' game favoredIn the interview WednesdayStrozier said that several yearsago he and others had approachedformer Chancellor Robert M.Hutchins with a suggestion thata small league football programbe initiated. Hutchins had no ob¬jections. An attempt was begun, Science Division will presumablywish to take the courses thenIn addition, the applicant will which he would ordinarily take inbe exempted from the Divisional hjs first year of the Division,requirement of three elective Thus, when he officially enterscourses, provided that he has the Division he will need only onepassed one College comprehen- year of work to fulfill his MAsive with a grade of C or better, requirements. He would enter thewhich has not been used in Division in equal standing to themeeting the minor requirement, graduate of a traditional four yearIn effect, this means that since college. >, . . ., . , , . . . . . but the project was. abandonedbooted out by the ^University^of if^Kimpton pibanned^0 bring foot- because o£ difficulties existing atthat time.Strozier said, “I still think it’sChicago back in 1939. Since then ball back to the University ofthe school has had the reputation Chicago. Kimpton replied thatof being the citadel for more there are no such plans at pres-scholastic pursuits. ent. “Oh, you don’t like football,But Chancellor Kimpton had do you?” said the reporter. Asnothing to do with the decision to Ibis is not true, Kimpton a good idea.”Strozier also pointed out thatKimpton in his speeches beforethis is not true, Kimpton ex-abolVsh football at the University plained that he personally likes alumni and high school officials,of Chicago the game and that he would not stated that it took a great dealHe did not become Chancellor obJect t0 havinS a Pr0«ram of "St,.,*,," poge 6until 1951, and was vice-presidentfrom 1950 to the time of his ap¬pointment to his present post.Stagg Field during World WarII was the scene of importantatomic research. Otherwise, thedear old athletic ground has seennothing more exciting in recentyears than some intramural con¬tests. Enrollment takes slide againlatest registration data showsTotal enrollment on the quadrangles is 6.8 per cent lessthan it was last year at this time. According to the Registrar’sfigures based on paid registrations at the end of the first weekBut, in Omaha Tuesday, Chan- of the quarter, the Collegers down 14 per cent, and the Divi¬sor Kimpton talked football ; „nri c^nnlc mnrp than —^ ^lons and ?c™ols when tabulations are complete4 pet cent from last year s £be £ 0 £ a j enrollment will betotals. (See chart on page 7.) around 4,600 students.Only the Social Science Divi- Registrar William Scott statedlike an ordinary pennant waver.Secs 10 or 15 yearly“Oh, sure,” he said, “I see prob¬ably 10 or 15 games a year. I lovefootball.”In fact, Chancellor Kimpton anwent on, “I wouldn’t have anyobjections if we might some daystart football again.”Dean of Students Robert M.Strozier, who also was in Oma¬ha to meet with local alumniof the University was taking abath while the Chancellor madethat statement. sion and the Law School showed that he had so far received infor-inerease in number of stu- mation on enrollment from onlydents. The former is up 6 per one other university in this area,cent, the latter 7 per cent. The The University of Wisconsin hasgreatest setback was in the first declined about one per cent,and second years of the College The relative decrease is lesswhich have almost 37 per cent this year than it has been in theless students than last fall. past. Conjectures based on popu*There are still approximately lation indices indicate that aone hundred students who have slight upward trend in collegeenrolled but not paid their fees enrollment in the Mid-West shouldBui Dean Strozier heard the re- and are thus not tabulated. Prob- begin in 1956 with substantialSet "Football/' page 6 ably by the end of the quarterjumps in 1960 and 196a. Three hundred students were received by Chancellor Lawrence A.Kimpton and Mrs. Kimpton last Monday evening at Ida Noyes Hall. NancyCushwa, chairman of the Student Orientation Board introduced the Chan*cellor and his guests.Harold Anderson, University Marshal, headed the reception line, fol¬lowed by Chancellor and Mrs. Kimpton; Dean of Students, Robert M.Strozier and Mrs. Strozier; Dean of Biological Science, Lowell T. Cog*geshall and Mrs. Coggeshall; Dean of Students m the College, John R,Davey and Mrs. Davey.A bouquet of roses was presented to Mrs. Kimpton during the done#which followed the reception by Bruce Larkin, President of Student Union,on behalf of Student Union, and the Inter-Fraternity and Inter-ClubCouncils.Shown above are Mrs. Kimpton and the Chancellor greeting RobertPhillipson, student in the College.Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 9, 195:New student group meets; Job placement.services openstresses academic freedom to degree candidates in '54The Student Conference on Academic Freedom held herelast June under the sponsorship of the All-Campus CivilLiberties Committee has led to the formation of a new group,the Student Committee on Academic Freedom. This groupintends to include as members ~t—ZTT- 1 ™—r—students who are interested in £ “iet.efi ?„d ££«£doing something about the prob- supporting thelems of academic ireedom from wor* of the Committee have beencampus throughout the country. receivedThe Committee feels that if it piang *for this ^ WQrk willpresents the facts fairly to stu- be made at a meetin to be he]ddents it can combat the present Sund afternoon at 2:30 in thewidespread student apathy and Judson Library of the Burton.induce students to work actively Judson Dormitory> 60th St. andm defense of that freedom which EUis Ave. AU persons interestedis the basis of their own educa- in doing something or learningtion and the intellectual life of wbat js being done by students tothe country. preserve academic freedom areAs the result of an article in urged to attend. Registration for the place¬ment service of the Office ofVocational Guidance andPlacement is now open to stu¬dents expecting degrees beforeAugust, 1954. The free serviceseeks to help holders of Bache¬lor’s, Master's, or Doctor’s de¬grees who desire jobs in teaching,business, or industry.Industrial and business corpor¬ations have established a. policyof interview and selection amongjob applicants across the country.Educational units, although theyfollow no such established pro¬gram, also make it a practice tointerview applicants. “Since can¬didates must be chosen and setsof credentials prepared by I’ecom- mendations, prompt registrationis strongly urged” by the Office.* Students anticipating gradua¬tion this coming December,March, June, or August, and whoplan to look for employment atthat time, may register immedi¬ately in room 305, AdministrationBuilding. Miss Mathews is incharge of registration for teach¬ing positions; Mr. Calvin, busi¬ness opportunities; Miss llart,industrial employment.The guidance and placementdepartment advises men to regis¬ter regardles of military qualifi¬cation since many companies hireirrespective of service status orprovide job commitments effec¬tive as of discharge date.Selective service Community Fund National Teach©r CXaiTISstarts *53 drive to be held in Februaryexams coming upThe Selective Service Examin¬ing Section has announced thateligible students who intend totake the November 19th SelectiveService Qualifiation Test shouldapply at once to the nearest localboard. Applications for the No¬vember 19 test must be postmark¬ed no later than midnight, Novem¬ber 2, 1953.A bulletin of information andapplications for both the Novem¬ber 19, 1953, and the April 22,1954, administrations of the testare now available. Following in¬structions in the bulletin, the stu¬dent should fill out his applica¬tion and mail it immediately toSelective Service Examining Sec¬tion, Educational Testing Service,P. O. Box 589, Princeton, NewJersey,According to the testing serv¬ice, which prepares and admin¬isters the College QualificationTest, it will be greatly to the stu¬dent’s advantage to file his appli¬cation at once, regardless of thetesting date he selects. The re¬sults will be reported to the stu¬dent’s local board of jurisdictionfor use in considering his defer¬ment as a student. The Community-Civics Fund ofthe University of Chicago, headedby Robert C. Woellner, AssistantDean of Students, holds its 1953appeal for the Community Fundof Chicago this month.The Community Fund is aunited appeal of 183 health, wel¬fare, education, and child careagencies in the city of Chicago.Its drive for 1953 is $10,109,000.Contributions may be mailed orbrought to Room 315 in the Ad¬ministration Building. Membersof the faculty, officers of the Uni¬versity, and UC employees mayuse the payroll deduction plan.Contributions may be made in sixmonthly installments. Prospective teachers in theUniversity who will be start¬ing their student teachingnext year are urged by HaroldAnderson, director of studentteaching, to take the NationalTeacher Examinations being heldon February 13, 1954. They are,he said, being Increasingly 're¬quired of new teachers by stateeducation boards and city educa¬tion boards.The examinations include testsin professional information, gen¬eral culture, English expression,and non-verbal reasoning; , andone or two of nine optional exam¬inations testing the mastery ofsubject matter to be taught. Twohundred testing centers through¬ out the United States will admin¬ister the examinations.Completed applications, accom¬panied by proper examinationfees, will be accepted by the ETSoffice during November andthrough January 15.Application forms and a bulle¬tin of information describing reg¬istration procedure and contain¬ing sample test questions may beobtained from Mr. Anderson’s of¬fice, or directly from the NationalTeacher Examinations, Educa¬tional Testing Service, P. O. Box592, Princeton, New Jersey.ACASA Book StoreCarefully selected stock of Used fiooksORDER YOUR PERSONALIZED CHRISTMAS CARDS NOWFROM OUR CHOICE COLLECTIONTypewriters Bought - Sold - Repaired1117 E. 55th St. HY 3-9651 TOMMY’SFOUNTAINandGRILL949 East 55thCoeds From Coast-To-Coast“Aye” Arrow Gordon OxfordsGals acclaim neatness andstyle appeal of thesecampus favoritesThe ladies’ vote is unanimous: Arrow Gordon Oxfordsdo much for a guy’s appearance. Taking their cue fromthis coed consensus, Arrow dealers are now featuringthe largest selection ever of Arrow Oxfords in manysmart collar styles.ARROW*SHIRTSSHIRTS • TIES • UNDERWIAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTS features everyone’s -; style favoriteArrow “Gordon Oxford”Campus style leader! Arrow Gordon Oxford...smartly styled with the best-looking, best¬fitting collars in the world. Impeccably tai¬lored for neat, tapered fit. In fine "Sanfor¬ized”® Oxford fabric that will not shrinkmore than 1%. Choose Arrow Gordon Ox¬ford in your favorite color and collar styles—today! _ ^.Chicago - Evanston - Oak Park - Gory - Joliet - Alton, FOR EXAMPLE:• Home for week-ends, holidays,• Trips to the big gomes.• Visits to nearby big cities.• Group trips (gleo dubs, frater.nities, sororities, camera dubs,field trips, conventions, etc.Round-trip tickets (goodfor 6 months) save an extra20% on the return trip!One Round 1Way TripAKRON, 0. ... $ 8.25 $14.85ANN ARBOR, MICH. 5.95 10.79RENTON HARBOR.ST. 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LOUIS, MO. . . 4.95SALT LAKE CITY, U. 28.65SOUTH BEND, INO. 2.10SPRINGFIELD, ILL .SPRINGFIELD, O. .SYRACUSE, N.Y. .TOLEDO, O. ...WASHINGTON,D. CW. LAFAYETTE, IND. 3,10YOUNGSTOWN, O. 9.20(U. s.3.506.6014.755.25 6.50 <15.258.5012.10.4.4512.105.9517.102.80 ,13.158.4034.15 ,»18.7531.8018.4524.053.158.9551.603.806.3011.9026.559.4516.55 29.805.6016.60Tax extra]Foret subject to change without notice.JOHN STOCKS TRAVEL BUREAUAdministration Bldg.5801 5. Eilis Ave.Phone Midway 3-0800October 9, 1953 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3Sharp and Urey will give talkon Rosenberg case trial record“Logic and Rhetoric in the Rosenberg Case” will be thetopic of a talk to be given next Wednesday by Malcolm £&£££ SRf caucus Plansnow available definitive campaignPetitions are now available for ■ **those wishing to run as independ- Plans for activity in and out of Student Government andn-nfaeon- t p it ‘u a ent candidates in the student the drafting of a statement of principles and a platform forSharp, professor of Law. Harold C. Urey, distinguished serv- Government elections October 21 the forthcoming SG elections constituted the main activityice professor of chemistry will give his views on the case at through 23. The only require. of the student Representive Party caucus Sunday in Burton-the same meeting. The meeting, to be held in Law North at ^nt be^fMahy "registered Judson-4:3.0 p.m. is sponsored by the Law Students Club.Sharp has recently completeda book in which at the University, be carrying aminimum of two courses, havehe examines tabdsb the identity of the newly an average of “C” or better andthe Rosenberg trial record. After discovered table, it will cast se- have at least one quarter of resi-having made a public statement ^ious doubt on the credibility of dence prior to the election,last May in which he questioned ke^ witnesses for the^prosecution The petitions can now be ob-Ihe guilt of the Rosenbergs, he and the fairness of the trial as a Platform proposals indicated that SRP plans to work for“a re-definition of the status ~ ..—— 7 7777—.of Student Government in or- SG’ we can 100 tlmesder to more effectively carryout its student needs projects." Ne£ "T'commmw toRoy John, vice-president of SG, itself with activities concernoutside oftained at Reynolds club desk, the was elected chairman of the SRP sg was formed under the chair-l»articipated in the legal defense wa, • lue a klven Student Government office and campaign committee. John de- manshiD of Michael Kaufmanof the Rosenbergs at the invita- table ^will^^dlS'‘S the °ffiCe °f Mr’ Birenbaum’ Di’ clared’ “SRP intends to wage a According to Kaufman, the firsttion of their attorney, Emmanuel 01 ,, 11 VN1U De a acmai 01 rector of Student Activities. To constructive campaign, frankly project of the committee will beBloch. justice. become a candidate a student and completely outlining its rec- to sponsor a series of discussion-New evidence changed view Urc* wrote to Time* must file his petition, signed by ord and real accomplishments, as lectures on the subject of “TheOriginally it had been Sharp’s Ure^ first Questioned the guilt 25 registered students, by noon well as its mistakes. We believe R0le of the Liberal in Present-contention that the verdict had the K°senbergs in a letter pub- Wednesday, October 14, at the that the UC student body is en- Day America.” Invited to be thebeen “fairly reached,” though he bsbed *n tbe New York Times last Student Government office in titled to a rational presentation first speaker is Carey McWil-questioned the severity of the danuary- Sharp emphasized that Reynolds Club room 304. of the issues free of the petty par- Hams, editorial director of thedeath penalty^ However, upon BreY> though not trained in law, The Student Representative tisanship of previous elections, weekly magazine, The Nation,presentation of new evidence by was one of the earllest to see Party (SRP) and the Independent We are not afraid to ask for a Kaufman emphasized that SRPthe defense, he stated in part: weakness in the testimony of the Student League (ISL), the two reasoned comparison of the x>m- will invite speakers of widely“Moreover, the report of new prosecution. parties which will offer complete peting platforms and parties.” varying opinions.evidence must shake the confi- Sharp’s talk next week will be sIates’ are now in Process of Constitution blocks program Breslow sums upchoosing their candidates and will Albert Sciaky, former chair- Paul Breslow, chirman of SRP,man of the Inter-fraternity Coun- summed up the results of thecil and one of the independent caucus, stating, “SRP is going tocandidates for SG who will re- talk sense to the UC campus. Weceive SRP endorsement, declared are not going to minimize ourin a speech to the caucus that SG, errors or obscure the difficultiesby virtue of its constitutional involved in making SG an articu-structure, had been block in its late, forceful body. We believeattempt to formulate meaningful that we have given the campusprograms of student needs. Sci- a Student Government which hasihev will be apportioned as fol- a^y contended that the Independ- been more ambitious and bolderlows: 11 from the College, 10 from ent Students League in SG had than ever before, and which hasfailed to concern itself with mak- repeatedly attempted to breaking SG into an institution truly away from the debating-societyrepresentative of, and in close con- days when, under ISL leadership,tact with, the student body. SG was a training ground for as-Julius Lewis, SG president, de- Pir.inS and promising young poli-probably announce their slatessometime next week.According to the method ofelection, there is one seat forevery one hundred students ineach school. A total of 45 seatswill be contested in this election.dence of many who, like me, have a “selective preview” of his book,been willing to assume that the „ , , . , « . _verdict of ‘guilty’ was fairly and will be mainly concerned withreached. The evidence relates to the actual case record. Ureywhat may be regarded as details stated that his talk will be “non-of the prosecution’s case. Never- technical,” simply his opinion ontheless, if defense witnesses es- the case.Fulbright committeeMerle Crowe Coulter, associate dean of the Division of the Social Sciences Division, 5Biological Sciences, was recently named as chairman of the from the Physical Sciences, 4Committee for Fulbright Scholarships at UC. Other commit- from Humanities’ 3 from thetee members also announced are Adrian Albert, Department theological School and Biotogicai , rOf Mathematics* Leon Carnovskv fimAnto 1 iLrv fences Division, 2 from the Med- clared> «with the present struc- tlclans- In short, were more m-~ . , „ ’ ^ ‘uuu e lbrary School, icaj Lak, Social Service Adminis- ture of SG we can give the cam- Crested in being truthful and inDavid Easton, Department Of Political Science; Frank Flynn, tration, and Business schools, and pus a government five times bet- workinS for a meaningful pro-Social Sciences Administra¬tion, and John Wilson, Divi¬sion of Humanities andOriental Institute. Walter Biren¬baum, Director of Student Activ¬ities, is acting secretary.The original deadline for com¬pleted applications was announced . , gram than in running hat-check-zenship, and good health. Suffi- one *rom tbe Graduate Library ter than that of ISL. If the cam- jng services and winning ele<>cient knowledge of the language school. pus supports us in working for a tions.”of the country in which he willstudy is also necessary. Theawards cover the cost of trans¬portation, tuition, books, mainte¬nance for one academic year, andthe expenses of a language re-as October 5, but this has been fresher or orientation courseextended to October 15. Ail appli- abroad.cations must be handed in to Wai- The Fulbright scholarships areter Birenbaum, Reynolds Club, under the auspices of the Depart-202, before that date. ment of State and the final selec- Should Jewish state be center of JudaismMorgenthau asks in speech at Hillel“The existence of the state of Israel raises inescapably the basic problem of Jewry,”asserted Hans J. Morgenthau, professor of political science, at Hillel House last Friday_ night. His speech, entitled “Judaism, Zionism, and Israel,” was one in Hillel’s series of Fri-Awords for 1954-55 tion of candidates is made by the day evening discussions.These awards are provided for Board of Foreign Scholarships, The new position of Israel as a political entity gives substance to the question of whetherstudy abroad during the 1954-55 appointed by the President of the or not the Holy Land is the center of Jewish life. Israel’s prime minister Ben Gurion takesacademic year. To be eligible for United States. Last year eleven the view that all Jews oughtthese foreign study fellowships, students and four faculty mem- to live in Israel. The state isnot simply an organization ofstudents must possess a bachelor’s degree, United States citi bers of the University receivedawards.UNIVERSITY FOODS1129 East 55th Street Phone MU 4-4035Quality GroceriesVegetables and FruitsFresh Bakery Goods DailyOpen 9 a.m. .10 p.m. incl. Sunday(Closed on Fridays) with replacement by mere nation- perhaps more, on developmentsalistic considerations. in Israel than outside,” Morgen-, . _ , x- * “The dilemma wouldn’t exist,” thau concluded. If Israel becomescertain Jews, but a realization of Morgenthau continued, “if the a mere secular state, it shouldthe mission of Jhe Jewish peopte. state were jn Uganda; the holy arouse no feeling in Jews outsidesoil would not then be contami- of it except ‘humanitarian sym-n a t e d by political problems.” pathy.’ If it can ‘materialize spir-Israel has immediate importance itual values, then it could be theas a place to escape to, but this is spiritual center of all Jewry.”“a trivial and insufficient princi- The danger is that the outsidepie to serve as a philosophy.” Ob- Jews may substitute Zionist poli-viously Israel is unable, physi- tics for the traditional spiritual-For him, the Bible is a nationaldoctrine equivalent to the Declar¬ation of Independence.No political organizationThe fact that the people havesurvived despite the absence ofpolitical organization, said Mor- cally, to accommodate all Jews. - • , -genthau, raises a doubt as to the Th/ question is one of attitude. lty’ There 1S no pomt in survivalnecessity of a national organiza-and the religious, since the tradi¬tional cultural and religious val-troversy is between the secularues of Judaism are threatenedtion to Judaism. In fact, the con not£lllllllllllllllll!lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllttI WOODWORTH'S1| BOOKSTORE- Ready to Serve Tour Every NeedTEXT BOOKS Israel not large enough “ the SUrvivinS Part does“The solution depends as much, partake in the spiritual heritage.Campaign for prefab area cleanupL5 to have UC and Fifth Ward helpA three-day campaign to clean up the prefab areas with the co¬operation of University and Fifth Ward personnel will start on Octo¬ber 17th, according to Maury Waters, president of the Prefab Coun¬cil. The five areas total about 270 units which are occupied almostexclusively by student veterans and their families.The Prefab Council was originally formed last quarter after sev¬eral crimes had occurred in the > •NEW AND USEDCLASS BOOM SUPPLIES |TYPEWRITERS Sold - Rented - Repaired |POSTAL STATION — RENTAL LIRRARY |1311 East 57th Street |3 2 BLOCKS EAST OF M4NDEL HALL -3 STORE HOURS: DAILY 8:00 A.M. ta 6:00 P.M. EVENINGS—Monday, Wednesday, Friday to 9:00 P.M. 3SiHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItllHIIIIIIIIIlIBHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllHIHIIIHIillllHItllllllfca prefab areas. As a result of thecouncil’s activities additional out¬side lighting was installed in theareas, guards on patrol werearmed, and direct radio and tele¬vision communication with thecampus police department wasestablished.To acquaint recent arrivalswith the prefab community the UC Review comingThe Autumn issue of the Chi¬cago Review, the campus literarymagazine, will be published inmid-November.Editor F. N. Karmatz announc¬es that all students interested inany phase of magazine work-editing, circulation, publicity, etc.council is issuing an orientation —are invited to join the Review.booklet. Written by Tom Minder,Tim Black, Scott Mitchell andRuth Bloom, the booklet stresses Staff meetings are held everyThursday at 8 p.m. in the Reviewoffice on the third floor of thegreater awareness of community Reynolds Club,responsibility as the main factor Material for the Winter issuein better community living, A di* js now being accepted. Contribu¬tory of all pre fab occupants is tions in the fields of poetry, fic-included in the guide. tion- current articles profiles, sci-Future projects slated by the ence, and reviews may be mailedcouncil include improved laundry or delivered in care of the Rey-facilities and a pet club. nolds Club.Page 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 9, 1953Service offers students various jobs;range from baby sitting to Easter bunniesby Roberta Hopkins ond Mitchell SleinThe Personnel Office at UC defines its main purposes as teaching students “how to earnmoney and . . . not spend it.” In their offices, located in Ingleside Hall, 956 E. 58th Street,the counselors offer assistance in securing all types of employment in a variety of jobs.Mrs. Patricia Metcalf, Student Employment Interviewer, said that students should callor come to the office to make an appointment for an interview. When the student is inter¬viewed, the qualifications and skills which the student has are noted and advice as to typesof employments is given. She ; - ~ Z7 7TT~ TT ...noted that the agency serves a themselves to a 30b. She noted Part-time jobs with UC are heldlarge portion of the student body that new students often need ad- by the supervisors for studentswith many and varied jobs. justment as to their allocation of as long as possible™ e «tei»r time. For students who cannot af- of jobs at UC is slightly lower,Mo*+ jobs neor C ford much time, but need money, than on the outside, but it wasAlmost all jobs are recruited baby-sitting in exchange for room stresed that traveling time andfrom firms in the immediate aiea an(j board is ideal. Here is the carfare more than make up theand in the downtown section. case "bow not to spend money.” difference.Many of the firms have been majority of these residence Helps students adjustdealing with UC for many years j0bs reqUjre no manual work, The policy of the Personnel Of-and offer new job opportunities occasionally a boy is asked to fice is not to accept any jobs forevery year. Man> of the jobs tend furnaces or a girl to dust, students that in any way discrim-which were originally part-time whenever these duties exceed the inate against one or more sectionsschool jobs, have developed into agreed limit, students are urged of the student body. Any job thatfull-time summer jobs. to inform the office at once. In is offered is open to all students.Jobs range from baby sitting resident jobs it is always specified They noted that they have neverto delivering mail for the post that the student be given one known of any student who hasoffice. Baby sitting, for instance, night off every week-end. come in contact with any discrim-is open to all men and women at On the whole part-time jobs are ination after being on the job.all times. In many cases boys are easier to procure for resident Although the service deems itpreferred to girls because trans- students than for commuters, wise to limit the amount of timeportation need not be furnished Mrs. Metcalf added that in the a student may w'ork and thusto and from the house where the case of commuting students, earn, it specifically states thatsitting is done. Delivering mail especially those from the north veterans who attend UC underfor the post office is largely a side where very few jobs are of- Public Law No. 50 and Publicseasonal job, lasting from October fered to UC students, jobs with Law No. 894 are not limited into Christmas. It is one of the best the school are often the best, the amount they may earn,paying jobs offered by the serv- hitfier and yonCarolina U smearedice.Odd jobs availableThe Personnel Office, how?ever,offers more than ordinary jobs.For instance, UC students havebeen know'n to work as part-timeEaster Bunnys. There was onemale student who picked up someextra money by modeling a trussfor the National Orthopedic con¬vention. There are also jobs suchas the one now held by the UCstudent who delivers the weatherreport to NBC weatherman, ClintYoule, every night.While not all jobs are as un¬usual as being Clint Youle’sweatherman, they usually payat a good rate. The best paid jobson campus are clerical positionswhich entail some degree of skill.Clerical tests are given to thosewho apply for such campus jobs.These tests are designed to de¬termine what skills the applicanthas.Science jobs pay wellOther positions noted for theiragreeable renumeration are thoseoffered in the science depart¬ments. The positions in the sci¬ence departments, however, arespecialized and are usually notavailable to non-department stu¬dents.The service offers a number ofdriving jobs. Although the re¬quirement for driving is that aperson be twenty-one, it is oneof the more convenient oppor¬tunities because of the odd-hourarrangements possible. Jobs in¬volving work with machinery areopen to those who are 18 or over.If you are one 01 tne studentswho crave exciting work, per¬haps a job such as the one pro¬cured for a UC sports enthusiastwould interest you. He had a jobat the Annual Outdoor Show atthe International Amphitheaterbaiting hoks for fishermen at thetrout pond. Girls are also in con¬stant demand for work at boothsat Chemical Conventions andsuch. Public Relations have posi¬tions for Social Science studentsfrom time to time.No discriminatory jobsMrs. Metcalf also emphasizedthat the Personnel Office triesto help students to adjust to UCand at the same time to orient Beyond the Ivory TowerAt the International MedicalCongress held in London at theend of August, professors fromEngland and Germany com¬plained about medical students’insufficient qualifications. Prof.Brinton, London, said thai in Eng¬land the number of students con¬tinued to be high, but that theirquality was steadily decreasing.Many of them, he said, werethinking in the first place of asafe career in the Health Serviceand of the deferment of militaryservice granted in England tomedical students. The GermanProf. Bargmann (Kiel) criticizedthe unsatisfactory instruction, atsecondary schools, in the naturalsciences, which w>as unfavorablyaffecting the intellectual level ofmedical students.IndioSeveral students of LucknowUniversity have gone on a hungerstrike, because the Universityauthorities have been intendingto curtail the Student Union’sconstitutional rights. The J. B.College in Jorhat, Assam, alsosaw nearly 1,000 students go onstrike near the end of August,who organized a long processionas a demonstration of protest.The demands they directed to theauthorities included the immedi¬ate abolition of the division ofcollege classes by sex, the engag¬ing of an adequate number ofstaff, punctuality in the holdingof lectures, and cleanliness in lec¬ture-rooms. A large meeting ofstudents adopted several resolu¬tions, appealing to the govern¬ment to grant increased scholar¬ships and requesting the nearbyGauhati University to intervene.The University authorities, on theother hand, have stated that thefunds available to them are notadequate to meet these demands.According to the Associated Pressnews agency, the Universities ofLucknow and Allahabad havebeen closed pending further pro¬vision, on account of the students’“improper behavior.” SpainThe Director of the SpanishUniversity Syndicate S.E.U., in aspeech to Parliament, advocatedthe introduction of a compulsorysocial insurance scheme for stu¬dents which should be sponsoredby the State, but should be man¬aged by the students themselves.The costs of this insurance, hesaid, should be borne in equalportions by the State and by thestudents. In the course of hisspeech the Director of S.E.U.stated that 28 per cent of Spanishstudents were suffering from oneor another chronic disease, that20 per cent were abandoning theirstudies because they lacked thefunds for continuing them, that20 per cent only of students com¬pleted their courses by passingthe licentiate examination, andthat 6 per cent only were receiv¬ing scholarships, the sum ofwhich in many cases was noteven sufficient for meeting theexpenses of studying and living.Urged by his conscience, an un¬known student of art has now re¬delivered to the London ArtGallery the statue of Psyche, thegoddess of love, which, being awork of Auguste Rodin’s, wasstolen four months ago. In an ac¬companying letter he explainedthat he had kidnapped the statue,not for economic reasons, butmerely because he wanted “to betogether with her.” He includedthe sum of 10 s. to cover indemni¬ties.USSRThe “World’s Largest Univer¬sity,” the Lomonossow Universityin Moscow, was opened on Sept.1, 1953. Consisting of the 32-storymain building and 37 other build¬ings, it comprises built-up spaceof the amount of 2,611,000 cubicmeters. In the new University,there are 148 lecture rooms, morethan 1,000 laboratories, and a li¬brary designed to contain 1,200,-000 volumes. A total of 5,754rooms have been equipped to of¬fer accommodations to students.See "BIT/ page 11 The University of North Caro¬lina Daily Tar Heel last weektook dim editorial view of thosewho were dissatisfied with inter¬nal security on the Chapel Hillcampus. The editorial was headed“Sound and Fury” and is here re¬printed in full:“ ‘Reds Ran Printing Press NearU. of N. C., Witness Says.’“Judging by the AssociatedPress release which appeared un¬der this headline, the whisperingcampaign about Communism onthe University of North Carolinacampus has surfaced again.“The article says that testi¬mony before the Senate InternalSecurity Committee of PaulCrouch, North Carolina-born ex-Communist, has implicated theco-cperators of a Chapel Hill rec¬ord store and two Carolina pro¬fessors of the 1930’s in allegedcampus party activities.“So what?“Those w'ho are frightened byfreedom and those who supposethat so-called subversion willwither before the techniques ofex-posl facto revelation, intimi¬dation and smear will delight inthe testimony of Paul Crouch.“The Daily Tar Heel hopes theexpose will be dismissed for whatit is: Exhumation of dead horseswhich have long since returnedto dust.“No thinking idividual turnsaway from clear dangers to ourcountry’s political structure orto the political thinking of stu¬dents. But in North Carolina andon this campus, the ‘pink’ think¬ing of the 1930’s is gone.“The Progressive Party, whichthe people of North Carolina,through misinformation, wronglyidentified with the CommunistParty in 1948, failed to get thenecessary three per cent of votescast to be registered with theState Board of Elections. The pro¬fessors implicated with the cam¬pus cell have gone their ways.The co-owners of the bookstore,where a press is supposed to haveground out Communist literature20 years ago, have sold out.“So pardon us while we finish reading the comics.”Meanwhile freshmen at OhioState got an early opportunity tosound off.' The Lantern askedfirst year students for their ini.tial impressions of campus life.Virginia Gibson of Clevelandwas elated, herself, fc” she had“never seen a place so friendly. . . people say hello right on thestreet.” But Joe Rieger, for one, *1protested. He thought “theyshould have a better system ofintroducing the fellows to thegirls. Seems like the upper class-men are grabbing off all the girlsbefore the freshrpen get achance.” Something' quite differ¬ent troubled Bob Orchard. Chaf¬fed Orchard, "... first thingI didn't like was some of theguys from the social frats askedme ‘Do you drink?’ and when Isaid no, they told me ‘Don't wor¬ry; inside of six months, you will*. . . that happened twice . . .” Oneless man of distinction.The Minnesota Daily, Univer¬sity of Minnesota, which claimsto have the world’s largest collegecirculation, on September 29, wan¬tonly cidculated a classifier! adwhose nature, if only syntac¬tically, appeared highly dubious:“Experienced woman desires maidwork in smaller fraternity house.”A phone number was given andwe should like to call for clarifi¬cation, but the MAROON has noallocation for toll calls to experi¬enced women. Curious readersmay contribute to a phone fund.Contributions cannot, of course,be accepted from smaller frater¬nity houses.Roosevelt’s College’s GerrySchoenfeld, formerly a staff mem- ’ber of the MAROON and the Chi¬cago Review, is planning a thesison little known but critical con¬versations which have contrib-,uted to the American w-ay of life.One excerpt he allowed Hitherand Yon to reprint, Schoenfeldsays, represents weeks of re¬search and is substantiated be¬yond a doubt: “Sears to Roebuck,upon meeting him in the street,‘So w'ho is minding the busi¬ness?’ ”aiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimmimiiiiiimmiimmmiii:1 CLEARANCE SALE II OF PHOTOGRAPHIC ITEMS Im m| Starting on October 8 and Running ~: for 1 Week, the Photographic Dept. £i of THE UNIVERSITY BOOK §| STORE Will Have a Large Sale ofE All Types of Photographic Equip-I ment, CAMERAS, LIGHT METERS,| DARK ROOM EQUIPMENT, CAM-| ERA CASES, Used TAPE RECORD-s ERS and Numberless Odds and Ends.Drop in and Browse AroundThe Clearance Sale AtThe University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenu. —,HOLIDAYS DELUXEShoe Service"It Must Be Done Right”If it’s shoes, we can do anythingHOLLIDAY'S1407 E. 61st St.(at Dorchester)Normal 7-8717 •Two Blochs from Int. House International House Movie ProgramMonday, ond Thursday Evenings at 8 p.m.Admission 50c •Monday, October 12 — Gigi . . . (French)Thursday, October 15 — Moby Dick . . . (American)¥/Ae PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55*h STREET furniture — wrought iron legslamps — giftsradios - TV - appliancesfeaturing good designond moderate priceson display at Hermans935 E 55th stFaculty and NSA Discounts Open thurs til 9'53 October 9, 1953 THE CHICAGO MAROONhiotoini.ife. t>ndtaddlythene,1leyoftheIS*iris ■a:er-iaf-ingthetedi Ior-dir>neer-msan-adiac-us:aid>e.”indifi-noeri-ersml.rse,ter¬ry?m-"hl-?sis‘OI>rib-ife.her[eldre-be-ick,eet,usi-»USiHR Page 5Staff writer in AfricaClive Gray, MAROONstaff writer, has spent thepast summer studying thegeneral racial situation inSouth Africa.African press sees McCarthyas foreign press shows MalanStudents at all places have been vitally interested in Senator McCarthy and his "ism." Generally speak¬ing everybody knows about McCarthy and his methods, as well as their results, but not so many have the week’s visiting Congressmen dur-opportunity of hearing what many Americans are doing to combat them. Just as the "overseas" press is in£ a PartY given by the govern,inclined to treat South Africa on the whole in a more or less sensational light, the South African press in- uonaiistVpoint IbouTAtrican niClines to a similar treatment ' tive barbarity, the American said.Of McCarthyism. Mind you, I National Congress. He is a law- liberation of the white men from ion; I personally think Senator “Yes, you know,, 99 per cent ofthink this point can be over- yer, catering to African clients their fears. Cf. here all Alan Pa- Ballinger is doing the right thing, the violent crime in Washington,stressed, which is what South before the civil and criminal mag- ton has written on the subject, and the African leaders must not D. C„ is committed by Negroes."African Nationalists and U.P. peo- istrates’ courts, as they call them, African impatient fool themselves into thinking Actually, African culture breed*pie do when they blame S.A.’s of Johannesburg City. He takes But the African, as I hove their people will organize straight much more veneration for lawmuddy reputation abroad solely the standard view of educated found in talking with intelligent away once certain restricting fac- and tradition in the African thanunscrupulous American and Africans toward Government Africans (and Indians and Col- tors are removed. The real diffi- does our own western civilizationBritish correspondents. Similarly, racial policies, and was behind oreds too, of course) from the culty lies in the organizational jn ourselves, so it’s funny thatU.S. reactionaries, like Sen. Hick- the ANC passive resistance cam- ages of 15 to 60, is getting ex- backwardness of the African peo- this explanation should be givenenlooper, who was recently here paign; but he is far from being a ceedingly impatient, and rejects pie, and there is an immense job 0f ourbursts of violence amongfor a few days, are wrong in say- Communist, and indeed'the invo- the position of liberals who want to be done in the way of trade- urbanized Africans. Indeed, whening that McCarthyism is harmful cation of this law in his case and him to take the white man’s view- union consciousness. The Govern- talking about something else, e.g.to America only to the extent to others.like his will most certainly point into consideration. Thus Af- ment, recognising this fact, is at passive resistance, and trying towhich sensation-seeking journal- have the long term effect of ricans themselves are getting pro- present engaged in passing two prove a point there, the National¬ists over-publicize it abroad. equating, in the minds of Afri- gressively more irrational, and in- bills; one, designed to subject Af- jst reverses himself and says,But just as the American press cans, all resistance to social, eco- deed is not stopping at the point rican education to more National- “The native is a very law-abidinggives front-page coverage to out- riomic and political oppression of non-cooperation and racial, 1st control, and the second, de- chap; it’s way down deep insidebursts of racial friction in SA, with Communism. The law could blind nationalism, but increasing- signed to quell African trade un- him, but these left-wing agitators,and relegates articles on new hos- thus more accurately be named ly the African is forgetting the ionism once and for all. they make them do the most un-pitals and model housing-projects the Furthering of Communism actual limitations of his own peo- They have such unreal hopes, natural things!” This, I think,for non-Europeans to back-page Act- That my point is true, I have pie, at this stage of their develop- these Africaner Nationalists. To- typifies Nationalist reasoningspace/so the SA press gives very been able to prove in many talks ment, and he is forgetting that day and on Tuesday, I spent one most revealingly; it is incoherent,little spaee to resounding slaps * have had with African students this country would be nowhere at and a half hours with two Na- inconsistent, illogical, unscierv-in their face which McCarthyism and high school pupils. These peo- all without previous generations tionalist members of Parliament, tific, biased to the nth degree byhas been getting from the re- pie have generally completely re- of white initiative and enterprise, one of whom I was introduced to ingrained fears, insecurities, andsponsible American press and the jected any interpretation of such The trouble is, the Government by a Dutch Reformed minister hatred; in short, it’s reasoningAmerican academic world. disturbances as the Mau Mau re- does not seem to know when it and the other by the first one. without the use of reasonInterest in McCarthyism ' volt in Kenya which ascribes a has found a moderate, reasonable They said they are confident that Advantages of apartheid outweighedOne very good reason for the part in the violence and excesses African leader. Instead, it goes eventually the Africans will see To sum up then, it seems to meinterest of SA students in Me- to Communist agitation. That about banning people like Chief the great advantages for them in that the advantages of apartheidCarthyism is, of course, that the such an interpretation is partially jj. J. Luthuli, President of the apartheid, and settle down to a (mainly, the allowing of the Afri-same phenomenon is rapidly as- true I personally would not African National Congress, with policy of complete and willing co- can to assume government postssuming a larger and larger niche doubt; cf. Kenyatta’s study-period whom I had a chat recently at the operation with the Government, in his area, where they were for*in the political situation here. The in Russia. But these students and home of Manilal Gandhi, Mahat- The trouble is that there are all merly the monopoly of the whiteSuppression of Communism Act scholars did not even know Ken- rna’s son, who himself is now in these left-wing agitators, of whom man are greatly outweighed bycontains in it some of the worst yatta had been in Russia, or if jail for having illegally entered the ANC is full, who are mis- its disadvantages. Of course twofeatures of the Broyles Bills they had heard it they had forgot- an African location without a per- takenly driven to having “Euro- things must be remembered here:(though not all), and takes a few ten it, which shows they placed mit. Luthuli still has very strong pean” aims and aspirations which one, that apartheid representspoints much further than the no importance on it. Christian connections, and is one do not fit them. These they then only an extension of the systemBroyles Bills do. The Minister of Don’t associate bad effects ta Gf the African leaders who is con- again try to impose on their own of segregation already existentJustice, Swart, has the power Communism scious of the danger involved in people, instead of working for the everywhere except in the Capq,of “banning” anybody who, in his Thus people are not associating flirting too extensively with Com- real advancement of their fellows and two, that there are manyopinion, is “furthering the ends of any of the bad effects of resist- munists; but the action of the in science, education, and admin- Europeans, both inside and ^out-communism.” This act also out- ance to white domination with Government in banning even him istration, or in other words, the side the Central and Provinciallawed the Communist Party, and Communism, and they are associ- has fanned bitterness among “natural growth” of their people. Government, who are doing muchunder it the newspaper of the ating some of the good effects Africans. African naturally different work inside and outside theParty was closed down, although with it- Add it up for yourself; Attended interracial dub The obvious fallacy in this argu- framew’ork of apartheid to ad¬it immediately opened again un- simple arithmetic tells me Com- Recently I attended a meeting ment is then gotten around by vance the non-European and toder another name (“Guardian”- munism is making much indirect of an interracial club, where Sen- these people by saying that the ameliorate his present lot So to“Advance”). I have met the edi- headway in South Africa, Eyid the ator Ballinger, one of four sena- African is naturally a very dif- condemn apartheid, and more par-tor and the one Capetown report- Government is only adding fuel tors elected to represent several ferent sort of creation from the ticularly the previous and presenter of the paper. to the fire. Also, the so-called million Africans, gave his views white man. His culture, they Nationalist govenments who firstJust recently Swart has been anti-Communist liberal approach on the political situation. He is a claim, is almost a part of his phys- gave it its real name, is notinvoking the act very frequent- *s bein£ discredited here, partly staunch liberal, and lives for the ical make-up, so if you took a enough to give a good critically and I have met two people, in that many °* the whhe people day when qualified Africans will new-born black and put him in a evaluation of South Africa’s situa-one in Johannesburg and the who esPouse it are not going far be able to sit in the House of white household, he would not tion.other in Capetown who had re- enou£h in their liberalism to sat- Parliament to represent their own grow up in accord with white civ- Apartheid result in strifeceived notices of “bans” the day isfY the African- If a white man constituencies. His wife, who is a ilization. Of course there are a But nevertheless, future strifepreceding my visit A person who is not unbiased enough to eat at representative of the Cape Prov- few exceptions to this rule, but will most certainly center aroundhas been banned must resigi* the same table with Africans' to ince Africans in the Assembly most Africans, even a majority of the apartheid policy, so it mustfrom all organizations or from invite thera to his home and to (our House of Representatives), the educated ones, are still “raw be studied very carefully. And assuch organizations as the Min- come willingly to theirs, then heads the recently formed Lib- underneath”; that is, they break regards the question of conflictister has designated whichever Quite naturally the educated Af- eral Party, which advocates, out into an uncontrollable frenzy between the twp races, I wouldSwart chooses to ’ insist on rical has nothing but bitter con- among other sensible things, the when they are stirred up by some- make the following summaryand is forbidden to attend any temPt for him, even the more so extension of the franchise to Af- thing, and they know no limits to point: that the crisis of conflict;y if this white man pretends to be ricans on the basis of a universal their violent rage. The irrasponsi- which I feel will come, violent ora liberal. But this is unfortunate- educational qualification of Grade ble action of African mobs dur- not-so-violent as the case may be,ly the case most of the time with 8 certificate. (This is quite un- ing race riots is allegedly part of lies decades ahead of us; but thatwhite people in SA, whose up- satisfactory to almost all African this. At one race riot in Durban, the critical time for rapproach-bringing and environment still leaders, who want universal adult where a gentle and humanitarian ment and co-operation is alreadyhave too stern a hold on them to franchise.) nun was outrageously slaugh- upon South Africa, and hpr fail-allow them to carry their convic- During the question period, tered by a frenzied mob, it is ure to realize the only construc¬tions to their logical conclusion, some Africans present rose and claimed she was eaten by Afri- tive course in this crisis will makeAgain, even with liberals who attacked Ballinger vigorously for cans answering the cannabalistic inevitable, and the seal of fateEwart’s 'wav’ nfYhinkirw?"^‘because honestly carry out a policy of undertaking to represent them in call of their ancestors. I can’t find will be affixed in only a fewy racial brotherhood in their daily Parliament. It would be far bet- out whether it is true or not, but years, the future conflict.lives, there is much that will ter, they said, to boycott the sys- the fact is that the only African Clive Grayoffend the African Nationalist, tern of separate and unequal rep- tribe who inhabit Durban haveThus liberals, by definition of resentation, and thus hasten the no more cannibalistic history inthat term, are obliged to look at uprising of the African people, their background than we do, soboth sides of the race problem who now pacify themselves with the story seems at best incrediblyInally that Swart would invoke (as I believe they should), and the thought that they aren’t real- far-fetched,the law only in the case of real usually try to understand the ly so badly off if they have seven Shocked by CongressmanCommunists. Admittedly he has white man’s viewpoint, or more representatives in Parliament. Incidentally, I was ratherdone it to some, but far more accurately, his insecurities and These representatives are elected shocked when one M.P. told me ofsignificant are those cases where fears. Admittedly this viewpoint by a system of electoral college- a remark made by one of lastthe banning is used as a means is irrational and unreasonable, like groupings, often based on a ■lor silencing any opponents of but it need not be selfish. Thus tribal pattern, so most people are ■ •Government policy who are not the liberal has much sympathy not free to protest against the ■ Id#*under the protective wing of the for the white man, and does not electoral system by boycotting it. III ^Idl WUnited Party. The two people I want to hurry up the process of Cleavage between opinionstalked to are cases in point. Ons, African social, economic and po* This point illustrates the widen-an African, was head of the litical advance more than it can ing cleavage between alert Afri-Transvaal Branch of the African be accommodated to the gradual can opinion and liberal white opin-meetings for two years. Accord¬ing to Swart, a “meeting” in¬cludes a picture show, as well asa track meet or a reception for asociety figure. “Bannees” can ap¬ply for permission fromSwart to attend harmless meet¬ings, as of the above sort, whichis a necessary provision toit would be too difficult tp desig¬nate in the law which gatheringsare OK and which are not.Hoped would invoke low forreal CommunistsSome deceived souls hoped orig* There is a used book you want atSchneemann'sRed Door Book Shop1328 East 57th StreetPLAYWRIGHTS THEATRE CLUB1560 No. LaSalle Through the 18th, Thurs.,WHitehall 3-2272 Fri., Sat., Sun., at \:30 P.M.(Discounts for Students)George Bernard Shaw'sActing Classes by Al Saxe first playPlaywright Workshopby David Shepherd Widowers' HousesMusicol Revue—Contact Gene BaislyDiscussions—Meetings Starting Oct. 22nd for ThreeMembership Information Weeks—David Shepherd's THEon Request FIELDS OF MALFI see the new SPARTON fm - amnothing comparable at its pricespecificationephono input jackclip for external speaker6x9 heavy duty speakerpower transformereight tubeswell designed wood cabineton - off switch independent of volume controluniversity radio on 55th1149 e 55th streetOctober 9, 1953 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page *... Il TROPHY RoomI'Peace, pure and simple'' — Robert Maynard HutchinsIssued once weekly by the publisher. The Chicago Maroon, at the publico*tion office, 5706 South University Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones:Editorial Office, Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1010; Business and Advertising Offices,Midway 3-0800, Ext. 1009. Distributed free of charge, and subscriptions bymail, $3 per year. Business Office hours: 1 to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday,All-American—1946, 1947, 1948,1953Arthur Brown Richard E. Wardeditor-in-chief managing editorHews editors: Naomi Birnbaum, Allan Coleman, Allen Janger, Nellie StonemonNews Feature editor: Barbara VogelfangerFeature editor: Daniel QueenSports editor: Sherrard Gray -Copy editor: Shirley LongEditorial staff: Clive Gray, Lyn Burns, Paul Breslow, Jan Majde, Robert March,Mitchell Slein, Karl Rodman, C. Roy Maisch, Roberta Hopkins, RobertMcCluskie, Paul Hoffman, Stan Fox, Franz Snyder, Harry Whitely,Beverly Luther, David Schlessinger, Rolph Hirsch, Edwin Borkowitz,Suzanne Friedman, Sandra EpsteinOffice manager: Reva BrownAdvertising manager: Howard TurnerPhotographer: Richard KluckhohnA quarter a quarterAt its meeting last week, Student Government voted topresent to the campus through a referendum at the forthcom¬ing election an issue which we feel is of great significance forthe future of independent and responsible student representa¬tion.The proposal is simply that students support their studentgovernment by paying a quarterly fee of 25 cents “in orderthat SG may carry out programs of policy and services un¬hampered by a dependence on other sources for funds.”At present SG funds are supplied by the administrationwhich has a large measure of control over the manner inwhich the funds ar? expended.If student government is to be the articulate voice of thestudent body and if student needs programs are to be mean¬ingful, student representatives must have the financial meansto carry out its projects subject to the control of only theStudent body.At many other schools student activities fees of $10 andmore are levied with which student councils provide a multi¬plicity of services. The SG plan would permit such projects asa book-buying service and snack bar which have been pro¬posed by SG and vetoed by the administration purse-holders.The SG plan provides adequate safeguards for the publicfinancial accounting of funds.The MAROON urges every student who desires a studentgovernment adequately equipped to provide meaningful serv¬ices anti effectively represent student opinion to vote “YES”on the referendum.Is a quarter per quarter too high a price for a more auton¬omous self-governing student body?Andrei Ouroussoff, lecturer atFordham University Russian Cen¬ter, New York City.Public Lecture — Friday, Oct.16, at 4:30 p.m., room 122 SocialScience. The lecture is sponsoredby the Divinity School and Com¬mittee on History of Culture.Andrei Ourousoff, from the Rus¬sian Center, Fordham University,New York City, is speaking onThe Psychological and Philosoph¬ical Roots of Communist Power.4:30 p.m., room 172 Soc. Sci., apublic lecture on Culture of Rus¬sian People. The speaker is Poll watchers wantedPoll watchers are needed toman the polls at the SG elec¬tion, October 21, 22, and 23.Any socially conscious individ¬ual who has some time freeand wishes to volunteer hisservices should leave his nameat the SG desk in the ReynoldsClub.I don't know, either ... it must be some medieval relic!'Calendar ofcoming eventsAnnouncements of events of in¬terest to students may be placedin the Calendar of Events by anyrecognized student organization orUniversity group.The announcement must bewritten on standard forms avail¬able for this purpose in theMAROON office. Organizationswishing on advance supply of theseforms may secure them upon re¬quest.All calendar announcementsmust be in the MAROON office by5 p.m. on Tuesdays for events tobe listed in the issue of the follow¬ing Friday. MeetingsFil ms A report to the campus on theN.S.A., National Students Asso¬ ciation, convention is being spon¬sored by Student RepresentativeParty. It will be held Friday, Oct.9, at 3 p.m. at Ida Noyes Hall.Everyone is invited.Student Representative Partycaucus 7:30 p.m. Sunday night atBurton-Judson. The subject ofmeeting will be the platform forthe coming Student Governmentelections. Everyone invited—opencaucus as always.Wranglers Club meeting 6 p.m.Sunday, Oct. 11. There will be atalk by Ed Morbeck on “Chicago’sBig Problem.”Student Committee meeting onAcademic Freedom. The meetingwill be held in the Judson Libraryat 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 11. Thepurpose of the meeting is to makeplans to interest students hereand elsewhere in problems ofAcademic Freedom. Those whowere concerned with the Juneconference and all those interest¬ed in Academic Freedom are in¬vited.Student Forum is having itssecond meeting at 3 p.m. Mondayat the Student Forum officeReynolds Club 303. Topic of dis¬cussion is “Structure of a debatecase.”Political Economy Club is hav¬ing its annual fall tea Tuesday,Oct. 13, 8 p.m. at Ida Noyes Hall.It is a get-acquainted meeting.Young Republican Club spon¬sors its organizational meeting onTuesday, Oct. 13, at 7:30 p.m. inIda Noyes East Lounge.Talks on the Rosenberg case rrebeing sponsored by the Law Stu¬dents Club on Wednesday, Oct. 14,at 4:30 p.m. Law North. “Logicand Rhetoric in the RosenbergCase” will be discussed by Mal¬colm Sharp, professor of Law,and also by Harold C. Urey, dis¬tinguished service professor ofchemistry speaking on the case. MusicRecord Concert is being heldSunday, Oct. 11, at 2:30 p.m. atthe Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity,5747 University. The program isBach — Brandenburg Concerto 2and 3, Music for Festival; HandelAlexander’s Feast.Concert Band Rehearsal Tues¬day, Oct. 13, at 8 p.m. at SunnyGym, 5823 S. Kenwood.ReligiousSunday Chapel Service at Rock¬efeller Memorial Chapel. Theservice begins at 11 a.m. Sunday.The Reverend Wallace W. Rob¬bins, Associate dean of the chapelwill preach.Sabbath service of the HillelFoundation is on Friday, Oct. 9,at 7:45 p.m. The service is held at5715 S. Woodlawn. Following theservice a “fireside” will be held.Hillel is sponsoring Hug Ivri(Hebrew-speaking Group) everyMonday at 12:30 p.m. The classeswill be taught at 5715 Woodlawn.There is no charge.Hillel Chorus will meet at 5715Woodlawn at 4 p.m. Wednesday,Oct. 14. The chorus will rehearseMendelssohn’s Elijah. It is opento aiil students. Strozier ...(from page 1)of courage for Hutchins to takeUC out of the Big Ten.Mixed student viewReactions of students to thepossibility of some sort of inter¬collegiate football program va¬ried. Fran Kates, an enteringstudent in the College, said, ‘‘Ithink it would be the best thingin the world to happen to thisplace.” On the other hand, CarolEverett of the College responded,“I can’t think of a thing to sayabout a thing as silly as this.”Wants Kimpton fullbackOne student, Bill Smith of DieEnglish Department, commented,“I want Kimpton for fullback. Iwant to see him carry the ball."*Many, upon hearing it, were ap¬prehensive and suspicious aboutthe whole idea, while others saidit did not disturb them. One of themost perceptive comments wasthat the idea in itself was notbad, but intercollegiate footballof any kind was a symbol on thiscampus for a type^of college tradi¬tion which is considered superfi¬cial, and this symbol would notbe easily displaced.Football...< from page 1 )mark and called in his secondingvote; “I wouldn’t object either.”Dr. Kimpton continued; “Weprobably wouldn’t want to getback into the Big Ten, but wemight some day line up a sched¬ule with some of the smallerschools.”UC hos 'genius'“Actually,” he said, "we prob¬ably have an exaggerated reputa¬tion for having a campus full of‘geniuses.’ We do have our fairshare of geniuses, that’s true.“And we do admit specially-gifted students at the end of theirsophomore year in high school.But most of our students are ofthe average variety who progressat a more normal pace.”Social EventsThe Murderers Are AmongstUs. Presented by the Document¬ary Film Group on Tuesday, Oct.13, at 7:30. A deeply moving an¬alysis of the question of civilmorality in postwar Germany,seen through the mental conflictsof a returning Soldier.It Happened One Night. Friday,Oct. 16. Two showings: 7:15 and9:30 Social Science 122. Thismovie is directed by Frank Capra,Starring Clark Gable and Claud¬ette Colbert. The first successfulexample of the “screwball” com¬edy, in which the aimless livesof the protagonists are redeemedby gaiety and good will. . . visitthe India Handicraftsfor unusual imports from many lands10% discount on presentation of validated ID cards1455 E. 55th st.MU 4-6763Specialized Service to University StudentsBRAND NAME MERCHANDISEI Popular Prices . . . Skirts — Blouses — Lin- || gerie . . . Hosiery — Dresses — SweatersI Kelly dormitory is having anopen house Sunday, Oct. 11, at 3p.m. It is to be a general mixerwith dancing and refreshments.Kelly House is located at 5852University Ave, RoyalRemingtonSmith-CoronaTYPEWRITERStjitutient DiscountsEfficiency ProductsOffice Machines1144 East 55th Street1807 East 71st StreetChicago 15, IllinoisTelephone Midway 3-3468EAirfax 4-0127and accessoriesLecturese Committee on History ofire and Divinity School issoring Wednesday. Oct. 14, at I r= iE IE I= Is iE lE IE ■= Iz fm This coupon is redeemable for 10% discounton any purchaseROSE SHOP1377 East 55th Street I EI : IMPORTEDFRENCH AND GERMANDRY WINEValues Up To $3.5029At A Low, LowPrice Of *1These Are The Best Values WeHave Ever Offered At This PriceHYDE PARKLIQUOR STOREPL 2-8830 Free Delivery 1405 E. 55th'■Page THE CHICAGO MAROON October 9, 1953UC enrollment- dropsThe Office of the Registrarhas released the following fig¬ures showing the total numberand distribution of tstudcnts en¬rolled in the University for theAutumn Quarters, 1D52 and1953. These figures are basedon paid registrations at the endof the first week of the Quarter./Birenbaum talksto forum groupWilliam Birenbaum, Director ofStudent Activities, addressed theStudent Forum Monday at itsfirst meeting. Birenbaum stressedthe need for hard and consistentwork while participating on a de¬bate team.“Resolved that the Unitedshould adopt free trade," is thesubject for this year’s debating.Halloween night will be thetime for a debate between “HoboCollege" (College of Social Stud¬ies), and the University’s StudentForum. “If the Korean TruceFails ..." will be the subject ofthe debate.Other events planned for theUniversity’s debating club includecompetitive inter - collegiate de¬bates, and discussion groups withthe High Schools, YMCA’s andcivic organizations. DIVISION OR SCHOOL OCTOBER 7,MEN WOMEN 1952TOTAL OCTOBER 6,MEN WOMEN 1953TOTAL CHANGENUMBER PERCENTTOTAL QUADRANGLES 3,700 1,123 |4,823| 3,426 1,067 14,4931 — 330 1=01Total College 928 387 1,315 787 342 1,129 — 186 — 14.1Total Divisions 2,027 528 2,555 1,937 523 2,460 —95 -3.7]Total Schools 745 208 953 702 202 904 —49 •-5.1 j — 4.1COLLEGE, TOTAL 928 387 1,315 787 342 |1,129| — 186 — 14.11st and 2nd years 248 78 326 127 79 206 — 120 — 36.83rd and 4th years 680 308 988 658 260 918 —70 — 7.1Students-at-large 0 1 1 2 3 5 +4 —DIVISIONS -Biological Sciences 520 87 607 465 73 538 —69 — 11.4Humanities 342 136 478 292 127 419 — 59 — 12.3Physical Sciences 491 32 523 459 39 498 -25 —4.8Social Sciences 674 273 947 721 284 1,005 + 58 +6.1SCHOOLSBusiness 162 16 178 146 12 158 —20 — 11.2Federated Theological Faculty 284 37 321 267 34 301 —20 —6.2Law 215 10 225 225 16 241 + 16 + 7.1 +r-Graduate Library 24 29 53 23 29 52 — 1 — 1.9Medicine* (233) (19) (252) (229) (18) (247) (-5) (—2.0)Social Service Administration 60 116 176 41 111 152 —24 — 13.6* Included in Hie Division of the Biological Sciences.VOTECAMPUS WASHERETTEClothes Automatically Double Washedand Triple RinsedSHIRTS HAND-FINISHEDNO. 7-6488 1449 E. 55thMon. - Fri. — 8 o.m. - 9 p.m. Sot. — 8 o.m. - 6 p.m. Steven’s Lunch1321 East 55th StreetGood FoodLow PriceWhen you knew your beer.. .IT'S BOUND TO BE 1BUDA sizzling steak or tangy barbecue...everything tastes better with Bud.It’s brewed that way, by the costliestprocess known. And it’s enjoyedso much that it has pleasedmore people than anyother beer in history. n11 : |pip•.in 1II jI MAROON STAFFII MEETING TODAY II AT 4 P.M. I■ NEW MEMBERS 11■v:<■I?:-'.:*81nn INVITED I11Wm_ />vwv > 11.11:1Page 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 9, 1953DocFilm presents film comedy survey Berlioz, Strausson Reiner billA 108-page missal by education's "bad boy," former UC Chancellor Robert M. Hutchins, has beenhurled into the midst of the conflicts concerning the philosophy of education, especially the schism at thisUniversity. The volume (The Conflict In Education In A Democratic Society, Harper and Brothers, NewYork, 1953, $2.00) is based upon lectures given at the University of Uppsala in 1951 and the Universityof Toronto the following year.Chronologically it falls be- the ancient philosophical valuestween his “Farewell Address” of true and false.and the Walgreen Lectures deliv¬ered last spring, each work bor¬rowing from and based upon thepreceding. Indeed, the germina¬tion of the Walgreen Lectures onthe "University of Utopia" isfound in the final pages of thebook where Hutchins states “somemodern sage . . . might create forhimself a sort of myth or dreamof the higher learning."Hutchins main thesis in foundin the one sentence: "The aim ofeducation ... is to improve man In fitting man to the environ¬ment no mention is made ofand no basis for value judg¬ments are offered for the en¬vironment and whether it is oris not suitable.In the I9th century only thosewho were meant to rule re¬ceived a liberal education; inthe 20th century under demo¬cratic systems all the peoplerule and therefore all mustreceive a liberal education, atraining in the classical philo¬sophic truths.Harpo Marx, a cigar, and a tele,phone (early manufacture) in"Duck Soup."Sinfonietta planscoming seasonThe Collegiate Sinfonettia, achamber orchestra under the di¬rection of Dieter Kober, is look¬ing for several good violinists andviola players. Students interestedin playing 18th century Baroquemusic as well as certain contem¬porary European pieces, are cor¬dially invited to the first rehear¬sal Sunday morning, October 11,in the East Lounge of Interna¬tional House. The players willmeet at 10 a.m.Kober has recently returnedfrom a summer in Salzburg wherehe conducted chamber orchestrasin some of Handel’s ConcertiGrossi. At this first rehearsal onSunday, he will begin with theConcerto Grossi Number 4 in A-minor. Five or six more violinistsand at least two viola playersare needed. oo » tj„ «•, Liberal education has not madeopens with a con- mucjl Headway in America be-demnation of the theories of John cause the founders of the Amer-Dewey and his followers, upon ican universities patterned themwhich most standards of contem- ?fter the German but neglected toporary education are based and imPort .the humanistic German... . ,, . TT . . gymnasium which served thew ich at this Lmversity were in same function as the British pre¬vogue before 1930 and are now paratory school or the College ofregaining favor. the University of Chicago, teach-Dewey’s idea*:, the fitting of ing these classical values, trairf?man to the environment, thetraining of specialists, the im¬mense catalogue of "courses" of¬fered by universities, resulting inthe general degrading of educa¬tional standards as a whole—allthese are scorned as improperfunctions of a University becausethey exclude any consideration ofthe standards of right and wrong, ing the mind rather than produc¬ing the reflexive actions of spe¬cialization.Hutchins is skeptical aboutthe future of liberal educationbecause “the university, in Eu¬rope as well as America, is sofar sunk in empiricism, special¬ism and positivism." The bestforeseeable solution is a univer¬sity “composed of men whowere prepared to conduct a con-Campus Food ShopBAKERY AND HOME COOKEDFOODSGROCERIES - FROZEN FOODSCIGARETTES - ICE CREAM1369 E. 57th St.Chicago 37, Ill.MI. 3-7239Open Till 10 P. 1ft.Illlllllllllllllllll, ig looney Qn QampusSoil CHRISTMAS CARDS In Spar* TimeMake hundreds of dollars, in just a few weeks, this easyway. YOU can do it—on campus, in town, wherever yougo! You don’t need any selling experience.HURRY I NOW’S THI TIMS TO IARNIEverybody buys Christmas Cards NOW. Friends, towns¬people, merchants will gladly buy from YOU whenyou simply show excitingly different COLOR PHOTOPersonalized Christmas Cards. You make $1.00 profit perbox! 150 other fast-sellers payyou more money: big value As¬sortments, Name • ImprintedCards, GLO-INTHE-DARKOrnaments, MAGIC LEAFSilver Cleaner, Gifts. Send atonce for your outfit of Assort¬ments on approval and othersamples FREE. But hurry! RUSH ^COUPON FOR SAMPLES!MIDWEST CARD CO., D*pt- II7-S11)3 Wathingi'on Av*., St. Louis 1, Mo.Pl.os. rush monoy-motiing outfit of Assortments onapproval and other samples FRE0Nam*.MIDWEST CARD CO., D*pt. 117-51113 Washington Av*., St. L*wl* 1, Mg. Address. tinuous Socratic dialogue onthe basic issues of human life"and thus “establish a genuinecommunion of minds.” This isdeveloped to a greater extent hithe Walgreen Lectures on theUniversity of Utopia.The validity of this theory is tion) and that there are no con¬flicts between individuals as tothese conceptions. Obviouslythese differences exist. If the uni-dajs Of ueui aaedaad oj si Ajisjoainto society it must undertake theeducation, understand and evalua¬tion of these differences. In otherbalanced upon the premise that words, it must promote liberalthe purpose of education is to im- education,prove man as man. To say thatits function is to produce an indi¬vidual prepared to step into so¬ciety is as if to say that there areno philosophic differences as tothe conception of society (andthus to the philosophy of educa-Cily .Zona... .State. Hutchins’ book is an invalu¬able contribution to the fightfor better, i.e. liberal, educationwhich, almost everywhere butat this University, is on theascendency,Paul A. HoffmanJ. Paul Shcedy* Switched to Wildroot Cream-OilBeelaws He Flunked The Finger-Nail Test"#• lump In the Ink*/* squalled Sheedy’s mermaid with baited breath,“You look simply crabby with that messy hair. Better get your hooks intoWildroot Cream-Oil, America’s favorite hair tonic. Keeps hair combedwith no trace of greasiness. Removes loose, ugly dan¬druff. Relieves annoying dryness. Contains lanolin. Non¬alcoholic. I shell never sea you again until you startusing it.” Paul crabbed 291 and bought WildrootCream -OiL Now he’s the crab-apple of her eye. Sowater you waiting for? Hurry and get a bottle or handytube at any toilet goods counter. And nets time youvisit your barber, ask for Wildroot Cream-Oil on yourhair. Then you’ll be the best catch on campus.* of 131 So. Harris Hill Rd., Williamsrille, N. Y.Wildroot Company, Inc., Buffalo 11, N. Y.Beginning next Friday, the Documentary Film Group will present a survey of the filmcomedy from the satire of Chaplin to the farce of the sound film in the early thirties.The five Chaplin comedies for Keystone (Making a Living, His New Profession, GettingAcquainted, The Knockout, and The Rounders) came as Chaplin the clown entered the films.For the most part the films were directed by Max Sennett who, even in 1914 when Chaplinjoined him, had become well known for rather unsophisticated comedy.StyleThe Sennett Style was ablend of lunatic fantasy, pre¬posterous physical types, ex¬aggerated costumes and make-up,very quick pacing, violent action,and ridiculous situations. Hisfilms were improvisations—“shotoff the cuff,” and on the spot.Chaplin adopted many of hismethods.Although one does not seethe symbolic, the social Chap¬lin in these films, the embryoof the later style is evident, theclown is emerging.Italian Straw Hat, a film by theFrench satirist Rene Clair, em¬bodies much of the sentiment ofthe matured Chaplin. Clair in thebest manner of the Rabalais-Vol-taire tradition, bludgeons thebourgeois society of the 1890’s.Tne film is ostentatiously thefilming of a gentle farce by La-biche — actually a lampoon ofLabiche’s respectable subjects.Parallel to Chaplin’s panto¬mime of expression was the dead¬pan pantomime of Buster Keaton.In The Navigator he makes use ofthe oft-imagined boy and girl onthe desert island as the vehiclefor a series of fantastic situa¬tions. With the coming of soundcame the skillfully destructivefarce of the Marx Brothers. TheMarxes make use of an escape,an escape which is not the ab¬straction from reality in theusual sense but rather a reduc¬tion of reality to absurdity. InDuck Soup they approach war,not with the sardonic mannerof such as Chaplin, but with acynical disaffection. They havebegun the trend in Americanfilm to produce comedy for thesake of comedy.This trend culminates in suchfilms as It Happened One Night,directed by Frank Capra. In thisfilm the society is placed outsideof the story; it is evident only inthe attitudes that produced thefilm. Typical of the current cropof “screwball” films it is repre¬sentative of the escape of the’30’s and lies in telling contrastto the profound comedies ofChaplin and Clair.In addition to the films men¬tioned above the series will in¬clude A Trip to the Moon, anearly trick film by George Melies;The Barber Shop with W. C.Fields; High and Dizzy with Har¬old Lloyd; and Dream of a Rare¬ bit Fiend, directed by EdwinPorter.Showings are at 7:15 and 9:30in Social Science 122. Series ad¬mission is $1,50, Fritz Reiner’s opening programOct. 15, with the Chicago Sym¬phony, will include the Overtureto “Benvenuto Cellini” by Berlioz;Strauss’ Fin Heldenleben; and theBrahms second symphony.Later in the season, Reinerplans among other works, theAmerican premier of Toldi, asymphonic poem by the Hungari¬an composer, Leo Weiner.Front "A TripGeorge Melies. to the Moon," conceived, devised, and directed byHutchins' book pans specialization". .. ~October 9, 1953 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 9Sophocles’ ‘Antigone’, UT’s first playOn the 16th, 17th, and 18th of October, University Theatre will present the first in this year's series ofdrama recitals: a production of Sophocles' Antigone. This play will be presented in the Studio Theatre inthe’ Reynolds Club, as were last season's productions of Oedipus Rex, Volpone, and Ghosts.The drama recitals have been conceived not only as an addition to University Theatre's program of pro-ductions, but also as an for presen^s double develop- The drama recital as a method impeding boots point toward aOlu tO Tne Students Ot the mentin the persons both of Creon for production is scarcely a new formalization in manner and ges-Humanities in the College. In and Antigone, in their progres- one> although it has recently ture, which is closely resembledline with this policy, the Thea- Sjve movements towards a dog- gained new influence on the by the modern reading in whichtre will produce many of the matic unitv Antigone and croon American stage. The original the character is portrayed throughplays on the reading lists in a unity. Antigone ana creon, form of presentation which might the use of the voice alone,manner as faithful to the original *n company with the rest of the have been seen by Sophocles Tickets for Antigone will be ontexts as possible. It is hoped that characters, are represented as would have been surprisingly like sale at the Reynolds Club Desk athearing the lines read as they very “human” people, strong but modern recital. The use of fifty cents. All seats are generalwould be spoken will help stu¬dents to see some of the implica¬tions and relationships not imme¬diately apparent in a “closet”reading.Antigone is the final play in the with a capacity for self-doubt. Itis the fact that Creon’s doubtcomes too late wherein lies thereal tragedy.Antigone is an interesting ex-Oedipus series. It was produced ample for students of Aristotle’sfor the annual Athens festival Poetics, for it embodies many ofabout twenty-four hundred years the principles laid down by Aris-ago. It deals, however, with a ,problem as topical today as It was t0,le lor the construction of athen: that of the State and the £reat tragedy. In few tragic pro-individual. Sophocles traces in the tagonists is the tragic flaw socharacters' of the tyrant Creon carefully outlined as in Creon,and Antigone the struggle for antj jn another sense, in Anti¬moral fulfillment in a totalitarian . . ,. . . • „state. Many of the implications of ^one‘ Again, there is in AntigoneCreon’s strictures h a \ {e found the use of the chorus as a mem-their close resemblances in the ber of the action, and as a corn-postures and programs of Hitler’s mentator on it which is empha-Germany. sized in Aristotle and in the pro-The play is more than £ discus- gressive development ofsion of a moral problem, however, drama. masks and of heavy movement- admission. Eugene Troobnick and Joy Grod-lins of Playwright* Theatre Club.Playwrights Theatre presents early Shawin a highly commendable interpretationThis weekend and next, the Playwrights Theatre Club at 1560 N. LaSalle is presenting oneof its most commendable productions — Widower’s Houses, George Bernard Shaw’s earlyplay unfolding the Fabian story of a social order not responsible for itself. It is a criticismthat although lacking the playwright’s later biting wit, has force when it is blatant, and ironywhen it is superficial.Based upon what is indeed a somewhat ba nal plot, the play tells of marriage plans, thecourse of which seem to bedetermined by a complex ofattitudes towards a group ofpoverty stricken tenants. So deli¬cate is the balance of emphasisbetween the farcical and the so-Greek c*al natures of the plays that aninsensitive interpretation could easily render the play an irrespon¬sible drawing room comedy.Fortunately the director ofthe Playwrights Theatre pro¬duction, Allen Stone, recogniz¬ing the unsubstantial natureof the plot, chose to emphasize 'the meaningful aspect of eachIt’s easy as P'e'Mo entry blanks*.Mo box tops- you can cash inagain and again-C’mon, 1®* sTWICE AS MANY AWARDS THIS YEARWRITE A LUCKY STRIKE JINGLEbased on the fact that LUCKIES TASTE BETTER!*• well-known towns to unknovm»* Mosttaste Easiest $25 you ever made. Sit rightdown and write a 4-line jingle based onthe fact that Luckies taste better.That’s all there is to it. More awardsthan ever before!Read the jingles on this page. Writeoriginal ones just like them—or better!Write as many as you want. Therp’sno limit to the number of awards youcan receive. If we pick one of yourjingles, we’ll pay you $25 for the rightto use it, together with your name, inLucky Strike advertising.Remember: Read all the rules andtips carefully. To be on the safe side,clip them out and keep them handy.Act now. Get started today.---------CUP OUT THIS INFORMATION♦TIPSTo earn an award you are not limited to“Luckies taste better.” Use any other salespoints on Lucky Strike, such as the foblowing:L.S./M.F.T.Lucky Strike Means Fine TobaccoLuckies taste cleaner, fresher, smootherSo round, so firm, so fully packedSo free and easy on the drawBe Happy—Go LuckyBuy Luckies by the cartonLuckies give you deep-down smokingenjoymentCOPR., THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY -[bfcyrft , i ucktes,though,RULES1. Write your Lucky Strike jingle on a plain pieceof paper or post card and send it to Happy-Go-Lucky,P. O. Box 67, New York 46, N.Y. Be sure that yourname, address, college and class are included—andthat they are legible.2. Base your jingle on any qualities of Luckies.“Luckies taste better,” is only one. (See “Tips.”)3. Every student of any college, university or post¬graduate school may submit jingles. ,4. You may submit as many jingles as you like.Remember, you are eligible to receive more thanone $25 award. .separate act. Indeed, in terms ofsocial meaning, the acts arequite independent; the play isa triptych of bourgeois man¬ners and morals.In the first act, jest is madeof a hypocrisy that virtually sty-imies communication; in the thirdact the selfishness and the super¬ficiality of ethics and of mannersthat rise out of the social struc¬ture are remarkably brought tolight, particularly when contrast¬ed with the sharp criticism thatoccurs within the second act.For in the second act we seethe society standing in splendorupon a pedestal of poverty, sus¬taining itself upon the sustin-ence of others; knowing it iswrong, yet unable to right it¬self.As Sartorius, the symbolizationof the bourgeoise—with his mat¬ter-of-fact recognition of his posi¬tion, his expedient repudiation ofhumanistic feeling—Edward As*ner makes a dilemma real. Oneis able to sense the uncertaintyin Sartorius, both as the man andas the businessman.Joy Grodzin’s Blanch, thedaughter of Kartorius, is a wellexecuted and convincing prod¬uct of the final third of thetriptych. She has been raisedas the self-centered young lady,acceptable to the decaying aris¬tocracy. Miss Grodzin’s charac¬terization quite properly barelyscratched the’ surface of the lesspalatable third of the triptych.In ironic contrast to her isByrne Piven’s Harry Trench, theunderspoken son of the aristoc¬racy who mixes ideals and prac¬ticality. Piven conveyed the in¬decisiveness of Trench’s charac¬ter ’ but, unfortunately, much ofthe indecisiveness was but an in¬decisiveness of delivery. To re¬main consistent with Stone's at¬tack upon the play, Trench shouldexhibit certainty in his idealismand uncertainty in his ellucida-tion.The decaying aristocrat, Wil¬liam Cokane, as played by MarvinPeisner always remained a re¬minder of the first third of thetriptych. Peisner’s indignance,his propriety were the amusingindication of an order that hasonly its surface to maintain.Yet quite properly the out¬standing portrayal was of Lick-cheese, who in the second actrepresents the pedestal uponwhich the society stands, andwho, in the third act standsupon the pedestal himself.Eugene Troobnick presented apoor man who could evoke oursympathies and provoke our in¬dignation, but who could beseen as a man whose scrupleswould not forbid him to takeadvantage of others in his posi¬tion. Troobnick made probablea character development thatmight have been absurd.With the favor of some of thefinest acting yet seen on its stage,Playwrights Theatre is produc¬ing a play that has something tosay. The theater must be com¬mended for making the messageplainly visible.Domel Queen1October 9, 1953dent Needs and NSA Committees are planning programs forthe next year for formation of co operative buying servicesin certain fields.A serious deficiency in programs of this type is that it hasproven practically impossible to enlist the co operation ofrestaurants in granting any meaningful discount. Such proj¬ects as the vetoed Snack Oar would have been of assistance;however, until it is possible to receive approval for theseideas it is suggested that students utilize services such asthe Co Operative food market and the lower priced arearestaurants.The following is a list of those merchants in the Universityarea who co operate in the Student Government discountprogram. Discounts will be given os indicated below excepton "fair-traded7' merchandise (that is, merchandise coveredby price-fixing agreements).Student Government's NSA Committee plans to publish addi¬tional lists. We hope to have a list of participating discountstores in the Loop area available by the end of the quarter.Additional lists of area merchants and buying informationwill be compiled on a quarterly basis. In addition, the StuHOW TO USE THE DISCOUNT SEEN ICE:.It is not necessary this year to have a special discount card. Present your identification card to the participating merchantbefore payment is made.BOOKS FLOWERSSchneeman's The Red Door Book Shop. 1328 E. 57th St., Mitzie’s, 1301 E. 55th—Flowers and Plants 10 ' ,on all used and foreign books and most new books... 10% Corsages 20" ,Blooms, 1443 L 53rd—Flower and Plants 10%DRUGSTORES Corsages .... ... 20%Kim Roxal! Pharmacy. 5500 Kimbark- Ellis Flower Shop, 1103 E. 63rd—all items picked up 20° „excluding cigarettes 10% Delivered in city 10%Albert Drugs, 5245 South Woodlawn IO%-20% RADIOS AND RECORDSCLOTHING University Radio and Recording, 1149 E. 55th—Herman Cohn, Custom Order Tailor, 1363 E. 53rd 10% Radios, appliances, repairs 20 ’ 0Lucille's Dress Shop, 1317 E. 53rd •■•••••• • • j|J% Lowe's Radio, 1233 E. 55th—Repairs including parts 20%Kaufmans Men's and Boys' Wear, 1309 E. 53rd 10% Records 10",..30Harmony Clothiers. 949 E. 63rd (Men's and„ ......... M% HARDWARE1003 E. 63rd 10% Paint and Hardware. 1158 E. 55th.... ...10%££ photocraphks and suppliesJ. Greenberg, Men's Store, 1222 E. 63rd 10% Ray Studios, 1035 E. 63rd 12%... _ _ . _ The Album Photographers, 1171 E. 55th, exceptSHOES AND SHOE REPAIRS ID and passport photos 10%Lewis Shoes, 1328 E. 55th 10% Model Camera Shop, 1331 E. 55th 10%Health Spot Shoes, 1027 E. 63rd 10% (Higher on some larger purchases)Leon's Shoe Shop (Repair), II28 E. 55th 10% Reliance Camera and Photo Supplies,University Shoe Repair, 6251 University 10% 1517 E. 63rd 10° to 20° '0Reliable Shoe Repair, 1229 E. 55th—on repairs over SI 15%LAUNDRY AND CLEANERS R#y . potie(i ,207,2 E 55i(1 10%•Sf.'KarJ'JS,' !£££* ,r„ *• «• «• -Lee's Hand Laundry and Cleaners, 6240 Kimbark— ISERVITF CTATIOHICon services over $2 10° n vJewel Service Station, 5801 Cottage Grove. . Gas, 2c per gal.JEWELERS OH, 5® Service. 10%. Wash, 25c, Simoniz, $2.00Best Jewelry, 1523 E. 53rd—non-Fair Trade 20% MISCELLANEOUSJ. N. Watson, 1200 E. 55th—non-FairTrade !!! .' 20 ' “ Erika Kaufman Beauty Salon. 1227 E. 55th 10%Watch repair 10% The Gallery, Prints and Frames, 1168 E. 55th. 10%Roy A, Potter, 1207'i L 55th 10% Newman's Linen and Embroidery, I206'2 E. 63rd 10%DISCOUNT SERVICESThese firms regularly sell a large variety of appliances from fountain pens to furniture at discounts, usually at least 10% andas high as 30%. Both services have indicated the»r desire to serve University of Chicago sfudents. Membership cards anda catalog for the Atlas service are available in the SG office.Geiger Buying Service, 850 W. 79th St HUdson 8-1701 Atlas Buying Service, 605 S. Dearborn WAbash 2-2947Note: If is our policy nof to list establishments which discriminate on the b^sis of color or creed. Any violations by partici¬pating merchants should be reported to Student Government, Reynolds Club 302, Ext. 1067.October 9, 1953 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 11Cross country underwaysoccer team wins 3-0by Sherrard GrayYesterday, your reporter, still reeling under the paralyzingshock of another Dodger loss to the Wall Street boys of base¬ball, decided to interview the Cross Country team. I shookoff my despondency, strode through the dirty black portalsof Bartlett Gym, and out into the athletic bedlam of StaggField. After negotiating a football game and a soccer scrim¬mage, I caught sight of Ted t—. —tt—r-^—ITHavdon the track teamvet PimPled athletes- At a brisk com-t ayaon, t e tracK team s vet mand from their coach, the youngeran mentor. athletes began to plod along theHaydon, attired in his usual grass through the bitter wind andred jacket was calmly surveying cold. I had a minute to talk, untila small group of shivering, goose- the boys completed the quarter-documentary film groupProgram of Single Admission ShowingsAUTUMN, 1953 PROGRAMThe Murderers Are Amongst Us(Germany - 1947)Directed by Wolfgang Staudte, with HildegordeKnef, Ernst Borchert, and Arno Paulsen.The Lady Vanishes(Britain - 1938)Directed by Alfred Hitchcock, with Margaret Lock-wood, Michael Redgrave, and Paul Lukas.Shors (U.S.S.R. - 1939)Directed by Alexander Dovzhenko, photography byY. Ekelchik, with E. Samoilov and I. Skinotov.Experimental FilmsL'IDEE (France - 1934) Conceived and producedby . Berthold Bartosch. IL DEMONIACO NELL'ARTE (The Demon In Art) (Italy - 1951) Thefantasy paintings of Brueghel, Bosch, Gruenwold,and others.NJU (Germany - 1924)Directed by Paul Czinner, with Elisabeth Bergner,Emil Jannings, and Conrad Veidt. Also: DEATHDAY (Mexico - 1931) from the footage shot byS. M. Einstein.'Runways of St. Agil(France - 1938)Directed by Christian-Joque, with Erich von Stro¬heim, Michel Simon, and Aime Clariond.Tuesdays, 7:15 & 9:30 p.m. Admission 50c (tax incl.)SOCIAL SCIENCE 1221126 East 59th StreetTuesdayOct. 13TuesdayOct. 20TuesdayOct. 27TuesdayNoy. 10TuesdayNoy. 17T uesdayNoy. 24 mile circuit, and I talked fast.Haydon very enthusiastically randown the list of his ten mansquad: Ken Stapley, lettermanand last year's indoor captain;Jim Flynn, letterman and twomile star; John Smothers, backfrom retirement after spearhead¬ing the undefeated squad of 1951;Hal Higdon, transfer from Car-leton and last year’s MidwestConference cross country cham¬pion; and Ray Saunders, transferfrom Wright Junior College.These five men are the core ofa fine team which is determinedto avenge last year’s record of3 wins and 5 defeats.Nuveen had polioBut there is one sad note inthis set-up; the absence of lastyear’s great little pace setter, TimNuveen. This summer Nuveenwas stricken with polio and hos¬pitalized and is now under doc¬tor’s orders to remain inactiveuntil the indoor season. We allhope that Tim will have thestrength and undaunted spirit tocontinue his work as one of Hay-don’s top two milei's.Coach Haydon just had timebefore his shivering athletesstumbled past to inform your re¬porter that our first meet isagainst the UC Track Club,Friday at 4 p.m. in WashingtonPark. This promises to be an ex¬citing, talent-loaded meet. TheTrack Club boasts two nationalrecognized performers: WaltDeike, former “big ten” crosscountry champion from Wiscon¬sin; and Lawton Lamb, who wason Illinois’ 1951 two mile relayquartet that set a new nationalrecord.Sailing meet on weekendOver the weekend the Univer- SPORTS CALENDARSaturday, October 3Soccer game: Varsity vs. MortonJr., Stagg Field.Thursday, October 8Tennis match: Varsity vs. NorthCentral.Friday, October 9Cross country meet: Varsity vs.U of C Track Club, 4 p.m.,Washington Park.Soccer match: Junior Varsity vs.Morton High school. Saturday, October 10Soccer match: Varsity vs. Wheat¬on, 2 p.m., Stagg Field.Soccer match: Junior Varsity vs.Lake Forest.Sunday, October 11Regatta: Sailing Club in Wiscoi*sin Invitational at Madison.Tuesday, October 13Tennis match: Varsity vs. Illinois.Wednesday, October 14—12 MBTennis match: Varsity vs. NorthCentral at North Central.sity Sailing Club will compete atMadison, Wisconsin, in their firstregatta of the season. This regat¬ta, which is billed as one of thebiggest and best sailing classicsin the Midwest, will see nine high¬ly rated teams in action: Chicago,Wisconsin, IIT, Purdue, Mar¬quette, Minesota, Michigan State,and Oshkosh. Each school willenter two teams. Each team willsail in nine races and the schoolwith the highest total for theeighteen races wins. Chicago’sdelegation includes two return¬ing crew members, Bob Baronand A1 Fortier, and four newmembers, Ellsworth McClene-chan, Bill Salam, Jim Van Abra-hans,. and Rony Van Abrahans.The Club finished weak last year,beating only two teams, but isconfident that this year will wit¬ness a better performance.Soccer team winsCoach Hermanson’s soccer teamwon its first game last Saturdayagainst an improved Morton Col¬lege team. The score was 3 to 0.Leading the attack, Alex Shane scored two goals, and Spike Pin-ney tallied late in the last quarterwith a beautiful corner shot. JohnGodfrey, last year’s captain, wasrobbed of several goals due to anumber of spectacular saves bythe Morton goalie.All in all, the team looked quitegood for its first game, and apromising season is at hand. Nextgame is Saturday, against Whea¬ton College on Stagg Field.BITLOUIE’S BARBER SHOP IFor Personality Hair Cut1110 E. 55th St., Chicago 15LOUIS CORTEZ (from page 4)JoponRecent floods in Kyushu causeddamage and losses at the KurumeMedical College estimated at wellover SF 2,000,000. Many studentsare homeless. Flood watersreached up to the second story ofthe main College buildings andhospitals. Equipment worth morethan SF 666,000 has been de¬stroyed. Books and medical sup¬plies valued at over SF 422,000have been lost. International as¬sistance is urg°Mly needed tohelp this College jover from thehavoc caused by the flood. Mean¬while the WUS Committee inJapan has been the first to organ¬ize a team of 55 Tokyo studentsto help in relief and salvage work.This was no easy task, since mostJapanese students work in thesummer vacations to be able tocontinue with their studies dur¬ing the next term. The WorldUniversity Service Committee hasobtained a grant of about SF 3,700from the Committee for FreeAsia to finance this team’s work. (icsS5I -I /STARTED SMOKING CAMELSBECAUSE A FRIEND OF MINEASKED ME 70 TRY THEM. NO OTHERCIGARETTE EVER GAVE ME SUCHPLEASURE. CAMELS TASTE SO GOOD-AND THEY'RE SO MILO !HOW THE STARSGOT STARTED * * *StartsmokingCamelsyourself!yu.trice. Munset says: “When Iwas a kid, I wanted to be alady football player. Then Idreamed of another career —whistling! Somebody discoveredhad a voice, so I took singinglessons. I worked hard at it— then I won the MetropolitanOpera auditions when I was 17."FbrMifdhteS)hd Ffavor Smoke only Camelsfor 30 days and findout why Camels areAmerica’s most popuiaicigarette. See how mildand flavorful acigarette can be!ELS AGREE WITH MORE PEOPLETHAN ANY OTHER. CI&AP-ETTE I:;^A'rb::r&'.v'Classified Nash 1947 4-door 600 sedan Excellent Room for rent with private bath. Phonecondition throughout. Radio, heater, OA 4-0806.seat covers, Gan be seen on campus.Call Ext. 1021. Highlands Chiehen ExpressSouthern Fried ChickenCreamy Cole Slaw and Rolls$135Room for rent. Prefer grad, student.FA 4-3041.Zenith phono-radio combination $30,Phono, table $10. Slacks, 33-lnch waist,topcoat. B1 8-3921. PERSONALMan's bike. English model, excellentcondition. $25. Woman's bike, good con¬dition, $15. Gall FA 4-0197. People interested in stimulating Interestin varsity athletics. Gail MU 4-9825, Askfor Rhinehart.1937 Chevrolet, "fire engine blue." , ■ -•—1 ■ ■ ——Radio, heater, seat covers, four doors, Portraits—-ID Photos—Anything but dl-excellent running condition, $125. DO vorce photos—Done where you are—3-3458. Kluckhohn, c/o Anthropology Dept. FREE DELIVERY tDinners, Steaks, Chops and Short Orders „ |at Budget Prices ft1516 E. 55tli St. BE 8-9220 (LOST & FOUNDFOR RENTDO Found lady’s watch. See Mrs. Rauch.Cobb 203.Pleasant room for woman,0539. ' flrlnkor Q IOCClassified ad policyfree classified ads, up to ISwords, may be placed in theMAROON by UC students, facultymembers, and other University per¬sonnel. For all other persons therate is 10 cents per word.All services, rooms, etc., offeredin classified ads must be availableto all students without restrictionsas to race, religion, or nationalorigin.The deadline for all classifiedads is 5 p.m. on Tuesdays. Adsshould be brought to the MAROONoffice by thot time, as no classifiedads will be accepted by phone.SERVICESHow! Low-Cost, high-quality photo¬graphs taken, Joe Wolf. FAirfax 4-3261,Mathematics instruction, afternoons,evenings, or Saturday. Individuals orgroups. At South Side or loop, callAlbert Soglitt, ST 2-6727 or eveningsOA 4-6170.WANTEDThird student to share 5-room apart¬ment, $25 month. Permissive environ¬ment. FA 4-0525, 6347 Maryland,Student desires ride to campus morn¬ings from vicinity 51st and woodlawn.Judy Smith, OA 4-2833,Driving from Central-Madison Mon.thru Tfaurs. Arrive campus 9:15. CallCO 1-6835, evenings, for information.If, of C. faculty couple wants 3-4 roomunfurnished apt, between Universityand Blackstone, 55th, 59th. Call FAir-fax 4-2283 around 7 p.m.Encyclopaedia Britannica 1948 or laterwanted. Call FAirfax 4-2283 around7 p.m.FOR SALEHigh fidelity Components at below netprices. BI 7-2929 evenings.Webster 356 three-speed turntable pre¬amp cartridges with base. $25, Cali HY3-9155 evenings.Tuxedo size 39. 2 suits, overcoat. PLaza2-1900, Apt, 707.fa>1 ; VoteInif, y 5 •II l SGElections1 *©fi t ' V?1 " *; f .... . ,||| THE LEGTHE BREAST▲ MOALL THE REST1 . Buy the PartsYou LikeI! r Fowl of All KindsWhole Bar-B-Q Chicken| ‘ with Tantalising:■ V1 ■ Flavor■I Fresh Fish and, Jvp s Eggst *Ozark1 y jr urmb1154 E. 55th■ Free DeliveryCall DO 3-953511a SMOKERS BTTHE THOUSANDSMO!'CHANGING TO CHESTERFIELDthe OA/lYc/oareffe everfo giveyou...OPROOFof LOW NICOTINEThe country’s six leading cigarette brands wereanalyzed—chemically—and Chesterfield was foundlow in nicotine—highest in quality.©A PROVEN RECORDwith smokersAgain and again, over a full year and a half a groupof Chesterfield smokers have been given thoroughmedical examinations . . the doctor’s reports are amatter of record, uNo adverse effec ts to the nose,throat and sinuses from smokingChes terfields/ *A responsible independent research laboratory super*vises this continuing program.HIGHEST QUALITYCopyright 1953, liOGcrv & Mvcts Toiacco Co.