Ward touring Soviet UnionCkMiorSmvKi_7V> k • MVmTtkrM m CM*fhij ww b 4tyfmcd cbnorrhlivdicatcd by ft suitable•rmbo4 above or parceding cbe addrm.UC prof faces sub-committee;given leave to prepare defenseby Mitchell SleinVal R. Lorwin, assistant professor of industrial relations, who has been indicted by afederal grand jury for perjury while testifying before a Senate sub-committee, is in Wash- SE^j^Ti| AmBTANDAIU^rlMfe*lljnqjW^*o^g^'ington, D.C., preparing his case. r • 1 ** 2 M 36iIn order to give him enough time to prepare his defense, the University has given hima leave of absence With full pay for as long a time as is necessary. He has engaged as hisattorney, F. Joseph Donahue. Donahue was the special government prosecutor who triedthe case against Harry WESTERN,,,, a-•UNION *’-§r•tail Victory Ln.Bridges.Backed by superiorJohn P. Caldwell, director oflabor research projects, who is sor of industrial relations and ex- full opportunities to present hisecutive officer of the Industrial case “in accordance with the con-Relations Council stated that he cept that everjr man is innocentr < f _ felt that Lorwin was one of the until proven guilty by a jury ofLorwin’s immediate superior, said most competent people in his field his peers.”that he was willing to back him an(^ that he is one of the best University has been fairall the way. He stated further that known experts on foreign labor The consensus in the depart-he was prepared to accept Lor- movements. He continued that ment is that the university ad-win’s word and that he believes in Lorwin’s writings are noted for ministration and the board ofhim. As to Lorwin’s ability as a their anti-communist flavor and trustees have been “extremelyteacher, he said that he had been that *n his writings he has con- fair” with Lorwin. The feeling iscompetent and efficient. When stantly attacked them. that no other institution wouldasked what would be his stand on Harbison said that he was re- have given him a leave of absenceLorwin’s returning to UC should sponsible for bringing Lorwin to with full pay and not taken anyhe be acquitted, Caldwell said that UC last Sept. 15. He said that “mo- action against him.“As far as I am concerned, he will tions day” (the day that the de- Herbert K. Burns, executive of-be restored to his position.” fense motions will be presented in ficer of the Industrial RelationsLorwin expert on labor court) will be January 8. He fur- Center, is in New Jersey and notFrederick H. Harbison, profes- ther stated that he will be given available for comment.University of Chicago, January 8, 1954 31 CTvCDUrj* * PD tBTLfZL MOSCOU Iff A WUCABlEB t fEJOx«LT Arthur brown Chicago haroom university of Chicagou Cr ckgo*•LEAVING MOSCOW FOIV SHORT TOUR OF WESTERN USSR GOINGLENINGRAD MINSK KIEV SOCHI KHARKOV TBILISI APDRESSNATIONAL HOTEL MOSCOW CHICAGO JAN 22m-RICHARD E WARDs.srunr mt wiftomt mrooamom wow m ranow cSocial thinkers, sinologists,Walgreen presents lecturesPolanyi talks on mindThe Committee on SocialThought is sponsoring a series ofeight lectures by Michael Polanyi,F.R.S., on the topic, “PersonalKnowledge: The Realm of Un¬spoken Affirmation.” Polanyi,professor of social studies at theUniversity of Manchester, deliv¬ered the first lecture of the seriesyesterday afternoon. Succeedinglectures will be given on January14, 21, and 28, and February 4,11, 18, 25 in Social Sciences 122 at4:30 p.m. Q♦ S. Pettee speaks on“Soldiers, Civilians”“Soldiers and Civilians” is thetopic of a series of six public lec¬tures to be given during the win¬ter quarter by George S. Pettee,deputy director of the OperationsResearch Office at John HopkinsUniversity. Sponsored by theCharles R. Walgreen Foundation,the lectures wiil be given in So¬cial Sciences 122 at 4:30 p.m. Be¬Kimpton cites University views on racial segregationand community deterioration during fraternity talk"The University is dedicated to the creation and maintenance of a community upon an unsegregated, in¬ter-racial basis. We view the policy of racial segregation as not only illegal but bankrupt and fruitless/Lawrence A. Kimpton told the Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity December 27th.Kimpton made this statement as guest speaker at the fraternity's public forum in Mandel Hall."Chicago's race prob¬lem cannot be solved bythe laudable commitment tolove one’s neighbor. Every¬thing would be just dandy ifeverybody loved everybody,”Kimpton said, “but the fact isthat they don’t, and and why theydon’t is more relevant and impor¬tant than the reiteration of thepious hope.”Migration major problemOne of the problems whichmust be faced, said Kimpton, isthe Negro’s rapid migration intoChicago from relatively backwardSouthern agricultural communi¬ties. The reason that the problem forthe Negro has become increasing¬ly acute and complex, assertedKimpton is that “two generationsof Chicagoans, both white andNegro, have been educated to thepattern of physical residential■segregation, and custom, eco¬nomic pressure, and for a longtime law have combined to en¬force it.”UC does not deny challenge“No university could morallyrefuse to meet the challenge ofits ability to act rationally, andto educate the community ofwhich it is an integral part,” Kimpton declared. Therefore, theUniversity has adopted certainvery clear policies.“First, the problem of commu¬nity deterioration is not a racialproblem. The enforcement of zon¬ing, housing and building codes,the prevention of overcrowding,the insistence upon proper stand¬ards of maintenance have nothingto do with the race, creed or colorof either the owner or occupantof any building' A blunt insistenceon effective law enforcement andeffective action to prevent the de¬terioration and misuse of prop¬erty is neither anti-white nor anti¬ Negro. It is simply pro-govern¬ment."University port of community"“Second, the University recog¬nizes that it is only a part of acommunity, and that an effectiveprogram must be a communityprogram, not merely a Universityprogram.'Third, the solution to the prob¬lem involves more than merelymaintaining what we now have.A substantial portion of our city,including many parts of the Uni¬versity community, must be re¬built and redesigned to meet theSec "Kimpton . . poge 4) ginning on Monday, January 11,with “Soldiers, Scientists andPoliticians,” the scheduled sub¬jects are: January 13, “The Con¬cept of Duty”; January 15, “ThePrivacy of the State”; January 18,“The Power of Knowledge”; Jan¬uary 20, “The Big Questions”; andJanuary 22, “Responsibility.”Chinese civilizationdiscussed by CreelA series of five lectures on “As¬pects of Chinese Civilization,” pre¬sented by the Committee on FarEastern Civilizations, will openMonday night, January 11, in So¬cial Sciences 122. H. G. Creel willlecture on “The Chinese Lan¬guage.” The remaining lectures,“Chinese Thought,” to be given byCreel, “Chinese Political Theory,”by E. A. Kracke. Jr., “Religion inChina,” by J. M. Kitagawa, and“Chinese Art,” by Ludwig Back-hofer, will be given on successiveThursday and Monday nights at8 p.m.These newcomers, he contin¬ued, face profound problems ofadjustment to the completely in¬dustrialized life in Chicago. Theyface the problems of absorptionthat have been faced by the immi¬grant from Europe.Scholars givenhigher degreesZechariah Chafee, foremostlegal scholar on the freedom ofthe press, and Harry A. Wolfson,noted historian of westernthought, were awarded honorarydegrees at the Autumn Convoca¬tion in Rockefeller MemorialChapel.Two hundred fifty-five Univer¬sity graduates heard Newton Ed¬wards, UC professor of education,speak on the importance of com¬plete freedom ot information andappeal in these critical times. “Ap¬peal to reason is important to afree society, and free access to themind must be maintained. ... Ifcitizens are not to become the vic¬tims of special interest, of halftruths, of false premises, and ofpropaganda, they must be equip¬ped with the habit of demandingadequate evidence and with thepower of rational analysis of it,”Edwards said. Kimpton gives reason for BA change;hopes to gain more divisional integration"It is one thing to be apart from our rivals and another to be apart from our roots." Thus ChancellorKimpton summed up the reasons for the change in the College plan in his State of the University reportto the Faculty senate in November of last year.He drew a parallel between the life time of the existing plan and the alienation of the University fromhigh-schools, the source ofits students. Its internalproblem, the schism betweenthe College and the Divisions,he said, was also due to theexisting plan. The new Collegeprogram, however, rectifies thisproblem of the separation of thetwo, said Kimpton. A new pro¬gram of teacher-training, startedthis summer, will better relationswith high schools and also helpsolve the problem of how to getmore substance and integrationinto the last two years of highschool.Draws attentionThe Chancellor drew attentionto the fact that though highschool graduates had always beenUC’s largest source of students, ithad been found that most of themwere required !o take much morethan two year’s work to completethe College. “And,” said Kimpton,“most of our students felt thatgeneral education was notenough. The Bachelor’s degree became a terminal degree atwhich students did not terminate.And for those going on for ad¬vance study the program for theMaster’s degree in all the divi¬sions stretched out three years be¬yond the Bachelor’s.UC separated from student sources“We were separated ourselves,”continued the Chancellor, “notonly from high schools and inter¬nally from one another but alsovery clearly from the diversifiedsources from which we had longdrawn our students. Now it isdeep within our tradition that ourgates are open wide to all thosewho share one article of faith—a justified belief in a life of themind . . . (But) for a large anddiversified body of students, thegate-became tpo narrow and theway too long.“These are not my opinionsonly. They or something close tothem are the opinions of the greatmajority of the faculty, which last spring through its representa¬tive body, the University Council,relocated and redefined the Bache¬lor’s degree. As redefined, theBachelor’s degree will signifymore than a general grasp of themain fields of knowledge. It willinclude in addition, a knowledgeof a single field sufficient to per¬mit one to enter and master thatfield.”"No pressures exerted": LAKKimpton stated that it was non¬sense to believe that practicedpressure interfered with academicstatesmanship in bringing aboutthe changes.Kimpton said that UC is stilloperating in the red—though heexpects a balanced budget by nextyear. The deficit this year was$325,000 (a record low for theUniversity) and the gifts totaledover $6,000,000 which compareswith the figure of $5,000,000 of1951-52.Chancellor reports on other problemsHe closed his report by prais¬ ing the stands of those of thefaculty and staff who were calledto testify before the Senate Inter¬nal Security Sub-Committee lastspring. Said Kimpton, “These menhave a special meaning for us.Ernest Burgess and Anton Carl¬son, with their learning, willing¬ness to dissent, and devotion tofreedom, symbolize the best tradi¬tion of our University. May wealways continue it. To preserveit is to make our contribution tothe best that is in the Americantradition.”Flu vaccine freeAU students who desire fre%vaccinations against influenxa areurged to come to the StudentHealth Service as soon as possible.Influenxa vaccine will be availableot Student Health Service duringthe following hours: 8:45-11:30a.m. and 1:15-4:30 p.m. Mondaythrough Friday.iPage 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON January 8, 1954Issued once weekly by the publisher, The Chicago Maroon, at the publica-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 Fridoy.Arthur Brown Richard E. Wardeditor-in-chief managing editorPoles plan polkafor Ida NoyesOld Polish folk dances will bepresented as the featured enter¬tainment for a dance to be heldtomorrow evening by the Univer¬sity Of Chicago Polish club. Theexhibition will be presented by aspecial dance group. The dancewill be open to the campus at a$1 admission charge and will be¬gin at 8:30 p.m. in Ida Noyes.Gene Stevens and his orchestrawill provide music for socialdancing. Dark Age hereAlpha Delta Phi will hold amedieval-type open house Satur¬day, January 16, after the basket¬ball game with Illinois Tech. Theopen house will be held in thechapter house at 5747 University.Medievial decorations will fillthe house and an air of informal¬ity will prevail. The Dungeon Barwill serve refreshments, and StuClayton’s orchestra will providemusic for dancing. Everyone is in¬vited; those wearing annor willbe especially welcomed. Lot bought;but not a lotfor UC carsThe University of Chicagobought 60,000 square feet of park¬ing lot this week. But before anybeleaguered comm u tors startplanning to paik their cars theyhad better be prepared for a longwalk; it’s located on the half blockat Monroe, Canal, and Clinton,slightly south and west of theloop.The University, however, is notoperating the property directly. Ithad no sooner bought the prop¬erty for $650,000, when it leasedthe lot to the R. G. Lydy ParkingCo., a parking lot firm. £,ydy hasalready taken possession. Foreign tour data preparedStudents interested in the annual summer tours either towestern Europe or around the world, sponsored by the Na¬tional Students’ Association can now receive all necessaryinformation. Descriptive literature and information will bedistributed from Monday through Wednesday of next weekin the corridors of Mandel and Cobb Halls between the hoursof 9:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. :——— ——*. including transportation and ac-An additional meeting will COmmodations, is presently esti-be held next Friday at 3:30 mated at $700.p.m. in the Reynolds Club Assem- An around the world tour start-bly Room, popularly known as jng jn Honolulu and working east-the “fishbowl.” information about war(j js ajso being offered for thepassports, reseivations on student first time,boats, accommodations and otherdetails about the program will bediscussed at this time.Portraits byLOUISE BARKERPhotographer1457 E. 57tk St. BU 8-0876 Those who are interested in thetours but who will be unable toattend the meeting should contactBob Marcus at MI 3-5604, or PamMorton at Green House.The average cost of the trip, WHERE THE U of CMEETS TO EATG<*dcm’4FINE F0OI1321 East 57th StreetIn 'S4Round Trip viaSteamship $40 AFREQUENT SAILINGS *¥¥»»Tourist Round Trip Air*365" .1 *424"Choice of Over 100STVDENT CUSS TOURS $C4 ATRAVEL STUDY TOURS wCORDUCTED TOURS >PUniversity Travel Co., officialbonded agents for all lines, hotrendered efficient travel serviceon o business basis since 1926.$•• your local travel o9*nl *or Ifolders and details o, writeUNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO.Harvard Sq., Cambridge, Mass. furniture — wrought iron legslamps — giftsradios — tv — appliancesJANUARY CLEARANCE SALEFACULTY ANDNSA DISCOUNTS Hermans935 E 55th st.Open thurs. til 9LOUIE S BARBER SHOPFOR PERSONALITY HAIR CUTEXPERT FOR CREW CUT1110 E. 55th St., Chicago 15LOUIS CORTEZ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ = DARKROOM SUPPLIES - FLASH GUNS S| CHEMICALS - PHOTO ALBUMS| GADGET BAGS§ CAMERAS1 STOCK CLEARANCE| SALE2 Starting the 21st of January we will place on sale many3 of the items that were crowded out of last quarter's sale.S For one week and one week only you will have the oppor- E3 tunity of stocking up on many items at greatly reduced S; prices. «2 ms1 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOf BOOKSTOREl 5802 ELLIS gwith me, camels clickedINSTANTLY THE RAV/OR'S HOU/, I LIKE fT, THE MILDNESSJUST RIGHT.' AIVE TRIED MANY BRANDS.BUT I GET MOST PLEASUREFROM CAMELS. YOUS. WILL, TOO rHow the| stars got started...Oiotoia.AMERICA’S NEWEST, MOST COLORFUL DANCE BANDEddie Sauter and Bill Finegan,leaders of America’s most excitingly-diflerent dance band, met in 1939as struggling young arrangers.Ed had studied trumpet and __ ... /i ’drum at college, worked /up to arranging for“name” bands; Billhad studied in Paris,won a spot with TommyDorsey. After 13 yearsof pooling new ideas,they formed theirown band. It clicked! START SMOKING CAMELSYOURSELF! Smoke only Camelsfor 30 days and find out whyCamels are first in mildness, flavorand popularity! See how muchpure pleasure a cigarette cangive youFot Mildm*W FfaVcyiOamels agree wi+h more people THAN ANYOTHER CIGARETTE IJanuary 8, 1954 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3Kirk: "Unbought grace of life" is disappearingRussell Kirk, author of “The Conservative Mind,” told a small audience in Social Sciences 122 last December 16, in alecture sponsored by the Committee on Social Thought, “Without a natural aristocracy there is no nation.” Opening hisdiscussion with a quote from Edmund Burke’s “Reflections on the French Revolution” — “The unbought grace of life, thecheap defense of nations, the nurse of manly sentiment and heroic enterprise is gone . . . the age of chivalry is gone; thatof sophisters, economists andcalculators has succeeded . . .Learning will be cast into themire and troaden under thehooves of a swinish multitude”—Kirk proceeded to apply theseeighteenth century observationsto modern times.Grace from moral imaginationKirk’s arguments revolvedaround the title phrase, “The Un¬bought Grace of Life.” This grace, the wardrobe of a moral imagina¬tion . . . the spirit of nobility andthe spirit of religion.”Kirk, assistant professor of thehistory of western civilization atMichigan State College, continued,“The unbought grace of life mustbe nourished by men who havepower, wealth and eminence.”Social progress and inheritancetaxes in Great Britain have led tothe decline of the landed gentry life was incompatible with mod¬ern industrial and democratic so¬ciety, Kirk replied, “I don’t know,I hope not.”Challenged on our ageIn the question period follow¬ing the lecture a member of theaudience arose and condemnedKirk for saying that the past wasbetter than the present. He re¬called the Holland of a centuryago as his father had described everybody drank so they didn’thave to look at the awful povertythey were living in. . . . Is thiswhat you want us to return to?I say that what we’ve got now—even with Malenkov and the atombomb—is better than anything weever had before.”Kirk replied, “Certain ages, ofcourse, are better than others.”John U. Nef, chairman of theCommittee on Social Thought,he said, consists of “all those su- and their manor houses have de- it to him: “Little children were arose and said the problems raisedr»AV» o rl /I a/J i/I #\n t. f I J j. j _ i.* • i c _______ x _ . i. x ^ rf' U /vu. * xl_ _ i* i j _ j. i. _per-added ideas furnished fromTheDisc1367 E. 57th St.RECORDSANDHI - FIEQUIPMENT stroyed the continuity of powerwealth and eminence and thusmake the nouiishment of thegrace difficult, he said. Whenasked if the unbought grace of taught how to rob and steal. Therewas hardly a girl who wasn’t amother before she got married.Whiskey was sold everywhere,even to six year old boys, and in the question could not be an¬swered in a single session. “Thisis the work of the Committee onSocial Thought,” he said. “I thankyou all for coming.” Study grantsabroad openThe Institute of InternationalEducation has announced theavailability of several scholar¬ships and fellowships for studyabroad beyond the Fulbright Pro¬gram.Fellowships are now availablefor graduate students for the year1954-55 in the Netherlands, Switz¬erland, Sweden, Germany, France,Denmark, and Italy. In most casesthe deadlines for applying forthese grants are February andMarch 1, 1954.Some details about the pro¬grams and instructions for appli¬cation are available in the Stu¬dent Activities Office, ReynoldsClub 202.'Dybbuk' folk play remarkably unified productionThe Playwrights Theatre-Club at 1560 N. LaSalle is currently presenting Sol Ansky's Yiddish folk play,The Dybbuk in an English production. The production, pos^bly the best executed grid certainly the best at¬tended of Playwrights7 career, closes Jan. 24.The Dybbuk, based upon Chassidic folklore and told in the manner of an expanded folk tale, tells thestory of a student's med¬dling in the Kabala (q mystic rites prove unsuccessful.. . . His soul, as a dybbuk, enters thebook of mysticism), arising k0fjy of the girl. The resultant sit-out of an agreement bonded uations bring about a trial calledin friendship before his birth by.a dead man and finally thee. union, in the “higher planes,’ ofby his father and the father of soujs Gf ^e girl and the stu-the girl who is to be his bride by dent,the agreement. He dies as hisInternational Ilon.se Movie ProgramMondoy and Thursday Evenings ot 8 p.m.Monday, Jan. 11 — “THE BICYCLE THIEF" (Italian)Assembly Hall Admission 50cThursday, Jon. 14 — "THE ROOSEVELT STORY" (American)East Lounge Admission 35c97te PHOTOGRAPHERSMIDWAY 3-4433 1171 EAST 55th STREET To we who benefit by the ad¬vance in scientific knowledgethese situations in bare state¬ments are, to say the least, un¬real; but we must examine thenature of a folk tale and of aplay based on folk lore. TheChassidic communities offeudal Russia were in forcedisolation from the outsideworld. Within the limited frameof reference of these communi¬ties, knowledge was at the stagewhere mysticism was reality.Mysticism could serve to ex¬plain phenomena as nothingelse they knew could. The leg¬ends on which The Dybbuk isbased were real to the peopleand they told their stories witha belief that they were real. great degree. In the climacticthird act the incredible inter¬play of forces is presented in amanner that makes the entiresociety move before us. In the. second act, almost lulling calmsmake more vivid the stormsthat follow them. Music, move¬ment, vocal dynamics are com¬bined to produce the fullesttheatrical effect.Edward Asner’s Rabbi Azrael isa man who believes in the rites heperforms and who makes the au¬dience believe with him. Becausehe at no time seems a conjurerand because his reactions are al¬ways human his presence consid¬erably bolsters the climax of theplay.Marvin Peissner, as Sender,the wealthy father of Leah, thegirl, is always the rich Chassid.His matter of fact acceptance ofthe ways of the Lord makes thereality of the play indisputable.Because of the isolation, these sometimes tends to introduce amechanical symbolism alien tothe play. Much of it is a sym¬bolism of forces outside theworld of the play. It is as ifsomeone with an entirely differ¬ent frame of reference noticedthat his point of view could beinserted conveniently at certainplaces. Consequently the smoothdevelopment of the drama is im¬peded. This and an occasionaltendency to make the play mys¬tical and surreal mitigate thedramatic effect and cloud themotivations in the climax. Theproduction becomes boring, forin these cases it interprets realsituations as purely mysticalphenomena, and therefore doesnot bring the audience into thegrip of reality.Alex? Horn, although for themost part convincing in his por¬trayal of Channon, the student,sometimes commits the mistakeof surrealism. Channon studiesthe Kabala for a very real pur¬pose, but too often Horn i$ mere-eommunities could see only the, j » — surface of reality, although they u ** TI1C1C’The Dybbuk, therefore, must lelt and were aware of influ. *hep C?annon £,ees *he realnot be approached as a play of enee of the outside world upon y a s H~*' £ a 1£au“ - - them. Naturally they could only po£a appar?n'ly <,e/ea,,ed' HornT does not react as deeply as thefantasy, neither must it be ap¬proached as symbolism throughthe meaning of fantasy. Inherent look to the means of communi¬cation, to the couriers that wentin the legends is a symbolism, but from town to town for an under-it is never more than the bondof the legend to the occurrencesof day to day life. Nothing in TheDybbuk reveals that the charac¬ters have anything but completefaith in the mysticism that appar- standing of this total reality. The‘paijiap Ajjeau euieoaq aaSuassauiand, as the tale goes, is ‘the right¬eous and benevolent man” who“gathers up the threads” from“the hearts of all the world’sently shapes their destiny. The creatures.” In The Dybbuk it isplay must be presented in as real the messenger who clarifies anda manner as possible, for only relates the situations to (Chassi-then will the actual circumstancesthat shape these people’s lives be¬come evident.Byrne Piven’s direction satis¬fied these requirements to a die) reality. Jon Jackson, in hisportrayal, presents the properconflict between participatingforce and critical observer.Nevertheless, the productionWhen you pause...make it count...have a Coke AC AS A Book StoreCards — Contemporary and TraditionalBest Prices Paid for Used Books1117 E. 55th St. HY 3-9651 part requires.In her portrayal of Leah,Joyce Hiller is too much at themercy of points of view aliento the play. Throughout the ac¬tion she is without hope, a con¬tinuous picture of sufferingwithout the strength to fightback, reacting to everything inthe same way—her characterdoes not develop. AlthoughLeah goes through periods ofjoy and sorrow, resolution anddoubt, Miss Hiller’s portrayalremains static.These faults, nevertheless, arefor the most part obscured by therealistic and powerful effect pro¬duced by the proper use oftheatrical elements. Lighting,sound, staging, scenery, timing,dynamics, are used to produce aremarkably integrated produc¬tion. This, combined with some ofthe best performances turned inby some of Playwright’s best ac¬tors provides a rewarding dra¬matic experience.Daniel Queen•OTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY SYCoca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.‘*CokeM n • registered trade mark. 1953, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY STUDENTDISCOUNT CARDSAVAILABLE FREEATSTUDENT GOVT. OFFICE 302REYNOLDS CLUBGood for Discounts at Stores in UC Neighborhoodand Home Towns \Page 4*tMJ**»**** ♦$* ******5: Private Mailing' CardsSmartly styled, inexpensive per¬sonal postal cards. Samples onrequest. The MAIL-BOX, Dept.Six, 3 14 Newell, Barberton,Ohio.v Ohio. THE CHICAGO MAROON January 8, 1954CalendarFriday, Jan. 8Billet Fireside. Peretz Gordon, a studentfrom Israel, and All Othman, Univer¬sity College lecturer, will discuss theArab-Israeli situation. Hlllel Founda¬tion at 8:30 p.m. The Fireside will bepreceded by the Sabbath Service at7:45 p.m.Saturday, Jan. 9The UC Polish Club will hold a dancein Ida Noyes at 8:30 p.m. Admission#1.Sunday, Jan. 10Rockefeller Chapel Service at 11 a m.The Reverend Daniel D. Williams willapeak on "Conflict and Reconcilia¬tion.’*Calvert Club. Supper at 6 p.m., servedfor 65 cents, will be followed by anOpen House at 7:30 p.m.Monday, Jan. 11Billet Foundation. Hug Ivrl will meetat 12:30 p.m. The Folk Dance Groupwill meet at 3:30 p.m.the UC Astronomical Society will meetIn Ryerson 352 at 8 p.m. Carl SaganWill present "A Half Serious Hypothe-sls on the Mechanism of Creation."Tuesday, Jan. 12“Emperor Jones,” a motion picture, willbe presented by the Doc Film Group-»n Social Sciences 122 at 7:15 and 9:30p.m. Admission 50 cents.Wednesday, Jan. 13The International House DiscussionGroup will meet in the East Loungeof International House at 8 p.m. Thetopic this week will be “The BritishCommonwealth Today.’’The Sailing Club will hold Its firstmeeting of the year in Ida Noyes at7:30 p.m. Movies will be shown. Classified ads ...For SaleMaple bed, spring and mattress; maplewriting desk; front room and kitchensets. Leave message for Bill Cohen, MI3-0800, ext. 1072.1947 Chevrolet 2-door sedan, heater,radio. Call W. F. Stinesprlng, BU 8-8300,working hours; FA 4-2385, otherwise.Reynold's Club chair—just please takeit away. MI 3-5931 around six.1952 Consul car of Ford productionmade In England, like new, originalmileage, one owner. See Herman at 8958S. Ashland Avenue from 9 a.m. till9 p.m.For RentRECORDS10" LP 79c12" LP $1.8978 RPM 8 for $1.0045 RPM Vi priceHermans935 E. 55th St. PersonalsBill Pozen and Art Solomon have movedto new quarters at 5833 Dorchester Ave¬nue.Female college graduate to share apart¬ment with same. Student or staff mem¬ber. PL 2-3800, apt. 1003, evenings orweekends, MO 6-3900, ext. 8130 days.Especially fof students. Attractive fur¬nished iy2 and 2Ya room apartments,2 blocks from U of C. Newly decorated,linens, daily maid service, reasonablerent. 6107 Dorchester, PL 2-9641.Newly decorated rooms and apartments,Pearl Beach Hotel, 5540 S. Cornell. Rea¬sonable rates, Ideal location. BU 8-9607. WantedEye ExaminationsVisual TrainingDr. Kurt Rosenbaumoptometrist1132 E. 55th StreetHYde Park 3-8372 Employed girl to share conveniently lo- ' If ■ |WW r|'cated apartment. DE 2-1995, weekdays, ■%. ■■ I I|J ■ Wl I • • •9-5.Room for rent. Private washroom. Mealsif desired. Hablamos efspanol, on parlefrancais, fala Portugese, sprechendeutsch? FA 4-7358.Furnished room, light, comfortable. Inapartment of discreet young couple.Breakfast privileges. $8. week. FA 4-5221.Room for male. First floor, 15 minuteswalk from university. MI 3-4713 after6 p.m.5-Room apartment to share with gradu¬ate student, $25 month. Permissive en-vlronent. FA 4-0525, 6347 Maryland. British staff member and two allegedlywell-behaved teen-agers require home orhousing very near Lab school from mid-January to summer. Robinson, ChicagoMidway Labs, ext. 2572.ServicesMathematics special instruction to fityour needs. You choose the math to becovered; we arrange program to fit yourneeds, whether for review or refresher,preparatory to an exam, introduction,improvement of background, modernoutlook, applications. For Individual orgroup. Sessions conducted at our officeor location of your choice. Albert Sog-lln and Associates, 180 West Washing¬ton Street, Chicago 2. Telephone ST2-6727.Expert computing. See attendant, Sta¬tistics Laboratory, Haskell 306, ext. 3427. (from page 1)standards and living requirement*of those who live here.”The fourth point the Chancellormade was that the University isdedicated to the creation andmaintenance of a community onan unsegregated, inter-racial ba¬sis, in which people will be ableto live in happiness, tranquility,and fellowship with others ofsimilar tastes and standards.Pannabecker, KE 6-8689 or see Panna-becker, Zoology 31-A.Portraits specialty; any other photog¬raphy. Low cost. High quality. GiveValentine portraits. Joe Wolf, ES 5-1615.Student male wants room in exchangeSpanish tutoring and/or baby sitting.Call Mr. Alda, ext. 2731.Secretary, $240 mo., social security, 37>/2hour work week, 3-week vacation, air-conditioned building. Midwest Inter-Library Center. 5721 Cottage Grove,MU 4-4545. You can't put the bite on Bernie . . • but you canon our HamburgersUNIVERSITY TAP AND LIQUOR1133 E. 55th Phone Midway 3-0524SAVE UP TO 50%ON USED BOOKSCash for books — more in tradeYou are welcome to browseNew catalogue availableWILCOX AND FOLLETT CO.1247 S. Wabash HA 7-2840FOR THE FIFTH STRAIGHT YEARCHESTERFIELDIS THE LARGEST SELLING CIGARETTEIN AMERICA'S COLLEGES...by a 1953 survey audit of actual sales inmore than 800 college co-ops and campusstores from coast to coast. Yes, for thefifth straight year Chesterfield is thecollege favorite.CHESTERFIELD IS THE ONLYCIGARETTE EVER TO GIVE YOU PROOFOF HIGHEST QUALITY—LOW NICOTINEChange to Chesterfield today — getsmoking pleasure all the way!YOUNG AMERICA GOESCHESTERFIELDAt the colleges and whereverwe play, I find more and moreyoung men and women goingfor Chesterfield/')CHESTERFIELD