NOV 2‘Offer Plan Of ‘Union Now’ ToBritish When They Are In DireDanger,’ Streit Tells Audience-Bull SessionThe Post WarPeriod BringsWhat?Last summer a group of. abouttwenty students, under the leadei'shipof Dorothy Greene and John Van deWater, formed the Student Councilon World Citizenship'and began hold¬ing discussions on the problems andpossibilities of a more stable, peace¬ful, and satisfactory world after thiswar. Since then, we have become con¬vinced that further study of theseproblems among ourselves is, whilehighly desirable, yet of less import¬ance than bringing the people atlarge to at least an elementaryawareness of what they must do toavoid a hopeless succession of wars,each bringing civilization closer toruin.Power for MankindW'e believe that the peace of free¬dom and security which we want canbe maintained only if control overthe destiny of men passes from thenational states to a power represent¬ing mankind as a whole. More spe¬cifically, all of us agree that regulationof the world economy—trade, rawmaterials, etc.—must be in the handsof a democratic international body;and most of us are also in favor ofgiving this authority the power to tax,-the duty of protecting the rights ofman, and especially sufficient militaryforce to insure peaceful change andthe safety of all people from aggres¬sion. Finally, we believe that, in orderto make our world democracy endur¬ing, an attitude of world citizenshipmust pervade the human race, al¬though we are aware that this spiritcan only come gradually as men real¬ize through experience the benefitswhich the universal state affordsthem.-Awaken American PeopleSince w'e are determined to be morethan a small student discussion group,we have been faced with the questionof how we can best help in awakeningthe .American people to their urgentneeds. In the opinion of those bestinformed, including our sponsors.Professors Quincy Wright and WalterLaves, the major difficulty is essen¬tially the same us the major obstacleto American participation in theLeague of Nations in 1919 and 1920—namely, the fact that the majority ofour people do not yet see the need forworld organization clearly enough toresist a pressure campaign appealingto the irrelevant totems of national¬ism.(Continued on page two)Field Plan Draws100 StudentsApproximately a hundred Univer¬sity students have now taken advan¬tage of the new Marshall Field Study-Employment Plan, designed especiallyfor incoming freshmen and transfersfrom other schools.The Study-Employment plan designsthat the student shall take fewercourses each quarter, and continuethrough four quarters of the year,with a definite schedule of part-timeemployment planned to fit in with theclass schedule of the individual. Aconsiderable variety of positions char¬acteristic of a department-store or¬ganization is open to the student,which are assigned according to hisbackground of previous experience andtraining.The students under this new planmay work a minimum of fifteen or amaximum of thirty hours a Week, de¬pending on his need and the time athis disposal, and may earn from $7.50to $14.00 a week. During Universityholidays, the minimum hours and wag¬es are suspended, because at that timeworking will not interfere with stud¬ies.“Ellis Coop and Its Pi’oblems”will be the subject for discussion atthe meeting of Student Forum to¬day. The speaker will be Bill Let-win, president of the cooperative,and he will discuss problems whichare important not only to EllisCooperative, but also to coopera¬tives in general. The meeting willbe held in Lexington 6, at 3:30. GlamourPants? IfsTraegerClayton Traeger is the most glamor¬ous man on campus, succeeding lastyear’s glamorpants, Dick Salzmann.This makes Clay Traeger not only themost glamorous man on campus today,but also the happiest.Glamorpants Traeger was elected bya majority vote of the women clubpresidents, who each handed in a listof the ten men on campus they thoughtClayton Traeger. . . meet him in a dream sometimewere the most impressive, the kindest,the smoothest, the most charming, andall the other superlatives a well-edu¬cated club president can apply to tenglamorous men. This election makesthe club presidents very happy too.Big, beautiful, blonde Clay Traegeris a Deke, in addition to being glamor¬pants number one today. On accountof that feverish process known euphe¬mistically as rushing, Traeger’s new ,distinction makes all his Deke broth-'ers very happy, too.Now everybody is happy except theother nine candidates on each list, butsome of them will graduate, which willmake them happy, and some of themcan hope to be king of men next year,which ought to make them happy, justto think about it. It is a wonderful andglorious thing to be superman andglamorpants like Clay Traeger.“Night of the Mayans,” prizeMexican film based on an ancientMayan legend, will be shown at In¬ternational House today at 4:30and again at 8:30. A technicolorshort, “Monroe Doctrine” will alsobe presented.Dr. Norman L. Bowen, Universitygeologist, has been granted the Pen¬rose medal, most important honoraryrecognition in the field of geology, ac¬cording to an article in the Tribune.Dr. Bowen was granted the medal bythe Geological Society of America “inrecognition of his achievements in theapplication of the principles of phys¬ical chemistry to the study of theorigin of igneous rocks.”Presentation will be made Decem¬ber 30 at the annual meeting of thesociety, in Boston. At 54, Bowen isthe youngest scientist to receive theaward.A graduate of Queen’s Universityat Kingston, Ontaria, with his PhD.from M.I.T., Bowen has been at Chi- Need ^AmericanExpeditionaryIdea A nd AEFBy ROBERT LAWSON“We’ll wait until Britain is in evenmore dire danger than they are now,and then we’ll offer them our plan ofUnion Now, and they’ll accept itthen,” said Clarence Streit, author of“Union Now” and “Union Now withBritain”, last night in Mandel Hall.Founding FathersSpeaking under the auspices of theStudent Council on World Citizenship,Sterit repeatedly hearkened back tothe founding fathers of this countryand the Constitution to prove thefeasibility of the plan he and his or¬ganization of six million people “ac-cago since 1937. He has previouslybeen field geologist for the CanadianGeological Survey, and ^ member ofCarnegie Institute.His career has included a largeamount of research with practicalramifications, according to the Trib¬une story. “His early experiments inmolten rock brought forth funda¬mental facts that made possible ad¬vances in ceramics and in the glass¬making industry. While working forthe war industries board during theWorld War, he supervised the pro¬duction of optical glass, a work that;was recognized as of prime militaryimportance. He was also a co-discov¬erer of mullite, basic constituent offire clay refractories.” cording to Fortune magazine” are ad¬vocating.“We had better organize ourselvesnow as a provisional union. The tideis ebbing much faster than most peo¬ple realize,” said the former NewYork Times foreign correspondent.Alternative to AllianceThe plan of a world federal unionis the only alternative to an alliance,and the inherent weakness of allianceswas well proved when the British andFrench, after making “the strongestalliance in history,” fell, he main¬tained. “On June, 1939, Great Britainbegged for Union Now with Franceonly to be turned down by the Frenchcouncil by a 13 to 10 vote,” he dis¬closed.Catch PhraseThe catch phrase of the Union Noworganization is an “American Ex¬peditionary Idea.” This combipedwith an American Expeditionary Force will win the war for this coun¬try and will also win the peace for us,Streit confided.“We must not lay too much em¬phasis upon the details of organiza¬tion now except that it will be an or¬ganization based on men rather thanstates,” he told a questioner.Latin AmericaIn answer to another question Streitsaid we must leave out Latin Amer¬ica because they will weight the or¬ganization down with inexperience.He quickly changed his mind, how¬ever and said he would “leave thething fluid, open till the time came.”“We will need dire danger to movethe people of this country,” thespeaker believes, but he believes thatsuch danger is eminent. “We havenever been reduced to as dangerouscircumstances as we are now and thatdanger will increase,” was the wayhe expressed it.AttemptRushingSolutionCovering the problems of the lengthof the rushing period, date of pledg¬ing, and illegal rushing a Daily Ma¬roon poll'was distributed last night toall fraternity houses.The Dean’s office is extremely in¬terested in the date of pledging andthe length of the rushing period. As¬sistant Dean of Students WilliamScott indicated this at the meetinglast week of fraternity presidents andrushing chairmen, called at his re¬quest.Council CriticizedThe Interfraternity Council hasbeen plagued by criticisms about theextent of illegal rushing during therushing period just ended. The poll, ifhonestly answered, will assist themin determining the actual extent of itthis year as compared to previousyears.It is emphasized, however, that nonames of either fraternities or indi¬viduals will be used in connection withthe poll. It is left with the fraternitymen to be completely frank in theiranswers.Publish ResultsThe results will be published laterin the week after an analysis of thereturns has been made. They will alsobe delivered to the Dean’s office andthe Interfratemity Council.ASU ResurrectsAnti-Nazi FilmResurrecting the much discussedfilm of a »entist’s tribulation in NaziGerman}^ the local chapter of theAmerican Student Union presents“Professor Mamlock” Thursday -inRoom 117 of the Pathology Building.The Soviet movie, explained withEnglish sub^titles, and running at 4.and 8 in the evening, is the first at¬tempt of the ASU to bring anti-Nazipictures to the Midway. Admission is35c plus tax.DoiLq TlbuJiOonVol. 41. No. 29 Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 25. 1941 Three CentsThe Daily Maroon will run acontest to discover the mostphotogenic couple at the Inter-Fraternity Ball this Friday. Thejudges will be a board of inde¬pendent experts. There is littledoubt the competition will beterrific,’but with the unbiasedexperts sitting in judgment, itis certain that the winners willdeserve their laurels.The prize will be one dozenphotographs, which will be do¬nated by Whelan and Buchanan.The pictures will be taken at theball, so look pretty, boys andgirls, and maybe you’ll be chosenas “Most Photogenic Couple.”InterchurchFair FeaturesMale HaremAnnual county fair of the Inter¬church council will be held Friday,November 28 at 8 in Ida Noyes Hall.Single admission of 25 cents includesaccess to booths and refreshments.Ticket-holders will discover a va¬riety of booths. Skill games galore,a balloon man who will blow up bal¬loons free and will be promptly fol¬lowed by someone selling pins, and amake-your-own-fudge booth—all sug¬gest Interchurch’s latest splurge.Big feature of the evening is slatedto be a sultan and harem act. Theonly hitch is that the harem consistssolely of men and should be reminis¬cent of Blackfriar days.Frank Hepburn, chairman of Inter¬church council, heads the show. Tick¬ets are available at Interchurch officein the basement of Rockefeller Me¬morial Chapel.SurveyHarold Wilson, of Delta SigmaPi, Honorary Business Fraternity,has joined the Maroon staff tempo¬rarily to conduct a marketing re¬search project. Purpose of the sur¬vey, to be conducted under thesupervision of Professor G. H.Brown of the Business School, is todiscover the buying habits of Uni¬versity students. A follow-up sur¬vey will later be made on studentreading habits.Dr,Bowen GivenMedalIn Geology WorkFour prominent seniors have beenselected by the Inter-Fraternity Coun¬cil to head the grand march of theIF Ball Friday evening.Clayton Traeger, DKE, and chair¬man of the IF Council will sharehonors with Jay Fox, a member ofZBT, chairman of the IF Ball Com¬mittee, and the Settlement Board. Vir¬ginia Allen, president of Interclub,and a Chi Rho Sigma, and CharlotteFord, Delta Sigma, A Senior Aide,and editor of the 1942 Cap and Gown,will be their partners.The Ball committee has invited fivesenior independents to the Inter-Fraternity function in recognition oftheir prominence in Quadrangle activ¬ities.James Burtle, Ed Rachlin, and DickHimmel are members of the Board ofthe Daily Maroon. Himmel is alsopresident of the Dramatic Associa¬tion. Webb Fiser, head of Chapel Un¬ion, and Bro Crane, student marshal,and chairman of the SFAC, receivedthe other two invitations extended toindependents.The Ball will be held in the StevensHotel, Friday night, November 28.Pick IFBaULeaders\APage Two THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 25. 1941By ANN STEELThe Autumn Formalwas a success Wednesday nightwith Jack Russell and band giving outsome pretty smooth music, Marge Ex¬eter wearing that sequin jacket ofhers and drawing sighs from all sur¬rounding men v/ith her singing, andMike Rathje looking her best in herCarson, Pirie, and Scott formal. PhilStrick was there was De Pauw’s Phyl¬lis Hansen who is now openly wearingPhil’s sweetheart pin. Shirley Bormansurprised us by appearing with PhiDelt Jim Tedrow. Sydney Strack who,after daily sun lamp treatments,matched the pink of her dress waswith coffee shop Dave Thomas. FloDaniels was with Bob Highman, Jack¬ie Horal with Dick Hull, Alice North-rup^ith Bob Monaghan, Bill Fralickwith Mary Trovillion.Thanksgiving Daysaw half the campus turning up atthe Colony Club dance at the ChicagoBeach Hotel. People were there infamilies like Miriam and Ralph Mc¬Collum, Eloise Goode celebrating herbirthday and with Warren Wilner, sis¬ter Janice in a bright red dress conga-ing with Phi Psi Jack Cahoun, BroCrane with Henrietta Mahon, andBarbara Crane with John Sponsel whowas back from Indiana for the week¬end. John tells me that he met Bar¬bara there last year when he camestag along with the rest of the Dekepledge class. The Dekes were therestag again as usual. Marty Hansen,Jack Ragle, Jack Shilton, and QuentinMoore. Clarissa Rahill was with Wal¬ter W'olfif, Craig Lehman with a verypretty date, the Lydings, one of theEvans twins, Ann Gayer getting arush from the stag line, Frantz W'ar-_ner, Bruce Dickson, Jane Thomas, andBetsy Wallace. To top the eveningand make life complete our favoriteband was there, the Colonial Club.O'Henry's, Friday nightwas full of Chicago women withtheir men from every other school butthe University itself. Jean Roff, Gen¬evieve Hackett, and Rae Hatcher werewith Purdue men. Mimi Evans wasthere, Lois Arnett, Betty Plasman,and Maxine Wright with Dave Easton.Saturday Night we arrivedat the concertonly to find ourselves seated next tothat man of all men, Ira Glick, whowas with a pretty girl who had a verybad cold which may have been thereason they left early. Perhaps be¬cause she had a cold, or perhaps be¬cause she was a very pretty girl. Onthe other side was Jim Hoaston withJoan Roehler. Down the aisle wereDick Reed, Janet Wagner, GeorgeFlanagan and Jean Eidmann. ShirleySmith and Sally Adams were withNavy dates. Behind us sat the bestlooking man on campus, A1 Ronander, who disillusions everyone by turningout to be a Seminary student. PatLyding and Chuck Moulds put in anappearance, too. Chuck hasn’t misseda concert yet but this time he brokeall records by falling asleep.At the Phi Psi EsquireParty Saturdaywere Anne Haight ana Uick Bolks,Ginny Nichols with the Whittenbergflash Glen Johnson, John White andthe prettiest girl there, Anna JeanLuddy, Frank (ole Doc) Reed withFran (Aphrodite) Toolan, Cal Sawyierand Fay Horton, Dave Petty and MaryToft, Johnny Green with DorothyDuncan, Justin Sloane and HelenWieselberg, Mary Lou Rowland paint¬ing pictures in the basement, GeorgiaHinchlifT and Wally Booth, Dave Sei¬bert and Jean Rofif still a good couple,and since there was “no liquor in thehouse” people spent their time dig¬ging little grooves in the billiard ta¬ble. Kay Christoph was there withGeorge Stier who had returned to thisfair city with Tom Evans. MarshaDzubay was getting the biggest rushof anyone there... Dave and PattyWolfhope Wiedemann playing chap¬eron...Peggy and Bill Self...KarenGrenander with Wayne Meager. ..BillRoberts with Betsy Wallace . . . andHenrietta MahonLouise Ecklund looking even prettierthan usual. Surprising Jhings thathave not made the column before^Esther Miller and Wally Younghave been married since September...Beverly Glenn has Beta Dick Lieber’spin...and flash of all flashes ye oldBob Cummins finally hung his Phi Psipin on Mortar Board Joan Sill,-and Iwin a long standing two dollar bet,and also intend to win another bet Imade with Frank Reed that Bob wouldpay up.Beaver Burrows Made Fossil^'^Corkscrews^^ Says GeologistThe mystery of the origin of “dev¬il’s corkscrews”—huge spiral-shapedfossils found only in Sioux county,Nebraska—was solved for the firsttime in the current issue of the Jour¬nal of Geology, published by the Uni¬versity Press.Dr. Alvin L. Lugn, professor ofgeology at the University of Nebras¬ka, attributed the formation of thestrange objects to prehistoric beaverswhich transformed buried vines intospiral burrows, in turn producing thecorkscrew-shaped fossils.The solution also provides scientistswith a valuable clue to understandingthe climatic conditions which prevail¬ed in Nebraska during a geologic agemillions of years ago. Dr. Lugn said.Daemonelix fossils, or “devil’scorkscrews,” were described by Dr.Lug^i as huge “ropy spirals,” foundburied vertically, six to eight feet inheight. The “stem” is two to teninches in diameter, with “whorls”varying from eight inches to three feet. The whorls turn either to theright or left, an equal number twistedeach way, he reported.In discussing two previous theoriesconcerning the origin of the fossils.Dr. Lugn pointed out that neither wassatisfactory in covering all the knownfacts.Proponents of one theory arguedthat the fossils were produced entire¬ly by buried remains of plants similarto the liana plants which flourish to¬day in tropical jungles, he wrote. Thistheory is supported by the fact thatsections of the fossils, viewed undera microscope, reveal cellular structuresimilar to that of plants.If this theory is correct, he pointedout, it indicates that tropical condi¬tions prevailed for a time in Nebras¬ka during the Miocene period, duringwhich the plants flourished. (TheMiocene era was approximately fromthirty million to fifteen million yearsago.) -Editorial— —Collegiate Press Better ThanPublic Press In Some WaysThe collegiate press is held invarying degrees of respect byoutsiders. Many feel that it isof immense importance in shap¬ing and guiding the opinion ofcollege youth. Many feel that itis of negligible importance_ andits main value is in allowing itsmembers of release some excessenergy and become campus fig¬ures.Perhaps those in the lattercategory might have changedtheir mind had they attended theAssociated Collegiate Press con¬vention held in Saint Louis overthe last week-end.Perhaps many of the delegatesmanaged to get drunk duringthe course of the conclave, butthat happens at any conventionwhether it be of the AmericanLegion '~X!f the AmalgamatedOrder of Montenegrin Plumbers.Attitude of DelegatesIt was rather the attitude thedelegates assumed towards thevarious speakers on foreign af¬fairs that was impressive. Ban¬quet speeches as a rule commandpoor attention. It was not sowhen Branch Rickey, vice pres¬ident of the Saint Louis Car¬dinals baseball team, spoke Fri¬day night.He admitted that he was buta dabbler in foreign affairs, butnot much more can Be said ofany of us, save perhaps the fewresponsible leaders of our coun¬try. It was a dynamic speechthat Rickey gave; it was a dy¬namic audience he addressed. Itwas an audience that absorbedall of his logic, and that applaud¬ed him lustily at the conclusionof his talk.Capable HandsThe college press is in capablehands. It might not be a big ex¬aggeration to say that it is in more rational hands than thepublic press. Those papers whichare interventionist in nature arecalm and sane in discussing theproblem; they are a far cry fromsome of the interventionist pub¬lic press whose hysteria ismatched only by its few opposi¬tionist isolationist papers.Few college papers support aprogram of isolationism, andmost have thought out theiirplatforms carefully.This is not meant to be a eu¬logy of the college press, how¬ever. A note of apprehension wasinjected by the number of pa¬pers who take no official cog¬nizance of the war. Much of thismay be attributed to the locationof the school and the interest ofthe readers. It is a lamentablestate of affairs, however, whencollege students are not suffi¬ciently interested in world af¬fairs to merit the papers edito- jrializing on them. IStudent Angles |Many feel that college edito-!rialists do not have sufficient in- iformation not available to theirreaders to justify their voicing;opinions in print. This is a short¬sighted view, overlooking com-;pletely the fact that many of ^these problems can be treated Ifrom a student angle w^hich the,metropolitan newspapers over- ilook. Most of the value of col-1legiate editorials must rest uponthis outlook.College editorials are both!overrated and underrated intheir importance. The writer be¬lieves that his article is of greatsignificance; many students be¬lieve that it is a waste of space.The true value lies midway be¬tween these extremes.As a speaker at one of theluncheons pointed out from the I ranks of collegiate journalismcome the professional journal¬ists. A free and thinking pressis a fundamental prerequisite ofdemocracy. From those dele¬gates at the convention will comethose who will determine wheth¬er or not the press will be think¬ing. From all. indications therecan be little fear on that scoreR.L."The Oculq HkiAooriFOUNDED IN 1902The Daily Maroon ii the official studentnewspaper of the University of ChicaRo. pub¬lished morninRs except Saturday, Sunday, andMonday during the Autumn, Winter, andSpring quarters by The Daily Maroon Com¬pany, 6831 University Avenue. Telephones'Hyde Park 9222.After 6 ;30 phone in stories to our printers.The Chief Printing Company. 148 West 62ndstreet. Telephones: Wentworth 6123 and 6124.The University of Chicago assumes no re¬sponsibility for any statements appearing inThe Daily Maroon, or for any contract enteredinto by 'ITie Daily Maroon._ The Daily Maroon expressly reserves therights of publication of any material appear¬ing in this paper. Subscription rates; J2.75 ayear, f4 by mail. Single copies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March 18.1908. at the post office at Chicago, Illinois,under the act of March 3. 1879.MemberPlssociorted Golle6icile PressDtitribulor ofGolleaiate DibestBOARD OF CONTROLEditorialJAMES BURTLE RICHARD PHILBRICK.RICHARD HIMMEL ChairmanROBERT REYNOLDSBusinessEdgar L. Rachlin, Business ManagerRichard Bolks. Advertising ManagerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESRobert Lawson, Nancy I.«8ser, Beata Mueller,Philip Rieff, Chloe Roth, Stuart Schulberg,and Shirlee Smith.BUSINESS ASSOCIATESGeorge Flanagan, Howard Kamin, RichardW'allens, William Bell,Ellen TuttleNight Editors: Barbara Bezark andPhil RieffWorld Citizenship—A Bull Session(Continued from page one)To remove this danger, many of us,as individuals, are working ',yith theChicago Group of the World CitizensAssociation, whose aims in generalagree with ours, to acquaint the peo¬ple of Illinois with the need for ademocratic world order. Among otheractivities, the Association is arrang¬ing round-table panels to appear be¬fore the various groups—labor, busi¬ness, agriculture, church, e t c.—which compose the greater part of ef¬fective public opinion and to discusswith them the aspects of the questionwhich touch each group most deeplyas well as the general problem.Educate the StudentsBut the primary work of the Stu¬dent Council on World Citizenship,as thus far formulated, will be toeducate the students of the Universityof Chicago in world organization andto encourage and assist other schoolsin forming similar councils. The of¬ficers elected this quarter are LeonardJacobsen, president; Joseph Adler,vice president; Joseph Thompson, sec¬retary; and Saul Levin, treasurer. Wehave presented Professors A. EustaceHaydon, Max Rheinstein, QuincyWright, Walter Laves, and WilliamT. Hutchinson at three public meet¬ings in Social Science 122, and mostrecently Mr. Clarence Streit in Man-del Hall.Qualification for MembershipOur members are not unanimous onthe war issue, on political affiliation,or on economic policy. But we areunited on our sole gualifleation formembership—an honest interest inworld organization. All students are invited to participate in our nextmeeting on Thursday, November 27,at 3:30 in Classics 17, at which weshall decide the question of more pre¬cise formulation of what sort ofworld we want and the scope of ouractivities to help attain it.A meeting of the Daily MaroonBusiness Staff will be held at 1 inthe business office today. Anyoneinterested in working on the busi¬ness staff should be there. CLASSIFIEDNew $425 Now $75 Raccoon coat. Privateparty will aacriflee man’s extra heavyraccoon coat. In perfect condition. CallMidyray 1662 after 4:30 p.m. weekdays.4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSEfO» COllECC STUDENTS AND GRADUATESA tluroHgh, iN/eiwtW, sttnograpkic count—starting January 1. April J, Juh 1, Octobtr 1.Inlertsting BookUt stnt frot without obligation— wnta or phono. No tolidtora omployod.moserbusiness collegeRAUl MOSER, J.D, PH.S.Courses for Beginners, open to HighSchool Graduates only, start fint Mondayof each month. Advanced Courses startany Monday. Day and Evening. EveningCourses open to men.116 S. Michigan Ava.^ Chicago,Kaado/ph 4347READSwedenborg'The physical world of Einstein is evennow beyond the grasp of many able minds,yet the essential ideas embodied in it wereapprehended by Swedenborg in 1734."PROFESSOR HERBERT DINGLE. D.Sc., A.R.C.S.Imperial College of Science andTechnology, London, Eng.“DIVINE LOVE AND WISDOM’’70c unabridgedat University and other bookstores.Page Three»'' '’*" I ~i 11 ' ^'i'lf‘'*ii*~r'' i~rift i^iVir■ i > ■'-THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 25. 1941‘C Club Opens MeetingTo Minor Lettermen;Air Athletic Troubles Maroons Beat MortonIn Wild Soccer TiffBy WERNER BAUMToday’s meeting of the Varsity “C”Club holds new interest due to thefact that minor lettermen have beeninvited for the first time. The Club,through its governing body composedof Jack Fons, Warren Wilner andEarl Shanken, has announced that themain feature of the meeting to beheld in the Bartlett Trophy Room at12:45 is to be a discussion of the ath¬letic situation from the viewpoint ofthe athlete.The Varsity “C” Club is a recog¬nized organization composed of Ma¬jor “C” men on campus. By enlistingthe aid of all athletes it is strivingto remedy some of the conditions fac¬ing athletes and athletics at the Uni¬versity of Chicago.Hockey Team PrepsFor Winter SeasonWith the completion of the ice-skat¬ing rink under the North Stands ofStagg Field the University ice hockeyteam will begin practice under the di¬rection of Coach Charles Erdman assoon as the ice forms.Formerly the step-child of the ath¬letic department, the team had topractice at a downtown rink at incon¬venient hours in past years. With oneof the best records of any Universityathletic team it is organized on an in¬formal basis, playing teams organizedon a similar basis.Ralph Rowe, chairman of the AlphaPhi Omega Sports Promotion Project,has been largely instrumental in theawakening interest in the sport. Heformerly attended a Maine collegewhere he had two years of intercol¬legiate experience in hockey.Thirty men have indicated a desireto play, and practice sessions havebeen tentatively set for Monday, Wed¬nesday, and Friday from four till fiveo'clock in the afternoon.The rink is open to figure skatingand plain skating as well as to thehockey team.Those interested in the hockey teamcan sec RoWe in the Reynolds Clubgame room in the basement each aft-enioon from 1:30 to 3:30.Illinois HarrierTakes First InCross CountryCovering the 3 mile 188 yard coursein 16 minutes 7.6 seconds, ClarenceDunne, University of Illinois Harrier,placed first in the Central AAU meetrun on Thank.sgiving Day in JacksonPark under the auspices of the Catho¬lic Youth Organization.The mini team, showing the sameremarkable sophomore strength whichhas characterized all their meets thisseason, placed first with the recordscore of 20 points. Wheaton Collegetook second place, while Lane Techni¬cal High School placed third.Freshman Harrier William MayerOakes, running unattached because ofthe University’s eligibility rules, plac¬ed 17th while John Leggit, Harriercaptain, placed 18th.Lacking the requisite five members,the University was not represented bya team.Baum Runs OffWith Pickin’ ’EmThe past weekend marked the clos¬ing of the Pickin’ ’Em contest andfinal tabulations show Werner Baumthe victor with a total of 134 points.This score tops by fourteen points thewinning total compiled by the Baum-Lawson combine last year.Phil Rielf finished second with atotal of 127 and Bob Lawson bringsup the rear with 120 points.The score for the final week of thecontest read: Phil Ricff 24, WernerBaum 23, Bob Lawson 19 and JeanNash 18. Jean is the first woman tofinish at the bottom of the pack. Bestpick of the week was Baum’s 26-0choice in the Northwestem-Illinoisgame. The actual score read 27-0. The Club is aiming to develop agroup spirit among the athletes onthe University campus. It is the “C”men’s hope that once this spirit hasbeen developed among themselves, thefeeling will spread over the entirequadrangles.Preservation of the traditions of theUniversity is an integral part of theVarsity “C” Club’s functions. Theopinion of most people at the Univer¬sity seems to be that at this time ourtraditions are not only poorly knownbut even more sadly abided by. TheClub hopes that the following* tradi¬tions will be more widely observed inthe future.Name Thursday Award DayTradition has set Thursday up asaward day. Every athlete on campuswho has received an award garment ofany sort from the University shouldwear this award on this day. Thegarment 4s also to be worn at all ath¬letic events. Awards shall not be wornin any circumstances other than thosedictated by good sense and they shallbe w'orn only by the owner.Frown on Abuse of Traditions. Our seal, located in the corridorunder Mitchell Tower, is not to be Novak NamedAssistant ToCoachMerriamReplacing Norman Root, formerMaroon track captain who has beenill since last May, Mr. Joseph C. No¬vak reported yesterday to assume theposition of assistant to Track CoachNed Merriam. Novak, who graduatedfrom Illinois in ’29, is at present As¬sistant Dean of Wright Jr. College,Chicago.While in college he won the BigTen Mile and Cross Country Cham¬pionships for 1928, and received 5 ma¬jor letters. Upon graduation he wasemployed as assistant track coachby the United States Naval Academyat Annapolis, M.D., and served asCoach and Director of Student Activi¬ties at St. Johns College in Annapolis.Coming to Chicago in 1934 Mr. No¬vak was Park Recreational Supervi¬sor until 1938 when he left to do post¬grad. work in Educational Admini¬stration at the University, and to takeup his present post at Wright.walked upon at any time. Strangerswho do so are to be told of the tradi¬tion and asked to help observe it.A tradition frequently abided inthe past is that of the “C” bench, lo¬cated in front of Cobb Hall. Accord¬ing to tradition the only people eligi¬ble to sit on it are seniors, “C” menand women kissed by '“C” men. Chicago’s soccer team Saturdaybeat a rejuvenated Morton Junior Col¬lege team, 2-0, with two goals in thesecond half.The junior college boys threatenedChicago repeatedly in the first half,before the Maroon comeback.The victory was scored with fourregulars and four men who neverplayed soccer before. Several of theMaroon regulars took advantage ofthe Turkey holiday, which explainstheir absence.Fighting desperately in the firsthalf, the Maroons were decidedlyhampered offensively. They were back¬ed up to their own goal continuallybut checked each of Morton’s scor¬ing attempts. During the half. CoachCharles Erdmann and veterans Joe’Tvrzicky and Nick Parisi pointed outto the new men some of the errorsthey had made and gave suggestionsthat proved worthwhile in the lasthalf.Jack Davidson, the Scotch threat,scored the first goal on a beautifulpass from Captain Joe Tvrzicky. A few minutes later, Siegfried Mein-stein made a quick boot from the 30yard line that eluded the goalie.The lineup was as follows:G. Jack SteinbergerRB Nick ParisiLB Henry TroppRHB Capt. Joe TvrzickyLHB Jack DavidsonOR Marty WeinerIR Ralph RoweCF Siegfried MeinsteinIL Henry BrooksOL Bob BassI ' ' «Six-Man PlayoffsAs a result of the Thanksgivingholiday last Thursday, the six-manfinals were postponed until today.To determine the 1941 six-man foot¬ball champion, the Red Devils and theIndians will tussle at 3:30 on StaggField. Together with the champion¬ship game, the'Duffers and Gopherswill tackle each other for third andfourth place honors in the tournament.WHO IS THE MOSTPHOTOGENIC COUPLEThe Winners Will Be Chosen From Pic¬tures Taken At The Inter-Fraternity BallBYWHELAN & BUCHANANSTUDIOTHE PRIZE!ONE DOZEN 8x10 PHOTOS5510 S. CORNELL THE CORNELL HOTELFAIRFAX 5400make" to*'**’Load withKODAK SUPER-XXFILMNight snapshots are as easy to make as snapshots outdoorsin the sunlight. Simply load your camera with high-speed Super-XXFilm and take the picture in the usual mann^ with the aid of acouple ot Photoflood lamps. Don’t let another night go by withouttrying a batch of these fascinating piaures. Super-XX Film, Photo¬flood lamps, and inexpensive Kodak Handy Reflectors are ready foryou at our camera counter together with a free leaflet that tells youhow easily you can make snapshots at night.University of Chicago Bookstore TUNE INTONITE and EVERY NITEStineway Symphonic HourPresenting music of famous masters by ivorld-famousorchestras and conductors as interpreted on records10:00 P.M. to 11:00 P.M.Station WIND 560 K. C.Ask for your free copy of a complete month's musicalprogram schedule at STINEWAY’S — bSth and KENWOODSTINEWAY DRUGSCOR. 57th and KENWOOD WE DELIVER—PHONE DOR. 2844How to Win Friendsin one easy lessonTreat yourself and others towholesome, delicious Wrigley’sSpearmint Gum. Swell to chew.Helps keep hreath sweet, teethbright. The Flavor Lasts.1: LavishCostumesFor DAIn the elegant and extravagant cos¬tumes of the English Rennaissance, alarge cast, headed by Grace Farjeonand Marvin Scholtz, will play the firstnight of the D. A. “Merchant of Ven¬ice” on December 9.Exceptional costumes are to beused in this latest D. A. production,and are to be brought from Wauwau-tosa,'Wisconsin. These costumes,which are insured for $10,000, weremade in 1936 by the Parent-TeacherAssociation of the Wauwautosa HighSchool, when the dramatics depart¬ment there gave the “Merchant ofVenice.”Since the first performance in Wau¬wautosa, the costumes have been usedonly once, when Bates College inMaine borrowed them for one per¬formance. Now, by special persuasionand permission, the D. A. will havethese costumes for all five of theirperformances of the Shakesperiancomedy.Marvin Scholtz will play Shylock,and Antonio and Bassanio will beplayed by two freshmen, Dominic Piz-zuti and Peter Doman. Grace Farjeonwill be Portia, Ann Marie Gayer willbe Nerissa, and the only other womanin the cast, Jessica, will be played bySue Pfaelzer. The three suitors, thePrince of Morocco, the Prince of Ara¬gon, and the Duke of Venice, will bedone by Eddie Armstrong, Frank Eth-erton, and Frazier Rippy. Ken Cam-pione will be Salanio, Bob Hanson will Trend Magazine^Wonderful^ Terrific, ’Say Dreyfuss, BarnesFrom the bustle that is the Trend office in Mitchell Tower, Editors JackBarnes and' Al Urey fuss emerged. ^‘Wonderful,” said Barnes. “Terrific,**echoed Drey fuss. The reason for their exuberance was the talent that istaking the shape of the initial appearance of Trend Magazine on December 12.Although the actual names were withheld, it was learned that the morethan one hundred student contributors include a girl who had been writingfor the United Press since the age of IS, a student who is writing screnariosfor Paramount Pictures, and another girl who at the age of H wrote a 'storyfor True Story Magazine entitled “I Sold My Love For My Children.**These, and several other student contributors have had their work pub¬lished in Poetry Magazine, The Saturday Review of Literature, The New Re¬public, HarpePs Bazaar, True Story, and Hika. The competition prizes heldby the contributing students number a fifth place award in the poetry contestat the University, a prize from the National Town Meeting, and another hold¬er of an award in a national competition.Sells for 25 CentsThe editors, along with Business Manager Jack Kneupfer, agreed that itwould be some time before financial remuneration could be realized. Themagazine, selling for 25 cents, is non-profit making and the revenue from ad¬vertising and subscription will be turned over to the magazine. Thus the planof co-featuring the work of famous authors along with student authors tvillprovide some stimulus until the infant publication is in a position to rewardthe contributors more materially.The scope of Trend will not be confined to the campus. Paul MacPherson,head of the publicity board, has issued press releases to papers all over thecountry and already the magazine has acquired a nucleus of chapter sub¬scribers. In line with this Jack Kneupfer issued an urgent plea for volun¬teers to fill the woefully undermanned bi'siness staff. No experience is re¬quired for work along the business, circulation, or advertising line.Present PlansAt present the plans are to have one issue this quarter and two issues inthe Winter and Spring quarters. Details as to the actual format, number ofstories, and noted authors who will contribute articles will be withheld untilshortly before publication.be Salarino, Ricky Jacobson will beGratiano, and Cal Schorer will be Lo¬renzo. Tubal will be played by Lennie Turovlin, Lancelot Gobbo by FrazierRippy, and Old Gobbo by George Tres-sel. Informal PlayTo Be EnactedInSwiftCommon“By Request,” a series of shortplays strung together by a centraltheme, will be presented by the Uni¬versity Players in Swift CommonRoom December 2 through 6. Theplay, which is based on an idea sim¬ilar to Noel Coward's “Tonight at8:30,” will be staged in the informal,intimate theater fashion with the au¬dience on four sides.To open the show, a satiric comedyof feminine psychology will be given.Jane Robertson, Lois Carroll, AngelaPeyroud, Joan Littell, Beth Carney,Marice Klaff, Ethel Lewison, and Ag¬nes Massias make up the cast. MaryLaura Collins is directing the playand Gordon Northrup is assisting her.The second play, a fantasy, will bedirected by Norma Evans and HartleyPfeil. The cast includes Lester Schiff,Bill Mayer-Oakes, Lois Wells, Doro¬thy Lippmann, Lolly Chevlin, HalClark and Ruth Irwin.“They That Mourn,” a short playwith a tragic theme, will complete theprogram. Sylvia Bemsen, Bob Koe¬nig, Bob Roos, and Ralph Rowe are inthe cast and Randal Reuschelle andHal Clark are directing the play. Student InKelly FieldAir SchoolThe first class of cadets in the newAir Corps Replacement Center at Kel-ly Field includes Raleigh Steinbacha former University student and amember of DelU Kappa Epsilon.Along with 1,972 other cadets, Stein^bach will go through a five weekcourse of preliminary training at theReplacement Center which will givehim a thorough military backgroundfor becoming an officer in the UnitedStates Army on graduation, thirtyweeks later, from an advanced flyineschool.During his preliminary training, hewill study a variety of subjects, in-eluding military law and signal com¬munication.Despite the high physical stand¬ards required for entrance into thecorps, the army figures that thereis room for improvement, so Raleighand his fellow cadets will get plentyof exercise.When he has completed the pre¬liminary course. Cadet Steinbach willbe ready to concentrate more fully onflying itself, and will enter one of theeighteen primary schools located in theGulf Coast Air Corps Training Area,where he will get his flight training.Ask University Aid In FindingWorkers For Civilian DefenseThe University is cooperating withthe Chicago Commmission On Na¬tional Defense, and anyone on theQuadrangles who is interested in do¬ing volunteer work for civilian de¬fense can procure an enrollment blankat the Information Office in the PressBuilding. Courses are given in volun¬teer nursing, emergency work forcivilian protection, and work in con¬sumer information centers. There are many part time jobs open to appli¬cants with experience in any one of20 fields, ranging from food prepara¬tion to radio operating.The Commission would like a mil¬lion volunteers to offer their servicesin connection with this importantwork, and it is hoped that the Uni¬versity will help towards filling thisquota.Out on the rangejl; it*s Howdy pardner, have a Chesterfield**i. That*s true Western hospitality,% , For bringing smokers together, givingV them exactly what they want, Chesterfield’sRIGHT COMBINATION of the world’s best ciga-*• rette tobaccos, is right at the top.There is more downright pleasure inChesterfield’s COOL MILDNESS and BEHER TASTEthan in anything else you ever smoked. VSAAAAfV%AVM/VVWWVVVVVVWVUVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVWi%^Read The Daily MaroonNews forNight OwlsIf formal wear is yourNemesis, see the good-looking Arrow dress shirts.They’re Loth comfortableand well-behaved.The Arrow Lido, for whitetie and tails, has a smootlinarrow bosom, held se¬curely in place by suspen¬der loops. $3. —*-The Arrow Shoreham, forblack tie and tux, has asemi-soft pleated bosomwith turned-down attachedcollar. Also $3.Arrow Dress Ties, $1 Handkerchiefs, 25cCollars, 35c