P. Douglas SchedulesDownstate Campaign;Assails IsolationistsWith plans being made for a down-state speaking tour to begin nextweek, Paul H. Douglas, alderman ofthe fifth ward, professor of economicsat the University, and candidate forUnited States senator on the Demo¬cratic ticket, is scheduled to make aninitial speech this Friday in De KalbCounty at a dinner party composed ofleading Democrats of the locality. Mr.Douglas has stated that his speecheson the tour will be essentially non¬political and non-partisan.StatementUpon filing his declaration last Sat¬urday to become a candidate for theDemocratic nomination for UnitedStates senator, Douglas made the fol¬lowing official statement:“It is a source of deep satisfactionthat so many thousands of Illinoiscitizens have petitioned for me to be¬come the Democratic candidate for theoffice of United States Senator. I onlyask for the chance to present the vitalnational issues to the voters of Illinoisin a free and open primary so that wemay select our candidates in a demo¬cratic way.“I have always known that the dic¬tator nations were opposed to our de¬mocracy and intend^ to damage us.I have therefore always been opposedto any program of appeasement andhave instead advocate all-out resis¬tance to Hitler, Mussolini, and Japan.As the citizens of Illinois know, I haveadvocated these policies up and downthe state not only for months but foryears before Pearl Harbor.“We must win a smashing victoryboth in the Atlantic and the Pacific—both against Germany and Japan. Wearc waging an indivisible war as ourmilitary leaders well know. We needSenators and Congressmen who willback up our President and Comman-der-in-Chief Franklin D. Roosevelt in-Ken. GardenFire Brings OutMilitaryinstituteBy STUD RUMLThe Institute of Military Studiescame into its own Monday night at9 p.m. when refugees from the Ken¬wood Gardens fire began to pour intothe Hyde Park Neighborhood Club,1364 E. 66th Street, for refuge fromthe cold of the night.For the cots they slept on and theblankets they slept in were furnishedby the Institute, the cots from theMill Road Farm, Lake Forest, wherethe Institute every quarter holds itsmilitary maneuvers, the blankets fromthe University, obtained by ActingAssistant Bursar Leonard Erickson,who is an instructor in the I.M.S.course.The fire broke out at the KenwoodGarden Apartments, 5608 KenwoodAvenue, at 3:30 Monday afternoon.About twenty fire trucks were onhand for the 6-11 alarm, and mem¬bers of the Maroon and Institute stafifsarrived shortly after the first trucks,about four o’clock. The fire began asa 2-11 alarm and the first forcek toarrive thought it was under control,but later developments changed it intoa 5-11 about four-thirty.The Instituce went into action with¬in fifteen minutes in Hugh Cole’sapartment directly across the streetfrom the apartments. By six o’clockthe entire housing of the refugees hadbeen arranged by Arthur Rubin andhis staff.To the Fraternities:Mid-year freshmen who enteredthe University this week, may hepledged to fraternities on March20, 19U2.Rushing, as in previous quarters,is to be consistent with the princi¬ples laid down by the Interfrater-nity Committee. Since the groupis relatively small, detailed ar-Tangements of rushing dates mightbe inexpedient. The Office of theDean of Students, however, strong¬ly recommends that a minimum offormal rushing be undertaken be¬tween the end of this week andMarch 10.William E. ScottAssistant Dean of Students stead of snapping at his heels as someCongressmen did in the days of Wash¬ington and Lincoln.Win War and Peace“We must first win the war. Afterthat we must win the peace and helpto build an international organizationwhich will deter aggressors and pre¬vent World War III from followingWorld War II. We cannot let the iso¬lationist minority trekt Franklin D.Roosevelt after this war as they treat¬ed Woodrow Wilson after the firstWorld War. Illinois is not an isola¬tionist state and should not be rep¬resented by an isolationist senator.“It is for these reasons that I amfiling my candidacy for the UnitedStates Senate. These are the prin¬ciples for which I shall contend andfor which I am ready to make avigorous campaign. I have not adopt¬ed these principles because I think itis expedient to do so. I shall cam¬paign for them because I believe inthem.’’Test For LeadRoles In Mirror—BlackfriarsShowTryouts for the leading roles in theMirror - Black friars show will takeplace this afternoon at S:S0 in Man-del Hall. All those who wish to audi¬tion for any parts in the musicalshow should report this afternoon forthe final tryouts before casting.Two parts are open as professors,supposedly from the University, whilethe most unusual role is that whichwill be played entirely in Yiddish dia¬lect. These, in addition to the 're¬maining and more traditional leadingparts will be cast upon the decisionof the board in charge of the showafter today’s auditions.Several of those who sang beforethe board last week have proven theirability as singers, but must yet showtheir capabilities as actors, and shouldreport today for further work beforethey are definitely assigned parts.These include Edde Armstrong, VerneBehnke, Stan Basinski, Ardis Molli-ter. Marge Exeter, Joan Roehler, Bet¬ty Headland, and Mickey Bondzinski.Any song writers may submit songsfor the show and should do so as soonas possible. Lyric writers need notprovide tunes for their words.Band EntertainsCoast GuardBurton - Judson’s 600-odd coastguards will come in for a bit of honornext Sunday when Harold Bachman’sUniversity Band presents its annualwinter concert. Featured on the pro¬gram will be Semper Paratus, offi¬cial march of the U. S. Coast Guards.The concert, which will be the sec¬ond the band has presented this year,is to feature music especially adaptedfor band, Mr. Bachman announced,and will also feature the work of theUniversity Choir, under the directionof Mack Evans.♦The choir will join the band in thefinal section of the concert, in thesinging of Teschner’s All Glory, Laudand Honor. Other highlights of theprogram will be the premier perform¬ance of the new tone poem WhenJohnny Comes Marching Home ar¬ranged by composer Roy Harris espe¬cially for band, and the Chicago debutof Handel’s Royal Fireworks Music,a composition originally written forband.Wallace Tourtellote, Harvey, Illi¬nois high school senior, will appearas guest soloist with the group. Tour¬tellote was first place winner in thetrombone division of the Illinois StateHigh School solo contests last year.Essrig LeadsDiscussionA discussion group sponsored byHillel will meet this Thursday to dis¬cuss “A Psychological View of theJews.’’ The group will be led by RabbiEssrig, and will meet in the Chapelbasement at 3:30. Vol. 42. No. 56 Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 10. 1942 Three CentsHutchinsAnswersThe South St. PauPsChoirHere McCoy ToPlay ForWash PromThe following is the text of astatement telegraphed by PresidentRobert M. Hutchins to Chancellor O.C. Carmichael of Vanderbilt Universi¬ty:Missed the Point“The resolution of the Southern As¬sociation in regard to the bachelor’sdegree at the University of Chicagoshows that the Association has entire¬ly missed the point of the Universi¬ty’s action. The Association wouldhave been more intelligent, as well asmore courteous, if it had given theUniversity a chance to be heard. TheUniversity was not even notified thatits plans were based on brief and in¬adequate reports.“The University’s curriculum to thebachelor’s degree is a four-yearcourse of study beginning with thejunior year in high school. For thetime being, at least, students will beadmitted to it in the middle, that is,at the beginning of the conventionalfreshman year, just as students areadmitted to all institutions in theSouthern Association in the middle ofyour four-year curricula, that is, atthe beginning of the conventionaljunior year. The University has al¬ways favored a six-four-four plan ofeducation, and condemns the conven¬tional eight-four-four plan as waste¬ful and the conventional bachelor’s de¬gree as meaningless.Try Our Exams“The faculty of the College of theUniversity is now reconsidering thecurriculum and the examinations forthe bachelor’s degree. When this studyis completed, I shall be glad to havegraduating seniors in the institutionsof the Southern Association try theexaminations that will be given forithe bachelor’s degree at the Universi¬ty of Chicago.’’ Fifty-five men and boys, membersof the St. Paul’s Episcopal Churchboy’s choir, will invade Mandel Halltonight at 8:15 to present an unusualconcert, titled “Young AmericaSings.”Under the sponsorship of the St.Paul Episcopal Church, the group willpresent a concert composed of re¬ligious music, classical choral works,and as an. added attraction, violinselections by the 10-year-old violinprodigy, Joseph Golan. Receipts willbe divided between the Choir Boy’sSummer Camp Association, and theAmerican Rb4 Cross.Handel, Bach, IvanovThe first half of the program willbe devoted entirely to religious choralworks, including works by Handel,Bach, and Ivanov. Featured on thepre-intermission program will be theCoronation Te Deum of Vaughn Wil¬liams, which was written especiallyfor the coronation of King George VI,and was presented first in this coun¬try by the boy’s choir.Golan, the young violin virtuosowho has been attracting more andmore attention in musical circles, willpresent three virtuoso pieces, HijreKati by the old violin master andteacher, Hubay, Fritz Kreisler’s ar¬rangement of the De Falla Dance Es-pagnole, and Wieniwaski’s ScherzoTaranteUe.After IntermissionAfter intermission, the chorus willresume the concert with Bach’s Wel¬come Cho7'U8, a death cant arrange¬ment of Blue Bells of Scotland, Mo¬zart’s Song of Loyal Brotherhood, andthe Handel setting to Milton’s HasteThee, Nymph.The program will feature solo workby Masters Grant Foster, Eugene Pel-ligrini, and William Johnson, of thechoir.Tickets are available at the door.Student Forum Asks IfVictory Is Possible“Can we Win the War?’’ will bethe subject of discussion at today’smeeting of Student Forum at 3:30 inLexington 5. The discussion will beled by Webb Fiser, Forum president.Forum Director Bill Bradbury alsoannounced yesterday plans for selec¬tion of Forum entrants in a nationalextempore-discussion contest on Inter-American affairs. Sponsored by theOffice of Coordinator of Inter-Ameri¬can affairs, the contest will be run offby a process of elimination in district,regional, and national conferences.Students to represent Forum and theUniversity of Chicago at the district icontest will be chosen at the nextmeeting of the group a week from to¬day, Bradbury said. “All Forum mem¬bers and potential members—and es¬ pecially those interested in Pan-Amer¬ican affairs, are urged to try-out,” headded.Grand prize offered by the spon¬soring office to national finalists is aconducted summer tour of some of theAmerican republics. Delegates chosento go to the national final at Wash¬ington, D.C. from the regional tourn¬eys, as well as those going to the re-gionals from the district meets, willhave all expenses paid, an announce¬ment states.Any new freshmen who wish towork on the editorial staff of theDaily Maroon should see MinnaSachs in the Maroon office Thurs¬day at 3:30. Clyde McCoy and his “SugarBlues.” That is to be the theme'ofthis year’s Washington PromenadeBenefit, announced Chairman BobBean yesterday.A1 Donahue, originally slated toperform in the Shoreland Hotel’sBallroom on the evening of February20 broke his contract with the SocialCommittee and McCoy and his orches¬tra, which goes under the banner of“America’s Most Imitated Band” willfulfill the engagement instead.Found Quick FameThe McCoy band broke in at famil¬iar spots around Louisville, then cameto Chicago. Moving into the massiveGold Coast Room of the ritzy DrakeHotel, McCoy found fame almost over¬night. His long engagement theregave him a nightly outlet over WGNand his trumpeting and the persuasiverhythms of his orchestra became na¬tionally known.Since then the way has been pret¬ty smooth, with movies, radio, andstage providing outlets for the Mc¬Coy talent when dances could bedodged. Clyde has written severalsongs among them his theme, “Lone¬ly Gondolier,” and an autobiographi¬cal bit of jittery jam called “Ridingto Glory on a Trumpet.”“Wa Wa”It is when the golden horn of thehandsome maestro tilts skyward andgives out the “wa-wa” thrills of“Sugar Blues” that Clyde is in hiselement. Over 150,000 copies of the“Sugar Blues” record have alreadybeen sold.Chairman Bean is at present de¬liberating the question of prom lead¬ers and the selection will be com¬pleted by Friday.Tickets for this year’s prom areselling at three dollars, tax included,and may be obtained from any mem¬ber of the Student Social Committeeor the Promenade Committee. TheMandel Corridor booth is open forticket sales daily from 11 on.Offer Radio CoursesIn process of formation at vari¬ous colleges in the Chicago area isa course in radio technician work,a University spokesman announcedyesterday. Probably starting aboutFebruary 23, the course arose outof the apprehension of Chicagoradio stations of a potential short¬age of technicians, due to theirshifting into defense work.Center of formation of the newcourse is the Illinois Institute,where some 1500 vAll be pickedfrom preliminary applications. Fi¬nal interviews will be made at thevarious institutions where the workis to be given, including the Uni¬versity of Chicago. Students inthe course will attend classes atthe college most convenient to them.The number to be trained atChicago remains a question, theanswer to which will ultimately bedetermined by the amount of equip¬ment available.Applications for membership inthe course, or for information re¬garding it, should be made to Mr.Sehreiber at Illinois Institute ofTechnology.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 10.' 1942By RUTH WHELAN'v Interclub . . .Chief social event of the weekendwas, of course, the Interclub Ball.Saturday afternoon Pat Smith, Anna-beth Hamity, Mary Lu Price, HelenArnold, and club-girl-for-a-night Weh-lan trooped down to the Congress tohave their pictures took by sundrynewspapers. Mr. Lovitt, by far thenicest publicity man in the middle-west, bought us all a drink in theGlass Hat, thereby starting the partyat five o’clock.Most of the women took the menthey might be expected to take, so wewon’t bother to name names. One ofthe Phi Beta Delta’s mother has todo with the Service Men’s center, soall the members of that club tooksoldiers or sailors. A good idea, too,since the boys seemed to have a goodtime.The Colonial Club orchestra did notplay as announced. At the last min¬ute it was discovered that all but sixof the men had been drafted, so an¬other band, which we can only identifyas belonging to an individual initialedJ. C. was hired. The drummer waswonderful, if somewhat frustrated. Hewould roll along unobtrusively forawhile, and then, when he just could¬n’t stand it any longer, would blastaway for a few bars even in the mid¬dle of “The Shrine of Saint Cecelia’’.On that it sounded good.The smoothest . . ... .looking women of the evening wereConnie Florian and Brooks Lewis, bothfeaturing red and green. The mostterrifying was Sybil Ferriter, whoalso looked smooth in a strapless cre¬ation which caused sharp intakings ofbreath every time she went by. AndyPark came next, complete with slick-ed-down hair and a flowing scarf.Jack Campiche, back from the armyfor the weekend, appeared strong andhealthy. The most ironically humorousincident since the war began occurredwhen the bill for his and Fay Tro-me If, okeep (hrnina.y(d Nero,fiddled hi^ way toward lander’s eating and drinking was pre¬sented. Jack carefully opened his billfold and guess what was inside—twotens and a one. Not one cent morenor less than $21.Stitch in Time . . .The chapter of the Red Cross atInternational House has its work cutK'M‘'We’ll preparesome of G T'ichoice steakson Uie blaze.’ Randall’s wife, oddly enough, told usabout the Coast Guard boy who cameinto the knitting session the otherday. “I just don’t know what I’m go-. (Continued on page three) Why We Need The Conference OnReligion And Social OrderTfie OctUUi THjaAoon.FOUNDED IN'rhe Daily Maroon i* the offleial atudentnewspaper of the Univenity of Chicaso, pub¬lished mornings except Saturday, Sunday, andMonday during the Autumn, Winter, andSpring quarters by The Daily Maroon Com¬pany, 6881 University Avenue. TelephoDM:Hyde Park 9222.After 6:80 phone in stories to our printers,The Chief Printing Company. 148 Wast 62ndstreet. Telephones: Wentwoith 6123 and 6124.The University of Chicago assumes no re¬sponsibility for any statements appearing inThe Daily Maroon, or for any contract enteredinto by The Daily Maroon.llie Daily Maroon expressly t^erves therights of publication of any material appear¬ing in this pai>er. Subscription rates: $2.76 ayear, $4 by mail. Single copies: three centsEntered as second class matter March 18,1908, at the post office at Chicago, Illinois,(iiidet the act of March 3, 1879.MemberPissocioied Golle6*ci!e PressDistributor ofG:)Ile6iate Di6eslBOARD OP CONTROLEditorialRICHARD HIMMEL, ChairmanJAMES HURTLEROBERT REYNOLDSBusinessEDGAR L. RACHLIN, Business ManagerRichard Bolks, Advertising ManagerHoward Kamin, Asst. Advertising Mgr.William Bell, Circulation ManagerLynn Tuttle, ComptrollerOfficeBARBARA GILFILLAN, Office ManagerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESRobert Lawson, Nancy Lesser, Beata Mueller,Philip Rieil, Chloe Roth, Minna SachsElizabeth Jane Waters, Shirley Smith andWerner BaumBUSINESS ASSOCIATESRichard Wallens, Alfred Bodian, Irene Forte,Milton Dauber, Muriel BurnsNight Editors: Eleanor Karlstromand “Bad boy” Lawson (An Editorial)The Campus Conference on Religionand the Social Order is sponsoring aseries on “What do men live by?” Wehope these meetings are well attend¬ed.Now is a time for more discussionof values, preferences, and ends ofaction. We once believed that the sci¬entific method was the one true needof society. Now we have a growingdoubt that the scientific method canever show us the right directions forendeavor. Science may help us toattain goals. It may show us how toachieve aims. But we must also havea common set of general preferencesthat can be criteria for making de¬cisions. Without the right social valuesas guiding principles, the scientificmethod may become destructive.Measured by the pure standard ofaccomplishing aims, the leaders of theAxis are the most scientific people inthe world today.Democratic ValuesPeople need to know, and under¬stand, and believe in a liberal demo¬cratic set of values. But religion,which might have been the greatvalue fixing mstitution in society, haslost most of its power and influence.The churches might have beenplaces in which men could have dis¬cussed and compared and formulatedtheir ideas of “right” and “wrong.”The churches might have been institu¬tions in which ideals and values mighthave been measured according to theneeds of a growing world.Churches FailedThe churches might have learnedthat the formulation of standards ofright living in a democratic state de¬pends ultimately on solving the prob¬lem: “How can people retain freedomto develop their full personalities and(still live in an orderly world where;men respect the rights of other men?”But the churches were seldom con¬cerned about this central problem.'Three forces tore organized religionaway from the discussion of valuesfor a social world. First were theprojectionists. They were bom of de¬featism. They saw in society aroundthem only the blackest misery. Theydespaired of ever having a betterworld. In mass daydreaming they setup strange worlds of their own calledHeaven and Hell and set out to glorifyor deprecate these new found play¬houses.They ignored misery and wretched¬ness on this planet and justified theirnegligence of these problems by point¬ing to the sweet afterlife that await¬ed those who knew the particularformulae for glorifying some partic¬ular God.Psuedo-MetaphysiciansWhen the projectionists did notruin religion, it too often fell intothe hands of the psuedo-metaphysi-cians. They were the ones who wor¬ried about such unimportant conceptsas God, Soul, and free will. They werenot satisfied to use these ideas assymbols for illustrating ethical prop¬ositions. So great was their enthusi¬asm for proving God, soul, and freewill that they too often neglected thesocial-ethical or value fixing functionof religion. They turned religion up¬side down. They used social ethics asa sort of appendage to the God ideain religion. While they were tremen¬dously interested in knowing thenature of God, they were quite satis¬fied with oversimplified and thor¬oughly inadequate ethical formula¬tions as, for example, the Ten Com¬mandments.Institutionalists ^When the value fixing function ofreligion survived both the projection¬ists and the psuedo-metaphysicians,it was too often destroyed by thedesiccated institutionalists. Unlike theprojectionists and the psuedo-meta¬physicians they were often interestedin the applications of religion to aworld of men instead of to a worldof star dust or a world of dialectics.But they became vested interests inthe industrial forms, in the symbolsand pageantry that might have beenadapted only to a long forgotten timein history. They forgot that the dutyof religion lies not only in clarifyingour preferences or values but also inadapting values to changes in the so¬ciety for which values are presumablymade. Instead they froze themselvesin ceremonies, in rituals, in high of¬fices. And in defending these ana¬chronisms the churches often becamefighters -for extreme conservatism andreaction.Social EthicsThe greatest concern of* religion should not be with the afterlife orwith God or with institutional formal¬ities. Religion should be concernedwith social ethics, with the things to¬ward which a good society should di¬rect its efforts.We hope that the conference on re¬ligion will discuss social ethics. Wehope it will not w;orry about glorifyingG(^, or attaining afterlife or withfollowing some ritual. We hope it willbe concerned about the kind of valuesCLASSIFIEDWantad—MannacripU. ate., to typa at hame.Reaaonable ratea. Briaraate 6200. Apt. 701.FOR RENT—COTTAGES oa Laka Miehican.240 milea from Chicaso, special ratea togroup of 4-8. Mrs. Luthera Seymour, Ur-bana, Ohio.FOR SALE—BLACK FORD COUPE—'36. rata¬ble seat, heater, good running condition, for$76.00—for information '■all Maroon office.Ext. 867.k-kltirit'k-k-k-kit1162 E. 63rdPuth Back SaahLEXPhone Dor. 1085Doors Open 12:30 •:• Show Starts IKK) DallyLAST TlldES TODAYTuas., February Ifiil BETTY if TYRONEGRABLE POWER"A YANK IN THE RA.F."andit FRED it MARYMAC MURRAY MARTIN"NEW YORK TOWN"V.'ED -THURS.February 11-12"HENRY ALDRICH RDR PRESIDENT"plusit JANE FRAZEEIn"SING ANOTHER CHORUS"** it it it it it it It it and preferences that must underlie aliberal democratic society..This is theonly problem that can justify a con¬ference on religion. In the long runit is the only problem that can justifyorganized religion.‘ J. B.New under-armCream DeodorantsafelyStops Perspiration1. Does not rot dresses or men'sshirts. Does not irritate skin.2. No waiting to dry. Can beused right after shaving.3. lostaotly stops perspirationfot 1 to 3 da^s. Removes odorfrom perspiration.4. A pure, white, greaseless,stainless vanishing cream.Sa Arrid has been awarded theApproval Seal of the AmericanInstitute of Laundering forbeing harmless to fabrics.Azrid is the LARGEST SELLINGDEODOAA26T. Try « Jar todaylARRID, At aO Mare* MlltaigtolUt good*(•Uoial04amlS94)an)iomostor fovoritGS"*by ArrowTOP FAVORITE: Arrow’sfamoas oxford-cloth shirt,Gordon. It comes in theslick wide-spread collar, inthe smooth hutton-downcollar, or in the regularArrow Cellar. It comes inwhite, colors, and stripes.Labeled Sanforized, fabricshrinkage less than oneI>er cent! Buy some today ISOLID SENDERS: Arrowneckties—a whole raftof new patterns, dozensof which yoa*ll be crazyabout. See *em today.W rinkle-resistant.SHIPvTS and TIESSomething You Won't Learn inBookS‘ • • Arrow shirts rate fops with 2 out of 3college men .. . and women. See them today at the Hub.YNffiWlttgSUte and Jacluon, CHICAGO • EVANSTON • OAK PARK . GARYTHE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 10. 1942 Page ThreeSimple To ConquerSyria In StationWagon, It Says Here Present LectureOn Lutheran List New FunctionsOf Home StudiesThere is practically no spot on theglobe which the university has nothad a finger on. And with the news¬papers and airwaves full of the namesof strange places, it’s fun and fas¬cinating to get first-hand reports onsome of them.Have you ever thought about Syriaand wondered what sort of spot it iswhich the British'took over last yearas a protecting link in the MiddleEast defenses ? Mr. Robert Braidwoodthinks about it everyday, and can tellyou practically anything you want toknow.Alluring LifeMr. Braidw’ood spent five years,from 1933 to 1938, in that very spotdigging about for the Oriental Insti¬tute, and is keen on returning, assoon as the “weather permits.” He,and his pretty young wife Lindalook more the quintessence of Voguethan archaeology, but they know thelay of the land, which proves thateven a newspaper reporter can bewrong. The life of an excavator inSyria, according to their descriptions,is more than just alluring; it’s heaven¬ly. But why?Well, the climate is mild and lovely,in the manner of Southern California.The food is good; you might even saypalatable, though meat is mostly mut¬ton, (a I’Anglaise), and vegetables andfruits usually are imported fromEgypt. Then, if you are an imposingmember of the Oriental Institute staff,you may have as many as three hun¬dred natives at your beck and call.Some of them can even be persuadedto carry water up a long steep trek sothat your mail-order portable showercan trickle on your head. The expedi¬tion lived in quarters that varied fromportable camps to adobe huts, and toall intents and purposes were immense¬ly comfortable all the time. They hada short-wave radio which brought inpractically anything, and were nevertoo distant to be in touch with civili¬zation.TransportationWhat about travel in the MiddleEast? It’s easy if you have a stationwagon, and not quite so easy if youtake the trains. Beirut and Egrypt tothe south have good connections withAnkara in the north, but since noth¬ing as spectacular as oil wells or theSuez Canal goes on directly in Syria,it’s a little harder to contact. PeopleBooks For VictoryBooks for the Victory BookCampaign can be left at the mainbookstore or the branch bookstorein Blaine Hall. This campaign istrying to collect and ship onemillion books to soldiers, sailors,and marines. It is sponsored bythe Red Cross, U.S.O., and theAmerican Library Association. Alltypes of books, both fiction andnon-fiction are welcome. However,no textbooks later than about 1936and no magazines, please. Anyonewho has no books to contributemay help by giving money whichwill go to buy them. Headquartersof the campaign is Kroch’s Book¬store downtown. did get there though. The Braidwoodsand their expedition were amazed intheir boots one day to see Donald Cul-ross Peattie, world famed travellerand biographer, who stopped in fortea.The expedition itself was a lucrativeone. They unearthed a lot of potteryof the veiy earliest productive age,known as Chalcolithic. Some of it isin the Oriental Institute this very min¬ute, being classified and studied. It’sgood looking stuff too, gals. But don’tI try to filch any. Mr. Braidwood hasseven pet blood-hounds.Johnson AsksInterclub ForSales GirlsSale of Defense Stamps has beengoing on for several weeks on thequadrangles under the guidance ofPunky Johnson. Stamps are sold inten and tw'enty-five cent denomina¬tions, and purchasers are providedwith the customary saving book.Although she has been assisted byseveral girls throughout the quarter,Punky is appealing to Interclub Coun¬cil to send her girls who would bewilling to take over a desk for theexpress purpose of stamp sales. It ishoped that defense minded people onthe quadrangles will continue theirpurchases as successfully as theyhave been doing since the beginningof the war.Those who have been helping Punky’are Marietta Moore, Joan Duncan,Dorothy Duncan, Sidney Strack, Dor¬othy Schmidt.Bazaar—(Continued from page two)ing to do,” he said. “I haven’t got aneedle and I haven’t got any threadand look at these buttons!” 'The vari¬ous faculty wives sat him down, tookoff his coat and sewed on all theloose buttons. This is an example ofprecedent-setting. It might be a wise,and certainly a patriotic, thing if allwomen carried with them a needleand some button thread to aid servicemen who are not clever with a needle.Even discounting the ever-presentCoast Guardsmen, there were an awfullot of uniforms on campus Monday.Two naval-looking gentlemen in thebookstore turned out to be the Mur¬phy boys, while army unifoi’ms couldbe seen us far and as often as onecared to look. The only explanationwe can offer is that maybe they wereleft over from week-end furloughs,except Corp. Ned Rosenheim who hada day off.Ah, poetry! . . .Last week a bewildered poetesscame in to ask if she could submit apoem for publication. There has beenno literary supplement of the Maroonfor at least two years, but we saidyes, not wishing to emburden Trendwith her. Today we received fromAnonymous Whosis some cinquains,which will provide the culture for the Views Of StateA lecture on “Luther’s 'Views ofChurch and State” by Dr. E. G.Schwiebert will be presented Fridayin Social Science 122 at 8.Gamma Delta, Lutheran StudentOrganization, is presenting Dr. Sch¬wiebert to refute a viewpoint whichhas recently been assuming import¬ance. There have been statementsmade as well as articles and bookswritten which have implied that thepresent German political philosophy isrooted in Luther’s attitudes concern¬ing the relationship of church andstate.Dr. Schwiebert is especially quali¬fied to deliver this lecture. He re¬ceived his Ph.D. degree from Cornellin 1930 and has since spent some timein Germany checking and discussinghis findings with reformation authori¬ties in that country. He is the au¬thor of Reformation Lectures pub¬lished in 1937, and an authority onLuther and the Reformation period.He is at present head of the depart¬ment of history and political scienceat Valparaiso University, Valparaiso,Indiana.Come FridayThere Will BeA Friday PartyKeystone is having its Friday the13th party Friday afternoon in theReynolds Club. Admission, 13c, en¬titles guests to free food, dancing tovictrola records, and the vision of 13beauty queens. First 13 men in getfirst dance with the 13 gkls. Dates areunnecessary.The tea dance for the coast guardSunday afternoon is at Ida Noyeswith dancing from three to six. Allgirls who would like to come signup at the Keystone meeting today inIda Noyes at 3:30, or notify BarbaraDeutsch.This afternoon’s Keystone meetingwill take part in the Campus Re¬ligious Conference. Ralph Gerard andRaymond Laurie will lead the discus¬sion on 'the subject “What do MenLive By?”day. As a reformed vegetarian. Anon¬ymous says:yellowdandelionsshall turn grey from horrorwhen they learn I ate theirgreen skirts for lunch,A propos of love:love isa grey old manwho delights in playingpractical jokes on his stupidchildren.There are lots of parties Friday.For thirteen cents Keystone offersbeautiful women, food, and music. Fora sum unknown to us, there is a C-dance. After the C-dance the Ellis co¬op offers beer, pretzels, sandwiches,cokes and anything else you can findfor seventy-five cents.Postscript. . .Nice, but not surprising, was theannouncement at the Deke party lastFriday night of Jean Hopkins andBob Thorburn’s engagement. Testtubes stuffed with appropriate “for¬mulas” and “chemical theories” com¬municating the news of the happyevent and of the forthcoming mar¬riage in June, were served in thedrinks as swizzle sticks.There will be a meeting Wed¬nesday at 2:30 in the TrophyRoom in Bartlett of all studentswho wish to sell tickets for theBlackfriar-Mirror Show. Each fra¬ternity is requested to nominateone or more freshmen for this job. Home Study department, nestled ina long spacious ante-room back ofthe University Bookstore, is blandlyignored by many Quadrangle stu¬dents. It gives rise to connotationsIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIICrossCountryBy JOAN WEHLENThe war has brought no cessationof studies to over 2000 English stu¬dents at Oxford. Now prisoners ofwar in Axis countries, most of themin Germany, they are continuing theircourses by correspondence. D. T.Terence, Master of Baliol, is theirfaraway tutor. Courses in engineer¬ing, commerce, and the arts areamong those being offered. A fewstudents are studying medicine, whileothers are majoring in chemistry orphysics. These students will sit fortheir degrees theoretically the sameday in June of this year as their fel¬low scholars in England. Books havebeen sent from England to assist thestudents and one prison camp has ac¬cumulated a library of more than 50,-000 books. The Germans have allow¬ed no books dealing with escapes orcontaining maps to enter the prisoncamps. Also banned are those bookscontaining technical informationwhich may be useful to prisoners whowish to escape.Step Up StudiesMeanwhile in America, students arealso continuing their studies at doublespeed. Step up programs have beeninaugurated at most colleges enablingstudents to finish the regular fouryear course in three years. The DailyTar Heel (now the Weekly Tar Heel)of the University of North Carolinasays that “Business as Usual” isdefinitely not the slogan for universi¬ties. “We must change our plans inany way that may prove of service toour country,” it goes on to state.Social LifeSocial life, however, seems to begoing on at nearly the usual pace formany universities. Iowa State en¬gineering students took time off fromtheir studies today to cast ballots forthe queen of their annual Engineers’Ball, while this Friday the 13thbrings Johnny “Scat” Davis to Pur¬due’s campus for the IF Ball. TheUniversity of Wisconsin celebrates its93rd birthday this week. Specialevent of the affair is a LivestockShow.Read ThisAnd WeepBeware, Friday the thirteenth! Foron that night, as the witching hourapproaches, there will be a scurryingof goblins and ghosts, seeking theperson most worthy of the title,“Homliest Girl of the Dance, Rulerof Witches Eternal, Supreme HighPotentate of Things Ethereal, andQueen of the Reynolds Club,” Theselecting board will be made up of;two ghosts, one goblin, a dwarf, twognomes, and a fairy, and all have re¬quested that their names be with¬held from publication.The Coronation March will be pro¬vided by Paul Benny and his orches¬tra. The music guarantees to be thesmoothest, most danceable heard oncampus this year, and features thesparkling piano of Mr. Benny himself.Among many engagements, the Ben¬ny boys list the Edgewater Beach andthe Chez Paree, and have just re¬turned from a number of weeks inMilwaukee night spots.Another feature of the evening willbe the drawing of a WashingtonProm bid by some lucky person. of ads seen in paper-pulp magazines.Nevertheless, Home-Study offers dis¬tinct services to students in residencewith several types of problems.As listed by the Director, Clem 0.Thompson, these people are: 1. Thosein need of a particular course (to fillcertain requirements) which they can¬not get because of program conflicts;2. Those who desire to persue coursesduring vacation periods; 3. Thosewho want to take courses in whichthey are especially interested, butcan’t “work in” because of sequencerequirements, etc. 4. Those studentswho for a variety of reasons mayhave to leave campus before the endof a quarter, or just before comple¬tion of a course.For these. Home-study is a way out.Round TableConfab FeatureThe highlight of the Campus Con¬ference on Religion and the SocialOrder will be the round-table discus¬sion to be held in the Oriental Insti¬tute on Wednesday at 8. DavidJ. Hefferman, Assistant Super¬intendent of County Schools; HoraceR. Cayton, Director of the GoodShepherd Community Center; and LeoHonor, Executive Director of theBoard of Jewish Education of Chica¬go, will discuss the conference ques¬tion, “What do men live by?”The$e Wilentinesly WCIENIELOKOgo straightto her heart i• A delightful Valentine forany lady fair... "Castel” withfour turrets . . . filled withLucien Lelong perfumes . . .Indiscrete, Impromptu.Care-free and Tailspin. $3.75 |5..'‘i0• She’ll love Lucien Lelong’samazing new "Balalaika”Solid Cologne. Rubs on, staysfragrant for hours. $2U. of C. Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.HYDE PARKRENT-A-CARSYSTEMNew De Luxe Ptymoutks, Radio and Heater Low Self Adjusting Ratesfor Pleasure, Business, Vacation, Weddings & FuneralsSpecial Commercial and Long Trip Rates Trips as Low as 3c per MilaDRIVE YOURSELFNO MINIMUM GUARANTEE5330 LAKE PARK AVE. CHICAGO PHONE PLAZA 33974 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSE'OX COILIOE STUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough, tntoHtivo, $t»nographic courtt—itarting January 1, A^l J, jufy 1, OctoPor 1.tnttrtsting Boohht tout frM, witnout obligation- writ* or phono. No ooneiton omployod.moserbusiness collegeEAUl MOSIt, J.D.PH.I.Kopdar Counoo/br Boginntrs. opon to HighSchool Graduotos only, tisrt lint Mondayof oach month. Adoancod Conroot otartany Monday. '>sy and Eooning. BooningConnos opon to man.114 S. Michigan Ave.« Chicago, Roedelpk 4947 Read Swedenborg's"DIVINE LOVEAND WISDOM"lOc in paperat University and otherbookstores DON'T THINKabOHf aHOME COOKED MEALeat one across the Midwayat theSt. George Hotel RestaurantLUNCHES 25c DINNERS 40 end 45cPage Four THE DAILY MAP'OON. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 10. 1942BADGERS SIHK MAROONSMidwaySportsDigestBy CRAIG LEMANThis column is aimed at all maleUniversity students. Most of you willprobably see service within two orthree years. As college men, you willplay an important part in the Ameri¬can armed forces. Do you realizewhat you ought to do to get ready?Do you prospective soldiers realizethat you’ll have to learn to get upbefore dawn, run two miles beforebreakfast, and work into your six¬teen hour day long drills, obstacleraces, intensive calisthenics, and testslike running as far and fast as youcan carrying on your back a man ofyour own weight. Have you stoppedto think that your enemy counterparthas years of intensive and mercilesstraining behind him? Do you recallGene Tunney’s striking statement:“Every front-line German soldiermust be able to run a mile with amachine-gun, set it up, dismantle it,and then run back with it?’’Needed A JoltIt took Pearl Harbor to jolt a fewhundred University students into be¬latedly starting their military train¬ing. It apparently will take nothingshort of an invasion to show them thenecessity of training their bodies formilitary life. Out of a possible 2853male students less than 200 took therecent Physical Proficiency tests atthe Field House. And only 200 havebothered to attend the Calisthenicsclasses given free by the AthleticDepartment.This is a shameful state of affairs.Lt. Commander Tom Hamilton, headof the Naval Aviation Induction pro¬gram, recently told an assembly ofcoaches and athletic directors thatair fledgelings, for the first threemonths of their training, did nothingbut develop their strength, endurance,agility, and physical prowess. ,Rigorous TrainingIn every other branch of the serv¬ice, though training is not always sointensive as this, trainees passthrough a gruelling grind of rigorousphysical training. In the Navy forexample, on enlistment every recruittakes a number of physical tests; ifhe fails any of them he is assigned toa weak squad and given hours ofextra work, losing his chance forrecognition and advancement.Since college men form so large apercentage of officers, they shouldenter in good physical shape. Reach¬ing the peak of efficiency so vital inmodem warfare is not a matter ofdays or weeks; it takes months.Varsity athle^s are almost the onlymen in this whole University who are Purdue WhipsGndermenThe Purdue track team managed towin 9 out of 12 of the possible firstsand defeat the Chicago track teamin its first meet of the 1942 indoorseason. Maroon thinclads excelledtheir opponents in the field events butPurdue was unusually powerful inthe track end of the meet.The loss of last year’s track cap¬tain, Jim Ray, and shotputter HughRendleman has left the team some¬what weak in the high hurdles andthe shot put.Chicago’s Bob Kincheloe and Kronof Purdue took the individual scoringhonors for the meet. Kincheloe wonthe pole vault, tied for first in thehigh jump, and took seconds in thebroad jump and the 70 yard low hur¬dles. Kron became the only athleteof the engagement to win more thanone event when he took firsts in boththe high and low hurdles.Although the Maroons lost the meetthey showed that they have a well-balanced team with considerablestrength in most events. Next Satur¬day at 2:30 in the Fieldhouse Chicagowill have a three-way meet withNorthwestern and Wisconsin. Thestruggle betweei the Maroons andWildcats is intensified by the fact thatChicago barely defeated Northwesternlast year in a dual meet.Pole vault—won by Kincheloe (C)Grimm (P) Rider (C) 12’4’’.Shot Put—won by French (P)Rider (C) Calhoun (P) 42’9”.Broad Jump—won by Dodge (P)Kincheloe (C) Jacobson (C) 20’11”.High Jump—won by Boyes, Kinche¬loe and Rider, Tie for first at 5’6’’.Mile Run—Won by Randall (C)Jentsch (P) Kemp (P) 4’28.5’’.60-Yd. Dash—Keim (P) Rapier (C)Bancker (P) 6.6,440-Yd. Dash—won by Anthony(P) Arnold (P) Wilner (C) 50.9.70-Yd. High Hurdles—won by Kron(P) Conant (P) Boyes (C) 9.2,Two Mile Run—won by Duesler (P)McLaughlin (P) Leggitt (C) 10:09.3.880-Yd. Run—won by Kemp (P)Randell (C) W’inkleman (C) 2:00.8.70-Yd. Low Hurdles—won by Kron(P) Kincheloe (C) Conant (C) 8.4.Mile Relay—won by Purdue Univer¬sity. 3:28.9.in that kind of condition. Daily in¬tense workouts, seldom found in In¬tramural or informal athletics, arethe only road to prime condition.The Conditioning Classes offer anefficient short cut to condition. Theyinclude concentrated, effective, en¬durance and muscle-building exerciseand provide all students the oppor¬tunity to get vital training at con¬venient hours.Be a patriot! Take advantage ofthem. Take the word of some ofChicago’s C men who have alreadyseen service and know their value.Every bit of work you do now to getyour body ready for military serviceis a smart investment.Schedule ForCampus Conf.Feb. 10, 12:30-1:20. Noon meeting.Professor Jerome Kerwin. “IndividualValues in Society”. Swift 200. 5:30-5:45, Chapel Evensong Service, led bythe Reverend George Aigner, directorof the Lutheran Student Association.8, Discussion-Group at the home ofDean Gilkey. Open to all. 5802 Wood-lawn Ave.8. Discussion group at Dean Gil-key’s home. 5802 Woodlawn. Open toall.8. Round-Table Discussion. DavidJ. Hefferman, Horace R. Cayton, LeoHonor. Oriental Institute.Wednesday, Feb. 11. 12, CalvertClub Luncheon meeting. HutchinsonPrivate Dining Room. 4:30, YWCAmeeting. Discussion group led by Wil¬liam Barrett Blakemore of the Divin¬ity School faculty. “Religion andWorld Crisis” Id Noyes. 5:30-5:45.Chapel Evensong Service led by RabbiHarry Essrig, director of the HillelFoundation. 8 Round table discussion.David J. Heffernan, Horace R. Cay¬ton, Negro Protestant leader. OrientalI Institute.1 Thursday, Feb. 12. 12:30-1:20. NoonL \ Fred Rehm. . . Badger GuardBarristers NewI-M Cage ThreatsPresenting a team loaded withfreshman stars and diversely famedcampus athletes, the Barristers servednotice on the simon-pure independentleague yesterday that there will be noquarter given or asked as they tookthe Burton 600 entry boys to thecleaners to the tune of 25 to 26.Another independent outfit hailingfrom the hallowed confines of the EllisCooperative, scuttled the InternationalHouse effort, 18 to 6, while the Psi U“D” five did not seem hesitant indirtying the so-far immaculate recordof the Delta Kappa Epsilon “C” teamnastily, 32 to 10.The distinction of being the bitter¬est fought brawl of the day goes un¬questionably to the Barrister-Burton600 game. Hank Ellman, fugitive fromDe Paul, flashed admirable form insalting away 12 big points for theglory of the lawyers, in company withteammate Joe Cullen, also a shininglight in Freshman cage circles, whohit for six. Haestra hit for nine mark¬ers and Werner for seven to lead the600 cause.The intellectuals from Ellis Housedisposed of the International Housesacrifice, chiefly because of the in¬dividual efforts of Kaufmann andBrant Haver who cornered betweenthem ten points. For Int House, theshow strictly belonged to Young,Franke, and Packard.The knee and the elbow came intoprominent use as weapons of warwhen the Deke-Psi U collision tookplace. There were occasions in theheat of the battle when there weremore forms on the floor than in theupright position. Long Jack Morristook the lion’s share of the Dekegravy by bucketing six points whilethe Psi Upsilon glory was more even¬ly distributed between Brothers Wad-lund, Senn, and Mathews.meeting. Swift 200. 5:30-5:45. ChapelEvensong service led by the Rev.John McCaw, director of the Inter-Church Council.Friday, Feb. 13. 12:30-1:20. Noonmeeting. Swift 200. Dean Gilkey. 5:30-6:45. Chapel Evensong service led byDean Gilkey. 8. Hillel Fireside. RabbiLouis Mann of Sinai Temple. “WhatIowa MermenBeat MaroonsLooking quite powerful in i^opening meet, the Hawkeye swimteam from Iowa City trounced theMaroon mermen,. 51-33.Bill Baugher won the 440 for Chi¬cago, and Captain Bethke took first inthe breast stroke, but Iowa made awaywith every other first place exceptthe medley relay, in which Paul Jord¬an, Baugher and Bethke came throughfor the Maroons. Baxter Richardsonshowed fine form in taking closeseconds in the 220 and 440, whileHank Heinichen again was second inthe sprints. Warren Schrcge. . . Star CenterCharles Epperson. . . Wisconsin ForwardPurdue Shuts OutWrestlers^ 30-0Purdue’s rugged Boilermakers in¬vaded Bartlett late last night andhanded the wrestling Maroons a de¬feat, their second of the season, 30to 0.Casey Frederick proved one of thebest small grapplers to appear on thequadrangles in several years, as henarrowly defeated Carroll Pyle in anexciting 128 pound match. In thenext heavier bracket fighting BuddyBates nearly had a win sewed upwhen Motoving injured his arm withthe score tied, but after a short restperiod, the Purdue man came back towin in an overtime, 14-10.Makes Life Worth Living”? IdaNoyes.^turday, Feb. 14. All day outingto Palos Park.Sunday, Feb. 15. 9-10:30. SundayBreakfast Chat. Dean Gilkey “Reli¬gion on the Quadrangles”. HutchinsonPrivate Dining Room. 11-12. Chapelservice. Dr. Wilhelm Pauck of theChicago Theological Seminary. Rocke¬feller Memorial Chapel. 7:20. ChapelUnion Meeting. Ida Noyes.BREAKFASTLUNCHEONDINNEROr AnytimeYou're always welcome at1004Restaurant1004 E. 55th—near EllisQuality Food.. .Reasonable Prices By PHIL RIEFFAll those people who deplorelynchings, low wages and longhours, might well spend a night,last night... at the Fieldhouse ifthey really want to find some tradi¬tional American cruelty worthy ofabolition, for Chicago’s hardwoodMaroons are undoubtedly the most op-pressed single group in the nation.Wisconsin played persecutor la.stnight, with an easy 54-20 victory overthe Norgrenmen.Got 60, ThoughThe exhibition itself was devotedexclusively to the question of whetherWisconsin will join the charmed circleof Big Ten teams that have garneredat least 60 points in an evening’sromp against the Maroons. CoachHarold “Bud” Foster’s squad, lastseason’s mythical national basketballchampions, started fast but did notkeep the sixty point pace.Johnny Kotz, the Badger key-manand Conference scoring leader, open¬ed up with four points, after threescoreless minutes had elapsed and EdScheiwe, guard, added a basket plusa free throw to run the count to 7-0,Wisconsin, with four minutes of thefirst period gone.Zimmie Opens ItDave Zimmerman, the compara¬tively small Maroon sophomore, whohas deservedly become the favoriteof a large section of the Chicagocrowd, finally assured everyone pres¬ent that the Maroons would “score to¬night” by feinting his guard out ofposition and looping in a short twopointer.The Badgers then turned in nineconsecutive points, before Bob Oak¬ley counted for Chicago, but theCrimson-clad outfit continued to reg¬ister on the above ration until thehalf-time total read: Chicago 9, Wis¬consin 26.Kotz was high-scorer on 18 digits,with Oakley’s seven topping the Chi¬cago column.TOTALSCHICAGO I WISCONSINis ft p| fg ft pFont, f. 11 l|Sultiv«n. f. 10 0Zimmerman, f. 1 0 l|KoU, f. 8 2 1Heinen, c. 0 0 l|Pattenon, r. 2 0Oakley, g. SI SjScheiwe, g. 2 2 1Wagenberg, g. 0 0 l|Rehm, g. S 1 1Nelaon, f. 0 0 OjScoU, g. 2 10Crosbie, t. 12 l|Schrage, g. S 1 0Krakowka, 0 0 OjLautenbach, g. 2 1 0Gophers TakeMeet; Chi. 2ndBy a scant 20 points, the Univer¬sity’s gymnasts lost to a strong Min¬nesota team, while defeating a weakerNebraska squad, in the three waymeet in Bartlett Gym Saturday. Thefinal score read Minnesota, 637; Chi¬cago, 617; and Nebraska, 321.Win Side HorseMinnesota took first and second onthe Horizontal Bar to win that eventwith 115.5 points. Earl Shanken, theonly Chicago man to place in thisevent, took third with 34 points. Earland Loken of Minnesota tied for firstin the side horse with 39 points a-piece. Other members of the univer¬sity squad piled enough points up,however, to win this event by a scantthree points.Courtney Shanken and Jim Degansewed up the Flying Rings for theMaroon team, while the Minnesotasquad took the parallel bars event bytwo points. The Shanken twins teamedup to win the long horse event by asubstantial margin, but the meet wentto Minnesota with the utter defeatof the Maroon Squad in the Tumbling.Degan, Berger, GoodJim Degan and Jack Berger supple¬mented the Shanken twins by turningin their best performances this year.Highlight of the meet, from a humaninterest standpoint, was the LongHorse event; Earl Shanken is theNational Intercollegiate Champ onthis piece of apparatus, and there hasbeen considerable friendly rivalry onthis piece of apparatus between Earland his brother Courtney. For eightyears Earl has held the edge on thispiece in every meet, but SaturdayCourtney, aided by a new move hehad developed during the last week,took first in the Long Horse, beatingEarl, 38-37.