Hus UoUUj iriGJiooifi wVol. 43, No. 2 Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1942 PRICE THREE CENTSPost War ProblemsExplained By SchmittBy BILL LETWINAmong the many suggested solu¬tions to the post-war problems of po¬litical reconstitution of Germany, thatof Bernadotte Schmitt, Andrew Mac-Leish Distinguished Service profes¬sor of Modern History, has beenamong the most disputed. Since thisparticular issue appears to assumethe utmost importance among gen¬eral post-war problems, I yesterdayinterviewed Prof. Schmitt.war.'VERSAILLES TREATY FAILED“Since the Germans believe inforce, and worship force; if we punish^them, they may abandon force as alethod, once they underst^and that thePother side has a greater force. Nat¬urally we shall have to maintai'i such' force after the war is over. It may benecessary to police Germany for sometime.‘There is an analogy which indi¬cates the practicality of punishment,lit exists in the case of NapoleoniciFrance. After the invasions of Francefin the decade 1810-19, the FrenchLturned away from war and becamefpacific.”GERMANY REJECTED DEFEATConsidering again the effect of theI Versailles treaty, “it is possible thata feeling of revulsion with war ex-1 isted among the German workersafter the last war. But the middle-class and the Junkers were sore onlybecause they had lost, not becausethey had fought. I do not think thatithe German people ever accepted thedefeat. All they wanted was revenge.This applied, I would judge, to atleast 80% of the people.“Germans can not be cured of their^militarism by kindness and bribes.[Punishment is the only effectivelethod to prevent further outbreaks,le German Army for a long timelas been the most popular institutionIn Germany. Conscription was neverdewed in Germany, as it has been,[in England and America as at best alecessary evil. On the contrary, theyliked it.“Thus to speak of negotiating the^eace with the German Army as dis-ict from the Nazi Government isitirely wrong. The Nazis have em-fodied the spirit of the Germanirmy; they have simply been moreEfficient about it.”PARTITION UNNECESSARY^Punishment does not, in Prof,thmitt’s mind imply national dis-lemberment. “I am not one of those^ho believe in partition of Germany”,[e stated, “merely because I believelat the parts would attempt to re-Inite. The borders imposed by theVersailles Treaty were essentiallyiound.“Most importantly, I am against./ing to impose democracy, or anyther form of government on Ger-lany. The attempt of the Versaillesreaty in this respect was a failure,am for making Germany politicallyipotent and then letting it stew ins own juice.” Military Inst.Active AgainThis QuarterProf. Schmitt’s essential assump¬tion is “that it is the congenital dis¬position of Germans for war and mil¬itarism that is responsible for this The University’s Institute of Mili¬tary Studies, established in the Au¬tumn of 1940 to “advance civilianknowledge of military history, theory,and practice”, this Tall goes into itsninth active quarter. Open to malestudents, faculty. University em¬ployees, and others in the Chicagoarea, the Institute is again offeringits Basic Pre-induction Military Train¬ing course, and five supplementaryadvanced courses.The essential basis of the peace,then, is punishment of Germany. “Ifwe punish them, make them see thatwar does not pay, they may of theirown free will come to believe in thevirtues of peace. If my plans wereaccepted, we would take away theirplanes, their ships, and disband theirArmy. True, the Versailles Treatymade some attempt at such action.However the Versailles Treaty failedbecause it was a compromise betweenthe idea of punishment and the ideaof a liberal, conciliatory peace. 'Thistime, it will above all be necessary totake away from Germany the fac¬tories capable of producing military/materials, as well as the stocks ofthose materials remaining at the endof the war. The basic course will be given totwo groups of 550 men each, meetingin the University Fieldhouse at 56thand University. Section 1 will meettomorrow night for the first time,continue to meet Thursdays, from7:15-10:15. Section 2 will commenceFriday, meeting at the same hours.Registrations are restricted to 650 foreach group because of limitations ofthe staff and of fieldhouse space.Advanced CoursesInformation about the advancedcourses, which are open only to mem¬bers of the Basic Course, will be an¬nounced at the second session of theBasic Course. These will deal with:Mathematics Basic to Military Serv¬ice, Map and Aerial Photograph Read¬ing, German Military Organization,and Rifle Marksmanship, in additionto a training course for instructorsgiving review in command, method ofinstruction, etc.The material covered in the BasicCourse includes work on the organiza¬tion of the army; military law; mili¬tary courtesy and customs of theservice; military sanitation; mapwork; rifle marksmanship; techniqueof rifle fire; new infantry drill regu¬lations; motor convoy movements;communications; interior guard; mil¬itary police; gas protection; scoutingand patrolling; elementary tactics andtactical exercises. Objective of thecourse is to give civilians a chance tobecome acquainted through practicewith basic military subjects.Benefits All“It is an introductory course formen who have had no military train¬ing at all and a refresher course formen who have had previous militaryexperience”, an Institute bulletinstates. “It will be helpful to men whomay be drafted, or who enlist vol¬untarily in the Army, Navy, MarineCorps, or the Illinois Reserve Militia.However, these services assume no ob¬ligation to those taking the course”.For the Institute’s courses, whichare entirely supplementary to the reg¬ular curriculum of the University, nocredit is given. Registration for theAutumn quarter’s courses are nowclosed except for a few places in theFriday night group, which will bekept open for students only until 3:00today. Interested students should ap¬ply before 3 at the Institute office,Cobb 403.Private MaroonPrivate Maroon is a new memberof the campus family of publica¬tions. Private Maroon is publishedby the Alumni Association. PrivateMaroon is distributed to membersof the University who are now inservice.Well then—hurry like anythingand rush all the names, addresses(and phone numbers if you aresending material about enlistees inthe WAACS or the WAVES) tothe office of Private Maroon, Alum¬ni Association Faculty Exchange.If you, do, when you are in service,and it may not be as long as youthink, your days will be cheeredby the presence of Private Maroonin your mail. Do it now! 1943 I F BallScheduled forDrake HotelThe 1943 edition of the annual In¬ter-fraternity Ball will be held thisyear in the Gold Coast Room of theDrake Hotel, I-F Council head JohnCrosby announced yesterday. Thedance, which will be the last majorformal before gas-rationing Is usher¬ed in, vrill feature the music of JimmieLanceford’s orchestra.Leaders Not ChosenLeaders for the affair have not yetbeen chosen, Crosby said. For the sec¬ond consecutive year the affair willnot be held on Thanksgiving eve, atradition of long standing broken lastyear. The dance in the past has al¬ways been a high-spot on the Univer¬sity’s social calendar. Last year theaffair was held in the Stevens GrandBallroom (a contingency obviatedsince its demise into an army cafeter¬ia), with the music furnished by Bob¬by Burns and his orchestra. In ’40the Sherman Ballroom and CharlieBarnett’s orchestra were used.Only Frat MenAttendance at the dance is limitedto fraternity men, with the minor ex¬ception of the last two years, whenpasses were given to a few minoroutstanding barbarians. The danceleaders, who will be announced some¬time in the near future, are generallyprominent University seniors.Concert ForWar ReliefForeshadowing the opening meetingof the campus Russian War ReliefCoriimittee on Wednesday, October 7,a concert will be given for the benefitof that organization by the AlmanacSingers at the Medical and DentalArts Building Auditorium, 185 NorthWabash, on Saturday evening, Octo¬ber 3, at 8:30. The campus groupswings into action with their meetingscheduled to be held in Lounge A ofthe Reynolds Club at 4:00 P. M., Mar¬jorie Eckhouse, secretary of the cam¬pus body, announced today.Musicians FeaturedThe Saturday concert is to be givenby an interesting group of musicians,who compose and sing their own ma-ierial. They include Bess Lomax,(daughter of the curator of folk musicat the Library of Congress, who picksa mean mandolin. Butch Howes, sonof the author of “Dark Frigate”, ArtStern, aesthetics expert, and CharlesPolacheck, only Chicagoan, whoselast work on campus was the direc¬tion of the Music Department’s pro¬duction of Gluck’s opera “IphigeniaJn Tauris”.Daiches and Sprague iThe Wednesday meeting will openwith greetings from David Daiches,faculty sponsor of the group, an ad¬dress by Ver Lynn Sprague of theWashington Square Methodist Churchin New York City following. Dr.Sprague will speak on the importanceof Russian War Relief. Refreshments(tea and cookies), music of the RedArmy Chorus on records, and" plansfor the quarter complete the proposedagenda.Recruit Donors,Stamp SalesmenBlood donors, war stamp salesmen,and U.S.O. workers are still being re¬cruited by the Student War Council.In addition, the War Council is look¬ing for clerical' workers and artistsand writers interested in doing pub¬licity.Since the council was founded lastyear it has conducted several success¬ful money-raising drives, including awar stamp rally and an ambulancedrive. This year the Council is con¬centrating on selling stamps in Man-del corridor and sending hlood donorsto the American Red Cross bloodbank. They are also supplying clerksfor several University offices whichare too understaffed to do War re¬search.The War Council’s aim is to haveevery student in the University signup at their table in Mandel corridorfor some type of work. New CommissionInto Three GroupsD. A. Acting inShaw's Play,Candida, PoorThe precept prohibiting the exam¬ination of the gift-horses teeth, is un¬fortunately non-applicable to works ofart, or so called works of art. So,although admission to D. A.’s produc¬tion of Bernard Shaw’s comedy,“Candida,” was free, there is no obli¬gation to consider the performancegood.The failure was in the acting. Let’stalk about acting. The idea behindacting is elementary. The playwrightin his more normal moments is tryingto tell us a story about how peoplelive. Sometimes about why people live.But the point is that he is concernedwith life, and more importantly withpeople. The play is yet to be writtenabout malaria bugs; and if it werethey would still be represented aswalking on tWo feet and wearing theirhearts somewhat higher than theirpockets. The actor is thus intended bythe playwright, and usually by thedirector, to represent a living humanbeing. The way most people indicatelife is by bodily and facial expression.Corpses are still and placid. Whenrigor mortis sets in they jerk theirmuscles violently.Cast Nearly DeadWell, there was very little life inthe actors in Monday’s presentationof “Candida,” albeit a good d‘ al ofmuscle-jerking. The horrible suspicionis thus aroused that the cast was closeto four hours past dead.This is not uniformly true. NormaEvans, playing the lead, did a re¬spectable job, both of abstract actingand of interpretation of Shaw’s char¬acter. At times, Frank Grover, castas Morrell, Candida’s husband; andDon Hurwich, cast as her father, comeout of their shrouds and played livepeople. The minor characters, JimChereso as Lexy, the young curate,and Joan Simonini as the typist, re¬cited their lines without much mishap,and without much inspiration.Marchbanks MisinterpretedBut the great bouquet of thornsgoes to Lester Schiff’s version ofMarchbanks. Shaw's Marchbank ad¬mits that he is a weakling, but admitsit with dignity.. .he doesn’t think it isan important consideration. Schiff’sMarchbanks was a weakling too, but asniveling weakling. According to thisinterpretation, much of the basic pointof the play is confused and distorted.It was Shaw’s idea that March-banks, if immature, was neverthelesssincere. Schiff’s acting portrayedMarchbanks as a fake, and a prettydisgusting one at that. If there is oneline which summates Marchbanks’character it is the one in whichMarchbanks scolds Candida for hav¬ing hurt Morell, even though in sodoing he jeopardizes his own case. Theway Schiff spilled the lines, it cameout funny, instead of quixotic.Hereby recommended that Universi¬ty Dramatic Associations which in¬sist on acting “Candida” read twobooks; “Principles of Drama” byStanislausky and “Candida” by Ber¬nard Shaw.Hillel MixerThe Hillel League of the Univer¬sity of Chicago makes a belatedentry into the orientation programof the quadrangles this comingSunday, October 4, when theystage a mixer for Freshmen andTransfer students in the lounges ofthe Reynolds Club. A varied pro¬gram utilizing all of the ReynoldsClub’s many facilities has beenplanned for the benefit of the Mix¬er guests.Refreshments, rumored to be inthe near vicinity of cider anddoughnuts, with malt juice andskittles running a close last, arebeing dangled as bait, if any suchis needed. A mysterious concoctionknown as the Hillel Surprise hasalso been mentioned. By CHLOE ROTHThe newly formed StudentPolitical Commisgion had itsfirst meeting yesterday, presid- ^ed over by temporary chairmanBill Dodds. The organization isdivided into three groups: theVolunteer Poll Watchers, headedby John Ballard; a discussiongroup, headed by John Hoving;and a Partisan Politics Group,headed by Philip Rieff.The Volunteer Poll Watchers groupwill train and distribute poll watchersto do work at the polls on electiondays. The discussion group will ar¬range for forums to discuss currentproblems with students and facultymembers. The Partisan Politics Groupwill set up political ideals and thenchoose candidates to support who liveup to these principles.Block SpeaksThe audience present at the meet¬ing was first addressed by HenriBlock, Frenchman and research as¬sociate in the Department of Econom¬ics. Mr. Block compared the politicallife of American students with thatof European students, and pointed outthat we were far behind them. Hesaid that American students lose toomuch time learning without under¬standing. He demonstrated the influ¬ence of European students in politicsand said that American studentscould be a powerful political force inthe United States if they would wakeup and stir. He said that Americanstudents should learn more about theirlocal politics, instead of just com¬plaining about it.NO IVORY TOWERThe group was then addressed byT. Walter Johnson of the Departmentof History. He gave suggestions forimproving the local political scene.He said that we should work to getback to the days when politics was arespected profession. He warned theorganization against forming on toonarrow a basis, and advised them tobe non-partisan. He also advised thatthe organization should be formedwith an eye to the future, and noton any immediate problem. Mr. John¬son closed with the observation thatnothing is more despicable than thestudent who stays completely withinhis ivory tower.Dodds States AimsMr. Dodds stated the aim of theStudent Political Commission to bethe development of good government.The group has a three-fold plan ofactivity; to train and distribute pollwatchers, to train precinct officers towork during campaigns, and the sup¬ervision of discussion of current andpost-war problems. All students in¬terested in poll-watching are invitedto a meeting Friday at 4:30 in SocialScience 122. :There will be a meeting fornew students and transfers inthe Maroon office, LexingtonHall, Friday, October 2, at jfe3 :30. All those who signed thel plist at the tea and all others ■T'who are interested should bejypresent. This is the last callfor Maroon workers as planswill be developed at the meet¬ing for training classes, whichare a prerequisite to member¬ship on the Maroon staff.•^age TwoMilk THE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 30. 1942Harding toMcCormick-As a Fascist of long service andone otherwise gifted with consider¬able political cunning, Col. Robert R.McCormick is making damn sure thatthe Republican party is saved fromsigning itself away to international¬3 .ism and democracy during the post¬war reconstruction era. His gauleitersin Congress and the Party, Brooksand Day, have seen to it that thestate’s Republican platform says lessthan nothing about post-war recon¬struction aside from making the samevague promises that America’s notedideal of Republican statesmanship,Warren G. Harding, made in his cam¬paign speeches of 1920.How Goes It?And how goes it on this old earthtoday?How goes it at Stalingrad?What is the score in China?And how many free men can India’sjails hold?What are the quotations on Jews inPrance today?How many Fascists in Rome, Ber¬lin, Tokio? How many Fascists inLondon, Chicago, Vichy, Middletown,Ohio? How many Fascists in Stalin¬grad?How goes it, you all-out-for-10%war Americans? How come the Bearsand what chances for the Cards?The Hunter andThe Hunted-It is a strange hunt.One man stalks a nation.Yet, because of the utter vicious¬ness of the one man’s belief, thehunter and the hunted seem almostevenly matched.Bemadotte Schmitt seeks to indictthe German people with a “congenitaldisposition” for war and militarism.He claims that this trait of the Ger¬man people is responsible for the war.He wishes to punish the Germannation, supposing the United Nationswin the war, by making it politicallyimpotent and “then letting it stew inits own juice.”We, too, wish to punish the Germannation. But we wish to punish certainparts of the German nation. Thereare two Germanies. Prof. Schmittneed have no fear. We will punish thepart that vexes the world. The Ger¬man people will suffer as if they werein hell before this war is over. Theywill suffer indiscriminant bombing oftheir cities and their homes day afternight, night after day. They will reapa bitter harvest of hatred, misery,cruelty, psychic depression, torturefor women and children, despair.Despair.Despair is what we seek. And morethan despair we seek the completedestruction of German faith in theirFascist government and all its works.The Reich will not be spared abjectdefeat in this people’s war, but it isalso the German people’s war. Theirlife^ under the heel of Fascism and itscounter-parts of Monarchism andPrussianism will be totally destroyedas a factor in German national ex¬istence.The enemy we face is no people.It is the class of wolves that haveheld decisive power in Germany eversince its birth as a state.The world was tired in 1919, andthe people were coiisuiiied by one pas¬sion : to forget. So the Kaiser ab¬dicated and the generals remained.This time Fascism and the generalswill hold to a strict accounting of thehorror they have loosed on the world.The people of the people’s war willnever forget again. The Fascists, the Monarchists, thereactionaries will not be allowed towithdraw from the terrible scenew'hich they created. They will not beallowed to let the people and the peo¬ple’s political movements take the re¬sponsibility for this war on theirshoulders.The Monarchists, the Generals, thereactionaries must take their medi¬cine. They will not be allowed to stepaside, and save their skins and reputa¬tions by pulling a brief vanishing act.The roots of the “congenital dis¬position” of the Germans for war andmilitarism, the power of the army, thepower of the Junkers, of the ^ in¬dustrialists and the middle-class, mustbe pulled out of German soil.That should satiate even so fiercean old warrior as Prof. Schmitt.But, unfortunately, we cannot allowProf. Schmitt to lop off the creativepower of a great people. The war towhich America is called is a people’swar, a war against the poverty, pow¬er, ignorance and injustice that hasdriven humanity to complete scientificanimalism. We refuse to match Fas¬cist barbarism with American bar¬barism. We refuse to degrade theGerman people on the grounds thatthey themselves are responsible forthis war.We are responsible. The English,the French, the Poles, the Bohemians,the Arabians. The poor people of theworld are responsible for allowingbarbaric systems and their leaders tolead them to this unparalleled worldmisery.One phrase in Prof. Schmitt’s dic¬tum to Bill Letwin, printed on pageone, interests us particularly: “It ispossible that a feeling of revulsionwith war existed among _ Germanworkers after the last war. But themiddle-class and the Junkers weresore only because they had lost, notbecause they had fought. I do notthink that the German people everaccepted defeat. All they wanted wasrevenge. This applied, I think, to atleast 80% of the people.”As Prof Schmitt well knows, thesomewhat less than miliaristic, Prus¬sian Social-Democrats were the coreof the popular German political move¬ment from 1919 to 1924. But theArmy and the old state elite remainedin a position of power. If the workerswere Socialist-Democratic, and if theworkers make up the great bloc of thepopulation, than how. Prof. Schmitt,could at least “80%” of the “people”thirst for revenge.If Prof. Schmitt would indict any¬one let him indict the elite groups ofall the Western powers who drove theGerman people right back into theclutches of the second oldest profes¬sion on earth.P. R. Bazaar Nominates aBeauty QueenENTER THEFOUR YEARCOLLEGEThe- Four Year College Weekly to¬day becomes part of the Daily Ma¬roon. Because Four Year College ac¬tivities and studies are so closelyallied with those of the rest of theUniversity, it has been decided thatthe doings of this group should bereported with the news of the com¬munity.The Four Year College will, in allprobability, have its own staff tocover its activities. This group ofreporters will be under the NewsEditor of the Maroon itself, but willwork almost entirely on their own,and will be recruited from the classesof the h'our Year College.We, of the staff of the Daily Ma¬roon, hope that the Four Year Col¬lege students will feel free to considerthis their paper and the spokesmanfor their activities and opinions.(Theyare welcome to work on the paper.We hope they will.THE EDITORS By MINNA SACHSTwo years down and two years to go....that’s where I sit today. Justlike the little boy in A. A. Milne whosat half way up the stairs, and halfway down, and not quite in the mid¬dle. In the meantime, life marches onand I promise no dirty digs as lastyear.Welcome, welcome, and helloFreshmen....there were lots of kicks lastweek, because there was no gossipabout the new class. Well, okay. Thiscolumn’s vote for beauty queen goesto Lyn Hill who has auburn hair,good legs and lots of dimples. She’snice, too, by golly. Louise Harvey wasenjoying life at the Reynold’s Clubdance following “Candida,” but whythe fed mittens? Afraid of soilingyour hands when dancing with eligi¬ble males, Louise? Tim Starels is afine young man, who says his name isGeorge, and signs himself Joel. Thenwe have Bud Gordon, who was whip¬ping around the one and only shop,sporting red hair and a pink tie. Andthe little blond number who floatsaround looking blase and also lookingfor men. She seems to be doing okeh.Bill Letwin wants a plug for LaurelParker. Bill is a bright boy who wroteour interview with BemadotteSchmidtt on the front page (plug).“Candida”...University Players say it wasgood. I didn’t see it, but a differenceof opinion makes the world go around.Speaking of the world going around.Keystone was resurrected last nightby B. J. Tullis who has a flat tire onher newly acquired bike.The C-Shop.. .was real gay after U.P. exhaust¬ed itself. People were running in andout, like John Crosby still with BettySeifreid, Janet Peacock, number twoof the three Peacocks, who was sport¬ing George Krakowka, lots of Sigmas,like D.A.’s Bohnen and Mademoisellemagazine’s Jane Moran, Betsy Wal¬lace who is not a Sigma, I don’t wantto confuse youse. (I couldn’t resist thepoetry). And who is the little manwho was whipping a red shirt and^reen tie a la Santa Claus, only thisjoker substituted a cigar for reindeer.Most attractive in a repulsive sort ofmanner. Even the old master DickHimmel arrived to see the show, thegreat social life of the University andthe Freshmen. He approved of a littlegal in a purple sweater by name ofLulu. Not that Lulu is the type hername implies.Congrats to... B. Kuh and J,‘ Scheidler whowore B. Kuh and J. Scheidler outwhile running around playing mam¬ma and pappa to the new arrivals.Betsy, may I add, is doing things solothese days, not in a twosome asformerly reported. (J. Scheidler of theBeta Scheidlers is still looking fondlyat Betty Fanning, who sports a fra¬ternal badge.)The C Dance\...I ain’t no social, but MarilynRobb reports that Maggerstad andJacob are still being Maggieish andDickish, Stud Ruml was on the out¬side looking in, no free tickets andI’ll that was the first time thatever happened to Ruml. Ann Tellerwith Alan, whose last name I haveforgotten. For a half an hour ro¬mance, mind you Romance, invadedInt, House, for all the lights wereturned out and soft moosic was thething. The Steirer brothers were stag,methinks. Midge Carlson and a younggentleman,. Lois Strom well of Capand Gown with a man from off cam¬pus, and hundreds of uniforms mak¬ing ail the nice U. of C. women gaga.There’s something about a soldier thatgpt« us dames.This T.B.!.. .is typical of all Traveling Ba¬zaars. It has lots of names and noth¬ing else much. Not that all you peo¬ple on the quadrangles who have beengiven names aren’t lovely, but some day you will get real high class gos¬sip with a snooty title and lotsa gram¬matically correct English. By theway, Mike Rathje is still plenty swell,and with Bob Oakley this season.Not to bring... myself into things, but havingfinished 724 words, I find that I havesaid “I” instead of “we” in propereditorial style. Like the four boys whoplayed poker in the front row of Man-del all through “Candida,” there isn’tanyone to stop me, at least not with¬in twenty feet.Come.. .all ye workers to the Maroonmeeting Friday at 3:30. JeanneCleary will probably tell you all aboutit, so come and play with us and ourtypewriters in Lexington Hall.And May I AddMaroon policy has always said “novested interests”—but I have one. Sobe prepared to heqr about the StudentWar Council often. It’s a worthwhileorganization. 4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSEroe coLiioi studints and okaduatisA tktfomgk, Mtmmphie counts•^wriU^rpkomt, No ooltaion omploytd.moserBUSINESS COLLEGErAui Moseit, j.D„rH.i.RmtAarComnmfbfBogi$uun,opoHto HighSekoot Grmduatm only, start first Mon&yof Mek month. Advaneod Coursat startany Mondsn. Day and Evening. EveningCourses open to men.116 S. Michigan Ava., Chicago, Randolph 434Fn€LJonEVES CflREFULLV EXflminEDFOR THE ONLY FAIR* OP EYESYOU WILL EVER HAVE . . .• Over 25 Years Experience• Finest Testing Equipment• And the BEST MaterialsAir ConditionedDr. Nels R. Nelson1138 ERST 63rd.ST.W E L C O MAGAINSTUDENTYou may be only a Freshman on campus, buteveryone is treated alike AT STINEWAY'SAT Enjoy a Delicious BreakiastLuncheon, or DinnerTHE MOST POPULAR DRUG STOREON CAMPUSREASONABLE PRICESI PROMPT AND EFFICIENT SERVICESTINEWAY DRUGSCor. 57th Street and KenwoodTEXTBOOKSNEW and USEDand aU studentSUPPLIESWOODWORTH'SBOOK STORE1311 E. 57th St. Open EveningsNear Kimbork Ave. Phone Dorchester 48002 Blocks East oi Mondel Hall ^3THE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 30, 1942 Page ThreeSmith For DurationThe College has lost—^for the dura¬tion—its popular Assistant Dean ZensL. Smith. The University has grantedMr. Smith a leave of absence so thathe .may assist in the teaching ofphysics and mathematics to air corpsofficer candidates from the Armyand Navy, under the new C.A.A.However, this is a repetition of hisWorld War I career, where he was acaptain in the American Air Force.In spite of this background, he willbe obliged to devote all his time tohis great contribution to the war ef¬fort. Since 1918 there have been manytechnological advances, especially inthe field of aeronautics. This necessi¬tates an enormous amount of learningand preparation in order,to becomeexpert in the field.Mr. Smith was born in Kansas City,Mo. He spent most of his boyhoodon the Canadian border; eventuallyihe moved to Quincy, where he attend-college and received his B.A. Heworked a year and a half on a Cali¬fornian ranch after’ leaving college,[n 1911, he was offered a position in[the mathematics department of aQuincy high school. After teachingfor two years, he became principalof the school.* Enlisted in 1917He enlisted in the Army in March|1917, ten days before the U.S. wentto war. He was given a commission at[Fort Sheridan, and was later appoint-an instructor for the second FortIheridan camp. He sailed for Francele following February. While at seale was transferred to the air service,[e spent a month in England; he waslen sent to* France. There he wasattached to the French ai*my forslamation 'of planes, motors, etc.fhen the Armistice came, he becamelison officer between the AmericanJrmy and the French people.Returning to America in June, 1919,became a salei^man for the Inter-fational Harvester Company and theloss Mfg. Company of New York. Af-sr working there four years, he ob-lined a position in the productionapartment of the First National Mo-ion Pictures Corporation, where herked for three years. In 1926 her^t to Galesburg to accept a positionassistant to the President of Knox)llege.M.A. in 1931In 1931 he received his Masters de-from the University of Chicago.[two years later, he completed all thelirements for a Ph.D., except forI e thesis. For two years he taughtMorgan Park Junior College, andthe fall of 1936, he came to theFniversity of Chicago as a memberthe staff.'The Daily MaroonFOUNDED IN 1902The Daily Blaroon is the official studentiwspaper of the University of Chicago, pub-led Wednesdays during the Autumn, Win-and Spring quarters by The Daily Ma-Company. 6831 University Avenue. Tele-one: Hyde Park 9222.fter 6:30 phone in stories to our printers.Chief Printing Company, 148 West 62ndTelephones: Wentworth 6123 and 6124.University of Chicago assumes no re-nsibility for any statements appearing inDaily Maroon, or for any contract en-into by The Daily Maroon._ Daily Maroon expressly reserves thets of publication of any material appear-,in this paper.Pubseription rates: $1.00 a year, $1.60 bydl. Single copies 3 cents,ntered as second class matter February1942, at the post office at Chicago, Illinois,T the act of March 3, 1879.Memberissocierted CDllediole FVessDistributor ofOollebiote DibeslUtOBIAL BOARD:I Philip Rieff—Editor in chiefMinna Sachs—News EditorBeata Mueller—Feature EditorChloe Roth—Make-up EditorBetty Waters—Copy Editor «IBINESS BOARD:' '^William Bell—Business ManagerAlfren Bodian—Advertising ManagerJoan Wehlen—Circulation ManagerB’len Tuttle—ComptrollerlITOBlAL ASSOCIATES:ferner Baum, Jeanne Cleary, Beth Carney,^n Blake. William Letwin, Charlotte■ton, James MacLear, Ray Poplett, Mary-obb. Barbara Gilfallan, Sec. to the Editor.Night Editors: Marge O’Brienand D. L. Polacheck ...RATIONED DEANAnnouncemenls!For r. y. C.1. TUITION deadline is Friday, Oc¬tober 2—3:30 P.M. Read StudentManual carefully on this point.2. Students who drive automobilesto school will please secure a permitfrom the College Office, 5810 Wood-lawn, to be hilled out and signed byparents.3. PHOTOGRAPHIC SCHEDULE:Wednesday, Oct. 7 and Thursday,Oct. 8 have been set' for photographsto be taken. All new students in thefirst two years, 11th and 12th gradeentering for the first time, should re¬port during one of their free periodson those days to the Photographic De¬partment of Billings, 950 Eact 59thStreet, Room 32, northeast corner ofthe basement between the hours of9-11:45 A.M. or 2:30-4:30 P.M.4. there will bt no charge for thephotographs on the days scheduled,but after October 8, there will be acharge of 50 cents.If for any reason you cannot reportto have your picture taken on the daysscheduled, report that fact to MissEvans at once.6. Note change in attendance proce¬dure: In the Student Manual, Page 6,item 2 should read—“Before attendingclasses, take the excuse to the officeof the Laboratory School Physiciansin BLAINE HALL—BOYS should goto Room 310 and Girls to 283.”6. A first and second year classmeetings will be held on Tuesday, Oc¬tober 6, 1942.7. All new first and second year stu¬dents in the College who DID NOTHAVE A PHYSICAL EXAMINA¬TION on Saturday, September 26are to report for this checkup WITH¬OUT FAIL on the following days aslisted:BOYS—Thursday, October 1,—3:30P.M.GIRLS—Friday, October 2—8:30. A.M.Tuesday, October 6—3:30P.M.Report to Billings, Health Service,S-109, first floor. If you cannot possi¬bly have your examination at the timelisted, see Miss Evans at once.Contract Bridge — Instruction — DuplicateGames—Rubber Bridge—Plaza 8782.Glasses lost in vicinity of Kimbark tenniscourts. Sept. 18th. Finder call Andover4800, extension 221. Reward.For Girl—Private room, bath, radio, andboard in exchange for very light services.Mrs. Blum, Drexel 4200.Read Swedenborg'sDIVINE LOVEAND WISDOM"lOc unabridgedat University and otherbookstoresBuyWar Bondsand Stamps And TimeWhips ByAs You SitBy BEATA MUELLERFor the naive it is often amazingto think of the number of places oncampus where people go to wastetime. For the others it is not so amaz¬ing because they just go there andwaste time without thinking about itat all.Always, of course, there is the Cof¬fee Shop. Everybody who is anybodygoes there and sits thinking abouthow nice it is to be so fortunatfe. Andall the other people go to sit and lookat the people who are somebody. TheMortar Boards sit at the first* table,and then the Sigmas and the Esoter¬ics and the Quads, and they are alllooking at each other with happy,meditative looks. After that comes thesmaller clubs in order of importance,and then the independents, and thenTriota in a belligerent corner. And atthe very back, sitting around the juke(Continued on page four) PICKIN' EMWith this issue the Daily Maroon again presents Pickin’ ’Em, itspopular football feature. Each week three “experts” gaze into theircrystals and come up with predictions for ten of the week’s footbidlgames. This year the “Board of Experts” will be made up of Phil Rieff;Werner Baum, former sports editor and now editorial associate and BillDaemicke, Maroon sports writer. Werner Baum has won the contest be¬tween the experts for the last two* years and Rieff and Daemicke are outto set him back on his heels for good. This week’s games:BAUM RIEFF DAEMICKEMinnesota-Iowa Preflight 20-13 14-13 1^21 ,Notre-Dame-Georgia Tech .... 20-0 14-0 14-7Northwestern-Texas 14-0 21-6 28-7Michigan-Michigan State 27-6 32-7 21-7Marquette-Wisconsin 6-27 *0-14, 7-21Iowa State-Nebraska 13-6 7-0 ‘ 7-20Indiana-Ohio State 7-13 21-7 7-14Illinois-Butler 21-0 32-6 35-7Harvard-Pennsylvania 0-21 • 6-14 21-13California-Oregon State 6-13 7-7 14-7DO YOUR BANKING WITH’ THE NEIGHBORHOOD BANKUNIVERSITY STATE BANK1354 East 55th StreetMember Federal Deposit Insurance CorporationVOass oomText BooksNEW and USEDand all student suppliesForty Years Service To UniversityStudentsGET ALL YOUR SCHOOL BOOKS ANDSUPPLIES RIGHT HERE BY THE CAMPUSFROM THE LARGEST BOOK STOCK ONTHE SOUTH SIDEWOODWORTH'SBOOK STORE1311 E. 57th Street Open Evenings2 Blocks East of Mandel Hall3ETHE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 30,FreshmanWeek EndsAfter a mildly exhausting week ofbeing oriented by their upperclasscounselors, freshmen are spending an¬other mildly exhausting week beingoriented by the powers that run the‘‘new” new Plan. Freshman Week wasnotoriously calm this year. No casesof homesickness or nervous prostra¬tion were reported. A goodly numberof freshmen even got to bed before3, once or twice. Most womout peopleon the quadrangles were the counse¬lors, who spent many long hourssearching for the freshmen, who wereadmitted to the University as late asMonday night., As a whole, the freshmen seemed toapprove of the process of being ori¬ented, although some of the Freshmengirls complained about the lack ofupperclassmen at the mixer. (Orien¬tation committee's bouncers weremore effective this year at spottingthe careworn faces of juniors andseniors beneath the false noses andluxuriant beards.)The dinner in the Commons was an¬other notable success of the week. Allof the 680 freshmen and counselorswho attended got themselves proper¬ly seated at the tables with a boy be¬tween every girl, instead of the usualQuaker-meeting effect of the boys atthe South end and the girls at theNorth.A few skinned knees limped out ofthe bam dance, but the majority ofGREGG COLLEGE TRAININGfor BUSINESS. INDUSTRY.GOVERNMENT SERVICEif Stenographers, if Secretaries.if Accoantants, if Conrt ReportersURGENTLY NEEDED!De^mand for Gregs: College Graduates ex-; ceeds supply • High school education requi¬site for day school • The great majority ofour present student body are collegetrained • Gregg College employs no solici¬tors * Elstablished 48 years • Co-educa¬tional • Free Employment Bureau • Dayand Evening Classes.Call, write or telephone ST Ate 1181 /orbooklet'. “‘The Doorway to Opportunity.’*The QREQQ COLLEGE6 N.. Michfian Aremie at Madison Street, Chicai# Meet the ArmyMeteorologistsThe Commons is crowded, the Cof¬fee Shop is closed to students, thecampus is even browner than before.It’s the war and the latest addition tothe University. The underclassmen ofthe U.S. Army Air Corps TrainingDetachment are beginning their actualacademic schedule next Monday. Uptill now they have been drilled in theschool of the soldier and preliminaryfacts and foibles of meteorology. Forthe last two weeks the Oriental Insti¬tute has seen hieroglyphics on theblack-boards, but not thanks to theAncients. Rather the newest scienceof all, complete with mathematics,hydrodynamics and such. Also fieldcourse with three and four hour labsat any hour; also calisthenics everyafternoon by request; also sleep, ifand when convenient.The detachment is commanded byWm. Starbuck, Captain. A.C. CadetFrothinger is the present squadroncommander, with Cadet Shaw as firstsergeant. Cadet Bozich is squadronadjutant; under the system set up byCaptain Starbuck the cadets run theirown affairs as much as is practicable.CADET CAPERSNow for the activities of the cadets.The little one who runs behind whenthe big boys in front take off is James0. Suffron, known as Siiffy. The onewho set a new record for the awful-lawful, that’s the obstacle course, andwho boxed and beat the Navy repre¬sentatives is John Finkey, firstsergeant of Flight Two. The one whostudies is, although there may bemore. Cadet Walter A. Albrecht.Last Sunday an Honor Guard, com¬manded by Richard A. Bagdon, wasappointed to parade at the dedicationof block and zone flags in the 84th andPeoria Civilian Defense area. CadetPurves established himself as a jit¬terbug of the first hep at the streetdance after the ceremonies.There’ll be more next week and thenext and so on. Until then, at ease.freshmen were loud in their praise ofthe Chapel Union affair. Teas werenot as monotonous as usual, owing tothe fact that practically no organiza¬tions served tea. Root beer, punch,and even beer were flowing freelythe day the campus activities enter¬tained. And Timer—(Continued from page three)box, is the intelligentsia, jiving theirshoulders and muttering, “This issolid; really, really solid.” The intel¬ligentsia are the only ones who aretoo busy to do any looking.Also there is the U.T., sometimesknown pedantically as the UniversityTavern. This is just the same as theCoffee Shop, except that the inmatesdrink beer instead of cokes, and conse¬quently have a more worldly lookabout them. The only drawback hereis that the exclusive atmosphere, com¬plete with silver stars on the ceilingof the back room, is often marred bymiscellaneous sailors and truck driv¬ers. This could never, never happenin the Coffee Shop.Finally, there is the Book Store. Thisis less the property of the campus ar¬istocracy, who only go to drink cokesand leave, than of the intellectualsand the internes. The internes eatsandwiches and talk with their mouthsfull, gesticulating with their littlerubber knee reflex hammers; the in¬tellectuals borrow cigarettes fromeach other and read the magazines onthe magazine rack. There are some¬times other people there, but theyaren’t wasting time, they only cometo buy paper clips and ink, and nobodypays any attention to that sort ofthing.Adair RetiresThe Medical Faculties of the Uni¬versity Clinics lose one of its mostdistinguished figures at the retire¬ment .on October 1 of Fred LymanAdair, Professor and Chairman of theDepartment of Obstetrics and Gyne¬cology, and Mary Campau RyersonProfessor of Obstetrics and Gynecol¬ogy. Dr. Adair will devote much ofhis time to his duties in maternal wel¬fare work for the state of Illinois,His post as Chief of staff at the Chi¬cago Lying-in Hospital will be takenby Dr. William J. Dieckmann.READ THE MAROON Cap and Gown is getting off toa bang-up start this week. PepPaulson, the Johnnie Bex of today,was very active on the businessstaff of Blackfriars and Washing¬ton Prom, has just accepted the po¬sition of Business Manager of the.year book.Bright new idea of Paulson’s isto throw into competition twogroups working on advertising;one made up of women, the otherof men. All students interested inadvertising should meet in Lexing¬ton at 4 on Thursday. paSeR^S ^ROMfROMU. of C. BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue *PEN REPAIR MATERIALSGETTING SCARCE . .. MAY SOONBE IMPOSSIBLE TO OBTAIN I• ImMfine writing term paper* with •quill! You may be—unless you protectyour pen from wartime failure. Repairparts are scarce. And that’s what makesamazing new Parker Quink with tnlv-xbig news. This sensational ink discov¬ery eliminates the cause of most penfailures... ends gumming and cloggingof inferior inks ... cleans your pen as itwrites! Get Quink with solv-x today.Rich, full-bodied, faster-drying—Quinkgives a new zest to writing. Don’t askfor ink—ask for new Parker Quinklcors. 1*41. THI PARKIS PIN CONPAHT NEW PARKER QUINK h timoMy Mr containing «ofv-x.EllmlfMl** Ihacaws* af mast paa falhitatt1, Tha solv-Jt In naw Parkar Quinkdissolvas sadimanf and Qummy da-posits laft by bifarior Inks. Qaansyour pan at it writasi2. Quink with tolv-x pravaids lharub bar rot and corrosion causad bystrongly acid writing fluids.J5f, 25f, and up. Made by the mahenof famous Parker Pens. 7 COLORS',Block, Blue-black, Royal Blue, GrmnVid^ Broun, Red. fFASHABLMor PERMANENT.ParkerQu/ivA'^^COETAIiS lOlf-XNewNotebooksPencilsCarbon PaperEnglishFictionSurvey SetsandReference Sets TEXT BOOKSSTATIONERYDICTIONARIESGENERAL BOOKSRENTAL LIBRARYPOSTAL STATION FOR YOUR CONVENIENCEMake this store your source of supplyfor campus needsU of C BOOKSTORE5802 ELUS AVENUE Second-HandErasersPaperInkForeignNon-FictionFictionNon-Fiction> a Wartime CampusBrown Alumni Photo Three Brown University freshmen, setting foot just inside the Von Wickle Gatesfor first time, provide an interesting study in expressions. Thf?v^are, left to right,John B. Henderson,' Richard H. A.A. Holmes of England, and E. Kenneth Bates.9mu dONdS S STAMPSAID YOUR COUNTRY’S ESSENTIAL DEFENlAn Old Campus Tradition at the University of Ar¬kansas is the Senior Walk, shown here through the door¬way of a campus building. Names of all graduates from1876 to date are inscribed on the walk. Minor Riots Occur when cadets of th(pre-flight training school at the UniveiIowa warm up to a game of push-ballof the huge balls are in action at orwith 45 men on a team. Object is iball through opponents goalposts.ColUgiat* Digest Photo by LongKEEP PITCHING!Rarin' to Go — It was thefirst practice session for Ford-horn's '42 football squad butfrom the looks of these charg¬ing Rams they are ready forthe season's opener. Left toright are Ray Elster; Bill Lib-rera, George Cheverko andJoe McCrane.No BIcKkout Here — Whilethe town sleeps University ofMichigan journalists burn themidnight oil in the studentpublications building puttingout the paper for the nextday. A curfew ruling permitsstudents to stay until 2:15A.M. when paper goes topress. —; ► Leods Harvard Gridders —Dick Harlow has a capable leadhis Crimson team this year in CForte, an end, whose play last iwas outstanding.with United Stotes War Bonds &Stamps! Every Stamp and BondYou Buy Helps to Call a Strikeon America's Enemies.Get in the Game NOW!Advtrtiiin§ RtprtfnMiv:N ATION AL AOVERTISINGSERVICE INC.Publicalioni Oflfic«: 317 Fowkes <50 Madison Av.nut, N«w YorkBuilding, Minneapolis, Minnesota <00 No. Miehifan Avenue, ChicagoBoston San Francisco Los AngelesColle6iate Di6estSectioniWhen (ttiode IslandState College cele¬brated its 50th Anniver¬sary, the first 'and lastgroduates got togetherto thumb through they e a r s' events. Dr.George E. Adams holdsthe first diploma givenin 1892, and Walter W.Wilson was the last ofthe 1942 class. HoffordFirst Down!Halfback Al Izmariangets away for a 10-yard gain as footballonce agoin takes thespotlight throughout thenation. This bit of ac¬tion was caught duringpractice at the Univer¬sity of Californio wherethe Bruins boast astrong eleven. Acme' IN THENAVY % sayVOOTfor recruit'HITTHSOMC' for get on the jobfor smokingpermittedCAMCL^ for their favorite cigarette^ With men in the Navy, Army, Marines,and Coast Guard, the favorite cigaretteis Camel. (Based on actual sales recordsin Canteens and Post Exchanges.)ITSSTRICTLY CAMELSWITH ME. I FINDTHEM FAR ANDAWAY MILDER.ALWAYS ENJOYTHAT SWELL■ TASTE! wherecigarettesare judgedThe *T-IONi'—Taste andThroat — is the proving'ground for cigarettes. Onlyyour taste and throat can de¬cide which cigarette tastesbest to you...and how it af¬fects your throat. For yourtaste and.throat are indi¬vidual to you. Based on dieexperience of millions ofsmokers, we believe Camelswill suit your *T-ZONI* toa •T." Prove it for yourself!J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, Nortb Carolinaof ihen (OOfi*"' ,o ood*'”' --^J,he blockboard ono „„d only“offered lo odvooce des.gn CoHegiote Oig«*»It's Either Spring — Or Fall — on the Villanova College 340-yard obstaclecourse, and It looks like one of the boys didn't spring. Clipper Smith, college ath¬letic instructor, has developed the most rugged routine of training being used incollege today. Here students are going off a five-foot diving board which givesthem enough spring to clear the 12-foot water hazard — or does it? internationalPortable Cooling System — When the game gets too hot for a Yale man, hedoes something about it! Here Spencer Moseley, captain of the Bulldog eleven,welcomes a pall of water after a broiling practice session. Yale fans expect thatSpence will be "hot" most of the season against iheir eastern rivals.'George Adamspoured. _ Acm*’ Accelerate War Program Brings • • •Registration RushSpeeded-up registration this fall was in line with the entire college progrmore than 800 colleges and universities shaped their curriculums to meet wmands. Texas A & M College was one of the first to inaugurate an accelicollege course to supply trained men for the armed forces. Freshmen enteriifall will finish the regular four-year course in two years and eight'monthstending three summer sessions.The nation's largest military school, Texas A & M will send about 80 pcof her graduates into the army as second lieutenants. As soon as registraticcompleted, the students donned khaki uniforms and got underway withwar education. Collegiate Digest Photos by BerryThere's more to come as the cadets line up for assignmentcards. A few students already are shown in uniform, andit will be only a matter of hours before "civies'changed for the army garb. are ex- And here's jthen that h]from the firmater songHow You Gonna Keep 'Em down on the form? This wasa big question to mid-west farmers this year os hundredsof farm boys joined the armed forces, but it was soonanswered by college girls as they rushed to give a hand.More than 35 Knox College co-eds took over jobs in thefield detasselinq corn for next year's seed. Lunch hourswere spent talking about bobby pins and permanents. Buteating was ndt over-looked as the girls gained an averageof five pounds each.the City Col-jt a problemThe course isart coursess first worlns ore tesining.Book teamin' — Joseph Anderson of Hamilton College, N. Y., shows whatthe average student would look like if he drew out a full four-years' worthof books from the library at one time. Dr. Lewis F. Stiea, librarian, figuredout that the average freshman draws out 10 books; sophomore, 16; junior,24; and senior, 28. Thirteen are novels and two poetry.There,'s no "Conga" to this line. Pockets and handsfilled with schedules, programs and sundry papersadd to the weary task of registering. in ■•mjr Euwif i Mr, 1-^ M1 'cr J|Hdent puts on r.is uniform, it isJniforms are worn at all timesuntil the last note of the almav Day. Registering done for some they renew old acquain¬tances and make new friends. But there's room forall in Texas, and when things get crowded inside,they move out to those wide open spaces. World's Record Breaker — Coach Mike Peppe congratulates Keo Na-kama, Hawaiian long distance swimmer of Ohio State University, after heset a world's outdoor swimming record of 20:29.0 for the mile course. Themark was established during the National AAU outdoor championship meet.therener trip'eUCalherine 'Catherine 'adProxies Get Technical as they learn about the operations of anacic" from Lt.-Col. Horold J. Conway. Karl T. Compton, president of Massechusetts Institute of Technology and member of Pres. Roosevelt's rubbecommittee, alms his sights on another war problem as Arthur C. Wilord, president of the University of Illinois looks on. Both men ore membeiof a civilian board now formulating policies for training thousands^ctechnical men needed for field maintenance work of the ordnance dlpartment.cmith CohcQ® P . right f ronce^*NA/iUiam SmrtT' ten ^avbe ‘t ^isters - just who was or . • collegelying 1o fign'® “tg-e'"®' to be owordedCotbenne. of mp'*'*.y are one jj^grees. He Swept School Honors — Brooms and books are both,fair (liar to Isodore Goldstein, 23, a New York street cleaner. (stein graduated .recently from Brooklyn College with MagnaLaude honors and a gfaduate scholarship. He worked daysstudied nights to achieve high scholastic standing. IntervPep Plant Discovered — Under the guidance of Dr. S. A. Ives, head of the FurmanUniversity (S. C.) biology department; these students have developed an energyproducing tonic that can be made from these plants which grow wild in the BlueRidge section. The tonic is similar to that taken by German soldiers to sharpen theirwits and give them additional strength for battle. Here they are inspecting a box ofplants they dug up on a recent field trip.Collegiate Digest Photo by Testermon Superman or Frankenstein? — You're wronIt's Lou Rymus,'225 pound Notre Dome tackle, weeing new type blockirtg pads designed by CooFrank Leahy of Notre Dame, for use in football pretice. The outfit is colled "Super Fightback." Acbadger ’Commandos’ Ihvade Campus in Raidhead®'^ siexe**'o-'d ''f.obvec"-'®attoad of Wisconsinandos, their faces»ned and wearingIts, leaves for thetrip across Lake Men-for the raid.oaching the "enertiy'', the commandosinto the waters oflota, wade quietly,ly to shore to com-e the attock. Under cover of darkness, the "'Commando" unit of the University ofWisconsin carries on Its raid against the "enemies." The raid broughtto a close six weeks of intensive training for the group made up ofmore than 100 Wisconsin ROTC members.Commanded by Lt. Arthur Peterson, the cadets have practiced beachlandings, raiding, compass reading, reconnaissance, combat and sabo¬tage. The first unit of its kind in the country, this signaled the start ofsimilar organizations on other campuses.Molds Barred — Each year Michigan State College Foresters stagela Paul Bunyan Shindig. All the men grow beards, and the ownere longest set of whiskers receives a beer mug. After several weeks^ing, this student showed up with some barely visable fuzz on hisBut it was all in fun, and he got a mug for his efforts. Predmore‘TRIUMPH"M/ TUCKAWAY £4UimY Feothcrtouch' Entemb$16.50, for men or womoncorrios sofdy in any posititWhat a lost feeling when you and your loved ones ore for opart,and no letters arrive to bridge the gap and cheer you up. Writethose letters! Letters are YOU IN PERSON, at long distance!Sheaffer's "TRIUMPH” is the newest pen. We begandeveloping it four years before the entry of the United Statesinto war. At that time "TRIUMPH" was undergoing final rigorous tests by landand sea. It has been sold throughout 1942. Fortunately, practically all of thematerials in "TRIUMPH" are of least critical nature . . . Men and women inall walks of life will value this essential gift, now and always.Note: Fuel all pens carefully. Sheaffer’s SKRIP is kind to the rubber and othercritical parts of pens—makes all pens write better and last longer.*Ail pens are uncontfiKonally guaranteed for the lifeof the first user except against loss and willfU damage — when^ serviced, if complete pen is returned, 'bfect onlyto insurance, postage^ handling charge—35c"TRIUMPH"^FeathertouchEnsemble, $17.50In CRESTDesign, $21.00 .SKRIP. WBU "MAGCIRCLE" C>little three\ stay derP $10 with 'CNEHOPURISKMP, successor to15c. Economy size, 25c.SHEAFFER3SHEAFFER PENSALL COLORS,.$2.75 TO $20 W. A. SHEAFFER PEN CO., FORT MADISON, lOVTATh«r«'s No Rotioiiing whenit comes to Ray ''Sugar'' EvansTexas College of Mines grid-ders. Evans was nick-named "Su¬gar" white he was in high schoolbecause a deficiency of sugarin his bldod caused him to faintin football games. The defictenejrhas been remedied, ond as faras Evans Is concerned, there isno shortage of sweetness. ^Co-op ProxyCollege life takes onadded importance forMargaret Rhoads thisyear as she assumesher duties as presidentof the CooperativeGovernment Associationat New Jersey Collegeaf*r***,* •Co-eds Rush to Fill War Courses — With classics far out of mind, a gof Barnard College girls sign to take "War Minor" subjects. Most pofare economics, engineering, mop reading, statistics, economic geognend modern languages. Margaret Gfddings, college registror, explainsihow girls con aid the war effort.