Men, Women AttendWar Work MeetingsArmy, Navy, MarineOfficers Speak HereBy HARLAN BLAKEAt a special meeting of all under¬graduate freshmen men in Mandellall yesterday morning, members ofthe Army, Navy, Marines, and Armyand Navy Air Corps explained in de¬tail their respective reserve plans.After an introduction by Mr. Na¬pier Wilt, Lieutenant (j. g.) ,Jay Ber-wanger, last U. of C. football immor¬tal, introduced Capt. Beilis, who ex¬plained the Army’s Enlisted ReserveCorps program. Beilis emphasizedthat reserve plans now were not forthe purpose of avoiding the war, butto prepare the student for more effec¬tive participation.Army PlanThe E. R. C. plan, as explained, al¬lows any underclalssmen, between 18and 45, who can pa^s certain physicalrequirements, to continue his collegework until he receives a regular B.A.or until time of special emergency, asdeclared by the Secretary of War.Lieut. Friedman, of the Army AirForce, next proceeded to explain theadvantages of the Army Air CorpsReserve plan, which allows undergrad¬uate men from the ages of 18-26 tocontinue their studies for a period oftime up to four years, if they are ableto pass specified mental and physicaltests.Navy V-1, V-7Lieut. Nelson, representing the Na¬vy, explained to the undergraduatesthe function of the Navy V-1 and V-7programs. Freshmen and sophomorescan enlist in the V-1 program, withthe promise that they will preparethemselves in college mathematics,physics, and physical educationwhich will prepare them for a gener¬al test to be taken in March of thesophomore year. Those who can passthe test can then enter either the V-5or V-7 groups, which allows them tofinish to their senior year, circum¬stances permitting, before enteringOfficer’s training.And the Marines )Representing the Marines was Lieu¬tenant Reeves, who stressed that formen desiring action, the Marines wasj the group. He described the Marines’program of physical toughening, andtheir distinctive methods of combat.The Marine plan described by Lieut.Reeves was based on the same schemeas the others described, with deferr-ment arranged. Special emphasis wasplaced on physical conditioning.Last speaker of the group wasLieut. Berwanger, who explained theNavy Air Corps V-6 program. Aftersuccessful completion of V-1 work,men may enter the V-5 group, com¬plete, tentatively, their collegt educa¬tion (through the senior year) andthen enter Naval Air Corps Officers’Training schools.After the talks, and again in theafternoon, men were invited to par¬ticipate in discussions of the planswith the officers. Detailed informationon any of the plans may be obtainedthrough the Dean of Students’ office.D. A.‘Biography’Tryouts TodayTryouts for the Dramatic Associa-^tion’s fall quarter production, "Biog¬raphy”, will bq held this afternoon inthe Reynolds Club theatre at 3:30.The casting of University Playersnext two productions, "Letters To\ Lucerne” and "The Male Animal”,will be completed at tryouts whichthat group will hold Thursday andFriday also at 3:30 in the ReynoldsClub theatre.Lester Schiff was elected president‘iTif the University Players at the first'^aneeting of the quarter Monday night.Other officers chosen were Mary WAAC, WAVESpeak to GirlsBy MINNA SACHSAttepted informality succeeded,yesterday morning in RockefellerChapel, in deglamorizing the uniformsof the women in the armed servicesto the extent that they appeared ashuman beings and not as idols to beworshipped by a uniform-blindedgroup. A WAAC and a WAVE, fullyaware of the ‘•sensation caused bytheir presence on the quadrangles asthe first representatives of a widelypublicized organization, addressed allUniversity women and discussed warwork for college students. 'Edith Ballwebber of the Depart¬ment of Physical Education served asChairman for the meeting which wassponsored by the University, althoughit was not compulsory as was themeeting for men held in Mandel HallMiss Nelly Hawkinson of the De¬partment of Nursing and Dr. RuthTaylor of Student Health were thefirst speakers to address several hun¬dred university women whose classeshad been cancelled so that all warwork in which they might participatewould be clearly and concisely pre¬sented at one time.Tn this, the meeting was eminentlysuccessful. Miss Hawkinson discussedvolunteer work in the clinics of Bill¬ings Hospital, stating that 2^/> hoursare required of every worker. Oncompleting this, she then proceededto a discussion of the possibility ofcommencing Nurse’s Aid Trainingand Home Nursing courses on thequadrangles. She closed her talk witha brief mention of the need for gradu¬ate nurses, and then vacated the plat¬form in favor of Dr. Taylor, who veryquickly and quietly discussed RedCross First Aid.Lt. Woodworth of the Women’sAuxiliary Army Corps re-emphasizedthe much stressed point that the wom¬en in the armed forces are attemptingto take the places of men who willthen be sent to fill other jobs. She toldin sketchy detail of the training per¬iod spent at Fort Des Moines wherethe W A AC’s gradually won the ad¬miration of Army officers who hadopenly stated disapproval of womenin uniform. Lt. Woodworth outlinedthe requirements necessary for en¬trance into the army as a member ofthe WAAC’s, including the 21-44 yearage limit and the necessity of goodmental and physical health, substan¬tial references as to character andcitizenship, and lack of dependents.Final speaker of the morning wasLt. Daly of the WAVES, whose popu¬larity was augmented by the style ofher hat. In addition to her apparel,Lt. Daly spoke of her group in muchthe same manner that Lt. Woodworthhad discussed the WAAC’s, with theexception that she mentioned thatWAVE officers differ from WAVEenlisted women in the possession ofone extra shirt. WAVE officials havestated a preference for women withcollege degrees or at least two yearsof college training. If WAVES aregood at their respective jobs, they canbe promoted to Ensigns. Otherwisethey continue in radio, as storekeep¬ers, and yeomen.Laura Collins, secretary-treasurer;Roddy Hastings, production manager;Virginia Lus, properties; Beth Car¬ney, publicity chairman; Rachel Mac-Hatton, chapel contacts; and MaryceKlaff, social chairmanRandal Reuchelle, star of manyplayers’ shows, has been named thenjw director of the group, succeed¬ing Frank Grover who is now assist¬ant director of dramatics on campus.Professor Louis Gottschalk willbe the speaker at the opening bi¬weekly Fireside and social hoursponsored by the Hillel foundationto be held Friday at 8 In the IdaNoyes "Y” room. His topic will be"Education for What?” New ContingentOf TraineesStarts ClassesIts enrolment increased by 50 percent, a new twenty-weeks course inelectronics and high frequency trans¬mission given by the University forthe Army Signal Corps began lastSaturday on the Midway.The 125 men who began work willreceive training salaries of $1,800 to$2,600 a year while working towardcommissions as second lieutenants ortoward civilian positions in the Sig¬nal Corps. The first group of eighty-fivo will complete their training Octo¬ber 31.Enrolment for the starting group isclosed, but a new contingent of 125will begin training when the presentgroup has completed half of its train¬ing in mid-December. The work isopen to men between 18 and 45 whohave had a minimum of two years ofcollege mathematics, including the cal¬culus, and one year of college physicsor the equivalent.Students between 18 and 28 are en¬listed in the Electronics Group of theEnlisted Reserve Corps and are as¬signed to inactive duty as long astheir progress in the training is sat¬isfactory. Upon completion of thecourse this group is eligible for com¬missions as second lieutenants. Mennot physically qualified for activeservice, or who are older than 28 willbe employed as civilian engineers.The salary paid during training willdepend upon the student’s qualifica¬tions. The course is tuition free, andincidental expenses are estimated atless than $25. Each students willspend 48 hours per week in lectures,laboratory, shop and discussion.Men interested in starting the workin December should apply at the Sig¬nal Corps Personnel office. Room 602,290 W. Jackson Blvd. Walter Johnson HitsBrooks’ Isolationism(Walter Johnson received his A.B. at Dartmouth in 1937. Granted afellowship to the University, he obtained his M.A. in 1938 and Ph.D. in 19U1.At present, he is working on a book entitled, America on the Eve of WaP\He is downstate director for the independent campaign for Rep. McKeough.)War CramsInt. HouseRed Cross workers in the Women’sLounge, nearly a hundred meteorolo¬gists living in the house—yes, war hasbrought changes to InternationalHouse just as it has to the rest of thecampus.War Workers Packed InThe third floor Women’s Lounge,one of the biggest and mose beautifulon campus, now houses five hundredRed Cross workers, members of oneof Chicago’s largest units. Here band¬age making and other war workchange the lounge so it can scarcelybe recognized as last year’s place torelax with a group of friends, a cig¬arette or a game of bridge.Nearly a hundred of the meteorolo¬gists who now use the University cam¬pus as a training school are living inInternational House. The war has al¬so affected the usual residents of thehouse, for Latin American member¬ship is up considerably, as is the num¬ber of Hawaiians, now 18 in all. TheChinese, however, still boast the larg¬est group.The most successful Internation¬al House social function this seasonhas been the reception held last Sun¬day evening, at which Mrs. Rovetta,wife of Director Rovetta, and SergeantFowler of the meteorological groupwere guests. More than four hundredpeople enjoyed the reception from 5to 7 and the dancing which continueduntil 9.Music TonightTonight a program of Puerto Ricanmusic is planned by the house mem¬bers, directed by Luis Figuerola. Thereare eight Puerto Ricans now living inthe house.Second C-DanceFriday in IdaFreshman Beauty Queen of the sea¬son will be presented at the C Dancenext Friday night at 9 in Ida Noyes.This is the second of a series of danc-PR sponsored by the Student SocialCommittee which includes the price ofadmission to this and other dances inits C Book. It is seldom that the citizens of Illinois are called upon to castballots in an election as serious as the one this fall. The senatorelected will serve for six crucial years. The congressman-at-largewill serve until 1944.*During the next two years Congress will beable to assist in winning the war (by clear-cut stands on price con¬trol, internationalism and a democratic tax program), or in losingit by obstructionist tactics in which a number of our congressmenhave displayed great dexterity in the past few years. The prob¬lems of a war economy and the problems of a post-war world areones that require the ablest people possible. The past records ofthe candidates running for senator and congressman-at-largethrow a great deal of light as to their capabilities to handle theseproblems and to the desirability of sending them to Washington.Raymond S. McKeough, for the last eight years representativefrom Chicago's second district, and now candidate for U.S. Senatoron the Democratic ticket, has a voting record in Congress which isconsistently sound. He has seen the issues clearly and has actedcourageously. When war broke out in Europe in September, 1939,Mr. McKeough supported the President’s request that Congressrevise the Neutrality Law so that our future allies could buy muni¬tions and implements of war from the United States. During 1939he supported appropriations to increase the size of our air forceand to fortify the island of Guam. In 1940, as Germany conquerednation after nation, Congressman McKeough threw his support tothe movement to aid the allies. He supported the President’s re¬lease of fifty destroyers to England in return for naval bases. Hevoted for the Selective Service Act in Septembr, 1940. In 1941, aswar approached the United States, he voted for the Lend-LeaseAct, or the arming of American merchant ships, and for the repealof that part of the Neutrality Act which prevented American shipsfrom using the historic right of the freedom of the seas. He tookthis stand not because he was a warmonger, as the Chicago Trib¬une charged, but because he realized that an inevitable war wasabout to engulf the United States. Instead of hiding his head'inthe sand, the way Curly Brooks did, and denying the realities ofthis approaching war, McKeough honestly faced the issue andhelped prepare the United States to meet the# Axis. As McKeoughhas said, “The Tribune is against me because it is against Roose¬velt and because McCormick knows I will uphold the Commander-in-Chief’s hands in winning the war and the peace that is to fol¬low.”McKeough’s record on internal matters is sound and progressive. Hesupported the Tefinessee Valley project for the development of the naturalresources of this great region, and believes that the governmnt should alsodevelop the resources of other acreas. He supported the New Deal’s programto rehabilitate the youth of the nation through the National Youth Adminis¬tration. He also lent his support to the Farm Security Bill designed to aidfarmers in rehabiliating their farms and which established farmers on landthat was not sub-marginal. He has supported President Roosevelt’s sevenpoint anti-inflation program. As a member of the powerful House Ways andMeans Committee he supported Secretary Morgenthau’s payroll-withholdingtax, he has vigorously opposed a sales tax as an unfair and inequitable meansof taxation, and favored joint income tax returns and excess profits taxes.He believes in the total conscription of manpower, materials and wealth as ameans to win the war. Refreshing in the light of the way many congressmenare working for special pressure groups, is McKeough’s forthright statementthat "Every sacrifice that any segment of our country is asked to make shouldbe willingly made not only to win the war but to insure the winning of thepeace.”During the past summer, instead of campaigning for office, he was inWashington working to check obstructionists who were fighting democracyfrom within. His speech delivered on the floor of the House of Representativesagainst Howard Smith’s anti-labor legislation, his work to get the removalof discriminations against negroes and other minority groups, and his supportof the Federal anti-poll tax legislation, shows his progressive nature.McKeough’s opponent, C. Wayland Brooks, has a voting record in theSenate which must please the enemies of the United States. He voted againstthe extension of the Selective Service Act in August, 1941. His attitudetoward this bill was "I do not think it necessary to draft American soldiers.The draft only causes confusion. Roosevelt wants to throw us into fear ofattack from abroad and lay the foundation for changing American govern¬ment and drafting industry.” He voted against the Lend-Lease Bill, the re¬vision of the Neutrality Act so as to allow our ships the historic right of thefreedom of the seas, and he opposed the arming of American merchantships. Since Pearl Harbor, his record has been no better. From January 5 toMarch 14, when the nation was really organizing for war there were sixty-seven roll calls in the Senate. He answered thirty times and was absentthirty-seven times! Recently, he has been conspicuous for his hostility toPresident Roosevelt’s seven point anti-inflation program, and for his en¬couragement to the farm bloc. Not long ago. Brooks saw to it that the IllinoisRepublicans endorsed a program which repudiated Wendell Willkie’s and theNational Republican Committee’s stand for the United States to join in aninternational association after the warIn the race for congressman-at-large, we also have a clear cut choice asto the more desirable candidate. The Republican candidate, Stephen A. Day,has been in Congress only two years. Yet his record and actions have beensuch that he is widely known as an appeaser and opponent of PresidentRoosevelt’s foreign policy. Day’s record has been that of an obstructionist.He voted against lend-lease aid to Britain; he voted against the UnitedStates seizing foreign ships interned in United States harbors; he votedagainst repealing the Neutrality Law, which was passed in spite of Day*/objection and that of his friends, like Hamilton Fish of New York.The most damaging charge that can be made against Day is that in the(Continued on page seven)«THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 7, 1942Cyril Johnsonthe greatest nome inCOVERTTOPCOATSby ERIESmooth as silk covert with all the weath¬er beating, wear resisting qualities thathave made the Cyril Johnson namefamous. In classic casual styles to putyou right in line for the title of "BestDressed Man". On campus or offyou'll find the free and easy swing ofthese Erie topcoats spell real comfort....just as their handsome tailoring standsfor a smart appearance and their lowprice for real value. Only$ 32 50Erie's the place to choose your entireFall and Winter wardrobe. Famous, na¬tionally advertised clothes by HartSchaffner and Marx, GGG, Eagle, Kup-penheimer, Knox, Arrow, Florsheim andmany, many others to choose from. Allat Erie's typically low neighborhoodprices. Now you can be well dressed onthe most limited kind of budget.3 wars TO BUY!Cash charge or credit. Take yourpick! You can have up to 3 full monthsto pay at no extra cost. Your credit isgood at Erie use it! EditorialJingo, Jango, JingoOf course, Brooks is the ideal Lodgebut he will find Roosevelt quite will¬ing to play Wilson.The issues in the coming Illinoiselection are clear. It is not becauseMcKeough is a great leader that hemust win. It is that Brooks and all hestands for must be defeated. The de¬feat of Brooks is the big issue.We do not believe that we are shat¬tering any precious illusions when wesay that the days of rugged indivi¬dualism, with prosperity tricklingdown from the top, are over. Brooks,together with that journalistic hodge¬podge of jingo programs, irrationalbundles of personal prejudices, andmodern fuedalism, is the powerfuldefender of that dead past. Their ha¬tred of all forms of liberalism and in¬ternationalism have carried them overto a raving, obstructionist that bord¬ers on the most hysterical brand ofAmerican defeatism.Brooks and Day, and their man be¬hind the throne, are the Twentieth-century Whigs, disciples of the bigprofit philosophy, obedient servants ofthe most reactionary elements of thestate who must inevitably turn tosome brand of exploitation and pre¬emption for their progress.Both men are now busy discoveringinnumberable ways of winning thewar. The Daily Maroon suggests thatthe best way they can help win thewar is to get out of office.Whose War Is This?We democrats and we all aredemocrats.... are just a little annoy¬ed that these Indians have picked thisdamnably indecent time to demandfreedom and democracy.We are annoyed that on the sameday that we are striving and dieingfor freedom and democracy the In¬dians get the outlandish notion thatthey, too, will strive and die for free¬dom.Gad, man! Whose war is this?“Tomorrow we will give them theirfreedom and democracy.” Today istoo soon and is quite inconvenient toLord Amery and the Indian Office. Itis also quite inconvenient to the In¬dian princes and industrial prince¬lings.“The Indians are incapable of self-government.”Oh, yes. It might go to their heads.They might grow big with the senseof their own importance and stubborn¬ly insist that they are as good as weare. They will grow big with pride andboast of their freedom and declaretheir independence of tyranny andtheir dependence on internationalgood-will.Are you theDaguerreotype or the Arrow Type ?i^EEP breathely andIjj/ picture yourself inone of Arrow’s newpride-swelling whiteshirts. They’re tops inauthentic styling andsport a collar that madehistory. Sanforized-la-heled (fabric shrinkageless than 1%). Cost lessthan you’d expect.$2.25 up Naturally their speech will growinsolent and they will renounce post¬war complications of their freedomas attempts to cheat them again.What an idea! English Tories nevercheat. They find unfortunate compli¬cations, (The Zionists in Palestinelook up and holler “Heve, Heve!”)And we white-white men will beforced to take certain drastic meas¬ures. We white men of the gloriousWest, burdened by the weight of car¬rying the fight for freedom, will re¬gretfully build more whipping posts.And we shall build bigger and betterjails so that they may adequatelylodge the free men of the world.Oh, yes, yes, yes. We are going towin this war. Oh, but of course. Wecannot lose because we cannot lose. Itis only incidental if we become thor¬oughly Fascist to defeat Fascism.♦ ♦ ♦You liberals—and you all are liber¬als—might be interested in knowingthat this is not yet a people’s war.You might be interested in knowingthat we fear victory as much as wefear defeat.If this were a people’s war, if wewere fighting for free people in a freeworld, then we would see to it that theIndians have their freedom. We wouldsee to it that the Indians could par¬ticipate in this war as free men, proudthat they are at last free to fight op¬pression as freemen; and not asslavey’s who have been promised par¬tial emancipation from the 'Toryparty at some future date. But theTories have good teeth. They havelied before and can lie again. They arepracticed in the genteel art of findingthe difference between a promise anda delivery. (Lord Balfour cries,“Here, Here,” and pounds the table.)If we have faith in the commonman and his ability to decide his des¬tinies then we must have faith in theIndian people and their ability to de¬cide their own destiny.We would do all this if we were notsoft and reluctant fighters in a warwhose outcome we fear because wehave come to fear and distrust every¬thing. All phrases, all hopes are emp¬ty. Only money can still talk withoutbeing smiled off the stage. Pricemakes right.We distrust even purselves. Wehave been reactionary in our politicsand progressive in our talk. Bent onpersonal comfort, the primitive con¬ceptions of rugged individualism andunfettered profit have made us in¬ternational cowards and anti-demo¬crats. And we found leaders who ech¬oed our hollowness. We found Bald¬wins, Chamberlains, Lavals, Petains,Bonnets, Hardings, Hoovers, Brooks,Days.We don’t look very ha'i.1some, veil¬ing our fear arid mistrust and hesi¬tancy under the heavy drapes of mili¬ClassifiedLarsre private bedroom with adjoining sunporch for two or three girls. Small quietfamily. 5209 Drexel-Plaza 0486.Wanted Univ. girl to assist & stay with child¬ren in exchange for room, board. A compen¬sation depending on time available. Beau,rm. in H.P. Call Dorchester 2522—9 A.M. or5 P.M.Must sell—1936 five window Ford DeLuxecoupe. Original paint, overdrive and radio.$175. Call Lt. D. N. Butts—Midway 3166.TIES •COLLARS. HANDKERCHIEFS .UNDERWEAR .SPORT SHIRTS The Daily MaroonFOUNDED IN 1902The Daily Maroon is the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicago, pub¬lished Wednesdays during the Autumn, Win¬ter, and Spring quarters by The Daily Ma¬roon Company, 5831 University Avenue. Tele¬phone: Hyde Park 9222.After 6:30 phone in stories to our printers.The Chief Printing Company, 148 West 62ndStreet. Telephones: Wentworth 6123 and 6124.The University of Chicago assumes no re¬sponsibility for any statements appearing inThe Daily Maroon, or for any contract en¬tered into by The Daily Maroon.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves therights of publication of any material appear¬ing in this paper.Subscription rates: $1.00 a year, $1.50 bymail. Single copies 3 cents.Entered as second class matter February23, 1942, at the post office at Chicago, Illinois,under the act of March 3, 1879.Memberftssocided Cblle5icrte PressDistributor ofGDlle6iale DibeslEDITORIAL BOARD:Philip Rieff—Editor in chiefMinna Sachs—News EditorBeata Mueller—Feature EditorChloe Roth--Make-up EditorBetty Waters—Copy EditorBUSINESS BOAPD:WilHnm B<^11——Businnsa MannprorAlfren Bodian—Advertising ManagerJoan Wehlen—Circulation ManagerEllen Tuttle—ComptrollerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATES:Werner Baum, Jeanne Cleary, Beth Carney,Harlan Blake, William Letwin, CharlotteLeviton, James MacLear, Ray Poplett. Mary-lin Robb. Barbara Gilfallan, Sec. to the Editor.Night Editors: Marilyn Herstand Harlan Blake tary “expediency.” The English sold¬iers will find it difficult to defendIndia from the Germans, Japaneseand Indians. The soldiers of “thepeople’s war” will find it quite con¬fusing to end up fighting the people.Fascism has won out thus far be¬cause of the half-measures, coward¬ice, fear and mistrust of a way of lifethat seems to be in decline. We havecompromised ourselves almost out ofexistence. We must turn now, and face theenemy clean and irreconcilably benton victory. To be bent on victory is toguarantee real democracy for all thepeoples that remain outside the paleof Fascism. It is to fight boldly, withthe conviction that comes of under¬standing.It is to be led by leading. India isvital to us young democrats.A little popular pressure, please.P. R.DO YOUR BANKING WITHTHE NEIGHBORHOOD BANKUNIVERSITY STATE BANK1354 East 55th StreetMember Federal Deposit Insurance CorporationiiiiipilijiiiiiiliiiiFILTERS FORVROYAL DEMUTHPIPESWrite for chart picturing18 beautiful alUsmoothmodels, telling benefits ofMarvelous Patented FilterENGRAVED ONETCHED BOWL j|rv Also same styles, all^etched, ‘with Eagle or^V^ engravedPATRIOTIC EMBLEMSspecially designed for men inservice as well as civilians, J^ fTm. Dtmutk 9 €•., /wc., N. T-yfflHow YOU can help herspeed vital war callsWHEN you’re about to telephone, remember thatthe wires—especially Long Distance circuits—arebusier than ever before, with war calls. We can’t buildnew equipment to carry the load because the materialswe need are going into ships and planes and shells.Here’s how you can help to keep the lines open forwar calls. Unless your message is really urgent, pleasedon’t use Long Distance service. But if you must,please make your calls as short as you can.Thanks!—-we know you’ll be glad to help!CAUS COM msr/■.t-f ■ yf"'THE DAILY MAROON WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1942 Page Thrt©Rushing Rules for ’42Announced By CouncilArticle I. Definition of Rushing.A Freshman is defined for rushing purposes as any matriculant in theUniversity with less than eight courses advanced standing, or with less thanone quarter’s residence at any other institution of college level.Rushing shall be defined as any spoken word, or an action, by a fra¬ternity member of an alumnus of any fraternity, committed with the pur¬pose of influencing a freshman in his choice of fraternities. No student in theCollege below Freshman standing is eligible for rushing. Any student in theUniversity twenty-one years of age or older may be pledged at any time.Article II. Rushing Restrictions: (rules to hold over to week period ofrushing):No freshman permitted in fraternity houses unless there is a “houseFunction”.No rushing in dormitories after 6 on any night except Friday, Saturday,(Sunday.Uniform rushing invitations will be furnished by the I-F Council andpaid for by the houses.No freshman may ride with fraternity men in automobiles except Sat¬urday and Sunday, starting at 6 P.M. Saturday.Freshmen may be seen in their homes until 10 P.M. Monday and Fridaynights.The rest of the time herein specified, fraternities are free to rush bothon and off campus—keeping the article on penalties in mind.Freshmen who are planning to join a Fraternity may not evade the regularpledge time by signing up another house which they cannot join. A seconddate will be set for the winter quarter when Freshmen will be given anotheropportunity to join a house.On campus friendly associations may be maintained between Freshmenand Fraternity men during Freshman Week and the two weeks following.But no entertainment or food may be furnished Freshmen by Fraternity menduring that time.Definition of the campus for Freshman Week and the two weeks fol¬lowing: West, Ellis Avenue; North, 56th Street; East, University Avenue;South; 58th Street.The following eating places will be considered on the campus:U.T., Reader’s, Hanley's, Spic and Span, Steinways, and Tropical Hut.But Fraternity men may not be seen in any of the above buildings at thesame time as Freshmen between the hours of 11 through 1 P.M. and 5 through7 P.M. Nor may fraternity men be seen with Freshmen walking to and fromany of these places at any time.Freshman Week and the following two weeks no rushing allowed in thedorms at any time. / Dean Brumbaugh....he speaksArticle III. Rushing Schedule.For the two weeks following Freshman Week no rushing as defined.Next two weeks: Rushing by all houses. First week of rushing: Lunches:Monday and Friday, 12 to 2. No food restrictions. Evening functions: Tues-Iday, Wednesday, Thursday, 6 to 10. Sandwiches and a beverage 7 to 9,'arbitrary.Saturday and Sunday open rushing on and off campus.Second Week of Rushing: Houses may have functions at their ownchoosing Monday through Thursday between 12-2 and 6-10 and at no otherhours. No food restrictions.No word may be spoken, no communications written between a fraternitymember or alumnus and a freshman after 10 P.M. Thursday. Pledging willtake place from 8:30 A.M. to 12:30 P.M. on Friday.Article IV. Enforcement of the Rules.Fraternities and Freshmen are morally bound to report instances ofillegal rushing to any member of the IF committee, or the Dean’s office, andthe names of such a person or fraternity bringing the change will be with¬held at the discretion of the Dean's office. Such reports shall be investigatedby the IF committee infractions of the spirit or the intent of the fraternityrushing code penalties as outlined below shall be imposed on a report madeup to five days after the offense.The IF committee may precede and prosecute any violation of the rulesit knows of whether formal charge has been made or not.Article V. Penalties for Illegal Rushing.The following penalties shall be inflicted against any fraternity foundguilty of violating the Fraternity Rushing Code:A bond of one dollar per active and pledge must be in the hands of thetreasurer before any functions may be held.Conviction for the first infraction of rushing rules will forfeit the bondf the guilty fraternity. A bond twice the size of the first must be in thehands of the IF treasurer before rushing functions maybe continued by thathouse.Punishmo’^t for the second offense forfeits the second bond and will re¬quire bond three times the first before rushing may continue. Extraordinary Brumbaugh TalksOn Fraternity LifeThe fraternities of the Universi¬ty of Chicago are an integral partof the program of extra-curricu¬lum activities. As such they areaccorded the privileges and co¬operation which the administrationextends to all student organiza¬tions. The value of a fraternity,like the value of any other studentorganization or activity, must bedetermined by the degree to whichit fills a social or recreational needon the part of its members and bythe contribution direct or indirect,which the fraternity makes to theachievement of a well-rounded edu¬cation. To what extent a fraterni¬ty will aid or deter one in securingan education will depend consider¬ably upon the fraternity and uponthe relative importance the stu¬dent attaches to it. Whether to ac¬cept fraternity membership istherefore a matter for each studentto decide in the light of his socialand recreational interests, his edu-' rational objectives, and his finan¬cial circumstances.The fraternities have the sanc¬tion of the University and new stu¬dents are invited to evaluate thepart they share in student life onthe Quadrangles.A. J. Brumbaugh. Crosby ExplainsValue of MembershipIn a FraternityThe Interfraternity Council hopesthat information in this special issueof the Daily Maroon will prove valu¬able to potential fraternity men.One might define the college socialfraternity as a group of young menwith similar likes and tastes whohave chosen to spend their collegedays together. What these men getout of fraternities will be told brieflyin this Maroon. Questions of this na¬ture should be of prime importance tofreshmen seeking £ survey of frater¬nities as a whole.Fifteen ChaptersHere at the University of Chicagothere are fifteen chapters of nationalcollege fraternities. The Interfrater¬nity Council is their unifying forceand the Committee is their executivebranch. The two main social events ofthe year are the Interfraternity Ballon Thanksgiving Eve and the Interfra¬ternity Sing in June.One of the greatest opportunitiesoffered by fraternities is in the fieldof athletics. Competition in the Uni¬versity’s Intramural program, one ofthe most elaborate in the country, isvery keen. At the end of each year a trophy is presented to the frater¬nity totaling the most points.Cooperating with the aims of theUniversity with respect to scholar¬ship, fraternities employ a variety ofmethods to make conditions favorablefor scholastic achievement. The com¬parative scholarship rating publishedeach fall shows the fraternity aver¬age is higher than the all-campusaverage.Extra-Curricular ActivitiesGood BoxingYear: VorresHouse HeadsWatch RushersThe following presidents are heldresponsible for the conduct of the menin their houses during rushing:Bob Steier-Alpha Delta PMEdwin Armstrong-Beta Theta PiJack Ragle-Delta Kappa EpsilonCarl Dragstedt-Delta UpsilonRobert Moore-Kappa SigmaFred Gustafson-Phi Delta ThetaNick Parisi-Phi Gamma DeltaEdgar Nelson-Phi Kappa PsiJack Glabman-Phi Sigma DeltaMaynard Wishner-Pi Lambda PhiBob Bean-Psi UpsilonWilliam B. Riley-Sigma ChiT. George Gilinsky-Zeta Beta Tau By PAUL PATTONCoach Spiros Vorres predicts agreat year for both wrestling andboxing as well as his new course inself defense, “due to the tremendousimpetus given to body-buildingcourses by the war.”The outlook is brightened by thereappearance of five freshman numer¬al winners of last year how are of acertainty varsity material. Amongthem are numbered George Culp,wrestling 155 lb. class. Bob Tallman,also 155, George Price, another 155,Irving Lifschitz, in 175 lb. division,and Nick Melas, 121 lb. Varsity menare Co-Captain Mustain, a heavy¬weight, whose wrestling career thisyear is jeopardized by the draft,Frank Getz, in 145 lb. class, LawrenceBates, 136 lb., Monoghan, 155 lb., andFrank Wrobel, in the 175 lb. division.The great need/ expressed by theCoach Vorres for a wrestler in 128lb. division may be filled by Bob Boch,state wrestling champ in Pennsyl¬vania in that weight. Not only do fiaternities helpintegrate their members in thecurriculum of the University, but alsoin the extra-curricular activities. Itis an accepted fact that fraternitymen dominate student activities. Mostof the marshals, holders of the high¬est honor an undergraduate can re¬ceive from the University, are fra¬ternity men. They are appointed byPresident Hutchins. Members of Owland Serpent, Iron Mask, and Skulland Crescent are almost all frater¬nity men.Social life among fraternities isvaried enough to be interesting andsufficiently extensixe to permit the in¬dividual to participate in as much oras little as he desires. Open andclosed parties, exchange dinners, stagfunctions, and picnics are character¬istic of the social program.Fraternity FellowshipOne of the most important benefitsof fraternity life and certainly themost intangible is fellowship. Thefraternity is unique in the idea ofj fellowship, since in no other activitycan the student find such a closely-knit group while at college.Because it is impossible to do morethan suggest the advantages of beinga fraternity man in an article of thisnature, freshmen should make themost of the six weeks rushing periodwhen fraternities extend a cordial in¬vitation to investigate their mode oflife. We wish to thank Cap and Gownfor its generosity in lending theCouncil the cuts used in this issue.Joan A. Crosby, President.Pros and Cons of Fraternity MembershipDiscussed by Dean William ScottIf all the arguments for and against fraternities were assembled to¬gether, there would still be irreconcilable differences of opinion. “Too costly”;“Snobbish and undemocratic”; “Time-wasters”; “Detrimental to intellectualor academic proficiency”; “Perpetrators of adolescent thinking and behavior.”These are typical adverse criticisms. The favorable ones include suchphrases as: “Morale builders”; “Aids to social and academic adjustment”;“Provide a sense of belonging”; “Best avenue toward permanent friendships”;“Furnishes experience in getting along with people”; “Develops initiation, re¬sponsibility, leadership—and fellowship—qualities.” To both of these kindsof comments can be added such real- Interfraternity ConcilAt 4:30 next Thursday afternoon,a memorial service will be held inBond Chapel for Prefessor Emeri¬tus James Hayden Tifts, who diedin Berkeley, California, August 5.Speakers will include ProfessorWoodward, Vice-President emeri¬tus of the University, Professor T.V. Smith of the Philosophy Depart¬ment, Professor Ames, and HaroldSwift, Chairman of the Board ofTrustees of the University.fiction will be taken by the IF Council for following offenses or for anysingular overt act of illegal rushing which may be brought to the attentionof the IF committee. Every house president is made liable for any unfairIroning activities of his house. istic appraisals as: “Adds to socialand personal prestige”; “Eases en¬trance into activities”; “Helps the in¬dividual away from home to solve hiseating and housing problems.”There is much of truth in all ofthese evaluations. The degree willvary from campus to campus, fromfraternity to fraternity. Ultimately,the relative goodness of fraternities ata given college reflects the qualitiesof the college itself—its academicand social standards, the maturity andintelligence of the students enrolled,and the cordiality of relationship be¬tween the college and administrationand the fraternity, its members andalumni.Since the University of Chicago isone of the best universities, since itsstudents average near the top in anyobjective rating of the intelligence ofcollege students, and since the Uni¬versity, while unwilling to direct This Issue is published bythe Daily Maroon as a courtesyto the Interfraternity Council,a fellow student organization.It does not in any way consti¬tute an opinion, tacit or ex¬plicit, about fraternities.more than a minimum of a fraterni¬ty's affairs, is certainly not antag¬onistic, it follows that fraternitieshere are pretty good fraternities.Under the rushing rules, bothFreshmen and the fraternities haveample time to get to know each other,without jeopardizing other concerns.Thus decisions can be made with care:costs, advantages and disadvantages,by Freshmen; and the fitness of anindividual Freshman to participate inthe opportunities and responsibilitiesthat go with membership in a particu¬lar house, by the fraternity.Dean ScottM ORiniNAl 1 /Page Pour -THE DAILY MAROON WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 7, 1942Alpha Delta PhiFounded at Hamilton College in1832, Alpha Delta Phi quickly rose toprominence throughout the country.The chapters agreed on a policy oflimited expansion, and today there are27 active Chapters at college and uni¬versities from the Bowdoin Chapter inMaine to the Stanford and CaliforniaChapters in sun scorched California.The present Chapter House wascompleted in 1931. The Chapter, form¬ed from the Lion’s Head Club in 1896,has had a long and distinguished his¬tory. The Chapter now has an activemembership of 24, and two pledges.In the Senior class are GeorgeDrake, member of Owl and Serpentand Chairman of the Student Publici¬ty Board, as well as a member ofERC, Dick Merrifield, President ofthe Reynolds Club Council, member ofthe Senior board of Blackfriars,. andan outstanding student in the Busi¬ness School; Bill Oostenbrug and LinLeach, members of the Baseball team,and Lin is also Steward of the Houseand has a schalarship in the BusinessSchool; Bob Stierer, President of theHouse and a member of the StudentWar Council; and Dave Durkee,President of the Hobes Congress andworld traveler of wide reknown. ^ activities, in which there has been anoteworthy decrease of interest. JohnBallard made three A’s out of fourcomprehensive grades his first year.John is a member of the newly found¬ed Students’ Political Commission,and of Skull and Crescent. John Hov-ing is also a member of the Commis¬sion, and another outstanding student.Jim Wenger was on the Freshmantrack team and also a member ofSkull and Crescent, as is Mike Jones,who received his numerals in gymnas¬tics last spring. Keith McCormickholds down the post of AssistantSteward, and Pledge Howie Corbus isactive in the Chapel Choir, as is Lar¬ry Brown.Prominent Alpha Delt Alumni in¬clude Robert M. Hutchins, PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt, Theodore or“Teddy” Roosevelt, Oliver WendellHolmes, Harlan Fisk Stone, ThortonWilder, and Stephen Vincent Benet.Members of the Junior class, whichhac been badly hit by the War, includeHowie Husum, Rushing Chairman,member of the Varsity Tennis team,and member of Iron Mask; Tom Hoe-gen, recently admitted to the MedicalSchool; Bob Van Etten, rugged Intra-Mural Chairman; and Wally Michel,another member of the Varsity Tennisteam.The Sophomore class is the largestin the House, and has a fine recordin academic achievement as well as in 1The costs of membership are about jequal to the campus average, andhave some' distinguishing features:they are all-inclusive, that is, they in¬clude all fees, meals, and social as¬sessments; they have not been raisedfor this year; and the initiation feehas been lowered $20, from $60 to $40.A House resident pays $60 per monthwhich covers all dues, board androom. A non-resident active pays $25 ja month which covers all lunches andone dinner per week. A pledge pays$20 for the same privileges. Delta UpsilonFounded in 1834 at Williams Col¬lege, I i Upsilon is one of the fiveoldest social fraternities in the coun¬try. The Chicago Chapter was formedin 1901 when the local fraternity.Iron Key, was admitted to the Dynational fraternity. Numbering 61chapters located at the biger schoolsin both the United States and Canada,Delta Upsilon is one of the larger na¬tional fraternities.Celebrating its 41st anniversary atChicago, DU, as the second largesthouse on campus, has the largest fac¬ulty representation of any fraternity.Included in this group are: H. B. Le¬mon, Fay Cooper-Cole, Dean Gilkey,Charlton Beck, John Moulds, GeorgeWorks, former bursar William Math¬er, and the present registrar, EdwinMiller. Delia KappaEpsilonFounded at Yale in 1844, DeltaKappa Epsilon numbers forty-sevenchapters in the United States andCanada. Consistently included amongthe first three fraternities, it is fairto say that Deke has long been veryhighly regarded in the eyes of similarorganizations. The list of famousDekes includes Presidents Hayes andTheodore Roosevelt; authors Nathan¬iel Hawthorne and Owen Wister; Dr.Harvey Cushing, Admiral RobertPeary, and composer Cole Porter.Among the famous Dekes well knownas athletes are Pete Layden, Jack-rabbit Crain, Frankie Albert, WilmerAllison, Don Budge, and WalterCamp. Paul S. Russell, Frank Mc¬Nair, Albert W. Sherer, and PresidentHarold Swift of the board of trusteesof the University are all ChicagoDekes.The fact most important to thosenow considering fraternities here arethe present accomplishments of theDelta Delta Dekes and the caliber ofthe present members. Last year theDekes were third in the infraternityintermural race, capturing champion¬ships in wrestling and track, secondsin basketball and swimming. A fineKappa SigmaKappa Sigma, with 114 chapters, isthe largest national fraternity in theUnited States. The first chapter wasfounded in 1869 at the University ofVirginia; the local chapter was found¬ed in 1904.Beta Theta PiBeta Theta Pi, now entering itssecond century of continued existence,has the distinction of being the firstfraternity to originate west of theAllegheny Mountains. Always apioneer. Beta was the first to adopta truly national point of view; andnow, in the words of the historian ofa rival fraternity ‘claims undisputedleadership in the Greek world.’This pioneer spirit in Beta is re¬sponsible for the optimism with whichit looks forward to its second centuryof life. With its 88 chapters in theUnited States and the two in Canadaits national roster shows a member¬ship of some 45,000 men among whomare such as Wendell Willkie, Paul V.McNutt, Associate Justice William O.Wisconsin, Larry MacPhail of theDodgers, Horace Heidt, Owen D.Young, president of General Electric,and many others prominent in publiclife.In scholarship Beta boasts anotherfirst. Since 1925 the results of theNational Inter-fraternity CouncilSurvey have placed Beta above allother large national fraternities 14times. Lambda Rho, the local chapter,has led the campus fraternities inscholarship for the past ten years.The local chapter, founded in 1892,last year celebrated its Fiftieth Anni¬versary along with the University. Itnow has eighteen active members.Jerry Scheidler is head of FreshmanOrientation, a Student Marshall, anda member of* Owl and Serpent. EddieArmstrong, of Blackfriars and Dra¬matic Association, is a prominentcampus figure. Jack Berger is on theReynolds Club Inner Council and aletter winner in Gymnastics. Jim Will-ott is on the Intramural Staff. BobKraybill is a letter winner in fencing,and Don Rowley and Dick Stoughtonare members of the hockey team.Harry Fischer is the second StudentMarshal in the house.In the chapter are two Third-YearHonor Scholars, John McBride andEdward Senz. McBride, president ofthe house, was active on the StudentHandbook this year and is a groupleader in Freshman Orientation.Wight Reade, a member of Skull andCrescent, is a Second Year HonorScholar. Pete Gunnar, also in Skulland Crescent is Rushing Chairmanof the house.A full social calendar for the yearincludes the Annual Mirror Partywhich traditionally comes in thespring after the Mirror show. Anoth¬er open party is the one following theInter-Fraternity Sing. Every week¬end ^there is a small informal party Most of the members are enrolledin some branch of the Services andmany of the members have taken thebasic military course offered by theUniversity.’for members, pledges, and their dates.Once a month there is a large in¬formal party with refreshments.These parties form the real backboneof the chapter’s social program. Alsoonce a month there is a date luncheon.Financially the house is unusuallysound. Costs to members are slightlybelow the average for the other fra¬ternities on campus. Charges forthose members living in the house av¬erage about $50 a month. This in¬cludes room, board, and chapter dues.Members of the fraternity not livingin the house pay $8.00 a month dues.Pledge dues are $5 per month. Theinitiation fee is $50 and there are nospecial assessments.READITHEMAROON In its program of developing a wellrounded house DU has become secondin scholarship and second in intra¬murals.At present there are two major “C”winners in the house. Walter Keme-tick, captain of the tennis team, andDonald Boyes, varsity track man.Grover Daly in tennis and Carl Drag-stedt in fencing are the minor letterholders in the house.Last year Kemetick won the BigTen tennis championship Number twospot for the second year in a row.This year’s team will probably have3 DU’s on it. This year’s rifle teamis captained by a DU, Gene Gleason,with Kelly, H. Tully, and Garver alsoon the team. Last fall 6 DU’s wonawards in 6-man football; while thisfall the same number of men are out.President for this term is seniorCarl Dragstedt, member of the seniorIntramural Board, varsity fencer, andAsst. Bus. Mgr. of Cap and Gown.Vice president is Eugene Gleasonfrom out Montai^a way, who as cap¬tain of the rifle team walked off withsome 25 odd medals in the Universityof Chicago rifle shoot last year andthe Blackhawk match. Secretary isGrover Daly varsity tennis player,and Paul Armbruster is Treasurer.Besides participation in athleticsthere are many DU’s in the variousactivities around the campus. WalterKemetick, besides being captain ofthe tennis team was treasurer ofIron Mask society last year. This yearBob Tully is treasurer of the Inter-Fraternity council.Sophomore Charles Meyer is ourmember of the sophomore honor so¬ciety, Skull and Crescent; Gene Glea¬son is o urman in the junior society.Iron Mask; and Donald Boyes is amember of Owl and Serpent, seniorhonor society. In addition to his mem¬bership in 0 & S, Boyes is head of theIntramural board. DU’s have quite apowerful representation on the IMstaff. Besides Boyes, Dragstedt is an¬other senior member. On the juniorboard are three more DU’s, H. Tully,Gleason, and Frank Kelly. The sopho¬more board also contains three more, DU’s, Meyer, DuBois, and little Jim¬my Hansen.The initiation fee is $50 with apledge fee of $10. While pledges, thedues are $3 per month, and after ini¬tiation active dues are $11 per month.Pledges are not required to eat anymeals at the house, but actives areexpected to eat at least 6 meals a weekif they do not live in the house, and10 meals for men living in the house.For a man living in the house, theaverage bill per month is $42, for dues,room and board. While a man outsidethe house averages $22 a month fordues and board. Prominent seniors in the house in¬clude Frank Kenney, Abbot of Black¬friars and member of Owl and Ser¬pent, senior honorary society; BobMoore, active in Chapel Union andCap and Gown; Warren Pursell, Chi¬cago Tribune reporter; and Don Haw¬kins, Law Review competitor.Eric Erickson, member of IronMask, Student Publicity Board, andthe swimming team and Vic Mintek, jdiver on the swimming team, are jun- |ior men of promise. jOutstanding sophomores include !Stocky Everts and Ted de Looze, out¬standing tennis players; Cliff Gurney,track and baseball contender; WallyGriffith, swimmer; Verne Behnke,singer and actor. Art Code, gymnast,who won first place in the ChicagoA.A.U. gymnast met; and John Gug-ich, on the staffs of the Daily Maroonand Pulse.According to the latest availablefigures. Kappa Sigma ranks fourth onthe campus in the scholarship.Officers of the fraternity for thecoming year are Bob Moore, Presi¬dent; Norman Phillips, Vice Presi¬dent; Fred Beattie, Master of Cere¬monies; John Dyer, Secretary; andDon Hawkins, Treasurer.The chapter house owned by thealumni association, has been locatedat 5715 Woodlawn Avenue since 1924.It provides accommodations for ap¬proximately thirty men. A separateroom on the third floor is reservedfor the use of city members who de¬sire to spend an occasional night oncampus.Men living in the house pay $53.00a month for room and board. Pledgebills are $17.00 a month for fivelunches and one dinner a week, use ofhouse facilities, and dues. The initia¬tion fee of $50.00 includes a life sub- turnout of members and alumni at the^iInterfraternity sing won the Quanti-^ty Cup for the house. Men now in the^chapter have won Major C’s in base-ball, track, and*swimming; Minor C's 'in water polo, swimming, track, base-ball, tennis, golf. v*..Head Marshall of the University,and outstanding Deke senior is Dew-,ey Norris—major letterman in base-ball. Owl Serpent man, and headSi,waiter in Hutchinson Commons^V?President of the house is Boston Jack^s^;.Ragle, letter winner in water polo, J',and a Psychology major. Captain ofthis year’s swimming team, and mem- ; Iher of the three honor societies—Skull and Crescent, Iron Mask, and'.,-Owl and Serpent—is senior -Bill ; -Baugher, who also works in the steel Ymills in his spare time. One of thehardest workers in the house is track- ^ster Johnny Leggitt, head of the In¬ter-Fraternity Cooperative. One ofthe outstanding performers on theMaroon’s track team is conscientiousBob Kincheloe.Prominent in hou.se affairs as hard- - iworking house manager is California’sJohn Buckingham, member of the Isophomore class which also boasts %among others, ace speedster Harry jBeardsley, gymnast Tom Mahoney, /and dashman Aubrey Moore RushingChairan and Junior classman is an¬other California product, QuentinMoore, head waiter in the CoffeeShop. Among his class mates aresmart Physicist Gordy Northrup whois also very active in dramatics; all-’round athlete, and letter winner intennis; Erie Theimer; very activeCraig Leman, letter winner in swim¬ming, and an accomplished pianist;and Norm Barker.Of this year’s chapter, exactly halfare members of re.serve corps of eitherthe Army, Navy, or the Marines. Sev¬eral of the brothers are not back be¬cause they are in the Services. Themajor aim of the Dekes—as a houseand as individuals—now is threefold:1) effective completion of their cours¬es of study as soon as is practicable;2) maintenance of good physical con¬dition as is necessary for all of usnow, through intermurals or throughparticipation in varsity athletics iftime permits; 3) continuation of housestrength and solidarity.Expenses to Dekes are less than theUniversity average. Initiation fee is$55 and pledge fee is $6. Men livingin the hou.se pay $150 for room, board,and dues. City men pay $27.50 fordues and $30 per quarter for sixmeals a week at the house. Social dues •are $15 per year.scription to the fraternity magazineand a fraternity pin.Members who have left for service ^in the armed forces within the lastyear include: George May rose, MortFranklin, John Boyd, Guy Centner,John Campiche, Chuck Noble, WallyKurk, Wayne Boutell, Ed Cerny, BobUnsold, and Ivan Keever.Prominent alumni of the local chap¬ter include: Dwight H. Green, Gov¬ernor of Illinois; Verni Hill Blackett,chairman of the Illinois State Repub¬lican Party; Dr. Emmett B. Bay, Pro-lessor oi ivieaicine at me university;Dr. Richard Biddle Richter, AssistantProfessor of Medicine; Egil Krogh,Olympis Star; Edwin Hubble, notedastronomer; Francis W. Parker, edcator.Lowell Thomas, radio commentabSen. Warren Austin; Hoagy Car-,micael, musician; Wm. Gibbs McAdoo,{former senator from California andat one time Secretary of the Treas¬ury; Gene Venske, world 1,500 meterrecord holder; Clarence Cannon,Chairman of the House Appropria¬tions Committee; Governor Price ofVirginia; Governor O’Donnell of Mis¬souri; Bob Zuppke, Bing Crosby, andClaude Passeau are eminent alumniof other chapters.William F. Edg’erton, OrientalInstitute Professor of Egyptologyjhas been called to Washington on|government service. Two of hisclasses at the Institute have beencancelled; History of the EgypttianLanguage, and Seminar in Egyp¬tology. His other classes have beentaken over by other staff members.John A. Wilson, Director of theInstitute and Herrllee G. Creel, As-soci'ate Professor of Early ChineseLiterature and Customs, have bothbeen on leave for some time oigovernment service.THE DAILY MAROON WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1942 Page FivePhi Delta ThetaPhi Delta Theta Fraternity wasfounded at Miami University in De¬cember, 1848, as a member of thefamous Miami Triad. The Illinois Betachapter of Phi Delta Theta was orig:-inally instituted at the old Universityof Chicago in 1865 but was disbandedwhen the school broke up in the de¬pression of the ’70’s. The chapter wasre-organized in 1897 at the presentuniversity.The chapter is headed by FredGustafson as president. Three mem¬bers of the house are varsity athleticcaptains. Bud Humphreville and BobMustain are co-captains of the wres¬tling team. Ray Randall is captain ofthe track team, and a capable miler.Bob Oakley plays guard on the bas¬ketball team and is considered one ofthe best in the Big Ten. Bob is alsonumber one man on the golf team.Ben Vineyard and Paul Kaup aremembers of the swimming squad. A1Ross represents the house on the gym¬nastics team. Armand Lilicn is one ofthe strongest players of the basketballteam as well as one of the upperbracket men in varsity tennis. Lastyear’s freshman class won six numer¬als.In last year’s intramurals. Phi Deltwon the University championship inbasketball and placed in touch foot¬ball and softball. The house is wellrepresented in other activities. KenAxelson is the president of the Dra¬matic Association, while a number ofthe other men are members of theorganization. Other Phi Delts aremembers of t h e Freshman Orienta¬tion Board, the Student Social Com¬mittee and the Publicity Board.Paul Kaup is a member of Skulland Crescent, the sophomore honorsociety. Bob Oakley represents thehouse in Iron Mask, the junior honorsociety. In addition. Phi Delta Thetahas led the campus for the past sev¬eral years in the number of Phi Beta, Kappa men—which is in keeping withthe national fraternity record of lead¬ing all other fraternities in the num¬ber of Phi Bete keys and Rhodesscholarships won. The fraternitymaintains a foreign exchange scholar¬ship plan whereby some student froma foreign university is given a year’sscholarship to the University of Chi¬cago and room and board at the fra¬ternity house. In exchange, the for¬eign university maintains a studentelected by the fraternity.Phi Delta Theta sponsors a numberof social affairs during the year, thehighlights of which are the winterand summer formals, and the SillyStrut which is an open party held thelast night of Blackfriars. House dancesare held at frequent intervals. Dateluncheons are held weekly. Girls’clubs are entertained at Sunday teasand weekday luncheons. The Found¬er’s Day banquet is a joint functionheld by the Chicago Alumni Club andparticipated in by the Northwesternand Chicago chapters of Phi Delt.Illinois Beta has a firm financialstatus. The chapter again ran suc¬cessfully “in the black” for the pastyear and the treasury has a substan¬tial surplus with which to start thehiGammaDeltaPhi Gamma Delta moves into itsforty-first Chicago year, with an en¬thusiastic chapter and an undauntedspirit. A small house, the Figis nonethe less play a prominent part in cani-us activities.Varsity and intramural sports areheir main stamping ground. Nick Pa-•isi, Wally Pfeil, and Rod Briggs com-)rise the Phi Gams’ gift to the start-ng baseball nine, with Harvey Car-len and Frank Siska trying for placesl>n the basketball team. In intramuraljompetition, the Figis are alwaysHrong contenders. Two silver foot-)all trophies garnered in the last threeears grace the trophy case, and theys are looking for a third this fall.On the social side, the Spring For-al, which replaced the *‘gone for theration” Grass Skirt Party, is the^h ligh^, and is supplemented by bi-kly house parties the year round.®^edecoration program, undertakent summer, has made the chapteruse a magnet for the Figis. The^me room has been copletely madefver, with ping pong tables, and—a-hfem—other facilities. The other roomstve also benefited, and now the housecommodates eighteen men. To livethe house, an active pays $61.50 amth, which includes room and mealswell as the bid to the Inter-Fra-rnity Ball. Pledges pay $4.00 a[mth, and this includes Monday night‘I'als and the I-F bid. coming season. Extensive refurnish¬ing was carried on last year and manynew house improvements were madethis Fall.The Initiation Fee into Illinois Betais .$65.00. This includes life member¬ship into Phi Delta Theta, pin, andlife subscription to two national mag¬azines, the SCROLL and the PALLA¬DIUM. Monthly financial obligationsof members: are as follows:PLEDGES: Dues, $4.50 and Board of$9.40 for an average of $13.90. 'AC¬TIVES: Men living in the chapterhouse—Dues $10.50, Room $20.00,Board $28.00, for an average of $59.30per month. Board is at the rate of$1.20 per (lay with no meals beingserved on Sunday. M^v. living in thecity—Dues $12.50, Board $9.40, or anaverage of .$21.90 per month. Boardincludes four lunches and one dinnerper week. All figures are based on onemonth. Board figures will vary slight-'ly with the number of days in themonth. Total for the year for activemen living in the Chapter House (in¬cluding board, room, and dues) is$468.40 or an average of $156.13 perquarter. These figures are computedfor the new 12-week quarter of theUniversity of Chicago.These costs include the entire Fra¬ternity expense of memebrs of PhiDelta Theta. The only additionalcharge is $5.00 each for two formalparties per year, held outside thechapter house. There are no summerdues, no special asessments, and nohouse notes or other alumni obliga¬tions.Many prominent men are on theroster of Phi Gam Alumni. From thischapter have come Donald Richberg,Vincent Sheehan, and Will Cuppy,Others have produced such men asCalvin Coolidge, Alf Landon, and NewYork’s Governor Lehman. An All-American football team could easilybe made up of Figis. Tommy ICuzma,Bill Daley, Bill Hellenbrand, Alf Bau¬man, Whizzer White, and Bill Dudleyare just a few of them.The men in charge of this chapter’seffort toward adding to this list are:Nick Parisi, President; Bob Hanson,Treasurer; and Chuck Seefelt, Rush¬ing Chairman.United We StandDivided We Fall Sigma ChiDuring the past academic year,which saw two national fraternitieswithdraw chapters from the U. of C.campus because of lack of men, theOmicron Omicron Chapter of SigmaChi pledged and initiated one of thelargest classes of its history, and alarger class than any other fraternityon campus. Not only was the class thelargest, but it has been one of themost active—socially, in extra-curric¬ular activities, and scholastically. .The abililty to initiate a class suchas this Sigma Chi credits to its uniquepolicy of refusing to allow the fra¬ternity to smother the individuality ofits members. Here are a few facts il¬lustrating this point. Two of the starsof the varsity baseball team lastspring. Bill Kontos and Lou Johnson,were Sigs. They will play again thisspring. Sigma Chi has more membersactive on the staff of the DAILY MA¬ROON than any other fraternity. Thestaff of Cap and Gown includes fourSigs, a larger number than any otherfraternity can boast. The Freshmanbaseball team included five membersof Sigma Chi. Student Forum, debat¬ing group, has more active Sigs thanrepresentatives from any other frater¬nity. In conjunction with the war ef¬fort, Sigma Chi has contributed agreat deal, not only in actives now inservice, but on the campus. Jack Bau¬man is student head of a very import¬ant Army Air Cadet Council, a«idmembers have been active in the WarCouncil. Some of the other activitiesin which Sigs are active are the Uni¬versity Band, the Student PublicityBoard, Alpha Phi Omega, Chapel Un¬ion, Inter-fraternity Council, the Uni¬versity Choir, Interchurch Council,freshman orientation, and DramaticAssociation^ Outstandihg member ofthe Freshman Rifle team was ArtGay, a Sig. Several active Sigs havebeen iniated into the Order of Black¬friars, and Sigma Chis have been e-lected to both Iron Mask and Skull andCrescent, University honorary socie¬ties. Sig teams are always entered in’every major intra-mural sport.Sigma Chi was founded in 1855,when there occurred a split in DeltaKappa Epsilan. Since that time. Sig¬ma Chi has grown to more than twicethe size of its parent, with 100 Sigchapters, two of which were installed3615 Woodlawn Ave., CuSversity of Chicago, Chicago, lU^this year. Sigma Chi is a member ofthe Miami Triad, most influential fra¬ternity group in the country. Alumniof Sigma Chi include a president ofthe U.S., important industrial offi¬cials, literary figures such as BoothTarkington, Harvey Allen, Clarence K.Streit, and George Ade; prominentWashington officials Mr. Justice FrankMurphy, John Cudahy, former ambas¬sador to Belgium, Marvin McIntyre,secretary to the President, and Sena¬tors and Representatives from sevenstates; cartoonists Milton Caniff, Fon¬taine Fox, and John McCutcheon, tomention but a very few of the greatSigs in every walk of life.Sigma Chi is one of the least expen¬sive houses on campus to which to be¬long. A man living and eating all hismeals in the house will have an aver¬age total bill of $65 per month, includ¬ing all chapter fees. A city man eatingan average schedule of five lunchesand a dinner will average $18.70 permonth—all fees included. However, aschedule of fewer meals will cost cor¬respondingly less. No special assess¬ments, which amount to a large sumin many houess, can be charged, ac¬cording to a chapter ruling. The inia-John R. Devey, assistant dean ofstudents in the College, was the prin¬cipal speaker at the class meetingsfor first and second year students ofthe College Tuesday.. Tor Richter andLaille Schutz presided at the sedondyear meeting, while John Spencer waselected president of the first year stu¬dents.Other first year officers electedwere Howard Frazier, vice-president;Marjorie Mather, secretary; and Pam¬ela Wilson, treasurer. Phi Kappa PsiThe brotherhood of Phi Kappa Psiwas founded at Jefferson College,Pennsylvania, in 1852, among a groupof students who realized the value ofsuch an organization, after helpingeach other to weather a devastatingtyphoid epidemic. Building their or¬ganization on this principle of mutualbenefit, "the fraternity flourished andexpanded to its present strength of 51chapters. It has produced many greatmen throughout its history—Wood-row Wilson, Pierce Butler, GeneralMitchell (air power prophet), “WildBill” Donovan, and many others.Phi Kappa Psi established its Illi¬nois Beta chapter at the old Univer¬sity of Chicago in 1865. There Was alapse when the University closed itsdoors, but the chapter was again in¬stated with the re-established univer¬sity in 1892. Its roll is heavy withnames playing roles of significance inthe annals of the midway. Of thethirty-five great teams of AlonzoStagg only two engaged in competi¬tion without the support of Phi Psifootballers. First of the only two menever to earn twelve Major “C” ’s atthe U. of Chicago was Phi Psi NelsNorgren, who, until he left to takea Captain’s post in the Navy lastmonth, was Head Coach of Basketball.Possessing one of the most well-rounded houses on campus. Phi Kap¬pa Psi stands proud of its record. Itsbrothers have been outstanding inathletics, scholarship, extra-curricularactivities, and intramural sports. Al¬though the ranks have been depletedto a considerable extent by the exist¬ing crisis, the remaining acti/e chap¬ter is • still notable in quality. Onefact of singuar interest is that IllinoisBeta is second only to our SouthernCalifornia chapter in the number ofbrothers which they have contributedto the present emergency. Of our fif¬ty-two brothers in the armed forcesthirty-nine are commissioned officers.In athletics. Phi Psi is represestedon the wrestling, basketball, tennis,and fencing teams. Three brothers a^emembers of the wrestling team, one aMajor “C” man last year. In basket¬ball, their representative has dis¬tinguished himself by earning twomajor “C” ’s in the last two seasons.tion fee of $50 is the smallest on cam¬pus.Sigma Chi’s house is physically oneof the campus’ finest. The chapter tookpossession of the house only two yearsago, and it is equipped with such unu¬sual features as a music room, recrea¬tion room, and a well-stocked library,including all college required readingbooks in the surveys.Clinics NeedNew VolunteersVolunteers have been relied upon inthe University of Chicago Clinics forsome time to perform many of theextra courtesies and hospitalitieswhich mean sc much to patients andtheir relatives visiting the hospitalsand out-patient departments. Now,with the constant demands on doctorsand nurses, the services which volun¬teers can perform have been consider¬ably expanded.These girl volunteers work in var¬ious departments of the Clinics, eachgiving at least two and a half hoursof service a week to a definite assign¬ment. They are distinguished by ma¬roon uniforms which have the insig¬nia “Volunteer” on the left sleeve;those who have given fifty hours ofservice wear a white coif.Work Frees NursesThe importance of this service isimmeasurable in humanizing the re¬lationship between a large hospitaland the patient. In the Clinics Ad¬mitting Offices, volunteers act ashostesses to all new patients, helpthem to fill out the application blanks,and make appointments. “Play Lady”volunteers tell stories and play withthe children in Bobs Roberts MemorialHospital for Children. In the Homefor destitute Crippled Children, volun¬teers assist in taking children to theoccupational therapy workroom, andaid in the supervision of their hand¬work activities.Volunteers help in the general cleri¬cal work of many hospital depart¬ments, work in the patients’ librarayservice, assist at visiting hours, andin night messenger service. There areopportunities for volunteers to do artwork, operate the motion picture pro¬jector for weekly movies, do mending Holding down the number three pcii-tion on the tennis team for the lasttwo years, is another double * C” win¬ner, and great htings are promised forour transfer from Notre Dame, whohas developed rapidly in fencing. Out¬standing sophomore swimmer fromlast year, and another “C” man, hasbeen called into the Naval Air Corps.Phi Kappa Psi’s participation in ex¬tra-curricular activities is well evi¬denced by the fact that they haverepresentatives in every honorary or¬ganization of the school. Phi Psiboasts of members in Skull and Cres¬cent, Iron Mask, two members of Owland Serpent and a Student Marshall.Our seniors hold many responsible po¬sitions on campus such as BusinessManager of the Daily Maroon, Chair¬man of Transfer Orientation, and VicePresident of the Interfraternity Coun¬cil.Phi Psi’s emphasis on scholarship isbrought out by the fact that half ofthe sophomore class has been grantedscholarship aid, our freshmen .lastyear earned a “B” average, and ourseniors took eight degrees.In intramural sports. Phi Psi hasnever ranked below fifth in the lastfive years. Last year, some of itsmore notable achievements were asecond in touchball, a close second inwrestling and a fraternity and Uni¬versity championship in softball.The finanacial obligations coinci¬dent with joining are as follows:Pledge fee—$17.00 per month (in¬cluding 24 meals). Active house bill—$65 per month (including room,board, and dues). Initiation fee—$60.No special assessments are madeduring the year, and there are nosummer dues.The Phi Psi house boasts proudlyof its gracious and efficient house¬mother, Mrs. O. J. White. MotherWhite has been a Phi Psi for sevenyears and is an exclusive feature withthe house among the fraternities oncampus.Reservations for the YWCA Car¬toon Supper (all entering women in¬vited) to be held next Thursday at5:30 at Ida Noyes must be made byWednesday noon in the Y office. JoanDoig, chairman, says it will be a swellprogram.New feature of the Y is the weekly“coker” every Friday from 3:30 to 6.All refreshments except valuable cokesare free.for children in Bobs Roberts, or workat the information desk in the lobby.Gain Valuable Experience“Volunteer work offers an excellentopportunity for girls to see the fnuc-tions and framework of hospital workand administration,” said Miss JeanElvin, Director of Volunteers. “Thework is adaptable to individual tal¬ents, and will undoubtedly expand evenmore this year, with the possible ad¬dition of a Nurse’s Aide course.”Students interested in this workshould contact Miss Elvin at BillingsHospital, Midway 0800, Extension 476.Placements are made through an in¬terview with her.Compton and WestminsterArthur H. Compton, physicistand Nobel Prize winner, will ad¬dress the Westminster StudentGroup Wednesday evening, Oc¬tober 7, at 7:00, in Ida Noyes Hall,on the subject, “The Student andSociety as a Physicist Sees It.”Compton, Professor of Physics atthe University and head of the De¬partment of Physical Sciences, isnoted for his outstanding research¬es in cosmic rays.This will be the first meeting heldby Westminster Student Group, thePresbyterian student organization,during the autumn quarter of thisyear. In addition to the speaker at7:00, supper will be served at 6:00.All those who wish to make reser¬vations for the supper may call inperson at the Interchurch office,Chapel basement, or phone Midway0800, ext. 1121.i » '1.•■:■/. ''A;.~ .• .. i " ^ ..'iP;'f ".'JTHE DAILY MAROON WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 7, 1942ij^mda Phi Psi UpsilonPi Lambda Phi is a model fra ternity. It serves its men and its menserve it. The house brings the bro¬thers together on campus. It ties abond between University life and so¬cial life (no, the two are not partic¬ularly synonomous), and graces theintellect with preferred social intel¬ligence, and indoctrinates the sociableswith the “Social Contract”.Well, suppose we begin with ath¬letics. Pilams are always a major con¬tender for the major intramuralcrowns, having been in the softballplaj’offs for the past 5 years, andquite often in football and basketball.The billiard team placed second thisyear. It is a policy of Pilam to getas many out for these sports as possi¬ble. Even though the B teams maynot be of championship calibre, theyget many men working out together• if only for the exercise and a whale ofa good time.As far as other activities are con¬cerned, there has not been a yearsince its founding that the BusinessManagership of Pulse has not beenin the hands of Pilams. This year’sBusiness Manager is Maynard Wish-ner with Alvin Star as Business As¬sociate. In dramatics Pilams stand outagain. In last year’s Blackfriars show,Dave Lazarus was in charge of light¬ing using then freshman Shelly Shal-ett as plug-sticker-inner assistant.Brother Herb Manning, now EnsignManning had charge of business. SolKaminsky again created a sensationwith his female impersonation dance.And Maynard WisJiner played thelead, stopping the show with the nowfamous cob-web scene. Brother Wish-ner also was in the DA musical suc¬cess “Those That are Fools” althoughhis performance was dampened by thepresence of the second row full ofPilams who showered him with thecontents of water guns at a strategicmoment. He has since become a mem¬ber of the DA board of control.In other activities are A1 Ungerand Phil Richman on the ReynoldsClub Council. Pi Lam is also the onlyfraternity represented on the HillelCouncil.Too much emphasis cannot be plac¬ed on scholarship which has alwaysbeen a Forte at the Pi Lam house.For the past four out of five years wehave won the National Pi Lambda Phiaward for the highest scholastic rec¬ord of all Pi Lam chapters. Joel Bern¬stein, Phi Beta Kappa and first manin the Department of Economics, andHerb Manning second man in theBusiness School are examples. Alsoincluded in the chapter roster are sev¬eral competitive and honor scholar¬ship men.Being a house which does not al¬ways turn to the bpoks on a rainy day,Pilam finds much time to be musicalwith the outstanding classical recordcollection on campus and with its ownideas and Bob (Beethoven) Chanock,Phil (Gershwin) Richman and Lyman(Lunceford) Lehrbarger.Quite proud are we of the list of allthe Pilams in the service which wouldreach to your knees. Included are BobJacobs now in a Flying Fortress, En¬sign Herb Manning, Ensign Ed Horn¬er (med. school) and Potential EnsignBob Greenberg. Happy Jimmie Kraneis waiting his call to the Navy AirCorp to serve in the newly formedLexington Squadron. Also in uniformbut still around is rotund Maurie Bil-sky in the drab of the Illinois Militiaand a .45 automatic of 1918 vintageat his hip. (Watch out for him.) Mostproud are we of Hankie Grossmancited for valor at the Solomons.The spirit of good fellowship andcomradery is evidenced by the everpresent younger alumni and graduatestudents who make the house theirheadquarters even after active bro¬therhood has ceased. Inspiring is thePi Lambda Phi National fraternity,oldest and largest Jewish Fraternityin the country with 35 chapters fromMassachusetts to California and Can¬ada to Florida. We also mention withpride our Supreme Honorary Rex,IJinreTue Steinhardt, United Statesambassador to Turkey. Psi Upsilon is one of the three old¬est fraternities in the country. Of theseven men who founded the first chap¬ter at Union College in 1833, five werePhi Beta Kappas. No fraternity in thecountry has smaller national dues, $4per year per member, accounted forbecause of no paid executives in thenational council.Chartered 13 years before any otherfraternity in the Quadrangles, the lo¬cal chapter was founded in 1869. Thechapter house was 'the first fraternityhouse built on campus.Famous Psi U’s of the past andpresent include Presidents Chester A.Arthur and Wm. H. Taft, ChauncayDePew, Sen. Robt. O. Taft, (^JorneliusVanderbilt, Henry Stimson, WilliamBullitt, Percy H. Boynton, Max Ma¬son, fourth president of the Univer¬sity, Nelson Rockefeler, ArchibaldMacLeish, R. R. Donnelly, Deems /Tay¬lor, A. A. Stagg, George Lott, andJay Berwanger.The annual, rollicking “HardTimes” party is the most eagerlyawaited informal party of the Autumnquarter. Psi Upsilon shares in theexclusive “Three Way Formal”. AfterBlackfriars opening night, the housegives an annual open formal party.During the course of the year, the so¬cial program is also marked by radioand record dances, theatre parties,date and club luncheons, and endswith the annual, closed Spring Party.Near the top in Intramurals, PsiU’s have probably the most imposingcollection of trophies on campus. AlsoPsi Upsilon has won more than itsshare of I-F Sing cups.House president is genial Bob Bean,who is a member of Owl and Serpent,the Student Settlement Board, andhead of the successful Student SocialCommittee where he is ably assistedby brother Sam Fawley. Geology stu¬dent John Crosby is president of theInter-Fratemity Council, a major Cwinner in fancy diving, and a memberof Owl and Serpent.House treasurer and student marsh¬all George Krakowka is a major Cwinner in basketball, while next year’sbaseball hopes rest in the strong rightarm of Capt. Bob Meyer. Frank Evansholds down Psi U’s traditional placeon the Blackfriars governing board,and Joe VonAlbade divides his timebetween the Intramural Board andthe Law School.Among the prominent juniors are:Pep Paulson — Social Committee’ssuper salesman, business manager ofCap & Gown, and a member of IronMask and the Student Settlement;Vee Yasus—junior Intramural man¬ager and a member of the FreshmanOrientation Committee; Bud Baker—Blackfriars’ Junior manager in chargeof production and decorations man onthe Social Committee; Ben Sutton—Coach Merriam’s track discovery whois expected to carry his share of theburden for the thinclads and big BritWadlund, a members of the control¬ling boards of the Reynolds ClubCouncil and the Orientation Commit¬tee.Charges are as follows. Initiationfee $100.00. There is no pledge fee.Dues are $10.00 a month with $7.50per quarter social fee. Meals areserved at nominal cost and house rentis $12.50 per month. Psi U’s well-rounded sophomoreclass includes representatives of allof the more important campus activ¬ities. Jack Lyding, Bob Frazier, andPaul Berwanger were elected to Skulland Crescent. Chuck Zerfas, DaveComstock, and Whitey Bayard are as¬sistant sports managers on the Intra¬mural Board. Lyding and Berwangerwork on the Student Publicity Boardand Bayard and Lyding are sopho¬more members of the Social Commit¬tee. Jim Halvorsen, Frazier, and Ber¬wanger received numerals in track,Lyding and Comstock in basketball,Bayard, Comstock, and Zerfas in base¬ball, and Bob Anderson in fencing.Seven of the class are out for six-manfootball and all but one member of theclass were upperclass counselors dur¬ing Freshman Week.The house is one of the most fi¬nancially sound on the Quadranglesand boasts excellent alumni backing.Brothers who live in the house pay$165 per quarter which includes room,board, assessments, and dues. Thoseoutside the house pay $56 per quarterfor 4 luncheons and one dinner, parlorfees, dues, and assessments. The ini¬tiation fee is $55 payable over fouryears.Specific list of costs per month: liv¬ing in the house: Board, $30; Room,$20; Dues, $5.Training War WorkersBegan YesterdayTraining of a small but vital groupof war workers began yesterday, atthe University when sixteen personsbegan a course in optical shop work,acquiring a skill important in the mak¬ing of sighting and other war appara¬tus.Half of the workers began theirtraining yesterday with the second in¬tensive section section scheduled tostart Friday.The present group will bring to six¬ty-four the number trained in thiswork at the University in co-opera¬tion with the U.S. Office of Education’sEngineering, Science, and Manage¬ment War Training program.In the past year 2,750 persons havebeen trained at the University in va¬rious phases of this war work pro¬gram, which has also included pro¬duction supervision, mapping and sur¬veying, statistics, physics, radio, andchemistry. Zeto Beta Tou phj Sigma DeltaZeta Beta Tau was founded in NewYork in 1898. It has grown to a pres¬ent membership of 34 chapters and8,000 members. Alpha Beta chapterwas founded in 1918 on the Univer¬sity campus and is the oldest Jewishfraternity at the University.Zeta Beta Tau is admirably repre¬sented by its members in all campusactivities. The president of the house,George Gilinsky, is a member of theFreshman Orientation Committee, theSocial Committee and the Interfra¬ternity Council. Dave Elbogen is ac¬tive on the Student Publicity Board,while Dick Wallens, a member of lastyear’s Washington Prom Committee,belongs to the Freshman OrientationCommittee.Among Zeta Beta Tau’s athletes isStanley Claster who last year wasawarded a “C” jacket for track work.In this year’s Sophomore class numer¬als were received by- Jerry Solomonfor baseball and basketball and HaroldFreidman for track. Both Freidmanand Solomon received six-man foot¬ball awards. Among the chorines oflast year’s Mirror-Blackfriars showwere Wally Goodman and SeymourHirschfield and George Gilinsky whohad a major, part in the production.Last year Zeta Beta Tau men wereelected to the senior, junior and soph¬omore activities honor societies. Elect- |ed to the senior honor society. Owland Serpent, was George Gilinsky.Dick Wallens is a member of the jun¬ior honor society. Iron Mask. Taken in¬to the sophomore honor society. Skulland Crescent, were Jerry Solomon andHarold Freidman.Among prominent alumni of theChicago chapter are William S. Paley,president of Columbia BroadcastingSystem; Irving Pflaum, Foreign Edi¬tor, Chicago Times; Seymour Berk-son, author and editor of King Fea¬tures; Julian Waterman, Dean of Lawat U. of Arkansas; and the late gov¬ernor Henry Homer. Other prominentZBT’s include Supreme Court JusticeFelix Frankfurter, George Backer,publlisher of the New York Post, Dr.A. A. Brill, famed psychologist, andMorris Cohen, eminent Harvard phi¬losopher.Ogbum to Be FirstWalgreen Speaker Mu Chapter of Phi Sibma Delta,largest Jewish fraternity at the Uni¬versity of Chicago with 24 activemembers, is located at 5625 Wood-lawn Ave.Phi Sigma Delta has served Chicagomen for over 21 years. In that periodthe house has become one of the lead¬ing fraternities on campus not only in'size but also in quality.Jack Glabman, senior student in theSchool of Business and former sportseditor of Pulse, is Phi Sigma Delta’sMaster Frater. Morton Pierce, whohas been a member of Iron Mask andSkull and Crescent Honorary Socie¬ties and now a member of the Inter¬fraternity Council and the Student So¬cial Committee is the fraternity’s Ex¬ecutive Secretary. Treasurer of thehouse is Werner Baum, former sportseditor and now an editorial associateof the Daily Maroon.Meyer Barrash is a member of IronMask while Bob Rabens and SheldonGGinsburg, a star of last year’s Black¬friars presentation, represent PhiSigma Delta in Skull and Crescent.The chapter house, newly redecorat- ■ed this summer, offers accommoda¬tions to men staying on campus. Rbomrent is only thirteen dollars per monthand meals and dues are seasonable.New men pay $100; $45 at the timeof pledging and $55 at the time of in¬itiation.Each year Phi Sigma Delta presentsseveral outstanding social events. Al¬ways the leading affair is the Straw-A weekly series of elever* free pub¬lic lectures on “American Society inWartime”, presented by the Universi¬ty’s Charles R. Walgreen Foundationfor the Study of American Institu¬tions, began yesterday with a discus¬sion of population trends by Dr. Wil¬liam F. Ogburn, chairman of theDepartment of Sociology and SewellL. Avery, Distinguished Service Pro¬fessor of Sociology.The series is the tenth to be spon¬sored by the Foundation since it be¬gan operation in 1939. Nine membersof the University faculty and twoscholars from other institutions willgive the lectures. All lectures in theseries will be at 4:30 p.m. in the So¬cial Science Research building, 1126E. 59th street, at the University.The schedule of lectures follows:October 6, “Population,” Dr. WilliamF. Ogburn; October 13 “Impact on theFamily,” Dr. Ernest W. Burges?; Oc¬tober 20, “Changes in the Towns,” W.Lloyd Warner; October 27, “Changesin the Cities,” Dr. Louis Wirth; No¬vember 3, “Changes on the Farms,”Lowry Nelson, professor of rural so¬ ciology at the University of Minneso¬ta; November 10, “War and the Sol¬dier,” Dr. Samuel A. Stouffer; Novem¬ber 17, “War and the Citizen,” Dr.Ellsworth Faris; November 24, “Racesand Minorities,” Dr. Robert Redfield;December 1, “Racial Ideologies,” Dr.Robert E. Park; December 8, “Crimi¬nal Conduct,” Edwin H. Sutherland,chairman of the Department of Soci¬ology at Indiana university; and De¬cember 15. “Maintenance of Morale,”Dr. Herbert Blumer.Reynolds Qub DanceThe Reynolds Club Council metlast night to discuss plans for adance to be held in the clubhouseFriday, October 16, at 8. The Rey¬nolds Club Queen, “the most pop¬ular girl on campus,” will bp intro¬duced at the dance. She is to bechosen by a poll to be conducted inMandel Corridor sometime beforethe dance.As yet the choice of orchestrahas not been made. Tickets are be¬ing sold for fifty cents. As a result of the increase in food,fuel and other basic costs, it has beennecessary for Zeta Beta Tau to reviseits previous schedule of fees. At thesame time ZBT has decided to elimin¬ate-its June “house bill,” hereafter tohave eight equal bills per year fromOctober 1st to May 1st. The schedulefor brothers is as follows: Chapterdues including social fees are $60.00annually, payable in eight install¬ments. Room rent is now $20.00 (eighttimes per year). The commissary feefor house men, eating all meals at thehouse is $42.90, while the city menpay $16.20 for commissary feesmonthly. A 2 per cent cash discountfor prompt payment brings the cityman’s total to $33.03 and the houseman’s total to $668.99; these bills areonly eight times a year. Initiationfee is $100, and there is no pledge fee.Pledge dues are $3.75 montly. berry Festival presented shortly aft¬er the close of the spring quarter. Atthis party, originated to raise fnudsfor Student Refugee Aid, a leadingorchestra provides music for outdoordancing. Also traditional is,the annual“Third Act Party” given on the lastnight of the Blackfriars show. In thepast the fraternity has always helda spring formal at a downtown hotelbut this will probably be forgotten forthe duration.Phi Sigma Delta also excells in ath¬letics. Trophies annexed last year in¬clude one in billiards, one in ping-pongand two in baseball. For the last sixyears the fraternity has won at leastone trophy in baseball each spring.Phi Si^ma Delta feels that, at thistime especially, it can be of invaluableservice to University of Chicago men.The fraternity attempts to providethe individual students with an impe¬tus toward intellectual activity, a cen¬ter for his social life, a home on thequadrangles, and a nucleus of closefriends for his college days and thedays thereafter. ISUBSCRIBETOCAPandGOWIFRESHMAN QUEENREIGNSATSWING PARADESKIRT & SWEATERSocial - C - DanceFRIDAY. OCT. 99:00 IDA NOYES HALLTHE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 7. 1942 Page SevenJohnson Stand-(Continued from page one)summer of 1941 he published a book, We Must Save the Republic, with aNazi publishing house—Flanders Hall of New Jersey. This publishing housewas registered with the State Department as being a Nazi agent, and yetDay published his book with them. This book is a diatribe against England.It offers nothing but the suggestion that the United States should not aidEngland. No wonder a Nazi publishing house published the book! (See TheChicago Times, August 7, 1941.) However, Flanders Hall, which was con¬trolled by George Sylvester Viereck, who has just been indicted as a Germanagent who failed to register with the State Department, didn’t think thatDay’s book was strong enough in its denunciation of England. So Day letViereck, a Nazi, revise his book! A book by a United States congressmanfrom Illinois was revised by a German agent! (See The Chicago Daily News,March 7, 1941.) This is the man who has the temerity to ask for re-electionin the Republican primary! Not only did Flanders Hall publish Day’s book,but Viereck used $1,000 to promote the sale of the book.Day, along with Hamilton Fish, the late Senator Lundeen of Minnesota,and William Stratton of Illinois, was one of the most conspicuous users of thecongressional frank to send out isolationist propaganda. He and Strattonsent out propaganda printed by the “Make-Europe-Pay-Its-War Debts Com-jYiittee” another organization controlled by Viereck in the interests of Ger-manv. The Chicago Daily News has said about all this:Mr. Day is a candidate to succeed himself in Congress, Mr. Strattonis a candidate for State Treasurer of Illinois. Both should be de¬feated. Their association with the activities of the leading Nazi agentin this country is susceptible to only two explanations: either theywere in complete sympathy with Viereck and the agencies throughwhich he operated, or they were so simple-minded that they werecompletely taken in ... In either case, Illinois cannot afford to per¬mit such men to represent the State. We cannot afford to permitIllinois to be represented by simpletons.Benjamin Adamowski, running for congressman-at-large on the Demo-ratic ticket, has spent ten years in Springfield as a member of the Stateislature. He was kown there as a conscientious and indefatigable worker,erhaps the most important committee on which he served was the Judicialommittee. As a young man (35 years old) he is a rising figure in Illinoisoliticics. He has pledged himself to wholehearted support of the war effortnd to the belief that the United States must join an international associa-on of nations ater the war to insure future world peace.The choice before the people of Illinois in this election is clear,vote for McKeough and Adamoski is a pledge of support to thear effort and to the far-sighted foreign policy of President Roose-elt. A vote for Brooks and Day will be hailed by the Axis as a signf disunity in the United States, and it will give encouragementnd stimulus to anti-democratic forces within the United States.legNew under-armCream DeodorantsafelyStops Perspirotionla Does not rot dresses or men’sshirts. Does not irritate skin.2a No waiting to dpr. Can be usedright after shaving.3a Insandy stops perspiration for1 to 3 days. Prevents odor.4. A pure, white, greaseless,stainless vanishing cream.5. Awarded Approval Seal ofAmerican Institute of Launder¬ing for being harmless tofabric.^uoToaadbX Al«>lnl0<and59^j«.UIRIDJk Go«d HooMkttPUif^ *“ vatricTniir* GREGG COLLEGE TRAININGtor BUSINESS, INDUSTRY,GOVERNMENT SERVICEif Stenoffraphera, if Secretariea,if Acronntanta, if Court ReportersURGENTLY NEEDED!Demand for Gregg Colleire Graduates ex¬ceeds supply • The great majority ofour present student body are collegetrained • Gregg College employs no solici¬tors • Established 48 years • Co-educaational • Free Employment Bureau • Dapand Evening Classes.Call, write or telephone ST Ate 1181 forbooklet: '‘The Doorway to Opportunity.’*Th« QREOQ COLLEGE6 N. Michifan Ateiuie at MadiSM StrMt, Chicais4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSEFOR COLLIOE STUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough, tnUusive. stouographic gwrse—fUu^mgloMuarr 1, AprU 1, Jub 1, OeP^l.Intorumg Booklet sent free, mthout obligahon—write or phone. No solicitors employed.moserBUSINESS COLLEGEPAUL MOSER. J.D,«FH.B.Regular Courses for Beginners.jpPen to HighSchool Graduates only, start first Mondayof oadt month. Advanced Courses startany Monday. Day and Evemng. EveningCourses open to men.116 S. Michigan Ava., Chicago, Randolph 4347IAUNDRY7-YES!—But Laundry Problems? NO!Even a Freshman soon learns how to handle LaundryProblems — just send your laundry home by RailwayExpress — and have it returned to you the same way.You’ll find it’s really no problem at all.Low rates include pick-up and delivery at no extra charge,within our regular vehicle limits, in all cities and principaltowns. Your laundry can be sent prepaid or collect, as youchoose. Psst! Send and receive baggage, gifts, etc. thesame convenient way.RAILWAl^XPRESSAGENCY INC.NATION-WIDE RAIL-AIR SERVICE TEXTBOOKSFor all U. of C. CoursesUSED and NEWUsed textbooks ore in greater demand this foil. Get yoursearly at the right price before our supply is exhausted.Books for the Social. Physical, and Biological Sciences.Humanities. Low. Business. Medicine. Education, and allthe other courses.TEXT and REFERENCE BOOKSStationery in hundreds ol styles lor all purposes and tolit all purses. Crane's. Eaton's. Old Hampshire, and otherleading brands from 10c to $3.00. University stationery15c to $1.25. Typewriters, papers, pads, books, etc.SOCIAL STATIONERYFountain Pens galore., Sheoffer. Parker. Waterman. WohLConklin. Eagle, and others from $1.00 to $10.00. A largestock in charge of a pen expert Pencils to match 50c to$3.00. We repair pens and pencils quickly.DESK ACCESSORIESThe largest and most complete stock of typewriters on thesouth side handled by typewriter specialists. We rent orrepair. See us first /TYPEWRITERSNotebooks in all standard sizes in leather, imitation leather,cloth, canvas, etc. Many with zipper opening. Priced10c to $7.50. Also bound books, compositions, spiral, etc.Choose yours from a complete stock.NOTEBOOKSZipper envelopes in a wide variety of leathers from $1.00to $8.00. Standard sizes and colors. Brief cases $1.00 to\$10.00—a large assortment ' (BRIEF CASES & ZIPPERSAlso blotter pads, alarm clocks, book ends, desk accessories,desk lamps, filing supplies, laimdry cases. University jewel¬ry, aift wares, greeting cards, and student supplies.WOODWORTH'SSTOREDorchester 4800Open eveningsBOOK1311 E. 57th Streetnear Kimbark Ave.2 blocks East of Mondel HallPage Eiqhl THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 7. 1942PageflPi:ity. Iservethersbondcial 1ularljintellligentwithW(leticstendtcrowplay(quiteTheyearas irble.notgetif 01a g(ceisirMsinBinesoagDiill:etBiMKwAlefan<C(hPPc<nbaCflCcedbeeFoha Traveling BazaarBy JANET HILLA couple of trite, but nonethelessbeautiful, orchids to Minna . . . mu¬sical, ain’t it . . . orchids to Minna forthe last Bazaar. We are now filchingMinna’s advice to herself and resolv¬ing to employ the editorial “we.”There is something so uncozy aboutleaving just me, myself, and I wideopen for those knives which mightjustifiably flash.We three are like the trio of mon¬keys to whom evil was a mythologicalword ... we shall play carpet sweep¬er and print only the dust that isbound to blow across campus, en¬deavoring to let that heavier sub¬stance, dirt, we believe it is called,sink to the bottom.Has anyone elsebeen wondering where everyone ishiding so far this quarter? The fresh¬men, bless ’em, were obviously thecenter of all eyes a couple of weeksago. (What girls wouldn’t love doingher first year over?) The general ex¬citement they managed to generate(sorry) was anything but an annoy¬ance to the majority of upperclass-women. We liked the refreshing newFall spirit they brought us. The in¬jured few will doubtless recover soonif they haven’t already. From wherewe sat, Alphadepts alone became en¬chanted to the point of dispensingmortal blows . . . we can’t rememberwho it was, but the currently mostnotorious one embarrassed himselfand everyone else by eavesdroppingup at Harper . . . for a guy with hisbrains we suggest a new set of sparkplugs.More AlphadeptsFlan and McNight were untouchedby freshman week temptation. Mc¬Carthy and Simon, ditto. Well, afterall, a ring does carry a little moreweight.We repeat, we have observed thelack of any form of humanity otherthan our meteorologist students, of¬ficers, etc., in the Shop, the Commons,the Circle, Any Place. We do wish wedidn’t have such an uncontrollabledesire to trip ’em when they tramp onour seal. They may march nicely, butgolly, men! And the sailors with theirpriority on the streets. We saw onepoor Alpha Delt almost miss a classwaiting for two platoons to stopcrossing the Delaware. Better movethe house, boys.As for the freshmen men, theircreed appears to be SMOOTHNESS.We have yet to encounter any green ones. Were they perhaps invisiblyhere all summer. They are not hidingin Harper, either. We give up...We think that something should bedone about women transfers. Whymust they be verboten from Fresh¬man Week, only to arrive anon and begreeted by the thundering SILENCE?It’s nice to be able to speak to twoof your high school friends who sud¬denly turned up here. Sue Keefe andJeanne Hammond, a couple of NewTrier’s alums, alias Wells and SarahLawrence respectively, are tops.We are of the opinion that PaulRussell is one of the smoother fresh¬men smoothies, (so are those threeother blonds) We also wonder whatthey will pledge. We wonder why themedical profession invariably drawsthe best looking men ... we toldMarty Hanson his line was so goodhe ought to take a crack at socializedmedicine. We were left with ourmouth full of teeth and our eyes fullof Hanson’s pitying look.McWhorter’s cute, too.If you don’t care what you say . . .hear tell he’s formed some bad habitssince last year. Well, he looked nicein his cap and gown, anyway, niceand confident. The worst blow he everhad was Hanson’s query as to whetherof not he is a med. student! How tolose friends and alienate people in oneeasy lesson, Hanson. We agree thatRussell will make a top M.D. He nowrations our cigarettes; somethingabout becoming a nervous wreck,(wrecker would be more to the point. . . we are joining a trucker’s unionhaving moved four times in one hallduring our pseudo vacation).The freshmen have dubbed theyounger Johnson P.J. (Punky Jr.) TheAlpha Belts’ P.J. should meet her.How about it, Paul?Dorothy Duff’s class inclusive-ex¬clusive party happened Friday night.My first date of ’42-’43 is waiting.Gawd; you’ll pardon me, please. Can’tkeep ’em waiting in such a scarcity.Talk about the fluctuations of de¬mand and supply . . .Florian and Reynolds are quench¬ing that before-the-navy-calls-usthirst for work by heaving 150 lbs. ofgov’t shipments around a baggageroom. Reynolds glances at his waist¬line every minute to see what’s com¬ing off. Hope he soon relaxes and re¬members that a watched pot neverboils . . . Gibler, the third cutie isback at Billings. Lohman SpeaksTo Foriun BEST SELLERSJoseph D. Lohmaii speaking yes¬terday to a large Student Forumgathering on “The Student, the War,and the Peace” affirmed the existenceof a social revolution and demandedthat students awake and meet thechallenge. He declared that the im¬portant idea to be appreciated was nottechnical change but the fact thattechnical changes have brought allpeoples closer together. Westerns civi¬lization can no longer smirk behindhypocritical remocracy; self proclaim¬ed democrats must apply faith in theAmerican ideal to the millions of Asia {—the Indians, the Chinese and evenJapanese. No longer do the westernpowers have a monopoly of the instru¬ments of subjection; the democracieshave and are arming the subjected.In the face of these facts Mr. Loh¬man maintained that the Studentmust not desert the essentials of aing which might be supposed to keepgeneral education for technical train-him from front line duty. The studentmust prepare both to take his placein the war effort and to help leadAmerica through the chaos which maycome with peace. The higher elementsof civilization must not be sacrificedto mere_ techincal knowledge whichwould be insufficient to rebuild atolerable world order.Next Tuesday Student Forum willconduct an extemporaneous speakingcontest. All new students interestedin participating should register at theStudent Forum office in Lexingtonhall, by Monday.Read Swedenborg's"DIVINEPROVIDENCE"lOc unabridgedat University and otherbookstores FICTIONTHE SONG OF BERNADETTE $3.0iby Franz WerfelDRIVIN' WOMAN $2.7by Elizabeth Pickett ChevalierAND NOW TOMORROW $2.7• by Rachel FieldTHE CUP AND THE SWORD $2.5by Helen MacinnesNON-FICTIONTHE COMING BATTLE OF GERMANY $2.5by William B. ZiffSEE HERE, PRIVATE HARGROVE $2.0by Marion HargroveTHEY WERE EXPENDABLE .$2.0by W. L. WhiteLAST TRAIN FROM BERLIN $2.7by Howard K. SmithVICTORY THROUGH AIR POWER $2.5^ by Major Alexander P. de SeverskyCome in and browseat theUniversity of Chicago Bookstor5802 Ellis AvenueGIFTSto arrive for ChristmasMUST be MAILED THISMONTH to boys overseasMoney BeltsWriting PortfoliosSewing KitsPlaying CardsBoxed CandyLeather Picture FramesPen and Pencil Setswith new invisible clipWe Wrap for MailingA complete line of Novel Jev/elryWooden PinsEarringsBeadsandClipsU. of C. Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue Only a Parker gives you: extra large ink capacity... originalpocket-level Military Clip . . . and the Blue Diamond LifeContract Guarantee. Visit your pen dealer today!Speed—more speed! And >\hether you face new duties at college, orare getting set for a job in the Service—a Parker Pen helps speedevery writing assignment. Parker Pens contain no rubber sac... holdone-third more ink than the average of three well-known sac-typepens. The ease and balance of the Parker are a revelation. That satin-smooth tip of osmiridium won’t wear scratchy in a lifetime! Visit yourpen counter. Try the amazing new Parker "51” with the "SFthat di ies us yuu ujite! Sec the famous Paikei Vacumallc Peus, too,♦ GUAffANTEB) BY UFE CONTRACTI Parker*$ Blue Diamond on the pen is our contractuncondounaUy guaranteeing service for the owner's life, without cost other than 35^ duvgeforpostage, insurance, and handling, if pen is not intentionally damaged and is returned completeto The Parker Pen Company, Janesville, Wiscoiuin. Beautiful ParlcerVoca-matk with TelevisionInk Supply."One-hand" patented filler.Junior and Sub-deb,$5; Major (illustrated)and Debutante, $6.75.iParkerSINCE 1888 AMERICA'S FINESTFENS, PENCILS, SETSCora. tt4Z, THE PARKER PER COMPARr^s-»bs Toughen Up ~ Where once a tackling dummy might havepn the playing fields at West Point, another type of dummy nowdevoted to the deadly seriousness of bayonet practice. Twelved plebes, the largest class ever to enter the United States Mill-academy, ore toking an Intensive course that would keep thes commandos ^^stepping.'^ Acme hearn to Fix Tires —Using only the illumination from alight Donna McCIIntock and Mary Ann Aikens repair a "blowout" »training In a course in "unsafe driving" at Penn State College. Thefind "bugs" In an almost invisible motor.Wide World[How the Frosh Like It — Beneath the historic Chancellor's Elm ate University, varsity "D" club men use just a little "persuasion" to estab-a 100 per cent record In the annual first-week-of-school sale of freshmenNew men wear the little blue and white beanies until Homecoming.Collegiate Digest Photo by Dunivent, .1. ..'W!Summer school cores, studies and classes were thrown atide for one day by BUniversity Sigma Nu^s and their dates for a duy at the seashore. The fun was reccfor Collegiate Digest readers by student photographer C. Robin Fish, but onlyhe had convinced police ofBckiis and army beach patrolmen that the picturesnot intended for enemy use.To conserve tires and gasoline, the trip to the beach (Narragansett Pier) was madeby bus. Here the friendly driver helps Shirley Buckingham onto the bus.Coilegiot* Digest Photos by Fish In Spite of worm weather, some of the girls needed a littlesuasion before they could force themselves in. Foul ArmourHenry Elysious help Barbara Linggame make up her mind.chbeuidn'tmw, row it wot o tot ottion ag*^!'lQo{ost arowntna Of course no beach party would be complete without apie of 'Vould be'' builders. Here Eugene Bellas! andstart a sand castle.Some of the bunch get together to try some beach tumbling. Dick Minor Climax of the fun comer when the boys spread out the big basket lunch which had beeiis caught somersaulting over eight men. Nice'work* if you can get it. pared at the fraternity house. A full stomacir'and the end of a swell day.KijJI Heyl Whereat**C II p i d? — The bu!!s'eye takes beotingwhen these three O'-edarchers at Superior(Wis.) State TeachersCollege get warmedup. Left to right, theyare Ellen Omernick,Joyce Clarke and Char¬lotte Gorden.Smiles. . . on the faces ofHead Coach JesseFatherree and his four-year-old son, Jesse, Jr.,indicate that Southeast¬ern Louisiana Collegeanticipates a great sea¬son in football this fall.Fatherree is a formerL. S. U. grid immortal.CAMELSARE ACES WITH .ME, THEV HAVE THEMILDNESS I WANT—AND THEY DON'TTIRE MV TASTE. ACAMEL ALWAYS HITSTHE SPOT WITH ME ,U M* W*®recruit(Ot takiog to parachuteforoijgj^ettefor their favortte egNavY» MatrneS’ a®* t^ith "»" tipteu' U Cau« ;^ ^ A ranteens.)changes and CantThe^T-Zone"wherecigarettesare judgedThe •T-ZONE''—Taste and Throat —is theproving ground for cigarettes. Only yourtaste and throat can decide which cigarettetastes best to you... and how it affects yourthroat. For your taste and throat are abso¬lutely individual to you. Based on the expe¬rience of millions of smokers, we believeCamels will suit your *T-ZONE* to a "T.*Prove it for yourself! •K. 4. Ueynoldg Tobtoco Company. Winston-Salem, North CarolinaOnC/ Two, Three, Kick -A third "line" takes to thefield at University of Miamifootball games when .theschool band forms a Congaline during the half. Major¬ette Marion Foley sets thefans "ga-ga" with her fas¬cinating rhythm. Ship Designs First, Then the Ships — At Rwar course in engineering acquaints studentyards by teaching them ship design. Prof. E(designs to his credit, examines a boat whiTraining on War Time Basis — Tougheneithe goal of the University of Southern Califorprogram. Emphasizing sports of contact and coprogram will eliminate less strenuous classes siIng and badminton. Jerry Whitney, Fred McCcup and at 'em over the barrier hurdle.NewCoachesThis year scores of newfootball coaches havepopped up to fill posi¬tions vacated by vet¬erans who have enteredthe armed forces. Someare new, others havebeen on the nationalgrid scene for years,but all will producethrills aplenty eachwe^k for the millions ofAmericans who followthe pigskin parade. Acm.- Ex-Frosh Coach Elmer Burnham re- North Carolina selected Jimplaces Mai Elward at Purdue. Tatum to fill boots of Ray Wolf. vill attempt to pullfootball doldrums.Howard 'Yale out A veteran line coach, IHauser will lead AaHoffordOutings and Wiener Roasts are more pop¬ular than ever on campuses this year as oilout war conservation makes elaborate partiestaboo. Here students of So. Illinois'Normal Uni¬versity gather at Giant City State Park in Car-bondale for hot dogs, marshmallows and sing¬ing. Globe Photo'"9 Over ofor o She Meets All Comers — Jean Stuhler, co-edmember of the Queen's College golf team, has de¬veloped her game to a point where she can shootat par with the best of them. She has won a placeon the "first" team and is one of the top point win¬ners in varsity competition. Acmeportfo,theiPunting will be strong at U.of Washington with Ralph(Pest) Welch at the helm.BobP<^PulQr plesnell willlebrasko. Earl Walsh assumes the Fordhorn job for the duration.Navy's new coach is ComdrJohn E. Whelchel.Invest in AmericTests Determine Muscular Coordinotion — To aid students iiing their place in the nation's victory effort, a battery of psycholand aptitude tests were given Massachusetts State College undenotes. Dr. Harry N. Glide here conducts a test which will indicatestudents can use their hands to advantage in a defense job.When Hamilton College students held a Buy-a*lball, all corsage money went into war stamps,danced with the satisfaction that they had in somehelped their friends and classmates who have alngone to war. Are you doing your part to back the bBONPSHe Knows His Angles —Trick shots are easy forMaynard L. Colomaio, Uni¬versity of Buffalo student. Hedemonstrated his wizardrywith the cue by winning thenational intercollegiate three-cushion billiard championshipthis year.War WorkerWhile U. S. and Chi¬nese forces fight shoul¬der to shoulder in the0;ijent, many Chineselike Francis Li, right,are doing their part on?he industrial front. Liis ^hown testing therotor of a gigantic ma-'rine motor. He gradu¬ated from ManhattanCollege last year, was*a frequent contributorto Collegiate Digestduring his undergradu¬ate days.School's a Pleasure, Now —Algebra and geometry should befun, now that members of KappaKappa Gamma sorority have volun¬teered to assist candidates forAviation Cadets in brushing up ontheir math at Northwestern Univer¬sity. Here Jean Horgan instructs aclass. AcmeNational Call for nurses isided in this poster prepared byunited States Public Health Serv-Fully 55,000 young women withkKooI or college education are^ to enter schools of nursing^ the 1942-43 school year.mcle Sam, capping a student nursehe end of her probationary per-typifies America's concern that1 the armed forces ond the civil-population shall hove adequateling service. College undergradu-i are urged to plan their courses;uch a way as to obtain both ahelor's degree and a diploma in (OBTARC*International Student Assembly Opens — Above are part of agroup of more than 350 youths from 53 countries who gathered atAmerican University in Washington, D. C. to "affirm the solidarity ofthe university world against the common enemy of learning, culture Coordinator — Dr. Edward C. Elliott, president of PurdueUniversity, has obtained a leave of absence to becomenational coordinator of civilian training in technical andmilitary colleges.one serious traffic accident in tour years! That's the record established by Antioch Col-, Yellow Springs, O., despite the fact its student drivers cover more than 1,000 miles eachk. Sensible rules for long trips and night driving . . . rigid car inspection twice a year . . .'ely safety campaign under the direction of the college community' government . . . thesethe factors behind the record which has won commendation from state safety officials. ,Students take out trip insurance before starting on an educational fieldtour. Antioch students travel plenty as half of th^ir school year is spentgetting experience on real jobs in some 20 states.Antioch College Drivers Set Traffic Record'^1YouthKeeps FiIn a world whose heart beats tb jrhythm of marching feet and wh^pulse vibrates with the throb pf boners' motors; there is no quollty 1prized as youth. Youth's entKusiolits energy, its abounding idealism aincdr-ruptible pride are flung out libanners in a weary civilization, iCanada today is thankful for, ^Pro'Rec plan, o movement whichstarted back in 1934 in Vancou^B. C. It is a governmeht-contlycjscheme of free recreation cenflwhich provide physical recreatl^Jyouths of both sexes. Utilizing scfaauditoriums, gymnasiums, church dcommunity halls all activities areasigned to develop strength, flexilxjand muscular coordination. We«programs of the centers read flthose of expensive clubs. Acti>^have widened to include public Jlmatic and orchestral groups, hHclubs, gymnastic demonstrations Hcompetitions, concerts, social muand even radio broadcasts on sjlland recreation. And it is oil free. Ionly required quolifrcations are frr^^jliness and a desire to keep fit. MCotlegin1« Digest Photos by taques<BlQcl||9the Pro-RecUniversity otfounder otr.ort at *efencinq(nent, lo*'Columt>*»o Girls concentrate on exercises that will strengthen those tummy muscles and achieve th<waistline. As much of the worl< is done outside as possible. Racial, social, political and rdifferences are forgotten in the search for health. , iv.