. 43. No. 6 Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1942 PRICE THREE CENTS4cKeough, Adamowski Keynote Wariolly at Mandel 3:30 Tomorrowlymond McKeough Benjamin Adamowski Earl Die Discuss Relationship of Warto Present Electionsby RICK MEANAThe relation of the war to the pres¬ent election will be the topic of dis¬cussion in a program to be presentedin Mandel Hall on Thursday, October29, at 3:30. On the platform will beRepresentative Raymond S. Mc¬Keough, democratic candidate for U.S. Senator, Benjamin Adamowski,candidate for Congressman-at-large,Alderman Earl Dickerson, member ofthe Fair Employment Practices Com¬mittee recently established by Presi¬dent Roosevelt, and Professor QuincyWright of the Department of Inter¬national Law of the University. Act¬ing as chairman of the meeting willbe T. Walter Johnson of the Depart¬ment of History and downstate mana¬ger of the Independent Voters for Me-McKeough ViewsSections, Warriving to make himself heardB the clamor of the tenty men inoom at the Morrison Hotel, Ray-I S. McKeough, the Democraticdate for United States Senator,a most succinct interview. “Mr.eough can give you just threetes,” was our warning, and threetes it was. In that brief time, weat him several specific questions,^hat do you think is the issue ofampaign?”he issue is the war. The votersput those men in Congress whosupporting an all-out war effortwho will strive for a just andable peace."[r. McKeough, what is the respon-ty of students in the world cri-}irst, they must understand the is-involved. Second, they must takeopriate action. With clear under¬ling and determination to act, the student can be a major force in bring¬ing the entire people to a realizationof the gravity of the international sit¬uation."“Mr. McKeough, how is the war af¬fecting democracy?"“Democracy has taken on new vigorand meaning as a result of the anti¬poll tax bill by the house, the authori¬zation of votea for soldiers, and theincreased participation of labor in thewar effort. These specific advances—as well as the outcome of the war it¬self—are endangered now by defeat¬ist minorities in Congress. The defeatof these men at the polls on November3 will be the greatest single evidenceof strength of American democracy."We thanked Mr. McKeough, andleft his office. Believe us, three min¬utes of interview under those circum¬stances made us wonder how the cena-torial candidate was still alive afterthree weeks of a whirlwind campaign.m Explains Standyn War, Strikes Cox New Dean ofSchool of Businessllowship of Reconciliation is anlization of religious pacifists. Ittn international, non-sectarianopposed to war, the militaryce connected with war, and vio-of any sort. The members putfaith in “non-violent, direct ac-”—which means specifically ac¬es such as strikes, boycotts,iganda distribution and displaysnscientious objection. All this to)ne “in the spirit of good will",ote Mr. George Houser, presidentle Chicago chapter.) The groupadvocates freedom for India, theg of the bans placed by manyTsities (our own included) onnts who are American citizens oflese race descent.-No Party Linese fellowship of Reconciliation hasilloive^en Hopming Upe Social “C" Dance, “The Hallo-Hop", will be held in Ida Noyes,ly, October 30, at 9. Skirts andters will be the style when danc-Floyd Campbell, on** of Chioa-finest colored orchestras. Cam->Os co-featured last year withhik Spots and has recorded forOkey and Bluebird,e proceeds will go to the Univer-Settlement for lunches for thePen whose mothers are workingfenae factories. f its finger in many pies, but these arethe most important of the pastry. Itis difficult, however, to generalize onthe aims of the organization, for thereis no definite party line and the mem¬bers seem to differ greatly in the de¬gree of their religious and political in¬tensity. Some members sit constantly“in silent worship and prayer”—and Iquote from a leaflet printed by theorganization. Others sit in jail—wherethey find themselves if they object tooconscientiously. On the whole, eachindividual follows the dictates of hisconscience—whether it lead him tojail, to Civilian Public Camps, or tonon-combatant duty.A Constant CauseDuring peace time, the group agi¬tates against the causes of war-im¬perialism, nationalism, and racialprejudice; in wartime, they turn enmasse into conscientious objectors.The pacifists advocate that the soldierslay down their arms and resist theirenemy by methods of non-cooperationrather than by force. They claim thatthe war can be won eventually by theuse of such methods, and with a muchsmaller death rate. Pacifist groupsthroughout the country have broughtabout this recognition of conscientiousobjection to the extent of - gainingCivilian Public Service Camps forthose who feel that they cannot fight.This, in itself, is a considerable ad¬vance and the group expects to con¬tinue its work in the hope that it willeventually gain enough members toput its program into action. Garfield V. Cox, Robert Law Pro¬fessor of Finance, has been appointedActing Dean of the School of Busi¬ness, in place of William Homer Spen¬cer who left suddenly last week totake a job with the government.Cox has been on the staff ^of thebusiness school for twenty-three yearsand is well known for his books, “AnAppraisal of American Business Fore¬casts" and .“Forecasting BusinessConditions,” He has also been chair¬man of the Board of the South EastNational Bank of Chicago since 1936.In taking the position of RegionalDirector of the Chicago ManpowerBoard, former Dean Spencer is fol¬lowing in the footsteps of many of theschool’s faculty. Associate DeanMitchell is assisting in the organiza¬tion of the Chicago Regional Office ofthe War Production Board; L. C. Sor¬rell, Professor of Transportation andTraffic, is now the Transportation Ex¬pert for the Civilian Supply Divisionof the W. P. B.; and J. P. Dean, As¬sistant Professor of Statistics andMarketing, is Director of Fuel Ra¬tioning in the O.P.A.All in all, the Business School isreally aiding the march to victory agreat deal. Sigma ChiTops PledgingIMS RanksUp Over 20%Since the outbreak of the war inDecember, enrollment in the Instituteof Military Studies has increasedfrom a thousand in the winter quar¬ter, to twelve hundred this quarter.The Institute was established threeyears ago, to advance civilian knowl-jedge of military history, theory andpractice. The work being extra-cur¬ricular, the regular curriculum of theUniversity continues to provide thegeneral collegiate education funda¬mental to specialied military work.Admission is open to all qualifiedstudents, whether or not they arestudents at the University. The onlyqualifications are that the students bemale, and between the ages of 16 and48.The curriculum is composed of thefollowing: organization of the army,military law, military courtesy, riflemarkmanship, motor convoy move¬ments, communications elPTnpntnry'mathematics, map and aerial photo¬graph reading, and courses in militaryGerman and intensive Russian.The courses are held at the Field-house of The University, 56th Streetat University Avenue. Tuition fee is60 cents. Equipment fee, 3 dollars. Two hundred and twelve men pledg¬ed fraternities last Friday morning inMandel Hall, official' figures releasedby the Dean’s office show. This is anincrease of 38 men over last year’stotal of 174.For the second consecutive year.Sigma Chi pledged the largest classon campus, with a total of 23. Theywere closely followed by Alpha DeltaPhi and Phi Kappa Psi with 21 each,and Phi Sigma Delta with 20.John Crosby, IF president, com¬mented, “The class is not only thelargest, but the best pledged by fra¬ternities as a whole in recent years."(Complete lists on page 2)Old BooksIs UofC’sWarQuota Keough Committee.Speakers McKeough and Adamow¬ski will address the gathering on thesubject of the “Politics of Victory”.McKeough has been a representativefrom the second congressional dis¬trict, comprising a large part of thesouth side of Chicago and includingthe University area, since 1934; Ad¬amowski formerly held the position ofa state representative and is at pre-s-ent associated with the Board ofElection Commissioners. AldermanDickerson will speak concerning the“War". He is an executive member often organizations including the CookCounty Bar Association, Chicago Ur¬ban League, both of which he servedas president, and the National Law¬yers Guild, which he directed. Pro¬fessor Wright will continue Dicker¬son’s discourse and talk about the“Peace". He has just published a twovolume, 1500 page study of war whichrequired 16 years to assemble, and in¬cidentally, for those whose interest orcuriosity is aroused, may be found inthe window display at the Bookstore.The Student Victory Committee, assponsor of the rally, has declared it¬self an organization on campus “notexclusively for securing votes butwith an educational aspect to showthe relationship of the war to thepresent election. It backs “Win the•War Candidates” not because of partyaffiliation, but to oppose obstruction-istsLlike Brooks and Day.” ; * - .Russian ReliefRally ComingA campus Russian War Relief Weekwill be initiated with a rally Wednes¬day, November 4, at 12 at MandelHall. The rally will be addressed byPresident Robert M. Hutchins andseveral prominent student leaders.The week will also include a concertof music composed by Russian com¬posers, to be held in the Social Sci¬ence Auditorium, Friday, November6, at 12. It is planned to present aRussian movie during the week. De¬tails concerning the presentation willbe announced later.The campus Russian War Reliefcommittee urges all students to co¬operate in the RWR Week, and toparticipate in its year-round activity.The Victory Book Salvage Commit¬tee has set a quota of 5,000 books forthe University in the National Victo¬ry Book Drive. This is the minimumnumber of books which the Universitymust turn in. Helen Tyler, head of thecommittee, an organization under theauspices of the Student War Council,feels that the 5,000 books is a lowgoal, and she hopes to surpass it in ashort time. Receiving boxes will beplaced in the corridors of all buildingsat the beginning of next week.Current non-fiction is desired aswell as exciting Westerns, but anytype of enjoyable book is accepted.Current issues of magazines will alsobe received. If anyone prefers to turnin money instead of books, or alongwith books, banks will be placed be¬side the book retainers for this pur¬pose. The National Drive is sponsoredby the U.S.O., the Red Cross, and theAmerican Library Association. TheUniversity is expected to be an im¬portant factor in the national cam¬paign. Army InvadesInt. House /Invading International House nexmonth, four hundred meteorologistwill take over more than four flooriof dormitory space, including tw(floors on the men’s side which nevhouse women residents. Nationarooms and the ping-pong room will also be converted into dormitory spaceand the spacious assembly hall wilbecome a lecture room for the cadetsSince school opened more than ihundred cadets have moved into thehouse, and this new group will swelthe International House populatioito a thousand, nearly double its peace¬time capacity of 525.covers the cost of a cap, one copy ofthe Institute’s text, “A Manual of Ba¬sic Military Training", range and am¬munition fees, maps and other in¬structional materials issued in thecourse. Hutchins to AnsiverQueries at Stag^President Robert Maynard Hutchinwill be the guest of honor at a staito be held nt the Reynolds Club oiThursday, November 5, at 3:30. President Hutchins will give a short talkafter which a discussion will be heland questions may be asked. All meistudents of- thfe University are cordially invited. Freshmen are especiall;urged to attend.Page Two EDITORIALS The Daily MaroonFraternity PledgesAlpha Delta PhiDonald AppleRateJohn CampbellCass Canfield. Jr.Donald ClemensJohn N. DickersonWirt L. HarrisRalph HarrodFrederick KramerWalter LaurenceChester LukeyGerald MooreJohn RahillRoderic RobinsonDavid RumlWilliam SharpRobert Simond. Jr.David SmothersWalter SohierE. H. SteeleRichard W'hitingFrank WojniakBeta Theta PiRex T. BryantJohn J. DineenJames FitzpatrickJ. Robert CrimsonPaul M. GrissonDonald D. HeindelGeorge KlumpnerDelbert LarsonThomas McCrackenWayne MillerRobert H. NelsonJames RatcliffePhilip ReinertsenRobert ShermanDonald ShieldsStanley WarnerDelta UpsilonJames AbegglenRobert BainPierce BrayAddison Brown IIIJack BrunkhorstSydenham CrystCharles M. DutcherPaul FrenzenThomas H. GibbonsKenneth GutschukPrescott Harmon, Jr.Glen LehmannDonald MulliganWard J. Sharbach, Jr.John StoufferJohn Drew TrulandRobert WrightJohn H. WymanPhi Sigma DeltaLouis DeitelbaumGerome EngermanElliot T. FreidsonAlan J. GarberPhilip GlotzerMarvin GrossmanSidney KallickFred KarstenJack KramerMonroe MendelsohnSeldon MessingerVictor PerlsteinStandford ReinischHarvey RoseDaniel SchepsEdwin ShapiroMilton ShulmanRobert E. SiegalIrving WeinRobert L. Wiley Phi Delta ThetqJohn CervenkaRobert CooperJack CroneighJohn GtiyWilliam JenningsRay JensenBasil LambrosRichard LottMichael T. LuluRichard C. MillerRichard PetersonRudyard PropstJames RobbinP. Philip RohusBob RoseAlfred RossJohn SheerinSigma ChiRobert BachEd BarnicleArthur B. ColeyWilliam CooperBert CushwayEwing GlascockWilliam GreeneJerry HallamDana HawkinsLuther LoranceRobert James MaguireRobert MaurathTony MancinaJoseph Mates!Gordon McConnellBurton MooreDale OlesenDavid St. JeanMax SchuetteJack StoffelRichard TefoJames TurnerWendell ZimmersDelta KappaEpsilonOrmsby AnnanGeorge DillonMillard ElmsWilliam GaddisBill GoesA1 HubbardCharles KaneEmil RitterPaul S. RusselRobert Lee SchmidtFrank E. Simpson, Jr.Charles R. Templin, Jr.Prank TrovillionKappa SigmaGeorge A. BehlingEdwin J. CorfeyEdward DanasczkoGordon GustafsonByron HawkinsEugene HenvionJoseph HostMorris JonesRichard H. LeighJohn A. McCleaveEdward McGaughyWarren C. PillingJohn K. ReadWilliam RoweA1 SjoerdsmaWalter W. WatsonAlbert WessonNicholas Yoxall Phi Kappa PsiBenedict BehlingRobert E. CarlsonAnson CherryDan CummingsGeorge DruryRobert B. EllisWilliam FogartyWalter GoodHoward HansenDale HirsteinJohn A. Jones, Jr.Robert F. KlineThomas A. LarkinRobert MacAuliffeRobert MerkerJack MillarGuy E. MillardRobert C. OliverRalph PasekFrederick W. RichardsWallace TourtellottePi Lambda PhiArnold FlammDaniel GoldbergerMarvin GreenbergerLeon MorseMartin KruskalIrving PalevskyHarold PatinkinAllen PostelAllen RosenblattJerome SandweissNathaniel SilbermanEmanuel SteindlerPsi UpsilonCarl W. AndersonStephen AtwaterThomas BradelBill CleavesWalter S. HeffronPaul JernbergAnton KucabaMelvin LackeyJames S. LaneAndrew MacLeishDon McBrideRoger ReithCloyd StandfordWalter WrightPhi Gamma DeltaHarvey CardonEdwai^ HusseyEarl LehmanStuart LloydLouis NagyDean WiselyZeta Beta TauDonald FeitelStanley FreehlingHarry GoldsteinGerald GordonLionel GrossLowell HokinRichard KiserAlan KuperHoward NovitchBerton OlinMaurice OlinskyLawrence ReichHenry ReinhardtJoel StarrelsStanley WernerClub PledgesAlpha EpsilonJohanna MussleinLorraine JonesDoris O’DonnellBetty StumpeElinor WilsonChi Rho SigmaJanice BrogueBeverly BullenRuth ChapinMary GronertRuth HalvorsenJacqueline KompareLois Lavina LawrenceShirley LyddonHelen NealBetty SingletonJean StaverPi Delta PhiBetty Jane EverettRuth HankeAnn HutchinsonBetty Jane SmithMary ZertlerTou SigmaUpsilonNahami AbbellLois BernsteinCecilia BrooksHelen DimentbergRochelle DubovyAdeline GellerErma KaltenCecyle LazarDorothy LevitanHarriett LevyDeborah NathanRonnie SobleMinda ZimmermanDelta SigmaSuzanne ChuinardRuth ErnstMarjorie Bohn HoffBetty JulstromRuth LetcherLaura NicholsonMarilyn QuinnDorothy Ann SiltanenKatherine Wright EsotericGeraldine BertashLouise CorusBetty EarlyElizabeth FishKaty GuildJean HarveyRenee LungaardJean Me CormickWinifred PetersenLilian ReodMary ReedMarjorie TuftsMortar BoardJane BerryJean McEldowneyMary Lou EmmartElinor EvansNancy FarwellCatherine HopkinsEdith JacksonLouise HarveyJean HammondAnne MaephersonMuriel Mac ChesneyMarjorie MoffetLindley ParkerJoan PaceBarbara OrtlundAnnette PreucelBarbara ReeceAdele W’hitakerAileen WisemanWyvernRuth BachrachRuth Ann BakerEllen BaumMildred CarlsonBetty CantzlerMartha CookVivian DeyoRosemary DursemaGay FollmerMargaret GrierOma HollandRuth KlineLouise La RueLorna ManneyMaxine MargraneEleanor MeindooGloria SandalisMuriel SmithJacqueline SwansonElizabeth Watson QuadranglerJerry BorbjergEva CookJeannette DavidsonHarriet DudleyJanice FolsumMary FrohmanSue KeefePhyllis O’TrembaJoan PeabodyPat PickettKay PiperCarolyn PlasmanAudrey ReidRosemary RiedelMarjory ShollenbergerPat StoneJo ThomasMarjorie ThompsonSigmaPeggy AbelNancy BrownRenee DavisDorothy DuftHelen FloodWanda GrzankaMarilyn HillAnn HuntingtonMary Elaine JohnsonNancy JonesSally LofgrenHelen RaftCynthia SilbeyCarlyn TruaxBarbara WinchesterPhi Delta UpsilonUrania CosmasElizabeth HeintzDorothy KozinskiShirlee LowryMargaret MacHenryJean RoselliniPenny SvagndipMary TrindleJosephine ZizasAlpha Chi ThetaMarielyn AmtzenDorothy FishmanDoris GuthrieMuriel HasselsTUNE INTONITE and EVERY NITESTINEWAYSYMPHONIC HOURPresenting music of famous masters by world-famousorchestras and conductors as interpreted on records10:05 P.M. to 11:00 P.M.Station WIND 560E.C.Ask for your free copy of a complete month*s musicalprogram schedule at STINEWAY'S—blth and KENWOODSTINEWAY DRUGSCOR. 57th and KENWOOD Traveling BazaarAnd So They PledgedCongratulations to all fraternity men on the large number of men pledging. Over the protests of a formerbeauty queen, Lyn Hill pledged Sigma. Carolyn Truax made the Sigma queen record perfect. Last minute switches;A1 Hubbard at 9:00 Thursday night changed from Psi U to Deke. Jimmy Lane in reverse was sewed Deke, wentU. of C. BookstoreBILLY MITCHELLEmile Gauvreau and* Lester Cohen $2.50This biography is an authentic account of this hero’s exciting and stormy career andhis great fight to convince our government of the coming importance of air power.Psi U. On the fence between Mortar Board and Quadranglar, Don Shields went Beta. Barbara Ortlund wearing avery happy smile, pledged Mortar Board. Dave Ruml jumped Deke for AD Phi. The Sigma Chi’s skipped campuswith their pledge class on Thursday night. Louise Harvey went MB, sister Jean-Esoteric. Bob Wright joined theU High colony in the DU house.U. of C. BookstoreI REMEMBER, I REMEMBERAndre Maurois $3.00A book of intimate memories that reads like a novel, by the author of Ariel, Tragedyin France. It is the noblest French spirit which speaks. And it concludes in dauntlesshope.And So Pledged MondayAs the story goes, Punky Green overheard Louise Howson talking. Being I-C President she smelled dirtyrushing in the conversation. While details were being arranged for an I-C committee to drop in on Louise’s homein Hinsdale, Betsy Kuh overheard Marge Sullivan talking to Betty Fanning about a car. Action began early in themorning. Louise and the Quads left her Hinsdale home with Harriet Dudley and Elly Winslow in a hurry. The com-U. of C. BookstoreG. B. S.Hesketh Pearson $3.75Mr. Pearson is as like Shaw in wit and humor as anyone will be able to be. Since Mr.Pearson is also witty, good humored, personable and sensible, and has a natural gift forwriting, he has without the slightest doubt or hesitation written the best biography ofone of the best men who ever lived.mittee arrived to find the trap empty, lights on and garage door open. Waiting hours in a parked car outside thehouse Punky, Marge and Betty were seen by the returning Quads who had left the freshman. In walked theQuads, and in walked the committee. Upshot was that Quads were to be at Inter-Club Meeting at 7:30, slept throughit . . . and pledged Monday!Mortar Board PartyVery successful. Adele Whitaker and Hal Gordon looked smooth. Ditto Horton and Sawyer. Jack Lyding and(is she pinned or isn’t she) Pat Rutledge. Bob Kinchloe was with Marge Moffat. The Betas were stag. GeorgiaU. of C. BookstoreNO DAY OF TRIUMPHJ. Saunders Redding $3.00The extraordinary record of what happened to a young Negro who, at the invitation ofthe University of South Carolina, explored the lives of Negroes living in the South.Hinchliff returned her Phi Delt pin to Bill Blackwell. Barbara Ortlund with Schultz, was smiling happily. SallyAdams was also very very very very happy. Quadrangler Beth Mahan enjoyed the Mortar Board Party with PaulFlorian. Louise Harvey and Brit Wadlund. Shorty and Janet. Bobby Reese and Jack Neff. Elizabeth Louise Mac-Neille and a husky escort. Bob Bigelow. Rosemary Peacock looked lovey-dovey with Jim Wenger. Joan Lindenand Keith McCormick. Bob Oakley was one of the half dozen stags.U. of C. BookstoreTHE MAD FORTIESGrace Adams and Edward Hutter $2.60A highly diverting picture of a fabulous era out of America’s past—the 1840’s, themaddest in all our history. No cult or ism was too extravagant, too fantastic to bedenied large followings of apparently intelligent people. That daffy decade has beencaptured here.Sigma PartyIt really started at the Phi Psi house. Dinner was served to fifteen Sigma-Phi Psi couples. Barbara Win¬chester-Bob Kline, Rene Davis-Bob Ellis, Punky Green-Johnny Green, Helen Flood-Wayne Meagher, PJ-Anson Cher¬ry, Janet Rissman-Don Cummings were among those dancing after dinner.Prize remark of year! WANDA was cut in on by John Crosby, IF prexy. Making conversation with aU. of C. BookstoreI WRITE FROM WASHINGTONMarquis W. Childs $3.00Everyone who is eager to know what makes the U.S. wheels go round should read thisbook. It is a skilled interpretation of the eight most vital years in the history of ourcapitol.strange man she began, “I know I should know, but I can’t remember what fraternity you pledged!” Modest Johnexplained afterward, ”I thought I was crowding the hero bench when I said, ‘Psi U,’ but I didn’t add four yearsago.”The Betas made the dance a chapter function. The lads with date saw as little of them as they usually do atSigma functions. Gloria Robinson was missing. So was Bob McAuliffe. Sue Bohnen starred in the conga line.Jane Moran and C.T. Pete, ‘‘the great lover,” Gunnar, who incidentally is pinned to Betty Fanning, gave a demon¬stration of romantic dancing with Diny Butts. Most popular girl was P.J. Johnson, rather tough on Dancin’Anson.Jean Roff and Whitey Bayard. Chet Lukey, the wolf. Ex-wolf Hoatson and wife Joan. Jackie Horal and a midship¬man.U. of C. BookstoreGET THEE BEHIND MEHartzell Spence $2.76By turns an hilarious and nostalgic autobiography of a preacher’s son which will havea reminiscent appeal for both men and women thinking of their childhoods. The authorof ‘^One Foot in Heaven” turns the spotlight on the children of the Spence family.Here N ThereJoan Seigrist getting the hustle from Bob Snyder at the Tivoli . . . Over the weekend the Betas and SigmaChi’s contributed their brass nameplates to the scrap drive. They are very interested in knowing who the kindcollector was . . . Peggy Mason had a party . . . The Phi Sigs will have a closed on Friday night. Jack Glabman^will drag his Wildcat girl Nat Greenberg. Mike Barrash will again try to pin pretty Annette Midow ... It was a reffight in Blake Sunday afternoon. Room 21 ... Barbara Goodrich is running a three ring circus. Currently in the spotlight are Bob Pickus, Bill Dodds, Sid Ginger, and Bruce Pattou. That makes four I know ... A new couple at th^U. of C. BookstoreTHE MEDITERRANEANEmil Ludwig $3.75An historical tracing from the earliest communities of the East, through the gradualexpansion of the Meditermripan world, to tho omorgenre of great ideas, birth anddeaths of whole civilizations.“C” Dance will be Pat Millar and Q Moore ... Marge and Tony were setting them up in Hanleys Monday night forMary Lou Landes and Walter Barlow, Oma Holland-George Belling, Ruthie Kline-Nick Yaksa from England, andGinny Banning and Bill Swansboro. Strictly a Wyvern-Kappa Sig affair . . . The Psi U Hard Times Party \i onthe docket for the weekend . . . The Phi Psi Esquire Party next week . . . SPECIAL!!! Punk Warfield gave RfycfJeffris a ring last Wednesday night. The Horton Sawyer engagement will be announced tonight! |\V k^A/arlnesdav. October 28, 1942 THE DAILY MAROON Page ThreeFor The DemocraticRevolutionBy Maynard KruegerI (This is the second of a series of\three articles by Maynard Krueger,\assiiit(int professor of economics, and\national chairman of the Socialist\ Party. Born in 1906, he took his BAland MA at the University of Missouri.iHe teas the vice-presidential candidateIon the Socialist ticket in the election\of 19!^0.)I The revolutionary force of the dem-locratic idea is now in abeyance. ItI has been asleep for at least a fullGeneration; and being on the defens¬ive, it is challenged by the revolution-lary force of fascism and by the revo-llutionary force of communism. Fas-Icism is a totalitarian system—com-Iplete concentration of power on theleconomic field, complete concentrationlof power on the political field, coip-plete concentration of power in thesame hands—a totalitarian systemboth economically and politically. Thecommunist system as it has workedout in Russia is also a totalitariansystem; complete concentration ofeconomic power in the hands of thestate, and political power in the handsnot only of the state but of the rulingself-perpetuating bureaucracy of thestate. But both fascism and com¬munism have drawn a considerableproportion of their strength from thefact that they have solved a basic con¬tradiction; a contradiction between aneconomic world organized on the basisof autocracy of great concentration ofpower, and a political world organizedon the basis of democratic principles—equal franchise for everybody.There is no alchemy, nothing writtenin the stars, and nothing graven ontablets of stone and handed downfrom Mount Sinai that is going tomake it possible for us any more thananybody else to avoid facing the basiccontradiction between political democ¬racy and economic authoritarianism.The great strength of fascism andthe great strength now of the Com¬munists in Russia is that they havesolved that contradiction. But theyhave done so by the worst of all pos¬sible methods. They took politicaldemocracy, if they had it (as in Ger¬many under the Weimar Republic but not in Russia) by the scruff of theneck and tossed it out the nearest win¬dow. Then, having gotten themselvesa political system which is as authori¬tarian as the large scale corporateeconomic system, they had a politicalorder and an economic order thatcould live together.The question which then arises withregard to the revolutionary forces offascism and of communism is notwhether you like them or not. Theyare properly rejected by most of thepeople in this country; and we of theSocialist movement have been amongthe first to lay bare the character bothof the fascist order and of Russiantotalitarianism, which is now on theopposite military side from that ofthe Nazis. But while we properly re¬ject the totalitarianism of both com¬munism and fascism, the economiccollectivism which is represented inboth is no longer to be rejected byanybody. For we are getting economiccollectivism right now.The government of the UnitedStates is taking over the functions ofprivate enterprise. Within a shorttime, the government will be deter¬mining what is to be the product ofevery corporation in the country. Itwill be setting the scale of its outputand providing detailed specificationsfor the product. It will be controllingor attempting to control (not too suc¬cessfully) the price at which it issold, determining most of the costs ofproduction which go into its making,providing most of the credit and tak¬ing most of the risks. The functionsof private enterprise are well nighended.What is taking their place is a formof economic collectivism. Lincoln onceraised a question, in an address atBaltimore, which we also shall haveto answer: “Must a government ofnecessity be too strong for the liber¬ties of its own people or too weak tomaintain its own existence?” If wewish to avoid totalitarianism, we mustfind out how economic Collectivism,whi<*h is inevitable, can be reconciledwith democratic control; how it canbe made and kept democratic. BAandMAExams forEnglishDue to the demand of men enteringthe army, the English Department hasjust announced that the Comprehen¬sive Examinations for the Bachelor’sand Master’s Degrees will be offeredthis quarter. All wishing to take theexam must register before Nov. 1.The required reading for the Eng¬lish Bachelor’s is as follows:1. Criticism: Matthew Arnold, Soh-rab and Rustum and the Preface tohis Poems (1853).2. Analysis of Ideas: Samuel John-vson, “Milton,” in his Lives of theEnglish Poets.Reading for the Master’s Degreeis:1. Criticism: Herman Melville,Benito Cemo.(Candidates are expected also to befamiliar with Harold H. Scudder,“Melville’s Benito Cereno and CaptainDelano’s Voyages.” PMLA, XLIII(1928), 502-32).2. Analysis of Ideas: Roger Asch-am. The Schoolmaster.Pre-Med StudentsEscape Draft InShortage of DoctorsVictor Johnson, Dean of Students inthe Biological Sciences division^ re¬leased to the Maroon today a state¬ment concerning the position of thepre-med student in selective service.Johnson’s statement indicated that“appropriate action for conserving thesupply of qualified pre-med studentswill be taken in the very near fu¬ture.”Johnson continued to explain thatdue to the need for doctors in thearmy, less than 5 of the 20,000 med¬ical students registered in the U.S.were inducted during the first year ofthe draft.All physically fit med students willgraduate into some branch of the mil¬itary services.INDISPENSABLEREFERENCEBOOKSMILITARY AND TECHNICAL BOOKSSPECIAL BOOKS FOR ALL DEFENSE CLASSESDictionaries—THESAURUS'0/ , JI VlillSli AOKDSAMI VSiS ' Webster CoKegiate—54th Edition $3.50 - $4.00Standard Dictionaries—^Wide Selection 35e to $22.50Foreign Language Dictionaries—All Standard Editions $1.00 to $6.50Medieai Dictionaries-Portland, Gould, Stedman 12.00 to $2.50Complete Rhyming Dictionary 1.89Keller-Readers' Digest of Books 1.97The Works of Plato 1.95Basic Works of Aristotle—McKeon 5.00Roget Thesaurus 1.00Webster's Dictionary of Synonyms 3.50- YOUR BOOK HEADQUARTERS -WOODWORTH'SBOOK STORE1311 E. 57TH ST. — OPEN EVENINGSj School NeedsMore ThanPoll WatchingBy JAMES SHEGGLERAfter a survey of campus politicalactivity, it would seem that its graydrab and cloistered atmosphere hasspread to its mind politic.The newly-organized political com¬mission, for whom such high hopeswere held, is concentrating on poll¬watching. Not that we have anythingagainst poll watching, the best peo¬ple do it, but (or hadn’t you heard)people are talking about India, revo¬lutions, Fascism and Communism. Infact, the last two have be^n whisperedaround for a long time now.Why is at that at the University,which is fast assuming the foremostposition among the world’s intellectualleaders, there is no group politicalconsciousness? Where, oh where, is astudent leader who can organize thosenumerous students who will think andtalk their politics, that important fac¬tor in shaping individual philosophies ?Consider again the political com¬mission. After Mr. Henri Bloch hadmoved the minute assembly to a con¬templation of adequate goals, student“leaders” placed their touch of deathupon the meeting and poll-watchingbecame the order of the day.And thus was interred another in along line of well-intended, but dismalattempts to organize the universityliberals, a line stretching completelyuninterrupted through one of themost momentous periods in world af¬fairs.While in Mr. Bloch there was foundan advisor whose vision goes beyondpoll-watching and Colonel McCormick,there still was pitifully lacking thatncLJonWpitRISTsjl ^0p,|l|l'ANsjEVES CRREFULLV EXHtllinEDFOR THE ONLY PAIR OF EYESYOU WILL EVER HAVE . . .• Over 25 Years Experience• Finest Testino Equipment• And the BEST MaterialsH. P. 5352Dr. Nels R. NelsonV. 1138 EAST 63rd.ST. J all-important student leader.Let him be someone who can getreactionaries and liberals under oneroof and maintain organization whilethey fight to the death.Or better yet, let him be a reac¬tionary rabblerouser who can collecta large group of us followers, whileour precious intelligensia tries to ig¬nore and finally fights him.But let him be, omnipotent Zeus,one person with the strength, withthe brains, with the vitality, with theintestinal fortitude to finally makethis University compare with itsEuropean predecessors.3y the way, you don’t just call ameeting and pray; you call a meet¬ing and make certain an adequate at¬tendance.Hbcb's an oda to tha good old daysWhan collaga man had crazy ways.Tha Raccoon coat was fust tha thing—(Ed Rachlin sur'i was in tha swing).Football gamas and big fur collars—Lots of baar, and fun, and dollars.Football gamas hava gona foravar,But tha atmosphara, it laavas us navar.Lat's gat back to tha record-aatars—Wa all ramambar old Bob Patars!A lamb-linad coat, (his prida and joy)Showed him to ba tha "Easiarn boy".Tha Eastern prap school shows you how.In cold, cold, weather, be a wow!A sheep-skin lining, sheepskin collar.The other fellows soon will foliar.To finger-tip, tan gabardine—The coats this year do seem to lean.Tha price? In dollars, 25.So let's ba smooth, boys—lat's arrivalthe*! hub ,Stuli iinil Jaci.'son, CHIC ACj(/**Fit to be tied?*K you’re “fit to be tied” with shorts that hitch andbind you, change to Arrow Shorts, with the patent¬ed seamless crotch construction. . . there’s no binding or chaf¬ing, and there’s plenty of room!The Arrow Sanforized label isassurance that the garment willstay your correct size. (Fabricshrinkage less than 1%), GetArrow Shortstoday!Tops, 55c upShortSj 75c upO ♦ DMV ». I. WAR iOilOS AND UAMH */ARROW SHIRTSTIES • COLLARS a HANDKERCHIEFS e UNDERWEAR • SfORT SHIRTS^ Page Four THE DAILY MAROON %Wednesday. October 28,Our Mutual Friend... •Our mutual friend, Col. Robert R. McCormick, is made especially moroseby the mere idea of the defeat of his personally chosen candidate for thetitle of Senator from the soverign state of the Chicago Tribune. His de¬pression at the very thought of such an affair takes a peculiarly violent bentand it takes at least seven editorials .on the revolutionary evils of the Roose¬velt administration to bring his mood back to a normal black.It has probably been a mistake for foes of Fascism to concentrate somuch attention on the personalities of Brooks and Day themselves. After along life of crusading, we have decided that we have been wasting our time ingoing gunning after individual reactionaries. Salvation can only be foundin probing down into the roots of the man in power and discovering the soiland sources which make him possible.The roots and sources of reactionary power in Illinois rests in TribuneTower. A shrewd politico, the aristocratic Col. M. has already opened hiscampaign to keep Henry Wallace out of the White-House. We see no reasonfor the Col. to begin potting at Wallace quite so early, but, then, the Col. isa thorough gentleman, as is obvious from the fact that he is still fighting theelection of 1932 for Hoover by slyly planting grass in certain city streets.The Colonel realizes that this is 1942, and Franklin Delano Roosevelt ispresident. His power is known and can be broken. Even now his men arethreatened with defeat. Newton Jenkins has hit out for warmer climate.Mrs. Dilling is’going to the same place by way of a Washington court.The people of Illinois are asked to decide whether this is a people’s waras far as they are concerned. If it is, they will send McKeough and Adamowskito Washington.The Maroon believes that McKeough and Adamowski, even if they beparlor progressives, are preferable to home-grown Fascists. We are notperfectly satisfied with the Democratic candidates. If this is a people’s warthen we want men at the peace table that will write the opening chapters of adurable people’s peace. And those are not McCormick’s men, nor is it Cox,or Howard Smith, or that elegant Democrat, Frank Hague.The men who lead America will transcend all party boundaries. Theymust not be chosen for their party allegiance, but for the past and presentperformances and attitudes on this international civil war.There can be no compromise. If fascism wins in Illinois on Nov. 3, thenit will be manifest that the American people do not yet understand thattheir most dangerous enemies include neighborly, homespun Americans andrespectable jingo politicians.The power that may win for Brooks is the inertia of the mass of thepeople. It is the thankless job of the liberals and the left to wipe away thescum of prejudice and ignorance from which poverty and misery grow everstronger. This can only be accomplished with the unfettered strategy oftruth.Whether the people can know the truth and so be set free is a questionthat will be answered again on Nov. 3.P. R.Get ThatRealHoliday SpiritWith A NewERIE SUITGet your ««ardrobe in shape for a stren¬uous social workout this coming winter.Class, campus or big date you'll passevery test in Erie's nationally famousHart Schatfner & Marx, GGG, Eagle,and Kuppenheimer clothes.CUSTOM SHOPWORSTED$ 40Even a Hallowe'en spook would go forthe smart, handsome lines of these long-wearing suits. They're skillfully tailoredto give you the utmost in comfort andappearance. Made of fine, 100% woolworsted to bounce back smiling from thetoughest kind of wear. Hard to beat forlooks. Impossible to beat for value.COLD?Not H You Wearan Erie windbreaker. All types, all kinds,materials. They're perfect for wearbetween classes. Swell for week-ends.Mighty handsome at all times. A com¬plete range of styles and prices.TAKE 3 MONTHS TO PAYno Extra Charge! Adult Ed.CouncilRecitalsThe distinguished Musical Arts Pi¬ano Series sponsored by the Adult Ed¬ucation Council of Chicago will openits seventh season of recitals by notedpianists in Orchestra Hall on Tuesdayevening, November 3, with the Chileanpianist Claudia Arrau as the recital¬ist.Arrau will be followed on Decem¬ber 1 by Artur Schnabel, and the re¬citalist on January 5 will be DorothyCrost, “Chicago’s outstanding youngpianist”, chosen in public competitionlast spring to appear on the series.Rosalyn Tureck, young Americanpianist, will appear on February 2,and Brazil’s most distinguished pian¬ist, Mme. Guiomar Novaes, will be therecitalist on March 2. Rudolf Serkin,who has repeatedly won the SeriesSubscribers’ poll as the most popularpianist presented on the course, willwind up the season on March 16.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, 6831 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, $1.60 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.Memberftssocidled Gc)!le5iotG PressDistributor ofGDllebiote Di6eslEDITORIAL BOARD:Philip Rieff—Editor in chiefMinna Sachs—News EditorBeata Mueller—Feature EditorWerner Baum—Makeup EditorElizabeth Waters—Copy EditorBUSINESS BOARD:Ned Munger—Business ManagerBarbara Ortlund—Advertising ManagerJoan Wehlen—CirculationDick Peterson—CirculationEllen Tuttle—ComptrollerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATES:Beth Carney, Harlan Blake, William Letwin,Marylin Robb; Barbara Gilfillan, Sec. to theF'ditor.BUSINESS ASSOCIATES:Ben Freedman, Beth Fish, Sid Ginger, BudO’Donnell, Rick Meana, Carl Gruhzit, ShirleyVan de Water, Craig Wilder, Alice Traynik,Marilyn Hill.Night Editors: Rick Meanaand Harlan Blake. Now under-armCream DeodorantsafelyStops Perspiration1. Does not rot dresses or men’sshirts. Does not irritate skin.2. No waiting to dry. Can be usedright after shaving.3. Instantly 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.39^ ®Al«o in 10^ and S9< jarsf* GuaranMMDY.Good Houtokoepingk.4ki» vocnawiM .a. ARRIDGREGG COLLEGE TRAININGfor BUSINESS. INDUSTRY,GOVERNMENT SERVICE—Stenographers — Secretaries —— Accountants — Court Reporters —URGENTLY NEEDED1Demand for Gregg College Graduates ex¬ceeds supply • The great majority ofour present student body are collegetrained • Gregg College employs no solici¬tors • Established 48 years • Co-educa¬tional • Free Employment Bureau • Dauand Evening Classes.Call, write or telephone ST Ate 1181 forbooklet: “The Doorway to Opportunity."The QREQQ COLLEGE6 N. MIchioaii Avenue at Madisen Street, ChicaaeNEWS PAPERSERVICE CO.EXCELLENT ENGRAVING81 WEST VAN BURENUnited Hospital & UniversityWorkers L. I. U. 787Cigarette DanceNOVEMBER 17Bring Your Best GalBenefit of former employees ofthe University of Chicago who areserving as members of the armedservices.Admission: two packages ofCigarettes4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSEPOR COlieOE STUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough, inteusivo, stenographic course—Sorting January 1, April 1, July 1, October 1.Interesting Booklet sent fru, without obligation— write or phone. No solicitors employed.moserBUSINESS COLLEGEPAUL MOSER, J.D^PH.B.Regular Courses for Beginners, open to HighSchool Graduates only, start first Mondayof sach month. Advanced Courses startany Monday. Day and Evening. EveningCourses open to men.116 S. Michigan Ave.« Chicago, Randolph 4347 BloodbankCommitte*Pleads for VolunteenPresent PartyAt Int. HouseWinding: subterranean catacombs,ghosts guaranteed to startle the brav¬est souls, and a goblin dance in theauditorium will make up the Interna¬tional House Halloween celebrationnext Saturday night.Games, music and dancing, refresh¬ments, and ghostly decorations are be¬ing planned by the house membersand the air cadets who are now livingthere. Audrey Collinson, a studentfrom England, is chairman of the par¬ty committee and is being assisted bya large committee of nearly thirtymembers. The party is open to all, andguest tickets are 45 cents. Housemembers’ tickets are only 36 cents.This afternoon at 1:30 MadameChu, vice-president of the World Y.-W.C.A. and wife of the military at¬tache, General Chu, will speak to agroup of house members and Y. W.-C.A. members. Tomorrow evening theAlumni Association invites all univer¬sity students to hear Frederico Gram-iel from Cuba to speak on “Interna¬tional Relations between the Ameri¬cas.Student council elections are alsoin full swing at International Houseand all nominations will close tomor¬row at midnight. Elections are sched¬uled for November 6.Calvert ClubWeekEndTripCombined religious and social ac¬tivities will comprise the annual week¬end trip of the Calvert Club alumnigroup at the organization’s Childerlyfarm near Wheeling, Illinois, October30-November 2. The group will be ad¬dressed by the Rev. Walter Farrel,prominent theologian and author; theRev. Martin Carabine, director of Chi¬cago’s Catholic high school studentorganizations; and the Rev. JamesMeyer.Reservations can be made with theRev. Joseph D. Connerton, Calvert di¬rector, at the club offices, 6736 Uni¬versity Avenue.KIMBARK63rd & KimbarkWed, Thurs,"Tarzan's New York Adventure"With Johnny Weismuller"Flight Lieutenant"With Pat O'BrienFri. Sat,"Take A Letter, Darling"WithFred Mac Murray & Rosalind Russell"Lady In A Jam"With Irene DunneSun. Mon. Tubs.'Strictly in the Groove''Mr. KippsCall of the Canyon'With Gene AutryOpen 12:30 15c till 6:30HAMDKRCm nSTPROm VITAL ZONESO Aumit HOW oms you smoke itTeresa Dolan Dancing School1208 E. 63rd St. Near Woodlawn"Were you embarrassed by poor dancing at the 'C Dance orPreferential, or during rushing week? Why not forget aboutyour worries after a few lessons?"-Private and Class Lessons—Lady and Gentlemen Instructors— More volunteers is still the pithe bloodbank committee! Justof their goal of three hundred dcthe committee urgently needstional volunteers to give a piiblood apiece to the Red Cross Ebank.The committee wants to thantnose who have donated blood osigned up to give it. Deadline fodrive is November 5, but apiments for donors must be ma(advance.Anyone who is in good healtlis over 18 is eligible to become aor, providing he or she weighspounds and, if under 21, has theten consent of parents. Volurshould contact Carolyn FriedmjBeecher..U.P. to OffeiPlay on Wai“Letters To Lucerne”, the rBroadway success which many cconsider the finest play written ;the present war, will be given bUniversity Players on Novembe13, and 14 in the Reynolds Club 'ter.Written by Fritz Rotter and .Vincent, the play is the story olthe lives of the students in a Jboarding school are affected bjbeginning of the war.Oldtimers in the csst include !Laura Collins and Maryce Klaffanother veteran, Norma Evans, ;recting the play. Other cast merare: Esther Moellenoff, Elaine Gspahn, Bernard Frazer, Beatricetor, Wally Bachrack, Doris De !Phyllis Grondine, Mary DiarMerle Sloan, Homer Goldberg,Jack Solomon.The Dramatic Association’s veof S. N. Behrman’s “Biography’'open the campus dramatic seNovember 5, 6, and 7 in the ReyClub Theater. Betsy Kuh playileading part in the show, whichArmstrong is directing.CatholicCenterDedicatee“There is a decided trend tothe Church on the Universitypus.” So said Archbishop Stritch ’questioned on Monday, Octobeiafter the ceremony of the blessirCalvert Club’s recently acquired 1and chapel.Speaking at the afternoon cererheld in the chapel, the Archbipraised the spirit of the work andcussed the “Love of God” treatisSt. Francis de Sales.Archbishop Stritch then metvidually the large group of pelconnected with the Universityhad attended the ceremony. A diwas held at six Monday evening.Calvert Club’s new headquaiwhich were occupied July 1, areby the arch-diocese of Chicago,building was obtained largely thrthe combined efforts of Fathernerton, chaplain of Calvert Club,Archbishop Stritch, who acteisponsor for the movement.When aslced how the UnivergCatholic group compares with 1of other colleges throughout thetion the Archbishop stated,course, this is not as old as someilar organizations, but it comivery favorably with any in the ctry.”LuncheonIn Ida NoyesPumpkins and autumn leaveshp thp dpporatioTT? for thp annualloween luncheon which the Y}will hold in Ida Noyes tomorrovjnew version of Devil’s DelightIda Noyes gingerbread are onmenu.Tickets for the luncheon will >sale today and tomorrow in M»Corridor. :Volume XIFirst Official Act of Everett Cose (left) after his induction as ninth presidentof Colgate University was the conferring of honorary Doctor of Laws degreeson Chief Justice Harlan Fiske Stone (center) and 'Joseph Clarke Grew,former Ambassador to Japan. Acme•d Student Donates Blood — Ned Smallwood, blind student at Cornell Uni-'♦y, accompanied by his ''Seeing Eye" dog. Gringo, gives a pint of blood to the^0 bank as a contribution to the war effort. A member of Phi Delta Theta,illwood is active in campus affairs and has been on the crew and wrestling squads.**ng on Occasion of an Occasion — Formal serenades are a part of theantic side of college life at Wittenberg College, Springfield, Ohio. Here Phi Psi snode Alpha Delta Pis because a brother has announced his engagement to onesisters in the ADPi house. f/ym feetGiant strides carry Vic Smith,U.C.L.A. halfback, for a goodgain around end‘in the firstquarter of the Texas Chris-tian-Bruin encounter. Whentwilight settled over Los An>geles AAemoripl Coliseum theTexas Horned Frogs walkedoff the field with a hard won7-6 victory. AcmetkCelebrating an Election Victory — Connecticut College forWonf>en girls swarm into the dormitory halls to congratulate BevBonfig (dotted p. j's.) upon her election to the presidency of thesophomore class. Bev obliges by dancing with her jitterbug pal,Mickey McCullough. Collegkrte Digest Photo by Oberg Pole SitterThe traditional flag rushat Brown Universityended in victory for thesophomores this year.Robert Kerr tied him¬self to the top of thegreased pole, and hisclassmates wouldn't letthe freshmen get nearhim to haul down thepennant.Outside. . . looking in, but nothappy about the-wholething, is Charles Webb,University of So. Cali¬fornia student whosegirl was monopolizedfor a whole eveningwhen the Alpha ChiOmegas entertained agroup of soldiers. Whosold Army life is tough?Heoded for Scrap — Duquesne's scrappy football eleven drags a 1932 Cadillac to the cityscrap pile, urged along by two pretty "teamsters," Betty Sipes and Sarah Kearns.i M ' '*OPtW3.' 1 i ‘t • ]111 i ^ iIBiTransportation Problem Solved — The play 'Two On An Island" presents a difficulttask even for professional stagehands with Its subways and taxis. But students of Lewis¬ton State Normal College in Idaho set the scene with a few pieces of cardboard, clothand lumber. The tire shortage doesn't seem to bother the young lady In the taxi, but Itseems as if many people have taken to using the subway pictured on the right.AQK“ for serviceixtra snappy.ir favorite c arettelAatin®*’sales tec-Canteens.)Salci'^'\Vln»n"‘' I FIND THEM ]MILDER ALL WAYS !THATfe ONE REASON ISMOKE CAMELS-ANt) THATFULL, FOUND FLAVOR^ IS another!where cigarettesore judgedThe "T-ZONE' Taste and Throat—is the prov-ing ground for cigarettes. Only your taste andthroat can decide which cigarette tastes best toyou...and how it affects your throat. For yourtaste and throat are individual to you. Based onthe experience of millions of smokers* we be¬lieve Camels will suit your'T-ZONE" to a "T/'l^tove it for yourself! TURKISH & DOMESTIC. BLEND ^Let no man think that women aigirls, who, in past wars, confm*It's different this time—very diffattest.During the last few months abeauty shops. They appearedmarks appeared. Why?Place yourself on the campuo'clock. You'll see girls pedalinled to nearby farms where theposition and milk cows; otherschores. Two hours later they waThis is the phenomenon createis not their only activity. Many aMt. Holyoke farm volunteers find that there is all sortsof work for them to do. Cutting and stacking of fire¬wood formerly might have been done by a man whonow sits behind a gun or a machine. Now it's in thehands of girls like Jeanne Long."XJ d,formed byr scbedoles- This™.oD the collegeAitcran jcanCoUegebuiidi*'^To keep themselves fit college girls are devoting more time tohealthful exercises, demonstrated here by Lois Mathieson ofButler University. A Co-ed’s Work is% KS'Xi 7' ^ \w > ^i ,M 1 iBf / yk ' V w Lle Wartime!Harriet’Hunt shows the photographer that girls con really work in the fields.She spent the summer working at the Wyoming work camp for college youths.Ithis-lob of winning the war-especially collegeindaqes and raising money for the Red Cross,fo pog®' women's colleges,I co-eds. They began to spend less time inL Scratched arms and legs, black and blueSouth Hadley, Mass., some morning at sixAnd if you followed them, you'd beI their sleeves. Some push stools and pails intoI ■ ihe farmhouse, help with a dozen otherI a cup of coffee and rush off to classes.[to help on the home front. But aiding farmersdefense jobs as aircraft spotting, fire-fighting,nursing.J'oniofes OftoskX * f,loiDed tht> * ° *' fQkei'♦ s the one Thousands of co-eds have received certificates for completing the homerord. Wells nursing course of the Red Cross. Uncle Sam is calling for 50,000 nurses’‘acting knit- this year, a good percentage of which will be college trained girls. These Barnard College girls, enrolled in one of the classes in war defense work,are learning about the mechanics af an automobile motor. Doing their part tofurther the victory effort of their country, they also learn such skills as aerialphotographic interpretation, first aid and communal cooking.Forming Patterns in the Water is one of the stunts of the Lawrence College aquobelles. Herearrange themselves in an octagonal formation.Big Bill Daley steppedInto the shoes of anAll-American halfbackwhen he scored fourtouchdowns to lead theMinnesota Gophers in a50-7 rout of the de-emphasized Pittsburghteam. He proved to beon able successor toBruce Smith, Minneso¬ta's hero of last year.. to<^odets ta,iix feet. He® corned q o pointsy ^novvsiwoMon-HisboseIf every college student inthis country J^iight just ONE$25.lw Weir j^^d this yeer/it would^amount to enougW'money,, .to^-ouyEven the Sun*Dial on the Bucknell University campus isplaying a part in the college's war-emergency progrom. Theold timepiece is now used by naval reserve trainees as a con¬venient laboratory in studying the time of day. William Ben¬ner, a V-7 naval candidate, explains the intricasies of theinstrument to pretty Phyllis Coding, Bucknell co-ed. Hchn machineAJv*rtltln§ :NATIONAL ADVERTISING^ SERVICE INC.4S0 Madison Av«nH«, Ntw Yorli400 No. Michifan Avtniia, Chicafo;Bgitoa Saw Fraociico Lot AmalaiGolIe6icite Di6estSoction ' ^Publicotions Office: 3)7 FowlcasBuilding, Minnoopolb, Miitnasotu Save for Victory--Buy a War Bond,bo«V o^ZiheW «w<J, profl'O'"■.ion iniM^*a 10 »>• *• ^5W e^, 7**JTSi «h« te V. ®"f C *•Everyone is happy todo his shore in this nec>essory defense work. Atleft engineering stu¬dents ready materialsfor smelting, addingpractical experience totheir knowledge as wellas material for waruses.☆Teutsch hands first $25war bond purchasedthrough the efforts ofthe committee to Deanof Students R. C. Beaty,custodian for the Tol¬bert Fund. In the firstfive weeks of the cam¬paign more than $200was raised, a record forany school to shoot at.Mu*"Ho«Cl"^ " IKsaMUtxC*"'|v u*i't ^I A *‘***'**I.««■ I Tif mUMMAL •WU*'On dormitory bulletin board, studentreads notices seeking cooperation in thereclamation program, showing how econ¬omy and conservation may be broughtabout. To put the program across to thertudent body, advertisements and newi[tories in the Florida Alligator, studentweekly newspaper, were also used. At the Phi Delta Theta fraternity house, membersplace scrap, materials into waste paper and metaldepositories for campus-wide collection. You'd beamazed at the amount of metal turned up in theaverage house! Working here are, left to right, BillyWatson, Powell Schell, John Voges and Clay Cod-rington.^ the ATO house, Wilbert Canning studies In front of a reminder to•nserve electricity. The campus' 21 traternitles reported savings in elec-c bills ranging from $5 to $12 in the first month of the program. Executive Committee ChalrnKiriKurt TeutKh, seated in ceii|^ a -^ Q|rman refugee vrho teSrriedof skniiar programs^Qerffhany, confers wjth sub-ift^ c^irmen. New ld«CiSHere for diKussioh.^Snakes Alivel^Student Milks Rattler'4:''During the last few decades, research doctors have been attempting to curediseases by the injection of snake venoms in minute doses. The task of extractsvenom is one of the most important and most treacherous parts of the job 'Thomas Goreau of Goddard College it's all in a day's work. Left he grips theready for the "milking." This is the most critical stage of the wholebecause unless the grip is in the proper place and with proper strength, theprocess is undermined. Below you can see a drop of venom in the bottom ofvessel. Statistics show that one out of every fifteen bites is inflicted on personstionally handling poisonous snakes. That makes the odds pretty highGoro-QIack Star Photo*Dartmouth Gridders Join Another Teom — Coach Tuss Mclaughry shows theremnants of his Dartmouth varsity team the roster of Big Green gridders already servingin the armed forces. Eleven lettermen joined Uncle Sam's team instead of returning toschool this fall. The list is headed by Rem Crego, first-string center, who was killed lastspring while training as a naval aviation cadet. Acm«mSlippery As o Greosed Pig—Skin — This bit of action took place as the University^of Michigan opened its 1942 football campaign by defeating the highly touted GreatLakes Naval Station team, 9-0. Here Michigan's Robinson recovers his own fumble fora first down. But it looks like No. 59 thought he was going to have something to sayabout possession of the ball. ^ file Sum — Severol huiidfed R,A.f, U.$. Air Corps cadetroiniiig in aerial novlgo^bn'and meteorology at the lintversi‘V cadets study Jn the loshionoyie Coral Gabl^ resort areo of' work ot much m vocotlohiri enjoy their ploy, f mr^ Autrey, tlfo be adni^ dired from school, ''shoots