BLACKFRIARS, DORMS LOST FOR WARThis is the Army;Ftiars Con't GoTo TownThis week the war disposed of yetanother time' honored standby, andshelved “Blackfriars” for the dura¬tion. A skeleton organization of jun¬iors will take care of it until thenwith the present officers in an ad¬visory capacity: the fact remainsthat no play will be produced eitherthis year or for what may be a con¬siderable time thereafter.This was the decision last weekof Abbot Kenney, Hospitaller Merri-field, Scribe Evans and Prior Arm¬strong.They did so not because of money,of which they say they have plenty,but the were forced into it by apretty universal problem: manpow¬er. With luck, the four figure theymight swing a show on a somewhatlesser scale than last year’s effort,but you can’t produce a musicalcomedy with the army’s left overs,or prepare one with a cast due togo into khaki any day the draftboard wants them.Until the armistice, then, the of¬ficiating officers will go into semi-retirement, while the administrationis left to a newly-elected board ofjuniors consisting of Abbot Baker,Prior Eric Ericson, Scribe UrchieEllis, and Hospitaler Bud Simon,Praecentor Naninga. The old guardwill give up office but keep a fingerin the pie, with the understanding Reserve PlansInclude OnlyThose Advised“All students who have applied totheir advisors for admission to Armyor Navy reserve plans will be ac¬cepted, subject to two conditions.They must have the approval oftheir faculty advisors and must beable to make arrangements to havetheir physical examinations by De¬cember 15, next Tuesday.’’ Thisstatement was made by Mr. Wiltyesterday afternoon and is a distinctchange in the policy announcedMonday following the closing of en¬listments. On Monday the Dean’s of¬fice said that only those studentswho had completed their physicalswould be accepted. Now all studentswho wish to enter Army, Navy, Ma¬rines or the Air Corps and whohave contacted their advisors maycall at the Dean’s office to completeenlistment. Anyone who had notspoken to his advisor is out of luckas far as reserve plans go.that when and if they return theymay take up where they left off.In this manner the oldest organ¬ization of its kind save Harvard’sHasty Pudding must close shop. Forthe duration “Blackfriars’’ must gointo hibernation.Student Forum to Enoge inNotional Intercollege DebatesThe University has entered the1943 National Intercollegiate RadioPrize Debates, sponsored by theAmerican Economic Foundation,which is offering prizes of $1000 and$600 for the best speeches on eitherside of the question: “Should Ameri¬can Youth Support the Re-establish¬ment After the War of CompetitiveEnterprise as Our Dominant Eco¬nomic System?’’ Sixteen other prizesof $50 and $26 are offered.The University’s two entrants inthe contest—one upholding each sideof the question at issue—will bechosen in an open competition onFriday, January 8. All undergradu¬ate students pursuing full-timecourses toward the bachelor’s degreeare eligible to compete, and namesof entrants must be submitted to W.C. Bradbury, Director of StudentForum (Box 40, Faculty Exchange)by December 19.Contestants desiring to representthe University will present on Jan¬uary 8, speeches, 7^ minutes inlength, before an audience of facultyjudges, who will choose the onespeaker on each side to send an out¬line of his proposals to the AmericanEconomic Foundation. These briefsmust be sent in by January 25. The16 nationally best briefs on eachside will be picked, and their authorswill participate in radio debates overBlue Network Stations in variousparts of the country. At these de¬bates prizes of $60 for the bestspeech and $25 for the best speechon the opposing side will be paid.The Foundation will then choosefrom among the prize winners thebest two briefs on each side of thequestion, these four to participatein the final radio debate in NewYork, at which prizes of $1000 and$600 will be awarded to the two bestspeakers. Traveling expensesthroughout will be paid by the Foun¬dation. Co-op PlayersPlan Russian Play,Squaring the CircleOne of the first plays to come outof Russia after the revolution,“Squaring the Circle’’ by ValentineKataez, will be produced by Co-opPlayers sometime in January. Theplay deals with two Communistbachelor room-mates who marry, onthe same day, two women of ex¬tremely different types. The hum¬orous results make this amusinglywritten Russian comedy.Although casting has not beencompleted, three of the four leadshave been announced. They will beplayed by Lee Pilot, Wally Bach-rach of Pulse and U.P. fame, andMary Monahan. Alec Sandimirskywill direct the production, assistedby Mary Monahan.The play is another of the RussianWar Relief Benefits and will begiven not only on campus but on theSouth, North and West sides of thecity.Publications View'Billy Whiskers'Famed AnarchistYesterday, as the MAROON wasbeing put to bed and Pulse struggledto get their closely spaced issuesto press, a strange character, dress¬ed in cast off clothing and breathingheavily through his immense beard,entered the publications’ office. Afterthe utter amazement had partiallypassed, one of the members presentrecognized him to be “Billy Whisk¬ers’’; most famous of the West Mad¬ison Street moochers, anarchists,and world travelers. After walkingthe entire distance between his homedistrict to the University, he seatedhimself comfortably in the office andoffered to give a story for a price.After a collection had been taken, hewrote a short account of his viewsin a rather self-praising style andleft, ending the brief interview ofthe 72 year old schizophrenic. BullSessionBy TIM STARRELSAmerica has been at war for ayear. The sacrifices have been many,yet they have been made by a few.Lives have been lost and familieshave been disrupted, and the peoplewho have suffered have borne theirtroubles and have not turned theirbacks. But there are people, so manypeople, who still hoard food andcomplain about gas rationing. Whenthere is good news they glance backat their isolated haunts and standpoised, ready to jump back into theirformer “America First’’ attitude.There are people at the Universitywho live today in much the sameway as they lived on December 6,1941.$10Monday was the anniversary ofthe attack on Pearl Harbor.Throughout the country, cities andorganizations commemorated the dayby extra scrap drives and war bondsales. Now, I certainly do not ap¬prove of brass bands and useless flagwaving. However, I do approve ofobjective action, and plenty of it.On Monday, December 7, 1942, theUniversity sold $10 worth of warstamps. Action?Of course, you can say that everyperson on the campus has been hitby the war. Some are sharing theirrooms with other students. A “big”sacrifice. The men are all concernedwith the draft; many were enlistingbefore the President’s decree. Butwhat are they doing while they arehere, aside from what they have todo ? There are those who direct theirefforts to profitable causes, but howmany are there who still live shel¬tered from the real world by theUniversity life? They are due fora rude awakening.Operate!!!I have heard that the reason theUniversity students have been so un¬cooperative with the War Effort isthe inaction of the Student WarCouncil. This may be partially true.For example, numerous times stampsales have had to be discontinuedbecause those who promised to sellhave failed to show up or send a sub¬stitute. Then, too, organizations are“touching students right and left”for donations, and the whole busi¬ness seems to be a hopeless muddle.But as the name signifies. The Stu¬dent War Council is you and me, thestudents. If there is disorganization,why don’t you do something aboutit? Pledge to sell war stamps onehour a week, and sell them. HelpRussian War Relief and the WorldStudent Service collect funds in sucha manner as the Male Animal bene¬fit. Think of some improvements andthen give constructive suggestions.You can turn them in to THE DAILYMAROON office, and I can assureyou, action will be taken. If the*Student War Council is bad, it isyour fault, and we should do some¬thing about it. The uiliversities ofAmerica, i more or less, on trial.Many will soon have to be closed forthe duration, or turned over com¬pletely to the Armed Forces. It isour responsibility, and our job, toshow Mr. Hitler, and to show theUnited States, and to show ours(P>lvp«!that the universities are important,both in curricular and extra-cur-^ricular activities; that they areworth preserving, and worth fightingfor. 1 ‘‘Male Animal”Classed As GoodEntertainmentUniversity Player’s recent presen¬tation of James Thurbei* and ElliottNugent’s comedy, “The Male Ani¬mal” impressed me very favorably.The direction? Well, all thingsconsidered, it was very good. I sayall things considered because Ran¬dall Ruechelle did the almost hnpos-sible job of both acting and direct¬ing with some help on direction byFrank H. Grover. Randall’s aestheticsense was aptly illustrated by thewell-balanced “stage pictures”, andthe direction inspiration came fromits usual source—Frank Grover. Thetempo was a bit uneven at times,but it picked up after a while andmade the performance fast-movingand comprehensible to the very re¬sponsive audience.Most of the acting honors go toDunny Smith who played Joe Fergu¬son with intelligence and much dom¬inating of all the scenes in which hewas on the stage. He must also becommended for the wonderful workhe did in ad-libbing when one char¬acter failed to make an entrance. Itgoes without saying that RandallRuechelle made his usual good stagepresence as Tommy Turner andsome new talent was discovered in"*the person of Thelma Lou Richerwho felt her part in spite of the factthat she was not type-cast. JeaneSimonini as Patricia Stanley andWally Bachrach as Michael Barnesrecited their lines and Rod Hastingsas the elderly and scholarly Dr. Da-men played the part in voice only.Paul Quay, in the part of the uni¬versity trustee, Ed Keller, (muchshouting and little acting), LoisWells as Mrs. Damen, and MaryAlice Green as Myrtle Keller, weresecure in their parts. Mary LauraCollins made a good Cleota and theothers, William Mayer as “Nutsy”Miller, George Tressel as the news¬paper reporter said their lines with¬out much mishap.On the technical side, settings■were fair, lighting, poor.On the whole, the production wasvery satisfying and good entertain¬ment.Ice Skating To BeContinued DespiteNavy in BartlettDespite the slow envelopment bythe navy of Bartlett gym, ice-skatingbegan officially last week under thestands in Stagg Field. The onlychange will be in the entrance whichwill be from 66th stret instead offrom Stagg Field gate as before.There are several improvementsin the skating facilities this year.The most important of these is thenew warming house which is veryup-to-date and modern. Specialclasses will also be held to teach therudiments of figure skating. Instruc¬tors will be Carl Seaburg and visit-^ing members of the Chicago FigureSkating Club.All those who wish to skate mustfirst get tickets from the PhysicalEducation office on the third floor ofhe Reynold’s Club. Blake <S Gates GirlsForced To MoveBy MeteorologistsWith the request from the Dean’soffice that students living in resi¬dence halls double up next Quarterto make room for men in militaryservice, more of the rigors of warwill be felt on campus.Girls now living in Blake andGates will move into the 4 otherwomen’s halls while Hitchcock andSnell residents will double the spacein the dormitories, by room^sharing.The “doubling up” plan was adopted 'so that no students would have tomove off-campus.These shifts will not affect thehousing accommodations now beingarranged for the expected group ofyounger students who will enter theUniversity in February' and June,under the new program by whichthey will receive the bachelor’s de¬gree before the age of 18. New andseparate housing facilities are being »provided for them. 'Shifting of 120 women will clearGates and Blake for pre-meteorologystudents. This will not be the firsttime that men have occupied thesedorms. Until 1931 when Burton andJudson Courts were opened, Blakeand Gates housed masculine stu¬dents.Originally Middle Dorm, Gateswas a residence for divinity studentswhile Blake, which was called Northdorm when the University opened in1892,' housed graduate studeiM^Names of the halls were changed bythe University to honor the Rev. FredT. Gates, one of the founders and E.Nelson Blake, first president of theboard of trustees.Blake Hall was the home of manyfamous alumni while they were stu¬dents on the quadrangles. StephenLeacock, Alexis Carrel, and WilliamVaughn Moody once lived at Blake.Formal Dance andDiscussion HeadInt. House Program“Snowball”, the Tenth Anniver¬sary Fall Formal of InternationalHouse, will be held next Saturdayfrom 9:30 ’til 1. Complete with JirBlade’s smooth orchestration,white Christmas tree and Santa wifihis little deer, the party is beingplanned by Helen Kendrick and hercommittee.Strictly stag, this is another op¬portunity for the many cadets whchave settled on International Houseto meet the resident students. A Ifperson reception committee will taktcare of introductions. Dress is formal for women, optionally forr. .afor men. Admission is 66c for mem¬bers and $1.00 for guests.Also at the House this week is adiscussion on “Post War Reconstruc¬tion”. De Witte Baldwin will speakon “Vocational OpportunitiesThrough Church and Governmer*Agencies.” International Relatioiicommittee is the sponsor, Friday ■8 is the time, and the Home Rofis the place. The discussion is o^to all students.Page TwoEDITOR'S LETTERSThe Daily MaroonLexington Hall,To the Editors:The present emergency should callfor sacrifices from us all. Sacrificeshave been made by many of us. Someof us have even borne the burden. for others who have been living in. comparative case. I speak in particu¬lar of the University Housing situa¬tion for men.Every available dormitory has ei¬ther been fully taken over or occu¬pied to the extent that there is muchless available space than there areapplicants for that space. The fra¬ternities have gone almost scot freeas far as this is concerned. As a re¬sult the Independent is hard-put forliving quarters, while the Fraternityman is not.1 am calling for a more equalsharing of sacrifices in this matter.1 ask that the fraternities maketheir houses available to the Armyand Navy so as to relieve some ofthe strain on the dormitories. If theydo not do so of their own accord, Icall on the University to apply pres-• sure.Richard J. Wolf sonU. of C. Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue[ ncLfon Last week THE MAROON pub¬lished an article on campus dramacriticism by Barbara Winchester.The chief argument was that a criticis only qualified to be a critic if heis well acquainted with the produc¬tive end of the theatre business.Obviously Miss Winchester hasmistaken the real purpose of a dra¬ma criticism. She might just as wellsay that publishers are the onlyqualified book-reviewers, or thatcooks are the only gourmets. Thecritic is a speaking representative ofthe theatre public. A good critic isone who can speak convincingly andwhose views represent those of theaverage theatre-goer.The average theatre-goer doesn’tknow much more about the theatrethan he sees on the stage or readsin the gossip columns. What goeson behind the scenes is irrelevant tohim—he wants an arresting play,continued interest, good dialogue,able acting. He doesn’t want tospend his money on a boring eve¬ning, so he consults the opinion ofsomeone he respects, someone whounderstands his point of view—thecritic.Legitimate ComplaintThe wise critic tries to give fairadvice. Here Miss Winchester hasa definite complaint: campus re¬viewers have been outdoing them-expressing a typical reaction. Theyare being bad critics not becausethey are ignorant of productiveproblems but because they are notexpressing a typical reaction. Theyare too busy polishing off scathingremarks to sit back and enjoy agood play. They seem to be afraidthat praise will show mediocrity ormellowness.Fortunately for box-office receipts,campus criticisms seldom appear intime to be used as a guide for at¬tendance. By the time the publicsees them it has already seen andjudged the play; it recognizes thecritic’s petty invective. And praisethe Lord, the audience won’t consultthe same critic the next time.Carroll AtwaterWSSF Collects $50For Needy StudentsThroughout WorldThe University Committee of theWorld Service Fund has collected$50 to date. Thirty dollars has beenpledged. The money collected goes tothe relief of students throughout theworld, especially in Russia, China,and unoccupied Europe. The Univer¬sity Committee expects to collect atleast $900 this year. Felicity Funger,one of the heads of the Universitycommittee, in a statement to theDAILY MAROON said, “The stu¬dents who have been contacted haveresponded beautifully. There arestill many organizations to be con¬tacted. We shall try to give all stu¬dents an opportunity to contributethrough their own organizations.”Gifts for ChristmasCIGARETTELIGHTERU. of C. BOOKSTOREEVES CBREFULLV EXflminEDFOR TNE ONLY PAIR OF EYESYOU WILL EVER NAVE . . .• Over 25 Years Experience• Finest Testing Equipment• And the BEST MaterialsH. P. 5352Dr. Nels R. Nelson113B EAST 63RO.ST.IZ TUNE INTONITE and EVERY NITESTINE WAYSYMPHONIC HOURPresenting music of famous masters by world-faniousorchestras 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—57th and KENWOODSTINEWAY DRUGSCOR. 57th and KENWOODT THE DAILY MAROONBy MCKNIGHT-HATCHER-SHIELDSTwas a cold night, but there was plenty of anti-freeze; noone suffered from frost bites. 3-WAY turned out as festive asusual; terrific music, mediocre food. Cocktails by DKE and A.D.-Phi started the ball rolling, so by the time dinner was served noone cared about eating anyway. Now for thePEOPLE:Mickey and Jean Nash looked divine in identical formals, butBondzinski’s jacket saved this week^s BAZAAR from runninga “Dept, of Utter Confusion.” Event of evening was the announce¬ment of Ginny Both & Howie Kamin’s engagement & little sisterBobbie was pinned by Frank Evans. Mr. & Mrs. (John & Louise)Davenport; Chuck Percy*& his pretty woman, & Art Bovee, theAlpha Delt songster were among the old-timers. Brick & Oostiewere jumping all over the place but having a good time as usual.And speaking of jumping ... we all missed MacGuire, the fire.Happy couples included: Bob Stierer & Ruthie Alquist, MikeJones & Lou Howson, Beaming Betsy Wallace & J. Ballard; ChetLukey & Renee Davis. Durkee smooth-shaven (believe it or not)as a polished rail, & Drake escorted two NU Pi Phi’s. Puzzle aris¬ing from the lady in red . . . Did the seamstress mix up the frontand back of her dress ? We think so.ONE-WAYAmong the DKE delegation were: Frank Trovillion & PhyllisOtremba; Q. Moore having a wonderful time with Patty Pickett;Rosalie Phillips is carrying on in the good old DKE tradition evenwith Shilton in the Army; she was there with Herr Grossman.Dottie Duft was daring in a black slit-to-the-knee formal whichcaught everybody’s eye. She was with Tom Mahony. The Rus-sells were there en famille; Carroll with Norm* Barker, and Paulwith the ever-amazing Janet Hill who was wearing a glamourizedrose in her hair. Jeanette Davison appeared with Harrison Beard¬sley; A1 Seibert & Marge Moflfet made a pleasing combination.TWO-WAYThere was a distinct Bourbon & Scotch glow prevailing atthe Deke tables; Marty (red-neck) Hansen was beaming. Brownie& Muriel MacChesney arrived distinctly different in street clothes.Janet Peacock & G. Krakowa made a please-some twosome; Pep,keeping up with the Betas & A.D.Phis squired Janet Wagner.Brit Wadlund was ever-present with Lou Harvey; they got alongsplendidly ... later on in the evening; Ernie Rowe & Buckingham(again!)THREE-WAYWhirlaway Barnard & Connie Florian; nice to see each re¬appear at events. Karen Grenander was seen with Whitey Bay¬ard; Joe Mohr escorted Genny Hackett; Annie Steele & Jack Ra-gel made another pair; Scott Rogers & Chuck Cain arrived withWisconsin imports. Elaine Hackett & Wally Michaels enjoyedeach other’s company. Barbie & Jack Dryden were representa¬tives of the young married set; Adele Whitaker & Hal Gordonwere happy as usual; Barbie Ortlund with Emil Ritter. We allmissed Charlie Compton’s smiling face.MORE AT THREE-WAYBobo & Cile; Gerry Bovbjerg & A1 Hubbard; Mary Trovillon& Bill Fralick; Betsy Kuh & Steve Atwater. Toughy Lehman &Janie Graham had the time of their lives; Nancy Farwell & BillGoes; Ellie Winslow with Sandy MacLeish, The Ace with GlorisHickman; Merriam Petty & Bob Murray; Rosemary Peacock,(who took Jim Wenger’s ADP pin last Sat.) was with Bud Bakerwhile Wenger was with Mary Augustine. Jack Lyding & Pat Rut¬ledge were back together; Patsy Lynch, Igor’s sister w^s strikingin black with Barf Dillon; Croz & Duncan.PHI PSI’S ON SATURDAYSaturday night parties were meant to be sort of anti-cli-mactical but turned out fine. Phi Psis gave a terrific brawl tocelebrate the end of transfers’ “Indoctrination Period”. The partywas highlighted by the floorshow entertainment provided bypledges. Dotty MacMurray & Beep O’Donnell; Nancy Jones &Jack Millar; Marge Moffat & J. Green; Wayne & Wanda; JanetPeacock & Sherrick Twist Kernoll. Pat O’Donnell & Ned Munger;Bud Pasek & Jack Neff’s little sister ... where has he been hidingher is what the brothers Phi Psi have been wondering. Poor Duftput her foot in it again . . . She came to the party with-WallyTourtelotte and an OVERNIGHT BAG! Freddie Zarhn was inevidence . . . he’s on furlough from the Maritime Service.BETAS SATURDAYSecond smooth Saturday party was given at the Beta house.Smoothies included Gunnar & Butts (of course) Zerm and PatStone, Reinertsen & MB Ann McPherson, Armstrong was all overthe place but we weren’t quite sure who with. Newlyweds Mr.and Mrs. D. Barnes, Steve Llewellyn and Lois Arnett had theirlast fling. Brother Steve has since departed for Elwood, Indiana,hence Lois’ long face these days.WOMEN DRAGGED SUPER DATESSunday Federation Dance started a bust, ended a success.Phi Psis, Mortarboards, and Quads were absent because of initia¬tions, but Sigmas and Betas made up for the loss with all outattendance. Kuh and Wagner dashed around with full punchbowls leaving Jerry Scheidler the sole ticket-taker. Janet Hill ap¬peared with Barnard; while Barbara Winchester (glamorous inblacjk replete with turban) was with Jack Berger, newly-electedpresident of the Beta house. Ann Huntington with an off-campusdate, and Beverly Glenn with uniformed Bob Kray bill. The jour¬nalists, Dave Heller and Frances Capron made a tender couple.J. Moore and Shirley Vanderwalker sat out most of ’em. HelenFlood and Bob Moore. Louise Harvey was with Fred Kramer, butBig Brit, though on duty in the Reynolds Club, seemed to stealall the dances. Carol Russell and Pep, exchanged many danceswith brother Paul and Jeanne Cleary. Dub Riley and Helen Roffhid behind a smoke screen. The voice of Renee Davis could beheard all afternoon saying, “Now Chester.” Meaning I^ukey, ofcourse.HERE ’N THEREThe girl in the center of a triangle. . . Pat Millar. Girl in the center ofan octagon . . . Barbara Goodrich.Girl . . . PJ Johnson. Hanleys is on(Continued on page three) Gifts for ChristmasGuest Books & Scrap BooksWithNew and Distinctive CoversU. of C. BOOKSTORE December 9, 1942CHRISTMASCORNERBy BARBARA ORTLUNDThis week's Christinas shoppingideas are mainly gifts for men—thetraditional classic gifts that seembound to appear, in one form or an¬other, under every Christmas tree,are now being featured at the Hub,Henry C. Lytton and Sons, all fourstores.Manhattan has given the always-acceptable plaid sport shirts somesuper new twists.... Bold plaids, insoft cotton, are varied in color andpattern, these come in all sizes at$2.50.Other shirts for gifts to any man.... Arrow, Manhattan, and Kingley, inwhite, stripes, or solids, with longpoint or regular collars, run from$2.25 to $5.00....and they're Sanfor¬ized.Christmas would not be Christmaswithout the proverbial Christmasties. The most complete assortment,both as to price and style, are presentand accounted for. There are wools,knits, foulards, homespuns, satins,prints, etc. etc. etc. All hove thewell-known RESILIENT CONSTRUC¬TION and range in price from $1.00to $5.00 to meet every budget. ^ .The biggest thing of the season isthe new Swank creation for service¬men. It's the CHECK-R PAK, a smallleather bound package (five inchessquare, to be exact), complete withchecker board and checkers, proudlybearing a service insignia. The dam¬age, only $2.50.For the women, gloves make anawfully, awfully perfect gift....Thestrictly unavailable doeskin IS avail¬able, and of a good grade, too. The"Meyers-Make" Polava doeskin, inblack, brown, or beige at $6.00.For sportier wear, genuine pigskinwhipstitch, in cork or natural, areonly $3.50. **”All the items in this column are nowon sale at the Hub, at the State andJackson, as well as all thre suburbanstores.Gifts for ChristmasJiffy Coin Pursein colored leatherU. of C. BOOKSTOREKIMBARK63rd & KimbarkThursday'A Haunting We Will Go'"Tombstone""Timber"Fri Sat.'Mrs. Miniver"WithGREER GARSONandWALTER PIDGEONSun. Mon. Tues.'Smith of Minnesota""X Marks the Spot"In Old Caliente"/#w 12:30 15c 'till 6.3iGifts for ChristmasHobnail Ash Traysand Vasesin colored glassU. of C. BOOKSTORtTHE DAILY MAROON Page ThreeDecember 9, 1942plenview BeatsMaroons 39-37By NED MUNGER Third Quarter SlumpYes, we lost. The score: 39-37.But that is far from the true pic¬ture. One might have qualms overrepeating the sentence starting, “Weshould have won,” which has appear¬ed so often on these pages. But ratherthan cry in retrospect, it is far eas¬ier to smile over the future. A pre¬diction for the Navy Pier game to¬night: Chicago 45-Navy Pier 31. TheMonday night clash with a top notchMarquette quintet: Chicago 47-Mar-quette 46. Anyone with folding stuff,and different opinions should turnhis steps towards the MAROON of¬fice.The game with Glenview beganlike a preview of coming attractions.The Maroonmen jumped into a 8-0lead. Glenview whittled this down to10-8 at the quarter. They continuedto outplay us until at the half thescore was Glenview 16, Chicago 15.What was wrong was obvious. AsKyle told the team during the half,everyone was “tight”. The feelingwas generated by the many sopho¬mores playing their first big timegame. It spread to the more experi¬enced players, and caused countlessshots almost in, to drop out.U. of C. Bookstore5802 Ellis AvenueGREGG COLLEGEA School of BusinessPreferred byCollege Men and WomenIntensive Stenographic, Secretarial, Courtreporting and Accounting Courses.Day and Evening SessionsCall, write or phone ST Ate 1881for free book: **The Doorway toOpportunity.**The GREGG COLLEGEPresident, John Robert Gresrir, S.C.D.Director- Paul M. Pair, M.A.6 N. MichiRan Ave. Chicago Things were no better in the thirdquarter, and it looked like the Ma¬roons had folded, for the score boardshowed a 28-21 advantage to thehome team. The first inkling of asuccessful season was the excellentfighting spirit and comeback in thefinal quarter. The team fought itsway into a 32-32 tie at the end ofthe regulation period. Both teamsscored 5 points in the first overtime;Ed Nelson dropped a long one thatalmost won the game but Glenviewknotted the count. The final periodhad but 5 seconds to run when aGlenview man scored from the floorand the gun went off.High scorer for the game wasDave Elman with 6 baskets and 12points. Oakley and Krakowka bothrang the bell for 7. Nelson and Zim-ny both held th dr men scoreless.Glenview Tough Opponent ForOpenerGlenview was a far tougher teamthan Chicago Teachers were lastyear. They boasted such stars asChet Murphy from the quadrangles,and Epperson from Wisconsin’s fineteam. The fact that we should havewon will be more clearly apparent, asthe many winning scores throughoutthe season, reflect the team’s ability.You may view the Maroon’s vic¬tory in the Navy Pier game, only ifacompanied by a navy man. Wavesexcluded, Anderson will probablyput the following team on the floortomorrow night, and to face Mar¬quette Monday: Zimmerman andNelson forwards, Elman center, andKrakowka and Oakley guards.W.A.A. will hold a bowlingtournament during winter quar¬ter. Five clubs have enteredteams, and all those interested inparticipating may sign up on orbefore tomorrow.The Oriental Institute will in¬troduce a series of public lectures,Friday, December 11, at 8:30 onvarious aspects of ancient Baby¬lonian and Egyptian culture asthey affected our own civilization.The first will be given by Profes¬sor Henri Frankfort on “Con¬cepts of Kingship”.The Freshmen Teas are beingheld every afternoon this weekin the Ida Noyes library for theexplicit purpose of acquaintingthe freshmen with their advisers.All freshmen are invited.Gifts for ChiistmasHaeger Potteryvaried colors and designsU. of C. BOOKSTORE SPORTS......SHOTSBalloting for the All Star Touch-ball Team is almost completed, ac¬cording to Intramural Head WallyHebert, Phi Psi Reynolds, Psi UMurray, and Alpha Delt Higginslead the balloting.* ♦ *Intramurals are through for thequarter. Basketball is the next ma¬jor sport on the calendar. The Dekesand Phi Belts look like the teams tobeat on paper.♦ ♦ ♦Anyone want to coach a basket¬ball team ? Kyle missed practice yes¬terday ... (he wasn’t there when theMaroon went to bed) ... so volun¬teers are in order.* >|E 9):The fencing picture is complicatedby the crammed quarters, and somedifficulties with getting hot showersafter practice.♦ ♦ «Wrestling is a popular sport asnever before on the Midway mats. Ifall of the lads who practice hammerlocks and half nelsons were eligiblefor the varsity, the conference cupwould be easy. The army, navy andfreshman form an impressive group.Mustain, Getz, Reynolds, Culp,Bates, and Wroebel are expected toprovide the bulk of the points.9|C 4c HeThe feature of the Intramuralswimming was the diving of TommyMahoney. Surprise was the excel¬lent showing by Kappa Sigma. Manyof the boys who won novice, did somainly because they faked theirtrue abilities and qualified withpoor enough time to stay in the nov¬ice class.4c 4e 4eIf the interest shown by Owl andSerpent and Nu Pi Sigma this year,and the interest of the “C” men informer years, were put wholeheart¬edly behind the basketball team topush it at home games and on theroad as much as possible, it should¬n’t be difficult to organize support.After all admission is free, and manypeople would like to attend gamesmerely to be on campus for the Rey¬nolds Club dances that often follow.Student PoliticalCommission MeetsThe Student Political Commissionwill resume activities for this quar¬ter with its meeting this afternoonin Social Science 122 at 4:30. Thesubject of the meeting will be “Stu¬dent Interest in Better City Govern¬ment.” Dave Durkee, Jerry Zeigler,and John Ballard will be the speak¬ers.The student speakers, introducedby George Drake, will be followedby T. Walter Johnson, candidate inthe Republican primaries next Feb¬ruary. Johnson will speak on thesame topic and is expected to pre¬sent views that will form the founda¬tion of his platform throughout thewinter.Alan Vanderiiof of Chicago wasone of nineteen officers killed onthe cruiser San Francisco duringthe last battle of Guadalcanal. TheSan Francisco was the only cruis¬er cited for heroic duty in thisbattle. Vanderhof, a lieutenantjunior-grade, was twenty-twoyears old and a member of PsiUpsilon, class of 1942.Gifts for ChristmasZEPHYR DECKSMemo Pad for theWeU Kept DeskU. pf C. BOOKSTORE Phi Psi'sBeat AD'sOn snow covered Greenwood fieldlast week, the Phi Psi Pledge Teamwalloped the AD Phi Pledge Team21-0. The outstanding play of thetouchball season led to a Phi Psiscore. George Drury faded back fif¬teen yards behind the line of scrim¬mage and threw a pass that traveled41 yards in the air to Wally Tourte-lotte, who caught the ball one hand¬ed as he fell over the goal.The Alpha Belts missed the pass¬ing arm and team spirit of Chet Lu-key, mainstay of their previous vic¬tories. Hampered by the cold, the AD Phi’s never got an attack rolling.Dick Reynolds, Jack Millar, andBob Ellis also starred for the PhiPsi’s. The rest of the winning teamwere Cherry, Merker, and Bud Pas-ek.All Men ResidentsLeave Int. HouseAs Army InvadesAll male civilians will have beenevacuated from International Houseby the first of the year to makeroom for the new detachment ofmore than 200 cadets who are sched¬uled to move in January 2. This isthe next to the last step in the oc¬cupation of the House. The finalmarch will take place if and whenthe 200 women who still hold the fortare replaced by cadets next Spring.More than 400 cadets are alreadyquartered in the House and this newcontingent will up the population to630. The entire men’s wing will beoccupied, as well as the assembly andNational rooms.'Because the House cafeteria nowserves civilians, it cannot obtainpriorities on food or equipment, andsince the situation is becoming crit¬ical the cafeteria may soon be forc¬ed to discontinue its service to civil¬ians. If this happens the residentstudents will have to take theirmeals somewhere else.IMS ManeuversNext SundayOn Sunday, December 13, the of¬ficers, non-commissioned officers, andtrainees of the Institute of MilitaryStudies will apply what they havelearned throughout the quarter inthe military maneuvers at PalosPark. The enrollees will assemble atthe fieldhouse at 6:55, and leavefor the battleground from there. TheThursday night group, batallion 1,will be the white team, and the Fri¬day night group, battalion 2, will bethe black. The battalions will becamped at opposite ends of the park.Both battalions will spend the morn¬ing practicing extended orders,scouting, mapreading, and even do¬ing K.P. duty. Mess will be calledat 10:45. Final orders will be issuedat 11:30, and at 12 noon, the maneuv¬ers will begin. The action will besimilar to the Army War Games.Each man will carry a wooden rifleand a map. Casualties will be mark¬ed although there will be no stretch¬er-bearers due to the shortage ofmanpower.In the past the exercise has beenof great ‘value in coordinating thework of the course as a whole accord¬ing to Director Arthur C. Rubin. Inthe past the victories have beengained by the battalion commandedby Major Tuf over the forces ofMajor King. Colonel Alan Street, thecommander of the regiment does notcommand troops in the field exer¬cises. He is on the umpiring staff. BAZAAR(Continued from page two) *the rocks . . . gas rationing, and thefact that they don’t ask for draftcards in the U.T. . . . this despitethe mother of a club girl who wrotethe state liquor commission lastspring and requested they raid theplace, because her under age daugh¬ter had been served . . . they raidedand among the modern miracles wasthe fact they found everythingcricket . . . Blush of the year wasput on by Zelda Solda. She is NapierWilt’s secretary. He is the armedforces representative. The blushcame after a few whistles and cat¬calls from the 500 odd ERC men inKent to hear Wilt talk. She the onlygirl in the group . . . Marge McCol-ley looked very smooth the othernight in a black dress . . . Threecheers for Pi Delt.UT AND QUARTERLIESWeek-end UT’ing we saw AudreyReid and her proud Phi Gam, BudLloyd. Stoughton and Hi Betts werecrying in their beer alone. But onthe whole too much went on thisweek-end for many people to botherwith'UT. Most of us were recuperat¬ing and then of course there arethose quarterlies!Was it Roy Emery who found theDeke Crest in Hanleyfe john. And heisn’t a Phi Delt. Hill (without abirdsnest in her hair) and Emery informal attire carried it to Blake. . . where Lyn Hill placed it on theall with great tenderness (not to beconfused with Lyn Hill of Truaxfame).As PJ puts it, “This is one weekCrosby is omitted.”Current Tondelayo Rae Hatcher isWhite Cargoing it with white manEarl Theimer. No Walter Pidgeonhe!Gifts for ChristmasGlittering Gold Jewelryfor the HolidaysU. of C. BOOKSTOREGifts, for ChristmasCOLOGNEWith Real FlowersBy BlockiU. of C. BOOKSTORENow under-armCream DeodorantsafelyStops PerspirationDoes not rot dresses or men'sshirts. Does not irritate skin.No waiting to dry. Gin be usedright after shaving.Instantly stops perspiration for1 to 3 days. Prevents odor.A pure, white, greaseless,stainless vanishing cream.Awarded Approval Seal ofAmerican Institute of Launder¬ing for being harmless tofabric.A uuaramttdL Good Honsokoopii^itMrfcnviM^ \a jarAlto in lOd and 59d janARRIDJGifts for ChristmasLapel Gadgetsin woodU. of C. BOOKSTORE“Ask the Man Who Owns One”. . . the Mortarboards . . . 99.44%Betsy Kuh . . . They talk about find¬ing the needle in a haystack. Howabout finding the slack in slacks . . .Was it a Kappa Sig who asked thePi Delt, “I hear the Board of Trus¬tees is trying to stop necking?”“That so,” interjected a Green Hallgal, “next thing you know they’ll tryto make the students stop.” ^Punky Johnson, “Green has goneto war.”Blake Hall dialogue as overheardby Miss Maguire:“How are you this eveninghoney?”*‘A11 right, but lonely.”“Good and lonely?”“No, just lonely.”“I’ll be right over.”It couldn’t have been a Quadrang-lar who said, “If you try to kiss meI’ll scream.” Nor an Alpha Delt whoreplied, “Not with all these peoplearound.” And of course she didn’ti^ply, “Well, let’s find a quieterspot.”And what did your girl wear toThree Way? ’’She wore a paperdress.” And what did you do after¬wards? “We went on a tear.”There was a young guy namedBaker.He tried at Three Way to takeher.Rosemary was sweet, sc he wasbeat,For Wenger’s the guy who canm her . . .There as a young gal named Ma-quire.Set all the young laddies on fire.' Her sister said stop.So now she’s a flop . . .The Phi Psi’s do have a housemother . . . The Phi Gams don’t . . .Gifts for ChristmasChristmas Note PaperBright, Colorful, UsefulU. of C. BOOKSTOREGifts for ChristmasPipes for HimMEDICO FilteredU. of C. BOOKSTORE With so many University Womenworking as salesgirls at MarshallField’s, the following conversationreported by a Beecher Hall gal, isdefinitely plausible. Her date (prob¬ably a friend of Bob Pickus) kissedher good night. Tired from allday at the counter she replied ab¬sent mindedly, “Will that be all?”Santa Claus is the only Greek whocan run around with a bag all night,and not get talked about . . .Every Phi Delt likes a broad smile.Especially if she smiles at him.And there was the little coloredlad who peered from the closet whenPeggy Williams opened the door sev¬eral nights ago. He went, “shhh.”She ran to the hall and screamed,“There’s a man in my room.”Phi Psi: Does this lipstick comeoff easily.Sigma: Not if you put up a fight.Cop: No parking. You can’t loafalong this road.Gruhzit’s voice from within car:Who’s loafing?It is invariably the rule when agal goes crazy over love, sooner orlater she gets a little buggy . . .L. W ?Jean Roff’s favorite saying, “I betyou can’t guess what flavor lipstickthis is.”One is never too old to yearn . . .name your poison.(This was written to aid circula¬tion. If your blood circulates faster,thats not enuf. If the cracks cir¬culate faster that’s not enuf. But ifthe Maroon is called the Moron, itmeans you bought it.)Walter Blair of the University’sEnglish Department will speaknext Saturday afternoon at 1 onNorthwestern’s Radio feature “OfMen and Books”. Blair will ap¬pear as the guest of John W.Frederics, author of the program,and will speak on his recent book“Horse Sense in American Hu¬mor”. Special feature of the pro¬gram will be a long distance com¬ment from James Thurber inNew York. Thurber will defendhimself against Professor Blairwho criticized the eastern authorin his work.Gifts for Christmasin neat caseLastic Shoe BagsU. of C. BOOKSTORE THE DAMY MAROONU. P. Presents"Heaven CanWait" in Jan.“Heaven Can Wait”, known in themovie version as “Here Comes Mr.Jordan” is scheduled for U.P. pro¬duction the week-end of January 20-23. It’s partially completed castinghas named Hartley Pfiel for one ofthe lead parts, Mr. Jordan. The othertwo leads are Homer Goldberg asJoe and Merle Sloan Betty.Minor roles, for which casting hasnot been completed, will includeMary Diamond, Maynard Wishner,and James Cheresco. Charged withdirection of the play, Randall Reu-chelle of “Male, Animal” fame willbe assisted by U.P. president LesterSchiff, who will make his debut as adirector.Senior AlumniDance of U-HighTo Be Held Dec. 19The U-High Senior Alumni dancewill be given Saturday evening, De¬cember 19, in the Reynolds Club.The dance, sponsored annually bythe senior class, has long been a tra¬dition.Usually formal, it will be informalthis year. An'orchestra will furnishthe music, and there will be refresh¬ments. All alumni of the UniversityHigh School are invited. Invitationswill be sent to members of the lasttwo graduating classes. All otheralumni are expected to be in the hab¬it of attending regularly.Take HomeA Gift That'sWearableWhen you go home for the Christmasholiday.. .take along presents thatare practical. Dad, brother, uncle orcousin... you can't go wrong in of¬fering them something to wear...from Erie. Erie's reputation for smartclothes... style sure value... and lowprices.. .will work wonders for yourgift as it has for your appearance.Remsmber! A complsta selection ofnationally famous names to choosefrom... all imder one Christmosy roof.Leisure CoatNo matter what his age... he'll enjoythe comfort and smartness of Ameri¬ca’s most popular sport coat. In solidcolors or two-tone effects lined withrich Celanese. Only$13.95ShirtsSport shirts, all white business shirts,colored and patterned shirts! Well-known Arrow and Kingley brands.You know how easy it is to run outof shirts so get him some of these...at Erie's unusually low prices.$2.00 and upGlove-Muffler SetsKnitted, 100% wool gloves and muff¬lers in matching colors. He's going tobe cold walking instead of riding...here's the easy way to solve hisproblem and yours too!$2.50 and up-AND TAKE YOUR TRAUI CAREEREElDon’t start for home cluttered up with luggage. Just phoneRailway Express and we’ll call for your trunks and bags,speed them to your home, and save you time and needlessworry. Gives you more room and comfort on the train, too,to say nothing of pick-up and delivery at no extra chargewithin out regular vehicle limits in all cities and principaltowns.You can send **collea”, too, when you use Railway Ex¬press. Just phone for information or service.Rai lwaiAExpre S SAOENCY^gUr INC.^^NATION-WIDE RAIL-AIR SERVICE Maroon and PulseTo Plan MergerThe Army marches in again, tak¬ing men and'space so the band playson. The newest solution to the prob¬lem confronting campus publicationsstruck Dean Mort last week. He isrov; stricken with aplomb; in shorthe wonders as to tl\e outcome. At2:30 this afternoon in Reynolds ClubLounge A, there wlil be a meetingto which board members of theDaily Maroon, Pulse and the highlyrumored rival sheet have been in¬vited.A plan proposed by Minna andMeana of the MAROON uses a fiveman board. The members includeEditor-in-chief, Associate Editor,having no active vote). Co-editorrepresenting the Maroon; AssociateEditor representing Pulse; Man¬aging Editor representing Pulse; anda Business Editor. The Co-Ed. andAsociate Editors would have underthem editorial boards of their re¬spective publications. It sounds likea reasonable compromise, and sinceboth Maroon and Pulse are forcedto room together with Cap and Gowneveryone might happily work underthis scheme. The majority of thepresent boards of both publicationsare in favor of it.CLASSIFIEDBoard and room and pay for part time careof 2% year old girl. Near University.Plaza 8711.Gifts for ChristmasVIOLIN BOTTLESin ^colored glassU. of C. BOOKSTORE December 1942 iThe Daily Ma^onFOUNDED IN 190VThe Daily Maroon is the ofAcial studentnewspaper of the University of Chk puh>lished Wednesdays during the AutU> Win¬ter, and Spring quarters by the fy-u-roon Company. 6881 University TAvenue. ^Telephone: Hyde Park 9222.After 6:80 phone in stories ^o our ptlnters,The Chief Printing Company, 148 West 62nd |Street. Tele]>hones: Wentworth 6128 and6124. 'The University of Chicago ^assumes no re- 'sponsibility for any statements appearing in 'The Daily Maroon, or for any coTit^iict en¬tered into by The Daily Maroon.The Daily Maroon expressly reserwia 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 poet office at Chicago, Illi¬nois, under the act of March 3, 1879.MemberAssociated CbllG6iate FVessDiitributor of |ODlkbiole DigestEDITORIAL BOARD:Minna Sachs—News EditorRick Meana—Makeup Editor |Elizabeth Waters—Copy EditorBUSINESS BOARD: 'Ned Munger—Business ManagerBarbara Ortlund—Advertising ManererNight Editors—Janet, Bob, Roy,Ned, P. J., and Rick.U. of C. Bookstore5802 Ellis AvenueFIGHTING WORDSdelivered byWestern Electric field telephones"^et the message through!”—that’s the tradition ofthe Army Signal Corps. And on every battle frontyou’ll find field telephones, wire and switchboardsright in there helping!Radio telephone sets ride into battle in Armyplanes and tanks — in PT boats and Coast Guardcraft On larger naval vessels, battle announcingsystems and telephones deliver fighting wordsinstantly. Turning out vast quantities of«uch equipment is the war job ofWestern Electric—maker of ,Bell Telephones.Western ElectricARSEN ^..0. F, c O M M U NIC AT I o N SP^ «le it >1"FRONT Nancy Sebring and Ruth Rutherford, Bethany College, W. Va., journalism majors, check the final copy of the"Service Men's News" with Alumni Secretary George C. Hettler. This mimeographed weekly consists of sev¬eral chatty pages of campus doings, fraternity and sorority news, current events and"^miscellanea, goes outto former Bethanians in the services all over the world. Many colleges have started similar papers. Formore pictures concerning home front activities turn to page two. Photo by Free Lance Photographer! GuildtGifts — Christmas gift boxes for alt alumni abroad with the armed forces were sent by HendrixCollege (Ark.) Booster Club members, using funds normally spent on the homecoming celebra¬tion. Collegiate Digest Hioto by Foris "Cookies for Rookies" is the newest project on the DePauwsity campus. Home economics students are baking hundreds ofevery month for the huge cookie jar at the canteen in the Unionat Indianapolis, Ind. And how the soldiers go for ^em!Scrop Collecting — A few weeks ago through Collegiate Digest North CarolineState College issued a challenge for other schools to beat their record of 72pounds of scrap metal per student. In their homecoming scrap drive University ofNebraska students accepted the challenge, amassed a total of 166 pounds percapita. The feat drew a congratulatory telegram from Donald M. Nelson. Abovea judge estimates the weight of Kappa Kappa Gamma's collection. Mail — Virginia Polytechnic Institute alumni spread over six continents receiveregularly from their "war buddys" still in school. Every month each of the mor(3,000 Virginia Tech cadets gets off a letter to his buddy. It's a great moraleing stunt. Collegiote Digest Phafo byCooching the Eli — Red Rolfe (second from left), Yale's newbaseball and basketball coach, watches an Eli athlete's pivot¬ing form. The Yankee star third baseman is rounding up pros¬pects for the hardwood court sport. Acme Strutting Her Stuff — All eyes focus oYoung, drum-majorette of University ofwhen she leads the 52-piece military baithe field between halves of Saturday a(football games. Collegiate Digest PhotoBeoting Gas Rationing — and having fun at the same time these girls fromA^nticello College, Alton, III., highly approve of the new surrey which wasadded to the college stables. Headline Headgear — Members of Pi Delta Epsilon, nationol honorary journalismfraternity, require neophytes to wear pressman-hats around the campus for a weekbefore initiation. Like regular printers, these Lehigh University men made their hats ofnewspaper.( IF you ASK /VIE- THIS GAY, HOUSE 'FULL OF CAMELS IS A 6/FT THAT'SSURE TO PLEASE ANY CIGARETTE SMOKER(CONTAINS 4 tOXIS Of TNI AOTUiAlliAT PIfTIIS-MO CAMI4S) ^ AND THISHANDSOME GIFTCARTON OF CAMELSALWAYS SAYSMERRY CHRISTMASIN A BIG WAV'/ IF HE a* SMOKES A PIPEhe'll enjov this giftOF PRINCE ALBERT FARINTO THE NEW YEAR!(THIS MG rOUNO GIFTOF FMNCI AISIRT IS SO RICH-LOOKING. IN ITS. CHRISTMAS JACKH- ■L. RICNSR-TASTING IN HISDEALERSEVERYWHERE AREFEATURING THESEHANDSOME G“=TSOF CAMELS ANDPRINCE ALBERTFOR CHRISTMASR. J. Roynokia ToJmcco Company, Wiiu^n-Smlem, North CaroUiuiJournalism Sideshow:A Day of the CircusDid you ever take an afternoon off to visit the circus, see the animals,talk with clowns, munch peanuts and dicker with the hawkers? Well Vir-gina Elliott and Ralph Webster, Glendale Junior College freshmen, did—and experienced just about every thrill the circus has to offer. Studentphotographer Harry Bournique followed them around on a journalismclass assignment, shot this series of unusual photos.Dyed-in-the-wool circus fans can't stroll the grounds without a cane orpennant so the stop Is made for tfiese "musts.""Two," soys Ralph, as he "pops" for admission tickets for the big tent.Where else can you get all of the assorted thrills, smells and sights fora buck? These Fish Flap Their Fins — When they want some real noise at pep ralliesat Sam Houston (Texas) State College they smear the frosh with "fish" labelsand set them to yelling. And what a racket they raise when really warmed up!Collegiate Digest Photo by Gibson Camprjsthe traditiiThe weddistudent beHow No1University'shelping insinstalled ctheir mottcThe monkey cage is always good for a laugh so the couple head for it once inside the A clown pulls Virginia to one side, tells her a few gags Now the tables are tunanimal tent. Ralph would like to play with the little fellow but heeds the sign. about her "collegiate boy-friend." the trick rider. "It's tim<imbers of Drakech for a secondubby group hoveompuses, use osr DuniventA Good Wisecrack gets a lough from these Brown Uni>versity freshmen at a bull session sponsored by the BrownChristian Association.y Willock was selected as the "bride" thfs year atiri Wedding of Madison College, Harrisonville, Va.zes the union of the old and new members of theCollegiote Digest Photo by Morris During the torrential downpour that lasted throughout the Cornell-Penn State football game, certain members of the Big Red band hadadequate protection. Collegiate Digest Pho^ by LevitonTi/ifa Topperschat withs Virginia. Elephant trainers give Virginia an extra thrill by allowing her toride into the arena astride one of the gaily bedecked elephants. The'show is on and eyes pass back and forth from one ring to another as the sceneof action changes. Here's the climax to an afternoon of real fun.ACPXonventioii Is fi«1 ”** cArt editors were left ot home %vheo some 400 editors ond business monogersthe 21 tf onnuoi Associoted Collegiate Press eonventioo in Chicogo* bii|t thedrspkiyed excellent "phone booth" technique os they plugged their schools ondrowing board. Representing 36,stotes and more tl^n 150 publkoHons, thespent three days discussing pubtfihing problems with experienced newsmen emd^ernment officiols.☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆"A" UniqueRoss Allen, studentat the University ofMinnesota, earnedhis tuition by serv¬ing aboard a trans¬port ship in the warzone. Allen adoptedshorts while in Egyptand c o n t i nued towear them until Min¬nesota's blastingwinter proved toomuch. KierstadLIKE YOU NEVER DID KFORE☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆ ,Onill()t^iaieDifiesfSectKMiPwblicctioM OKce: 317 FowkctBuilding, MMWi#opoli», MiniMsoto NAtlONAL ADVERTISINGD ' SERVICE INC.4S0 M*di$OM Avtnvt. Ntw york400 No. Miclii5«fi AvtNVt, Chi<«90Boalo* Son froncHco Lot A«fl«ltt Co-eds Become War Waitresses — The studeat Sarah Lawrence College voted to take turns wotable when many of the regular waitresses went iwork. Katherir>e Eisner was assigned K. P. dutyshown serving two of her classmates.They had scarcely set foot on the campus when officers lined them up for inspec¬tion on the dormitory grounds. They will specialize In radio training while at theuniversity.WAVE arrivals at the University of Wisconsin campus are greeted onips by Commander Charles F. Greene. They have left careers and|ht in the battle for freedom. "Inspection over, they are hustled out to the stadium to see their newAlma Mater beat the University of Missouri on the gridiron. Next on the program comes assignment of roommates. Nowthe girls have a chance to unpack their bags and get ac¬quainted. They have come from ail sections of the'^country.Completely uniformed, the girls smile for the photo- ’grapher as they leave the building. For the next fourmonths they'll have plenty of studying to do, regula¬tions to learn. - . AcmePicture above showsthe girls passingdown one of the "as¬sembly line s" Inwhich they receivedall of their clothingand incidentals ex¬cept the uniform, forwhich they were fit¬ted (right).o the outfitting. Two WAVES enter a tem-nt store set up for the occasion. Tn a shortnerge iii full military dress.•t’.f"imperfect in originalPeddling Profs — Many youngsters of the Purdue faculty are competing withtheir dads for the family bicycle these days as the professors find it impossibleto drive to school on their four gallons of gas. Here's proof that many of them' are turrung to the bicycle for transportation. Tarian of the Ropes —tech student reaches the top14-foot rope climb, one ofunits which hove been conson the campus for use in tmicol fitness program. It's a lotup when you use only youand hands. Digest Photo hUnanimous Choice — >judges at Wright College, Clcame to select the home<queen they had to look nothan pretty Patricia Atteber"Pat" is engaged in manycurricular activities at the iand considered one of th<popular girls on campus. Coiwoops!Mud-bespattered MonkGafford (25), Auburnhalfback, romps aroundend for a slippery 25yards in the game with‘Georgetown which end¬ed in a 6-6 tie. Barelyvisible through his ownmud mask is Vic Cos¬tellos, Auburn captain,in the background. AcmeAlmost a Brother Eleven~ Four sets of brothers onthe University of Rochesterfootball team give the Yellow-jackets a gridiron distinctionprobably unpdralleled in thenation. Two of the tackles.Jack and Bill Forsyth, are pic¬tured here. Wide World