V ^MaroonPublication of News and Opinions 'Vol. 1, No. 6 Z-149 February 19, 1943 Price Four Cents. Pick Prom LeadersAs Sales SkyrocketDanceable music by MitchellAyres combined with the setting ofthe Shoreland Hotel's Crystal Ball¬room and bar (easy on the "A"cards) will make the University's lastWashington Prom one of the mostsuccessful of its kind ever given.Dancing begins tomorrow eveningat 10 and ends at 2.Leadeps chosen for the grandmarch are Janet Peacock, chairmanof Mirror board and a member ofNu Pi Sigma, Betsy Kuh, head ofFederation of University women,member of the Social Committeeand Nu Pi Sigma, Bob Bean, chair¬man of the Social Committee anda member of Owl and Serpent, andSam Fawley, vice president of theSocial Committee and a.,Hve in itswork all year.Although ticket sales made byPep Paulson's prom committee wereslow at first, they have skyrocketedin the past few days, since most ofthe members of the Air Corps Re¬serve have discovered that they will not be inducted until next week.However, several commi.tee mem¬bers will have been called beforethat time, including chairman Paul¬son.The Wash. Prom committee,chosen by the Social Committee,consists of twelve other members:John Bauman, Jack Berger, MiriamPetty, Betty Headland, Mike Bar-rish, Alice McLaughlin, WightReade, Gene Gleason, Betty Rosen¬heim, Pat McKnight, Jerry Ziegler,and Lois Regnel. There are alsomany sophomore ticket agents.Tickets are on sale in the MandelCorridor ticket booth and in thedormitories and fraternity houses.They will be sold through Saturdayand at the door that evening. Salesso far indicate an attendance of twoto three hundred couples, slightlyless than last year's four hundredbids sold. Since this is the lastWashington Prom, such attendanceis not unexpected, even from adraft-depleted campus.Year's Most ElaborateStaging at Int House"International Nights," the mostelaborate production on campusthis year, will be presented by In¬ternational House tonight and Sat¬urday at 8. It already has receivedmuch publicity in the city papersand Life magazine has expressed in¬terest in photographing it for futureissue.This annual show is a method ofraising funds for the foreign stu¬dents' scholarship fund and lastyear netted $700. This year, inspite of the war. Miss Eva DeanKemp, activities director, expectsover $400 in profits. This is thetenth year in which the show hasbeen produced.The program, for which 70 centsadmission will be charged, starts at8 p.m. in the auditorium and con¬sists of six acts. The first is "TheVillage," a Latin American numberof songs and dancing. Next is ashowing of historical Chinese cos¬tumes. An English group will pre¬sent a dramatized version of theMad Hatters Tea Party from LewisCarroll's "Alice in Wonderland,"complete with masks. "Lei Day in Hawaii" feaures hula dancing andthe ceremony surrounding the coro¬nation of the May Queen."Drafted in a Harem," the actwhich has caught the fancy of citypapers, is a skit presented by agroup of Near-Eastern students andpretty girls, and dealing with ad¬ministrative difficulties such as ceil¬ing prices on blondes. The finale isthe "Slovak -Festival" with a largemixed chorus and dancers.The staging for all these numbersis elaborate and well done and over$300 has been invested in sets.Some of the entertainers are pro¬fessionals although the greater partof the cast comes from InternationalHouse.In addition to the program theHouse will be filled with concessions..An. Indian palm reader, a boothwhere patrons have their nameswritten in Chinese, a BohemianCafe with dancing, music and re¬freshments, and an American nightclub with typical entertainment,are the major attractions. NavY* Relocations BoardTrap U of C on Jap PolicyAt this time the University ofChicago is the vortex of a ludicrouscomedy of cross purposes betweenthe National War RelocationsBoard and the Navy. Out in thewest are hundreds of Nisei studentsfrantically seeking escape fromtheir internment camps by entranceinto some university. Chicago it¬self has received 100 applications.It has passed twenty. Neverthelessnot a single Jap has entered theUniversity since the day they wereall shipped from the Pacific Coastand interred.For, while the Relocations Boardstrives frantically to put these stu¬dents back in a normal atmosphere,both the Army and the Navy firm¬ ly refuse to brook any danger to thenumerous war activities on campus.Although the Army has passed theaccepted twenty, to this date theNavy meteorologists, research men,and all regard the admittance ofany such characters as a violationof the University's defense con¬tracts. Nobody in authority has theslightest idea as to when the Navywill have a change of heart and letthe internees^ in.As it stands, they the RelocationsBoard spends nigf f-s figuring waysto get Japanese students into col¬lege while the men in the Navyshake their heads sadly and say itcan't be done. And while the twobranches of the government indus¬ triously labor at cross purposes, theI diversity is forced to fall back onthe hope that by pushing themthrough one by one the waitingNisei on the west coast can finallyget out of the camps.It is the opinion of the Maroonsomebody outght to make up'•hismind. Doubtless the Navy's positionis justified. Certainly, though, theapplicants deserve better treat¬ment. But whichever way you lookat it nobody will get anything doneas long as they keep on fighting oneanother. Either the Universityshould definitely close its doors toall Japs or the Navy should quitpulling the petals of daisies and dosomething.Johnson'sFinal Phaseof CampaignT. Walter Johnson, AmericanHistory teacher and candidate foralderman in the 5th Ward, is mov¬ing into the last phase of his cam¬paign in high gear. This fact wasbrought out in interviews with Mr.Johnson, his campaign manager, Mi¬chael Greenebaum, and Jack Sha¬piro, chairman of the precinct or¬ganization. VAn important asset in Mr.. John¬son's quest for election is his ef¬ficient precinct organization, it wasemphasized by Mr. Shapiro. Allpretincts are organized, and cap¬tains have been appointed in over2/3 of them.Mr. Johnson himself has, in themeantime, pushed doorbells in sixcomplete precincts, and his can¬vassers will have completed theirrounds by the end of the week.Mr. Johnson, who is backed bythe Paul Douglas organizations anda majority of clergymen in theWard, is highly optimistic about theelection. Fortunate for him is thesplit between the organized Demo¬crats here. Mr. Moss was leftfloundering high and dry by theorganization and is now trying tosave his campaign in frantic at¬tempts to pick up stray votes; andMr. Lindheimer is backed by forcesusually not active outside of theRiver Wards. Neither of these can¬didates presents an attractive pic¬ture to Democratic voters. The Re¬publicans have not yet declaredtheir affiliation, but either Moss orLindheimer would, if elected, fallback to Kelly-Nash stereotypes.The Negroes also are sympatheticto Johnson.There is a chance that the Lind-heimer-Horan people might try dir¬ty work at the polls. Poll-watchingvolunteers, therefore, are solicitedand may report to Mr. Johnson'sheadquarters. Plaza 3010, untilMonday. KruegerConfidentMaynard Krueger, running forAlderman in the sixth Ward, is con¬fident that he can bring enoughhonest voters to the polls next Tues¬day to swing the vote in his favor.Patrick Sheridan Smith, his op¬ponent, has made no appeal to hon¬est voters in his district for reelec¬tion, as indeed there is little in hispast aldermanic record, as pointedout by Krueger, v^Kich should enticeany honest man to" cast a Smithvote.Smith instead has followed theone path to reelectlon that is famil¬iar to him. Sitting squat on his"record", he has not attempted tobring any issues before the publicbut instead will probably attempt to"Service to the Campus" is thegoal of an ambitious program ofnew activities the Student PoliticalCommission is planning at this time.In addition to its regular work,the Commission is beginning twonew activities which it hopes will beof interest and service to othercampus activities and students ingeneral.The first of these is a survey ofother campus activities, their atti¬tudes and ends, what they mean tothe campus, in short, "what theysay and why they say it" as JanieGraham, publicity chairman of SPC,put it.This is intended to be an objec¬tive survey, run by the Commissionindependently of the surveyed or¬ganizations. It is hoped that this willclarify to students and interestedoutsiders the aims and means of thecampus organizations. The findingswill be published in mimeographedform.SPC is undertaking this task with throw in enough money on electionday-—what shady source it will comefrom is not yet known—to buy ei¬ther enough voters or enough of¬ficials ot bring the count to hisfavor.To counteract this, the Kruegerorganization plans to watch the pollsvery closely this year. The "danger"precincts have been completely cov¬ered with poll watchers—some areex-Golden Gloves champions—andassignments of poll watchers to oth¬er precincts are being made thisweek. The response to this, thoughgood, has not been as heavy asoriginally expected. More volun¬teers will be welcomed this week atthe Campaign headquarters, 6412Cottage Grove Ave., BUTterfield0083.Saturday evening a big rally willbe leld at the Hayes Hotel forwhich the speakers have not' yetbeen announced.ganlzations surveyed.The other, and also very impor¬tant, activity contemplated by theSPC is one which should be of in¬terest to every student on campus,regardless of affiliation. A collec¬tion has been begun, with the helpof SPC friends Jerome Kerwin, Wal¬ter Johnson, and some others, ofbooks and pamphlets dealing withpost-war problems.This collection has already beenbegun, and volumes have been plac¬ed on a shelf behind the referencedesk in the main reading room atHarper Library. Interested studentsare welcome to use the materialcontained in this collection.An established part of the SPCwhich parallels this collection is theseries of weekly discussions held onthis and similar problems. Anyoneinterested in this or other PoliticalCommission activities should addresshimself to Charlotte Getz at Fosterhall.S P C to UndertakeAmbitious Programthe hope of being helpful to the or-Page TwoPeople WiU TakeCentury-SmothersTo the Editor:Last week you published an ar¬ticle under the rather violent head¬ing of "the Common Man Must NotHave Century". What followed wasa strangely garbled grab-bag of re¬actionary cliches and misinformedconceptions. Nevertheless. I think itonly right that the CHICAGO MA¬ROON publish a summary of themultitude of reasons why any suchviewpoint manifested by that ar¬ticle holds no more water than atattered pair of socks.What you say, in short, Mr. Edi¬tor, is that the common men of theworld don't deserve the right togive themselves an even break. Thatthe common man in a sordid, wash¬ed out unimaginative, unethicalvegetable. If that is so, you areright. The Common man would notdeserve his century.But it is not so. Anybody whoreads the newspapers knows that itis not so. You say the Commonman is not worth it? I say that thesoldiers of Stalingrad, of Leningrad,the millions of men fighting acrossthe flat icebound plains of Russiaare worth the best you can givethem. You say the Common mandoesn't deserve it? I say that themyriad people of China who havefought the Japanese beetles for sixyears while the whole world madebelieve it was nothing in their livesmust and will be given their sharein the world to come.The cockneys of the London Un¬derground, the malaria-shot men onBataan, the soldiers, the sailors, themarines of all the United Nationsare Common Men. They cannot bedenied a new chance. The Poles,Czechs, the Gree'-s, the French, Bel¬gians, Dutch, who fight back still inthe face of starvation are commonmen. He who can claim that thesemen are not noble, fine, even heroicdo not know the meaning of thosewords.You ask, Mr. Editor, "By whatright do they deserve a hundredyears?" If man ever had a greaterright, history doesn't mention it.Your mention of race hatred, sodapop, the movies, poison press andsimilar unrelated topics are quib¬bles, and you ought to realize it.And if the common man does nothave his century, who shall? If heESO Rummage SaleOld shoes are wanted for theEsoteric Rumage Sale to be givenFriday, February 26 this week atFoster Hall. Ruth Rowe will acceptanything and everything appropri¬ate for the Rummage Sale. VirginiaBennett is in charge of the sale, andthe money earned will go to theCommunity and War Funds. Theproceeds in the last two yars havegone to other worthy causes such a:the Fiftieth Anniversary Fund. doesn't run things for his benefit,somebody must. Do you think, Mr.Editor, that the Empire men of Eng¬land and the money men of Amer¬ica are better suited morally andethically to run the lives of theworld? They’ve done a fine job sofar, haven't they? They have pour¬ed millions into the mouths of can¬non; they have visited us in fortyyears with two wars of such wretch¬ed misery and iuncurbed savagerythat the world we know cannot sur-vive another. That Is the work of themen who "deserve" to run theworld.We have had a war each twentyyears. Shall we "take the trainback"? Then in twenty years timewe will have another carnival ofmurder. Just think, Mr. Editor, whatimprovements in throat-cutting willbe developed by that time. Bombedcities will be passe. Extermination,rather.And yet the thing that men likeHenry Wallace are asking for is notvery frightening. It is not commu¬nism or socialism or any other bogeyto the property God. It's basic prin¬ciples are extremely simple.The foundation of the Century ofthe Common Man is common de¬cency. It consists of giving the Chi¬nese Coolie and the Russian dirtfarmer that dies for us today ahalf-way decent break tomorrow.You can disregard catchwords like"a quart of milk a day, if you please,Mr. Editor, but at least one squaremeal out of three, the right to anequal share in the world's wealth,the chance to stand on one's ownfeet certainly shouldn't scare you.The people of the world are fight¬ing their way out of the mess ourleaders got us into. They're not go¬ing to turn it over to the samehands when they've finished.Mr. Editor, you call to my mindthe return to the balance of powerand devil take the hindmost if youplease. It won't make much differ¬ence what you or anybody else sayabout it. When this war is over thepeople of the world will give them¬selves their century irregardless.They have won it for themselves. Ifthey give up ‘their power, then youare right. The Common Man willnot deserve his century.Sincerely,David SmothersBig Ten Debate"Resolved: That the United Na¬tions Should Form a Federal Un¬ion .. . and admit other nationswhich agree with the principles ofthe Union" will be the topic of de¬bate Friday and Saturday whenStudent Forum, representing theUniversity, and representativegroups from the other Big Tenschools will meet for the WesternConference Debating champion¬ship at Northwestern University. Volunteers are neded to helpin the nation-wide canned goodsrationing registration (rationbook 2). This registration will beheld next week, Tuesday throughFriday, from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.Anyone who can possibly givesome time to this should applyat any elementary school in hisward. It will not be necessaryfor volunteers to serve during theentire rationing period, but onlyat those hours which are conven¬ient.USO Style ShowSeveral prominent campus beau¬ties will participate in a Grand Mu¬sical and Fashion Review to be heldnext Wednesday, February 24, at2 P.M. in the DelPrado Hotel. TheMidway U.S.O. will be the chiefbeneficiary.University women who will modelfor the show include Janet Wagner,Chloe Roth, Beth Mahon, BettyHeadland, Helen Weiselberg, andBetty Fanning.by James AbegglenLast week this column containedseveral comments on the general in¬advisability of the American nationclinging to the slogan, "Century ofthe Common Man." A number ofobjections were raised to the article,objections well outlined in the ad¬joining letter to the editor.*First of the objections was thatthe article was "Fascist" and "Trib-unish." In itself this is no valid dis¬agreement. We are in a position tomake, at the close of the war, oneof the most far-reaching and mo¬mentous decisions in history. Ourconsiderations must center aroundwhat is most expedient, not aroundwhat strikes us as most noble. If weare to have a program we must bepositive that such a program canbe carried out. A century of thecommon man would be based uponthe commoner, and it is my conten¬tion that such a base is dangerouslyweak and inadequate.This brings us to the second ofthe objections, namely that the viewof the commoner which was ad¬vanced was unjust and stupid. Asyou will note by reading the letter,this objection was based largely up¬on the participation by the com¬moner in this war.Such an objection is doubly fal¬lacious. Assuming that his motivesfor fighting are high, it still is dan¬gerous to entrust the making of thefuture to men who are fighting theNazis and Japanese all over theworld. Russia is a good example.The Russian began a magnificentfight because two of his most val¬uable possessions were endangered:Mother Russia, his homeland; and Review ofMaroon Standon JohnsonSome things I had written in thelast two issues of the MAROON inregard to the 5tl)^Ward aldermaniccampaign of T. Walter Johnsonhave, i^nfortunately, been misin¬terpreted and therefore been sub¬ject to criticism. I would like toexplain here shortly how this mis¬understanding came about.Two weeks ago I wrote up re¬ports of the progress of the cam¬paigns of both Mr. Johnson andMaynard C. Krueger, candidate fora similar office in the sixth Ward.Then I drew up a short statementin which I, on the basis of the in¬formation I had at the time, pointedout what to me seemed a slightflaw in Mr. Johnson's campaign.Regrettably, space that week didnot permit the printing of all thesearticles, and the critique, whichwithout the accompanying articlethe land, -the soil of his ancestors,which is an integral part of his be¬ing. And from this has stemmed afierce, deep-rooted fear and hatredof the German; a hatred shared bythe Dutch and Czech; an under¬standable hatred. But hatred isnothing to build a new world upon.It is the commoner again who formany reasons hates blindly, but withall his being. He is in no mood tobe entrusted with the making of thefuture. Hatred is always negativeand there must be positive aims ifnew worlds are to prosper.I challenge too the motives thatare the driving force behind thisgallant fight. The Chinese has pa¬tiently fought invaders for centuries.He is fighting now for the samereason he has fought so often be¬fore—his land is threatened. But hismotive is not a desire to build free¬dom, it is merely the same old mo¬tive of hatred.Centuries of warfare have takenplace. Men with great ambitionsrose and were beaten back, and theworld went on without great change.I do not at all intend to suggestthat it is even faintly possible for anation ravaged by a great war toreturn to the life it knew. This wasnot the meaning of the expressionused, "take the train back."What the expression really im¬plies is this. That to build any newstructure, there must be a sound,clearly visible, and positive base.We have concentrated for decadesupon destroying all that was positivein our society. Religion, morals, po¬litical purity, faith in any ideal hasfallen before the blast.But while doing all this we put might have confused the motives ofthe writer, was published alone.During the subsequent week thisarticle was attacked in a public let¬ter published in the Maroon, andI, in answering this letter, tried toexplain my stand of the previousweek with the information at mydisposal. That story was no attemptto present any new developmentsof the campaign during the week.Unfortunately, however, it was re¬garded as such by some readers;and, read as such, it would havebeen at best confusing, and atworst backknifing traitorous. It wasnot, however, written in that spirit;and I am truly sorry that it shouldhave been received in that spirit. Ihave none but the best wishes forMr. Johnson, and I wholeheartedlyhope that his quest for election issuccessful.This statement and the accom¬panying story on the progress thecandidate has been making should,I hope, set the record straight.Kurt Melchiornothing in the place of our old be¬liefs. Since we have no new religionthat the mass will accept, since thenew morals are impossibly alienatedfrom the mass which most needsthem, we must go back and acceptthe old faiths. No civilization hasever endured beyond the time whenthe great mass of the people lostfaith in their leaders and their God.And that is why we must "take thetrain back."It is inconceivable that the com¬moner will give himself this century.Those Americans who feel that ourforeign policy of the last decadehas been poorly-handled are merelyrepeating today what they did 25years ago. When Wilson, with hisideas of a new internal and externalpolicy, led us through a war thecommoner merely voted for theother side, and was satisfied thatthe problem was solved. The manyAmericans who are convinced thatour present leaders "got us into themess' are now simply transferringallegiance to the Republican party.Typical of the commoner. "Roose¬velt got us in; let's give the otherside a chance."I believe that there should be alarger measure of equality grantedto the under-privileged of all na¬tions. The commoner, however, ismentally and morally incapable ofsecuring this for himself. I dare not,I cannot, tell to whom this mostimportant of all tasks should begiven. I do say that we must goback to those faiths that we oncehad, in order that we have a strongfoundation for the new world struc¬ture.People's Century WithoutAny Positive Ethical BasisLearning to Speak Foe's Language — Planning for the daywhen the war will be fought in the German bailiwick, at whichtime a knowledge of German will be a distinct asset, a classin "military German" has been created at the University ofBuffalo.V/orWdeyH Merry-Go-RoundThis "one-man" merry-go-round, part of Penn State's"a u t o I a b" equipment,demonstrates how distribu¬tion of weight affects thespeed of a whirling body.The swivel chair is set inmotion and as the occu¬pant pulls the weightedlevers towards her, therate of rotation increasessharply. Betty Christmanis in the driver's seat.es $20,000,000 to Northwestern — One of the largestever left an educational Institution was announced re¬ly when the will of the late Walter Patton Murphy,'e, revealed that more than $20,000,000 be given tohwestern University. The gift is for the endowment oflew Technology Institute, given to the school by .Murphy. One Hit. . . No Score — George Pastushok bats out what might be calleda one-bagger as he slams the ball out of the hands of opponent DickFromm (56) of Tennessee, as Dick was about to shoot for the St. John'sbasket. St. John's won the game 52 to 41. internationalAcme r,/.•II•IIii?.»Iffhliflrlid. / ^ ^ -fHThere's Cause for These Smiles — Rosalyn Ritchie and SoolaSmith smile happily as they make out an application for a $100 WarBond. The purchase was made for Xi chapter of Theta Upsilon soror¬ity at Birmingham-Southern College. j1 e'iurejiifVXBasketbu!! Ballet — The Speedray camera stopped this action coldas two of the California B^rs drove in under Southern California'sbasket. The Trojans fought off a stubborn California rally in theclosing minutes to win 39-32.Internofionai Cleaving Her Way Through — Freshman Dorothy Quigley helpsfinance her way through the University of Rochester by wielding ameat cutter as a butcher's aide. Helping people solve their dinnerproblems and the act of "constant handling of meats keeps my handssmooth and soft" are.some of the job's attractions. Wid« WortdOn WheelsRoller skates are the latestaddition to the game ofbasketball at the Univer¬sity of Detroit. It's aharder way to play thegame, but the novel sportis catching on. Co-eds areshown under the basketduring a brisk session.One has scored, wide WorldNo MasqueradeOne of the events staged byBeta Chi fraternity at the Uni¬versity of Tampa when theyinitiated pledges was an old-fashioned pie eating contest.The result made Val Dziew-guc, left, look like a refugeefrom a circus clown's head-guarters. Digest Photo by ZielinskiCAMELSARE EASY ON ATHROAT—ANDSWELL TO TASTTHEY SUIT MtTEST PILOTThe ZONE*—Taste and Throat —is the proving ground for cigarettes.Only your taste and throat can de¬cide which cigarette tastes best toyou...and how it affects your throat.For your taste and throat are abso¬lutely individual to you.Based on the experience of mil¬lions of snx)kers, we believe Camelswill suit your *T-ZONE* to a "T.*Prove it for yourself!where clgorettes arejudgedII. J. Ki‘yn<»l<l!iT'.>l»:«w<”'»i«I*any. \VinsU*n-Salcm, Northt'urulina (IIJWilsonAltogether Now . . . Swing — In these days, when public morale is built up with music,the demand for conductors far exceeds the supply, so students at Rhode island State Collegeare learning community singing directing. Here Edmund Kreischer shows Evelyn Calderone thestroke of the down beat. Collegiate Digest Photo from HoffordModelversifythrouglelectricshadovBeating the No Pleasure Driving Edict — University of Florida students solvedthe transportation problem in this manner to attend a school dance. It's not exactlya hansom but it has walking beat ten ways, Collegiote Digest Photo by Whitaker$t'4 VVoy* '"''y <I '*f>«n c. p^ otf fo 1.j. ' * '»*«!’fl’OOl. R'"««•€' 1**^ •Of,fc ^ ^Of* ‘*®^»”ow*ec/#Jui''ocu/fy ch"^V jHelping To Relieve a Labor Shortage while waitingto be called to duty by the armed services, these Prince¬ton University students labor Sundays to keep Army sup¬plies moving continuously at the Belle Mead Quarter¬master Depot. They're only two of a large number ofstudents lending their services. Wide Worldpt the Women's College of the Uni-arolina becomes spectacular not onlyhe dancers but also through the skill ofhieve dramatic effects with light andService PartyService men help themselvesto some delicious home-cooked food during a partyHunter College girls had forthem in the students loungeof the Park Avenue building.And what's better than goodhome-cooked food to a serv¬ice man? * Photo by FertigBuys War BondSurplus funds of Alpha PhiOmega fraternity at North¬ern Illinois State TeachersCollege are shown here be¬ing converted into a $1,000war bond. Dr. M. C. Ha'yes,sponsor, exchanges check forbond while Don Kriechbaum,chapter president, and BobErickson, right, look on.Collegiate Digest Photo by Raymond Milk Did It ... To Him — Jean Bolton, University of Georgiabeauty, enjoys a bottle of sweet milk with Yeoman Curtis Harbin, Jr.,of the Navy Pre-Flight School In Athens, Ga. Harbin, six feet sixinches tall, attributes his height to sweet milk, so Jean hopes to growa few inches by consistent milk-drinking. OfFiciol U. S. Navy PhotoWomen Plan for Wcir Work — These women are part of a classdispatched by Eastern Aircraft Corp. to Rutgers University where theyare being instructed os junior engineers. Upon completion of thecourse they will be put to work in various plants of General Motors.Collegiate Digest Photo by DernDaskbdard Reminder — F. P. Maupai, student at Kirks*ville (Mo.) College of Osteopathy and Surgery, claims he issaving the speeds above "35" for victory and this design onhis speedometer serves as a constant reminder of this aim.Collegiate Digest, Photo by EsterlineG)llo6icile [)i6estSectionPublications ^Office: 317 EowkesBuilding, MiiTneopolis, Minnesota Advcrtisifif ffeiKcscntetive:NATIONAL ADVERTISINGr^ERVICE INC.4M Medison Avenue, Mew Yorli400 No. Michitee Avenue, CkieefeBoston Sen flewcttco AlMWl**Literally 'Learning the Ropes' are these aviation cadets as they scale a simu¬lated cargo net as part of the Navy's physical fitness program conducted at the CorpusChristi "University of the Air." This work gives the cadets a degree of mental andphysical alertness that will render them more capable of holding their own under anycircumstances when meeting the enemy. Wido Worldstudy Machine* "Good-night" says Bill Hutche¬son to Doris Blanchard in thesoftly lighted setting of the newwomen's dorm at Colby College,Maine. The structure was openedlast fall. Digest Photo by SmithOrganize for Victory — The PurpleCow, Williams College literary and hu¬mor magazine, started a campus-widedrive for a "stamp a week for everystudent." Victory committee- membersare Jim Pritchard, Bill Brewer, BillSchlosser and Bud Bailyn. Witherell★ Voice for Victory—Moke Your Pennies Speak! ★Elis Practice Jiu-Jitsu — Pre-commando training at Yale University includesinstruction In the old Japanese art of jiu-jitsu. This is part of the new physicaltraining program at Yale to fit all men for active military service.Columbia Newsphofo* the ^pantffig gun has been start theNational Collegiate Bond Queen Contest, spon¬sored by your student newspaper in conjunc¬tion whh A|sdcioted Coliegiate Press ond Coi-legiote^Oi^st. All purchases of War^ BondsamfStaifips mode on or after February 15 mayto counti^ as votes according to the contestrules diiiibunced in your paper* ^u Winning queen on your ^campiis will tojudged with those from other'^coltoes partici¬pating in the contest. A $50 War Bond will tocnvorded to the winner of the notioMl contest.Bvery penny you spend for Wor Bonds orStlmps win count os a vote .for your fovortoqueen ahU a slap at the Aj|isf Start buyingStudents Teach Troops Three R's — Members of the Education Societyinstruct troops of the Second Battalion in reading writin' and 'rithmetic In acollege classroom. One of a long list of offerings to the neighboring troops(included are sciences, advanced English, math and foreign languages) courseslike this were started last year by the CCNY Education Department. Classes,held every day, are tutored by students and faculty of the CCNY School ofBusiness. Troops also may use the collegers gym, pool, library and laboratories.Visit Lincoln's Shrine — Two Marine sergeants from the Washington detachmentwere among hundreds of people who visited the Lincoln Memorial on the 134th anni¬versary of Lincoln's birth. They are shown standing in silent tribute to the presidentwho saved the union. Ottkiai U. S. AAorin. Corps Photoinofc sidestroke but keep yourBrown commandos derith a rifle. Swimmer mustdo this approaching on dry. ,"onstrofe ,he ,1'"oke ony !'"'f'iondlyon't^et burnedknowhow,king through;t n g teas ojtroke with!iji*pove7«ifIf parts thent as eosiy*’i^ur hol^:iv^rs^ coAimmsEverything from the basic back float to the technique of swimming underwater to avoid blazing oil patches or to escape from the cockpit of a sub¬merged plane was offered recently as the latest phase of Brown University'sphysical fitness program.The course is designed to increase the service man's chance of survival inthe water in case of mishap and to give the men technical advantages ofready mobility in the water. Starting with regular swimming fundamentals,students eventually are able to swim, tread water or float with a 10 lb.length of pipe simulating a rifle while fully clothed. At the end of the coursetests were given to determine their skill as "water commandos."Providence Journal PhotosThese students are demonstrating the use of the Franklin emergency buoywhich can safely support six men. The two tubes on the sides are automaticwarning signals which are set off by the action of sea water.Page Three \Propst ApplaudesRachmaninoff ConcertOn Behalfof the Publicby Hartley PfeilRight now, I'm as confused as 1can be. There doesn't seem to beany way of discovering what thedramatics groups are going to dowhen. Of course the draft has a lit¬tle something to do with it all. Sothat Rod Hastings can get to Ari¬zona in time for induction, Univer¬sity induction. University Players'"The Beautiful People*' has beenmoved up to Monday throughThursday, Feb. 22 through 25.And apparently in order to maketime for casting (that man problemagain) the second UP Anniversaryplay, still unchosen, will be held offuntil March 11,12 and 13.The week in between, still re¬served for DA will see either "NightMust Fall." "Angel Street." or amoment of silence in memory ofDramatic Association.At any rate. Uncle Hartley was -probably not too far off the beama few weeks ago when he askedwhy DA and UP did not merge. Theostensible reasons he repeated fornon-cooperation were apparentlyjust about exactly the real reasons.Members of both DA and UPhave carefully retold him how differ¬ent are the types of people in thetwo groups. Speech majors, the Di¬vinity school, prim old maids. Andon the other hand, student leaders,activities joy-boys, the "elite."One member of University Play¬ers outlined the distinction between"student leaders" and "speech ma¬jors" and explained why it was im¬portant that both groups have achance at direction and productionof plays.What confused, me was remem¬bering that Lester Schiff, for exam¬ple, who as far as I know it not yeta speech major, was doing consid¬erable directorial work for UP, andeven more, that when first plans forDA's "Night Must Fall " were an¬nounced, speech major Frank Grov¬er was to have been the director!With such overlapping and withthe groups both struggling to getcasts, I just don't get it.But there are a few encouraging(though also confusing) things. TheDA highlights were probably evenmore surprised than I to learn thatUP would produce Saroyan's ' TheBeautiful People." Well, it's a goodplay, or at least I like it, and it mayturn out to be something. But onceagain it's plenty tough on the per¬formers.But if the players can rise abovean atterhpt at symbolism (Saroyanmay wish to read a lot of signi¬ficances in to his play, though it'sperfectly aceptable at face value),they may put on a first rate show.Meanwhile, will somebody pleasetell me what's going to happen toDA? HutchinsBook OutRecently published and on salein the bookstore now is Robert M.Hutchins' Education for Freedom.The book, which sells at $1.50, Is anexpansion of a lecture series Dr.Hutchins gave at Louisiana StateUniversity in 1941. It appears tobe mostly a reiteration of theproxy's well-known ideas about aliberal education. The author hasprovided it with an autobiographywhich brings us closer to the back¬ground of the "revolooshonary"ideas he persistently advances, isinterestingly written, and. In spite ofour familiarity with its contents,seems worth the price.Last week in this space there ap¬peared a very short note about theEllis Housing Co-op, which waswritten up as representaitves of co-operattves on campus. It was saidthen that the co-op was not an ab¬stract of all nice and beautiful thingsof life, but did present a decent,clean, and orderly place to live in.In this article It is attempted to ex¬pand and explain these remarks.You will not find luxurious loungesand richly carpeted halls leading tospacious and cleverly furnished bed¬room suites at the co-op's home,5558 Ellis Ave. Emphasis there isplaced on economy and the es¬sence of decency and cleanliness.The members—26 of them—havesimply furnished single or double,rooms which they keep clean them¬selves. They for the most part takea majority of their meals at the eat¬ing co-op downstairs.Rental for rooms ranges from$8.50 to $1 1.50 for single or dou¬ble rooms. That, together with eat¬ing expenses and laundry allows thestudents to live at school for anaverage of $30.00 per month. This,of course, is a much more reason¬able sum than would be needed forsubsistence elsewhere on campus.The 26 men form, for the mostpart, a rattier close-knit and friend¬ly group. There are, of course, somewho live at the co-op simply be¬cause it is a cheap place to live at,but the majority find friends andcompanions at the co-op whom theywould not have if they would roomalone somewhere In the neighbor¬hood. The house has a small loungein which at almost all times of theday some of the fellows are playingchess, or playing the phonograph,or trying the new radio. But thelounge is not the place for bull ses¬sions. In spite of the limited size ofthe rooms, for a good bull sessionsome ten or fifteen people will Silents toReappearfor Benefit"Busted Hearts" with CharlieChaplin will be one of the silentfilms to be shown in a benefit per¬formance for Bundles For Bluejack¬ets on Friday. February 26. Therewill be two showings, at 3:30 and8 p.m., in the Ida Noyes Theatre.Tickets will be sold for 30c everynoon next week in Mandel Corridor.The audience will also be given achance to hiss at the villain in atrue melodrama, "East Lynne". Ru¬dolph Valentino in "The Great Lov¬er" and an Our Gang Comedy,"Thundering Fleas" will be the otherattractigns.crowd in and sprawl all over thedouble-decker bed, the desk, andthe chair.Some of the furniture has beenmade by the boys themselves, orby former co-op members. On Sun¬day the tables which fill the diningroom downstairs are folded away,tools come out of the basement, anda busy shop turns out chairs andsometimes a table or desk. A fairlylarge pile of old and replaced chairsin the basement testifies to the fel¬lows ability as craftsmen.All this should not be taken assaying that this mode of living is thebest or finest to be found, or anideal to be aimed at by othergroups. There are serious defects,true. The original state of decay ofthe building can be seen in largecracks in the walls: narrow, ricketywalls and stairways; and the diffi¬culty the boys have been having intrying to keep up their heatingsystem.But the spirit of the boys hasmade light of these obstacles. Theysee beyond these things and formon them a democratic and friendlygroup in which money and socialposition do not count, but wherethe things a person does determinehis worth to his society.WANTED: Girl student for light houseworkduties in exchange for own room, breakfast,and some dinners. Small ap’t, no children.One employed woman. Ph. Mid. 8787.GREGG COLLEGEA School of BusinessPreferred byCollege Men and WomenINTENSIVE Stenographic, Secretarial,Court Reporting andAccounting CoursesDAY AND EVENING SESSIONSCall, write or phone ST Ate 1881for Free booklet: **The Doorwayto Opportunity**The GREGG COLLEGEPresident, J'^hn Robert Gregg, S.C.D.Director, Paul M. Pair, M.A.6 N. Michigan Ave. Chicago by Rudyard PropstAt sight of the tall, lean, slightlystooped figure, the Thursday eve¬ning audience rose from their seatsand stood, awaiting that series ofcourtly little bows which would pre¬cede a performance they knew fromexperience would be of a nature un¬approachable anywhere in the civ¬ilized world. The bows,, from thewaist, of such a perfect balance ofhumbleness and pride then theconcerto.Sergei Rachmanloff had chosenthe Beethoven 1st Piano Concertofor half of his offering. This Concer¬to, had it been composed by anyother save Beethoven, would havebeen forgotten long ago.Mr. Lange bolted the openingchords and maintained his unfortu¬nate but stubbornly misconceptionto the end. The wood-winds, expe¬riencing an off day, clamored theirerrors in a wailing hard to ignore.The horns, equally dull, at least at¬tempted to muffle their fumbling ina secretive sort of playing that, withthe braying of the wood-winds,sounded a little incongruous attimes.To say that Mr. Lange's accom¬paniment failed to detract from theconcerto would be difficult to be¬lieve but scrupulously correct. Nomatter how the orchestra had play¬ed, one would only have wished itsilent; for the music that came drift¬ing out of the great, shapely boxof the grand piano was of a puritythat would have defied a Toscaniniof matching or even approaching it,had he been the accompanist. Thetones.that flowed out to that foronce still audience seemed to comefrom a perfect union of two greatartists; as if Rachmaninoff wereplaying on a live thing. Actually to say more than "Rach¬maninoff played the Beethoven 1st"is superfluous. To attempt to trans¬late the tones of that evening Intoanything like a comprehensible eval¬uation, one would be forced to re¬sort to an impressionistic style of thetype Carlyle uses in his "FrenchRevolution", the most striking partof which are the dashes. In brief, theattempt would merely soil the mem¬ory of those fortunate enough to bepresent and hopelessly confusethose who were not.After an intermission duringwhich a shaken audience attemptedan emotional recovery, Mr. Langerecovered himself to turn in a thor¬oughly lovely reading of VaughanWilliams' "Fantasia on a Theme byThomas Tallis". Scored for DoubleString Orchestra, this work, whose.oriental minor key developmentcalls to mind the Taj Mahal on afull moonlight night, if played spar¬ingly enough, should become a per¬manent item in the repetoire of theChicago Symphony. Mr. Lange hasdone wonders with his strings, whichare now the show-piece of the or¬chestra, and their newly acquiredTallis. The trio for viola, first violin,and cello was completely ingrossing,and hauntingly bazarre.Last on the program was Rach¬maninoff s own "Rhapsody on aTheme of Paganni". Fiendishly diffi¬cult, I found myself wishing he hadplayed it first and the Beethovenlast. While it displays his incredibletechnique, it almost never allows hisgleaming,. hot-gold tone to comethrough. The orchestration is tooloud. Only once does Rachmaninoffhave the stage alone. It was’thefirst time I had ever felt that a pi¬ano could sing more beautifully thana full string section.Just off the PressEDUCATION FOR FREEDOM by Robert M. HutchinsThis book is at once a trenchant statement of the crisis facingthe ^higher learning in America and a proposal for making cul¬tivation of the Intellect once more the essential aim of edu¬cation - $1.50THE NATURE AND DESTINY OF MAN by Reinhold NiebuhrThis is volume 2 entitled Human Destiny. "The belief whichinforms these pages is that the Christian faith represents deepersources of power for the fulfillment of life than has been assumedin the main currents of modern culture" , $2.75LET THE PEOPLE KNOW by Norman AngellIn which this Nobel Peace Prize winner answers the question aboutthe war, the peace, and war aims, which have been asked him by |John Citizen in radio, university and book audiences $2.50 ;University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue\Ellis Housing CoopBased on EconomyPage FourNew Group inMeteorologyThe first contingent of the Me¬teorology "C" group which will oc¬cupy Blake and Gates Halls has ar¬rived this week and is already atwork. This group of 100 in GatesHall and another similar groupwhich will come to Blake this weekare retained by the MeteorologyCommittee here, which is respons¬ible for meteorology courses in theentire country, as a control groupfor the "C" course, to which highschool graduates with mathematicscredits are admitted.The meteorologists who are quar¬tered at Int, House are "A", or ad¬vanced standing, groups. They havebeen on the campus for some time. Hinton MakesDebate FinalsDeane Hinton, senior in Econom¬ics and veteran Forum debater, hasweathered the first round of theNational Economic Foundation de¬bate tournament. He is one of six¬teen who remain from the originalfield of 600 entrants.The next round will take placeFebruary 26 at Madison, Wis., andwill be broadcast over the Univer¬sity of Wisconsin's radio station,WEMP. His partner at that timewill be Al ConwiI of Northwestern,an old friend and debating op¬ponent. They have been assignedthe affirmative in a debate on thetopic of reestablishment of freecompetition after the war. Theiropponents have not yet been nom¬inated.'A'See the throat microphone?<7flCHnNG wmsdelivered byWestern Electric RadioWherever American soldiers ride into battle inroaring *'hell buggies,” they get their orders overradio telephone sets. So do pilots of Army bombersand fighting planes — and the commanders of theNavy’s deadly PT boats.The Signal Corps needs great quantities of fieldtelephones, wire and switchboards to get the mes¬sage through. Aboard large naval vessels are battleannouncing systems and sea-going telephones.Sixty years of experience in making Bell Tele¬phones gave Western Electric the *'know how” tospeed equipment that helps ”keep ’em in contact.”Western ElectricARSENAL OF COMMUNICATIONS Children's ConcertGiven SaturdayThe University of Chicago Sym¬phony Orchestra will appear atMandel Hall tomorrow, Saturday, at2:30 P.M. in a children's concert.Admission will be free.The concert, given with the co¬operation of the U. of C. elemen¬tary school, will feature the popular"Peter and the Wolf" by SergeProkofieff. Also featured will be theChildren's Symphony by JospehHaydn which includes in its scoremusic by children's toy instruments. Charles Buckley will conduct, andJoseph Go|an will render a violinsolo. The famous narrator’s part in"Peter" will be taken by MiltonMayer.This is the first time that an efforthas been made to include the ele¬mentary school group in a symphon¬ic program. The orchestra has beenhard hit by the draft, and this factas well as the participation of thechildren may take some of the pol¬ish off the performance; but the or¬chestra, composed mostly of Uni¬versity students with a few neigh¬borhood people added, promises toall comers a most entertaining aft¬ernoon. THE CHICAGO MAROONEntered Jenuery 13, 1943, es third cietsmeil in the United Stetes Postel Service.The ofticiel student publicetion of theUniversity of Chicego.BOARD OF CONTROLPublisher Jim AbegglenSports Editor Paul PattonFeature Editor Hartley PfeilAdvertising Manager Barbara OrtiundCirculation Manager Dick PetersonASSOCIATESNews Editor Kurt MelchiorComptroller Ward SharbachAssist. Circulation Manager...John TrulandAssistants—David Smothers, Barbara Win¬chester. Dorothy Granquist. Mary Stone.Dick Clurman. Joseph Schmitt, JessiePolacheck. Shirley Vanderwalker, BetsvKuh.Training For NowAnd After The WarMeteorology and AviationClimatology by Thomas A. Blair $4.00Introduction to Meteorology by Sverre Petterssen $2.50The Observer's Planisphere of Air Navigation Stars by Chichester $ .75What's That Plane—How to Identify American and Jap Airplanes $ .25Weather Science by Lt. Charles W. Barber, U.S.N.R $2.50Weather Study by David Brunt $2.25Illustrated Aviation Dictionary by Assen Jordanoff $3.50A Pilot's Meteorology by Charles Greham Halpine $2.00The American Student Flyer by Merrill C. Hamburg and George Tweney....$l.50Electronics and PhysicsPrinciples of Electronics by Royce G. Kloeffler $2.50Electrodynamics by Leigh Page and Norman lisley Adams, Jr $6.50Applied Nuclear Physics by Ernest Pollard and Wm. L. Davidson, Jr $3.00Electronic Devices and Their Application by E. P. Anderson $2.00Alternating Current Circuits by K. Y. Tang $4.00RadioRadio Physics Course by Alfred A, Ghirardi $5.00A complete, up-to-date, authoritative electrical and radio coursewhich explains everything about Radio, Electricity,. Photo-electricCells, Television and the Talkies.R.C.A. Receiving Tube Manual $ .25Radio Fundamentals by Willis H. Ballou $1.40Basic Radio by J. Barton Hoag $3.25Mathematics/Refresher Course in Fundamental Mathematics for Basic Technical Training..$ 35A Mathematic Refresher by A. Hooper $1.32Study GuidesGeneral Service of Aircraft by Arthur Bawden and Christine Bancroft $2.00Powerplants for Secondary C.P.T, Ground School Courses $2.50Aerodynamics for Secondary C.P.T. Ground School Courses $2.50Civil Air Regulations for Pilots $2.00Practical Air Navigation $2.00Meteorology for Pilots $2.00University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis AvenueGirls' Basketball ScheduleFeb. 184:30—Mortarboard—WAAFoster A—Delta Sigma5:00—Neophytes—QuadranglerPi Delta Phi—KellyFeb. 234:30—Kelly—SigmaDelta Sigma—Pi Delta Phi5:00—Morta rboa rd—EsotericFoster A—StudempsGirl's LeagueBasketballResultsLast Thursday, February II, PiDelta Phi forfeited their game toMortarboard, and Foster to Sigma,Sigma and Mortarboard both win¬ning by a score of 2-0. In the sec¬ond game, the Neophytes won overEsoteric by a score of 1-5. In theother court, Studemps beat Quad-ranglers 26-6.On Tuesday, February 16,W.A.A. beat Esoteric 28-10 andKelly defeated Neophytes 17-12.Sigma defeated Delta Sigma, 20-7.On February 4 Foster B was with¬drawn from the tournament and PiDelta Phi was entered.Feature inthe Newsby Warren PursellFeatures in the newsThe news: Marron wrestlerstrounce sailors from 7th Street Na¬val training station, 31 to 5. Thefeature: Heavyweight "Moose"Mustain came out on top as substi¬tute coach. Spyros Vores is still inBud Bates pinned his sailor-op¬ponent in the 135 pound event in1:40. A few minutes later he was en¬tered in the 145 pound event andpinned the heavier sailor in five sec¬onds less time The Maroons wonfive falls, a decision, and a forfeit.The news: WGN announces week¬ly results of Big Ten basketball scor¬ing averages. Chicago team aver¬age lowest. The feature: Dave Dur-kee, third string or thereabouts, topsconference scoring averages with aperfect 1,000 . . . Durkee has playedin one conference game, the firstweek of tabulations, making one at¬tempt for the basket in the closingminutes of the C^icago-lndianagame. His shot went in, thus hisclaim for fame.The news: Wisconsin c a g e r strounce Maroons,‘ 74 to 30 forfourth Big Ten in six starts. Thefeature: This was the game Chicagowas gunning for. The Midway ladspushed Minnesota until a few min¬utes before the half. They kept thelead until then—a substantial lead,but then dropped by the wayside.The news: Chicago Is host In five¬way Big Ten track meet tomorrow.The feature: At least nine tracksterswill bow out of Collegiate competi¬tion. Chicago loses five of the best. Maroon Sports Page Fiveevent, the Badgers had a stronglead all the way. Northwesterncame next with 23 V2 points, close¬ly followed by Purdue's 22, andChicago's 2OV2. IMnnesota broughtup the rear with 12.Upsets FeatureIntramuralsby vie HerbertThe Psi U's tossed a bombshell in¬to the University Intramural Basket¬ball League last Wednesday nightwhen they upset the league leadingBetas 16-15 at the Fieldhouse as theseason came to a close. When thesmoke cleared, the Psi U's, Betasand Phi Gams found themselves in athree-way tie for the championship.The underdog Psi U's roared backfrom a half-time 9-6 deficit, and,led by Walt Bayard's 8 points, theymade themselves co-champions by aone-point margin. Then Phi Gamwhipped the Alpha Delts 16-10 lastweek-end and won a 2-0 forfeit fromihe tail-end Pi Lams Wednesdaynight for their share of the title. Aflip of the coin automatically gave.the Phi Gams "2nd" place and theright to meet the Wodlawn winnerin the playoffs. Last night the PsiU's played the Betas again to de¬termine the official champion tomeet the Woodlawn runner-up.The Woodlawn league had itslast-minute difficulties also, whenthe Phi Sigs lost to the Phi Delts14-9. The Phi Sigs confested thegame because they claimed not tohave been notified of a schedulechange and all their men weren'tavailable for the first half. The PhiDelts, however, were awarded thegame and 2nd place. The Dekesclinched the championship Mondaynight with a 24-12 drubbing of thePhi Sigs.The playoffs, scheduled for thisweek-end and next week, will pairteh Woodlawn champion with theUniversity runner-up and the Univer¬sity Champion with the Woodlawnrunner-up. The Dekes are scheduledto play the Phi Gems in the firstgame today at 3:30 in the Field-house. Next Monday at 5 the PhiDelts will play the winner of lastnights P'si U-Beta game. Then thewinners will meet sometime nextweek for the fraternity champion¬ship.In the "B" division, both leagueshave ties for 2nd place to play-off.Original PaintingsandHandmade WoodcutsbyAleschaformerly of Austria, now of ChicagoON DISPLAY AT THEU. of C. Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. Details have yet to be worked out.The Dekes won the Beta champion¬ship with a 17-11 victory over theundefeated Sigma Chis Wednesday,and the Kappa Sigs tied Sigma Chifor 2nd place with a whooping 23-6win over the Phi Sigs. The AlphaDelts won the Alpha division cham¬pionship, but the Psi U's entered athree-way 2nd place tie when theyedged out the Betas I I-10.The "B" playoffs will be staged onthe same basis as the "A" contests,but dates and teams are as yet un¬decided.And now for the news we have allbeen waiting to hear! Our friendsthe Virgins won the Sigma (Inde¬pendent) title last week when theyrepulsed the Jones Boys 27-13, andfollowed up with a 33-19 victoryover the Whiz Kids. (Who said theVirgins are inexperienced?) TheMedics and Sharpy Fibers finished1-2 in the other division and theplayoffs will be held Wednesdaynight. Judging from their past per¬formances this season, I'd say tokeep your eyes on the Virgins—that is, all except YOU, you wolf!FINAL "A" STANDINGSWoodlawn UniversityW L W LDekes 6 0 Beta 4 1Phi Delt 5 1 Psi U 4 1Phi Sig 3 3 Phi Gam 4 1Sigma Chi 2 3 Delta U 2 3Kappa Sig 1 5 Alpha Delt .. 1 4ZBT 0 5 Pi 1 am 0 5FINAL ■•B" STANDINGSAlpha BeteW L W LAlpha Delt 4 1 Dekes 4 0Phi Psi 3 2 Sigma Chi 2 1Delta U 3 2 Kappa Sig .... 2 1Psi U 3 2 Phi Sig 1 3Beta 2 3 Phi Delt 0 4x-Pi Lam 0 5x-DroppedNow under»arm c.Cream 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.a jarAlso :u lOi and jarstv Guaranteed by 'A.Good Housekeeping mb Track Teamclose fourthFor a while it looked as if Chica¬go were going to place second Inthe 5 way Big Ten Indoor track meetlast Saturday night at the Field-house. However, Dave James ofNorthwestern took the -broadjump,second to the last event, and Purduetook the final mile relay, therebypushing the Maroons downstairs tofourth place.Wisconsin's 54 took the meet bya landslide and except for the first Harrison Bearsley took secondplace in the half mile and the 440,to donate 6 points for Chicago.Randall took the only first place forthe Maroons by winning the mile.Randall's 4:22 is one of the bestmiles turned In in the Conferencethis year.The decisive last event, the milerelay, found the Maroon's HarrisonBeardsley a pace behind Purdue'sanchor man at the'tape. This costChicago second place in the meet.Rasmussen grabbed a second Infhe high hurdles Kincheloe got 4thIn the pole vault for one pointEnjoy YourCOLLEGE NIGHTFridayWITHRUSS MORGANMusic in the Morgan MannerANDGay and ColorfulPROFESSIONALAND COLLEGE SHOWSAdmission 65cIncluding TaxGet Special Student Tickets at Activities WindowIN THE BEAUTIFULMARINE DINING ROOMPage Six' —Ida Noyes CouncilAny woman who wishes to be acandidate tor member of the IdaNoyes council should submit hername to Marjorie Sullivan' at FosterHall. Members of any class may becondidates.The election of officers will beheld Tuesday, March 9. Chapel ServicesHeadlining the service at Rocke¬feller Memorial Chapel this Sunday,February 21, will be Herbert King,associate secretary of the NationalCouncil of Student Christian Asso¬ciations. Mr. King, a negro, is incharge of Race Relations activitiesof the group, which is the only co¬educational student organization ofits kind in the country. Noon Concerts BeganMusic lovers will be pleased tohear that the noon hour phonographconcerts have been taken up again.These concerts are giv.en daily,Monday through Friday, from 12:30to 1:20 P.M. in Social Science 122.They had been suspended becauseof inability to obtain crystals nec¬essary to run the machine. Discuss Restrictive CovenantsAssistant Professor MaynardKrueger will share the rostrum atthe Woodlawn A.M.E. Church, 65thand Evans Ave., tonight at 8 o'clockwith Rev. Archibald Carey, Jr., andDr. Arthur Falls. The topic of thediscussion will be "The Right toLive—Anywhere": Restrictive cove¬nants as seen by a minister, a phy¬sician, and an economist and pro¬fessor. Calvert Club Outing"The Catholic in the Crisis" willbe discussed by Dr. Jerome Kerwinand the Reverends George Dunneand Daniel Cantwell at the Calvertclub's Childerley week-end outing.The party will leave Calvert Houseat 4 p.m. Friday and return on Sun¬day night. Reservations at $4 ea.,may be made with Joan Hammel inFoster Hall.The driiting sounds so strenuous—tNonsense! The most beautiful women in America todayare the girls in khaki! Some calisthenics and drilling arevital to general good health, discipline and tuned-up reflexes.After a few weeks at Fort Des Moines, Daytona Beach or thenew Fort Oglethorpe training center you’ll feel better thanever in your life.May he M wonlduH iike the worh?People are happiest doing what they do well. Every effortis made to place you where your service will count mosttoward final Victory. You may have some latent talent thatwill fill a particular need for work interesting and new towomen — such as repairing the famous secret bombsight,'\ \ ^' I rigging parachutes, operating the fascinating new electronicdevices — or driving an Army jeep over foreign terrain.Then M hare a ehanee to tearn something uewfSome questions and answers of interestto every patriotic coilege womanFirst of all, is the JVAAC reatig needed?Emphatically yes! Already the President has authorized theCorps to expand from '25,000 to 150,000. The Air Forcesand Signal Corps have asked for thousands of WAAC mem¬bers to help with vital duties. Both Ground Forces andServices of Supply are asking for thousands more. Membersof the WAAC may be assigned to duty with the Army any¬where — some are already in Africa and England.Can the WAAC reaUg heip win the war?The whole idea of the WAAC is to replace trained soldiersneeded at the front. If American women pitch in now to helpour Army (as women in Britain, Russia and China do), wecan hasten Victory — and peace.What can mg eoliege education contribute?College training is important equipment for many WAACduties too long to list. Cryptography, drafting, meteorology,laboratory work, Link trainer and glider instructing, for ex¬ample. If you are a senior you may enroll at once and beplaced on inactive duty until the school year ends. See yourWAAC faculty adviser for more details. Yes, indeed. And the list of WAAC duties grows constantly.The training and experience you get in the WAAC mayequip you for • many stimulating new careers opening upfor women.What are mg chances of pt^moUou?Excellent. The Corps is expanding rapidly and needs newofficers, both commissioned and nonconunissioned. Thosewho join now have the best chances. All new officers nowcome up through the ranks. If qualified, you may obtain acommission in 12 weeks after beginning basic training.What is the age range and other requirements?Very simple. You may join if you are a U. S. citizen, aged21 to 44, inclusive, at least 5 feet tall and not over 6 feet,in good health — r^ardless of race, color or creed. But theArmy needs you now—don’t delay. Total War won’t wait!MAtsgwsistS neededm If you speak and write Spanish, ^Portuguese, Chinese, Japanese, Russian, French, Germanor Italian, see your local Army recruiting office now! Youare needed for interpreting, cryptography, communications.But can M iive eomtortahig on WAAC pay?There are few civilian jobs in which you could earn clearincome, as WAAC enrolled members do, of $50 to $138 amonth — with all equipment from your toothbrush to cloth¬ing, food, quarters, medical and dental care provided. WAACofficers earn from $150 to $333.33 a month. ^jl^omen*s jj^xitiary"mriMWiMF For farther Information aee j^onr nearestIJ. S. ARMY BECBIJITING ANDINDUCTION STATION