ChicagoMaroonVol. 1, No. 14 Z-149 April 30, 1943 Price Four CentsSun Still to FufillFirst Liberal Idealsby Sheldon NewbergerOn Thursday morning, December 4,1941, the dream of thousands of lib¬eral enthusiastic Chicagoans was con¬summated. The Chicago Sun—Mar¬shall Field's great newspaper—theprogressive challenge to the rot¬ten, virulent Tribune—found its wayonto the newsstands and into thehands of eight hundred thousand anx¬ious readers. The people of Chicagohad waited a long time for a newspa¬per that would fight for their ideasand ideals.They are still waiting.Burdened by a reactionary upperoffice, a lack of clear objectives in thecity room, and a staff whose moralehas been literally “shot to pieces" bythree complete shakeups in personnel,the Sun has turned into a mediocre,sensationalized addition to an Amer¬ican press that itself is, on the whole,conservative and almost corupt.Assertions Hard to MakeI find these assertions hard to make,because I, too, was one of those per¬sons who waited anxiously for theSun—who hoped continually that herewas an organ that was to be the.yok;&of the liberal element in the middleWest—the great challenge to themorning monopoly held by the Trib¬une, with its distorted news and poi-soncHl editorial policy.1 have hoped for sixteen months.During this period I went to work forthe Sun—to see at first hand what hashappened to my hopes and the hopesof thousands like me. I have returneddiscouraged, but with the convictionthat all is not lost, if Marshall Fieldwill, in answer to the requests of Chi¬cagoans, give the Sun the dynamicleadership it so sorrowfully lacks.The Sun has been a paper withouta personality. It has tried to holdsome sort of middle ground, occasion¬ally dipping one foot into the “waterof the left", but hardly making somuch as a ripple. It has been afraidto champion for reform in local andstate government. It endorsed MayorKelly—backed by the Tribune in oneof the most corrupt political deals inyears—for re-election, on the groundsthat his opponent, would, if elected,fall prey to local isolationists. Yet,in the primaries, when the powerfulPUBLISHER EVANS EDITOR FIELDvoice of the Sun, might have aided inthe selection and election of a strongLiberal candidate, it remained on thefence.The Sun has yet to fight the Boardof Education—to demand vociferously'that the Chicago school system be tak¬en out of the control of politicians andput into the hands of educators. Ithas failed completely to champion thecause of the Negro against the re¬strictive covenants that blight theSouth Side.On the national and internationalfront, the record is more commenda¬ble. They have raised their voicesagainst the State Department, Francoand Peyrouton. Still they have failedto unveil the true story of the Ship-shaw deal, the training of Americansoldiers for strikebreaking, the devel¬oping “Jap Crowism," the hundredsof reactionary members of Congressand their affiliated lobbyists, whomust be exposed day after day withfact after fact. “We are editorially asmuch in need of high partisanshipdispassionately expressed, as ofstraight facts accurately reported,”wrote T. V. Smith of the Departmentof Philosophy at the University ofChicago, to the Sun on its first day ofpublication.Sensational StoriesThe treatment of the news has re¬cently tended toward the sensational.Stories on “Professor Found in Ho¬tel With Girl" and “Smiles as ShePlunges to Death” have been dis¬played in large skyline heads. I don’tthink the liberals of Chicago wantthis type of news treatment. Cheap,distorted, sensational stories can beobtained from the Hearst paper or theTribune. We wanted the Sun to treatthe news fairly, to give prominence toimportant facts, to fight hard for pro¬gressive movements. We still want itthat way.I have tended to give the dark sideof the situation concerning Chicago’snewest newspaper. But there is a sidethat is bright and full of hope. For Ihave the utmost confidence in the menwffio form the staff of the Sun. Themen who write the editorials, super¬vise the foreign news, edit the copy,and get the stories. Most of thesemen came to the Sun because it rep-(Continued on page three) S.P.C. OrganizeActivities WithJoint PlanningIn a surprise move more than tenstudent organizations last night rati¬fied a constitution calling for completecorrelation of future action. Amongthe cardinal principles of the newconstitution are the setting up of a cal¬endar of meetings and the establish¬ment of a library on current politicaland social trends. The Parliamentaryarticles give each member group onevote—with any additional organiza¬tion that wishes to enter the union inthe future, possessing the same rightsand privileges of charter groups.Passed at the instigation of theStudent Political Commission which ina “Report to the Campus" severalmonths ago invited co-operative actionby student groups, the new constitu¬tion is the culmination of severalboard meeting® among the organiza¬tions involved. Besides the S.P.C.,these include the ‘Free India" group,the Y.C.L., Socialist Club, StudentForum, Social Service Administration,Chapel Union, Calvert Club, Y.W.C.A.,and Russian War Relief.iU. of C. ScholarshipsWon by Oak Park,FYC, and Hyde Park. Oak Park and River Forest-Town¬ship high school won the annual-com¬petitive scholarship examinations, ofthe University of Chicago for thesecond consecutive year, A. J. Brum¬baugh, dean of students of the Uni¬versity, announced yesterday. HydePark high school, second to Oak Parklast year, tied for second place withrepresentatives of the second year ofth Four-Year College of the Univer¬sity of Chicago. Central high school,‘Superior, Wisconsin, was fourth.The examinations this year were-taken April 3 in fifteen centersthroughout the country by 669 highschool seniors, 450 from the Chicagoarea, representing 136 high schools.Oak Park students won five full schol¬arships of $300 each, one half-scholar¬ship, and an honorable mention, for atotal of 34 points. Hyde Park and thesecond year College students of theUniversity each scored 21 points, andCentral high, Superior^ Wis., won twofull scholarships to score 12 points.Thirty-three other high schools alsoplaced students in the competition.J. Cleary In Top 8 ofInter-American DebateJoseph Cleary, Student Forum mem¬ber and a senior at the University,was selected Tuesday as one of eightfinalists in the speech contest spon¬sored by the Office of Coordinator ofInter American Affairs under theAmerican Council on Education. Hewill go to the North Central RegionalContest at the University of Iowa onMay 4.His speech subject for the regionalfinals is “Mobilization of HemisphereTransportation Facilities for War.”If he reaches the finals he will go to |New York City to participate in a |discussion on “Town Meeting of theAir.” First prize in the contest is asummer trip to Mexico or a $500 studyaward. Federation CounsellorsGroup Leaders:Sue Bohnen, Barbara Bezark, Jane Chris¬tie, Marjorie Clemens, Mary Lou Landes,Betty Headland, Betty Seifried, ElizabethSpencer, Phyllis Savidge, Betty Lou Sim-son, Mary Trovillion, Virginia Butts, Bar-I bara Gilhllan, Dorothy Hager, Betty Plas-man, June Cohen, Joan Hammel, Virginia! Bennett.Counselors:Virginia Brantner, Martha Bowen,I aurel Childe, Tanja Cizevska, MildredCarlson, Eva Cook, Jane Crosby, RuthCargill, Priscilla Copeland, Lois Davis,Jeanette Davison, Janet Davison, ShirleyDoBos, Dorothy Duft, Betty Davidson,Carol Donovan, Mary Lou Emmart, Elea¬nor Evans, Betty Alice Early, Nancy El¬liott, Dorothy Fishbein, Gay Follmer, Hel¬en Flood, Evelyn Freeman, Joan Fultz,Janice Folsom, Lois Goldstein, KatieGuild, Wanda Gryzanka, Ruth Greenlee,Dorothy Granquist, Nancy Hamilton, Mar¬ilyn Herst, Louise Harvey, Virginia Ide,Edith Jackson, Lorraine Jones, BettyJulestrom, Isabelle Kohn, Erma Kallen,Ruth Kline, Jacqueline Kompare, DorothyKozinski, Louise Kachel, Joan Linden,Bibs Ludgin, Genevra Lorish, Lois Laur-ance, Shirlee Lowry, Barbara Moss, MaryMacIntyre, Anne MaePherson, Perle Min-des, Margaret McColley, Marge Moffet,Estelle Mass, Janet Nice, Dorothy Nelson,Rosemary Peacock, Wynne Peterson, Pat¬ty Pickett, Carla Peterson, Muriel Nidety,Georgiana Rogers, Doris Ruzek, NancyRice, Mary Alice Reed, Barbara Reece,Helen Roff, Pat Stone, Barbara Smith,Gloria Sandalis, Jean Staver, Alice Sheean,Betty Jane Smith, Marjorie Shollenberg,Kathleen Taylor, Georgia Tauber, Marjor¬ie Tufts, Marjorie Tompkins, MargeyThompson, Shirley Vanderwalker, MarthaVaughn, Adele Whitaker, Eileen Wiseman,Barbara Winchester, Dorothea Wixom, Lo¬is Wells, Cecile Scharfenberg, Donis Fish¬er, Lois Jacobs, Mary Guild, Esther Moel-lenhoff, Ruth Pollock, Polly Golstein, ElaineSiegal.Reserve Counselors:Janet Calkins, Ruth Ernst, Evelyn Fine,Ruth Holland, Shirley Horwitz, JohannaHusslein, Estelle Kalleck, Idell Lowen-setin, Deborah Nathan.Ericsoii ElectedNew. IF PresidentLast week at the Board of the In- jter-fraternity council, Eric Ericson ofKappa Sig was appointed President ofthe board for 1943. Craig Lehman,Deke," vice president, Phi Sig MikeBarisch, secretary, and Phi Gam EdHussey, Social Chairmon. The treas¬urer will be elected at some time inthe future by the members of theBoard. Alpha Delta Phi, Psi Upsilon,Delta Upsilon, Zeta Beta Tau, andPhi Kappa Psi are excluded becausetheir representatives held positions inthe outgoing board.At the same time it was reportedto the MAROON that DU PresidentGene Gleason had been elected head ofIM.The functions of Inter-fraternitycouncil are tremendously curtailed bythe war. For that reason the only ac¬tivity definitely planned by the coun¬cil for the year to come will be a du¬bious annual fraternity sing. Rushingrules, if any are needed, will be takencare of when the time comes.English CompetitionTo Be Held In BondThe preliminary competition for theannual Florence James Adams .Eng¬lish Contest will be held at BondChapel at 4 o’clock on May the twelfth.All students interested in the contestmust be registered by May 6 withProfessor Frank O’Hara, who is incharge of the contest, during his of¬fice hours from 12 to 1 o’clock onTuesdays and Thursdays.This contest is open to all under¬graduate students registered for twoor more courses in the present quar-quarters. Winners of former contestsThose who pass the preliminarycompetition will meet at Bond Chapelat 4 o’clock on the fourteenth of May.The MAROON extends its sin¬cere thanks to the picture editorand his associates of the ChicagoSun who went out of their way toenable us to publish their picturesof Marshall Field and Silliman Ev¬ans. Betty Fanning |Adds Mirror to |D. A. Laurels IOn Thursday, April 22, the present JMirror board elected Betty Fanningto head the dormant organization 'Iduring the coming year. Other mem-bers elected to serve on the board ^were Barbara Gilfillan, Peygy Wil¬liams, Beverly Glenn, Sue Bohnen andJean Cleary. The group did not pre- - isent its annual production this yeardue to difficulties encountered becauseof the war and has decided to remaininactive for the duration.Although Miss Fanning had pre¬viously been elected to the presiden¬cy of the Dramatic Association, the 1retiring board passed up several oth- ^er outstanding candidates and brokea long-standing University precedentto establish her as president of a sec- ^ond major campus organization. Inresponse to widespread inquiries re¬garding whether the aption were a }violation of University rules, theelectors received from Dean Scott anassurance that, “There is no rule ofthe University regarding such action.It has merely been the policy of the -iadministration in the past to discour¬age the concentration of influence andopportunity for experience in thehands of a small group or an individ¬ual.’’The incumbent board was entirelyselected by the out-going board con¬sisting of Janet Peacock, Janet Wag¬ner, Virginia Nichols, Chloe Roth,Libby McKey, Genevieve Hackett " andJane Moran. This was a clear viola^tion of the constitution, which pro¬vided that any member may vote inthis election and that the electionmust take place before the beginningof the spring quarter.^ValueWeeie^HugeSuccess — MitchellWith the topic''“For What ValuesAre Men Searching" the All CampusConference proved recently that theChicago student can function withease in the rarefied atmosphere ofhigher thought.During the week thirty-five meet¬ings were held by the fraternities,clubs, church groups, and various in¬terested organizations on the campus.In all about 750 students took partand in every instance, without excep¬tion, a genuine interest in the confer¬ence was expressed.No specific conclusions were reach¬ed, however, though a deeper appreci¬ation of the goals and purposes of lifewas brought out. There is an essentialneed for further discussion on thesubject.This represents a supreme achieve¬ment of inter-organizational coopera¬tion and proves beyond a doubt thatorganizations can combine and workefficiently together.Professor H. G. Wells,Pathologist, DeadLast week the flag in the circle flewat half mast. It did so in the memoryof Professor emeritus H. GideonWells. Monday morning he died atBillings hospital, at 67, of heart dis¬ease.Dr. Wells joined the University ofChicago in 1901. Since then he has notonly served the University brilliant¬ly, but has become America’s leadingauthority on chemical pathology andthe pathology of cancer and tubercu¬losis.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION ^imACTTVITIES MERGE: ■4MIRROR-D. A. TIEUPPage TwoThe Chicago MaroonEntered January 13. 1943, as third class mail in the Uuited StatesPostal Service. The official student Publication of the University ofChicago, published every Friday during Fall, Winter and Springquarters.MemberPlssocided Colle6iafe PressDistributor ofGjUebiote Di6estBOARD OF CONTROLPublisherFeature EditorNews EditorSports EditorAdvertising ManagerCirculation ManagerComptroller Rick MeanaDave Smothers.... Dorothy GranquistVictor HerbertWard SharbachShirley VanderwalkerBetsy KuhASSOCIATES , .Mary Stone, Jessie Polachek, Barbara Ortlund, Sheldon Newberger,Kurt Melchior, Ellen Rosenblum, Alice Traznik, Helen Roff, BillFriend, Ben Friedman, Bill Gibbs, Marvin Greenberger, Bob Mitchell.NIGHT EDITOR,Bob MitchellTELEPHONESDorchester 7279 or Campus Extension 351.PersonalPrejudiceby Dave SmothersLast Wednesday morning the Chicago Trib¬une published a front page cartoon outstandingin that paper’s record of irresponsible journal¬ism. The cartoon was titled, “The Spear ThatKnows No Brother”. A heroic figure labeled “thebrave spirit of Poland” stood facing a symbolicalNazi flag. Behind him a dark and bloody spearwas flying into his back: the spear was labeled“Communism”.Even more disgraceful was the long, wordyeditorial published in the same issue. There, un¬der the title of “Stalin Denounces Poland,” Col¬onel McCormack’s trained editorial writersbrought up a barrage of bombast and slanderagainst the Russian people. They did their jobwell.“DOUBLE DEALING AND COOPERATION”“Obviously,” intoned the voice of the World’sGreatest Newspaper, “if the Atlantic Chartermeans anything, England and America must de¬nounce the proposed rape of Poland ... The Com-misars know that their conduct in the past hasmade it easy to believe the story of the mass mur¬der of the 10,000 officers. As the Bolshevists havemurdered millions of their own people, includingmany hundreds of their revolutionary comrades,there is no inherent reason to believe that themen who ordered all these executions 'syould hesi¬tate on humanitarian grounds to kill a relative¬ly small number of Polish leaders.“It doesn’t take much of a psychologist toexplain the tone of the Russian declaration. Itsprings from a sense of guilt, and, characteris¬tically, the Russians accuse their victims of thevery sins of which the Russians are manifestlyguilty: imperialist ambition, double dealing, andcooperation with the Nazis.”ANTAGONIZE AND SLANDERThe Russian-Polish break is the first fissurebetween the United Nations to this date. It isone which, in some form or other, could havebeen, and was, foretold many months ago. Theobvious danger and importance of the situation isso manifest that the leaders of both Britian andthe United States are in the position of a fat manwalking tight-rope over Niagra.If we had not already been told so, then, wecould be sure that the diplomats of both our coun¬tries are doing their utmost to reconcile, if onlyfor the time being, Russia and Poland. It is a del¬icate, dangerous, undertaking.For that reason an article and a cartoon suchas that published by the Tribune is the worstkind of irresponsible, damaging journalism. Itis bad enough to deliberately insult an ally who,through their own sheer courage, have turned thetide of war. But to antagonize, slander, and spitupon the government and leaders of the Russianpeople when the United Nations teeter on thebrink of suspicion and disunity is criminal.TRIBUNE UNWORTHYIn times of war a newspaper has a tremendousresponsibility. An organ such as the Tribune,circulating as it does across the whole widebreadth of the Middle West, bears that responsi¬bility three fold. It should be a duty and a privi¬lege to exercise so much influence. The ChicagoTribune proves now, as it has proved in the past,that it is unworthy of both. Legality or Tradition?IThe recent Mirror election has caused consid¬erable comment in campus circles regarding theconcentration of two major offices in the handsof single individual. Although no clear-cut ac¬tivities rule has been violated by the selection ofBetty Fanning to head both the Dramatic Asso¬ciation and Mirror, it might be well to questionthe validity of this ‘appointment’.A review of the facts of the case reveals thatdespite the absence of an established Universityprohibition upon the action it has been the un¬written policy of the administration to opposethe control of several activities by one person oreven a single group. Regarding the rather lameexcuse of the war, it would indeed seem an ab¬surdity to place the blame for the apparent in¬ability to find a suitable candidate to head an all¬girl organization upon the dearth of male appli¬cants.POLITICAL FLIMFLAMThe Mirror constitution provides that anyperson having membership in the organizationduring the current year may vote in the selec¬tion of the board members of the succeeding or¬ganization and that this election must take placebefore the commencement of the spring quarter.Membership had formerly been determined bythe payment of a three dollar fee but it had beenwaived this year because of the abandonmentof production, thus retaining the same member¬ship lists as the year before. Only the sevenmembers of the present board were allowed tovote in the belated election.Despite the apparently irregular action ofthe board, excusable because of unusual condi¬tions, there can be no condonement of the fla¬grant transgression upon the traditions inherent¬ly protective of the individuality and independ¬ence of activities. By no rational stretch of theimagination can the energies of war-time be ap¬plied to this situation. Rather than an adjust¬ment to the exgencies of these times, it is a veryobvious piece of political flimflam.Western FrontCan't WaitLast week a hoary issue was revived and hail¬ed by various commentators as “the first Con¬gressional battle of the war.” Behind the stirringleadership of Tennessee’s Mr. Chandler a groupof belligerent Congressmen brayed: “We arebetraying the great American hero, DouglasMacArthur. We are repudiating the memory ofthe boys of Bataan. Why do we waste our timein Lybia when we are ignoring the real battle¬ground of this war: the South Pacific?”“WIPE THEM FROM THE EARTH”And when Washington announced that theToyko raiders had been shot, our choicest Ameri¬ca Firsters shouted, practically foaming at themouth: “What are we doing loafing around theSahara? Our job is to wipe forever from the faceof the earth the bloodthirsty, subhuman. Nean¬derthal, simian, lustful beasts of Nippon; tomarch with the gleaming torch of vengeancethrough the southern isles of the Pacific and ridthis planet’s surface of the crawling vermin’spresence.” Practically spitting, men like Hamil¬ton Fish said in effect: “The blood of those mar¬tyred boys crys out to us; they must be revengedwith every ounce of the country’s resources.”The Chicago Tribune, cloaking itself with a togaof dignity, depicted a fearfully solemn Americaand intoned: “Carthage must be destroyed.”KEEP OUR MOMENTUMThe memory of our defeats and our victoriesin those islands may well have influenced manypeople to agree with these men. Nevertheless,the stirring allusions of their flamboyant rheto¬ric should certainly not be allowed to lead any oneof us to follow their advice.Now, for the first time in four years of war,the Allied Nations are driving forward. In Rus¬sia and Africa the armies that have so long fal¬len back before the Nazis are now in attack. Theoutposts of both the Italian peninsula and Ger¬many are threatened, their panzer divisions, re¬treating steadily towards their own borders.Since 1939 Germany has consistently used oneinvincible weapon. That weapon was momentum.Now, with town after town, battle after battle,falling to our forces, that weapon is ours. It mustnot be wasted.The South Pacific, important as it is, can wait.But, with the rhythm of conquest in our hands,Germany and North Africa cannot wait. Traveling BazaarDEPT OF DKE PINSQ. Moore flung his long maintainedbachelorhood to the winds last week,and pinned Eso Mary Augustine. EarlBromstead has hung his pin on an offcampus girl with whom weVe neverbeen acquainted. Bill Goes and ShirleyVanderwalker are divorced.DEPT OF WEARING WEEKENDSThe Mortar Boards had a party Sat¬urday night at the Windermere East.Coffee Shop GoneOut of BusinessLast Monday evening the CoffeeShop closed its doors for the last time.With this, the most recent of the ar-my’s appropriations at Chicago, thelast vestiges of peacetime college lifewent off campus.From this week forward the “C”shop will be the property of the Unit¬ed States Army. On May 10, accordingto assistant Business Manager How¬ard B. Matthews, a new block of Ar¬my Basic Training men will arrive oncampus. The Coffee Shop is the onlyavailable dining space to accommodatethem. Eating in shifts, they will vir¬tually take up the whole day, and theuniversity must move out.Driven from the Shop, the studentbody find themselves forced intovast, crowded Hutchinson Commons.There Miss Nellie F. Polk, head dieti¬cian, is converting- the cafeteria to awartime Coffee Shop makeshift. Be¬ginning last Tuesday the Commonsremained open all afternoon servingcoffee, ice cream, and coffee cake.Gone, however, is any vestige of ta¬ble service. Henceforward all trademust be conveyed through the meansof tin trays.But with the death of the CoffeeShop the question naturally arose:“which next?” Both Miss Polk andMr. Matthews firmly believe it willnot be Hutchinson Commons. Spreading rays of sunshine were Bet-sy Wallace and Paul Russell, Nor-norEvans and Martey Hanson, Janet Pea¬cock with Joe Hackett, who is backwaiting to be sent somewhere else,Prexy Betty Fanning with Don Cron-son, and Vytold Yasus with a greatbig voluptous bottle of bourbon—nowthere’is the man for us!THE SIGMAShad a social inclinations on Satur-day night, too. They threw a big partyover at Dottie Duffs. Dottie was with—let me see—Oh, yes! Dana Johnson.Dottie Duncan and her off campusman had a bang-up time sitting andstaring at each other. Dottie explainedbitterly, “He wouldn’t dance, hewouldn’t play bridge, he wouldn ’t donothin’ ”. Barbara Winchester andJerry Moore, Jean Caswell and St.George Johnson, Sally Lofgren andBob Harper danced dreamily exceptwhen Harper’s head and the low raft¬ers connected. Bill Goes and ShirleyVanderwalker got along beautifully.ORCHESTRA ’N EVERYTHINGmade the Sigma Chi party very nice.People began to notice AubreyMoore dancing around with a tuxedoon, but minus his shoes and socks. Ab¬sent minded, no doubt. In the semi¬gloom we could make out Dottie Gran¬quist and Sandy, home for the week¬end, Emil Ritter and Ernie Rowe, andsome people whom we didn’t have theplea.sure of meeting.DEP’T OF MOON AND JUNEAdele Whitaker has been flashingan engagement ring given her by HalGordon. Wonder if this will start an¬other DKE precedent. Adele has beenpreparing for married life by carry¬ing on in a nutrition class. The otherday she informed us that vitamin Aprevented beri-beri, while vitamin Bprevented scurry-scurry.Elaine Hackett is wearing a pair ofsilver wings sent her by Corporal JoeMoore.rM WRiUNGmWW f WfSH M'60 POWN TOmcornu FOK 41WITH THC 6AH6'"In his letter home, even a generalin Africa recalled happy momentswith ice-cold Coca-Cola. There’ssomething about Coca-Cola. Evernotice how you associate it with hap¬py moments? There’s that delicioustaste you don't find this side ofCoca-Cola, itself. Ifs a chummydrink that people like right-out-of-the-bottle. Yes siree, the only thinglike Coca-Cola is Coca-Cola, itself.”'W, FOR AN ICF-COLOCOCA-COLA*'•OniED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY SYCOCA-COLA BOTTLING CO., OF CHICAGO, INC.ELECTRONICBOMBARDMENTby Jerry Douglas PotterYour columnist wishes to express noend of gratitude for the splendid andenthusiastic way in which his literaryoffering was received last week. Tocarry on from there, let us review themost recent social events: First of all,the graduation banquet of class four,which was held at the QuadrangleClub, and attended by many of thosein “who’s who”, namely Col. C. N.Sawyer, “U.H.F.” Brainerd and DeanBorhey; also Drs. Moon, Shaw, andHoyt, the valedictorian .being J. S.Robbs. Then there was the SpringSwing Dance, which was held at IdaNoyes, and attended by quite a few ofour boys, turned out to be a veryhappy little clam bake. Yours trulytalked to the girls of the social clubthat sponsored this dance in regardsto the possibility of running a dancefor the electronics men. If this shouldmeet with your pleasure, let’s hearmore about it soon.Sun • •••(Continued from page one)resented on ideal to them. They leftsecure jobs all over the country be¬cause they felt that here was a chanceto work on an honest, liberal, fightingnewspaper. They, too, are discouraged.Over half are planning to quite unlesssomething is done. That something isthe dynamic leadership the Sun soearnestly needs.I don't think Marshall Field is sat¬isfied with the Sun. He has shownthis in his constant change of per¬sonnel, his search for a combinationthat will work. Now', he himself hastaken over the direction of editorialpolicy. This is a step that holds muchpromise for the future. The next moveIS to get rid of Publisher SillimanEvans and assistants Frank Taylor,Charles Cushing and Clem Randau—men who represent Southern reac¬tion—and replace them with fightersof the Sam Grafton, Max Lerner,Ralph Ingersoll type.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, John Robert Gregg, S.C.D.Director, Paul M. Pair, M.A.6 N. Michigan Ave. Chicago^ Now under^arm qCream 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 to Everything seems to be under con¬trol in class five. The members ofwhich really enjoy and absorb thedaily lectures in spite of an almostcontinuous series of 9G’s directly ov¬erhead by the airforce boys. Thissometimes has us hanging on theropes, but we are usually saved bythe bell. “If you know what I mean”.By the way, have you heard thatquartet consisting of flute, flute, flute,and flute ? Manned by P. Acri, G. Loe,Podiwels, and M. Greenhouse, whoserenade the squirrels on the campusdaily with jive music. These symptomsmay look bad, but the boys are reallysolid. John Barker got a new watchand is so happy about it, that he runsaround the campus trying to tell ev¬erybody the time, but the trouble is,there are so many B.T.O.’s around,that it is difficult to find anyone whodoesn’t know what time it is.Under the heading of new businesscomes Podiwels and Baumgardner,who became fathers of Signal Corpsprospects. Then we have Sam Faran-tur and Edward Kronisch, who gotthemselves married to a couple ofcharming girls, and with the newsthat class six will contain girls afterMay 3rd, it will probably be everyman for himself from then on. Settlement TagDay May 5 and 6The Student Settlement Board an¬nounces that the annual Tag Day forthe benefit of the University Settle¬ment will be held on Wednesday andThursday, May 5 and 6. For the newstudents who are not familiar withthis custom, the Board wishes to em¬phasize that this Tag Day is strictlya university function in that all pro¬ceeds go directly to our own Univer¬sity Settlement. Page Throe“.. .settlement class’*To those students who have helpedmake Settlement Tag Day such asuccess in the past, the Student Boardexpresses its appreciation and asksthe further cooperation from all tomeet the Settlement’s greater needscreated by wartime emergencies.IMPORTANTNEW BOOKSThe Universities Look For UnityJohn U. Nef, Professor of EconomicHistory, Executive Secretary, Com¬mittee on Social Thought, The Uni¬versity of Chicago.A timely thought provoking study of needed educa¬tional reforms. A most important contribution to thepost-war educational policy $0.50Pioneer To The PastThe Story of James H. BreastedCharles Breasted, son of James H.Breasted, correspondent, and Sci¬ence Editor of Life Magazine, nowin Government Service in the NearEast.This book tells the intensely human, often poignant¬ly moving story of the brilliant career of JamesHenry Breasted, the greatest Orientalist and ar-chaelogist America has yet produced $3.50♦The Tennessee Valley AuthorityC. Herman Pritchett, AssistantProfessor of Political Science, TheUniversity of Chicago.The first general study of the program and adminis¬tration of one of the most successful and forward-looking New-Deal Agencies $3.50University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue one who wants to help can see me in tthe volunteer office at Billings hospi-’tal,’ says Miss Elvin.. ... ■ ■ ..Volunteers NeededVolunteers are needed in Billings,Bobs Roberts, and Lying-in Hospitals,announces Jean Elvin. director of vol¬unteers. “Play Ladies” for the chil¬dren’s hospital and girls to work inthe Clinics Admitting office and in theClinics themselves are especiallysought. “This interesting work is un- LOST-ere.n»h gabardine raincoat aomcusually important since the hospital j victor Herbert; , ,staffs are so reduced by the war. Any- 5,,, woodiawn. pla 9647.CLASSIFIEDFOR SALE — Men’s Dress Suit, 3&. Both >tux and tails, good as new; bargain. Mid. v' tf1676.Store Hourg^ Monday through Saturday9 9:4S to Ss4SSUDS DUNKER0Crinkly striped seersuckerstreet as cotton candyIt likes a bubbly bath as much as you,and has an edge on the usual cottonsbecause of rows of rickrack and ruffles ofeyelet embroidery. In red and white,blue and white, brown and whitestriped seersucker; 9-15. $9.95College Shop—Sixth FloorPage FourMaroonsvs.IowaBaseballToday^AndiTomorrow.Trackmen Plus Netmen Upset N U 6-3Michel Goes With ERGMeets in Rom - After last Monday’s stirring upset Bob Tully, Phil Glotzer, Dan Heffron',overL* Northwestern, Wally Hebert’s Frank Trovillion, Dick Fine andc’^u'-unpredictable U of C net team has a Deitelbaum, all freshmen with the ex- :busyf weekend to look forward to. Af- ception of Tully.terJ^Thursday’s game with the power- Altho the team won its first three 'ful , Notre Dame squad and today’s frames with walkaway scores. >:theagainst Minnesota, the Chicago team meets were against poor teams .andtravelsi to Madison for a game with until last weekend the team was still ^the Badgers, victors over the Maroons a big question-mark. Against a fairly?;tej! . good Wisconsin squad, the team had,.£'|;' ^Th^squad .will have' to face theseteams'.minus the services of WallyMichel.:only >eteran from last year.Michel left Wed pressed his doubts over another,.-vie*; ^to leave an unreplaceable hole in the year. >.linerup. Earl Theimer will play in the Monday the defending ConfertiivcP*leadoffispot for the rest of the sea- champions from Northwestern cantoson, with undefeated Grover Daly as to the Midway. Michel and Theinior :•number .two. Irv Drooyan, meteorolo- were beaten, but the lower end of the .gist student with Big,.Ten experience team managed to win three matchesduring; his’..collegiate days at Ohio and split even with NU in singles!State! will help the team on weekends. ..Then the team hit a climax when it.i;>\^ith;the exception ofithese three, the won all three doubles encounters^and’rest of the squad will be made up of i took the meet 6-3.The revitalized Maroon track teani;scored an impressive 70 points in'jtsfinal 1943 appearance on Stagg Field’last week to maintain its undefeatri-ed record and swamp Loyola, runnep;'up with 38 points. Navy Pier, 31, and;Illinois Tech, 26. - , . ??'^“Meteor” Hlad..?r ■■- Charles (‘‘Whitey”) Hlad, the Ma-.roon meteorology cadet, owner of thejWorld’s ;,60 yard high hurdles mark,^branched out, in leading the Maroonsto victory, winning the high and low,hurdles and?,^he 100 yard dash, plac^;;■ ing second Kins the javelin throw, and;.tying for third in the. high, jump, for.an aggregate-of 19 points.' Seven Wr*Nine' Chicago won seven of the- nine»trackjxevents, though failing to win onthe field. The other; Chicago winnerswere Buddy Melin in the 880, ^Johnson.Clarke-in;the 220, John McKean in*the•-r*'two,..mile,’.the relav team, composed’(»*. '‘A,., .' ’ ' ' ”, ■: ^ •Nineteen Athletes?;Leaves With ERCvThe ERQ has gone, and with it hasgone, 19 of the U of C rapidly dimin¬ishing? pool | of .athletes; iHardest^ hitarelthe-baseballKanditennisKteams-Wally Michel.is.|he,pnlj^ tennis loss,but as number oneAthiP,year<jhe hasadded , experience-'f.toXanraotherwise100^/ change .from*' last year’sCsuc-cessful squad. The'nine losti^almost anentire infield^ oLJlHarveyl-V.Rose,^^. lb.,Nick’^ Melas, ■2b.,v.hard-hitting?',PaulHomer, ss.,' and .-pitcherJerry.-.S9I0-mon. The well-fortified,';XwithvArinvboys) track team suffers a minor lossin Ned Munger and Jim^enger BjbOakley s loss, to the golf iteamK aboutwrites' finis, to that unsuccesful group.K*'; ’-5V'" ■,1,11c relay?team, composedof Ralph"Behiiett, Bob Dalef Hal Gor-don,',:and Clark.-Chicago, scored,in ev-ery -event and placed two-men: in-^ev,--erythjng except, thegSO,^ dijus, jave|.lin,;<and^ broad junipt.?? The5,Chicagopoint? swinners, 'in additionVYo' tlfose'listldt'abovef were 'tMarvin-*- ShapifitAubrey Moore, Craig Leman, ^ i^obBeilfolcar?* SchaafBoV 'WrTght^f Bob^Jazier, and Dick Rider:^. ‘ V-? .r-.Y4>' ’ ."I Big Six' ^5; Tomorrowv the track .men move,, onto Dyche Stadium' where they willtake-on, in'addition to the NStthwes?,terh^hosts, Indiana,'Purdue, Minneso¬ta, and Wisconsin, in^a preview of theBig Ten meet two weeks off.’? . TVS8^"try:.Sjdr^c^. ■Tennisjtour^^;^The . deadline a for? theZWomeh’sTennis Tournament has' bei^Z'ex;tended until next Monday.":Awardswill be given to winners andirun-nersSp; Sign ur ar Idt ^N'oyfc'orat, Foster Hall. ■ '.I.K■WITHFuture UncertainThe ■struggiingfMarb’on'-golf'teamlost its ..third :straikhtrhrateh'6f'theseasoh;wheh iilindV;tbbk-',^';i345 en-counter" at Olympia Fields last Mon¬day. Th'e;'^:Mardons;;iprey)pus ' lossesw'ere toTHlinois;?XechZanY""N,orthw!es-tern.,;:::;;/;‘::ztZzZy-TheYeam’s future ist rather hazysince iChks lost Bob^akley," who withJohn - CaJh'pbMi- has. 'tlietotal of -the team’s* 10' points in itsthree unsuccessful .encounters. fek\ \k ■“ NV *\ '. Music in the Morgan Manner...KV ...Beautiful Setting of the AnnualBIOSsoF E S T I V A iAdmission o5cIncluding Tax’, .teifeiliiiioitght to^see the smooth jobrow does oh shirts F* Special "Student Tickets at Activities Windoiv.•'» H) t . •: - IN THE BEAUTIFULMARINE DINING ROOMrrow does on ihirtsrFOR [LUNCH, ;AFTER the THEATRE,'RAy§J?Ajs«Ack ■You 'can ^always': ALEXAMDER'S1137 E. 63rd at University^13/6 E. 63rd at Dorchester SHIRTS • TIES • HANDKERCHIEFS • UNDERWEAR • SPORT SHIRTSBUT WAR BONDS AN D STAMPS ★