Six Fraternities ToStart Rushing MondayI ralornity rushing starts its annual squirrel-cage next'Monday, Simul-lanooiisly, the MAROON, as it has done each year for decades, herebylists those fraternities still active for the benefit of aspiring freshmen.ALPHA DELTA PHIAlpha Delta Phi is laying out aplan to be the first fraterniTy on thequadrangles to continue without ahouse. Its opportunities are great,since it presents several advantagesthat other houses cannot have under Founded at Hamilton College in1832, AD Phi quickly rose to promin¬ence throughout the country. TheChicago chapter was established in1896. Prominent alumni include Rob- Ihe Tho/ioon,' ■ IVol. 3, No. 3 Z-149 Friday, October 8, 1943 Price Four Cent'sNEW RUSH RULES^vartime restrictions. The membersarc surprised to-find themselves to-jrothcr at this time but seven menhave returned with a strong desire tocontinue. Three other men will partic¬ipate in a limited capacity, since theheavy burden of medical school workprevents full participation.The plan adopted may work outvery well since Dean Scott has giventhe fraternity permission to use thechapter room of Alpha Delta Phifor meetings. This room remained inthe hands of the brothers at the timea contract Was signed with the uni¬versity for the leasing of the prop¬el ty ns a dormitory and clubhouse forthe duration of the war. ert M. Hutchins, Franklin D. Roose¬velt, James Russell Lowell, OliverWendell Holmes, Harlan Stone, Thorn¬ton Wilder, and Stephen VincentBenet.KAPPA SIGMAAmerica’s largest national fra¬ternity, Kappa Sigma, was foundedat the University of Virginia on De¬ cember 10, 1869. Before the war therewere over 115 active chapters operat¬ing throughout the nation, and 3 inCanada.Gamma Beta chapter received itscharter in 1904, and throughout theensuing years has maintained a posi¬tion consistent with the ideals of theUniversity and with the best inter¬ests of the individual members—stressing loyalty, sound financial man¬agement, scholarship, participation incampus activities, and close bonds ofbrotherhood. The chapter now consistsof four active members, who live atthe Kappa Sig house, 5715 Woodlawn.No meals will be served at the housefor the duration.Several living alumni are HoagyCarmichael, Governor Dwight Greenof Illinois, Hill Blackett, Lowell Thom¬as, and Hamilton Baker.PHI GAMMA DELTAFounded in old Jefferson College(now Washington and Jefferson) atCanonsburg, Pa., on May 1, 1848, PhiGamma Delta is one of the oldestGreek letter societies. Chi Upsilon ofI’hi Gamma Delta was chartered atthe University of Chicago on May 19,1002.The Chi Upsilon chapter has 12 ac¬tive nu mbers and 4 pledges, and stillserves meals as usual at their house,Woodlawn.lew of the prominent alumni areCalvin Coolidge, Lew Wallace, Rock¬well Kent, and Glenn Cunningham.I’Hl SIGMA DELTAIn 1912 the Phi Sigma Delta Na¬tional Fraternity was founded to fos¬ter the spirit of brotherhood amongAmerican undergraduates. The Muehapter, at the University of Chicago,was founded in 1920.Thirteen actives constitute thechapter body, which meets at thechapter house, 5625 Woodlawn, and isonly serving breakfasts. PI LAMDA PHI ^Pi Lamda Phi was founded nation¬ally in 1895 at Yale, dedicated to theideal of tolerance and understanding.Illinois Omicron chapter was foundedin 1919.The Pi Lams are very proud of thefraternity. Every year rhey give an(Continued on page four) GDance ToSpotlight IF Council InnovatesWartime Legislation1943 CourtThe Social Committee, despite itsapparent lack of material, has drafteda plan worthy of palmier days. Theirprojects were justified by the successof the first C dance of the year whenIda Noyes was packed with datedmeteorologists and grateful patrons ofthe newly estaj^lished Date Bureau.They hope the dance tomorrow, willdo as well for itself. Last month theoccasion was highlighted by the pres¬entation of Freshman Queen MerilynMcGurk. This Saturday the entirefreshman beauty court, as presentedby the MAROON last week, will bepresent. Last time Ida Noyes dancefloor was so crowded that a deepbreath was a social error; for the firsttime in months couples were drivenout for lack of standing space in theback room. With the date bureau inwell lubricated operation, with fifteenfreshmen beauties (count ’em) insteadof one, tomorrow night should do aswell.The Social Committee Date bureau,which brought happiness into the lives6t so ** rfi&Yif ' lOfiely' TfesKmen*' ‘aridequally lonely soldiers, is supposed tohave organized itself by this week. Asdescribed in the last issue of the MA¬ROON, the bureau is a two way lonelyhearts club, a system with a Christianspirit dedicated to introducing unac¬quainted freshmen and soldiers. Lastweek the dance was packed withmeteorologists and regular collegemen; tomorrow the ASTP men will beincluded. .(Continued on page four)Navy V12, ArmySpecialist Corps Dilute VersionOf Coffee ShopIn PX; CokeharLast year they carried the CoffeeShop away and buried it six feet down.Last Monday it was exhumed andpropped up again in Ida Noyes. Allthe es.sential elements were present:packed tables, noisy competition be¬tween bawdy songs in the pit and anewly installed juke box; a few Mor¬tarboards determinedly playing bridgein the far corner.The newly opened coke bar plans tocontinue on its same limited menufrom three to five every afternoon.Advertising itself as newer and betterthan the Coffee Shop, it proved an ac¬ceptable substitute. A gaudy juke box,dragged in at around 3:30, lent theonly permanent note. The companywill let it stay there only so long aspeople keep feeding nickles to it: adrop in business and the beautifulthing jadlL bw.-iarried .away.The Coke bar’s opening coincidedwith the beginning of this year’s clubrushing. True to Coffee shop traditioneach club held down its private tableand competed in luring wanderingfreshmen women to their own exclu¬sive webs.The night before a simultaneousCoffee Shop extract, the Campus PX,had been revived in the same buildingwith equal success. The same songs,the same confusion, the same packedtables turned up. Between the two thenotorious tradition of the Coffee Shopseemed to have already managed toget head and shoulders out of thegrave. Beta Theta Pi AndPsi U Semi-activeFreshmen men’s festivities get un¬der way next Monday when eight fra¬ternities (with houses and without)get off on their annual rushing raceto last until eleven o’clock Friday, thetwenty-second. Beta Theta Pi and PsiUpsilon are carrying on an abbreviat¬ed rushing schedule, while the thirddehoused organization, Alpha DeltaPhi, continues with a full program.The calendar for the two week periodfollows:October 11—open rushingOstober 12—open rushingOctober 13—Phi Sigma Delta andPhi Gamma DeltaOctober 14—Zeta Beta Tau andKappa SigmaOctober 15—open rushingOctober 16-17—no rushingOctober 18—open rushingOcotber 19—Alpha Delta Phi ,andPi Lambda PhiOctober 20—open rushingOctober 21—^last night of rushing—open ‘October 22—signing up at IdaNoyes Hall.—Only''“‘‘^"**cijmpetirig '•fratettilttesscheduled may carry on rushing activ¬ities on the three closed rushingnights.Rushing rules this year (this year?)are to be hard and fast and any fra¬ternities found practicing illegal rush¬ing will be fined fifty dollars and for¬bidden pledging. All alledged offenseswill be tried by members of the In¬terfraternity Council composed of menbelonging to those fraternities notparticipating in the rushing program.The rushing activities are to be con¬fined to campus limits and rushees’homes and are tabu explicity at anyplace serving liquor. Rush hours are(Continued on page four)Examinations Due PREVIEW OF NEXT WEEK'S DEBACLEThe second nation-wide test for meninterested in the Army SpecializedTraining Program and the Navy Col¬lege V-12 Program will be held onthe morning of November 9,1943. Menstudents between the ages of 17 and22 who are interested may receiveinformation and eligibility require¬ments in Cobb 208. Ther qualifyingtest is the first step in the selectionof men for the Army and Navy Col¬lege Programs. It is designed to meas¬ure the aptitude and general knowl¬edge required for success in the pro¬grams.The purpose of the ASTP is to pro¬vide technicians and specialists. Menselected will attend colleges and Uni¬versities determined largely by theirown qualifications. They will be sol¬diers on active duty, receiving regularpay. Students are expected to receivecollege credits for their work. Thepurpose of the Navy program is toprovide officers for the Navy, MarineCorps, and Coast Guard. Men selectedwill be assigned to college under navycontract. The length of the variouscourses varies considerably, depend¬ing upon the degree of specializationrequired. The Botany Pond is used for all sorts of things, from objec¬tionable freshmen to precoscious Bazaar writers. Its most import¬ant function, hbwever, is the annual freshman-upperclassman Bot¬any Pond fight. Next Friday, despite the war, Chicago’s manliesttradition will be upheld. On a campus where most manifestationsof flaming youth and wild college life have gradually disappeared,the battle is one of the last holdovers from a campus filled withbroad chested, husky college men, where squads of ASTP men andmeteorologists had never marched on campus of the Universityof Chicago.Page TwoThe Chicago MaroonEntered January 13, 1943, as third class mail in the United StatesPostal Service. The official stident Publication of the University ofChicago, published every Friday during Fall, Winter and Springquarters.BOARD OF CONTROLManaging Editor Dave SmothersNews Editor Dave SmothersBusiness Manager Ward SharbachSports Editor John CampbellSales and Promotion Editor Bob DilleMakeup editor Dorothy GranquistCirculation Manager Sandy SulcerASSOCIATESAnn Huntington, Rosemary Peacock, Eddie Meyers, Ruth Ernst,Eugene Bahnsen, Bud Steenberg, Bill Friend, Mary McCaffrey, DonShields. Mary Augusta Rodgers, Jim Ratcliffe, Robert Fiffler, Mary-lou Landis. Connie Plasman, Doris Ruzck, Barbara Winchester, LoisArnett, Wayne Gasper, Bill Langner.Additional Associates—Hautz van Steenberg, Dolores Filman, NancyBusch, Sandy Selcer, Helen Panaretos, Nancy Smith, Marge Fo¬garty.Rush Week AgainIn a freshman’s calendar there are two weekscircled with red ink. One is Freshman week. Helearns that people don’t come to Chicago just tostudy; he dashes from mixers to barn dances toheart to heart talks with his counselors to thatwonderful moment when he holds the divine handin his and hears a Godlike voice murmur, “Howdo you do, Mr. Fincklewitch ?”The other is Rushing week. Some of them likeit. It seems as if these wonderful people can’tbe too nice to him; as if he’d never been reallyappreciated before he came to Chicago. Every¬body likes them: everywhere he goes anotherbosom pal is ready to lure him off into a cornerfor a man to man talk. It seems as if the Godsof the campus are chewing their fingernailsdown to the knuckles working out ways to makehim happier. All of a sudden he’s smooth andsophisticated and desirable. All of a sudden thesun breaks through and he sees mirages of fouryears’ palling with the best fellows in the world.They all like him. No matter what function hegoes to he likes the people and the people likehim. It’s all too wonderful for words.It’s different with the rest. Half of the fresh¬men men and women don’t get rushed at all. Theystand around thinking what a wonderful timetheir classmates are having—they sit homenights wondering what the other girls got thatthey ain’t got. Rushing week—such a wonderfultime for other people—is just seven more daysto them. The girls living in the same dorm arealways out—they’re at coke dates, the fashionshows; they’ve each got little black appointmentbooks; they’re always being buttonholed by thatwonderful girl from this club or the queenlyduchess from that club. They’re the left overs.All they’re able to get is a vague wave of thehand as some regal club girl sweeps by.There are others who get lots of invitations,go to lots of functions, and sit around for threehours at a time watching the other guys showhow smooth they are. Now and then some tiredsophomore will come over to him. He’ll ask wherehe’s from. Then he’ll ask what courses he’staking this year They both smile bleakly at eachother. Then the sophomore murmurs somethingabout getting him another cup of coffee and dis¬appears. For such as these' the great majorityof rushees, rushing isn’t any fun. All his jokesare a little bit flat. All the poise he ever hadseems to have left him at the door. Maybe theyget desperate—laugh like horses, give every¬thing they’ve got no matter what they think ofhim. If he’s smart he sits in a corner with a pileof potato chips and smile hopefully at every ac¬tive that wanders by.And in the end it doesn’t make much differ¬ence. The dazzling sensation from Central Highbursts like a rocket and goes out in a fizzle. Thelonely little stoop that sat in the corner wonder¬ing why nobody liked him is lead quietly to anupstairs room and solemnly bid. Everything’sover but the ghastly memory.The traditional rushing procedure is hard tochange. It will take something more than a yearof war to effect that change. The Clubs, nourish¬ed by the manpower shortage, entered this year’sfield like a pack of hungry wolves. Chicago’sfraternities, houseless and chapterless, are readyto make up for it with prestige and intensity.Just as it has been at the beginning of everyyear, there are the annual tirades against theclub-fraternity system, the customary defenseof the selection of the fit. If, as the rumors forthe last ten years have whispered, the adminis¬tration will eventually do away with clubs andfraternities the men and women of thn.sp organi¬zations haven’t let it bother them. TravelingBazaarBy Don ShieldsI see that at least ONE reader of this columnhas taken the advice offered in the FreshmanWeek issue ... I believe that was the week I toldthe freshmen to be different and they’d makeeither social successes or laughing stocks ofthemselves. . . . well, this week’s laughing-stockis Bob Speigler, the Little Boy Blah (as Winchelisays) of the psuedo-liberal world . . . Every yearwe get a group of these militants that set aboutreforming the campus to suit themselves . . .Wecan say all we please about them and the onlytime they really get angry is when we spell theirnames wrong . . . Speigler seeips to be the loud¬est and noisiest of this year’s crop . . . somebodyshould gently point out to him the difference be¬tween fame and notoriety. ..And now to more pleasant topics of conversa¬tion . . . Thosetears you’ve seenstreaming downthe faces of thecampus elite arenot for their lostvirtue but tearsof joy for thenewly institutedPX . . . RuthGreenly deservesthis week’s gold-plated glass eyefor her efforts inmaking the thinga success... LastMonday nightwas the firstREAL, Mondaynight on campus^ , since the C-ShopQueens Slade ... closed... Themaudlin sentiment it aroused reminded NelsFuqua of the C-Shop’s opening in 1927 ... Hekept up a running commentary on the evening’ssights that stiumlated those within hearing dis¬tance, Marge Fogarty and Dave Smothers in par¬ticular . . . The PX waitresses were appropriate¬ly freshwomen with Lois Boerger, Dorothy Mey¬ers, and Mary Forrest much in evidence . . . The“goodly crowd” consisted mostly of club girlsand freshman women but a few of the fraterni¬ties managed to put in an appearance. The AlphaDelts and Betas occupied a spot sandwiched be¬tween a sofa and the Sigmas . . . Mortar Boardand Quad held the corners at the other end . . .The Tau Sigs grabbed a table that was withina convenient screaming distance from the door,Kallen and DuBovy held prominent positions . . .“Great Profile” Steen appeared after the D.A. re¬hearsal so that Gasper didn’t have to representKappa Sigs all alone . . . Deanne Fons and DaveHeller, the jour¬nalistic pair, leftwhile the eveningwas young . . .Nancy P. Smythe(as in Smith)came with BillRoberts ... Meri-lyn McGurk talk¬ed with SylviaSlade about, well,whatever beautyqueens are talk-inb about thisseason . . . BothLyn Hills wereback on Campusto confuse any¬one who mayhave beenscreaming “HeyLyn. Ensignand Mrs. Lyn Leach came late, left early, stoppedlong enough for a chat with Brother Dille . . .Most daring sight of the evening was “TeddyBear” Huntington in a FUR coat . . . never toowarm for Ann ... On the whole only two com¬plaints can be lodged against the PX, (1) theroom’s too small for the crowd (2) it doesn’t stayopen long enough.The Ida coke bar is now the day to day counter¬part of the “C” shop . . . but let me give thiswarning to musically minded people (which Iwish someone had given me) . . . that juke boxat present is for ornamentation only . . . nickles,dimes, and quarters go in but damn little musicI comes out , . . . arid McGurk BMOC^ and BWOC’SStill Roam CampusEvery new year is the cue for certain Maroon traditions. Wilist the fraternities, we list the clubs, we extend a cold clammihand to the newcomers.We also list the BMOC’s and the BWOC’s. Some people anBM or BWOC’s because they made sure everybody knew about itOthers just can’t help it. The only real way, however, of spcttinian honest-to-goodness campus god is a little pin worn on the diesor the bosom as the case may be. If it resembles a long eareigoat’s head you are looking at a Nu Pi Sigma, member of the vvomen’s honor society. If it’s a pie eyed swallow encircled by a sr.akihe’s an Owl and Serpent man.Below are listed the names of some of these and other of almost equal dimensions. They are the dieties of Chicago and entitled to reverence.Gather round childrem if you want tohearHow the campus biggies conqueredfearOf being lost in the **madding crowd”.Or ending up in a big black shroud.Some B.W.O.C.’s have talent. Somework hard. Some are beautiful. Somehave personality. But each has some¬thing? to distinpruish herself from herinconspicuous sisters. They, univer¬sity women on a campus curbed bywar, still thrive on competiton andhave come out winners.Betty Lou Simpson, E.soteric, ispresident of Inter-Club, the organiza¬tion which determines the rushinpcode and establishes relationshipamong: the various clubs. Betty Fan¬ning:, a tall slender brunette, wieldsthe g:avel for the Mortar Boards. Inher freshman year she bej?an working:on the ticket committee of Mirror andis now president of that org:anization.And speaking: of Mirror, we think ofLETTER TOTHE EDITOROctober 1, 19J^3To the EditorDear Sir:7, too, am wondering ‘‘why the hell”the Socialists are griping about fra-'ternities and clubs, but more specif¬ically I am curious to know why thehell the Socialists are griping, orrather, why the hell the Socialists?Mr. Minsky may be a charming fel¬low and doubtless has reasons forediting that particular rag; he alsomust have firm convictions about whatis pseudonews and what is pseudo-socialism. What Mr. Minsky is lackingis the broad outlook and a precise rea¬son for addressing that letter to theeditor. He started out with complaintsto the editorial department on the pol¬icy of the Maroon, brought up the ivytower stuff (the Socialists' clingingvine) and then swung onto loud wailsof disappointment at finding names inthe Bazaar, but not Student Socialistnames. Was it the policy of the MA¬ROON, the ivy on the Press Building,Mr. Shields' column, fraternities, orthe cost of bananas that promptedMr. Minsky to take his poison pen inhand?I think Mr. Minsky is being ratherselfish about the whole thing. Hewants to edit and deliver his S.S. toa gullible public, write the Marooneditorial columns, choose the names toenter the Bazaar, and compose newsstories all by himself. He doesn'tleave anything for the poor Maroonstaff at all. Maybe Mr. Minsky coulddirect his executive qualities towardsharpening pencils, or installing fluor¬escent lightning in the U.T., or to justediting the S.S.And if Mr. Minsky expects to findthe Sandra in question amidst the ivy-covered towers, he's just not the cos¬mopolite and world news interpreterhe imagines. It might even be thatMr. Minsky never heard of MickeyMouse. At any rate, I never heard ofMr. Minsky.Lolly KabrineKelly Hall Sue Bohnen and Dinny Butts. SueSig:ma president, has been one of thihighlig:hts of the* Mirror revue willher clever dramatic skits. In additiojshe has participated in the DramatiiAssociation plays, both as actress aiKdirector, and the War Activities Committee. Dinny, also a Sig:ma has ])oeione of the most photog:raphed of thiMirror dancers. She, too, has a(-te(in D.A. productions, worked on thiFederation and won second place iithe poetry reading: contest. MortalBoard Connie Florian, a nonchalang:al with a baby haircut and .sophisticated humor, has appeared in the D.Aproductions and Mirror. On the SociaCommittee we have Lois Reg:nell, Sigma, as chairman. She is also a memher of Nu Pi Sig:ma, the senior wornen’s honorary society. Betty Headland’s sing:ing: has been featured iiMirror. She has been active in D.Aand is now a leader on the SociaCommittee. Betty as a memlK*r of thiQuadran^ler Club, as is Mary Trovi!lion, who is president, and a membeiof Federation. Janie Ellsworth, FedI eration president, has directed Freshman Week activities and endeavore(to convince the freshman women thathis is their campus. Blonde AmHutchinson, as leader of the Y.W.C.A.is one of those responsible for thiSnack Bar and newly initiated P>Canteen. Beverly Glenn, Sigrma, iiprogram chairman for the Y.W.C.A.publisher of the C Book and possessor of the Nu Pi goat pin. Betty Rosenheim, since her freshman year hasworked both on and behind the D.Astage. Betty too, wears the Nu Ppin. Didi Bennett, an Esoteric, hasalways been one of the lovelier Mirror chorines and Lois Arnet, Pi Deltis an ardent participant in Fedoration activities.And now for the B.M.O.C.’s. Thaisecond initial represents a vanishingspecies on all campuses which is prop¬erly known as homo sapiens. AlphaDelt Bob Dille is president of Inter-fraternity Council, chairman of theStudent Publicity Board and a mem¬ber of Owl and Serpent, the seniormen’s honorary society. Jack Bergeranother 0 and S man, is head ofOrientation, active on the social com¬mittee and a member of Beta ThetaPi. Another Beta, Don Shields, isknown for penning the Bazaar everyweek and consequently loved andhated accordingly. As to his column,any resemblance to persons living ordead are better off dead. Whitey bay¬ard, a good looking blond is an IronMask man and a member of Psi Up-silon. John Campbell, A.D. Phi, isSkull and Crescent president and cap¬tain of the golf team. Louie Levit’sclaim to fame, besides his inexhaust¬ible repertoire of bawdy songs, is thathe is the only undefeated Big Tengymnastics champion. Levit sports thebadge of the senior men’s honorary so¬ciety. Dave Smothers, an Alpha Delt,edits the campus weekly, known as theMAROON, Kappa Sig Wally Bailow,has been in Blackfriars since ’wayback. But no list would be completewithout the perennial sophomore, NelsFuqua, who since the demise of the“C” Shop, consoles himself by cor¬rupting sweet young things with hismellow memoirs in the Campus PN-QUADRANGLERBy BETTY SEIFRIEDF<»ur.ded in 18^5 as a social club topromote activities on campus, Quad-ranjrler as long been one of the tradi¬tional leaders among women’s clubs onthe quadrangles. The organization hasalways tried to continue its originalpurpose and to maintain this end thegirls of the group have always partic¬ipated in campus activities. Favoriteactivities of the group are the StudentPublicity Board, Student Social Com¬mittee. Federation, the War ActivitiesCouncil. Chapel Union, Ida NoyesCouncil, and the Student Forum. TwoQuadranglers are members of the sen¬ior women’s honorary society, Nu PiSipma.The twenty active members who re¬turned this year hold their meetingsin Classics every Monday evening.The social functions of the year in¬clude rushing parties autumn quarter;a dance, usually formal, every quar¬ter; informal coke sessions at variousintervals throughout the year; and toend the school season, a recuperativevacation together swimming and loaf¬ing at Lakeside, Michigan. Along thesports line, the Quadranglers partic¬ipate in the basketball tournamentwinter (luarter and the baseball tour¬nament spring quarter which aresponsored by Ida Noyes Hall. Lastyear, in the patriotic vein, the grouphelped entertain the service men oncampus at Sunday afternoon tea(lances ' and went dqwntown to the Officers’ Club.Dues for Quadrangler are $5 a quar¬ter, pledge fee is $5, and initiation feeis $25.President of Quadrangler is Mary i' »Mary Trovillion, PresidentTrovillion, Vice President is Beth Ma¬han, Rushing Chairman is Betty Head¬land, while Betty Plasman is Treas¬urer, Eva Cook is Corresponding Sec¬retary, and Betty Seifried is Record¬ing Secretary.‘ As a group joined together infriendship and common interest, TheQuadrangler Club amply satisfies theuniversity woman’s desire for com¬panionship and fun. CHI RHOSIGMAChi Rho Sigma celebrated its for¬tieth anniversary last January.Founded in 1903 by five Phi BetaKappas, today the social activites ofthe club takes precedence with itstheater parties, the Christmas party,the yearly house party, the dinner andtea dances. Twice last year the ChiRho Sigma’s entertained servicemen.The Founders’ Day Luncheon climaxesthe year for both the active chapterand the seven alumnae chapters, themost active of all University alumnaegroups, who support a Loan Fund forthe benefit of the active chapter.The officers typify the club’s partic¬ipation in various activities: PresidentPriscilla Copeland is a Nurses’ Aideat Billings Hospital; Vice-presidentJean Simonini, a University Players’star, assembles packages for prisonersof war at the Red Cross. Also workingfor the Red Cross are Rushing Chair¬man Ruth Capin and Treasurer Mur¬iel Becking. Blonde Anne Carus, re¬cording secertary, works tirelessly atthe Radio Canteen for servicemen;the YWCA claims much of SocialChairman Jean Staver’s time and en¬ergy. Student Forum, marksmanship,journalism, and scholarship winningare among the club’s other interests.WOODWORTH'S- 1311 E. 57th St. -BOOK HEADQUARTERSTEXTS - DICTIONARIES - TECHNICAL-MEDICAL - MILITARY BOOKSAll Current New Books — FictionModern Library — Everyman — LoebOpening Evenings — Come In And BrowseWoodworth's Book Store1311 E. 57Hi St.Have a “Coke”= Come, be blessed and be happy^ ‘“Coke”* Coca-ColaIt’s natural for popular names toacquire friendly abbreviations. That’swhy you hear Coca-Cola c?!!ed “Coke”... .from Idaho to IcelandHave a “Chile”, says the American soldier in Iceland, and in threewords he has made a friend. It works in Reykjavic as it does inRochester. ’Round the globe Coca-Cola stands for the pause that re-/reji&et—has become the ice-breaker between kindly-minded strangers*BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BYCOCA COLA BOTTLING CO.. OF CHICAGO. INC. -the globalhigh-signjO 1943 Th« C-C Co, Page ThreeWork-Study Program: IAn opportunity to systematizestudy-employment is offered to stu¬dents attending the University of Chi¬cago. Through the co-operation ofMarshall Field and Company andSears Roebuck and Company with theUniversity of Chicago a program ofstudy and employment can be arrang¬ed which enables students to carry onpart-time employment while attendingcollege. Classes at the university meeton Monday, Wednesday, and Friday,or on Tuesday, Thursday, and Satur¬day. Therefore, a program of study oremployment can be worked out on al¬ternate days. Students admitted tothis co-operation plan are given anunusual opportunity to help pay fortheir education at the time it is beingacquired.Students participating in this pro¬gram may work a minimum of fifteenhours or a maximum of thirty hoursa week, except during University holi¬days, when more employment will notinterfere with studies The studentwill be able to earn a minimum of$350 a year—the amount earned, ofcourse, depending upon, his specialabilities and his financial need plusthe amount of time he ckn spend doing part-time work. Students on this planreceive a discount on purchases at thestore at which they are employed andare offered the same consideration asfull time regular employes.Under the plan, the large variety ofpositions characteristic of a depart¬ment-store organization are availableto students. All assignments are tobe made on the basis of the student’sbackground of training and experi¬ence. Students accepted for this willbe given a definite schedule of part-time employment-at the time the classschedule is drawn np by the respectivedeans.This is a time when students whoshould be continuing their program ofeducation are likely to abandon theirstudies because of the attraction offull-time studies. On a long-term basis,however, a combined program of studyand employment should prove far moresatisfactory.Students interested in this planshould contact the Entrance Counsel¬or, 105 Cobb Hall. If the student hasbeen registered in the University, hisinquiries should be adressed to TheBoard of Vocational Guidance andPlacement, 215 Cobb Hall.NOW signalmen canwear helmets with thisnew headset!SIGNALMEN formerly saw action without helmets becauseold-style headsets were too bulky. Now miniature re¬ceivers with earplugs are being used for both radio andtelephone work.Fitting snugly under the helmets they give better recep¬tion by keeping out battle noise ... they are cooler, morecomfortable.Signal Corps engineers working with Western Electricand Bell Telephone Laboratories developed this new all¬purpose military headset.Here is another instance of Bell System ser¬vice to our nation at war.War calls keep ^Long Distance lines busy... ThaVs u}hy your call may be delayed.fPage Four*Fraternities—(Continued from page one)award to the individual who has donethe most to promote their ideal-toler¬ance. Prominent alumni of Pi LamdaPhi are Lawrence Steinhardt, ArthurHays, Budd Schulberg, and OscarHammerstein III.At present the chapter has 8 actives and 1 pledge. Meals are served at thechapter house, 6636 University.ZETA BETA TAUZeta Beta Tau was founded at NewYork in 1898. Alpha Beta Chapterwas founded in 1918 on the Universitycampus. Among prominent alumni ofthe Chicago chapter are William S.Paley, Seymour Berkson, and JulianWaterman. Other prominent ZBT’sare Felix Frankfurter, George Back¬er, and Morris Cohen.The chapter house is located at5749 Woodlawn, at which place mealsare still served. The chapter consistsof 8 active members.Rushing Rules—(Continued from page one)from one to six and seven to ten.Freshmen and fraternity membersmay associate with each other duringeating time only at Ida Noyes, theCommons, Tropical Hut, Stineways’aiid Spie and Span. It is illegal forrushees and the prospective brothersto be seen at U.T. during rushinghours unless two competing fraterni¬ties are represented at the same ta¬ble.Volunteers WantedHealthy men, aged 17 to 25, wanted for experimental sub¬jects five hours each day, Monday through Saturday, foreight to ten weeks. Normal vision required. No healthhazards. Opportunity for study during hours. Remuneration75 cents per hour. Inquire ofDr. Ward C. Halstead, Billings Hospital,Room S365, telephone 546BESTSELLERSTHE ROBELloyd C. Douglas $2.75SO LITTLE TIMEJohn P. Marquand $2.75A TREE GROWS IN BROOKLYNBetty Smith $2.75THE VALLEY OF DECISIONMarcia Davenport $3.00UNDER COVERJohn Roy Carlson $3.50U. S. FOREIGN POLICYWalter Lippman $1.50THIRTY SECONDS OVER TOKYOCaptain Ted. W. Lawson .' $2.00BURMA SURGEONLieut. Col. Gordon Seagrave $3.00GOD IS MY CO-PILOTColonel Robert L. Scott, Jr $2.50JOURNEY AMONG WARRIORSEve Curie $3.50BETWEEN TEARS AND LAUGHTERLin Yutang .{ $2.50ONE WORLDWendell L. Willkie $2.00 - $1.00UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOK STORE5502 ELLIS AVENUE Something forThe BoysBy Eddie Meyers and Eugene BahnsenWhat University of Chicago gal isdoing a thesis on dirty limericks?A STORYThe lanky fellow leaned clumsilyagainst the doorway, his cigarettedhand tracing meaningless smokepatterns in the air and finally com¬ing to rest on her shoulder. The girlturned away angrily ... SO HEREWAS THE ANSWER TO HERFRUSTRATED HOPELESSSTRUGGLE . . . THIS BOY SHEHAD RAISED FROM A BABYAND HAD COME TO LOVE LIKEA BROTHER ... It was hard hold¬ing back the tears. She didn’t try.(M.G.M. intends doing it sometimethis fall with James Stewart as theboy, Ingrid Bergman as the girland Mickey Rooney as the frustrat¬ed hopeless struggle.)FASHION NOTEWomen will be wearing the same4 MONTH INTENSrVESecretarial Course forCOLLEGE STUDENTS and GRADUATESA thorough, intensive, secretarialcourse—starting January, April, July,October. Registration now open.) ★Regular day and evening schoolthroughout the year. Catalog.A SCHOOL OF BUSINESSPREFEBRED BY COLLEGE MEN AND WOMENTHE GREGG COLLEGE' President, John Robert Gregg, S.C.D.Director, Paul M. Pair, M.A.6 N. Michigan Ave. Telephone: STAte 1881 Chlcigo. ML thing in brassieres this season . . .FOOTBALL PREDICTIONVirginia over SexedDear Advice to the Lovelorn Editor,Chicago Maroon:Last Saturday I had a date withan A.S.T.P. soldier stationed at theUniversity of Chicago. Did I dowrong ?“Fran”'Dear Fran,Don’t you remember?DIVRY'SHANDYSPANISH-ENGLISHANDENGLISH-SPANISHDictionaryBy J. Douglas,Ph.D.and A. Lomo,Ph.D.The most complete, reliable and up-to-datepocket Dictionary, listing all Spanish andEnglish words in current use—over 60,000—including many of the latest technical, sci¬entific and military terms. Also containsElements of Grammar, full list of IrregularVerbs, Cities with their populations. ColoredMaps, etc. Indispensable to students, trans¬lators, business men, etc. 536 pages, 3%x6V2. flexible leatherette binding. Postpaid$2.00_; with Indexes $2.50. On sale atleading bookstores.D. C. Divry, Inc., Publishers240 W. 23rd ST^ NEW YORK Social Committee—(Continued from page one)Future Social Committee plans irelude a promentory picnic on the se\enteenth of this month. The functiois open to all comers, dated or otheiwise.CLASSIFIED ADContract Bridjre — Clas.ses — DuplioaloProtrressive UridKe Gamea. BO cents. Plaza 87'HELP WANTEDWante<f: Younjr man, encrRetic. Work fro12 noon to 4 P.M. to bus dishes and peel pottoes. BO cents an hour and 1 mealTROPICAL HUT1320 F.ast B7th Stret'tROOM FOR YOUNG WOMANIn lakefront apartment, private enlrancprivate bath. All or portion of rent may 1paid by care of apartment. Dor. 7179.« New under-arm qCream DeodorantsafelyStops Perspiration1. Docs not rot dresses or men'sshirts. Docs not irritate skin.2. No waiting to dry. Can be usedright after shaving.3. Instandy stops perspiration for1 to 3 days. Prevents odor.4. A pure, white, greascless,stainless vanishing cream.5. Awarded Approval Seal ofAmerican Institute of Launder-Fcbuntain pens rationc d!“GOSH—ON. THE FRITZAGAIN! BET I CAN’T GET ANEW PEN. F/EN REPAIRPARTS ARE SCARCE!""WHY DON’T YOU GET HEPTO PARKER QUINK, JIMMY?IT HAS SOLV-X IN IT TOPROTECT METALAND RUBBERAND KEEPS PENS CLEAN!"e£7o /keey? yotcA>pen Qiuat^ lottA: /■pEDUCED drastically bygovernment order, first-choice brands of fountain pensare becoming scarce. Repairparts, too, are war casualties!So give your pen real war¬time protection with brilliant,smooth-writing Parker Quink,containing solv-x.Solv-x ends most pen trou¬bles by removing the causes. It flushes away the gum andsediment left by inferior inks.It prevents the corrosion ofmetal parts and deteriorationof rubber caused by highlyacid inks.Parker Quink with solv-x isideal for steel pens, too! TheParker Pen Company, Janes¬ville, Wisconsin, and Toronto,Canada.fOR V MAIL ••Micro-film Black.’' New Parker Quink in "Micro-filmBlack" photographs perfectly! Quink comes in 7 permanent colors: Micro-filmBlacky Blue-Blacky Royal Blue, Green, Violet, Brown, Red. 2 washable colors:Black, Blue, 15^, 2H and up.MAKE YOUR DOLLARS FIGHT—BUY V/AR BONDS NOWIPARKER SOLV-X(yf^iseFUi Ik 5 coa^/1* Protects rubber ... lengthens thelife of sac or diaphragm.2. Dissolves sediment and gum leftby other inks. Cleans your pen asit writes.3* Prevents clogging of feed.4* Safeguards base metal parts...prevents corrosion.^ 5. Assures quickstarting and evenflow.THE ONLY INK CONTAINING SOLV^^X