Anthropology Is HereTo Stay Declares ColeThis week the Maroon spotlight falls on Professor Fay-Cooper Cole, emi¬nent anthropologist and Chairman of the Department of Anthropology.“Who’s Who” devotes about five inches to Dr. Cole, most of it listing expedi¬tions he has made, his public service, his memberships in learned and profes¬sional societies, the several books he has written, and information about hiseducational background. Dr. Cole’s expeditions have taken him to the MalayPeninsula, the Netherlands East Indies, South America, Central America,Mexico, and most parts of our own country. He has studied at the Univer¬sity of Southern California, University of Chicago, Columbia University, andUniversity of Berlin.Professor Cole’s office is like a busy cross-road, people popping in andout, telephones ringing. Trying to interview Dr. Cole was an interesting past¬time, and we found ourselves sandwiching questions in between the visitsof Dr. Fred Eggan, Ethel Alpenfels, and an unidentified gentleman from theSocialist Club who wanted Dr. Cole to receive at his home a number of mem¬bers of the Club who wanted to become acquainted with the Professor, andget to know him . . . etc.Although the war his disruptedmost of the anthropological expedi¬tions to foreign countries, there are anumber of projects still in active oper-ation. “The Anthropology Departmentat the University of Chicago will con¬tinue archeological work in Illinois,especially in the southern part of theState where the University owns avery extensive Indian site,” Dr. Coletold us.“We are still carrying on a certainamount of cooperation with the Car¬negie Institute of Washington, D. C.,studying the peoples and languages ofMexico and Middle America. We’verecently been giving special atten¬tion to Guatemala. We are also great-(See “Cole”, page four) FAY-COOPER COLEModern Library GiantTranslated By JollesPublished. by the Modern Library, and translated by Professor 0. J.Matthijs Jolles, Assistant Profeaaov of German at the Univeraity Chicago^a new edition of “Clausewitz On War” has just come off the press. The pref¬ace is written by Dean of Humanities McKeon.Recommended to Army officers and I.M.S. trainees, the book is a com¬plete text of German militaiy strategy and tactics. Clausewitz, a German sol¬dier who joined the German army in 1793 when he was thirteen, took part inall the wars in which Prussia was involved during the Napoleonic era. Al¬though his work is the authoritative German treatise on military studies, histheory, which maintains that an active defense is superior to any offense, hasbeen actively brought into play by the Russian army in defeating the Nazis.A complete treatment of the strategy, nature, and theory of war together withthe engagement, attack, defense, and general plan of war, make up the textof the volume, which is designed to be a philosophical history and practicalguide to strategy.Himself a German, Professor Jolles served in the German army in 1934and ’35. He then went to England to teach and came to America in 1938. Alongwith his University courses, he is now teaching two courses in the Instituteof Military Studies; Military German, and the OrganiSation of the GermanArmy.The book is one of extreme interest and great value, not only to militarymen, but also to civilians who wish to understand more fully the changingtides of war, and the various phases of military tactics and strategy. It isProfessor Jolles’ opinion, and that of Dean Richard McKeon, Dean of Divi¬sion of Humanities and Chairman of the Committee on Pre-Induction Mili¬tary Training that it is necessary to read “Clausewitz On War” to gain anyfull grasp of today’s great war.Science History ToldIn 'Human Adventure'“As a dramatization of the factual research going on in colleges anduniversities, Chicago has already scored heavily with students of many de¬grees of learning.”Such was yesterday’s issue of “Time” magazine’s comment on the Uni¬versity of Chicago’s journey into the field of radio publicity, “The HumanAdventure”. A regular feature of the Columbia Broadcasting System forforty-two weeks in 1940, the “Adventure” has been going on the air underChicago spon'.:<>''h’p since September 23. According to director ShermanDryer: “We anticipate broadcasting the ‘Human Adventure’ for the nextyear.”The program was originated by Chicago’s vice President William B. Ben¬ton. Benton’s career in the past, before and after he renounced the searchfor mere riches and came to the University, has been almost synonomouswith the developmentof radio advertising. In addition to originating Chicago’sfamous “Round Table of the Air,” Benton has sired “Gang Busters,” thePhilip Morris “Crime Docter” program, Fred Allen’s “Town Hall Tonight”show, the Maxwell House “Showboat,” and sundry others familiar to radioaddicts. “The Human Adventure,” his latest piece of radio publicity, is theproduct of University research and graphic dramatization. Within the past(See “Adventure”, page three) The Iflo/iCrotiVol. 3, No. 7 2-149 Friday, November 5, 1943 Price Four CentsWar Boosts MaroonBasketball HopesU of C GrantsFYC’S CarillonFull SubsidyThis week saw the announce¬ment of a new campus publica¬tion in form of a subsidizedFour Year College quarterlycalled the Carillon. Published forthe first time last June as anoutgrowth of the students’ needof an outlet for literary expres¬sion, the Carillon received noformal faculty backing. But aft¬er seeing how much the staff,composed then of six students,could do with such limited facil¬ities, Dean Davies’ office decidedto give them full faculty sup¬port. As a result, a subsidy waspromised, the first to be grantedto a student publication duringthe long history of the Univer¬sity.The University’s waiving of its longstanding rule against publication sub¬sidization is probably due to the pur¬pose of the journal as stated by edi¬tor June Meyers. “The Carillon is anendeavor to. ^xromojte morp—genernUunity between the first and lasttwo years of the college”—a purposedear to the hearts of the Universityadministration.As the first issue will be publishedsome time in December, at the end ofthe Autumn quarter, the staff has al¬ready begun th dr work under theguidance of Miss Cohen, their facultyadvisor. The next Carillon meetingwill be held on Monday, November 8,from three to five o’clock in Classics20.AnnounceScholarshipsTwenty-five scholarships for under¬graduate students have been announc¬ed providing a full year’s tuition ofthree hundred dollars for nine coursesof study. Coupled with the scholarshipaward is a comprehensive plan to pro¬vide work on a part time basis so thatstudents can establish fixed incomeduring their school year.Class attendance may be staggeredto provide free days or periods eachweek to fit jobs which will be madeavailable to such students.The eligibility for scholarships isconfined to students acceptable underthe University scholarship standards.Additional standards have been im¬posed by the Company in order toidentify the applicant’s qualificationsfor work in the store and future prom¬ise in a business career. Special con¬sideration will be given studentswhose interests are in the retail fieldand returned service men and women,whose rehabilitation may be more ef¬fectively achieved by a combination ofwork and study.Interested students who can meetboth University and company’s stand¬ards can obtain complete informationat the Board of Vocational Guidanceand Placement, 215, Cobb Hall, orfrom Jean Campbell at the employ¬ment office, 3rd floor, Marshall Field &Company. Basketball coach J. Kyle Anderson practically beamed over the telephone,talking about this year’s basketball prospects. “Most of the conference teamswe will face this year will be on the same basis as our own.” He meant thatBig Ten basketball will be played mostly by freshmen this year because ofthe ravages of the Armed Services on the basketball crop. This fall, twenty-seven men turned out for the initial call, many with high-school experienceand some, with height.This will be the first year the Maroons have had men on the squadover six feet since Joe Stampf, alias “Iron-man”, played basketball. Lou Dei-telbaum. South Shore high school star, and one of last year’s freshman squad,stands six-two and a half. Bob Finnegan and Wayne Gasper are also over thesix foot mark.The tallest man on the new squad is Jack Markward who tops them all,at six feet five. According to Anderson, Markward, a nine letter man from OakPark high school shows real promise. Other freshmen are Fred DeGraw(Hirsch), Lark Flannagan (Mount Carmel), Chuck Lauritsen (U High), andBill Thomas (Hinsdale High). “We are fortunate,” says Anderson, “in havingpre-meds, math majors, and 17 year olds on the squad.”In addition to the regular conference games, Kyle Anderson has a fewgames lined up with teams of the armed services. Glenview Air Base, FortSheridan, Navy Pier, and Great Lakes are already scheduled for this season.He hopes to arrange one or two prac¬tice games before the Maroons meettheir first tough opponent. GreatLakes, on December 8 at Great Lakes.Anderson says, “We probably won’tbeat ’em (Great Lakes), but the gamewill be a great experience for theboys.”Five home games and three out-of-town will be played in the Big Ten.Schedules still may have to be revis-'ed because the Field House is notavailablejbjc Friday games. Hqwever,we have scheduled games with Pur¬due, Wisconsin, Michigan, Illinois, andOhio State to be played here. Gameswith Northwestern, Iowa, and Minne¬sota are scheduled away from home.While twenty of our men are fresh¬men, the other Big Ten teams aretroubled with the same affliction. In¬diana starts the season with 17 froshand Iowa with 21. The schools thatare in a position to take advantageof wartime conditions are Purdue,Michigan, and Northwestern, Theselucky schools have contingents of Na¬vy Trainees who in some cases makeup almost thj whole squads (in foot¬ball anyway). The Army doesn’t goin for sports quite so much unfortu¬nately.Richard Furry, Henry Reinhardt,and John Campbell were, also mem¬bers of 1942’s freshmen team. Allthree are smaller men but show prom-(See “Basketball”, page three)WAC CarriesOn VariedWar ProgramJust a year ago last April Mrs.Woodward, the wife of Vice-PresidenbWoodward, called a meeting of dele¬gates representing all the campus ac¬tivities, with the purpose of beginningthe University's sole "war-time otgani-zation, now known as the War Ac¬tivities Committee. Heading the firstcommittee was very capable MinnaSachs. Since then, thanks to the fore¬sightedness of its founder and theambition, cooperation of its membersplus a certain spirit of do-it-or-die theUniversity’s WAC is fast and steadilybecoming one of the most importantfunctions around.Today, presiding over the commit¬tee is chairman Didi Bennett who hasbeen with the organization since itsfounding and who formerly headedone of the most important of its sub¬committees—the one handling the saleof War Stamps. This office is nowheld by Ann Mac Pherson and six daysa week for five hours a day she is theone guiding the stamp sales.The other sub-divisions and theirleaders are the committees in chargeof collecting books for servicemen,(See “WAC”, page four)ASTP PsychologistsComplete ProgramNow ready to fill important posi¬tions as personnel technicians andclassification experts in the Army are116 recent graduates of the ASTPat the University of Chicago. Thearmy, particularly the Air Corps,needs the psychologists very badly.They were trained for six months bythe members of the departments ofpsychology of education and of Physi¬ology at the University, superviseddirectly by associate professor DaelWolfle of the Department of Psychol¬ogy, and supervised generally by Ma¬jor Herman E. Smoth, commandantof the ASTP here.Seventy-three of the new psycholo¬gists, assigned to the Air Corps, willassist in developing and administeringphychological tests and in designingannartus for testiner and selecting flight crews. The duties of the menassigned to the ground force as classi¬fication specialists will consist of in¬terviewing men, classifying occupa¬tional data, administering trade andintelligence tests, recommending ap¬propriate assignments for men in thearmy. Those who become personneltechnicians will classify personnel,supervise employment interviews, andinstruct in educational and vocationalguidance.Said Commandant Major Smith:“These men will be replaced imme¬diately. In addition, basic engineeringstudents are about to begin a coursehere. The new group will bring thetotal of ASTP men on campus to sixhundred. They will be quartered inBlake, Snell, and Hitchcock Halls.”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 EditorBusiness ManagerSports EditorMakeup editorCirculation Manager ....ASSOCIATESAnn Huntington, Rosemary Peacock, Eddie Meyers, Ruth Ernst,Eugene Bahnsen, Bud Steenberg, Bill Friend, Mary McCaffrey, DenShields, Mary Augusta Rodgers. Jim Ratciiffe, Robert Fiffler, Mary-lou Landis, Connie Plasman, Doris Ruzck, Barbara Winchester, LoisArnett, Wayne Gasper, Bill Langner, Houtz van Steenberg, DoloresFilman, Nancy Busch, Sandy Selcer, Helen Panaretos, Nancy Smith,Marian Golden.All For The CauseThe publication of a quarterly literary mag¬azine is not, in itself, a piece of news worthy ofmarked comment. The fact that a literary maga¬zine is to be published by and for the students ofthe four year college makes it a little more im¬portant, but not very. When however, the Uni¬versity administration places a fond hand of ben¬ediction on the publication’s forehead, when mon¬ey to cover their each and every wish is gratitu-itously offered, it is evident that the publicationof “Carillon” is an event of unusual significance.If there is one fact that rankles in every ad¬ministrative breast from Hutchins down it is thelack of mutual love between the first and lasttwo years of college. The first and second yearsregard themselves as genuinely guaranteed col¬lege students—Hutchins has told them so. Thelast two years don’t believe it. After all, they’vegraduated from high school; they’re Universityfreshmen—in four years they’ll be seniors: nei¬ther the President nor anybody else can tell themthey’re in the same class with a lot of sixteen andseventeen year olds. Despite all the frantic ef¬forts of the administration to mould the two in¬to one big happy family, the four year college iscleft into two precise and equal halves—one por¬tion claiming they’re just as good as anybodyelse—the other refusing to even consider theirjuniors.^ Along comes “Carillon” with its simple un¬spectacular plans. It’s first issue last spring land¬ed on the campus with the resounding thud ofa feather—few people even hear about it. Allthat pushes it up from the shuffling herd of otherforgotten literary journals is the fact that it isspecifically designed for both halves of the col¬lege—its only startling editorial declaration thatit is dedicated to “more general unity” betweenthe two. That’s all the University needs. “Caril¬lon” is a perfect foothold in the backbreakingjob of scaling campus prejudice.That is the probable reason why “Carillon”can sit now on its fat subsidy, the first of a longfile of still warm publications who starved forlack of the University’s benediction. All that’sleft for them to do is help carry out Hutchins’frustrated plans for one united four year College.The Silver LiningThe reputation of the University of Chicagodepends on which way you look at it. Some peo¬ple like the idea of a school where reason, Aris¬totle, and Hutchins are the only Gods. They liketo think of a remote aesthetic place where stu¬dents like to go off in a cozy corner to be alonewith a treatise on legal pholisophy or indulge intense Bull Sessions on the meaning of life.But there’s another side to it. Chicago has ashame all its own, and the whole country knowsabout it. Sure it’s a great school for students,but it ain’t got no football, it ain’t got no basket¬ball worth mentioning, it ain’t really got any¬thing that goes to make up a successful Univer¬sity.At last however, seeing Chicago could notrise to Big Ten standards, the Big Ten seems onthe point of coming down to Chicago’s. North¬western, Illinois, Purdue, every one of the greatbig husky bullies are just beginning to learnwhat it means to build basketball teams withphysical wrecks and harried students. To allappearances it would seem that Chicago will reapthe returns.True, Basketball Coach Kyle Anderson isstarting practice with a bunch of raw fresh¬men. So are the majority of other teams. Phys¬ical standards, with two exceptions, are, accord¬ing to the grand old Chicago tradition, low, butthe same goes for most other Big Ten Colleges.All over the country Collegiate Basketball squadsare just getting used to what Chicago has beengoing through for years. Dave Smothat jWard SharbachJohn Campbell•Dorothy GranquistSandy Sulcer TravelingBazoorby Rosemary Peacock & Joan LindenNot withstanding Shields’ heartening build¬up in last week’s Bazaar, our Traveling Bazaarcan’t go far at this time (gas rationing, youknow).Betty MacNeille zoomed into town this week.. .. The Gordon-Whitaker wedding took placedespite the absence of Sue Keefe’s and Hal Gor¬don’s best man. Genny Lorish’s mien was sur¬prisingly solemn (w^e were tempted to borrowher face for Hallowe’en). . .Besides yours trulythe others, namely A. Dickinson, J. Falsom, Pat¬ty Pickett, B. Reece and J. Carr (by the way,where do you get your gas?) looked exceptionallynice. Honorary members were initiated in tra¬ditional Mortar Board ritual... those honored in¬clude Ed Nelson, Screwball Moore, Marty Han¬son, Paul Russel], Carl Anderson (finally) and 12year old Teddy Lorish—tentative BMOC.Swing-shift Mac Neille crashed into towij....A Hallowe’en party was in full swing at theF.Y.C. Girls’ dorm located at 5637 UniversityAvenue, .in Paleozoic times knowm as the Psi UHouse.... A welcoming committee greeted theDartmouth Dudes . . . Bud Baker and TommyBradle. Crowding the bench of the glamorouswere Marion Baker, Dinny Butts, Elghammerand Bayard. Most mortified was G. Lorish (whoincidentally was having a very good time withher date Mark Beaubien) when pin-man AubreyMoore appeared from “Deep in the Heart of.”That is the face we really would like to borrowfor Hallowe’en. Everyone is happy, however,except Aubrey who is now displaying his Dekebadge on a G.I. shirt. Nancy Platt, of the SouthAmerican Platts, and Tor Richter were enjoyingthemselves as were Betsy Wallace and Bob Fra¬zier. Adding to ghostly groans masquerading asmelodies were the cat-calls of Bert Barnard—anagonizing attempt to revive the well-known songleading of one John Crosby. The party, easilyrated the best of the year, dispersed after theinevitable session at UT.“Black-Market gas” Mac Neille is still around.At the PX Monday night—the Tau Sigma Up-silons started the songs rolling (as some onealways does). Shields and Smothers, ensconcedamong the Sigmas, still seem to know the wordsto “God save the King.” Mary Lu Emart subtlylooking for Wally Heffron. . .Willie Fralick andJohn Boyscout just looking... Wally Lawrencesurprising everyone by appearing in civilian garb.. .where were Suzie and Jim when brother EmilRitter and Ernie dined at Morton’s Mondaynight ?. ..Department-of-voices- that - keep - breaking-in-on-preoccupied-people - trying - like - hell - to-dig-enough-ah-material-to-fill - up - the - Bazaar-Thteen! No I haven’t got my tooth back yet andI with people would quit athking me about it...Gasper: They like me at my job—I get worsecases of the bends than anybody (you figure itout). .. Dickerson off in a corner mumbling his“Claudia” lines to himself. .. Frantic voice fromthe inner office where Granquist and Kelly aredoing their French: “But what I want to know isou est le Goddam copy?”...Constant twosomes... Ed Steele and MargeFogarty. . .Sholly and Danny Heffron. .Rick andVanderwalker. . .Shields and Beta pin... Willieand Katie Guild. . .Jean Harvey and Ray Robert¬son ... Mac and the yellow car who finally wenthome.This is the poem Shields was denied publish¬ing last month. At his insistence it is publishedhere.Freshman, here’s a little word.Sage advice to go unheard,Things you really ought to doIf you have desire toMake a house of the elite 'So the males will kiss your feet . . .Borrow furs and clothes and car;Money really won’t go farTo impress the gals about you;Lacking it, they’ll do without you.Make your phrases insincere;Soon they all will call you, “Dear”Hypocrites are glorified.You soon will be sororified . . .Tell them of the men who’ve yearned.Broken hearts of guys you’ve spurned,Tell them with a flippant wince,Of the Bulgovarish PrinceWhom you met in Monterey,Broke his heart and sailed away . . .So, by all the gods above you,Be a hypocrite . . . They'll love you! What Price SanityBy Carroll AtwaterWe would like to tell the printer, the copyreader, and anyone else involvthat we, like the Carrolls of Carrolltown (of whom we are not one), spell ^first name with two R’s and two L’s. Eccentric, yes, but blame it on our Irishmother.* •* *As Christmas approaches and with it wagers on the nature of the eomino'Hutchins Christmas card, we are reminded of another card, another yearOne faculty wife was aroused that morning by an insistent buzz. She draggedherself to the door, where a grinning postman held out a large envelope“It’s the Hutchins card,” he said. “Thanks,” she replied, preparing to takeit inside. “Go on, open it now,” he urged, chuckling bawdily, “It’s the Goddamnedest thing I ever saw.”♦ ♦ ♦“Oklahoma!” is at last opening in Chicago. Some of us saw it in NewYork earlier this year, and take it from us, it’s the nearest to perfectionanyone could wish for. Music, book, settings, costumes, ballet—they’re allterrific. Aside from the songs everybody’s heard, there is a ditty called “ICain’t Say No” which will soon be the song on campus. “Pore Jud Is Dead ”sung by the hero and the villain, is a masterpiece of imagination and dramaticirony. Also worth noting is “All or Nothing,” a bouncing equivalent of theSinatra favorite.And “All or Nothing at All” was a winning costume at the Art Instiute’sDelta Phi Delta party on Hallowe’en. The winner had a dead-white face andan all-enveloping black cloak, which he huddled inside most of the evening.Every now and then he swept the cloak back to reveal flesh-colored tights—nothing at all!* *A woman was seen walking down 57th street, scanning the sidewalkanxiously. “Have you lost anything?” someone inquired. JBlithely she an¬swered, “No, but I always think that with so many absent-minded professorsgoing down this street one of them is likely to drop a dollar bill, at least.”4> « «If you’re cutting through Elementary School to get out of the wind,you’ll enjoy the murals by Miss Caroline Lee, age 10. Miss Lee does largehorses in a spirited modern style.‘ ♦ ♦ ♦Wednesday night we turned on the Lone Ranger just in time to hearhim quoting Polonius’s parting advice to Laertes. “This above all: to thineown self be true,” the Masked Rider was saying in that deep gorgeous voiceof his, “and it must follow as the night the day, thou canst not then be falseto any man.” C. A.BOOKSFORService MenVISIBILITY UNLIMITEDBy Ernest G. Vetter $4.00An authoritative and comprehensive book on meteorolgy and navigationwith 300 illustrations.CLASSICAL AND MODERN PHYSICSBy Hqrvey E. White $3.80Striking illustrations clarify the explanations and discussions in this text,which provides a comprehensive treatment of physical facts.CALCULUS MADE EASYBy Silvanus P. Thompson $2.00Step by step and in simple language the fundamentals of differentialand integral calculus is presented.FLYING AND HOW TO DO ITBy Assen Jordanoff $1.00Really a course in flying—conceived and executed by a well-knownflyer.PREPARE FOR THE OFFICIAL ARMY-NAVY TESTS..$1.50The only book that takes you through every step of Army-Navy testingand official classification procedure.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOK STORE5802 Ellis AvenueIda CouncilI Active In War“The Ida Noyes Council Bundles forAmerica Unit is sponsoring many newprojects this year,” Ruth Rowe, chair¬man, announced today.Sewing hospital gowns for woundedservicemen from men’s old whiteshirts, making scrap books for serv¬icemen’s Christmas stockings andknitting for the Army and Navyoccupies them at their weekly work-ship from two to five o’clock everyTuesday afternoon in Ida Noyes Hall.The magazines and shirts needed forthese projects are being collected inboxes in the lobby of Ida Noyes.Knitters can obtain w'ool for sweat¬ers, gloves and watchcaps Tuesdaysfrom twelve to one o’clock in MissKidwell’s office. Bundles for Blue¬jackets knitting bags are for sale for$1.00 each.Monday, October 16, from three un¬til five-thirty the Council is sponsor¬ing a Bundles for America BenefitBridge Party. Admission is twenty-five cents and refreshments will besold. There will be three prizes.There are several openings formembership on the Ida Noyes Council.Freshman members will be chosenlater but sophomores, juniors and sen¬iors who are interested should get intouch immediately with Ruth Howe atFoster Hall. MAROON SPORTSBasketball...(Continued from page one)ise in their speed. John Campbell, avery clever fast player, will be usedalternately with Furry. Thomas andDeGraw, Finnegan and Flannagan,will also be interchanged. Says An¬derson, “This year we have a teamwith spirit and one that wants tolearn. They are attentive to instruc¬tion and have a swell chance of mak¬ing a good basketball team.”LAST CHANCEToday is the last day on whichindividuals may sign up for theV'-12 or A-12 programs. If you areinterested, see Mr. Napier Wilt inCobb 208 before 4:30 p.m. today. As the second week of intramuraltouchball draws to a close, the Ma¬roons appear'to be the only undefeat¬ed team out of the eight groups par¬ticipating. Due to some of the players’failure to turn in their score sheets,this information may not be entirelycorrect. The teams, consisting of fourfraternities and four independentgroups, play every Tuesday andThursday at Greenwood Field, 60thand University Ave. Ten medals areto be awarded to the winning teamsat the end of the season.In regard to other forms of intra¬mural sports, Coach Walter Hebert,sponsor of the leagues, says, “Thetouchball league was started by pop¬ular request. Other leagues will prob¬ably be formed later if enough teamsare organized to make it worth while.”Coach Hebert believes that the playerscomprising intramura teams will pos¬sibly want to start basketball andsoftball leagues during the winter andspring quarters. If as much interestcan be roused in basketball as hasbeen displayed in touchball, Wednes¬day night games will be played*in IdaNoyes Hall starting in January.All intramural games are conduct¬ed by the students themselves. A de¬tailed schedule and all equipment isfurnished by the Athletic Department,but from then on it’s up to the play¬ers. The teams comprising the presenttouchball league are Phi Sigma Delta,Alpha Delta Phi, Dukes, Maroons,College Ponies, Phi Gamma Delta,Zeta Beta Tau and University House.All men interested in track orfield athletics are urged to attenda get-together meeting Tuesday,November 9, at 12:00 noon, in theField House, 56th and University.No previous experience is neces¬sary. The types of meets to bescheduled will depend on the in¬formation gathered from this meet¬ing. Indoor track meets start inJanuary.CLASSIFIED ADAPARTMENTS WANTEDProfessional couple with infant seeks con-t^enial abode for next 8 months with couplethat works. Will either exchange houseworkfor room or will pay rent. Will consider made-over upstairs apartment. Furnished or part¬ly furnished. Will welcome almost any propo¬sition you have. Call Rog. Pk. 8109, 6-8 p.m.WANTED TO BUYApartment building near University campus.Owner contact: Mr. Hersberger, 3550 W.Franklin Blvd., Kedzie 6557. Phone Midway 7447We Call and DeliverMAX BROOKUNIFORM REPAIRING ANDCLEANING EXPERTLY DONETAILOR and CLEANER1013 East 61st StreetThe University of Chicago ChoirTENORS WANTEDOffice, Lexington Hall, 5831 University Avenue. For information orappointment call in person or telephone extension I 165 after 2:30 p.m.Service men are especially welcome: allowances will be made for theirlimited time and changing schedules.MACK EVANS. DirectorYou can still get real steak . . .Broiled Beef Tenderloin Steak Sandwich, Grilled Onion,Cottage Fried Potatoes, Solad $1.00A Specialty AtAlexander's Restaurants1137 and 1376 E. 63rd Street Below are the intramural footballscores up to this point.SCORESPhi Gamma Delta-0—College Ponies-6Maroons-14—University House-0Alpha Delta Phi-0—Dukes-6Dekes-1—Crimson Tide-0 (forfeit)Phi Gamme Delt^-1—Zeta Beta Tau-0 (forfeit)Dukes-0—College Ponies-6Phi Sigma Delta-0—University House-6Phi Gamma Delta-15 — UniversityHouse-0Maroons-30—College Ponies-0Alpha Delta Phi-0—Dukes-6Zeta Beta Tau-6—University House-0Maroons-46—Dukes-0Phi Sigma Delta-0—College Ponies-7Phi Gamma Delta-0—Phi Gamma Del-ta-13STANDINGSW LMaroons 3 0Phi Gamma Delta 3 1College Ponies 3 1Dukes 2 2Zeta Beta Tau 1 1Phi Sigma Delta 1 2University House 1 3Alpha Delta Phi 0 3 William B. Benton.not his firstthe University of Chicago will drama¬tize the story of Ignaz P. Semmelweis, ^Page Thre#founder of the treatment for the pur-eatal malady known as “childbed fe¬ver”, first mentioned by Hippocratesin the fifth century, responsible for20% of the death rate in the seven¬teenth and eighteenth, childbed feverstill accounted for 90 out of a hundredof the deaths in childbirth in Semmel¬weis’ year of discovery, 1843. Semmel¬weis, without even the knowledge thatsuch things as germs existed, drovethrough a regime of sanitation at hishospital in Vienna and watched thedeath rate tumble downward.Walter Yust, head of Chicago’snewly acquired “Encyclopedia Britan-nica” is the program’s master of cer¬emonies. The title of the “HumanAdventure” is lifted from a bookby the former head of the OrientalInstitute, James H. Breasted. Theprogram is broadcast on WGN everyThursday evening from 7:30 to 8:00.Adventure.(Continued from page one)!six weeks the program has broad-!cast “Studies of Marriage” “Pencil-lin,” “War Edema” and three othersto America’s radio audience in spicedup educational form. Last night the“Adventure” came through with anepic on Cosmic Rays. Next ThursdayU. T.Complete Selection.of Beers andOther BeveragesMIDway 0524Blatz and Siebens Beer1131-1133 E. 55th St. Send Her . . .A CORSAGEfromMITZIE'SFlower Shop"Flowersfor alloccasions"1301 E. 55th StreetMidway 4020*4021 STUDENTSChristmas WorkIf you can spare two or three daysa week, an excellent opportunityawaits you at Mandel Brothers. Wecan place you in either a selling ornon-selling position. Experience notnecessary. We will train you. Goodsalary. Storewide discount privil¬eges. Earn that monye here thatyou need for tuition or Christmasgifts. Apply employment office,11th floor, Wabash.MANDEL BROTHERSState and MadisonSCRVICE MEN-CARRYTRAVELERSCHEQUESNo matter what branch of the service you are headed for, you will fineAMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVELERS CHEQUES the best way to carryyour travel money. They are not only spendable everywhere, but theynave an important safety feature that protects you. It is this: if they arelost or stolen, you get a prompt refund.Issued in denominations of $10, $20, $50 and $100. Cost 75d for each$100. Minimum cost 40^ for $10 to $50. For sale at banks and RailwayExpress Offices.AMERICAN EXPRESSTRAVELERS CHEQUESHave a Coca-Cola = What’s the good word.^... or how to get along with folksHave a **Coke**, says the returned soldier and bis friendly gesture isunderstood in Newport or New Zealand, at home or in far-offplaces. Around the world Coca-Cola stands for the pause that tv-fresbts,-Asses become the gesture of good will, saying Let*s befriends.■ OTTLED UNOEt AUTHOKITY OP THE COCA-COLA COMPANY iYCOCA COLA BOHLING CO.. OF CHICAGO. INC.Page FourAYD PlansStudent DayProgramOn Tuesday, Nov. 2, AmericanYouth for Democracy held its secondmeeting at Ida Noyes after officialrecognition by Dean Scott. Dr. Eus¬tace Haydon of the Divinity School isthe group’s adviser.Plans were made at the meeting toparticipate in the Red Cross blood-donors campaign by securing studentsfrom campus as donors. A legislativecommittee was formed, with HelenCohen of S.S.A. as chairman, to studylegislation before Congress with theintention of taking concrete action re¬garding it. A salute to Servicemenwill be given on Dec. 7 as a tributeto the fighting men of our armedforces.On Nov. 17 “AYD” will present aprogram for International StudentDay, a day observed by students allover the world in commemoration ofthe 160 Czech students and professors,massacred in Prague by Nazi storm-troopers, while demonstrating to savetheir university from the fascist in¬vaders. This day is a reaffirmation ofthe resolve to defeat fascism and topay the debt of all youth to thoseyoung people who died in the fightagainst it. The chairmans for the I.S.Day program are Marian Cohen, Bet¬ty Davidson, Debby Ishlon, NancyLudwig, and Mary Stone. News ofthis important event will be forthcom¬ing.The first -“Penthouse Theater”production of the year will bestaged by the ODP early in De¬cember. The play, an imaginativecomedy entitled “Good Morning”,is to be cast largely with campusnewcomers. Among them will beHarold Patinkin portraying thehero, who earns his daily bread byselling locomotives, and Ruth Foleyas the stage actress heroine. Theplot itself evolves from the after-math of a scavenger party held inthe home of the unsuspecting hero.As a “Penthouse Theater” pro¬duction, the play differs from theusual “stage drama” in that thestage is on the same level and sur¬rounded by the audience'. This doesaway with the usual theatricalformalities of stage setting andlighting giving the production amore unique and informal aspect.^ New under^arm qCream DeodorantsafelyStops Perspiration1. Docs not rot dresses or men’sshirts. Docs not irritate skin.2m No waiting to diy. 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 Cole • • •(Continued from page one)ly interested in studying the simplecultures and peasant cultures, thestructure of contemporary society allover the world. Our studies so farhave covered a French-Canadian com¬munity, a Japanese village, and aMexican village.“One of the most important proj¬ects now being worked on is Mrs.Sarah Tucker’s ethno-historical studyof all documents relating to the con¬tact period between the Indians andthe whites. The material, put on mi¬crofilm and made available to anthro¬pologists and others for study, in¬cludes ancient French, English, andSpanish documents. Initiated some sixor seven years ago by the Anthropo¬logical Department and financed joint¬ly by the University of Chicago andthe American Philosophical Associa¬tion, this study is now being carriedon under a grant from the RockefellerFoundation, a grant covering a termof years.”Also in progress, Dr. Cole told us,is a study of contemporary Indiangroups of South and North America,including the Mayans and Azetes.When we expressed surprise, and ask¬ed if these weren’t ancient civiliza¬tions, Dr. Cole told us that Mayansand Aztecs still exist. “You see,” hesaid, “when the Spaniards came tothe Americas the Aztec civilizationwas a ‘going concern’. There was asmall group, a super priestly and ed¬ucated caste, at the apex of the civil¬ization over the great body of ordi¬nary people. When the Spaniards,with their firearms, destroyed thissmall number of people at the apex ofAztec life, the great body of ordinaryindividuals were left without leaders,and their civilization declined. TheMayans and Aztecs of today are thedescendants of the peoples conqueredby the Spaniards.”Asked about the status of the mod¬em Indians in South America andMexico, Dr. Cole told us that theyranged all the way from very primi¬tive groups, backward and isolated from civilization, to educated andprominent members of the Europeancommunities. “In Mexico some of theIndian groups are backward and somehave been amalgamated with Spanishwhites.Some of Mexico’s leaders areIndians, and there.are many Indiansholding positions of great responsibil¬ity in the Mexican government. Asfor South America, one finds verylittle color line or prejudice. In gener¬al, there is an attempt on the partof nearly all the governments to ed¬ucate their Indian groups, and thefuture of those groups lies in theircoming into our culture. That is, theirculture may not be like ours in theStates, but the pattern will be towarda European pattern; unlike the EastIndian groups whose modern socialpattern has been evolved mainlyfrom their own primitive culture, withlittle European influence.”Reflecting on his past work in an¬thropology, Dr. Cole said, “In all theyears I’ve been in it I’ve seen it de¬velop largely from a group of spe¬cialists interested primarily in inten¬sive studies to a realization that an¬thropology has a great deal to offerto the other fields, particularly tothe biological sciences and the socialsciences, and that more and morethe books on anthropology have beeninterested in current problems, andthat more and more anthropology hascome to be considered as a part of thenecessary cultural background, as apart of what an educated person oughtto know about.^“Anthropology deals with human jdevelopment, and in this direction we !have seen tremendous changes in an-'thropological work. With respect to •organic evolution we have seen an in¬creasingly greater change of people’sattitudes, a diminishing of scepticism.We now have a large body of concreteevidence, which has led to great de¬velopment in the field of physicalanthropology and to much closerworking with the biologists than wasformerly the case.“In social anthropology, ethnology,and archeology, we are bringing to¬gether a great mass of information ture, practically a laboratory type ofmaterial.“We study man as an animal, whichstarts us in the study of biology; thenwe find that this animal has developeda culture, and we find ourselves led tothe study of social science. Anthropol¬ogy contributes knowledge to and re¬ceives knowledge from all fields ofhuman endeavor, and it is in this di¬rection, the relationship and inter¬change between anthropology andthese other fields and their increasinginfluence on the personal life of thecommon man that we can look forthe most striking and far-reaching ad¬vances and contributions of anthro¬pology’.”WAC...(Continued from page one)Nancy Elliott; the Blood Bank, Caro¬lyn Friedman; parties for the Meteor¬ologists, Barbara Reece; Red Crosswar prisoners’ packages, Edith Jack-son; and a poster and publicity com¬mittee.Interested ambitious personages areurged to help support this energeticbunch by donating an hour of freetime, a pint of blood or a couple ofnimble fingers (still attached, please).They want your help, and we certainlywant their organization. The Y.W.C.A. of the Universityof Chicago is sponsoring a paneldiscussion on the subject, BUlLbNOW FOR PEACE, next Thurs¬day evening November 11 at 7-30P.M. at the Ida Noyes Library.The three speakers will be MajorEmery Woodall of the AmericanMilitary Government, Rev. HollandSchloerb, minister of the HydePark Baptist Church, and DrStephen M. Corey, professor ofEducational Psychology at the Uni-versity of Chicago. The problem ofinsuring the four freedoms will beapproached from the economicspiritual, and educational stand¬point by the respective speakersafter which a discussion period willfollow.4 MONTH INTENSIVES»entarial Course forCOUEGE 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 BUSINESSPBEFEBBED BY COLLEGE MEN AND WOMENTHE GREGG COLLEGE* President, John Robert Gregg, S.C.O.Director, Paul M. Poir, M.A.6 N. Mlchlfan Avt.. Teltphont: STAta 1881 Ch'cafi, in./on the growth and development of cul¬A DURATION DO!Your shirts are valuable items these days andappreciate special handling.Turn up j’^our shirt collar before sending itto the laundry. A collar washed flat doesn't frayso easily at the crease.Have your shirts laundered frequently. A too-soiled shirt requires more scrubbing and conse¬quently wears out more quickly.Go easy on the starch. Starching stiffens fabric,so that it breaks instead of bending. ^When you buy, buy Arrow. Arrow shirts arelonger-lasting, better-fitting, and carry the San¬forized label (fabric shrinkage less than 1%).ARROWSHIRTS • TIES • HANDKERCHIEFS • UNDERWEAR • SPORT SHIRTS★ BUY WAR BONDS AND STAMPS ★ '-f ' s's. /Telephone lines from poles to homes take aterrific beating from old man weather. Andwith wire for replacements drafted for militaryuse, existing lines must be kept in good condition.Asphalt coating applied in time keeps outmoisture, chief trouble maker on telephonelines. Without lowering the wires, this trolleypainter speeds the coating — helps recondition50 lines a day.This simple stitch in time” helps keepcommunications open to the homes ofAmerica — and saves critical materialsfor vital war weapons.War calls keep Long Distance lines busy•.. ThaVs why your call may be delayed.