Vol. 3, No. 16 Z-149 Friday^ February A, 1944 Price Five CentsEntire Faculty To BePlaced Under RigorousFull Time Contracts Congress VoicesThreats To ArmyCollege ProgramAt a meeting of the faculty on Fri¬day, January 28, in Mandel Hall,President Robert Maynard Hutchinsannounced the newly adopted systemKOHEKT MAYNARD HUTCHINS.. removing financial pressure . .of full-time service contracts for fac¬ulty members as passed by the Boardof Trustees. Staff members with aAppoint FilmCompany HeadsFifteen prominent educators, edi¬tors, and business leaders were electedto the Board of Directors of Encyclo¬paedia Britannica Films Inc. at ameeting January 28. The educationalfilm company was formerly known asErpi Classroom Films and was recent¬ly purchased by Encyclopaedia Bri¬tannica.Chairman of the board is WilliamB. Benton, vice president of the Uni¬versity of Chicago, who is also vicepresident of the Britannica Board.Also elected to the board were Ches¬ter Bowles, OPA Administrator; Mar¬shall Field, publisher; Robert M.Hutchins, president of the Universityof Chicago; Wallace K. Harrison, ar¬chitect; Paul G. Hoffman, president ofStudebaker Corporation; Ernest Hop-kins, president of Dartmouth; HenryR. Luce, editor of Time and Life; E.H. Powell, president of EncyclopaediaBritannica; Beardsley Ruml, treasurerof R. H. Macy Company; E. E. Shu¬maker, president of EncyclopaediaBritannica Films Inc.; M. LincolnSchuster of Simon and Schuster; Har-Vf Scherman, president of Book ofthe Month Club; John Stuart, Chair-of Quaker Company, and WayneC- Taylor, Under-Secretary of Com-merce. rank of assistant professor or higherwill be required to turn over to theUniversity all outside payments forroyalties on books, lectures, consul¬tant fees, and similar activities. Thisrule applies immediately to new fac¬ulty members and may be voluntarilyadopted by present staff members. If,in such an adoption, compensation foroutside income is required, it will beaccorded on a quota basis with prefer¬ence given to assistant profesors, as¬sociate professors and professors, inthat order. The only instance wherethe new full-time contracts will becompulsory for standing staff mem¬bers is in the case of a promotionfrom instructor to assistant professoror higher.This action is a continuation of thepatent policy adopted by the Boardof Trustees last autumn in which theyruled that neither the University normembers of its staff are permitted to(See “Faculty,” page seven)Creative PublishingAward To UniversityOf Chicago's PressTo the University of Chicago Pressthis year goes the Carey-ThomasAward for the best example of crea¬tive publishing, in its handling of *‘ADictionary of American English onHistorical Principles.”The award, sponsored by the Pub¬lishers’ Weekly, the American BookTrade Journal, was presented at aluncheon at the Hotel Roosevelt inNew York on January 27. Represen¬tatives of the University of ChicagoPress included Joseph A. Brandt, Di¬rector of the Press, Rollin D. Hem-ens. Assistant Director, James R. Hul-bert. Professor of English at the Uni¬versity and co-editor of the Dictionarywith Sir William Craigie, and Mit-ford M. Mathews.The jury which made the awardwas comprised of Carl Carmer, authorand president of the P.E.N. Club,Sterling North, literary editor of theNew York Post, Nicholas Wreden,manager of Scribner’s Book Store,New York, and president of theAmerican Booksellers’ Association,Joseph Henry Jackson, literary editorof the San Francisco Chronicle, andMilton J. Ferguson, director of theBrooklyn Public Library.Presiding over the luncheon wasFrederic Melcher, editor of the “Pub¬lishers’ Weekly,” who originated theaward last year. Mr. Melcher namedthe award for two early Americanpublishers, Mathew Carey of Phils^delphia and Isaiah Thomas of Wor¬cester.(See “Award,” page seven) Yale's SeymourTakes LiberalTeaching StandIn UniversitiesPresident Seymour, of Yale Univer¬sity, in a recent speech, fretted aboutthe plight of liberal arts colleges, andhow they are being driven to extinc¬tion by the technical or ‘practical’exigencies of war. He feels that thegreat need for the scientist and theengineer, as well as the spirit of ma¬terialism which is rising without thestimulus of need, will frustrate therestoration of the academic liberalarts when the war ends. Though he,and other educators of a like view,have good cause to worry, their rea¬sons and attitudes in defense of theliberal arts are wrong. But, so arethe materialists.The materialists are wrong becausea vibrant, flexible, progressive worldneeds art and culture. Germany—and Nazism is only another form ofmaterialism—^has destroyed its intel¬lectual life. It has committed suicide,both as a nation and a method of life.There is no such thing as a static,stagnant nation. People are not ma¬chines. Under the fascist system, theyoperate like machines; their procrea¬tive, productive and consumptive ca¬pacities are measured and utilizedlike machines, but only part of thetime. The rest of their lives must bedevoted to life processes: to thought,to hope, to love. Living is more thanjust functioning.The academicians have been wrong.In the past, they hid from the worldin their “ivory towers.” They livedin the past, hardly understood thepresent, and refused to recognize afuture. They left to the merest fewarticulate liberals the social, political,and economic battleflelds of the world.The tremulous theoreticians refusedto soil their hands or interrupt theirdessicated trains of thought. Theywere an intellectual aristocracy aboveand beyond life. They betrayed us tothe materialists who, alone, are re¬sponsible for today. Liberalism lost itsbattle by default to the forces of re¬action. We are now engaged in war(See “Seymour,” page eight)) The Military Affairs Committee ofthe House of Representatives will soonrecommend the discontinuance of allbut a small portion of the Army’sSpecialized Training Program afterJune 30.Secretary of War Henry L. Stimsonhad said at a press conference that re¬duction of the program now is underway. If the committee’s recommenda¬tion is carried out as it is expected,from the investigation completed thisweek, 100,000 young men will be re¬leased for active military duty. Thecommittee’s sentiment for discontinu¬ance of all of the program, exceptclasses for students in medicine andfor some advanced students in engi¬neering, became clear after the pro¬nouncement made by Secretary Stim¬son.Stimson had previously announcedthat the program would be cut from140,000 to 125,000 men by April 1.This, it appeared, will not be enoughto satisfy the committee.Committee members were particu¬larly critical of the Army’s classes inlanguages, to which 12,800 men wereMcMahon Planned asFeatured Guest AtService Fund RallyFrancis E. McMahon, associateprofessor of philosophy, will speak on“Education for Peace” at the WorldStudent Service Fund rally next Mon¬day, February 7 in Mandel Hall at12 noon.This rally is designed to promotethe World Student Service Funddrive which will be held from Febru¬ary 6 through February 26. Thecampus WSSF committee is composedof leading members of representative(See “McMahon,” page seven) assigned on January 10. Many menwith no background in languages havebeen asisgned to these courses, com¬mittee members said, while others,fluent in several languages, havedrawn humdrum Army chores.“It would be nearer right to reduceit to 25,000 instead,” RepresentativeKilday (Democrat, Texas), a commit¬tee member, said. “I feel no justifica¬tion has been shown for the program,with the possible exception of thethree medical categories (doctors,dentists, veterinarians).”If the committee decides to discon¬tinue the Army College Program, itwill recommend to‘the House Appro¬priations Committee that War De¬partment appropriations be reduced inthe amount necessary to sustain theprogram, and that restrictive provi¬sions be written into the appropriationbill to prevent use of other funds forthe purpose.It is still uncertain as to whetherthe recommendations will apply to theNavy specialized training progpram al¬so, which embraces 70,000 young men,but the military affairs committee hasauthority to pass on the question ifit so desires.Elect Leonard WhiteOf Chicago FacultyHead Association OfPolitical ScienceLeonard D. White, professor ofpublic administration at the Univer¬sity, has been elected 1944 presidentby the 2,500 members of the Amer¬ican Political Science Association, itwas announced last week by the re¬tiring president, Robert (hishman ofCornell University.Professor White, the author of 14publications and numerous mono¬graphs in the field of public adminis¬tration, is regarded as one of theforemost authorities in the country onmunicipal government personnel andadministration. Professor Whiteserved as a consultant on the Pres¬ident’s Committee on Civil ServiceImprovement from 1939 to 1940 andas a member of the U.S. Civil ServiceCommission and Central StatisticsBoard from 1934 to 1937. In 1930, heserved as an investigator on theHoover Commission of Social Trends.A member of the University facultysince 1920, he has acted as chairmanof the administrative committee ofthe Department of Political Sciencefor the past three years.An OutlookEditorialIn adopting this new, more convenient size for THECHICAGO MAROON, we feel that you will agree with usthat it is more practical than the previous neither stand¬ard nor tabloid size. In addition to making more conven¬ient the handling of THE CHICAGO MAROON by reduc¬ing the page size to thirteen column inches (from a pre¬vious fifteen), we are keeping in line with all War Produc¬tion Board restrictions on newsprint.The increase in price to five cents was necessitated bythe increased operating costs.We hope you will understand the needed changes, andfeel free to communicate with us concerning any matter.Joseph J. Weissman vPublisher ^Page TwoWilliam Wamhaugh THE CHICAGO MAROONRubensteijrt Playing;Rachmahineff WorlciSpeUbinds Vi/rltdrThe outstanding fealiire of lastSunday’s concert in memory of Rach¬maninoff was Artur Rubenstein’s per¬formance of the mighty Second Con¬certo, accompanied by the Minneap¬olis Symphony, conducted by DimitriMitrppoulds. His tone was a miracleflo^ of melody tothe orchestra. A capacitymitted a .smooth.soar aboveaudience filled Ithe 'Civic Opera, anaudience which was held spellboundbefore the miracle being wrought.From the slowly rising crescendo ofthe opening chords like the tolling ofa bell, the orchestra’s mighty openingsurge which rose and fell like foam¬ing waves, the lyric interludes beforethe.ini(ddle vivo section, the sol¬emn splendor of the alld marciai tothe glittering closie of the first move¬ment, the music < mounted on a flood-tide of melody. The second movementwas. a jewd (to borrow List’sphrase) set between two abysses: thewhole a beautiful lyric ^th piano,flute,.,oboe, and clarinet rhapsodizing.The finale moved with quick march¬like steps, interspersed with bravurapassages for the solo piano which re¬vealed the perfection of the Ruben-stein technique. At the conclusion aleave its seats until. Rubenstein hadresponded '^th the Chopin F SharpNocturne after five bows, and hadbowed ttdce more.ude in C Sharp Minor, in the tran¬scription of Sir Henry J. Wood andclosed with the Symphony Nc. 2 in EMinor. Mr. Mitropoulos, who man¬aged to restrain himself while actingas accompanist, produced a bloatedtone , in the prelude. His reading ofthe. symphony lacked the balancewhieh characterized his predecessor’s(Ormandy): he preferred apparently: (See “Concert,” page six)WiVii TERESA DOUNDANCING SCHOOL1208 E. .63rd St. (Near Woodlawn Av.)\Life Member of the Chicago/Association of Dancing Masters50c—BEGINNERS CLASSES—50c%Sun., Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs.,and Sat. Evenings at 8:30Private lessons $1.50—12 N-l I P.M. dallyLady or Gentleman InstructorsTelephone Hyde Park 30801131-1133 E. 55th St.Complete Selectionof Beers andOther Beverages-MIDway 0524Blatz Beer Ryerson Physical Laboratory, one of the most complete\ and experimental pikind in the country.Ryerson Physical Laboratory is thegift of Martin A. Ryerson in the mem¬ory of his father, one of Chicago’searliest settlers. At the dedication ofthe laboratory his son in his tributedeclared him to be “a man who inthe struggle to overcome the materialdifficulties of life found intellectual^owth and developed a tenderthoughtfulness for the welfare of hisfellow men.”During the campaign to raise$1,000,000 in 90 days for the Univer¬sity, Mr. Ryerson was abroad but hecabled $150,000. The building cost$200,037.41, to which Mr. Ryersonadded more for equipment. Designedby Henry Ives Cobb, the structurewas completed on January 1, 1894.In July of 1910 Mr. Ryerson pre¬sented $200,000 for improvement ofthe building and an addition to it.The new building with space increasedthreefold, was dedicated in December1913.The basement of the main building contains twelve research rooms, ofgreat stability and possessing failuniformity of temperature. Three ofthe rooms have been lined with corkand fitted with non-conducting doors.In one of these rooms Professor Mich-elson conducted experiments whichearned him the Nobel Prize in Phys¬ics, 1907.Two other rooms are kept at 0 de¬grees Fahrenheit and Centigrade bya carbon-dioxide cooling plant. Theserooms and others on the first floormay also be kept absolutely free frommoisture. In 1913, Professor Millikentional Academy of Sciences for workdone in these rooms in connectionwith the study of lions.Since the war began Ryerson Phys¬ical Laboratory has been used by theArmy for experimental purposes. Sosays the librarian anyhow who can’tget near the place to get some booksshe wants from the library.Religious Education NecessaryIn Universities, $qys Dr.Bernard Iddings Bell, in an inter¬view Thursday, stated that an under^-standing of religion and of variousbeliefs is necessary for an apprecia¬tion of all the culture of the westernworld.With 30 colleagues, also chaplainsat Great Lakes during the last war.Dr. Bell made a study of religiousbeliefs and practices of 100,000 menof all faiths. They found' that 80 pereent of the men knew nothing aboutreligion, its theo^ or its practice.With a divided church and state, noreligious education was to be found inthe schools, and teaching has alwaysbeen the least competent part of thechurches.The evidence of religious illiteracyon such a large scale persuaded Dr.Bell to devote his life to an attemptto rouse people to a realization of thefact that generations of these illiter¬ates were finding it difficult to live ad¬justed, happy and useful lives. Hehas spent 26 years of study on theproblem of how religious education can be introduced into American lifeand thought.Since universities are filled withyoung people, the same problem isseen. While students argue voluablyabout religion, very few have any realinformation on their subject. It shouldbe the duty of all educational institu¬tions to teach an understanding of re¬ligion without which much literatureand little history of the western worldcan be understood.How to undertake this task is dif¬ficult and Dr. Bell would appreciateany suggestions which may be sentto hini in care of the Dean of the Col¬lege who will forward them.Though an Episcopal clergyman.Dr. Bell is here as a research studentin adult education. His work is inter¬denominational and many educationalleaders have shown great interest inhis theories. ^ ^He has been on campus for twoweeks presenting a College sponsoredseries of lectures examining" theChristian religion. \ : 380 Engineers, AreaAndjanguage^giIn First Graduation^,' Arwar IS .won,,:a .nation.4S c.built, :athe people is measured iii terms of in-dividual accomplishments.; for a mancan be great in himself and of j Hini-.self, but a nation or an army can only!be great in its men,” stated WilburC. Munhecke, advisor to the Univer¬sity on war prospects, in an'address tothe/^ graduatesASTP units. of ithe UhiversityVIn the. first formal ceremony to beheld for graduating AST? meh sta¬tioned on campus, 380 men receivedcertificates Friday afternoon, Jan¬uary 28, in Rockefeller MemorialChapel. Certificates were granted to120 soldiers wbo have specialized inand language for foreign ad-miriistrative duties, apd to, 260 whohave completed'a Bourse in basic en-gineering. All 380 men have complet¬ed nine months of intensive training.The cominencemerit exercises werehighlighted by the presentjitipn oftwo $300 scholarships to the Univer¬sity for use after, the war. Graduat¬ing with highest honors in their re¬spective course of the Army Special¬ized Training Prograin were PrivateWilliam P. Hull of Detroit and Cor¬poral Murray Selig of New YorkCorporal Selig was top^ ranking.... .... ..- ... > .. 'V<f. ...the area and language course, andPrivate Hull ranked highest of the260 men who studied basic engineer¬ing.Major Herman E. Smith, Command¬ant of the ASTP at the University,presented the certificates to the 380graduating soldiers. Montague Apple-baiim member of the graduating engi¬neering class, rendered a violin solo.Mr. Munnecke’s address was entitled:“The Most Important Man In TheWorld.” Friday’s ceremony includedall the traditions of a University con¬vocation, processional, convocationaddres.s, and presentation of honorsand certificates.The area and language graduates,each of whom knew one language be¬fore entering the Program at theUniversity, have learned a languageof the allied or enemy countries. Inaddition to the language,' they havestudied the history and social, polit¬ical and econopiic conditions of thevarious countries. Basic engineeringstudents have completed a ninemonths’ course in the essentials ofphysics, chemistry, niathematics,geography, history and English. Wright ExaminesTrade BarriersOver Round TableTrade policies deydoped during thepresent conflict, .yniliiiietermine nostdeclared QuincyInternationalwar prosperity, < _Wright, Professor of,Law at the University, when the Uni-versity Round Table broadcast fromNew York the second ,of a series ofdiscussions on the Economic Stum-the U.S. andGreat Britain. 4 > /"bling . Blocks betweenDiscussing “Trade “Barriers toProsperous World” with/Mr.were Frank D. Graham, Professor ofEconomics at Princeton • University,and Herbert Feis, advisor, on interna¬tional economic affairs for the Depart¬ment of State.“The further general lowering ofbarriers between teade,’* said Mr. Gra-ham,* “will be thei nucleus.world condition8.’’/;He; further pointedout the necessityi/ofrta^ satisfacton’•'andGreat Britain ak\these two,; countriesnow control floppier cerit,of "the world’sforeign trade. ^“To maintain peacell successfully inthe future,” Mr. Feisldeclared, “polit¬ical arrangements bh^the internationalscale must have counter-economicparts. International trade/ agreementsare even more important, to countrieswith less diversifiedlresburces than tothe Anglo-American /^nations.' Theirtrade is their opportunity44for a moreprosperous way of living.”,The trade barriers to be feared ac¬cording to Mr. Graham, are.protectivetariffs, quota arrangements, and ex¬change controls.by vested interests /which have be¬come highly prosperous under the pro¬tective tariff, Mr. Wright said: “Thegeneral interest must come before, anyparticular right of dfiy other interest.”All speakers agreed that the imme¬diate period , following the war willbring serious difficulties to both Brit¬ain and the U.S.'/whja will be facedwith millions of unemployed and de¬teriorating investme^nt,,,shipping, andbanking systems. /This problem willmake it even more ^difficult to makefirm and farsighted, decisions in traderelations. /•“High tariffs, discriminating tradebarriers, and debte,” Mr. Wright con¬cluded, “will hamper -world productiv¬ity. Neither natiqn^^l .or internationalproblems can be solved unless theUnited States and Great Britainin agreement on the trade aspects. areIdell LowensteinCritic Find$ 48th ExhibitionOf ChicoQO Artists AppealingThere were several especially time-Whistler was once confronted by alady who said, “I don't know anythingabout art, but I know what I like”.“So,” he retorted, “does a cow.”Even thought it might appear in¬telligent to tear apart some of thelesser works shown at the 48th An¬nual Exhibition by Artists of Chicagoand vicinity, this article will be con¬fined to paintings and sculpturewhich appealed to the writer.This year’s Logan Prize was de¬servedly won by Edgar Miller forStudy: City Detail, exhibition number8. Night on the near north side, shim¬mering with light and color thatbreaks through the darkened build¬ings and sky, is presented in an ex¬citing and masterful portrayal ofChicago. Another beautiful and in¬teresting city scene is Harold Hay-don’s Comer of 57th and Harper(47), double-viewed through thewindshield of a car.William Schwartz, whose colors en¬tranced the writer when she was stillstudying 'Rithmetic, and Ivan Le Lor¬raine Albright, were unmistakablyrepresented. Albright’s The ShowcaseDoll That Was Never Painted (5),with his inimitable white highlight¬ing, had only three spots of color onits neutral canvas. Schwartz’s A Vil¬lage Comer (106), again displayedhis brilliant, varying greens, done inhis flawless, just-this-side-of-surreal-istic style.One of the most striking paintingsin the exbition was by Seaman Leo¬pold Seyffert, Jr.: Toddy, (107) anexpertly composed portrait of a girl,with a beautiful pattern of lights, afinely chiseled technique, and a won¬derful tang of life. Dor and Davis(73), by Arthur Lidoy, was a lovable,human portrayal of a woman and alittle boy, softer than Toddy, but notso well knit. ly pictures. For They Shall Be Filled(80), by Lou Matthews was done al¬most entirely in sienna tones of handsreaching upward to receive bread.The Bullets Were Coming Kind ofClose (27), by Julio de Diego, was aNew-Yorkerish scene of close shootingwith the Japs. War Time Station(29), by Elizabeth Englehard, was adelightful, realistic sketch, filled wtihan interplay of human activity.lAne Abstraction (21), by Pvt.Alexander Corazzo, was a pleasingsolution of black lines on white can¬vas with three color areas. Arrange¬ment No. 49 (66), by Medard Kleinwas an interesting abstraction of col¬ors. The up-and-coming Stanley Mit-ruk did an excellent still life: GreenApples, (86), showing a good dealmore than “promise.” WestleighFarm (65), by Clinton King, was alovely sunshiny, summer landscape.Another scene, this time of peopleunder an “L” station, was NovemberMorning (14), by Edithe Jane Cas-sady. Nan Rice from the 57th StreetColony exhibited Portrait of the LateWilliam Saunders (98).Margo Hoff (George Buher’s wife,if you were ever in the RaymondFund Classes) won a prize with Inthe Cathedral (54), four kneelingMexicans against the black and whitepattern of a tiled floor; and also ex¬hibited a charming ceramic; HaitenDancers (133). Girl Getting Into theWater (129), was a plaster figure byWolfgang Behl. A beautiful woodcarving was Two Figures (145), byJoy N. Steele. Mario C. Ubaldi hadan excellently modelled, feelingful,hard plaster portrait: My Friend Joe(249). A terra cotta head of our ownDr. Ulrich Midledorf (150) was doneby Egon P. Weiner.Mortimer Adler's Book On WarAnd Peace Not A Blueprint:Speaks Of Basic GeneralitiesHOW TO THINK ABOUT WARAND PEACEby Mortimer J. Adler, Simon andSchuster, New York, February*1944, xxiii t307 pp., $2.50Mr. Adler’s latest book is that rar¬est of things: an exhaustive, scholarlytreatment of a subject written for andIn the language of the non-scholarlypopulation of the world. The book isnot directed towards men as Ameri¬cans, but as men as members of aglobal community.How to Think about War and Peaceis not designed as a manual for thepeace table; it offers no scheme forgeographical organization, economiccollaboration, political or military ar¬rangements; nor does it tell you what^ do with the enemy when the warIS finished. In a sense, these problemsare irrelevant, because their solutioncan result only in slight relief from^ar, not settle the causes of war.These problems are particular things.To study each one separately, withouta frame of reference, without a pointof view as jumping-off-place for dis¬cussion, is to stay on the bottom levelcf Plato’s divided line. Mr. Adler sup- MORTIMER J. ADLER“. . . his book no peace table manuaUplies a frame of reference to illumi¬nate each particular thing and lead tothe general principals which hold forall the particular things.A profound study of war and peace(See “Adler,” page seven) - THE CHICAGO MAROON Page ThreeOrganist Alexander SchreinerExtols Merits Of Sight ReadingAlexander Schreiner, famous Amer¬ican organist, will include the Univer¬sity of Chicago on his current trans¬continental tour. He will play a reci¬tal at Rockefeller Chapel on March 13.A brilliant career of organ programsthroughout the United States launchesSchreiner on his first extended tourof the major cities across the conti¬nent.At the age of ei .'ht, Schreiner wasalready a church or^ -inist and was ap¬pointed to the post of organist at thenewly built Salt Lake Tabernacle, oneof the largest churches in the world.In 1928, he played the first of the na¬tional radio programs which now areone of the oldest series in existence.Millions have heard the huge organof the Tabernacle in these Sundaymorning broadcasts. From 1930 to1939 he divided his time between SaltLake City and the University of Cali¬fornia at Los Angeles where he taughtthe Schoenberg system of harmonyand played about 100 recitals yearly.Schreiner’s command of organ re¬pertoire is reputedly enormous. Fol¬lowing a season of recitals at the Uni¬versity, he would go to the Salt LakeTabernacle to toss off another fortyprograms to as many audiences.Schreiner is a devotee of the art ofsight-reading. “You read a book atsight, then why not music? It is onlya matter of practice and experience.Pilot Tests InCobb MondayWould you care to receive a salaryamounting to approximately $291monthly? Any alert University ofChicago student will be given an op¬portunity to do so. With the salaryyou’ll be awarded the Navy Wings ofGold and be commissioned an Ensignin the U.S. Naval Reserve or a 2ndLieutenant in the U.S. Marine CorpsReserve. All you have to do is take acouple of aptitude tests on Monday,February 7, in Room 110 of CobbHall, starting at 3:00 p.m. If you passyou’re in; and if a U. of C. studentcan’t pass it, who can?The Naval Aviation Cadet Board ofChicago wants 600 men from amongthe 17 and 18-year-old college menor high school graduates to meet theirwinter quota. If you take the tests andyour grades are acceptable, you’ll en¬ter the Naval Aviation V-5 pilot-offi¬cer training program. This new V-5flight program now offers you two ad¬ditional semesters of the Navy V-12college training course. This V-5course is also open to 19 through 26-year-old high school graduates andcollege men.Deadline for enlistment under thisquota is February 12, and all eligiblestudents are advised not to miss Mon¬day’s tests; information on the V-5program also may be obtained at thattime. Men taking the V-5 examina¬tions are never under any obligations,and an applicant is not in the Navysimply because he takes the tests.Upon completion of the program, ca¬dets will receive the aforementionedcommissions, award and salary. Reading widely in music literature isas exhilarating as a jaunt through anew village, or travel through a for¬eign land. Pianists and organists canhave great pleasure in reading notALEXANDER SCHREINER“. . . to sightread at U.ofC.**only their own voluminous literature,but also that of other instrumentalistsand singers.”Prairie Club SceneOf Chapel Union'sOuting February 72The second Chapel Union outing ofthe current school year has been sched¬uled for the weekend of February 12and 13 at the Palos Park Prairie Club.If the weather is fair the vacationerswill play baseball, football, and otheroutdoor games. Alternative activitieswill be substituted in case of badweather. A barn dance and a programof ghost stories are planned for en¬tertainment Saturday evening.Any students wishing to go on theexcursion are asked to sign up in theChapel office before February 7. Allparticipants will leave for the PrairieClub at 11 a.m. on the morning ofSaturday, February 12.Last Sunday, January 30, ChapelUnion’s weekly meeting featured astudent discussion on the subject ofValues. The discussion leaders wereHuston Smith and Howard Parsons,two divinity students who are teachinga course in Values at the AbrahamLincoln School, 30 W. WashingtonStreet.Social Problems LikeMathematics: Morgenthau“Social problems are very much likemathematical problems. They can besolved-and their solution is implicitin the very essence of reason fromwhich it is to be evolved through achain of logical deductions,” saidHans J. Morgenthau, visiting profes¬sor in political science in a lecturelast Tuesday, when he spoke on “TheAge of Science and the Social World”. As a child, Schreiner spent his leis¬ure hours playing the sonatas of Bee¬thoven, and played them one afterthe other, one every day. He says,“That which you persist in doing be¬comes easy, not that the nature of thetask has changed, but that your abilityto do it has increased.” He feels thatAmerican students are prone to wantto learn one piece with which to showoff, to the neglect of an acquaintancewith the remainder of music litera¬ture.Speaking of sight-reading, one daySchreiner was visiting back stage ata performance of Gershwin’s “Rhapso¬dy in Blue.” The regular soloist wasill with fright and walked off the stageas the orchestra was getting underway. Schreiner’s impish nature as¬serted itself, for he picked up a copyof the music, walked out into the spot¬light dressed as he was in streetclothes, and read the piano solo partat sight. “There is no pleasure likereading great quantities of music atsight,” says Alexander Schreiner.Hans Lange DirectsChamber Program Of18th Century Music;Mandel Next WeekOn Friday, February 11, the Univer¬sity Chamber Orchestra, composed ofplayers selected from the larger Uni¬versity Orchestra, under the baton ofHans Lange, will present a programof seldom-heard eighteenth centuryworks for chamber orchestra. Theprogram will consist of a Handel Con¬certo Grosso never performed in Chi¬cago before; Haydn’s Symphony No.48 in C Major (“Maria Theresa”);and Mozart’s Concerto for Bassoonand Orchestra, this last with ClarkeKessler, bassoonist of the ChicagoSymphony as soloist.The eighteenth century was a pe¬riod which produced a large quantityof charming compositions for the or¬chestras of the Esterhazys, the Lob-kowitzes, and Rassomousky. Unfor¬tunately, large quantities of this mu¬sic have lain in unjustifiable neglectdue to the gravitation of taste to thelarger forms with the advent of pub¬lic concerts in the opening decade ofthe nineteenth century. Much of thismusic is worth many hearings, as itis the most polished expression of anage which was characterized by anemphasis upon the precise phrasing ofan idea and its orderly development.Last season Mr. Lange demonstrat¬ed that the eighteenth century mas¬ters were his forte: a week from to¬day we shall see what he has beenable to do with a group which wasable to sustain its part in performingMilhaud. Students are reminded thattickets for the remaining three con¬certs of the season may be obtainedfor $2.00, including tax, at the In¬formation Office. This provides, anopportunity at an unus ially low priceto become acquainted with outstand¬ing classics of the chamber repertory.Page Four- THE CHICAGO MAROONThe Chicago MaroonOfficial student publication of the University of Chicago, pub-lished every Friday duringsthe -academic , quarters.vPUBLISHER;EDITOR: David SmothersMANAGING EDITOR: Barbara WinchesterBUSINESS MANAGER: Ward J. Sharhach, Jr.EDITORIAL ASSOCIATES: Alice Ludwig, Bill RobertsBUSINESS ASSOCIATES: Lolly Kabrine, Alan J.Strauss -ASSISTANTS: Caifpll:-Atwater, Barbara Barke,: PhilBriggs, Harmon "Craig,^ Bill Erlandson; Mae .Falk,Marillyn . Fletcher,, Bamby. Golden, Fred Gottesman,Dorothy Granquist, Jim Hqskinson, Dorothy Iker,vHarry .Krollj Louis' Levit.i ldell LWenstein,, DaniaMerrill, MuriaU Newman, S. Harold Patinkin* DonShields, Cynthia; Sibley^ Nancy Smith, Fred Sulcer,Shirly Vande^alker, William Wambaugh ,Faculty RestrictionsWhen^ last * *a-WT 1InaJ a- .. , .. . Hall, Jiiost of the^ -TT . -I J? 1the University of Chicago knew. . : , - V -r-. 1what was going to happen. Ever since last aut-umn, when the administration first decreed^all revenue received fro .nr-lr of fharnffers ifr**'' COIierS, 1Chad been obvious \what he was driving at. Lastweek the entire plan was made public.Henceforth alt copyright or patent royaltiesLi’ V , ‘_U? 'Al. — -^^lAy lUCUiUCA O ' UA l/HC cav:priated by the Administration. In return salarieswill be ad justed, in proportion. The details of theproject need not be listed here. In relation to it,however, there are a number of points that areimmediately self evident.To many Chicago .faculty members, their lifeoutside the University is as important, if notmore so, than their duties here. Some are nation¬wide figures, politicians, commentators, writers.They, speak oyer the air, they write newspapercolumns, they publish books. These men do notown University, regardless of how great thatUniversity may be. To them there is a world out-menThere are others, of course, who are contentMidway. It is possible that these even form amajority. However, the protest which is risingat this moment against the injunction is proofthat a great many are by no means willing to letA".'the matter pass undisputed. Perhaps it can besaid that the administration is not prohibitingUniversity; it could not. Nevertheless, it is evi¬dent .that the University's latest actions offer-According to Hutchins, the plan takes into con-siderAtign the welfare of the whole faculty. It isquestionable, however, whether it takes into con-Thereare many men who, while otherwise more thariwilling to join Chicago’s Faculty, might refusein the light of what has just happened. A manwho does not wish to be a teacher, pure and sim¬ple, all his life, will not be attracted to a Univer¬sity where anything he may earn on his own ini¬tiative does not belong to him. The Board ofTrustees’ new injunction may in no way prohibitsuch activities, but it by no means offers a de¬sirable field for them. This Week On CampusFebruary 4, Friday—i . Noon service at Joseph Bond Chapel, James LutherAdams, Professor of Theology, Federated Theologi-cal faculty. ■■ ' ~College- Lecture-Discussion, “The Moral ChallengeFacing Christianity,” final meeting in the series “AnExamination of the; Christian Religion,” Rev.; Dr.Bernard I. Bell, speaker; .Maynard C. Krueger, As¬sistant Professor of Economics, discussion leader.Graduate Education 126, 7:15 p.m.. Student Forum presents Rabbi A. J. Seinberg, ofTemple Beth-El,. Hammond, Ind., wbo will speak on“Thp RritisVi 'Wiiife Paper and,the Four Freedc'— ”Classics, 17.“At HomeV—atit “Y” ,Office, 3:30-6 p.m.Chapel Union ,Outi.,^, m^t at 11 a.m. at PrairieFebruary 5, Saturday—Club, Palos Park.' ' - " ■ • ' V4inXT 1 , "Three-Cent Stamp,” Ida-Noyes Hall, 8:30-11:30 p.m.Basketball game, University of Chicago vs. Unh:W:Inter-club Ball, Louis XVIth roqm, Shorelknd Ho-A 1 n OA A ,tel, ,9:30 p.m. to 1 a.m.February 6,1 Sunday-^University Chapel Service, 11 a.m., Rev^ HdwardThurman, Dean of Chapel at Howard University,Washington, D.C. ‘A.,- mmmrnUniversity of Chicago Round Table, 12:30 \p.in\NBC, “World Relirf and Behabilitation.” 'h \“Hi-Notes,” new r^did program for college students';12:45-1:15 p.m. Radio station W.^AFCarillon recital, Frederick-. Marriott, UriiverrityChapeli 4 p.m.Sunday Sdireei International House, 4:16^ p.m.,program of Scarlatti, Bach; Brahms, Debussy and.Albeniz by Dorothy Walters, pianist.Vesper service; Uniyersity Chapel, Wheaton College ^Men’s Glee Gub, -i:30 p.m. aFebruary 7, Monday-^Noon service at Joseph Bond chapel, Ray Jenney, ;Minister of Bryn Mawr Community Church.University of Chicago students participating inradio program, “Chicago Brain Battle,” 6:30 pirn.WBBM.“Types of Comedy,” Napier Wjlt, Professor of Eng¬lish and Dean of Students in Division of Humani¬ties, 8-10 p.m., Social Science Research 122. Fourthin series, “The American Theater and Its Popular,Antecedents.”February 8, Tuesday-^Women’s Athletic Association sponsors “Sugarihg-Off” party, Ida Noyes Coke Bar, 3:30-5 p.m.Lecture, “Scientific Spirit in Foreign Affairs,” HansMorgenthau, 4:30 p.m.. Social Science 122.■-February 9, Wednesday—“Peace as a Prqblem of Economics,” Jacob Viner,-Morton D. Hull Distinguished Professor of Econoni-ics. University of. Chicago Public Lecture, Breast dHall, Oriental Institu^, 4:30 p.m.Raymond H. Joyce, resident of Chinese Turkes^hfor six years, sp.eaks to Christian Youth Lea^e. oh“The Gospel Challenges Communism in CentralAsia,” Ida Noyes, 6-6:50 p.m.Public Affairs membership luncheon, Ida „GSSnack Bar, nqoil.“The Great Reforms of 1861 and the Disillusion¬ment: The Growth of Radical Criticism,” GeorgeV. Bobrinsky, Assistant Professor of Sanskrit, So¬cial Science 122, 8-10 p.m.February 9, 10^ 11, and 12^—Intimate Theater, Ida Noyes 8:30 p.m.February 11, Friday—Noon worship service, Joseph Bond Chapel, AmyLopez, graduate student, Department of English^Chamber concert, 8 p.m., Mandel Hall, Hans Lange,associate conductor of Chicago Symphony Orches¬tra, and the University Chamber Orfchestra.February 12, Saturday—Student SocialIda Noyes,Hermes’ orchestra.' 0 >\ ’'Committee'K ^ ir’''' 9 dance, “Sweetheartp.m. to midnight. Wally,. '“..'r r-‘ of the campus was covered from Cobbto Rockefeller; from,Reader’s to thesnack bar; from Hutchins,to me. Theeditorial was a classic;' the Bazaarwas interesting, the Counterpoint' cx-pose was really an expose. In : one ofmy private polls I found the. soldierson campus enthusiastic over theiiThis column is open to any student or faculty member of the Univ^r.^Bity of Chicago. The only limitaMon set on letters is that they should he dnsubjects of interest and concern te CHICAGO MAROON readers ),To The Editor:I used to purchase the Maroon forthe sole desire of criticising it. It usedto irk me just to look at a'Maroon.I told myself it was :^unworthy of ourschool; that its coverage was woeful¬ly inadequate; that its writers weresemi-illiterate and cliquish; that its'. 'editors were partial ^ and, unskilled;that its make-,up.,was bad and its staffincomplete. Then one Friday after•,the eight page issues came out,- ! tookthe trouble of reading everything inprint. And something! happened. Itdidn t irk me to look . at . the: Maroonany more. Another issue, on the same'order, came ouWand. another and, yetanother. And the feeling oLbeing irkedat Its sight was. a feeling of. the past.In the . last offering of the ChicagoMaroon I found an issue* with; which•ax 1 AX - ' 1 • A AX Apage—with only the complaint thatAX ' »A X nr"x T A " J Athere wasn t enough. When I turned tothe letters to the editor columns,:andread Shirly Vandewalker’s explanationelation.I went further. I sought .out, the edi¬tors and writers of:-the, Chicago Ma-mi;roon and met them face to face. Iknew Dave Smothers to be a coura¬geous fellow-T-now I, found him to. bea brilliant fellow with a brilliant style.I met Don Shields. He .was. friendlyand easy to talk with. He has morefriends than enemies; and most of hisenemies (and I speak from.experience)don’t even know what he looks like. Iadmired Atwater’s column from itsorigination; now you can .add: to. that.my admiration of Carroll Atwater. Inever liked Nancy Smith before I got, , ^1^ana ner column shows it.Before., the recent present, 1. wouldhave nothing to do with'the Maroon.When Counterpoint w;as l)orn, Ithought I had finally, fpund an, openingfor. my journalistic abilities. .'Im theprocess of its abreyiated "growth, theChicago Maroon became" a worthycampus publication. Now Counterpointis,a dead enterprise, while" the. Maroonflourishes.,In the past I hadn!t thought‘ •V-’-X * ’• I-.,'. •the Chicago ‘Maroon . worthy,., of me,'y - ™ ' t.Chicagolet my journalistic abilities go towaste. I desire to be on your steff,Mr. Weissman, so I offei* you my ser¬vices—even if all you want'me to dois. sell the paper. To your continuedsuccess then, ' '' j'!/- * ‘S. Harold PatinkinJo The Editor^ ; !' ^Congratulations on your perspicaci-'i'*'--*:.’*' . .. .i* .Vi. 'ty in the happy choice of Mr. William.Wambaugh as music-critic.Mr. Wambaugh has^ shown judg¬ment, freshness of style, and above all Friday’s recital. It takes not only ex¬cellent musical' knowledge, but cour¬age to give a forthright interpretationof the works produced by a celebrityof Mr. Stravinsky’s calibre./; J, J Very truly yours,; Lilian E. WinlakeTo The EditorAs. the hands on the clock, on theOhio Bus Terminal told us, itnearing five o!clock, on the morningof January 3,, we arose, some seven¬teen of us, from the sitting, kneeling,or leaning positions in which we hadbeen singing for the last five hours.Seventeen, did. I say?. Yes, and whata significant seventeen it was! Repre¬senting many! denominations, manynations, and many races, , a group of600 students ".had been gathered to-Studeht Christiangetheri,. for theJ -O-.- - » .Movement at .Wooster. Of this partic¬ular seventeen^ two were Chinese,four American ^ whites,, two SouthAmericans, two Canadians, one aBritisher, oiie’ Nigerian, one French,one Spanish,-one-American Negro,and two Japariesel Singing, did I say?And how we:sang! During the fivehours, under the leadership of KarlDowns,, the r 28 yr; old president ofSam Houston College; we sang. every¬thing from the latest and'most pop¬ular! hits to the ,c)i<i favorites, thehymns and the Negro spirituals. Butnow, as the .end:bf the conference wasnear and oiir"ifain times were ap-A • •preaching, we arose to join arms in a• ■ J X- - 'Jin “Till We Meet Again.”And I have seen .this same finespirit reflected .in many of my experi-iences on the , University of Chicago.‘campus.. But this spirit of understand¬ing and mutiiar aid is not present inevery community of students. Wehear of how the .Chinese students areforced to move, .with only what booksthey can carry ' :in" hand, to saferplaces. The Japanese American stu-dents have had ‘to leave their pos¬sessions and move to, relocation cent¬ers where conditions make study al-most impossiblerThe, prisoners of warof - all nations are being deprived ofa,freedom which we enjoy: that oflearning. These students' are the di-' : . . ■ ^ ...rect victims of an evil for which they’ 'are no more responsible than each oneof us.. , .We then, as.ffee: students, for whomothers are having to sacrifice, mustfeel our duty to actively express thatspirit of understanding and aid whichis ours. We must financially con¬tribute to the World Student ServiceFund. W(B must all, each of us, joinother world ; students :in the WorldDay of Prayer in Rockefeller Chapelat 4:30 p.m. on February 20.“ < Frank A. Higgins.To the Editor : > /We too are . readers of the CHI¬CAGO MAROON; If you do not con¬tinue to add tolybur writing vocabu¬lary such words ‘ as “Damn” and“Hell”, we shall boycott the Maroon-^aiid there are two of us. Do you notdesire to present a fair cross-sectionof,the student body?... Very truly yours,Marv Ann Schmu'/ 14' •'' ': ■ /• : - \\\ ' 1 ' '' : J , Mary Ann Schmidt: : Nancy Bush* ^ i % Ilf ^Page RveFeature PageDon ShieldsTraveling BazaarWell, at last we got a peep of the entering class...I don’t think I ought to call them Freshmen because no¬body really quite knows...they range from 2nd YearHigh-School to godknowswhat.. .but from the looks of’em you can bet that they’re mostly “real collitch kids”..As in other years (when we got our freshmen everySept, instead of every month or so) a few of the womencan be called outstanding.. .In previous years they wereRosemary Peacock & Betsy Wallace, Carlyn Truax & LynHill • • • them women who have made campusnames for themselves .. . This class’ candidates for fameseem to be a triumvirate of Corina Rodgers, Connie Sla¬ter, and Marilyn Burkhart.. .When final pledging comesaround we’ll be hearing a lot more about them...An¬other one not to be overlooked is Janet English a veryquiet girl from Kansas.. .Janet wears a diamond fromone Marion Hall of the Army Air Forces...The fewfreshmen men are a little better off than the women...Inter-Fraternity council has forbidden all rushing for thenext two weeks.. .consequently the men didn’t get aroundas much as their more interesting partners... Larry Brcn-ncn has the height and build for the basketball team andfrom the scores we could use him... Mary May has acousin in the new class named Joe...There is also theusual crop of exhibitionists and those who try to out¬college the Bwoe’s.. .only two or three of the menturned out to be the pipe-smoking men-about-campustype that has become almost a cliche around here...they’ll probably grow up in a week or two...The most amazing sight at the Mixer was Suzie Shry-ock and her BLACK EYES!.. .Reports about it conflict...when I asked her how it happened she just shrugged andsaid ‘T dunno I guess Jim Ritter and me have broken up”Dania Merrill swears that somebody hit Suzie with acouch...take your choice.. .Heard that Alice McLaugh¬lin finally went down to Texas to become the bride ofEddie Armstrong who will get a commission in a fewweeks.. .The Sunday afternoon brawls at Sigrid Grande’s“Slaughter House” are out-rivaled only by those of Mag¬gy at the “Chez Mag-Mar”.. .While redecorating theirapartment Sig and her roommate put up a wall of plas¬ter-board and titled it in big red letters: “Guestie List” I...on this sacred plaque are inscribed the witticisms andsignatures of the campus elite...also a few odd foot¬prints here and there.. .Louanna Engelhart’s glasseshave long been the object of public wonderment if notanxiety.. .Every day the frames are a different color...and they never match anything.. .1 think the poor childsits up nights with her pots and pigments and thinks upnew and more fascinating ways of painting them.. .Mu¬riel Newman ought to stop wearing her monogram onher blouses or at least add a question mark after it.. .asit is now she appears regularly with a great big MENon her collar.. .Gloria Sandalis returned Tom Mahony’sDeke pin to him when he came in on furlough.. .1 smell astory behind it but Gloria isn’t talking., .The rumor tobe scotched this week is the one concerning the Coke Bar...there is NOT an epidemic of Trench Mouth emanat¬ing from there.. .this vicious and evil calumny.was start¬ed by jealous females who are piqued at the number ofmen who flock up there to entertain Genny Lorish.. .the•story was designed to keep them away... Dinny Buttsrecovering from a siege of Scarlet Fever, Pneumonia, andIngrown Toenails hit the campus looking her own healthyself...She tells me that Pete Gunnar (and nobody yetknows whether or not she’s got his Beta pin) is now over¬seas ... he’s in England and cutting a wide swath in thebest circles.. .Marge Fogarty still insists she’s got Ed¬die Steel’s Alpha Delt pin but coyly suggests that perhapsshe left it home on the dresser.. .At any rate she hasn’tWorn it for a while...“Mike” Wallace who has the unique distinction ofbeing the only female in a Meteorology class of somefew hundred air cadets did the inevitable... she marriedone of ’em.. .Wayne Gasper in on leave from Great Lakesdazzled the “Luncheon Set” in Ida with stories of hisnaval career.. .Bill Roberts has been surprising all of usin the MAROON office with his weird and very Thurber-osque sketches of the personalities who frequent the fouli^ole... I never knew he had a bit of the psychoanalyst^n him.. .which is just about all this typewriter can stand•■.D.S. -7— THE CHICAGO MAROONBill ErlandsonJazz Cocktails“Concerto For Cootie,” the Duke Ellington record of1940, has been reissued under the name of “Do NothingTill You Hear From Me”—The same thing happened to“Never No Lament” by the Duke which turned up as“Don’t Get Around Much Anymore”. This is a perfectexample of how good jazz is commercialized. Put a fewcheap lyrics on a fine jazz tune and sell it to the millions.Only five bars of “Concerto For Cootie” sound like therevised popular song.Robert Goffin, the Belgian jazz critic, has written anew book published by Doubleday Doran entitled Jazz—From the Congo to the Metropole. The book has rathera twofold meaning, I think; one to soundly rebuke certainstandards which have been set up by other jazz criticsand by so doing try to equalize the importance of some ofthe hitherto neglected phases such as the Original Dixie¬land Jazz Band or the records of the Cotton Pickers orFrank Guarente. His other purpose seems to be that oftracing the history of jazz and explaining what its im¬portance was, is, or may be in the development of music.Here Coffin does a fine job because he is definitely on theright track towards placing jazz in the position which itshould enjoy in comparison with the other arts.It will probably be hard for a person who knows lit¬tle or nothing about jazz to read this book. Goffin assumesthat the readers of “Jazz” do have something to sayabout the subject, and his text seems to be more of acontinuation of what has been written before rather thanan attempt to introduce the reader to jazz.Goffin’s all-American band, which he picked for “Es¬quire” last year was practically the identical band thata whole pack of critics picked for the same magazine thismonth, which goes to prove that Goffin knows what heis talking about. He is perhaps the subject’s most sobercritic. His book is important and was definitely needed.The reaction to it will be very interesting, for he breaksprecedent, and in jazz that’s hard to do without a hardreaction.^ancy SmithBox OfficeThe column this week will have a sort of western fla¬vor. In fact. I’m declaring a John Wayne Day. JohnWayne is our favorite cowboy.A LADY TAKES A CHANCE.. .on cowboy and sweepsthe stakes at a hundred-to-one shot. Jean Arthur (MollyTruesdale, the Lady) takes up where she left off in “TheMore The Merrier.” She plays an adorable white collargirl on an abhorabel bus tour ($137.50 all expenses paid).The sightseeing starts becoming worth-while when, at arodeo, cowboy Wayne is bucked by a bronco right on topof her. They recover their faculties in a noisy westernsaloon, jump through a window when the brawl begins,landing on a hayrack, where they beeme better acquaint¬ed. Miss Arthur misses her bus as a result of all this; isdismayed at the fact that she missed the Pacific Ocean,the Grand Canyon and The Waterfall of Seven Delights.(“I’ve never even seen a waterfall with one delight!”she rues.) Wayne chivalrously offers her his room, butseeing the gleam in his eye she kicks him out right away.Vagabond Wayne loves only his horse and his freedom(“Women are like socks; you gotta change them often”)but Jean insists that “any man who can love a horse canlove a girl.” Much occurs, but finally she proves thatWayne’s sidekick Charles Winninger is wrong in sayingthat she is “barking up the wrong cowboy.”“A Lady Takes a Chance” is a clever comedy, clever¬ly directed and photographed. It is decidedly worth see¬ing. (Don’t forget that John Wayne is six feet four inch¬es and Jean Arthur is as cute as a bug’s ear.)IN OLD OKLAHOMA.. .might have been named some¬thing less archaic. It is one of those unfortunate titlesmovie audiences forget that they saw advertised.. .Wehave the city slicker, the old timer and the rootintootin-twogunshootin cowboy (once more Wayne). A touch ofsomething new is added with Martha Scott as a femaleauthor who DARED to write a racy novel (not consider¬ed so now, to be sure!) The plot is all mixed up in theyouthful oil business of the early nineteen-hundreds...City slicker Albert Dekker vs. Honest John Wayne andtownspeople. Wayne’s philosophical mouthpiece is hisnon-existent granny...A subtle cowboy is an amazingphenomenon. The finis is apparent, but it’s delightful towatch. Carroll AtwaterWhat Price SanityBefore I say another word I would like to repair last week’s plug for thePoetry Library. It is now located on Harper sixth floor, as any literate poetry-lover will tell you. Only one has so far told me.« « «Around the MAROON office there is always the saga of the Moody Bible.It all began down at the printer’s, known to the local journalists as Chief’s.A couple of weeks ago one of our pagan night editors was down there andspied a Bible. He had a couple of hours to kill so he read a few chapters.He became interested and when the paper was duly couched, he tucked the Bi¬ble into his coat pocket, intending to finish a chapter at his leisure. Early inthe morning telephone calls started coming in to the MAROON office fromChief’s. “Where is our Moody Bible?” Everyone in the office looked aroundfeverishly all morning, but the inspiration of Chief’s office could not be found.Some time in the afternoon the night editor, refreshed after a good morning’ssleep, arrived. The missing book, already forgotten by him, was found inhis pocket and rushed down to Chief’s. Order was restored again.« « *Wendell Willkie appeared as guest-conductor on Monday night’s Infor¬mation Please, and he started right in by calling the experts by their firstnames, very chummily. He conducted the whole program with an air of briskefficiency that is very comforting in a likely presidential candidate. One canpicture him at a League of Nations meeting saying candidly, “Now see here,Joe, the thing’s got to be approached from a more business-like angle.”« «My sister returned home from her examinations for the Marines with anilluminating report on the bottleneck situation. Having filled out a question¬naire and having discovered that the Wave in charge had given her the Wavequestionnaire instead of the Marines she went back to get the proper formfrom the Wave. She noticed at the same time that the^Wave was handing outthe blanks automatically, and at the same time was deep in the Decameron ofBoccaccio.Lolly KahrinePlush And TunaReturns are in from the Rubenstein-Rachmaninoff-Mitropoulos concertSunday—probably to be billed as the outstanding music feature of the year.And you aren’t the only one who couldn’t get tickets . . . there was me forinstance . .. who wasn’t even at close enough range with phonograph to catchRubenstein by telepathy . . . and who fitfully passed up “Terry and the Pi¬rates”, “Abbie and Slats” and “The Batman” to get to three reviews . . . thethree reviews, to vastly understate, were very interesting when compared. . . Claudia of the Trib revealed her deep passion for Rachmaninoff by con¬tinually harping on Civic Opera House acoustics . . . Claudia would do betterby climbing down from the gallery once in a while and forgetting the tech¬niques of music (which she apparently knows nothing about, anyway) . . .perhaps she shouldn’t even attend concerts . . . the circus will be around soon... in the meanwhile perhaps she should just read other reviews . . . butcertainly not C.J. Bulliet’s . . . Bulliet’s reaction to the most emotional mu¬sic ever composed was a rather involved algebraic proportion: Rubenstein:Rachmaninoff^Cezanne: Greco. He loses his usual conservatism, however,with the ecstatic conclusion that “Altogether it was a memorable program”. . . Yipeee . . . My only satisfaction was found in Felix Borowski of theSun .. . and no, I am not prejudiced in Sun favor because of Frank Smothers’yellow shaving sweater . . . Memo-to-oneself-to-remember-what-not-to-say-dept.: Stop repeating the cliche anecdote to friends and spectators about howRachmaninoff hated his own C sharp minor Prelude ... it is apparent thateveryone from Cassidy on up knows about it . . .News commentators, reporters, interpreters, and raconteurs had a galatime Sunday and Monday of this week relating, remarking, and repeatingthe avid and notably sparse details of Hitler’s last speech . . . one and allthey drooled over its pessimistic note and propaganderizingly speculated onwhat he meant by “Russia or Germany will be the only victors in this war”.. . the one point they couldn’t agree upon was the time element. . . was it 21,22, or 25 minutes long ?...Careful perusal of somebody’s Stylebook reveals such cageytidbits as: the hyphen is not a decoration, and don’t use commas un¬less they are necessary in a sentence . . . also spellings like armour for armorand fibre for fiber and rat for cat are strictly no sir . . . it further specifiesin loud and lucid tones that when one is writing ad copy one does not confusesales with special sellings, sellings, or clearances and still receive one’s paycheck regularly...Professor Napier Wilt at Soc. 122 Monday evening last merely touchedthe top soil of the drama and revealed a rather touching example of one whodoes not do enough research preceding a lecture . . . however, the hour and ahalf was entertaining and interesting and displayed a rather delightful hatredon the part of Prof. Wilt for Ziegfield, Cole Porter, and technicolor, whichhave all contributed to the downfall of the theater and the upshot of themusical extravaganza with moving stage, legs, costumes and song and dance'. . . P.S. (public service) . .. “God damn it” first reached the dra3rma in 1909and has been articulately present since . . . g.d.i. ... L.K.Page Six — ■Voice Of Company E ContinuesJo Contemplate Hospital Life; DiflBcult to say what this week’scolumn will prove or disprove. A lit¬tle of everything seems to be the gen¬eral idea of most of these literarycontributions, so here we go again.Your reporter is still putting intime at the Gardiner General Hospi¬tal, formerly the Chicago Beach Ho¬tel; and as one day follows another, ■he is learning a little here and a littlemore there regarding said Army in¬stitution.The name of the hospital? Hereare a few more facts to supplementwhat I wrote last week. The hospitalwas named in honor of Second Lieu¬tenant Ruth M. Gardiner, who wasthe first “flight nurse” to lose herlife in the performance of duty in theservice of her country. LieutenantGardiner was bom May 20, 1914, inCalgary, Alberta. In 1934, she wasgraduated from the Whitehaven Sani¬tarium, Whitehaven, Pa., and wascommissioned in the Nurses Corps onJune 15, 1942.In July, 1943, she was assigned toFlight A on the 805th EvacuationSquadron attached to the 11th AirForce of the Alaska Defense Com¬mand. On July 27, 1943, while on amission to evacuate patients by AirTransport, she was instantly killedin a crash ten miles northwest ofNaukek, Alaska, in the North Ameri¬can Area.The former Chicago Beach Hotelwas first used by the Army as aStation Hospital for Air Force andother troops in the Chicago area. Itwas acquired on October 15, 1943, andwas formally opened as a StationHospital for the Chicago area on De¬cember 20, 1942. The conversion froma hotel to a military hospital was ac¬complished as a war measure in theRabbi Seinberg ToSpeak On PalestinePicture For ForumRabbi A. J. Seinberg, a leadingZionist, ^11 speak to the StudentForum today in Classics 17 at 4 p.m.He will speak on “Palestine, the Brit¬ish White Papers, and the Four Free¬doms”.Of special interest to incomingfreshmen is the fact that the Fommhas recently reorganized on a commit-te basis. Because of this there arenow many opportunities for anyonewho is interested. At the present timethe Forum has signed 25 new mem¬bers and anyone who is interested isinvited to come to the Forum office,Lexington 15 B in the afternoon. Thereare now many opportunities for peo¬ple interested in debate since theForum has scheduled several debatesfor the immediate future.Next Wednesday the members willhold a bull session with Mr. EdwardWilliams, president of Hobo College,leading the discussion. The place forthis meeting will be announced viabulletin boards.Mr. Albert E. Glenn, of the C.I.O.regional office will speak to the mem¬bers of the Forum on the NationalService Law at their next regularmeeting next Friday in Classics 17 at4 pjn. short period of sixty days. This speedwas made possible because of the “L”shape of the building; all patients’rooms and wards have outside win¬dows. Space is adequate to accomo¬date 1,250 patients. The Medical De¬partment has furnished the installa¬tion with the most modern medical andsurgical equipment. These installa¬tions, together with a carefully se¬lected professional staff, assure theAmerican soldier the best and mostmodern medical and surgical equip¬ment. The hospital is complete withlarge operating rooms, modem X-rayequipment and physiotherapy appara¬tus, a large dental clinic, and othernecessary departments.The unit continued to operate as aStation Hospital from December 20,1942, until September 16, 1943, whenby War Department order it becamethe Gardiner General Hospital. Col.John R. Hall, Medical Corps, RegularArmy, was assigned as CommandingOfficer. The remaining patients, pro¬fessional and administrative staff, andequipment were transferred by.change of status to the newly organ¬ized unit. Since the activation as aGeneral Hospital, the staff has beenaugmented by new assignments nec¬essary to care for the increased num¬ber and type of patients.Overseas Letter of the Week: Inthe absence of material for a soldier-of-the-week department, we shall de¬vote this space to excerpts from anoverseas-letter-of-the-week. The writ¬er is Pfc. A1 Brokow of the Air Forces. . . “Your letter did not catch me inthe States. In fact it was the firstI received when I arrived in Af¬rica. For three weeks I loafed around,wishing I had something to do. Aweek ago I came here—the MiddleEast—and here I expect to stay forseveral months . . . My station is inArabia. The climate is pretty good,and we have good bathing beaches.Other than that there is not muchgoing on in this part of the world . . .No doubt you have heard about the“confab” (Teheran Conference) someof the big boys had up here a fewweeks back. It was all rumor to usuntil it came out in the newspapers.”Joke-of-the-week: You’ve probablyall heard this one, but here goes any¬how . . . ^‘Three blood transfusionswere necessary to save the life of thepatient. A brawny young Scotchmanoffered his blood. The patient paidhim fifty dollars for the first pint;twenty-five dollars for the secondpint; and after the third pint the pa¬tient had so much Scotch blood in himthat he just gave the Scotian donor aletter of recommendation.”Concert.,,(Continued from page two)to unleash the orchestra in the cli¬maxes, overemphasizing them at theexpense of the rest of the work. Infairness it must be said that the stageof the Civic Opera is not suited toorchestral performance: some of thetones were muffled and distorted. - THE CHICAGO MAROONSettlement LeagueBenefit PerformanceOf HarpsichordistsTonight In MandelThe Board of The University Set¬tlement and the Settlement Leaguewill present a benefit performance bythe Manuel and Williamson harpsi¬chord ensemble on Friday, February4, at 8:30. The ensemble, consisting oftwo harpsichordists, two violins, aviola and a cello, will play music ofthe seventeenth and eighteenth cen¬turies including works of some of thelesser known composers and selectionsby Handel, Mozart, and Bach.Lillian Chooksian, contralto, will beaccompanied by the ensemble in fourselections, one being “Lord to TheeEach Night and Day” by Handel.Students of the University will actas both ushers and flower-sellers.Tickets and reservations may be ob¬tained at the Mandel Hall box officeand range in price from 50 cents to$2.27 plus tax.Three OrchestralGroups Open To AllMusic EnthusiastsStudents and non-students interest¬ed in orchestra work should look intothe three groups now practicing oncampus. The aim of the Departmentof Music in sponsoring this is to givetraining in orchestral routine and en¬semble playing and to help developmusicianship with the aid of readingpractice.All but advanced musicians enterthe Preparatory Orchestra, which iscoached by Clarke Kessler of the Chi¬cago Symphony. Those with moretraining enter the Campus Orchestra,a group which often has the oppor¬tunity of performing in public withthe Chamber Orchestra.Applications can be made in Lex¬ington 14 C any afternoon and it isto be hoped that all those interestedwill realize their opportunity. 150 Freshman FetedWith Dance, DramaIn Week’s ActivitiesEnding their first day at the Uni¬versity a majority of the 150 enter¬ing students attended an informaldance given in Ida Noyes Hall lastMonday night. The main attraction ofthe evening was a variety programarranged by Freshman OrientationChairman Whitey Bayard.Featured on the program were Su¬zanne Bohnen, well known campusactress, who gave two readings; Bar¬bara Bloomquist, who presented Dor¬othy Parker’s immortal “The Waltz”;and Virginia Brantner, who, accom¬panied by Nancy Smith, sang twocurrent song hits. The remainder ofthe evening was spent dancing to themusic of Wally Hermes’ orchestra.Tuesday night was Activities Nightat Ida Noyes. Chairman Whitey Bay¬ard again spoke to the campus new¬comers, discussing the wide varietyof student activities. Later in the eve¬ning, the students were introduced torepresentatives of the various organ¬izations, and, if they so desired, wereable to make plans with them for fu¬ture meetings. Under the direction ofthe Office of Dramatic Productions,the third act of Pygmalion starringMaynard Wishner as Professor Hig¬gins and Mary Diamond as Eliza, waspresented to an appreciative audience.Although the ages of this years mid¬term entrants range from fifteen toeighteen, the majority are Januaryhigh school graduates who will re¬ceive a B. A. degree in two years. Bydoing two quarters work betweenFebruary and June, and workingthrough the summer, all the enteringstudents will be able to complete afull year’s work by September. At theopening of the regular autumn quar¬ter, they will be qualified to starttheir second year with those Collegestudents who entered last fall. 4 MONTH INTENSIVESeentarid Course forCOlUGE STUDENR and GRADUATESA thorough, intensive, secretarialcourse— starting February, |u|y^Oaober. Registration now open!„ ★Regular dtjr and evening schoolthroughout the year. Catalog.A SCHOOL Of BUSINESSPB»mBD BY COUJOf MEN AND WOMENTHI GRECO COLLEGEPr*«ia«nE, John Robert Orogg, S.C.D.Mroctor, Pod M. Pair, MA.8 R MIcMpa kn. Tsisptssa: tTRts lltl Ctfew. aPhone Midway 7447We Call and DeliverMAX BROOKUNIFORM REPAIRING ANDCLEANING EXPERTLY DONETAILOR and CLEANER1013 East 61st StreetMORTON’S5487 S. Lake ParkHyde Park's LeadingSteakhouseFamous for Fine SteaksFor Reservations CollPlaza 9088Have a Coca-Cola = Let’s be friendly...a way to win a welcome wherever you goThere’s friendliness in the simple phrase Have a ^^Coke^*. It turnsstrangers into friends. In both hemispheres, Coca-Cola stands forthe pause that refreshes,become the high-sign of the good-hearted. X• OrTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OP THE COCA-COLA COMPANY SYCOCA-COLA MTTUNa CO., OF CHICAGO, INC. SsVVo>m,oIt’i natural for popular name*CO acquire friendly abbrevia-dona. That’a why you hearCoca>CoIa called “Coke”.Adler,..(Continued from page three)the general principles which hold forall the particular things.A profound study of war and peacein general—any war and any peace,past, present, or future—this book isthe statement of principles derivedfrom a philosophy of history which,in turn, came as the result of Mr.Adler’s taking the “long view” of menand their problems. To take the longview is to study an event in relationto the total age which encompassesit and to study that age in relation topast ages, seeing in this telescopingof one age into another, like the radi¬ating ripples of a stream when a stoneis dropped into its depths, the his¬torical direction of men’s destinies.For the long view, one must be coldlydispassionate, rising above all emo¬tional appeals. To cultivate such anattitude is extremely difficult. Themodern Western World has producedbut few men able to think “indepen-edntly of the ambient tradition.” Mr.Adler is among thase few.In the words of Robert Briffault,‘‘Most of us barbarians lack the his¬torical, therefore the political sense. . . which has been strangled by thefierce superstitions of nationalism.”One of Mr. Adler’s major premises isthat national sovereignity and lastingpeace are incompatible. There are oth¬ers, equally thought-provoking. Mr.Adler’s method is to state the prob¬lem, pick out the crucial points, definehis terms, then by means of analogies,taken from familiar aspects of ourdaily lives, clarify, illuminate, demon¬strate, and summarize. When you’ve finished understandingthe book, you have the finest briefever presented for the humanist po¬sition: that men are rational, thatthey desire to live in harmony withtheir fellow men, that by their own ef¬forts they can achieve that harmonywhich is order and good government,for all time. THE CHICAGO MAROONMethodhts Begin PlansFor Community WorshipRegularly scheduled worship serv¬ices will commence this afternoon at5:15 when Methodist students partici¬pate in the first campus communionat Hilton Chapel. Rev. J. Richard Deesof the Hyde Park Methodist churchwill conduct the sacrament, and AliceSelby will read the responsive litany.This’ series of Friday afternoon de-votionals is planned by the MethodistStudent League, an affiliate of the In¬terchurch council, for the remainderof the Winter quarter. By rotation ofleaders for these services, the worshipcommittee, headed by Ernest Brock,hopes to enable more students to con¬duct such religious meetings.Iron Mask SocietyInitiates MembersThe order of the Iron Mask, juniorhonorary society, announces the init¬iation last night of the following newmembers:John Louis CampbellLouis DietelbaumRobert FinneganDaniel HeffronDonald ShieldsDavid SmothersEverybody'sReadingTEN COMMANDMENTSTen great modern authors give you this never to be forgottenbook. A rich experience $3.00THE GAY ILLITERATE by Louella 0. ParsonsA famous columnist shares with you her gay, charming, aboveall human experience $2.00LEND-LEASE by Edward R. Stettininus Jr.America's foremost question is answered completely and in¬telligently in this great book $3.00TARGET-GERMANYThe 8th Bombers Command lets you ride with them overEuropean skies $2.00WINTER WHEAT by Mildred WalkerThe critics are raving and so will you after reading this grandstory of a young girls emotional awakening $2.50CONE OF SILENCE by A. Fleming MaclieshCone of silence means "you're right on the beam , a superblyfitting title for this powerful novel *$2.75Remember you can obtain THE ROBE, SO LITTLE TIME,VICTORIA GRANDOLET, NONE BUT THE LONELYheart, undercover, we followed our hearts toHOLLYWOOD, and other best-sellers also at the BOOK¬STORE.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOK STORE5802 Ellis Avenue Faculty...(Continued from page one)profit from patents arising on re¬search work. In passing this measurethe Board accorded with PresidentHutchins’ recommendation in his an¬nual report last year that the patentpolicy be extended to provide full¬time service for faculty members.This system has been used in theSchool of Medicine since 1928 withconsiderable success.“This basis of faculty service hasthe merit of improving salaries wherethey nee:’ it most,” said Hutchins inannouncing the action. “It is designedto make possible the more rapid de¬velopment of young men as scholarsand teachers by removing the finan¬cial pressure which leads them to givetime and energy to unproductive piecework.”In his annual report to the BoardMr. Hutchins commented on the pat¬ent policy: “The fundamental propo¬sition on which the policy rests isthat the advancement of knowledgedepends on the free interchange ofideas and information and that thepurpose of scientific institutions isstultified if this exchange is checkedthrough the attempt to appropriatethe results to one man or one groupof men at one institution.”Although Hutchins pointed outthat a copyright, unlike a patent, isnot contrary to the purposes of a uni¬versity, he said that “writing booksto make money stands on no differentfooting from any other activity tomake money, and should, in my view,be treated in the same way. Profes¬sors should write books, but the moneyshould go to the University.Award... Page Seven(Continued from page one)The “Publishers’ Weekly” estab¬lished this award as a means of hon¬oring publishing firms for their mostcarefully planned enterprises whichwere considered by those competent tojudge most successfully carriedthrough. It is not credit for editorialjudgment, production or promotion,or sales results alone, but depends onall the elements that make for goodpublishing; the creative idea, cooper¬ation with authors, careful productionand imagination, and successful mar¬keting. Good publishing can be studiedonly by examples and with com¬petent judges to point out where the-excellence in publishing lies; the ac¬cumulating record will help to visual¬ize what good publishing consists of,and will encourage more enterprisesof equal standards.Last year’s award, the first onegiven, was presented to Farrar andRhinehart for their “Rivers of Amer¬ica” series. Mr. Melcher has alsofounded the John Newbury and Cal¬decott prizes for the best written andillustrated books for children.McMahon...(Continued from page one)student organizations who are can¬vassing the campus for funds for thecontinuance of the activities of theWorld Student Service Fund, inter¬national organization for student re¬lief. Activities of the WSSF involveproviding books and correspondencefor prisoners of war and internees. Labor Rights Society HearsEbey Speak On Labor's BattleThe first public rally of the newly-formed student-faculty Labor RightsSociety will be held on Wednesday,February 9, at 8 p.m. in Rosenwald 2.Kermit Ebey will speak on “Labor’sComing Battle” and Len Levy willtalk on the fight between C. I. O. “Lo¬cal 20” and Montgomery-Ward. Dr.Francis McMahon of the Universityfaculty will preside. A collection forthe Local 20 Defense Committee willbe taken.The Labor Rights Society has beenformed to inform students of labor’sproblems and to take action to furtherlabor’s rights. The officers of the So¬ciety are Glo Levinger, James Luther Adams, Charlotte Wolfenstein, WillRail, and Janie Grahame. Facultymembers are J. L. Adams, MaynardKrueger, R. Bianchi, and M. S. Branch.The first problem on which thegroup is concentrating its efforts isthe struggle of Local 20 against Mont¬gomery-Ward and the million-dollarsuit which! the company has filedagainst it. An injunction against theLocal’s newpaper, “Spotlight,” is alsobeing sought.This case, according to a Unionspokesman, is a spearhead of the ris¬ing anti-labor movement in the UnitedStates today.COLLEGENIGHTEVERY FRIDAYEddie OliverHIS PIANO ANDHIS ORCHESTRAEnlertainmenIDorothy Dorben DancersAnn Judson, Jr.Doris Briggs [Carolyn and Ted AdairStan Kramer & CompanyCourtesy CardsStudent Courtesy Cards may be obtainedat the Maroon office. Admission with card65 cents per person, including tax.MARINE DINING ROOMEDGEWATERBEACH HOTEL5300 BLOCK SHERIDAN ROADMaroons FightPhi Gams, Pi LamsLead Field In 2ndWeek Of IM ContestLast Tuesday night at 7:15, thesecond, series of intramural basketballgames were played at the Ida NoyesGym.^jjThe Phi Gams, Jones Chemistrysquadj Z.B.T.’s, and,.:the Psi U’semerged victorious at the end of theevening; Highest's the .Tues¬day card was forward Hoekstra of the-, 28 points Saturday against Indiana, 12 poinIf has boosted his. total ,to ,202 for 11 -:-f games. In conference games, Dave " upemngf:; Danner has a narrow edge, 93 pointsto Ives’ 91. Danner has 156 for all second wirgames, an average of 14 plus per phi Gams.4 game withFred DeGrawf^Chicago’s >//Flying ter the'^r*Dutchman” Will fortunately be able to'// play Saturdayffpr 'part of the igatne ^ . 5V ^V. at least. “Dee/^ how is number'seven-f- teen in Big Teif scoring.: LoufDeitel-f' Ilunne/rai] a more logical ^cradle""be found, thanih^ bur universities President Lowellof Harvard University once "said, “IfI .‘read historyf aright,>;.institutionshave rarely' been killed while theywere- alive!'They ^commitVsuicide, ordie from' lack of'.vigor, and then theadversary comes. and buries them.”Here is the answer to the educators’lament. This is a clear challenge tous/the ^studenta|whoJmake the con-,tentand qualityuniversity. Ifthe"re' be*' any fyalue'^-in ^ our '^'Americamuniversity, ^ thef time ...to* stimulate and■ nurforej that^value^ is? hbw:l^fOne cannot ,believe'‘in*'Kismet. Mir¬acles are not to be had fbir the asking.We must do\ not merely think aboutdoing. We must' take- rear cognizanceof what goes oh around us. The word. is awareness. ~ We must re-establishi our standards and re-affirm our ideals.' We must become more politically as¬tute and less divided! We "gain nothingi and lose much by quibbling about the' spectroscbpic/^tshades ' of “ liberalism,and we must not be blinded or befud-I dledtby the. smoke ‘screens of propa-! gahdists!. Then, perchance, the minormiracle will come about,'and we willbe more competently led! The/cost isgreat, hiit'^the profit.'greater; and ifthe effort be honestly.made, our heri-.tage need not be all gall./ ? ,yrEW telephone ope’1-^ take basic trainingboard positions. But0: boards are crowdc'M Meeting the cly shortages, fttU-sc(if switchboard panr^the training of moreill operators needet.Telephone Systeni.Actual cords, keys,iff lagraphs for thningL:^practice, quickly^^haxidle real calls. /'Every TQsomce of' : M serving the Nation, ’'*^ons now soirators gcju^_at idle switrtoday’s swi1 with war callchallenge of wa';ale 'photograpliels are helping"j than 125,OC;d this year in ifyz, dials, an/g calls, give raining operaj >r U'f h«r*—• umv*r»i>Y ra^taii^^ rn«ni, of ih« unlvortity. studonl %»ho it d*l«fmin«d'..lo livo hit liio for^ *^>,1 , % Cod. whoihor in butinott, lh«. proiottiont or.ih* horn*. Hird-hilling, <.^*'^®**®”** •**^<^t**•Hicl*, on Chrittitn ovidoncotyour enmput Chrttiian'groupican b«.nidtlv«li«ctiv«arliclat /A?*•' **'•■ mittion8rY5.movoiT<«nl ;n»onihly ratumi' of Chrit.;i:^j,?f’if r ♦ flian aclivitiat on Mmputat throughout lha United Siatat . , .tl'Paopla'Po Thmgt"—iha kind of halp you ne»d. ^ /fDon't aalta Ihaao fatportanf ^artidat in Ika^fal^iaifyp^jglia 0. • iW FAlWY AT McGILt—'How Chritlian thidanlt at MeCitl Univat. -JMoniraai, utad fha Chriatmat hohdayt to wtn Uliow-ttudanlt toUVl**THt ClttBmN?]^£ori4HMitTflt^moS®AM^fiil7nsi*•. HOW can wa bacoma lha partont wa want to bat ,,. •# ’*:, * inOM YOU MASSY—Can,a Chritlian?tnarry^'a non-Chritlian'gnd* •"”0^ * *WOW 000 n-X Itaw^piirics'lt^'^old‘^lam. ital® . 4,„ day* . 'f Subscribe toChicagofMaroon BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEMWar calls keep Long Distance lines busy* ,,Tha^s vshy your call may he delayed.Saturday night at 8 p.m., the Uni-' versity of Chicago basketball squadwill face the unbeaten Iowa Univer¬sity Hawkeyes. The Hawkeyes havewon 11 straight games, six of which/were with conference foes, and sharethe Big Ten lead. History is about theonly factor that will favor the Ma-firoons in the contest, as the Iowa menare heavy, tall and fast.“Those Maroons twice ended longlosing streaks at Iowa’s expense. Theyhad lost 33 straight before beatingour Hawkeyes at Iowa City in 1938; and in 1935 their wind snapped in a14-game losing string,” cautionedCoach “Pops” Harrison to his cockyiVsquad. ^l/V/! .1 ‘ ' v’ >In the Ohio State game, Chicago’slast Big Ten opposition, six of thehard-fighting Maroons were injured.Most seriously injured was Fred De-Graw with a sprained knee. “Charliehorses,” sprainedankles, /and, soreshoulders added to the general woe.By Saturday * however, t h e boysshould be sufficiently recovered to giveIowa a run for their money.The heavy : scoring ofwho broke two Iowa records with his lowonsbaum, who gave such a fine perform¬ance in the Ohio game, has been in¬ducted into the Army and will beleaving very soon, perhaps within thenext few weeks. The only possible re¬placements will come from the classof entering freshmen. One or twohave already reported for basketballpractice and one has promise accord¬ing to Kyle Anderson. “A fellow camein from Pennsylvania named DrewKey. He’s played a lot of ball andhe’s pretty fast but like the rest ofthe boys he hasn’t got much heightfor basketball,” said Anderson. , i-THE CHICAGO MAROONSeymour,,,(Continued from page one)because of that preliminary loss.But a war may be won, though abattle lost. Well, have we profited bythe shock of our first defeat? Un¬fortunately, the American universityscene would seem to indicate a nega¬tive response. Not only is the Amer¬ican university unable to infiuenceworld, or national, or even state af¬fairs, but we at Chicago are pre¬sented with the ludicrous situationwhere the faculty and students of ourmost progressive university are un¬able to elect a liberal representativein a ward that is almost totally en¬compassed by campus. ;Where, then, can we find the mili¬tant liberalism we seek? In the hellof Europe. Unlike the American tra¬dition of the fraternity, the footballteam, the degree mill, the Europeanuniversity has another, more vitaltradition to uphold. And that tradi¬tion is being upheld in spite of cer¬tain death. Of what consequence cana European university be under Hit¬ler’s rule? Of such consequence thatthe' spark of underground resistancethroughout all Europe is fostered bythe university. Of such importancethat the Germans imprisoned 500 stu¬dent and faculty members of the Uni¬versity of Oslo, Norway, and utterlyannihilated more than 850 professorsand students of ; the University ofClermont-Ferrand, France. ,, We.are not in Europe; we are stu¬dents of the..]tJniversity of Chicago.Though : the-i. physical needs of ourcountry may not be'Vs great as Eu¬rope’s, our/, need/ for/ari intellectualrenaissance IS’ greater. And where can Woi^'f'Bdsketboll Eiig "Second Exciting WeekThe Women’s Basketball Tourna-1 having won three games. In secondment is now in its second week. I place are Studemps and Beecher HallAl.. ^ ^Twelve games have been played todate. Outstanding among them wasthe Waves-Coop game, which wasplayed on Tuesday. Spectators wereimpressed by the clean, close, excitingplaying. The Waves, displaying excel¬lent teamwork, won by a close marginof 16-15. The other Servicewomen’steam, the Yeomen, has been unable toplay so far, due to the Kavy's priorityon the team’s time.This is not an elimination tourna¬ment, rather-tL^ teams are rankedaccording to the number of gamesthey have won. Phoenix House andW.A.A. are tied for first place, each both with two games to their credit.Four Year Collegre, Esoteric;; GoopDelta Sigma and the Waves have allwon one game apiece. This is the waythe teams stand now, but there isplenty of time for complete rear-rangement of places before the toum-ament ends. -yKA game not to be missed will bethe Phoenix-Waves game scheduled^for next Thursday at 4 p.m. Also ofspecial interest will be the Phoenix-Yeomen game at 5 p.m. next Tuesday.There should be plenty of excitementwhen the W.A.A. plays Esoteric onMonday at 4 p.m. and Sigma at 4 p.in.on Wednesday of next week^^^^,