Vol. 4, No. 26 Z;149 . Friday/Janudry 12, 1945 Pried Five CehtsTrustees’ PlanForward Step,Says HutchinsIn his address to the annual Trus¬tee-Faculty dinner, held Wednesday,President Robert M. Hutchins com¬mended the plans for the reorganiza¬tion of the University Senate recentlyadopted by the Board of -Trustees anew chance for achieving the integra¬tion necessary for future progress.He again criticized the tendency inhigher education toward over-special¬ization, a tendency which, he declared,“has promoted the extinction of liber¬al education.”Maintaining that a principal func¬tion of the university is the transmis¬sion, criticism, development, and sys¬tematization of the culture of therace, he continued, “I venture to saythat this kind of synthetic, general¬ized scholarship which aims to trans¬mit, criticize, and develop the cultureis not merely non-existent in thiscountry; it is not even respectable, socomplete has been the victory of spe¬cialization.” He further stated thatthis very task, the search for stand¬ards, ends, and goals, has never beenso important as it is today. “Theworld is crashing about us,” he assert¬ed. “The moral fabric which we callcivilization is falling apart. If thenew world which is coming is to becivilized, it must in some way or oth¬er formulate and make effective theideas which are to guide human lifeand mould society.”Speaking of the College of the Uni¬versity, President Hutchins pointedout that although the aim of the Col¬lege plan is to give every citizen aliberal education, admission require¬ments have been raised to a pointwhere only students of relatively highintelligence can benefit by the plan.“What about citizens of relatively lowintelligence?” he asked. “Can theybe educated for citizenship, or mustwe train them to be self-supportingand let it go at that? If. they areto be educated for citizenship, whereand by what methods shall it be done ?To these questions we have no an¬swers.”(Continued on page three) Student Self-GovernmentWinsNew CommitteeTo SupportCollege CouncilGrowing SupportGates HallHouse CouncilLeads the Way!by Abe KrashThe movement to initiate a genuinestudent government to lift Universityof Chicago student activities out ofthe doldrums lunged forward undernew impetus this week.A major development sent aspira¬tions for formulating a student gov¬ernment within a short time soaringskyward and there were bright pros¬pects that the question would bebrought to a head in the immediatefuture.The program launched in a wide¬spread editorial campaign in the fallquarter by the Chicago Maroon servedas the core for a platform presentedthis week to a faculty committee by agroup of three interested college stu¬dents. Conferring with an investigat¬ing board headed by Professor RussellW. Thomas to urge the creation ofstudent government were CharlesSchwartz, Joan Beckman, and LenoreCallahan.The committee, it was learned, wasspontaneous and its proposals, whilesketchy, were received with favor bythe Thomas committee.Coincident with the announcementthat it had met with the Thomasboard, the three students, who em¬phasized that they have no officialconnections or “go ahead” authority,sounded a call for interested studentsto meet with to frame a final platformwhich will then be presented to thefaculty committee for action.In this regard, it is not known atthis time what procedure will be uti¬lized to bring about adoption of thisplan. Dean Lawrence A. Kimpton whohas given plans a shot in the armmore than once with assurances offull support from his office, has urgedthat the organization be spontaneous(Continued on page three) Raider" CarlsonDr. A. C. McGiffert, Jr. NewHead Of Theological SeminaryDr. Arthur Cushman McGiffert, Jr.,has been elected to the presidency ofthe Chicago Theological Seminary andwill begin active duty on January 1of next year. Until that date Dr. Al¬bert W. Palmer will remain in office.Dr. McGiffert held the position ofprofessor of theology at the Seminaryfor thirteen years. Since 1939 he hasheld the presidency of the PacificSchool of Religion, where he will re¬main for a few months in order to al¬low the school time to select and in¬stall a new leader.He received his A. B. at Harvard,where he was elected to Phi Beta Kap¬pa, and has also studied for a yearin the American School of Archaeol¬ogy in Athens, and the Harvard Di¬vinity School. His B.D. was receivedat the Union Theological Seminaryin New York and his M.A. from Co¬lumbia University. He was awardedthe honorary degree of Doctor of Di¬vinity from The Chicago TheologicalSeminary in 1939. In 1917 Dr. McGiffert was ordainedas a Congregational Minister andserved as a chaplain with the rank oflieutenant in World War I. From1920 to 1926 he was pastor of AllSouls Church, Lowell, Massachusetts,and in 1926 was called to the chair ofChristian Theology at The ChicagoTheological Seminary.He is the author of an authoritativebook on Jonathon Edwards. Otherbooks which he has edited include“Christianity as History and Faith”and “Young Emerson Speaks.” Hisfield of specialization has been thedevelopment of American religiousthought.Dr. Palmer, who is retiring fromthe presidency in accordance with theage limitations rule of the Seminary,will probably continue after January1, 1946, in some form of active relig¬ious service yet to be determined, butdoes not plan to remain in the Chica¬go area. He has served as presidentsince 1930. Official U.S. Marine Corps PhotoCOL. E. F. CARLSONStudent Art ExhibitPrizes AwardedIn Many FieldsIn this year’s Student Art Exhibi¬tion, first place was awarded to Hil-dergarde Vogel for her oil, “CheyeneMountains, while Pauline King’s pencil sketch, “Virginia Mountaineers,”and Patricia Peck’s woodcarving,“Samuel” received first ratingblack and white drawing and sculp¬ture, respectively. Second awardswent to Sonia Katz, oil, “Self-Portrait,” “Cosmos,” a watercolor, byGeorge Latta, and “A Very YoungKitten,” sculpture by Elizabeth Hoyt.This exhibition which is held underthe auspices of the University ArtClub, opened January second in Good-speed 101 and will continue until Jan¬uary 17th. Announcement of theawards was made January 5th at atea by the judges Hubert Ropp, Deanof the schol of the Art Institute,Frank Hqll^nd, Chicago Sun ArtCritic, and Rex Gorleigh, Director ofthe South Side Community Art Cen¬ter.Most of the artists exhibited areeither graduate students or studentsin the divisions. Those participatingincluded Malkah Tolpin, Marie Levitt,Don Baum, Diran Kermoyan, PatriciaPeck, Donna Chrablow, Maxine Walthers, Frances Chamberlain, EspiVoulis, Morton Heilig, Josephine Bap¬tiste and Hilda Fowlie.Socialist LeagueLectures Begin“Turmoil in Europe” will be thetopic discussed by Irwin Suall of NewYork, national organizer for theYoung People’s Socialist League, Monday night, at 7 o’clock in Social Sci¬ence 107. Suall will discuss alliedpolicy in Greece, Poland, Belgium, andItaly at the first of a series of openlectures sponsored by the SocialistClub. Admission is free.In its first meeting of the quarter.Socialist Club elected the followingofficers: Ann Morrissett, Chairman;Mary Shannon, Secretary; and Elea¬nor Guttman, Educational Director. by Zonabel KingeryPrecipitated by recent editorials inthe Chicago Maroon, plans for a dor¬mitory council are being crystalizedthis week and positive steps towardits formation are being taken.After a discussion of the values ofinter-dormitory cooperation, the GatesHall Council voted Tuesday night tomeet with officers of the other women’sresidence halls for further action.The process of developing an effic¬ient student government, a studentgovernment that is more than a merefigurehead, is one of evolution. Themost natural and effective place forsuch a process to begin is in theresidence halls.Accordingly, invitations have beenextended to the officers of Beecher,Blake, Foster, Gates, Green, and KellyHalls for a meeting to be held thisWednesday evening at 8:30 in GatesHall.Simultaneous with the action of thewomen was the statement of JohnYarnelle, Acting Director of ResidenceHalls, that a full program of activitywould be spurred by a Burton-JudsonCouncil. He also indicated that resi¬dents of Burton Court favor a planproviding for inter-dormitory action.House committees of both the men’sand women’s dormitories have beenasked to attend a general meetingsponsored by the Maroon for coordination of various proposals. This meeting will be held in the Burton CourtEast Lounge on Januarj* 24 at8:00 p.m.The current spurt of enthusiasmin this and other activities directedtoward eventual student governmentis indicative of a gradual process ofintegration of College life. Col. Carison of‘‘Raiders” FameWill Speak HereColonel Evans F. Carlson, leader ofthe famed Carlson’s Raiders, willspeak at 4:30 this afternoon in Man-del Hall.Recently returned from the SouthPacific war theater. Colonel Carlsonwill speak on “The People’s War inEastern Asia.” The lecture will beopen to the public without admissioncharge or ticket. 'Carlson, a veteran of World War I,was placed in command of the SecondRaider Battalion with the rank oflieutenant colonel in 1942. His lead¬ership of that unit on Makin Islandon August 17, 1942, won him a GoldStar in lieu of a second Navy Cross,and a second Gold Star was awardedhim for pei'sonal heroism and distin¬guished leadership on Guadalcanal inNovember and December, 1942. '*Returning to Tarawa after medicaltreatment in the United States in1943, he was cited for volunteering tocarry vital information through ene¬my fire from an advance post to divi¬sion headquarters. He'was woundedduring the Saipan operations and wasgiven a Gold Star instead of a secondPurple Heart.Colonel Carlson has spent manyyears in the Asiatic area during hismilitary career which started in 1912.He has studied Chinese and Chinesemethods of fighting as well as thetactics used by Japanese soldiers.“Trade Union”Lecture SeriesBegins Thurs.The changing economic role oftrade unionism will be discussed nextThursday evening by Frederiek Har-bison, assistant professor of economics, in the first of three lectures ontrade unionism sponsored by LaborRights Society.Mr. Harbison, head of the newlyformed Industrial Relations Center,will give his talk in Social Science 106at 7:30. Reinhard Bendix and G. £.O. Meyer will lead the two followingdiscussions in this series on the idealsand political activities of trade un¬ions.At the last meeting of LaborRights Society, largest politically ac¬tive student body on campus, UrsulaWolf was elected president; MerleRogers, vice-president; Malkah Tol¬pin, secretary; and Ruth Komhauser,treasurer. Jim Blout is executivemember-at-large. Red Cross SponsorsFirst Aid CourseThe campus unit of the Red Crossis sponsoring a twenty hour coursein first aid beginning this Tuesday,January '16. The meetings will beheld in Ida Noyes'from 7:00 till 10:00every Tuesday evening. ,The Home Nursing course, alsosponsored, by the Red Cross, is -stillopen to those, who have missed thefirst meeting.. It is possible for thosewho wish to continue to make up thisdeficiency at a later date.GDP Will MoveBack into OldOffice in TowerSince the spring of 1943 the De¬partment of Meteorology has occu¬pied the Reynolds Club, the theatreand the Tower Room. Early thisweek, however, it was announced thatthe Office of Dramatic Productionswill again have its offices in the Rey¬nolds Club. The Tower Room willnot be vacated until February 1, butthe theatre, which was previouslyused as a drafting room, will be va¬cated next week. On January 22, theNorth Lounge on the first floor willbe evacuated, and the lobby will nolonger be restricted. The Navy, how¬ever will retain the billiard room onthe second floor, and the third flooroffices.The schedule of plays to be pre¬sented by O.D.P. in the theatre isstill uncertain, but will probably be¬gin with “Driftwood”, a new play byMaurice Dunn.P«9e Two THE CHICAGO MAROONDean of Students AnnouncesWinter Scholarship WinnersEntrance Scholarship awardsthe winter Quarter have been an¬nounced by the office of the Dean ofStudents. The students entering thefirst year of the College who have wonawards for the duration of College areas follows: John Below, SullivanHigh School; Mark Bradley, VonSteuben High School; and LaurenceLee, Lake View High School, all ofChicago; Francis Pfeiffer, Washing¬ton, D. C.; Barbara Ziesmer, St.Paul, Minnesota. The students enter¬ing the third year of the College whohave one year awards are: RichardBechtolt, Hirsh High School, Chicago;Charles Eerl Gasteyer, Michigan City,Indiana; Louise Hughes Goines, En¬glewood High School, Chicago; Wil¬liam Greenwald, Tuley High School,Chicago; Edna Hennan, Richmond,Virginia; Robert Johnson and RichardPeltz, Hyde Park High School, Chi¬cago; Elizabeth Lewis, Cleveland,Omio; Daniel Schneider, Taft HighSchool, and Doris Schroeder, SchurzHigh. School, both of Chicago; Caro¬lyn Shadley, Cleveland, Ohio; ThadSuits, Kirkwood, Missouri; DorothyTaylor, South Shore High School, Chi¬cago; Peter Wolkonsky, Winnetka,Illinois; Pauline Zuckerman, MewYory City; Edward Marshal Wasser-man, Hollywood. A one year awardwas also awarded to William Davi-don, Purdue University, West Lafay¬ette, Indiana.The General American Transporta¬tion Corporation awarded the follow¬ing scnoiarships to children of itsemployees: Alfred Palfi, East Chi¬cago, Indiana; Rose Encher, Chicago;Lovauore Michaeline Stratton, Mas-ury„ Onio; Robert Topel, Chicago.These awards were also made on thebasis of the scholarship requirementsof the University. Piche to Play InChapel January 16Victoria Anna Adams scholarshipswere granted to Lois Jane Ericksonand Lorraine Edith Strobel of Calu¬met High School, Chicago; Betty D.Anderson, also of Calumet i High, re¬ceived the Genevieve Melody Memor¬ial Scholarship.Second Year OpensSocial Calendar WithDance at Ida Jan. 27Keeping up with the winter whirlof social activities, the second yearof the College will sponsor a danceJanuary 20 from 8:30 till 12:00 in theIda Noyes Theater. Mickey Bren¬nan’s twelve-piece orchestra will pro¬vide the music and refreshments willbe served. Admission fee per coupleor per stag is fifty centSbThe committee in charge of thedance consists of chairman, StevePlank; tickets, Roland Schneider; pub¬licity, Bill Miller; decorations, JeanHirsch; refreshments, Toni Speare.All students of the college are invited.W Secretarial trainingfor college women.'Catalog tells ajl.F|atliaririe'QibbsNEW YORK 17 . . . 230 PARK AVE.BOSTON IS . 90 MARLBOROUGH ST.CHICAGO 11 . 720 N. MICHIGAN AVE.L_ Bernard Piehe, organist of theCathedral of Trois Rivieres, Quebec,will give an organ recital in Rocke¬feller Chapel, Tuesday evening, Jan¬uary 16, at 8:15. Admission is with¬out ticket and without charge.Curtiss Publishing Co.Offers Interesting JobsThe Curtiss Publishing Company islooking for someone to post displaymaterial and do recording work. It isnecessary to have a car, but gas cou-will be provided. The salarynonsis $1.00 per hour. Anyone interestedin either of these positions shouldcontact Mr. Calvin at Cobb 215. Carillon Editor Lashes Back at AllCritics In Open Letter To Maroonby Marjorie Ladd BrownA number of criticisms, undeservedand unfounded, pertaining to the pub¬lication, Carillon, have convinced itsEditors that a clarifying discussionof the issues is imperative, if furthermisconceptions are to be eliminated.One such recurring criticism ofCarillon maintains that its failure toachieve recognition as a top-rankingliterary magazine is the fault of itsStaff in not formulating and adheringto a high standard. Such a state¬ment is entirely without validity, butmore important, it reveals-how littleof the problem is understood by thedisciples of this view. The memberscomprising the Carillon staff are unit¬ed in the desire for a successful liter¬ary magazine. Allegiance to this com¬mon cause was not the sole determin¬ing factor in their election to office,however; each member was selectedon the basis of previous experiencein a particular field, which would en¬able him to analyze and judge critic¬ally a specific kind of writing or artand thereby choose the best contribu¬tions for publication. But this hasno bearing on the cause of Corillon^sfailure to “arrive”. For, regardlesshow high the standards of the Editorsare, it is the quantity and quality ofcontributions received which set thevalue by which the staff must inev¬itably abide.A non-profit magazine, unaided bysubsidies, dependent upon voluntaryand unpaid contributions, is obviouslyHappy-go-'ovelyCASUALCROSS COBBiESYou’ll love them, live in them.. •for they’re the softest, foot-cuddliest,young shoes you ever wore. Casual as a sweater.Swish as a date dress. And Gold Cross qualitythrough and through.Famous for over 50 years at RedvCross Shoes ... Unchallenged value otColleglately yours,Robert Allen, Inc.58 East MadisonChicago 22 East Adams handicapped and can print only thatmaterial which is duly submitted. Italso incontrovertible that if theISmanuscripts are few, thus limiting thechoice of the Editors, and the calibreof the work is below their standards,these Editors have no alternative butto print the best which has been re¬ceived, however poor. If a Staff, com¬posed of the country’s foremost menof letters, were installed to governCarillon, as conditions presently exist,the situation would not be improved.There is, the Editors firmly believe^a solution to change these circum¬stances—a simple, easy remedy. Itis contained in the word cooperation—not of the few, but the many.If the all-too-eager critics who em¬ploy so much time penning pointlessand useless invectives against Carillonwould devote their efforts toward stim¬ulating and promoting student inter¬est and pride in this publication(which is, after all, representativeof them and their university), manyof the ills bemoaned would be cured.This remark necessitates qualificationand exclusion, and the Editors ofCarillon take this opportunity to ex¬press appreciation to John Harmonfor his constructive and intelligentcriticism of the Autumn magazine con¬tents.This spirit of cooperation shouldestablish an alliance between Carillonand the University newspaper: thatthe paper work in conjunction withthe Editors in their attempts to evokeliterary interest and activity amongstudents.If the persons who are so disturbedabout the quality of the magazine,utilized their efforts to encourage con¬tributors of talent to cooperate withthe Staff, they would not find theEditors remiss in the performance oftheir duties towards producing a suc¬cessful Carillon.'If the reputation of the magazinehas been unsavory, if the circulationhas been such that “successful writ-would not condescend to submiterssame authors lending their good namesand meritorious works to Carillon tocounteract its deficiencies. Then, andonly then, will these problems be effec¬tively and conclusively eliminated.However, if such contributors do existand their cooperation is not forth¬coming, the name of the magazinecould be changed, but the r^utatienwould not be improved; a differentstaff could be inrtigated, but thiswould not materially affect circula¬tion.—In short, student activity andinterest are the controlling factors inthe success or failure of Carillon, aswith any other publication owned andoperated by the students in a univer¬sity, all theories hitherto expoundedby the many critics to the contrarynotwithstanding.Relative to another important mis¬conception brought to the attentionof the Staff: that Carillon is an ex¬clusive organ of the College—^the Ed¬ itors wish to assure the students ofthe Divisions that such rumor has nobasis in fact. Carillon is the propertyof all students of this University andno such restriction obtains. Any stu¬dent enrolled in the University ofChicago, whether of the Division orCollege may and is welcomed to con¬tribute to Carillon. Nor do there existany limitations as to kind, number orfrequency of manuscripts which maybe submitted.For the, convenience of both con¬tributors and Staff, manuscripts maybe sent to the Carillon by addressingthem to Box 31, Faculty Exchange.Contributions are now being acceptedfor consideration for the Winter edi¬tion. In order to expedite the workof editing, the Staff requests that thefollowing rules be observed in prepar¬ing manuscripts: Material typed, ifpossible; writing on one side of paperonly; lines double-spaced; pages num-bered; author’s name, address andtelephone number on title page tofacilitate communication for confer¬ence, and, as a protection against loss,contributors should retain a carboncopy of all material.It is the collective hope of Carillon'seditors that, in view of the factsherein presented, a better understand¬ing of the situation will evolve amongthe students and that Carillon willemerge a creditable tribute to thisUniversity, as a result of this newperspective.(Ed, note—The above article wassubmitted by Mrs. Brown, and weprint it in an effort to explore andpresent all shades of opinion regardingthe future of Carillon. We feel thatnot only the publication problems, butthe very existence, of a high qualityand representative literary magazineare matters of major concern to theentire campus. We welcome and willgladly publish further comment of acongruent nature.)Vocational Boardmaterial, then Oie^ unpleasant con- OpeUS OppOltUmtieSditions can readily be resolved by these JT i rTo June GraduatesThe Board of Vocational Guidanceand Placement is again urging allstudents who will receive degrrees byJune of 1945, and are interested inpermanent employment, to registernow.The opportunity of being interview¬ed by representatives of large, wellknown industrial and business firmsfrom all over the country is one whichthe student should not overlook. Itnot only offers potential employment,but gives the individual a bird’s eyeview of his vocational field. Thisbroad survey will enable him to choosemore wisely when accepting i* posi¬tion.To make^ the best possible use ofthis service, it is advisable to regis¬ter immediately. To do so, menshould contact Mr. Calvin, and wom¬en, Miss Fox, both in Cobb 215.Home Made Pastries Dorchester 5028Recommended by "Around the Town"DORCHESTER RESTAURANTChicago's Most Beautiful •— Farnous for Fine FoodsAir Conditioned HARRY LETSOS 1375 E. 63rd StreetTHE CHICAGO MAROONU.T.113M133 E. 55th St.Complete Selectionof Beers andOther BeveragesMIDway 0524Blatz BeerCommittee,*,(Continued from pag^e one)and a result of student body demand.<<We are interested in foisting noprogram on Idie students,** he hasdeclared. It is thus assumed that areferendum will be called for the stu¬dent body to approve, amend, or rejecta final plan.The Chicago Maroon focused thecherry-hot searchlight of publicity onthe lack of such an organization whichwould coordinate student activities.The newspaper has had under studythe constitutions of various other mid-western universities, but its purposein its editorial campaign has been notso much to present a final plan foraction as to spur student thoughtwhich in turn can assume the initia¬tive for bringing about a student gov¬ernment in the University. SaidMaroon editor Frederick Gottesmanthis week: *‘Such an organization isvital if we are to bring to an endthe confusion and uncertainty whichcurrently exists in college life.Members of the Thomas committeeappointed by Kimpton to probe theproblem, include in addition to Thomaswho serves as chairman, Paul Derrof the Department of Athletics; Chris¬tine McGuire, Social Science instruc¬tor; Margaret Kidwell, women’s phys¬ical education instructor; and ZensSmith, of the division of SocialSciences.Congdon DiscussesSemantics* PlaceIn Educational FieldDr. Charles B. Congdon, psychia¬trist of the Student Health Service,will be featured on February 23 inthe third of a series of lectures on se¬mantics, entitled “New Attitudes fora Changing World. He will discuss“General Semantics in Education.”The lecture series, to be held overa three month period at 32 West Ran¬dolph Street at 8 P.M., is sponsoredby the Society for General Semantics.This series will feature five of theleading experts in the field and isdesigned primarily for those with noprevious knowledge of the subject.Advance students will also find ithelpful, for the lectures will empha¬size uses of semantics in familiar lifesituations. Tickets may be obtainedfrom Mrs. Harry Johnson, Cabb 105. W.S.S.F. DriveOpens Feb. 6“Your fellow-students are fightingagainst hunger and despair. Givegenerously.” This slogan will beused by canvassers for the WorldStudent Service Fund Drive beinglaunched on campus February 6.A Poster Party sponsored by AliceSheeham, Art Chairman, will holdforth in the East Lounge of Ida Noyestonight at 7 o’clock. The purpose ofthe party will be to start work onArt Publicity for the drive. Any per¬sons interested, whether they candraw or not, are cordially invited toattend.In order that the University com¬munity may know what its contribu¬tions will actually do, the followingis reproduced from the U.S.S.F. Hand¬book, 1944-45:One Dollar will supply the note¬books and paper required by a pris¬oner of war for six months.One Dollar a month will providesoy-bean milk for a Chinese studentthreatened with tuberculosis.Five Dollars will supply condens¬ed milk for a Russian student fora year, vFifteen Dollars will supply fuelfor a month for a kerosene-pressurelamp around which^ forty Chinesestudents can study.Two Hundred Dollars will makeit possible for a relocated Japanese-American or refugee student to goto an American College.Every student is urged to donateas much as possible to this worthycause.Part-time EmploymentAvailable to StudentsTwenty girls are needed for tempo¬rary employment by a newspaper incheck-up work on deliveries. The jobwould be for Wednesday and Saturdayafternoons, and would cover the HydePark and Kenwood areas.A job of tending the furnace at afraternity house on campus in themorning, in return for room, is avail¬able.See Vocational Guidance, Cobb 215.CLASSIFIEDRoom A board for girl or teacher in exchangefor staying with children nights. Lovely mod¬em home with happy family. Good food.Excellent transportation. Drexel lOSO. "Greek ClothingDrive ClosesTomorrowBaby clothes, sweaters, shoes, gar¬ments of all kinds, have been contrib¬uted this week to the clothing drivefor the Greek War Relief Association.The drive which will continue throughtomorrow, is sponsored by the Chi¬cago Committee of the AmericanFriends of Greece.Although donations have been gen¬erous, warm clothing for men, women,and children is still urgently needed.Blankets and shoes of all sizes arealso welcomed. Articles can be de¬livered today and tomorrow at theOriental Institute, 1155 E. 58th St.,between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.Members of St. Constantine'sChurch will wash and mend the gar¬ments collected which will finally bedistributed among the suffering peo¬ple of war-tom Greece.Y.W.C.A. PresentsAnnual U.S.O. PartyTomorrow night marks the presen¬tation of the Y.W.C.A.'s AnnualU.S.O. Party at the 131 South WabashU.S.O. Club. Eighty junior hostessesfrom the University wil be present.Entertainment wil be provided byHerby Minty and his orchestra. Re¬freshments will be provided throughthe contributions of members of theY.W.C.A., the advisory board, andthe women’s culbs on campus. Cigar¬ettes for servicemen have been so¬licited from the girl’s dorms.Chairman of the party is ShandesPincoffs, assisted by Jane Colley ashead of junior hostesses. Other com¬mittee chairmen are Betty Frieling,decorations; Brenty Bishop, prizes;Miriam Rosenbloom and FrancesChamberlain, contributions and cakes;and Doris Guthrie, representativefrom Inter-club Council.Hutchins,,,(Continued from page one)“*rhe resolutions of the Board ofTrustees give us a new chance for in¬tegration,” President Hutchins con¬cluded. “The creation of an academiclegislature representing the whole ac¬ademic community, the establishmentof new and regular means of commun¬ication among all parts of the com¬munity, the new methods of obtaininguniformity of policy and uniform qual-* ity in the staff, and above all the, spirit which the Board has shown—these things provide us with the con-I ditions we need to answer the greatquestions which must be answered if’ the American universities are to playI the role which history has assignedj to them.ST. CLAIR HOTEL ROOF » CHICAGO■ —" — — Page TliretThornton^ College Librarian,To Leave for Vassar PositionBISHOP HENRY WISE HOBSONBishop to SpeakAt Chapel SundayEpiscopal Bishop Henry Wise Hob¬son of the diocese of Southern Ohiowill be the first guest speaker of thenew year in Rockefeller MemorialChapel, Sunday at 11 a.m. He hasrecently returned from an eight-weeks’ trip to the European Theatreof Operations where he visited Eng¬land, France, Belgium, and Holland.A veteran of World War I in whichhe served as a major, Hobson receivedthe Distinguished Service Cross forhis work in France. He has held hispresent office since 1931. He is agraduate of Yale’ University, and re¬ceived his B.D. from the EpiscopalTheological School in Cambridge,Mass, and his D.D. from Kenyon Col¬lege, Gambler, Ohio.Brady Predicts WarIf Cartels SurviveProfessor Robert A. Brady, visitinginstructor in economics from the Uni¬versity of California, forecasts aworld war within two decades if car¬tels are permitted to grow unchecked.Speaking to Burton-Judson dormi¬tory residents, Brady said that theformation of three power blocks be¬tween Great Britain, the UnitedStates, and Russia will seriouslyimpair any hopes for peace. Eileen Mary Thornton, College li¬brarian, has been named librarian ofVassar College, effective July 1, 1945.Miss Thornton became head of theCollege Library in 1942. The pre¬ceding year she spent studying at theGraduate Library School of the Uni¬versity. Her previous training waissecured at the Univeristy of Minneso¬ta, where, in 1931, she received a bach¬elor’s degree in library science.She gained her first experience inlibrary work as general senior assist¬ant in the Public Library of Hibbing,Minnesota. Later, she served at illiUniversity of Minnesota as head as¬sistant in the graduate seminars, asLibrarian to the West High School,Waterloo, Iowa, and at the StateTeacher’s College, Bemidji, Minne¬sota.Win Five DdlarsIn War Stamps!For the best tetters, either proor con, on the subject of studentgovernment and dormitory councilsubmitted by any student of theUniversity, the Chicago Maroonwill award five dollars worth ofwar stamps. The rules are simple:1) Each tetter must not exceed200 words arKi must be type¬written.2) A student may submit as manyletters as he Wants.3) Each tetter should be confinedeither to student governmentor dormitory council.4) DO NOT sign the tetter, but iplace the name of contestanton a separate piece of paperto be included in the envelope.5) All letters shall beconoe theproperty of The Chicago Mo-roon.6) The decision of the judges (theBoard of Control of the Ma¬roon) shall be final.7) The winning entries and asmany other tetters as aredeemed worthy will be printedin the Marqon.8) The contest will close at mid¬night February 1st. Letterspostmarked after this* datewill not be eligible for theprizes, though they still may bepublished as regular ’’Lettersto the Editor*’.ENJOY IT TODAY ATCOLONIAL RESTAURANT» 6324 Woodlown Ave.0«lieroii» horn* cooking hot mede this booiiflful JInIng ptecafomout. Sklllo4 womon eoob proporo “food fHtf liko m^orHtod to mako"—totty hot rolli, homamado plat, eakaa and teacraam—wondarfully taatonad maatt, poultry, Irath vagatablafc^ RaeemiiitRdad by Dmecm NlMt—eatbor, “Advantaraa ie Oood E^tlagrPage Four- —THE CHICAGO MAROOHOfficial-student publication of the University of Chicaso, publisljfed every Friday during theacademic quarters.' Published at Lexinirton Hall, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois.Telephone DORchester 72i9 or MIDway 0800, Ext. 351.EDITOR: Frederick I. GottesmanBUSINESS MANAGER; Alan J. StraussDEPARTMENTAL EDITORS: Harold Donohue, Jack Hill, Inger Olson, BettySteams, William R. Wambaugh.DEPARTMENTAL MANAGER: Phyllis Riggio.EPITORIAL ASSISTANTS: Barbara Barke, Ellen Baum, Charlotte Block, Frances Carlin,Babette Casper, Lita Chiappori, Jayni Cowen, Judy Downs, Catherine Elmes, Roger Englander,Ellen Englar, Albert Friedlander, Joan Geannopoulos, June Gillian, Ar^ Horowitz, Pat Howard,Jean Hubbard, Dorothy Iker, Robert Jones, Pat Kindahl, Zonabel Kingery, Joan Kohn, AbeKrash, Shirley Krumbach, Norman Macht, Lorraine McFadden, Robert Mitenbuler, MaryMoran, Barry Nathan, Dorothea Noble, John Odell, Philip Reilly, Lolly Sharbach, EstelleSharpe, Nancy Smith, Helen Tarlow, Eepey Voulis, Mary Wong, Don Youngs, Peggy Whitfield.BUSINESS ASSISTANTS: Florence Baumrnk, Carol Chism, Joan Frye, Barbara Gee, MaryJane Gould, Elaine Johnson, Doris Krudener, Kathleen Overholser, Alex Pope, Connie Slater,Robert Voas, Phoebe. Zinder.Dormitory Council Soon?: Although the Chicago Maroon initiated consideration of prob-le?ms pertaining to the formation of a dormitory council severalmonths ago and continued discussion of these matters during muchof last quarter, there was disappointing lack of general responseon the part of inost students. However, the new quarter hasbrought about several, encouraging developments in behalf of adormitbty council, which leads us to state without any undueoptimism, that the quarter's end will see the formation of thatcouncil. 'I . * * •, ’ At the present writing, we have been informed that GatesHall has already considered the question of participating in theformation of a council and has strongly endorsed the councilprinciple.. W.b further, understand that Beecher is also in favorpf a council (thougii no formal action has been taken as yet), andplans are now in the making for a meeting among all six women'sdormitories > to pursue *the question in greater detail and withWider collaboration. This is thoughtful and concrete action of apiost ehhearteriin^ nature.: Moreover, the- Maroon will hold a meeting for all House Com-iiiitteers on January 24 at 8:00 p.m. in the East Lounge of BurtonCourt for the express purpose of coordinating the efforts of the in-diyidp^" groups-.and-.to consider specific proposals regarding the^ake-upa«d functions of the dormitory council. However, this willjreprbs^rt Hierefy a good beginning unless the students, generally,jgive the problem of a dormitory council genuine thought and whole¬sale • supports’Thfe'^tiihe for ‘‘why dormitory council" has passed;only* “when'''rj^nimns.; ;' “ t)ri various ddcki^iOns we have been questioned at length onv^Kat would make a l^itimate program of action for a dormitoryjcouncil.' There are; three areas for immediate consideration,-which, if followed by. prompt action, could more than justify theexistence of a dormitory council by virtue of its value to theUniversity.. For almost a year and a half, a quasi-experimentalhousing progfajn has been underway in the first two years of theCollege*' It is full time that a student evaluation of this programbe undertaken, and^ .if it is found at all worthy, necessary stepsshould be taken to recommend its extension to the last two years ofthe College. The dormitory council is the logical instrument to per¬form both functions.>; For more years than we care to remeinber, the commuter hasbeen the forgotten student on campus. Where other universitieshave established recreational facilities especially for their com-inuters, this university has nothing. Where other institutions ofhigher learning have provided extra-curricular programs designedprimarily for commuter-student participation, the University ofChicago, with more than 50% of its College students commutingjiaily, has done less than nothing. What better purpose could adormitory council serve'than providing associate memberships injthe various,houses to the off-campus student, so that he, too, mayparticipate fully in student life?I Finally, there is the matter for council consideration of policyregarding hours regulations. A council could propose, execute andjenforce an' acceptable policy of liberalizing and grading hours•regulations; and yet remain congruent with University policy andIresponsibility. One of the first points of consistency would be therevolution of a policy of regulation whereby the schism betweenjthe first twjo years and the last two years of the College could bematerially liessened. This could be done by eliminating the unfor-Itunate distinctions caused, by stringent regulations in the first,jtwo years, and an abrupt absence of regulation in the* last two.j What, is needed! is a system of graded regulation, progressively[decreasing yeai^’by year through all four years of the College.jAgain, it is to the dormito^ council that we must look for suchUn accomplishments ‘ ‘ Quadrangles MiscellanyRomance in the AirAlmost all that’s new this weekdeals with weddings and engage¬ments. Jean Gilruth and GeorgeShanks (formerly a meteorologisthere) became officially engaged—shereceived her ring from the postmansince George has a little business ata P.O.E. Gates Hall is giving a par¬ty Monday for its engaged and mar¬ried denizens—among them Alice Ol¬son (now Mrs. James J. Bonga) andBetty Mann who’s decided on thelucky man.Surprise of the week came with theannouncement of Veva Hopkins’s en¬gagement to George R. Schreiber (themiddle name is Richard). MarinesGinny Coward (Delta Sigma) andGene Gleason (DU) were married lastSaturday—she’s a sergbant and he’s alooie. We wonder who’ll be boss...Ruth Schroeder has been marriedsince last Jan. 24th to Lieutenant(j.g.) just returned from overseasduty.Things are Tough Dept.Before he left for the army in Jan¬uary, Steve Sobotka took his fatherdown to the Chinese laundryman andvery ceremoniously introduced them... It seems the laundryman refusesto accept laundry from any unknownsand since Steve usually took thelaundry, Mr. Sobotka ranked as anoutsider.MenWe hear that Bud Reinhardt waswandering around the third floor atGates the other day (he says he wascarrying Marcia Fromkin’s suitcaseto her room)...Just to make theshortage seem more serious, theCommons is now keeping the hand¬some bus boys in the kitchen (wehave heard several complaints).AroundThe Town“There’s nothing like starvation forthe constitution,” Otto always says.Provided of course, three squares aday are included in the regime. Sodeep has he imbedded this idea inour block of concrete, that we wenthunting after a meal for our complain¬ing paunch again this week and cameup cold but very well-satisfied.Before trying Marty’s, 936 DiverseyParkway, (half a block from the El)prepare with a three-day fast. Bythe time the sled-dogs drop you offat the local icicle and you’re feelingfaint, it’s about time to dig in andenjoy yourself. The only thing thatcould possibly bother you from nowon is a steady flow of food. We havea pet waiter who keeps insisting thatjust one more course will be “goodfor your health” despite a pseudo-dietwe use in defense!Comfortable surroundings in theRenaissance Room make for a granddinner, and impressive paintings keepyour interest until food rolls in. Besure to allow plenty of time for aleisurely dinner, which will includefive courses. If you do this, the Ap¬petizer, Soup, Spaghetti, Main Courseand Dessert will more than please.Marty’s “Piece de resistance” is awonderful steak dinner for about$1.76. But, if you tire of that, Ital¬ian and American dishes can keep themost regular customer going forweeks.The fine preparation and equallyfine service will send off our mosthardened restaurant-goer a betterman within, and ready for Chicago’sweather to blow on ai'ound him. Thetrip is well worth your while in anyseason.—B. C. Winter) WonderlandTaffy McCulloch and Mary Moranwere seen thumbing their way to theI.C. Station—they must have lefttheir boots at home... The facultyhas blossomed out collectively inhats that put Mr. Grene to shame.We are led to believe Daniel Boonewas ancestor to some of our distin¬guished professors since so many ofthem are porting coonskin caps.Northwestern’s TreatLast Saturday Northwestern AlphaDelts threw a hayride and dance andinvited the Chicago chapter. A gayold time was had by all—well, atleast Jean Schlageter and FrankBane and Phyllis Riggio and Ed Ho-fert.VisitorsVirginia Brantner Levering cameback to school after a five month hon¬eymoon in Connecticut and plans tostay until she hears from her ensignhusband bn the West Coast...SparBarb Swett is here on a leave aftercompleting pharmacist’s mate schoolin New York and receiving an up inrating.. .Marty Hansen, former Deke,mysteriously appeared on campusTuesday in civvies—this should de¬light all women over seventeen.ToujoursBarbara Gilfillan will be marriedFriday to John Crowley in Hilton...Sid Burks (Sergius in “Arms and theMan”) snagged himself an heiress, asenior at Vassar, during the Christ¬mas holidays.. .Natalie Bernard isengaged to Sheldon Newberger, for¬mer editor of Counterpoint, who’s nowin P.O.E Ann Huntington wasmarried January 10 in Hilton to a lawstudent (we didn’t catch his name)...Jo Thomas took Ed Steele’s pin dur¬ing the noon rush at .the Snack Bartwo hours before she received herB.S.Odds and EndsWacs Maxine Murphy and Marie Ull-man send us their greetings fromFrance.. .Benedict Behling, Air Corpssergeant, has just returned from Eu¬rope—he was one of the three chosenfrom the Eighth Air Force with re¬quired qualifications for West Point.The Literate Phi GamsAfter three years of illiteracy. TheFijigram is again being published re¬plete with news and gossip of thebrothers... The sectional conventionof the fraternity is being held hereJanuary 20...New Fiji officers areprexy Larry Kielman, treasurer PhilReilly, secretaries Bob Rasch andBill Jensen, and historian Jim Servies.Judy DownsServin' It HotThe Jazz Man Record Shop has justreleased a new Crescent label, the fin¬est sides yet, in their series of record¬ings of original New Orleans jazzmen.The band, listed as Kid Ory’s CreoleJazz Band, is primarily the same onewhich has come into national promin¬ence on the Orsen Welles broadcasts:Mutt Carey, trumpet; Kid Ory, trom¬bone; Omer Simeon, clarinet; BusterWilson, piano; Bud Scott, guitar; EdGarland, bass; Alton Redd, drums.They have recorded four sides. SouthCreole Song and Blues for Jimmy GetOut of Here packed with authentic,rough*-and-ready New Orleans jazz.Kid Ory is playing the same tailgatetrombone he played twenty years agowith Louis Armstrong and Joe Oliver,as in evidence on the strictly Crescentadaptation of the Benny Moton classic,South. . Those jazz lovers, with ayearning for the lost aura of old NewOrleans, will also get a special thrillfrom his vocal in a NO French dialecton Creole Song (C’est L’Autre Can- Mexican MoodsToo Condensed^Critic LamentsLittle if anything can be said of“Mexican Moods,” the first of thetwo films shown by the DocumentaryFilm Group in its initial program ofthe Winter Quarter. The film, a tech¬nicolor production by the UnitedStates government, is too condenseda treatment of Mexico and its peopleto be of either educational or enter¬tainment value.By the first, however, we shouldnot judge the second. Although the“Time in the Sun” was not satisfac¬tory as a film, it was more than satis¬factory—indeed, excellent—as picture.Now there is a difference. Takealmost any good American film, say,“Laura.” As a whole and only asa whole was any meaning imparted tothe spectator, and, as one looks backat the film, a life and vitality is givenindividual scenes only as they arepart of and fit in with the remainderof the film. Not so with “Time inthe Sun.” Quite the reverse. Look¬ing back at it, one is struck not bythe whole, but by particular scenes.Considering that it consisted of somefour thousand feet of film out of abouttwo hundred thousand feet shot bythe director, and that it was arrangedby a person other than the director,it is a tribute to say that it had thelittle meaning it did.As picture, though, faults are sel¬dom if ever present. The director,Sergei Eisenstein, is considered bymany the world’s most able and fruit¬ful. An artist, he is primarily inter¬ested not in plot or in his actors butin light and dark, mass and space,sound and silence. In keeping withthis interest, his actors become al¬most no more than part of the scen¬ery and consequently are given littleif any depth or sympathy or under¬standing. Compensating for this lackof warmth is the quality of both di¬rection and photography. Faces,masks, steps of a temple, cacti, detailin stone, or the sky are, to put itbluntly, Eisenstein’s ‘meat,’ and it isin these shots that his particular skillis evident.Still, his coldness is evident andleaves the spectator hoping for more.The director who achieves the warmthof “Laura” and the quality of Eisen¬stein is yet to appear. Perhaps Eis¬enstein’s long-awaited and soon-to-be-issued “Ivan the Terrible” will notshow his present weakness.B. R. N./can). Contributing no less to thewarmth and spirit of these sides areMutt Carey and Omer Simeon, prob¬ably the best possible choices for sucha group. Simeon’s clarinet stabs bril¬liantly through the knocked out GetOut of Here which smacks distinctlyof the flavor of the old Buddy Boldenclassic Don’t Go Way Nobody withwhich tradition has it, Bolden rockedthe Perdido joints around midnightwhen the “dicty” folks went home, andthe music got “mean”. Blues for Jim¬my (the late Jimmy Noone) attainsthat eloquent richness of emotion ofthe true “blues feeling”—^no one yethas been able to play the blues on alevel with a small band of Negro NewOrleans musicians.These sides are especially recom¬mended to the modern jazz fan yetunacquainted with that style whichwas the daddy of them all; for thismusic is easy listening to the rawestears, while retaining the true spiritof the old New Orleans jazz band.Cross CampusHildegarde got off to a colorfulstart drawing murals on the diningroom wallpaper when she was two.Later—much later—she graduated tooils and canvas, and, with her paint¬ing, “Cheyenne Mountain,” won firstplace in the oils division of the recentstudent art competition held in Good-speed hall.Miss Hildegarde Vogel’s only re¬mark made in reference to her prize¬winning painting was, “I am verymuch interested in color and colorpatterns.” I make no pretense at be¬ing an art critic, but in “CheyenneMountain” I think it is that very colortreatment—suppressed and yet som¬berly exciting—^which will impressyou with its blue-ribbon qualities.With this in mind, I asked Hilde¬garde which of the paintings in theexhibit she had particularly liked. Ap¬parently the judges have made a validchoice for Hildegarde’s favorite wasSonya Katz’s second prize-winner,“Self Portrait.”Hildegarde has been studying at theUniversity for two years and expectsto receive her Ph.B. in June. Teachingand commercial art don’t particularlyappeal to Hildegarde. But she hopes—and we do too—^that she’ll continuewith her art and that some day soonwe'll be able to say ‘We knew hei^when—’Miss Pauline King, first-prize win¬ner in the black-and-white divisionwith “Virginia Mountaineers” has “al¬ways liked to draw.” She is nowearning the degree of Doctor of Phi¬losophy, in the art department of theUniversity.After seeing her casually but wellexecuted sketches of the “VirginiaMountaineers” and coal miners, I wasinterested in her reason for enteringthose particular drawings in the com¬petition. This was it:“I entered the exhibit with theseparticular pieces because I felt thatthe “American Scene” should be rep¬resented in some way, although I amnot opposed to surrealism and all theother “isms.” Also, I have alwaysbeen interested in the Virginia moun¬taineer and the Virginia coal miner.” “Menagerie”Cast FetedAt ODP Tea THE CHICAGO MAROON“My God, do they pray in here?”queried Miss Taylor as she settledherself in a Swift Commons armchair.Surrounding her on the floor wereTennessee Williams, author of “TheGlass Menagerie,” Margo Jones, itsco-director, Julie Haydon and AnthonyRoss of the cast, as well as some fiftyUniversity students. The occasionwas a tea given last Tuesday by theOffice of Dramatic Productions for thepeople in and around “The Glass Men¬agerie.” Mrs. Kimpton and Mrs.Kharasch acted as hostesses.Mr. Williams was the first to arrive,accompanied by the vibrant MargoJones, and Anthony Ross. As soonas they had all been seated, in cameJulie Haydon, the same Alice in Won¬derland character that all had imag¬ined her. “Julie,” as Miss Taylorlater remarked, “manages to love ev¬erybody. I wish I knew how shedoes it.”Margo Jones delivered a pep talkto the aspiring Thespians present, ongoing out and getting what you wantin the theatre.” The cast of “The In¬spector General” invited the cast of“The Glass Menagerie” to a specialperformance, at which the profession¬als would be the guests of honor. Thisplan was partly thwarted, however,by Laurette Taylor’s announcement,that, yes, she had seen Stanislavskido it.Miss Taylor, who braved the longtrip from downtown in a taxi, provedthe real delight of the afternoon.When the group had heard one of heranecdotes for mixed company shequipped, pointing to a stem gentle¬man on the wall, “Well, he still hashis beard.” Stories about Stanislav¬ski and “Peg O’ My Heart” followed,but were cut short by the arrival ofanother taxi, called to whisk theguests back to the loop. The tea wasimmensely successful: it was infor¬mal, fascinating, and grand.B.JJ.S.A Guide To The BefuddledGeorge ^iltonChapter XIIThe country which Mexico seeded inthe two Mexican Sessions was an ar-rid waste when America acquired itin 1848, inhabited only by lizards,coyotes, and, above all, insects. Theinsect population of the United Statesjumped tremendously in that year, asevidenced by the famous song:’Tis eighteen hundred and forty-eight. ...The year we flies commemorate . . .The first human inhabitants of theregion were the original settlers ofUtah, the Latter Day Saints, led byJoseph Smith, Bring ’em Young, Sim¬on Templar, etc. Smith, the founderof the sect, conceived teh idea in adivine revelation in the CatskillMountains of upper New York State,a place still filled with revelations,most of which are far from divine.Smith found a pair of golden tabletsin the wilderness which he seriouslysuspected of being a two-day supplyof B complex vitamin capsules. Hesoon discovered that these tabletswere a divine revelation of the historyof the American Indians includingMass a‘ suet, Minnie (Ha Ha!) etc.Smith’s followers even adopted theancient Indian greeting of “Hi ya,Watha!” This custom made them ^ap¬pear somewhat idiotic, causing theaborigineep of the region to call them“The Morons.”The basic precepts of Moronismwere' founded on Smith’s discovery that the golden tablets were legibleonly to people. who wore a specialpair of reading glasses he had dis¬covered at the side of the tablets. Asthese glasses were imposible of du¬plication, the only way in whichSmith’s followers could behold divinerevelations was by putting themselvesin the mood of a pair of glasses. TheNew Yorkers thought that the Mor¬ons were thereby making spectaclesof themselves and began to drop suchgentle hints as tarring and featheringsome of the bretheren, etc.Because it is well known that noform of clothing is so conducive totraveling as tar and feathers, the stu¬dent will easily understaml why theMorons moved to Illinois. Their firstsettlement was Kaskaskia by the Mis¬sissippi. Because only 2 7/8% of theMorons could spell both Kaskaskiaand Missisippi, they moved to SaltLake City. Settling at Salt Lake Citywas quite difficult because it wasn’tthere at the time. Bring ’em Young,most F.N.E. in A.H. of the Morons,was quite disappointed in the site ofSalt Lake City. In fact, his firstwords were “THIS is the place?” Thebretheren,wished that they could justforget about the place and fly away.They therefore built a statue of aseagul, about which a large part ofthe civic life of the settlement re¬volved until the building of the SaltairBeach pavilion, sometimes known asthe Moron Tabernacle. YWCA LaunchesAnnual StudentFinance DriveThe annual student finance drive ofthe YWCA, launched yesterday willcontinue to January 27. Since contri¬butions are not limited to YWCAmembers, representatives will solicitmembers in the dormitories and in In¬ternational House. The drive is head¬ed by Mary Kellogg, finance chair¬man.The following girls are solicitarsfor the drive: Kelly Hall: FlorenceAllen, Nancy Yochem, Margaret Wil¬liams; Foster Hall: Harrie't Martin,Jo Jennings; Beecher Hall: Jean Flet¬cher, Grace Olsen, Jane Anspaugh,Blake Hall: Amy Barnes, Jerry Royal.Gates Hall: Marjorie Horn, Eliza¬beth Leven; Green Hall: BarbaraGreene, Patty Vogt, Jane Colley;Michaelson House: Mary Ann Finch,Lois Karraker; International House:Phoebe Hopkins, Lois Ann Schafer,Lucille Peterson, Betty Everett.Club representatives are: FlorenceBaumruk, Chi Rho Sig^ma; Mary AliceReed, Esoteric; Terry Kachel, MortarBoard; Helen Toman, Phi Delta Up-silom; Doris Arnett, Pi Delta Phi;Mary Kellogg, Quadrangles; JoAnnButters, Sigma.Bach to BaxHoward Hanson: Symphony No. 1in E Minor (“Nordic”); Eastman-Rochester Symphony Orchestra, How¬ard Hanson, cond.Of serious American composersHoward Hanson is the most well-represented on records. At one timeor another his Symphony No. 2 **Ro-Tnantic**f a suite drawn from the operaMerry Mount, and his large work forchorus and orchestra. The Lament ForBeowulf, have been available. MerryMount, which was the most readilyaccessible of these and easily the mostpopular, suffered that fate inexplicablewhich befalls so many many nice al¬bums and leaves so much trash avail¬able—it was withdrawn.Now the first symphony has beenadded to the list of Hanson worksrecorded. Hanson won the PulitzerPrize in 1944 for his Symphony No. 4.Since this happened while the record¬ing ban was still on, it is presumedthat, otherwise, we should have had arecording of that much better, moremature v^ork. Certainly, as a firstsymphony, this one is pretty much ofa flop. Many an unwary listenermust have been surprised to hear thedescending scale which opens the lastmovement of Tschaikowsky’s FifthSymphony in the second and thirdmovements of the work. Like mostcyclical works it goes in circles andnever really gets any place. It maybe that contemporary composers in¬dulge in the cyclical form so frequentlybecause they fear that, otherwise,their works will lack unity. To besure, Haydn, who never was accusedof a lack of unity, succeeds in intro¬ducing the most diverse material intoa work (as, for example, the Quartetin E Flat, Op. SS, No. 2); yet Haydnalways “comes out even” in the end.It remains to remark that the sym¬phony had its first performance by theBoston Symphony on April 6, 1929(not 1928, as the accompanyifig notessay). —W. R. W. Nancy Smith Page FivfWAR STAMP TEASThe War Stamp Committee is en¬larging its activities to include aperiesof faculty-student teas this quarter.Admission for these teas will one25c war stamp per person. Each weeka different faculty member will beintroduced to the students. Co^air-hnen of the Teas are Aileen Baron andAlice Sheehan. CAN’T HELP SINGING can’thelp stinking in spite of itself. DeannaDurbin—lovely in teciinicolor—flounc¬es through it to the bitter end witha song on her lips and one gorgeousgown after another on her back.“Can’t help singing,” she carols at toofrequent intervals. Her inability tocontrol her laryngeal vibrations isunnecessarily painful, since the musicin the picture in toto is inane anduninteresting. It flows from the lipsof wagon trainers, and in a possiblygenuine baritone from Robert Paige,a definitely dull young man who playsopposite Miss Durbin. The fault isnot hers, Paige’s, or even the wagontrainers, I suspect,'but may be laidat the feet of the sub-idiot who wrotethe script.The plot is one of those easy oneswhich can be summarized in a flash.(Deanna leaves her home in the eastto marry a paternally-unapproved cav¬alry officer in the west; she falls inlove with somebody she meets onthe way instead; finis with fiestaflourish.) The unhappiness of the finaleffect is not to be blamed on thesimplicity of the story, but on thestupidity of handling. Its authors trydesperately to keep us diverted fromthe main issues. We are sidetrackedfor what seems like hours on a pic¬turesque hill-side alone with Deanna,who is trilling angelically and com¬muning with Nature suggestive of arebirth of Transcendentalism.By far the most interesting diver¬sion in the picture is a couple ofnomadic characters, Akim Tamiroffand 'Leonid Kinskey, who alternatebetween being Dickensian and theDuke and Dauphin of HuckleberryFinn. They serve no visible func¬tion by their presence, but one is gladof it anyway. This same absence of French FilmScheduled forNext TuesdayDanielle Darrieux, the French ac¬tress recently cleared by the Parispress of all stigma of collaborationwith the Axis, will be starred in“Abused Confidence,” the first of thisquarter’s five bi-weekly fiction filmsto be sponsored by the DocumentaryFilm Group beginning this Tuesdayin Social Science 122, at 8 p.m.“Abused Confidence” in French,^with sub-titles in English, was di-'rected by Henry Decoin, to whomMiss Darrieux was married at thetime the film was made. Included inthe cast is Charles Vanel of the’Comedie Francais. I/Other fiction films scheduled forthe winter quarter are: “L’Alibi,”with Eric von Stroheim, Louis Jou¬vet, and Albert Prejean, to be shownJanuary 30; “Eternal Mask,” a psy¬chological film directed by WernerHochbaum, starring Mathias Wiemanand Olgo Tschechowa to be shownFebruary 13; “Lower Depths” (“LasBas-fonds”), starring Jean Gabin asthe thief and Louis Jouvet as a fallenaristocrat, scheduled for February 27.Suzy Prim makes a return engage¬ment in this film. The final pictureof the quarter to be shown March 13,will be “Don Quixote,” starring thefamous Russian opera star FeodorChaliapin.purpose gives them an air of mysterywhich is accentuated by the oddnessof their costume. They have a qualityof decadent grandeur—^but the trulygreat thing is the Hat. Ah! the Hat!Kinskey has a magnificently batteredbrown beaver stovepipe, which rises inthe air to alarming heights.This Week On Campus yFriday, January 12Worship Service. Joseph Bond Chapel. Speaker: Roger W. Barrett, Gradu¬ate Student, Divinity School. 12:00 Noon.Mathematical Biophysics Meeting. “The Mechanism of Periodic Activity inElectrolytes.” Speaker: Professor J. H. Bartlett, Department of Physics,University of Illinois. 5822 Drexel Avenue. 4:30 p.m.Public Lecture. “The People’s War in Eastern Asia.” Speaker: Colonel Ev¬ans F. Carlson, U.S.M.C.R. Admission without ticket. Leon MandelAssembly Hall. 4:30 p.m.Chamber Concert. Third in a series presented by the Department of Music.Hans Lange, Conductor, with instrumentalists from the Chicago S3nn-phony Orchestra. All tickets have been sold. Leon Mandel AssemblyHall. 8:30 p.m.W.S.S.F. Meeting for heads of organizations to plan drive. Ida Noyes Hall,4:00 p.m.Saturday, January 13Another dull day.Sunday, January 14University Religious Service. Rockefeller Memorial Chapel. Preacher: Bish¬op Henry W. Hobson, Diocese of Southern Ohio, Cincinnati, Ohio. 11 a.m.Monday, January 15Public Lecture. “The Civil Service in Wartime: The Search for ExecutiveTalent.” Speaker: Herbert Emmerich, Lecturer in Political Science,Associate Director, Public Administration Clearing House. Room 122,Social Science Building. 4:00 p.m.Tifesday, January 16Worship Service. Joseph Bond Chapel. Speaker: George R. Tolson, Gradu¬ate Student, Divinity School. 11:00 a.m.Public Lecture. “Imagination in Mathematics.” Speaker: Edward Kasner,Professor of Mathematics, Columbia University. Room 1^2, Social Sci¬ence Building. 4:30 p.m.Fiction Film. “Abused Confidence.” Danielle Darrieux (French). Room122, Social Science Building. 8:00 p.m.Student Forum Speaker, Professor Mary Branch, Social Service Administra¬tion. Topic, “Campuses and Co-ops”. Rosenwald 2, 7:30 p.m.Wednesday, January 17Public Lecture.' Speculative Thought in the Near East, “Egypt.” Speaker:Professor John A. Wilson, Mehiber of the Department of Oriental Lan¬guages and Literature. Room 122, Social Science Building. 7:30-9:30 p.m.Public Lecture: “Imagination In Mathematics.” Continued. Speaker: EdwardKansner, Professor of Mathematics, Columbia University.Thursday, January 18Public Lecture. “Mathematics and the Visual Arts.” Speaker: William Iv¬ins, Jr., Counselor, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Room 122,Social Science Building. 4:30 p.m.Record Concert. Home Room International House. 7:30-9:00 p.m.GRETA THE CHICAGO MAROONReligious ActivitiesTo open their winter profirram, theCalvert Club will present the Rever¬end Alfonso Castiello, SJ., visitingLatin-American professor, at theirweekly meeting next Sunday eveningat 8:00. Father Castiello, a Jesuit,who studied in England and nowteaches in Mexico City, will talk on“Latin America’s Cultural Heritage.”Speaking at the club’s home at 5735University, Fr. Castiello will bringout the views of Mexico, ideas newand fresh to those accustomed tothinking in terms of accepted Ameri¬can cultural values. Because of hisstudies in England, completed inSpain and France, he speaks excellentEnglish and understands the OldWorld in contrast to the New.Through the cooperation of theU.S. Dept, of State Fr. Castiello isteaching ^ at Loyola University thisqu^ter. In Mexico he is dean of thefaculty of philosophy and literatureof the Centro Cultural Universitarioof Mexico City, an affiliate of the Na¬tional University of Mexico.At last Sunday’s meeting generalplans for the quarter were made. TheSunday night open house will continuewith prominent speakers on the pro¬gram. The social calendar will in¬cluded Mardi Gras Dance, a St. Pat¬rick’s Day party, and the quarterlyC^Tderley weekend at the club’s es¬tate near Wheeling, Illinois.An Episcopalian communion ser¬vice will be held this Sunday morn¬ing, January 14, and each Sundaythereafter, at 9:15 a.m. in theThomdyke Hilton Chapel. Thisservice will be followed by a break¬fast at the Chapel House, 5810Woodlawn Ave. For its regular Sunday discussionJanuary 14, Chapel Union is bringingback one of its most popular speak¬ers of last year, Bernard Loomer, As¬sistant professor of Ethics of theFederated Theological Faculties andAssistant Dean of the DivinitySchool. As usual, the meeting willbe in Dean Gilkey’s home, 5802Woodlawn, at 7:45 p.m.In addition to the regular meetingSunday, Chapel Union is having askating party tomorrow (Saturday)evening. Anyone wishing to attendshould meet at the Chapel House at7:30 p.m.“The National Student Consultationheld from December 27 to 30 in Gran¬ville, Ohio, made great progress inorganizing the Protestant Churches,the YWCA and YMCA under onehead for cooperation in student work,”reports Edward Vorba, Congregationalstudent pastor and representative ofthe University of (Chicago and theCongregational Church at the con¬ference.“It was,” said Mr. Vorba, “The firstmeeting of its kind in Protestant his¬tory, for it is the first conferencewhich plans to go beyond the confer¬ence stage and really form a centralorganization.”Dr. Henry Simon Bloch, speakingabout “Social Conflict and IndividualResponsibility,” will be guest speakerat the first Hillel Fireside of the Win¬ter quarter, tonight at 8:00, in SwiftCommons. Refreshments and a So¬cial hour will follow. Student ForumAddressed onRace RelationsJohn Brenton, a Relocation Officerof the War Relocation Authority, gavean interesting talk before the StudentForum last Tuesday, January 10. Thetopic under discussion was “New De-velopments in Race Relations.”Mr. Brenton, in discussing this top-ic, used the presence of Americanborn Japanese and the friction exist¬ing between them and native Ameri¬cans as an example for his thesis. Hethen went on to state how relocation,the best way to help solve this par¬ticular problem, depended largely onthe people themselves. Housing, em¬ployment, and public acceptance formthe main constituents of relocation,according to Mr. Benton, and publiccooperation is necessary for these.Dismissing critics, he pointed out thata fear complex was largely responsi¬ble for much of the friction. In Cali¬fornia public opinion is undergoing achange as the fear complex is lessen¬ing. The facts, he concluded, speakfor themselves, and it is up to thepeople of this country to throw offtheir fear complex.¥Ida Noyes ConcertsMoved to MondayRecording concerts and teas, spon¬sor^ by the Ida Noyes Council willcontinue this quarter. However, achange in day from Wednesday toMonday has been made. As before,they vdll be held from 8:80 to 5:00p.m. in the , libraray,, and studentsand members of the faculty are in¬vited to attend these informal after¬noon session.She loves to spltiige on color, to whisk herinventive crochet hook through tangerine,chartreuse, aquamarine, and giddy fuchsias.Her originals are Fashion’s pet-topic acces¬sories, and you’ll adore the new approachthey give to yoiu vsdnter.Beret, 4.8S Jumper, e.95Gloves, 6*00CARSON PIRIESCOTT & QoiAccessory Skop * lirst floor %JACKSON PARK WINE STOREFINE WINESExclusive Distributors ofPiuma's 3 and 7 Star Wines INSURANCENEWSUPER-COMPREHENSIVEHOSPITAL-SURGICAL-MEDICALWith accidental loss-of-life, 'fight,and difmemberment benefits.Maroon readers are invited to sample our wines with each purchase1500-02 EAST 63rd STREET PHONE HYDE PARK 0061 J. P. DeWees1316 East 61st St.Hyde Perk 086STodo marcha perfectamente... Have a Coke( EVERYTHING’S COIN’ O. K.).. .or enjoying a friendly pause in hH^icoIn the famed Xocbimilco gardens of Mexico, tb* paust thatThreshes with ice-cold Coca-Cola is an old established custom.Across the border, as in your own living room, Coca-Cola standsfor a refreshing interlude, a symbol of good will wherever itis served.lOTTlB) UND^ AUTHORITY OP THi COCA-COU COMPANY lYOOCA-COLA BOnilNG CO.. OF CHICAGO. INC Cdces Coca-ColaIt*s natural for popular natnato acquire friendly abbrevia¬tions. That's why you hearCocaCola called Coke. 6iTHE CHICAGO MAROON P«g* SeveiiChicago Closes Season Away FrontHome Against Wheaton, WilliamsVarsity Faces Defeated FoesIn Search of Final Victorieshick HillTime InChicago’s last defeat at the handsof Navy Radio wasn’t as lopsided asthe score (69-47) might show. 'Thedecisions were lousy and both teamshad plenty of gripes coming. Thissame type of officiating hampered therecent Stagg tournament no end andwhile some have held that the refereeshad to keep the games in hand, wethought that fouls and traveling werecalled entirely too closely.If the U. of C. had had one manwho was about 6’4” or thereaboutsand could play with an average degreeof proficiency, we think that the Mar¬oons would have been a hard team tobeat by any man’s team. At least wecould have taken Northwestern* * *And anent that tall man idea....Jack Wulf, tallest man in the Staggtourney would make a nice hunk ofbasketball flesh to add to the Norgrenteam about three years from now.Wulf was 16 and 6’6”. And the kidis still growing! Fred Cimerblatt, moving spirit inUniversity baseball, has turned ina tentative players list for the sum¬mer season to J. Kyle Anderson. Towiseacres who mistakenly believe thatsuch plans are premature we wouldlike to pass on the information thatthe Michigan team has already startedpractice. Cimerblatt and several otherexperienced players plan on workingout in the Fieldhouse as soon aspossible and any men on campus whoare interested in baseball should seeAnderson or Cimerblatt to let themknow of their interest.* 4> «We need a sport staff! And weneed one soon.. .All and sundry, maleand female, upper and lower collegecan come to the Maroon offices to talkto this writer or Mr. Gottesman. At¬tempts will be made to give campuswide coverage in all phases of sportsand we will need the help of severalstudents. Stampf Five BeatsFavored HarvardIn Upset, 33-28By Bob SchallmanPlaying before an overflowingcrowd on last Tuesday, the U-Highheavy basketball team defeated Har¬vard School for Boys in Bartlett Gym¬nasium. It was indeed a grand mo¬ment for Coach Joe Stampf and hisboys when the final gun sounded andthe scoreboard read: U-High 33, Har¬vard 28, for it was the first time ineight years that the first and secondyear college boys had defeated theirarch rivals.The game was a thrilling spectaclethroughout. Although Stampf’sstarting five of Schallman, Heffron,Gray, Hansen and Blumberg were ata decided disadvantage due to thegreater height of Harvard’s players.Uncle Joe’s boys got their share ofrebounds and the half found themtrailing by a narrow margin, 12 to10.In the second half, however, Schall¬man and Gray found the range of thehoop, Hansen’s fine defensive play be¬gan to take effect and after a nip andtuck third quarter Chicago led 20 to19. In an exciting final period whichhad the crowd constantly on its feet,Chicago pulled ahead and as the finalgun sounded the boys in Maroon wereahead 33 to 28. Maroons Lose LastFieldhouse GameTo Chicago RadioWith a score of 59 to 47, BemieBeiderman and the Chicago Navy Ra¬dio School handed the Maroons theirsixth defeat in twelve starts lastSaturday at the Fieldhouse. The ser¬vice team had knocked off Chicagoby a one point margin before the hol¬idays. Beiderman, a small, fastguard, dropped in 5 baskets and 7free throws for game honors, whileFred DeGraw maintained his highscoring for the second consecutivegame with 16 points.George Raby, Maroon center, wasfouled five times and dropped in 4free throws to add to his 6 field bas¬kets for additional scoring honors.The Radio team led all the way withthe help of Bob Robbins and GeorgeJanchenko who dropped in 6 and 1apiece.The University tied the score onceat 20 up right before the half, butChicago Radio closed the intermissionperiod with a 7 point lead. The Ma¬roons were never able to overcome,this lead and gradually fell behind tobe defeated by 12 points. The Chicago Maroons, sport¬ing their best record in six longseasons, wrapped their homeschedule in camphor this weekand moved through rehearsals inanticipation of the two wind-upcontests.Their season, cut short by theshift of naval trainees schedule,to take place after Jan. 20, theMaroon cagemen will shut downafter a game, Monday, withWheaton College and a joust,Jan. 20, at George Williams Col¬lege.Chicago has pieced together six vic¬tories to match the six setbacks theyhave incurred. And the record booksreveal that though this year’s clubis not engaged in Big Ten conferenceplay, that is the best posted by aChicago quintet since the club wentinto a tailspin dropping 46 consecutivecontests.If the Maroons split the final en¬gagements they will come up with a.600 record. If they score a grandslam they’ll end up in the black.Chicago flattened both teams in pre¬vious encounters. Wheaton Collegewas hammered 41-33 while GeorgeWilliams was spanked 39-30. Butboth games were played amid thefamiliar confines of the Fieldhouse andsports professors generally acknow¬ledge that the home floor is good forat least 6 points.Register Open forW.A.A. TournamentAll teams wishing to enter the an¬nual W.A.A. basketball tournamentmust register either with Louise Har¬vey or at the office in Ida Noyes bythis Monday, January 16. Any wom¬en students unaffiliated with a teamat present may also register, and willbe placed on a team with other unaffil¬iated students .who register.Practice schedules will be assignedto groups and hours to individualplayers. Sixteen teams have alreadybeen entered in the competition.W.A.A. Wants YOU(If You Can Swim)The Woman’s Athletic Associationhas made numerous announcementsof its hoped-for swimming team. Atthis time there are not enough peopleto compose one.Practice hours are set for Mondayand Wednesday at 4 P.M. in the IdaNoyes pool. Any woman on campusis eligible to be on the team and maytry out for a position.A tentative schedule of swimmingmeets has been made and as soon asenough girls have composed the team,it will be verified. For further infor¬mation, contact the Ida Noyes office.4 MONTH INTENSIVE* Course forCOLLEGE STUDENTS and GRADUATESA thorough, intensive course—ston¬ing February, July, October.Registration now open.★Regular day and evening schoolthroughout the year. Catalog.A SCHOOL OP BUSINESSPKEFEBKED BY COLLEGE MEN AND WOAIENTHE CREe<» COLLEGEPreddcnt, John Robort Grogg. S.CJ>.Diroctw. Rcwl M. Pair. MA.Dt»t C.M. 6 N. Mick. Aw. TM. tTAIt ISIlCkkm 2. IN.G! AMarine Dining RoomEMIL VANDAS’ORCHESTRAfeaturingARNIE HARTMANWizard of the AccordionTHE ZOPPE TROUPENovelty AcrobatsTHE THREE GAY BUDESComedy Singing StarsRUTH PRYORBallerinaDOROTHY HILD DANCERS IMPORTANTNEW BOOKS1 . .BAREFOOT BOY WITH CHEEK by Max Shulman $1.00An outrageous and witty expose of American College life.I'LL HATE MYSELF IN THE MORNING and SUMMERTINDECEMBER — two mystery novels by Elliot Paul $2.50Coming January 15.RE-EDUCATING GERMANY by Werner Richter $3.50How we can prepare "Hitler's children" for citizenship in ademocratic world community.THE ECONOMIC ORDER AND RELIGION by Frank Knightand Thornton W. Merriam $3.00Provides an interesting and provocative controversial state¬ment of a most timely and vital theme.THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE WASHINGTON by Vera Bloom $3.00A warmly human behind-the-scenes panorama of the great andnear great from the four comers of the earth, portrayed' atwork and play.BORN FREE AND EQUAL by Ansel Adams $1.00The story of loyal Japanese-Americans.WHAT THE NEGRO WANTS edited by Rayford W. Logan $3.50"14 leading Negroes—ranging from poet to trade-unionist,conservative to Communist—state the Negro case ... a seriesof balanced thoughtful articles."—^Time.AN INTELLIGENT AMERICAN'S GUIDE TO THE PEACEedited by Sumner Welles / $3.75Over 80 lands are presented here, making available for thefirst time the essential and pertinent facts about every im¬portant nation and dependent area in the world.YOUR INCOME TAX by J. K. Lasser $1.00The most widely used tax guide in America.♦University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave., Chicago 37, III.Ag/ain this quarter^ Marshall Fidd & Company turnsits spotligfit on campus celd)rities . . . and in focus^this time, are our dormitory glamor queens. First to takeher lovely place on these pages is GwendolenSchmidt of Beecher Hall , , . member of the FreshmanBeauty Court, member of Ida Noyes Council,Quadrangler Pledge. Isn^t she pretty?But that’s only half of it ... a look at Gwen’s picture*here will show you that she’s smart, too . . . because sheknows that good-looking clothes can make eventhe prettiest look prettier. That suit and topcoat she’swearing, for instance . . . when have you seen anythingsmarter or more suitable for campus? Where did shechoose them? Why, at Marshall Field & Company, of course!Maybe you’d like them for yourself? Or something similar?There’s a brand new collection of spring suits andmatching topcoats in the Sports Room on the Sixth Floor.This combination comes in powder blue, cherry red,Kelly green ... in sizes 10 to 18. The price? $45 each• . . and well worth it. Others h*om $29.95 each.Meet the Best Peoptem Every week, on this page,the Chicago Maroon will introduce you to anotherUniversity of Chicago glamor girl... a winning campuspersonality. And every week you’ll see her in anattractive costume she’s chosen atMarshall Field & Company.THE CHICAGO MAROONrage EightStore Hours, 9:45 to 5:45with the CHim MilROOK»a. L