VOL. 5. NO. 7—Z-149Scholars Must Lead WayTo World State-HutchinsWorld CommunityMajor ChallengeUC Solons ToldRegistration Ques . ♦ ♦ Not Breadlines . ♦ ♦UNIYERSI^Y ENROLLMENT SOARSScene as hundreds jammed Bur>sar’s Office to pay tuition andfees. University facilities for reg¬ istration of students were strainedto capacity and officials have ad¬mitted that they are inadequate. Inset: Veterans Adviser ZensSmith consulting with former G.I.H. E. McSwain.1300 Ex-C-I's InvadingMidway; Housing SoughtA house-to-house canvass is being con¬ducted by the Housing Bureau of the Bursar’sOffice, to uncover additional space near theUniversity for veterans and other students withfamilies it was announced this week. Handbillsurging householders to make avail¬able extra rooms have been dis¬tributed from 43rd to 67th streets,and east from Drexel boulevard tothe Lake.“Many single rooms have turnedup,” Joseph F. Gotten, Bursar, re¬ported, “but incoming studentswith families require small apart¬ments which have not, thus far,been made available to the Hous¬ing Bureau.”The canvass will be expandedshortly to areas within reasonablecommuting distance, along trans¬portation lines. Gotten said. Morethan 7,500 handbills have alreadybeen distributed, and the HousingBureau expects to continue itswork in this direction until all newstudents and veterans find ade¬quate places to live.“Many veterans are now livingin unsatisfactory quarters, andmust find satisfactory quarters inseveral weeks,” he concluded.Write or telephone to the Univer¬sity Housing Bureau any sugges¬tions, ideas, or available livingquarters.DKE House Sold;Chapter to FoldThe Delta Kappa Epsilon fra¬ternity house has been sold to theUniversity by its alumni founda¬tion and its chapter withdrawnfrom Chicago, it was learned ye.s-terday. UC AlumnusLeads ManilaQd UprisingVeteran enrollment at the University hasreached a total of about 1,300 with more ap¬plications still coming in, Zens L. Smith, ad¬visor to veterans, told THE MAROON thisweek.Last quarter’s total of 600 vet¬eran admissions has more thandoubled and, Smith added, morethan 50 women are now enrolledunder the G.I. Bill.“Our office appreciates the ex¬tremely cooperative attitude of thenew veteran entries,” Smith said,(Continued on Page 6)Sharing headlines with the Deg-nan munder case this week wasnews of mass meetings and dem¬onstrations by GI’s in Manila pro¬testing the slow demobilization oftroops in the Philippines. One ofof the leaders in this movementwas a U. of C. alumnus, SheldonNewberger, who graduated fromthe University in 1^44.He entered the army immediate¬ly after graduation and is now asergeant in the Recovered person¬nel division with MacArthur.While on campus, Newbergeracted as feature editor of The MA¬ROON, and was the founder of theliterary magazine. Counterpoint.Among his more outstanding jour¬nalistic achievements during thisera was a front-page feature ar¬ticle in the Chicago Sun entitled“Sun Still to Fulfill First LiberalIdeals.” This article, for whichNewberger gathered material byworking as a copy boy in the Sun(Continued on Page 6) try Club, the Chancellor revealedthat proposals are under way toestablish a committee at the Uni¬versity of outstanding scholars forthe purpose of drafting a worldconstitution.In his address, the Chancellor;(Said that the« mission of theUniversity and of all higherlearning is to save the world fromthe catastrophe of an atom-bombwar;2 Asserted that liberal educationhas conquered vocational train¬ing and is the most pressing needof our time;Liberal education has triumphed over vocational learning,Chancellor Robert M,. Hutchins asserted Wednesday night ashe posed a world community as the number one challenge con¬fronting the University.In his annual message to the Board of Trustees and theFaculty at the South Shore Coun-Start DriveTo Aid CzechWar VictimsWSSF Campaign to StartMonday; Set $5000GoalBy DON BUSHNELLIn reply to an appeal sent byCzech medical students, the ex¬ecutive board of World StudentService Fund has set $4,000 as thegoal for its annual drive openingMonday. In a cablegram sent fromCzechoslovakia to Mary Kellog,chairman of the W.S.S.F., the Uni¬versity was asked to contributemattresses, pillowcases, blanketsand sheets for a student hospital.These badly needed supplies willbe bought at the completion ofthe drive.The purpose of the W.S.S.F. isthreefold: (1) It provides directrelief for students who are victimsof the war; (2) it is the only or¬ganization in this country throughwhich fellow students can behelped, and (3) it provides aidand means for reconstructionwhere it is needed most.Map Intensive DriveIn past years the drives havehad little success. In view of this ^fact the Committee has planneda program which will cover allstudent organizations. Co-chair-(Continued on Page 2)34 Demandededucation; extension of adultAsked that University degreesbe simplified and divisionalenrollment curtailed;5 Claimed that the U. of C. is theleading scientific institution inthe world.Crisis for IntellectualsHutchins defined a world com¬munity as the primary obligationfor “all intellectuals.” “The worldis about to burst into flames,” hesaid, “and the good will and de¬voted effort of every man areneeded to prevent the conflagra¬tion.” He charged that politicianslack vision and knowhow whichthe crisis demands- “The detach¬ment and knowhow should be pos¬sessed by that much malignedrace, the intellectuals,” he de¬clared. “Now is the time,” he said,“for the intellectuals to show(Continued on Page 6)Maroons, Wolverines TangleHere Tonight in FieldhouseSTARTING LINEUPMichigan ChicagoHarrison, fStrack, fSelbo, cMullaney, gElliott, g Sharp, fDeGraw, fRaby, cFreeark, gLilien, gBy MURRAY HARPINAThe University of Chicago bas¬ketball squad plays host tonight inthe Fieldhouse to Michigan in itssecond conference tilt.Monday night the team travelsto Minneapolis for a battle withMinnesota.Michigan features a team whichis bigger physically and just asfast as last year’s squad, whichtook fifth place in the conferencewith a five won and seven lost record. Their starting five aver¬ages 6'2" in height.Chicago is not favored, to put itmildly, but there is no predictingwhat Michigan will do. Aftersweeping their first five games,the Wolverines dropped their con¬ference opener to Indiana in anOther UniversityPapers AvailableTHE CHICAGO MAROON ismaintaining a daily file of news¬papers from all major Universi¬ties in the Reading Room of theReynolds Club.Donna K. Gleason, MAROONExchange Editor, completed thearrangements with Circulation De-partmenis of other Universities. overtime. They promptly followedthis with a loss to Ohio State.Then, just as all the other con¬ference teams were beginning tolook forward to their games withMichigan with pleasurable antici¬pation, they tripped up Illinois49-48. Last Monday night theyagain startled the experts by drop¬ping a 49-36 decision to MichiganState in one of the larger upsetsof the year.Michigan’s starting lineup willfeature high scoring center GlenSelbo, who has had experience atboth Wisconsin and Western Mich¬igan. John Mullaney of last year’ssquad and grid star Pete Elliottare at the guard posts, while fresh¬man Bob Harrison, former all-(Continued on Page 7) ’THE CHICAGO MAROON ■■' ■ 'j-'" ■"*Friday, January 11, 194$Calendar of Events.If ."it" Next Week onQuadrangles“ ■ ^Friday, December 11DOCUMENTARY FILM. “Lives of a Bengal Lancer?’ Social Sciences122. 7:15 p.m.UNIVERSITY CONCERT. Philharmonic String Quartet. Mandel Hall.8:30 p.m.RELIGIOUS SERVICE. Joseph Bond Chapel. A Service of Reading.BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES CONFERENCES. Pediatric Clinical Con¬ference. Billings 137. 3:00 p.m.Clinical Pathological Conference. Pathology 119. 4:30 p.m.REUGIOUS SERVICE. Raymond Karasik House of Hillel. SabbathServices at 7:30. Fireside at 8:15. Dean Charles Gilkey of Rocke¬feller Chapel “Hebraic Heritage in American Culture.” Singer:Sonia Sharnova, formerly of Chicago Opera.BASKETBALL GAME. Chicago vs. Michigan. Field House. 8:00 p.m.FICTION FILMS. International House. “Citizen Kane” and “Pearls ofthe Crown.” 8:00 p.m. Admission 40c.Saturday, January 12C-DANCE. Ida Noyes. 9:00 p.m.Sunday, January 13ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION. “Things to Come: How SciencesShapes the Future.” Speakers: William F. Ogburn, DistinguishedService Professor of Sociology at the University of Chicago, Walde-mar Kaempffert, Science Editor of the New York ^ Times, and athird speaker, to be announced. NBC 12:30 p.m.RELIGIOUS SERVICE. Rockefeller Chapel. Speaker: Dean HowardThurman of Howard University Chapel, Washington, D. C. 11 a.m. New Dorm Head « • ♦Address all Calendar material to Calendar Editor,THE CHICAGO MAROON, Faculty Exchange. Materialmust be submitted not later than 6:00 p.m. Tuesday after¬noon before the week (Friday to Friday) in which theevent is to occur.Monday, January 14RECORDING CONCERT. East Lounge, Ida Noyes, 4-5 p.m. Tea servedat 5:00.Tuesday, January 15DOCUMENTARY FILM. “The Fight for Life.” Social Sciences 122.7:15 p.m.CHAPEL TALK. Joseph Bond Chapel. Speaker: W. Barnett Blakemore.Wednesday, January 16PUBLIC LECTURE. “A Bibliography of Chaucer” Eleanor P. Ham¬mond. Social Sciences 122. 7:30 p.m.HILLEL. Membership Meeting. Movie and Refreshments. RaymondKarasik House. 8:00 p.m.II Blithe Spirit" Lifts FirstCurtain on Guild ActivitiesHarley Smith* new Director of Dramatics, has chosen NoelCoward’s comedy “Blithe Spirit’’ to ring up the curtain on thePlayers’ Guild and dramatic activities for the quarter. “BlitheSpirit’’ will run for six evenings in the Reynolds Club Theatre,beginning Monday, February 4 and ending Saturday, February 9.Two different casts, both to bedirected by Mr. Smith, will play j ally in Chicago about two yearsalternately on the Reynolds Thea- 1 ago. Presented almost continu-■■ tre stage next month. RobertaUnger, Ann Barber, Jean Cooke,Helen Auerbach, Rosaline Biason,and Sidney Levy will alternatewith Martha McCain, Mary Aley,felicity Pratt, Margaret Stevens,and David Weaver. FranklinAlexander will appear in bothcasts.With the exception of Franklin." Alexander, Rosaline Biason, andMargaret Stevens, who are new-■ comers to the Players’ Guild, these.^students are all familiar to cam-^pus audiences. Martha McCain,Y<hrector of the experimental thea-7 trcs, was last seen in “Death Takesa Holidayi^” and has also appearedin “Arms and the Man,” and'“Driftwood.’’ Roberta Unger, Jean• ^ Cooke, Helen Auerbach, Sid Levyand Mary Aley were all in lastquarter’s production of “Winter-set,” while Ann Barber, Felicity- Pratt, and David Weaver acted inthe Players’ presentation of “TheRope” and “Aria da Capo.”Mr. Coward’s witty play about anovelist who is haunted by theghosts of his first and secondwives, was performed- profession- ously since its opening in NewYork in 1941, “Blithe Spirit” hasbeen a huge box office success.WSSF(Continued from Page 1)men Mary Kellog and Ed Woodshave appointed various studentsto plan the campaigns which willbe carried out in each of theseorganizations. Linsley Lundgaardrepresents Burton-Judson Courts;Joan Beckman, girl’s dorms; TediEvans, Inter-Club council; DonBushnell, fraternities; HeldaMayer, International House; andBud Long, Chapel Union.Other members include: Treas¬urer, Bob Reed; Publicity, Paul¬ine Mathewson; and Faculty Ad¬visor, Lois Henricks. The drivewill officially open Monday, Jan¬uary 14, and continue until Feb¬ruary 3. During that time a car¬nival will be held at Ida Noyes,dances will be sponsored by thevarious organizations, and a TagDay will climax the drive. JOHN A. WILKINSON,New Activity,Dorm HeadsNamed HerePromise of a sustained effort toreorganize student activities andthe residence halls in conformitywith general University policywas sounded this week by thefour-member Committee on theResident System and Student Ac¬tivities.Simultaneously the Universityofficially announced the appoint¬ment of John A. Wilkinson as Di¬rector of the Residence Systemand John E. Yarnelle as Direc¬tor of Student Activities. Theysucceed Alan Lake Chidsey, for¬mer assistant dean of students,who resigned his position here toaccept a post in Houston,,Texas. «Dean of Students Lawrence A.Kimpton and Prof. Eugene North¬rop of the Department of Mathe¬matics ’will join Wilkinson andYarnelle in coordinating and plan¬ning activities and the residencehall progi-am. Northrop will serveas faculty' coordinator.Wilkinson, who will reside inBurton-Judson court, will havesupervision over the more than1,000 students who live in the Uni¬versity dormitory system. Mrs.Barbara K. Anthony will continueas Wilkinson’s assistant in hercapacity as Resident Adviser inthe Women’s Residence Halls.' Yarnelle was Acting Director ofthe Residence Hall system lastyear and has been closely affili¬ated with student activities.No immediate plans have beenannounced by either Wilkinson orYarnelle.Yarnelle has already indicatedthat full University support ofmeritorious student activities willbe continued.In th« tarry avaiif thatyou hovo net at yot roadLook Forward Laborby Victor ftoutborwo havo tocurod a numbor ofadditional eopiot of tho Docom-bor COMMON SENS! which youeon purchoto for 2Se ... atEnquiry Book ShopWOKWS MOST NONOMD WATCH Religious RoundupFellowship Dinner IsSlated Wednesday -The main event on the religious calendar this week is theannual Inter-Church Fellowship Dinner, which will be held thisWednesday evening at 6:00 p.m. at the Disciples Church, at57th and University Ave.,Sponsored by seven Protestant organizations of theInter-Church Council, the dinner' —Civic Opera, wilt sing for thewill feature as its main speakerLangdon Gilkey, son of CharlesW. Gilkey, Dean of Rockefeller,Chapel. Mr. Gilkey has just ‘ re¬turned from China, where he hadbeen teaching, until interned bythe Japanese shortly after the be¬ginning of the war. His experiencesbefore and during the war will bethe topic of his speech.Dean Lawrence A. Kimpton willspeak at the dinner, and Dr. AlfredPainter will act as master of cere¬monies. Entertainment and dancingwill follow. Those interested inattending the function may phoneChapel House for further informa¬tion. \* * *Hillel Foundation will hold Sab¬bath Services tonight at 7:30, andat 8:15, Dean Charles W. Gilkeywill be guest speaker at Hillel’sweekly Fireside Tea. Dean Gilkeywill discuss “The Hebraic Heritagein American Culture.” Sonir Shar¬nova, formerly of the Chicago group. ^Hillel will also hold a member¬ship meeting on Wednesday, at8:00 p.m. A discussion of Hillelactivities for the quarter, a movie,and refreshments will make up theprogram at Karasik House.« * *Calvert Club starts two tourna¬ments today—one bridge and theother p i n g - p 0 n g—at CalvertHouse, and all interested studentsare invited to'enter. Calvert willalso hear George Drury, of theSheil School of Social Studies,speak at a meeting this 'afternoonat 2:15 p.m. Mr. Drury will discuss“The Psychology of Prejudice.”• * «Chapel Union will hold a specialmeeting this Sunday evening, em¬phasizing the World Student Serv¬ice Fund. A ballot for the electionof CU’s officers for the quarterwill also be presented at the meet¬ing.Telephoneson Wheelsand Afloat' JThe Bell System plans an extensive trial of two-way radioin providing telephone service to vehicles in a numberof large cities.Connections with other telephones will be madethrough the nearest of several receiving and transmittingstations operated by the telephone company. It is gener¬ally similar to the existing ship-shore radio telephoneservice for vessels in coastal and inland waters.The main job right now is making more telephonesavailable for those who have been'waiting for regularservice. But as soon as the new equipment can be builtthe Bell System will begin extending telephone servicetoVehicles.^ i j tBilLL TELEPHONE SYSTEM. I i ! i: , . . . .....Friday. January 11, 194« THE CHICAGO MAROOri Pag« S^ ALWAYS MILDERg BEHER TASTINGg COOLER SMOKINGA// fhe Benefits of. Smoking P/easuroArmament Race Menacing Security,Emily Taft Douglas Warns ForumBy SHIRLEY ISAACThe world is launched on thelargest armaments race in his¬tory, declared Mrs. Emily TaftDouglas Wednesday night.Speaking before the StudehtForum, the Congresswoman - at-Large from Illinois warned thatthe world’s only hope of strikingthis “most portentious debit” fromthe ledger of 1946 lay in effectiveuse of international mechanismssuch as UNRRA, UNO, the Foodand Agricultural Organization, andthe Bretton Woods Bank and Fund.Reviewing events of 1946, Mrs.Douglas pointed out that on thefavorable side of the balance sheetmay be placed the fact that Con¬gress has so quickly voted theCuttler Returns toU.C. After Navy DutyPreston Cuttler, Assistant to theChancellor, was released to in¬active duty in the Navy on De¬cember 29, and is now back at theUniversity. Whiie tn the Navy,Mr. Cuttler was Director of UnitedStates Armed Forces Institutewhose headquarters are in Mad¬ison, Wisconsin. United States into membership in unwise construction during thethe UNO. Mrs. Douglas "and Sen¬ator Voorhees of California haveintroduced concurrent resolutions•into Congress, she said, in an ef¬fort to get UNO to function at onceto maintain international peaceand security.Unilateral Disarmament SuicideNo nation dare disarm unilater¬ally, asserted Mrs. Douglas, sinceunder present conditions of mu¬tual suspicion, even among recentallies, this would mean suicide.The only possibility of stoppingthis “crushing drain on our re¬sources” would lie in multilateraldisarmament of the Allies.On the home front, growing ra¬cial tension is among the ugliestof our problems, Mrs. Douglas de¬clared, warning thdt it would be“miserable irony if the type ofpoison belched out from Berlinshould infect us to the extentwhere we accepted the key idea ofNaziism, after defeating its expo¬nents in a bloody war.”Returning G.I.’s find a “cruelwelcome” in the current crucialhousing shortage, said Mrs. Doug¬las- Conditions are equally badthe country over, she went on,attributing the present situation to ’20s, and the depression and war¬time necessity for ignoring housning requirements.Raps ReactionariesMrs. Douglas lashed out stronglyagainst Southern bigots who, sheasserted, were members of theDemocratic party only becausethey had to belong in order to beelected. These poll-taxers haveno sympathy for the ideals ofFranklin D. Roosevelt, whichPresident Truman is attempting tocarry through in his program, sofar ignored by Congress, she re¬iterated, citing as an example Sen¬ator Rankin of Missouri, “who,”she laughed, “is called Dearly Be¬loved on the floor of the Senateby Clare Hoffman of Michigan.”A bright spot in the home-frontpicture, Mrs. Douglas said, is rep¬resented by less-than-expected re¬conversion unemployment. Of thesix millions who were supposed tobe unemployed by Christmas, shewent on, only about two millionare actually involuntarily unem¬ployed at present.Must Solve Labor DisputesReturning veterans, Mrs. Doug¬las predicted, will organize effec¬tively to express their growing re-IfiSf iKom a Mvn* Tobacco sentment at the labor-managementdisputes, which are holding upproduction. The people of Amer¬ica want something done about thelabor situation, she declared, citingas evidence the hundreds of let¬ters from constituents pouring intoher office in Washington express¬ing anger, concern and alarm overthe strike situation.10 LecturesSlated HereThis QuarterOf vital importance to the prob¬lems of present-day life, as wellas of scholarly interest, are the tenlectures on American Books ofSocial Protest to be presented atUniver.sity College, 19 South La¬Salle Street, during the WinterQuarter.“The Jungle,” by Upton Sinclair;*^Main Street,” by Sinclair Lewis;“Grapes of Wrath,” by John Stein¬beck, and Thorstein Veblen’s“Theory of the Leisure Class” areamong the American economic andsocial classics which will be re¬viewed. Walter Johnson of theUniversity of Chicago’s HistoryDepartment and author of BattleAgainst Isolationism will give thefirst lecture on Wealth AgainstCommonwealth by Henry Demar-est Lloyd, January 15.The series, to be conducted bydistinguished lal5or leaders. Uni¬versity of Chicago faculty mem¬bers, and Chicago social workers,is but one of several pertinentlecture series currently sponsoredby the University of Chicago. Alsoscheduled for winter presentationcce ten lectures on Chaucer’s Can¬terbury Tales, by James R. Hul-bert, and five lectures on liberaleducation by Mortimer J. Adler.Dr. Hulbert, Professor of Eng¬lish at the University of Chicago,is one of the nation’s foremoststudents of Chaucer. The next lec¬ture in the series will be presentedJanuary 16 on A Bibliographerof Chaucer: Eleanor P- Hammond,and further lectures are scheduledweekly through March 13.The liberal education lecturesby Dr. Adler, Professor of thePhilosophy of Law at the Univer¬sity of Chicago, will be presenteddov/ntown at University College.Such topics as “Good and Evil,”“Law and the State,” and “Virtueand Happiness” will be covered bythe remaining lectures.4 MONTH INTENSIVECourse forC01U6E STUDENTS and GRADUATESA thorough, intensive course—start¬ing February. July,'October. BulletinA,on request. Registration now open.•Regular day and evening schoolsthroughout the year. Catalog.A SCHOOL OF BUSINESSFBEFERBED BY COUECfi MEM AND ISOMEMTHE GREGG COLLEGEPrMidenl, John Robort Orogg S C.D.Oiveclor. Paul M. Pair. M. ADept. C.M. 4 N. Michigan Ave.Chicago 2. Illinois Here and ThereMichigan YefsEligible forMOO GrantsTexas A. and M. GivesCourses to Yet WivesA $25,000 found has been madeavailable to veteran students atthe University of Michigan by theStudent Bomber Scholarship Com¬mittee. Fifteen $100 grants willbe made each semester.This committee, organized in1942, had raised by fund by dona¬tions from campus groups with theplan of awarding tuition scholar¬ships to former University stu¬dents returning after the war.When the G.I. bill made this planmeaningless, the committee de¬vised the new scheme for disposalof the fund.Veterans to be eligible for thescholarships must be former Mich¬igan students who have served atleast six months in the armedforces, have completed two semes¬ters in any undergraduate schoolat Michigan, and must have in¬sufficient credit hours for a degreeof any kind from the University.The University Scholarship Com¬mittee and representatives of theBomber Scholarship Committeewill select the recipients of theaward-Women at Texas A. and M.Wives of veterans at Texas A.and M. College will be allowed totake extension courses from theschool, beginning with the springsemester. »A, and M., a non-coeducationalinstitution, plans to serve thesewomen through this scheme, real¬izing that man^y of them left col¬lege to join their husbands at theirservice posts.Only three women on the Albion(Michigan) College campus planto marry, according to the voca-<tional' interest cards filled out onregistration day.Vocations receiving the highestnumbers of votes include teaching,social work, medicine, journalism,and music. Unusual choices in¬clude travel and assistant to a vet-ermarian.By far the largest number ofthe students said they were un¬decided as to what vocation topursue.New Trustee NamedElection of Walter P. Paepeke,founder and president of the Con¬tainer Corporation of America, tothe Board of Trustees of the Uni¬versity, was announced recentlyby Harold H. Swift, chairmanof the Board.QUEEN MARY’SCandies and Ice CreamCome in for a super-dupersundae63rd Streetat Greenwood AvenueCLUBCLEANERS and DYERSQuality Cleaners '1375 EAST SSth STREETWe Specialize in cleaning formals and in dying armyclothes—and best of all— we’ll PICK UP and DELIVERat the dorms or at your home.Call MIDway 1413iPage 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON TrJday, January 11, 1946Slljr (!U|ua90 iiarnnn Student Opinion No Names PleaseThe University of Chicago Official Student Newspaper1945 /4CP All-AmericanPublished every Friday during the academic year by THE CHICAGOMAROON, an independent student organization of the University of Chicago.Abe Krash, Editor-in-ChiefWard J. Sharbach Jr., Business ManagerTHE EXECUTIVE EDITORSManaging Editor... Ruth WachtenheimNews Editor Joan KohnFeature Editor Libero De AmicisCopy Editor Antoinette TotinoSports Editor Richard Fine Circulation Manager .James E. BarnettExchange Manager. .Donna K GleasonGeneral Manager Norman MachtArt Editor Cissy LiebschutzPhotography Editor. . .William EscoubeEDITORIAL ASSISTANTSBarbara Barke, Ellen Baum, John Below, Don Bushnell, Babette ^sper,Claire Davison, Vicki Dowmont, Judy Down^ A1 Eckersberg, Catherine Elmes,Rose Encher, Lucien Fitzgerald, Mary Jane Gould, Murray Harding. Ray Hor-rell, Shirley Isaac, Patricia Kindahl, Margaret Kirk, Larry Krebs, GeraldLehman, Tess LaVentis. Victor Lowns Norman Macht, Shirley Mosei, FayetteMulvoy, Alan McPherron, Anne Norris, Patricia O’Halloran, Kathleen Overhol-ser, Hillard Anne Perry, William Phillips, Joan Reid, Joan Reinagle, EleanorSaunders, David Sander, Edwin Suderow, Betty Stearns, Helen Tarlow, VirginiaVlack, William Wambaugh.BUSINESS ASSOCIATESFlorence Baumruk, Charlotte Block, Barbara Gee, Valerie Kopecky, HerbLeiman, Doris Matthews, Muriel Thompson, Natalie Waechter, Betty Watson,Mary Wheeler.EDITORIAL AND BUSINESS OFFICES; The Reynolds Club. 5706 SouthUniversity Avenue, Chicago 37. Illinois Telephones: MiDway 0800, extension351 (Editorial Office), extension 1576 (Business Office).SUBSCRIPTION RATES. On campus. 50 cents per quarter By mail. 75cents per quarterADVERTISING RATES; Quoted on request. Address all communicationsto The Business Manager, The Chicago Maroon.Member Associated Collegiate Press (1945 ACP All-American) and Inter¬collegiate Press.THE CHICAGO MAROON PLATFORM FOR THE. WINTER QUARTER1) More and better housing for more students,2) Elimination of the Ph. B, degree,3) An all out campaign by a socially-conscious, politically-alert student body to quash any racial or religious intoler¬ance practiced in or by the University,4) Well organized, adequately financed, attractive residenthall and student activity programs in consonance with thephilosophy and aims of the University,5) A program for adequate orientation of new students—par¬ticularly veterans—in the background, functions, and spiritof the University,6) The need for a central recreation center in solving the com¬muter problem and in unifying the campus.THE MAROON-PlatformPresented herewith are the planks of THE CHICAGO MA¬ROON’S 1946 winter quarter platform. In renewing one of themost venerable newspaper traditions, The Board of Control ofTHE MAROON does so, well aware of the shortcomings of anyplatform and of the danger posed by glittering generalities. Itshould be instantly evident to even the most cursory observerthat not all of the issues confronting the University have beenitemised. Many of the most worthwhile objectives of specialinterest groups have not been included, and only the most salientproblems directly affecting a large majority of the students anddemanding immediate attention have been listed. A sense ofurgency is one of the crying needs of our time, and as such theeditors of THE MAROON believe that a specific representationof the major questions confronting students of the Universitywill be of significance and value.The first listing of housing is not accidental. The lack ofadequate residence units is without question the most pressingproblem of the hour. It is estimated that over thirteen thousandstudents, including many with the necessary requirements, willbe denied admission to the University between now and the fallquarter, largely as a result of the lack of adequate housing.Hundreds of veterans and divisional students are living underincredible conditions because of the failure of the trustees andthe administration to act with foresight and decision. Prompttemporary measures should be taken at once and should be im¬mediately followed by the allocation of funds and blueprints fornew housing units.Resolution of the Ph. B. paradox is a problem for the faculty,but it is important that students be made aware of the issuesinvolved. The educational program at this University mustnecessarily presuppose an intelligent, thoughtful student body,willing and equipped to take an active part in formulating andcriticizing the curriculum. The principle involved in the Ph. B.dispute is that of liberal education itself. Students should bekeenly aware of the implications of any decision regarding itscontinuance..Little need be said of the third item—bigotry. The projectsof the Anti-Discrimination Committee warrant a full measureof support,.as does any other measure which will suppress dis¬crimination. The white-hot glare of publicity is one excellentremedy and the columns of THE MAROON will be openedwidely to any intelligent effort to solve the problems of in¬tolerance.The need of the fourth issue is universally recognized andhas been one of the most tragically mismanaged problems in theUniversity, One cannot paint too dreary a picture of the stateof student activities on the Quadrangles. They have fallen intom virtually complete state of disrepute and confusion largely be¬cause of the half-hearted, indecisive lip-service policies of the(Continued on Page 6) Stress HouseScarcity, AskFor G-l LoanTq the Editor, The Chicago Maroon:In glancing through the re¬cently published Student Direc¬tory, I was surprised to notice thelarge number of students, who, al¬though residents of Chicago, havecampus addresses.In view of the difficulty out oftown students, veterans and othersalike, are having in locating roomswhile attending the University, Ithink it would be well for the Ad¬ministration to restrict the campusdormitories to the use of out oftown students for the duration ofthe housing emergency.As a student who has lived bothStudents and faculty mem¬bers are invited to contributeto the Student Opinion Col¬umn. Letters must be type¬written and addressed toTHE EDITOR, THE MAR¬OON, The Reynolds Club.Unsigned letters cannot beaccepted, though names willbe withheld upon request.THE MAROON reserves theright to refuse publication orto cut any letter.on and off the campus in variouscolleges, I well realize that thestudent who lives away from thecampus is at a disadvantage inhaving to carry more text booksaround at all times, in havingto use additional time in travel¬ing to and from school, and ingetting to the libraries and socialfunctions with more difficultythan those who live on the campus.But in the interests of those whomay not be able to attend theschool at all if they can not ob¬tain quarters, I think it would notbe tq^great a sacrifice to live athome and let out of town peoplelive in the campus dorms. Also,living at home should be cheaper,since a dollar a week for ‘L’ fareis probably considerably less thanthe weekly room rent.Ray Horrell1534 West Haddon MR. ANTHONY, I’VE BEEN MARRIED NINE YEARS . .Abe KrashEducational andOtherwise . . .It is no secret that behind the scenes one of the bitterestand sharpest conflicts in recent years is raging among membersof the faculty over the proposal to abolish the Ph. B. degree.Although the issue has been clouded by a swirl of oratory, thefundamental question is that of liberal education vs. specializedlearning.It is beyond dispute that the Ph.B. is a paradoxical degree. Thecollege has been founded on theprinciple that a liberal education isessential ta every individual. Thedegree which it awards should beemblematic of the completion of acurriculum of general education.At the current time the B.A.is given to students who enter herring. Students may take anyvourses which they desire in thisUniversity, even if the B.A. ismade mandatory as a liberal edu¬cation degree. Students who de¬cline to take the B.A. courses,however, simply should not be re¬warded with the degree of a gen¬eral education.Still others contend that theNeed Loan to Tide VetsTo the Editor of the CHICAGOMAROON: The failure of 68 vet¬erans to return to school this win¬ter highlights a tragic situation.For these veterans have quit’onlybecause they do not have themoney to remain, and could theybut wait a few months until theponderous Veterans Administra¬tion starts sending them theirchecks, they could remain. Butthey cannot and so they are gone.Gone with them is their hope of acollege education, a better career,and the not unconsiderable tuitionfees spent in their first quarterhere.Probably it is too late to helpthese veterans. But ,it is not toolate to help the veterans yet tocome and who will face the sameproblem of delay known to thedepartment vets.In order to prevent future oc¬curences of this sort, the Univer¬sity can help. The establishmentof a loan fund to tide these veter¬ans over the first three monthsor so seems in order. No risk isinvolved by the University as itknows that its returns will comeeventually. It will save many re¬turning G.I.’s a lot of grief anddisappointment. How about it,Mr. Treasurer?G.I.Want News About Ph. B.To the Editor of the CHICAGOMAROON: Every undergraduatereader of the MAROON wants toknow all about the movement tobe voted in the College to bar thePh.B. degree and to make every¬one take the 8 B.A. comps. Whynot tell us about it? REMEMBER—80% of the College is gettingthat degree right now. How willthey feel later when the Ph.B. isdeclared a phoney?College Student the frist year of the Collegeand complete 14 required coursesor who are admitted to the Univer¬sity after graduation from highschool and successfully pass eightrequired comprehensive examina¬tions. Ph. B. candidates are simplypermitted to replace two of the re¬quired fourth year courses withselective specialised classwork. TheBachelor of Arts, which signifiestermination of a liberal learningcurriculum, should either be of¬fered for the co.urses now requiredfor the Ph. B. and these should bedeclared as including a general'education, or all the courses in theCollege should be embraced with¬in the fold of the liberal educationcurriculum and all should be mademandatory. |n either the event theinconsistent Ph. B. must be junked.In the main the objections, com¬ing as they do from the die-hardswho will never accept liberal edu¬cation, have a faintly familiar ring.Spearhead to the opposition comesfrom Divisional scientists and somespecialists who, contend that if thePh.B is abolished their programsmay be set back as much as a yearsince students will no longer haveoptional courses as they now do,and must defer specialization untilgraduation from the college. Theargument collapses of its ownweight. It is quite obvious that thecollege is not Intended as a train¬ing ground for any specialist.Those who desire to specializeearly simply must take morecourses or continue the programover a longer period of time.There are still others who chantthat requiring all eight courses isto knife “student’s freedom.’* Butfreedom without knowledge is ahollow mockery, and the questionof freedom in this context is a red courses in the College have not yetbeen perfected so as to justifytheir being required. This obscuresthe question at hand, though it isface-to-face with the real problem.If the courses are not good, the an¬swer is not in retaining dual de¬grees representing the same thing,but in improving the courses or inoffering adequate substitution.Strangest of all the oppositionis from- anonymous .sources who ♦cry that if the Ph. B. is scuttledthose who have received it will bediscredited. No one has ever de¬clared that the Ph. B. is worthless.No one has ever discredited pre¬vious graduates of this Universitybecause they have not received aliberal education B.A. All that hasbeen said is that Ph.B. is not aliberal education degree andshould not be offered by a Collegewhich represents itself as theapostle of a general education.To continue the Ph. B. Is toperpetuate a bad thing, to main¬tain a degree and a program whichis the very antithesis of that w’hichChicago is seeking to represent inthe educational world. Good edu¬cational ethics begin at home, anda hcusecleaning of our own curric¬ulum would appear to demandpriority on any program.Show ‘‘Citizen Kqne”As Int. House FilmOrson Welles’ production, “Citi¬zen Kane,” is being revived thisevening at International House.The film will be shown at 8 p.m.in the Assembly Room. Admis¬sion is 40 cents, including tax.Next Friday’s movie will be“Pearls-of the Crown” in French,English and Italian, starring theversatile French writer-actor-pro¬ducer Sacha Guitry of “Baker’sWife’* fame. The picture will beshown at the same time and place.Friday, January 11, 1946Youngest Dean . . ♦ THF. CHICAGO MAFOOMEllen BaumDivinity School DeanOutlines New ProgramWhiteheadian . . .UC ProfessorIs Back fromGerman TrialsQuincy Wright, Professor of In¬ternational Law and Chairman ofthe Committee on InternationalRelations, will be the speaker atnext Monday evening’s joint meet¬ing of the International Relationsand Political Science Clubs.Professor Wright, who has re¬cently returned from the war trialsin Nuernberg, Germany, where hewas Technical Advisor to theAmerican member on the Interna¬tional Military Tribunal, will re¬late some of his experiences dur¬ing the trials.The meeting, which will be heldat 8 p m. in Social Science 201, isopen to interested friends of thetwo clubs as well as members."C" boncesMexican MotifThe first “C” dance of the win¬ter quarter is scheduled for Satur¬day, January 12, in Ida Noyes hall.The hall will be decorated in agay “Mexican Holiday” style, andthe Mexicans’ national drink, coca-cola, will be served. The specialevent of the evening will be whenthe pinata is broken by the luckyticket stub holder. Parker Mell-ing’s eleven-piece orchestra willbegin playing at 9 o’clock. This isthe first of a series of dances spon¬sored by the Student Social Com¬mittee. Nancy Kerr, Joyce Boer-ger, and Don Bushnell are chair¬men of the dance.His object is creation rather thanrepresentation, and in reviewinghis paintings it must be admittedthat he shows great promise as anon-objective artist.Of special note is his compre¬hensive use of color. Soft com¬binations of blue, green, black,lavender, and peach are carefullyblended, producing a delightfulrainbow effect. This airy effect isproduced by superimposing atransparent sheet of paper withthe ink work over the water colors.It is diffioitilt to appreciate <?on-cretely the exhibit by sight alone, Theology ScholarWas Once LoanCollectorBy BABS CASPERYoungest dean at the Universityof Chicago is likeable, thoroughlyhuman Bernard MacDougell Boo¬mer, newly appointed Dean of theDivinity School.The 33-year-old dean missedtying Chancellor Hutchins’ feat ofbecoming head of the University at29 by only-a few years. Hutchinsis said to have once commentedthat he feared Loomer was gettingtoo old to succeed in Universitylife.Bernard Boomer’s background isas unconventional as it is interest¬ing. Born and brought up in Bel¬mont, Mass., he attended highschool there and received a B.A.from Bates College in 1934.Throughout college, he was an ar¬dent sportsman, participating infootball, hockey, baseball andwrestling, to mention a few. Thefollowing months found Boomerin New York working as an in¬surance adjuster and later as aloan collector. He values his ex¬periences of that period to this day,finding them rich in humor andpathos, making for a better un¬derstanding of human nature.In 1935 Dean Loomer enrolledin the U. of C. Divinity Schoolas a graduate student. Up to thattime he planned to enter into thefield of ministry. By 1940 he wasappointed part-time instructor inthe Divinity school and soon afterwas made full-time instructor. InMarch, 1942, he received his Ph.D.in the theological field. His thesissubject was, “The Theological Sig¬nificance of the Method of Reflec¬tive Analysis in the Philosophy ofA. N. Whitehead.” One of the fore¬most American authorities onWhitehead, Loomer has been in¬terested in the great philosopherfor many years. He was ap¬pointed Assistant Professor andDean of Students in 1943 and hasbeen Assistant Dean since 1944.An ordained Baptist minister, heis married and is the father oftwo children.Concerning future plans for theDivinity School, Dean Loomerlooks forward to busy years. Atthe present time he has announcedonly two definite moves. The firstis a desire to make the federatedfaculty a unified body, the secondto create a center here, developingthe study of religion in highereducation. Both show promise ofbeing significant forward steps.Professor Charles Holman, Deanof the Baptist Divinity House,aptly described him when he said,“He brings to this position youth,vigor and ability.”but an emotional transcendencyis felt, closely related to that pro¬duced by rhythmic music. Eventhose who do not understand ab¬stract art should be able to appre¬ciate the ethereal qualities of thesepaintings.Mr. Snowden believes thesepaintings to be among the finesthe has exhibited in the field ofabstract works, because the artistconforms to the rudiments of‘purenon-objertivism. The exhibit willcontinue until January 31. Self'Made . . .THEODORE ASHFORD* * itScientistSucceedsHard WayHere’s a mountaineer (by birthanyway) . . . born in the Greekmountains about 25 miles N.E. ofSparta. . . . Went to elementaryschools there. ... In 1922 came tothe U. S. A. . . . (right to Chicago,too). . . . Went to a school forforeign born people, but quit be¬cause, “The pace was too slow.” ...So he picked up his English withthe aid of a dictionary and suchhighbrow journals at the SaturdayEvening post and the newspapers.Proceeding thus he was readyfor high school by 1925 SchurzEvening H.S. . .. then the Y.M.C.A.and Crane Jr. Colleges. . . . Alsoboned up and took U. of I. examsfor credits. ... He really got hiseducation the hard way, workingfull time all the while he went toschool. ... By ’30 he was able toenter the U. of C. . . . then camethe depression and he was leftwithout a job—so he simply*tookmore courses . . . was torn betweenphysics and chemistry, decided onchemistry . . . got his B.S. in ’32. . . while taking his M.A. here, hetaught in the jcity schools . . . usu¬ally in the high schools, and,strangely enough he enjoyed it . .except when he had to teach gen¬eral science to 7th graders ... gothis Ph. D. in ’36 . . . so is nowteaching in the College . . . he’snow acting chairman of the PhySci course.Bubbling with ideas about thePhy Sci course . . . “Course is al¬tering rapidly . . . (could we haveever heard that before?) . . . start¬ed out in ’31 as a brief survey ofthe first year science courses, witha fair amount of integration of theseparate sciences . . . since thenthe major emphasis has been putbn unifying the principles of thephysical sciences. . . . Now thereare two major objectives—under¬standing of the physical universe,and training in the methods of sci¬ence . . . both objectives importantand necessary.In the future probably moreemphasis on method . . allowingstudents to formulate their owntheories from observations . . . ifpossible allow students to experi¬ment—developing ideas of scienceby basing them on the ultimatesources of scientific knowledge,i.e., the phenomena themselves;plus a logical analysis of ideas aspresented in original documents.Thinks the college plan is thebest anywhere for a general educa¬tion . . . “Of course, it is subjectto improvement—can be more in¬tegration between courses.”Madard Klein's Art ExhibitAccents Ethereal BeautyBy HILLARD ANNE PERRY“People who enjoy good music would enjoy these paint¬ings,” said Mr. Madard Klein about his works, on current ex¬hibition at the John Snowden Gallery.Mr. Klein’s paintings are defined as non-objective. They areabstract works entirely free of any resemblance to actuality. The TravelingBazaarOur FacultyFrom the august precincts of the Zoology Club comes one of thosesmall incidents, commonly called Life’s Little Embarrassing Moments.A well-known prof, whom we shall call Jules Doe, had enlightenedthe club with a lecture and demonstration in his special field; after¬wards, he was the guest of honor at the Zoology Tea. Into this teacrashed another well-known prof, hereafter known as Joseph J.Smith, who charged up to Doe, proffered his hand, companionablyshouted, “My name’s Joe Smith! What’s yours?” Mr. Doe volunteeredthat his name was Doe whereupon Smith inquired condescendingly,“Say, are you any relation to Jules Doe? I know him very well.”PeopleSarah Goodell’s wearing a new piece of jewelry, courtesy of GeneCampbell (it doesn’t mean she’s engaged though) . . . Bill Murphywho left campus last July is now doing something new and differentin Seoul, Korea; he’s located in a former Korean girls’ school andteaching chemistry to the G.I.’s . . . Marge Mather’s a-glow—her man’sin town . . . Mary Onken, assistant head of Beecher, got herself en¬gaged . . . Carol Grey is in Iowa visiting fiance Jim McGiffin’s family. . . Jane Hykes came back to Campus and had a long visit in herold hangout, the Classics Fellows’ Corner.Success LessonA phenomenally high average was obtained by med students ona certain recent exam. It seems a large part of the exam is to diagnosewhat is wrong with a dog which is brought into the exam room. Thedog came in and recognized the particular med student who hadoriginally performed an experiment on him—he ran up to the student,barked, licked his hand, and generally made himself friendly. Saidstudent happened to remember what he’d done on the experimentand hrppily put down the correct answer. It seems the other studentsremembered too, and thus the high grades.MiscellanyInterClub Ball will be Friday, February 8 at the Knickerbocker—a welcome change after the last few years . . . Bill Flory plans tobe back on campus soon . . . The B-J boys don’t even listen to theirown radio anymore—too much static . . . The oddest people are wear¬ing discharge buttons at present now that the ruptured ducks areused instead of fraternity pins for pinnings . . . Beverly Elmore andBill Whipple took the fatal step, minister presiding . . . PaulineMathewson is in desperate need of a sound truck, so if you happento see an extra one around, send it to her.Our Sweet Young ThingsOne of our more fluffy-brained damsels was being just too charm¬ing at a debut party during Christmas vacation. In the course of theusual small talk, she inquired of a friend what said friend’s husbandwas planning to do now that the war is over. The friend replied thathubby was an architect—to which our sweet young thing squealed,“Oh, I just ADORE architecture!”Candid CriticismThe University Press has a standard form which is sent out toits readers when they review manuscripts. One of the more interestingones reads in part as follows: Does the r uthor have a purpose, ^and, ifso, is it fulfilled? NO. Are there any other books in this same field?THE WORLD IS FILLED WITH THEM. Should this book be pub¬lished? IN THE INTEREST OF CONSERVING OUR NATIONALRESOURCES, NO, NO, NO. Recommendations: FIRE.William WambaughThe Critic's CornerDuring the Chnstmas recess the University Choir wentdown to Orchestra Hall to appear with the Chicago SymphonyOrchestra in Ralph Vaughan Williams’ Fantasia on ChristmasCarols. As might have been expected, the Choir performedSmoothly in a seemingly effortless performance. Polished per¬formances of Vaughan Williamshave long been a Choir specialty,and this was no exception. Thereis nothing quite so heartening asto see Gerhard Schroth, the Choir’shard-working Director, continuingin Mack Evans’ artistically suc¬cessful footsteps. In the summerof 1944 Evans gave a definitivereading of The Shepherds of theDelectable Mountains; and thissummer Mr. Schroth gave anequally polished performance ofthe Five Mystical Songs.Probably part of the successwith Vaughan Williams goes to thefact that there is inevitably inthese scores a baritone solo, whichJames McEnery, the Choir’s bari¬tone soloist, negotiates with asmooth, rich tone which is a de¬light to the ear—especially afterthe raucous braying of most alleged“great” baritones. The Choir’sstage has improved since its lastappearance with the SymphonyWhen it sang Bach with the Sym¬phony last season there was somerather uncouth groping for lostplaces in the music.Built on four English carols withVaughan Williams’ customarymodel treatment, the Fantasia isa rich fabric. Unfortunately, theperformance, though competent,was sluggish due to Hans Lange’sstolid conducting. There was nospark or drive in the performance,only methodical plodding. Mr.Lange also performed Beethoven’sthird I,«eonore Overture and Boro¬din’s Second Symphony. Mr. Langehas not the lightness of touch to kindle the Borodin score to theflambouyancy it requires for in-teresting projection, and his Bee¬thoven was a monotonously regu¬lar performance which dragged. Itis no crime to point out that theaudible restlessness of the audi¬ence was due to boredom—andnothing else. Any one v/ho heardDefauw’s recent performance ofHolst’s St. Prul Suite on the radiowould have heard what the Chi¬cago Symphony can do when thereis some spirit in the conductor.Oratory ContestFeatures Topicof World UnityStudent Forum’s second annualoratorical contest has been sched¬uled for January 29, Bert Wax,director of the Forum, announcedyesterday.Each contestant will deliver aneight-minute prepared speech onthe question “Prospects for World.Government.” Medals will beawarded to the first prize winnersin the men’s and women’s divi-.sions. Those interested may regis¬ter Jn the Forum office on thesecond floor of the Reynolds Qubfrom 3 to 5:30 p.m. daily.Hans Morgenthau, Professor ofInternational Relations, will speak,on this question on January 24at 7:30 p.m. in the Forum office,and will act as one of the judgesfor the contest.0.Pace C THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, January 11, imeResponsibilityOf Your CampusVeteran Status Dave Sander onVETERANSI could almost have counted all 1,300 vet¬eran-students yesterday, waiting to get intothe Cobb Hall veterans office. They say onefellow in the crowd fainted, and it was almosta half-hour before he could fall down.One veteran turned to me and smiled: *‘Surewill be great to get back to school and forget aboutwar and post-war and this ‘veteran’ business,” hesaid.Sure would, buddy,- but it won’t be possible toforget you’re a veteran for the rest of your life.You know the self-consciousness of the men in thefirst World War, who felt almost compelled to stopyou at bars, in railroad club cars, even standingnext to you in movie lines, and make known toyou that they, too, served in war-time. It will bethe same with you in a few years; wait and see.The veterans’ organisations won’t let you forgetIt, either. They need your dues aftd your vote, sotiMt pressure groups in Washington can say: *‘Wespeak for the returned service men of America,who feel ...”Wbat do you feel, veteran? You who foughtfor your country and its right to exist, do you feelas a group about anything? How about Full Em¬ployment, or Organized Labor, or National Hous¬ing, or Bonuses, or veteran-preference in jobs,getting new clothes, new automobiles. Civil Service,new homes?The three most articulate veterans* organiza¬tions—American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars,and American Veterans Committee—all opposeeach other on most of these measures or sugges¬tions. They all speak for “the veteran.”No group has a right to speak for you withoutyour consent, veteran, and yet they do.So you have a respK)nsibility, a new' one thatcomes with being part of a vfed-for Minority—the veteran—which you didn’t have before. You’vegot to speak for yourself, or to make sure that youare familiar with how you are being quoted acrossthe legislative land. You cannot afford the luxuryof forgetting that you are a veteran; the* path topeace is taken only when each of you takes thefirst step—accepting your veteran status, and do¬ing something about it, the something that you feelto be “right.”I grant that it is far easier to forget about thewar, and to deliberately avoid going to meetingsthat suggest “Post-war Problems.” But you, vet¬eran, YOU are a post-war problem simply becauseyou exist in millions and can be used politically toeveryone’s advantage—but your own. The respon¬sibility is evident: to accept your position as asocial, political force in America and to see thatgreat potential force-for-good. The Veteran, usedproperly.On campus your position is important, too.Most of the students here are not veterans, andit will be a simple step for you to talk the Coca-Cola talk that has expunged war and problemsfrom its vocabulary. Sure, go ahead.But be prepared to send your children off towar, just as your fathers sent you into this one.They’ll probably come back all right—if anybodycomes back from the Next One.4> <i> *Please don’t misunderstand. Organized veteranswere, in large part, responsible for this war, andMill certainly be a component factor in the causesof a Next One. But veterans who are aware ofthis force, and who intelligently discuss it and usetheir power as veterans FOR THE COMMUNITY,and NOT to enhance their own prestige and pro¬fessional, political, social power, can be the mostvital influence in encouraging a secure, united,democratic and free' post-war world. It is a greattrust; we must be worthy of it. Total Value of U of CSoars to 137 Million MarkLatest assessment of the total value of the University ofChicago stands at $136,626,037, Controller Harvey C. Dainesrevealed this week.Over 45 millions of the amount represents cost of investmentin plant and equipment, explained Daines, adding that the sumalso covers nearly 2 millions inannuity and living trust funds, anda quarter of a million in loanfunds. Current funds are $13,000,-000, plus another 5 millions in a“suspense account.”AlUime Financial HighUniversity fiscal operations dur¬ing 1944-45 reached a peak total of$32,600,000, largest in Universityhistory. Atom bomb work waslargely responsible for the unpre-dented expansion of the budget. with the U.S. Government contrib¬uting nearly 21 million dollars ona non-profit basis.153 l^ion Since 1890Endowments, and income frominvestments and tuition fees havetotaled over $153,000,000 since1890, reported the Controller. Sev¬enty-two millions of this amounthave been received during the 16year incumbency of ChancellorRobert Hutchins.Hutchins ♦ . .(Continued from Page 1)whether they have intellects equalto the task.”Hutchins said the fundamentalproblem of our time was philo¬sophical and one of values, and hecalled on scholars to formulrte theproblem and to state possible solu¬tions. He urged the exchange ofprofessors, students, and publica¬tions, and the fostering of interna¬tional congresses.To Frame ConstitutionHutchins said the proposal toframe the constitution originatedin the Humanities Division. Hepointed out that it had not beensuggested the constitution be in¬stantly adopted, but he said thatit was a definite step toward aworld government.Earlier in his address, the Chan¬cellor, who described himself asthe “only resident ex-president ofthe University,” said that the“University of Chicago is nowready for anything.” He describedhis 16-year tenure as having beendevoted to the removal of educa¬tional obstacles. The problem, hesaid, is what do we want to donow?Hutchins denounced what helabelled “the incredible frivolity ofAmerican Universities” which he--said “has long ceased to curse ourInstitution. At Chicago we are try¬ing to be serious, and the indica¬tions are that we shall have to bemore serious than ever,” the Chan¬cellor asserted.The victory of liberal educationwas accented by his statementthat “even Harvard has now ad¬mitted it to be the most pressingneed of our time.”Adult EducationHutchins pointed out that in¬creasing mechanization meansgreater leisure and even greaterneed for University adult educa¬tion programs. “Increasing leisuremeans that we Americans mustdiscover some rational notion ofleisure cr degenerate into a nationof alcoholics, gamblers, moviefans, and pulp magazine consu¬mers, a nation, in short, of moronsand lunatics.”Hutchins announced another tri¬umph when he said that naturalsciences have now won their prop¬er place in the Universities by the“simple and effective process ofthreatening to blow up the world.”Hutchins urged even greatersupport for the Social Sciences andthe Humanities since they mayteach us how to control the floodwith which the natural scientistsare overwhelming us. “Whetheryou ought to wipe out the peopleof Hiroshima and Nagasaki is amuch more difficult and compli- RadioMidwayBack onRadio Midway, introduced tothe residents of Burton-JudsonCourt last quarter, will return tothe ether Monday at 7:45 p m.The programs planned for thisquarter evidence improvementover last quarter’s, and will beheaded by a regular great booksdiscussion. Thursday, John Wil-cinson. Director of University Res¬idence Halls, and Dean Kimptonwill argue the merits of Plato’sApology and Crito.Another addition is the inclusionof the Humanities I music supple¬ments in the regular classical mu¬sic program. Later in the quarter,the station expects to have fac¬ulty speakers to clarify some ra¬ther doubtful issues concerning thepurposes of certain college courses.On Wednesday, Orson Welles’Men from Mars will be offered asthe quarter’s first dramatic pro¬duction and, as most people know,it involves the appearance on theearth of a host of unsavory crea¬tures. George Weber will directand participate in the performance.Rather more technical and alsomore noticeable, will be the ad¬justment made in the sending set.Its amplitude has been increasedin such a way that the programswill now be audible. Q'l Enrollment...(Continued from Page 1)“especially in view of the personaldifficulties these men have infinding living quarters and gettingsettled.” Peak enrollment of vet¬erans will not be reached, how¬ever, for two years, and the Ad¬visor to Veterans has recommend¬ed “a considerable expansion” ofhis office to meet this influx ofnew applicants.Gilbert Gusland, himself a stu¬dent veteran, has been appointedassistant to the Advisor to the 100veterans now enrolled in Univer¬sity College downtown. Applica¬tions of veterans for the four-yearcollege are being deferred untilnext fall, although a new classwhich includes many veterans willstart at mid-quarter, he announced.Of the new total, about 40 vet¬erans are enrolled under PublicLaw 16, which provides for voca¬tional rehabilitation. MAROON Platform . . .* (Continued from Page 4)administration. A thorough'housecleaning with a constructiveprogram is in order if chaos is to be averted.That the orientation program has been botched should beclear with the arrival of the veterans. The University orientationprogram the past few years has been notoriously weak. The in¬tegration period is one of the most crucial in a student's careerat a University. Nothing should be left undone to see that theprogram is complete. A series ot suggestions Mail be set forthin these columns at a later date.Of the numerous recommendations for integrating commut¬ers and solving the activity problem in part, none appears to bemore worthy of support than a central receation center. Such aplan does not necessarily imply a student union, but it doessignify the lack of a central campus meeting place.From time to time, of course, the platform will be subject tochange as one problem is solved and another rises to take itsplace. No newspaper can conceivably long represent a staticposition. THE MAROON will continue to maintain its positionof liberalism coupled with drastic independence^ of journalisticintegrity, and of devotion to the principles and ideals of theUniversity.Alumnus * , .(Continued from Page 1)offices, provoked editorial com¬ment in Time magazine.Newberger’s mother, Mrs. OscarNewberger of 1314 W. Albion Ave.,reports that her son’s letters furn¬ish interesting sidelights on thepolitical situation in the Philip¬pines. He has made friends ingovernment circles as well asamong the native islanders and ispreparing material for an exposeof the political plot behind themystery which surrounds the in¬ activity of the 400,000 GI’s sta¬tioned in the Philippines.Natalie Bernard, a student inthe Social Sciences Division at theUniversity, is Thf Girl he left be¬hind him. Questions as to his p>ost-discharge plans are to be referredto her.AVC to MeetThe University of Chicagochapter of the AmericanVeterans Committee urgesall veterans to attend its firstmembership meeting of thewinter quarter Monday at7:30 p.m. in room 106, SwiftHall.Science Effects onFuture Is QuestionImplications of recent technicaland scientific changes in futureyears is the topic of discussion onSunday’s University of ChicagoRound Table. Speakers will beWillian F. Ogburn, distinguishedservice professor of Sociology atthe University; and WaldemarKaempffer, Science Editor for theNew York Times.cated question than the questionof how you are going to wipe themout after you have decided to doso,” he said.Repeating to thePoint of RedundanceBROWSERSARE ALWAYSWELCOMEafBOB MARSKUl’S. enquiry book shop IMPORTANT NEW BOOKSREVEILLE FOR RADICALS by Saul D. AlinskyIn Chicago’s Back of the Yards district and three other ’’Across the Tracks” com¬munities democracy has been literally reborn. Here is the blow-by-blow story ofthis hard, dirty, tough, heartbreaking battle to make democracy work,To be published January 14, 1946WARRIORS 'WITHOUT WEAPONS by Gordon MoegregorThe Sioux Indians and the white man’s culture—a lesson in conserving ratherthan destroying human, values. To be published January 14, sgp gw1946FLORENCE AYSCOUGH AND AMY LOWELL—CORRESPONDENCE OFA FRIENDSHIP edited by Harley Farnsworth MaeNairThis book records the discovery and exploration of Chinese pictorial art byFlorence Ayscough and Amy Lowell. To be published January 14, "TC1946 / O9FRENCH LITERATURE AND ITS MASTERS by George SaintsburyAll of a great English essayist’s Encyclopedia Britannica articles on French litera¬ture and the major French writers, constituting together a systematichistory and interpretation. To be published January 17, 1946 OawwTHE ZEBRA DERBY by Mox ShulmanAsa Hearthrug returns from the war to the postwar world in a brilliant satireby the author of THE FEATHER MERCHANTS and THE BARE- cOFOOD BOY WITH CHEEK ^dfcallUUNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOK STOREFriday, January 11, 11W6 THE CHICAGO MAROON Pate 7Maroons. Wolverines ClashWrestlersOpen SeasonAgainst N.U.still lacking men in four weightdivisions, the varsity wrestlingteam is pointing for its first meetof the year at Northwestern Uni¬versity on January 19. The fourdivisions still open are in the 121-pound, the 136-pound, the 145-pound classes, and the heavy¬weight class.Coach Vorres has announcedtryouts to be held in each of thesedivisions, with the winners com¬peting in varsity meets. There isstill time for anyone with anywrestling experience at all to tryto secure a place for himself onthe team.Only four dual meets have beenscheduled for the Maroon grap-plers, but the team will also enterthe conference meet at Illinois onMarch 8 and 9. The fopr grunt-and-groan contests include twoencounters with Northwestern, onewith Wisconsin, and one withIowa. The first home meet iswith Wisconsin on January 26.It has also been announced thatfor the first time the junior-var¬sity will have a wrestling teamthis year- Already a number offellows are working out each aft¬ernoon in Bartlett Gymnasium inpreparation for the first meet.With ten weight classes open,ranging all the way from 103pounds to the heavyweight classover 165, the need for a largesquad is obvious. Anyone inter¬ested is once again urged to con¬tact Coach Vorres.Jay-Vees inTrack MeetIn an effort to pick up whereit left off last year, the UniversityHigh junior-varsity track teamplays host to the Mount Carmelsquad at 4 p.m. this afternoon inthe local fieldhouse. This is thefirst meet of the year for CoachPaul Derr’s cindermen.Beaten last year only by Schurz,city champs, the Maroon - and -White team Is again consideredone of the strongest prep outfitsin Chicago due largely to its sevenreturning lettermen. These includeAsher (dashes), Ferris (pole-vault), Burns (distance), Davies(dashes and shot-put). Hall(sprints), Hasken (sprints andhigh-jump), and Johnson (hur¬dles).The Private School League, ofwhich University High is a mem¬ber in all other activities, does nothave an indoor-track schedule,and hence the Jay-vees must goinU) the Public School League forcompetition. Though the privateschools are generally considered tobe much weaker than the publicschools, the Maroon trackstershave long been the ^exception thatis supposed to prove the rule.Other than that of the Schurzcontest today, no announcementhas been made concerning futuremeets. Tfi6 Big, Bad Wolf—erine \ ♦.FineTimeIt’s true there is no substitute inbasketball for height. A good bigteam will still beat a good littleteam. You can’t score points unlessyou have the ball and the onlyway to keep the 'ball is to controlthe backboard.Still, few of the 2,500- fans whocrowded into the fieldhouse lastSaturday night would blame Chi¬cago's loss entirely upon its Irekof animated sky-scrapers. Therewas little question as to who wasthe better team.The Hoosiers fully lived up totheir advance notices by playingthe fire-brand type of ball that hasCoed Contests ..by YlackLast call for entries in the bridge tournament! The tournament is scheduled for Saturday, January 19, but late entrieswill be accepted until 5:00 p.m. Tuesday, January 15 by MissBallwebber at the Physical Education Office. The tournamentunder the supervision of Mrs. Leavett, is open to one or twopairs of players entered by anyhouse, club, or organization oncampus. It is not necessary toknow duplicate; the boards andunique method of counting will beexplained at 9:30 on the day ofthe game. All participants are re¬quested to come to the instructionperiod.* * •With the opening of the pool atIda Noyes, a big swimming pro¬gram gets under way. Junior andsenior life-saving courses are be¬ing offered on Tuesday and Thurs¬day at 3 p.m. These classes, openonly to women, are already inprogress but new members will beaccepted until January 18- A RedCross instructors’ course, open tomen and women who have com¬pleted the s e n i o r life - savingcourse, will meet on Thursdaynights from 7 until 10 startingJanuary 17. Advance registrationis not necessary.* * *The long awaited basketballtournament is at hand. Twelveteams composed of some of thebest feminine cagers on campushave entered the competition sofar. I^ your team is not regis¬ tered with Miss Burns at the Phys¬ical Education Office on the sec¬ond floor of Ida, make sure it isdone by January 12 because nomore entries will be accepted afterthat date. The tournament getsunder way the afternoon of Jan¬uary 15 with games played in theIda gym. This is one tournamentthat will be well worth watching!Note this item on your social-sports calendar: tonight is theRoller Skating Carnival in thegym at Ida Noyes. Bring yourman or your chum, but be sure tocome tonight at 7:30 for two hoursof skating fun. There’ll be music,contests, and a moonlight skate.Skates are available there.A bowling tournament of theleague type comes up next. Getin practice and watch the MA¬ROON for details and dates.An inter-house badminton tour¬nament will be due either at theend of this month or crowding thefirst of February. Each house mayenter one team consisting of fourplayers; two singles and one dou¬bles. The exact date and furtherdetails will be noted here as soonas they are announced. long characterized Indiana's oas-ketball teams, both college andprep. There are few sights in thesporting world that provide asmany thrills as does a cage teamsuccessfully employing the fast-break.As a rule it is the shorter teamthat will resort to the fast-breakin an effort to overcome its heighthandicap, but last Saturday Indi¬ana showed what a tall team cando with the same type of play. Re¬peatedly one or two Maroon play¬ers would find themselves facingthree or more Hoosiers bearingdown on them as the rest of theChicago team was left hopelesslybehind the ball and in no positionto break up the play.It is impossible to believe thatCoach Nels Norgren was unawareof the type of game that Indianais in the habit of playing. Andapparently he must have workedon a defense to stop the ^'hurryin'Hoosiers,” but it was to no avail.Moreover, the effort cost Chiergosomething by disrupting its al¬ready nonc-too-potent offense.We say this not by way of criti¬cism but merely as a statement offact. We aren’t so sure but whatthere is no defense that will workagainst a fast-breaking offense.M(^e correctly and proverbiallythe only defense is a good offense.To Register TeamsThe Women’s Athletic Associa¬tion has announced that all wom¬en’s basketball teams participatingin the coming tournament must beregistered on the Ida Noyes posterby Monday.I M Cage Loop Under WayBy NORMAN MACHTIn the wake of a successfulintramural football season duringthe autumn quarter, College housebasketball got under way Tues¬day, January 8. with practice ses¬sions for the eight entrants fromBurton-Judson Court. The teamsshared the Fieldhouse and BartlettGymnasium floors in a two-hour»/ nlike General Motors . . .. . our books are open to the public. . come in and look them over . . .ENQUIRY BOOK SHOP1324 E. S7th Street Piaxa 6445 praetice and scrimmage Tues¬day night and again on Thursday.The Divisional and ProfessionalSchools will operate in a separateleague; play will begin Thursday,January 17. Teams for this loopmay be entered with Mr. Hebertat the Athletic Office in BartlettGymnasium.The opening of the basketballseason marks the third installmentin the University’s latest athleticprogram, which stresses opportu¬nity lor all to participate in somephase of sports. The plan wasinaugurated in October by sixfootball teams representing asmany houses. Mathews Houserode through the grid w^s un¬defeated to take top honor/in thatdepartment. The second occasionwas an intramural swimming meetheld in December in the Bartlettpool.^This quarter the seven otherClassifiedRUSSIAN, German tutoring by gradu¬ate student from Europe. Oall eve- will^U^lnv DnHrlnings. Dorchester 5825. Daniel Fetler. Meaoe Wlll'^iay UOdd.M'-:' FOR RENT—^Room with private bath.Near campus. Hyde Park 1864.CORONA-ZEPHYR portable typewriterfor sale. Excellent condition, hardlyused; reasonable. Ph. Dorchester 0194. houses in the setup have a definitechallenge confronting them. Theyfeel that it is time to uproot Math¬ews from the position it now holdsand they are prepared to back upthese convictions with fast hardplay throughout the coming sea¬son.Coaches for the house teamsare: Chamberlain, Nels Norgren;Coulter, Chris Katope; Dodd, Wal¬ly Hebert; Linn, Bill Murphy;Mathews, Kyle Anderson; Meade,Paul Derr; Salisbury, Joe Stampf;Vincent, Charles Erdmann.The new schedule for the HouseBasketball League runs sevenweeks and provides an oppor¬tunity for each of the eight teamsto play every other team- Theseason opens Tuesday, January 15,and ends Thursday, February 28,with games carded for Tuesdaysand Thursdays of the weeks in¬cluded between these two dates.Mathews and Vincent open theseason January 15 at 7:45 p.m. inthe Fieldhouse. Following thisOnThursday, January 17, Coultertangles with Salisbury at 7:45, andLinn encounters Chamberlain im¬mediately afterwards. Varsity StillHunting WinNumber One(Continued from Page 1)state high' schooler from Toledo,and Dave Strack, recently dis«charged from the armed forces,will be forwards. Strack washonorary captain in ’42-’43.Chicago’s starting five will prob¬ably include George Raby at cen¬ter, Fred DeGraw and John Sharpat forwards, and Ray Freeark atone guard, with Lilien and Kingalternating at the^ther guard post-In the forthcoming Minnesotagame, Chicago’s first road engage¬ment, the Maroons face a vastlyimproved Clopher team whichalready has victories over Wis¬consin and Indiana under its belt.They have several returned vetson the squad and a freshmanphenom named McIntyre, who is-tall——jc —to n^itaa hotshot as well as an excellentfloor man.Cagers BowTo IndianaNumber 52 in Chicago’s longstring of conference defeats wastacked on last Saturday by Indi¬ana to the tune of 59-34. Chicagotook a 6-5 lead during the firstfive minutes of play on a coupleof buckets and a free throw byDeGraw and a charity toss byKing. From there to the half therewere nothing but red shirts allover the floor, and when the dustcleared, Indiana had a 28-10 lead.After the intermission the Hoo¬siers yanked Wallace, the chiefcreative spark for Indiana duringthe first twenty minutes, and in¬serted Herron, who spearheadedIndiana’s long passing attack forthe rest of the uneven contest.Kralovansky and a few other 6' 3”,4", and 5" boys retrieved most ofthe rebounds and made generalnuisances of themselves to Chicagoby tipping in various shots andscoring on fast breakaways.Despite the one-oIJed score,Chicago fans did have a few thingsto cheer about. The Maroons’ floorgame was excellent and, if ithadn’t been for their inability tohit on their many, many shots,they would probably have madebeads of perspiration stand out onIndiana coach Harry Good’s finelylined brow.As it was, Freeark and DeGrawled a small resurgence during thelast quarter, netting 13 points be¬tween them, but at that stage, ofthe game it didn’t make any ma¬terial difference.DeGraw captured high pointhonors for the evening with 13points.BOX SCOREIndiana (59)ff ft p(Wallace,! 4 11Copeland,f 12 0Walker,f 3 5Mehl.£ 1 1Schwartz.c 1 2Kral’sky,c 4 1Stepler.c 1 0Witt'akerjf 3 0Herrm’nn,g 1 lHerron ,g 4 023 13 10 Chicago (34)ff ft pf5DeGrawJSharp J0 Raby.cOirreeark,gl|King,g2 Ulien,g131113 8 16Ice Rink OpensFer tlie benefit of buddingSonju Heinies the Universityof Chicago Athletic OfBcc'announces the opening of theice skating rink under the.north stands.The rink is open to allUniversity students, faculty*members, and employees andtheir guests seven days aweek. Students are admittedon presentation of theiridentification cards whileoutsiders must secure passesfrom the Athletic Office. Hwrink is open every afternoonand evening.f > ■* • ' ■ - w** -■*'•.■ , '^4-"iiivI ;.r! i|ilLL. 8 THE CHICAGO MAROONMozart*s Chamber Music toOpen Winter Concert SeriesCollege MusicalSeries BeginsJanuary 16By WILLIAM W AMBAUGHA program devoted to the cham¬ber music of Moxart will be pre¬sented in Mandel Hall this eveningst 8:30 PJVI. as the opening concertof the Department of Music^s win¬ter series.The iijj’ogram will comprise theString Quartet No. 23 in F. Major,K. 590; the Quintet in E Flat, K.452, for piano, oboe, clarinet, horn,and bassoon; the Sonata in B Flat,K. 292, for bassoon and violoncello;and the Quartet No. 1 in G Minor,K. 478, for piano and strings.Featured as pianist in the quin¬tet and piano quartet will be PerryO’Neil, graduate student in the Dorm RoundupNew Head Plans NoMajor Changes NowBy LARRY KREBSNo major changes are planned in the residence program,John E. Wilkinson, new head of dormitories, said this week.Wilkinson, former head of the 700 Entry succeeded AlanLake Chidsey who submitted his resignatidn at the end of thefall quarter.Chidsey, new to the College lastquarter, organized the Collegehouse plan which centered aroundthe social, recreation, and athleticactivities in the residence houseswith. non-resident students as¬signed as associate members. Oneof Chidsey’s most popular contri¬butions was competitive house try. The 700 entry headship wasleft open when John Wilkinson,former head of 700, took DeanChidsey’s place as head of 100 en¬try, which also has a new pres¬ident, ex-Army Air Corps CaptainLin Lundgaard. Other house elec¬tions were held at the beginningof the quarter with Paddy Burnsrptaining the presidency of 700 Alter QuadClub RulesMembership regulations forthe Quadrangle club. Uni¬versity faculty organization,have been eased permittingelection by a majority of themembership.Previous “black ball” lim¬itations have been strickenfrom the constitution. Allprofessors who are membersof the University Senate,faculty ruling body of theUniversity, will be eligiblefor membership.Membership of the Quad¬rangle club include membersof the Board of Trustees,administrative authorities,faculty members, and prom¬inent residents of the SouthSide area. vWomen's Dorms HerePlan Active SeasonActivity in the women’s dormshas not been fully organized asyet so that their plans are justbeing‘completed for a busy socialseason. Talbot house heads the Friday, January 11, 1945Three BooksReleased byU of C PressReveille For Radicals, the newbook by Saul D. Alinsky, graduateof the University of Chicago, De¬partment of Sociolog>’, will be re¬leased by the U. of C. Press thisMonday. This book tells the stir¬ring story of the progress the In¬dustrial Areas Foundation, direct¬ed by Mr. Alinsky, has made inorganizing the people in the“across the tracks’’ communities insolving their common problems.Florence Ayscough and AmyLowell: Correspondence of aFriendship, edited by Harley F.MacNair, Professor of Far EasternHistory and Institutions, and War¬riors Without Weapons, by Gor¬don MacGregor, superintendent ofthe Tongue River Indian Agency,Montana, will also be released thisMonday. The Correspondence ofa Friendship is a collection of let¬ters relating the story of FlorenceAyscough’s and Amy Lowell’sexp)eriences and observations inChina. Canada, the United States-I'j. ^it:■if ■ Symphony Quartet; Robert Linde-mann, clarinet; Florian Mueller,oboe; Helen Kotas, horn; andClarke Kessler, bassoon, will be theassisting artists. Tickets for thisconcert, priced at $1.20 includingtax, may be obtained at the Uni¬versity Information Office, or inMandel Corridor the night of theconcert.Opening concert of the winterquarter in the University Collegeseries will be played in KimballHall, 306 South Wabash Ave., at8:15 p.m., Wednesday, January 16.The program will offer Beethoven’sQuartet No. 3 in D, Op. 18, No. 3,and Mozart’s Quinete No. 5 in GMinor, K. 516. The concert will bepreceded by a lecture on “ClassicalForms,” by Professor Cecil MSmith, Chairman of the Depart¬ment of Music.Artists that evening will be theChicago Symphony Quartet; as¬sisted by Walter Hancock, violist,in the Mozart selection. Ticketspriced at $1.50 including tax maybe purchased at the box-office onthe evening of the concert. miramurai looioau.Chidsey was not the only cas¬ualty of the fall quarter—thepocketbooks of the 331 residentsalso suffered. An additional $10price hike, third in as many quar¬ters, was announced for Burton-Judson, while a $5 boost was in¬stituted for dormitories which donot serve meals.* * *A gay crowd and the friendlyatmosphere of dimly-lit Burtonlounge helped make the first “off-the-backboard” dance a successlast Saturday night after the Ma¬roon’s Big Ten debut with Indi¬ana. The dances, sponsored bythe Burton-Judson Social Com¬mittee, will be held from 10 to12:30 after each Maroon homegame, the next of which is tonightwith Michigan.* * «A few changes in house headsand house presidents have beenmade this quarter. Kirkby, for¬mer assistant head of 400, tookover the duties of head of 500entry, a job left vacant by Mr.Cobb who is now head of 700 en-Initiate Fiction Seriesin Documentary PicturesPresentation of the Far EastBritish Army tale “Lives of a Ben¬gal Lancer” tonight marks theopening of the Documentary FilmGroup’s winter program.Under the. new schedule, threeseparate series, embracing bothdocumentaries and fiction films,will be shown during the quarter.All pictures will be presented onceonly, in Social Science 122, at 7:15p.m.New Film ClassActivities of the group havebeen augmented by the creation ofa new Film Class, designed to ac¬quaint students with importanttechniques and craftsmen in mo¬tion picture art, as seen in someof their important films.No separate admissions to thecurrent series, which operates un¬der a $ 1 subscription plan, will besold. Some of the movies sched¬uled for winter presentation underthis plan include: Orson Welles’“Citizen Kane” on February 1, tobe followed by a discussion; “Mu¬tiny on the Bounty,” starringClark Gable and Charles Laugh¬ton, on February 15; and “TheGood Earth,” Academy Awardwinner, starring Paul Muni andLuise Rainer.Documentaries ListedTrue documentary films will notbe neglected during the season.“The Fight for Life,” Pare Lorentz’serious and dramatic study ofchildbirth in a slum neighborhood,opens the series next Tuesday eve7ning. On January 29, developmentof motion picture techniquethrough more than four decadeswill be depicted in “Evolution ofthe Motion Picture,” a unique col¬lection of cartoons, comedies and excerpts from old films- “Turksib,”great Soviet documentary recordof the construction of the Trans-Turkestan Railway, will be shownon February 12.Pare Lorentz’ “Plow That Brokethe Plains” will be revived onFebruary 26, together with twooutstanding films on man and theland, “New Earth,” and “Powerand the Land.” The series willend March 12, with the showingof “Shors,” Dovzhenko’s impres¬sively photographed story of ayoung revolutionaiy, and “Kazak-hastan,” a film of life in that richbut little-known Far Ezistem So¬viet Republic.Single admissions will be on salefor each of these performances,which will be also shown in Room122 of the Social Sciences building. and Dave Hacker that of 800.Lloyd Fosdick of 400 entry, BruceBixler of 500 entry, and HerbBaer of 200 entry were also elect¬ed to the presidency of theirhouses. calendar with a formal dance onJanuary 19. The next weekendGreen Hall will hold its formalon January 25 to be followed byFoster’s informal dance, January26. and England.Warriors Without Weapons isthe story of a group of AmericanIndians whose lives were disrupt¬ed by the civilization of the whiteman.The Man's Magazine' G«t fha big Jonuory lssu«of your fovorlto nowfstaiid nowPAFPT’ BOTINGTM'S OWN UUZINGSTORY EXCLUSnaT IN“If I'm missing, don’t believe it.I’ll turn up to buy the drinks inSan Diego." But “Pappy" van¬ished on his last flight, the dayafter he had become America’s topace. Twenty months of silencedragged by. and the boys in "Pappy’s” famous Black SheepSquexdronof Marineflyersjustaboutdecided thateven "Pappy" couldn’tmake it. But he did, and here's hisstory—his flrst magazine piecc-^written for True and you. It’sunique reading—I’ll Buy the Drinks, BoyskfU.Ctt Orwsafy {TmmD ■ay*isf,U^»CHORSE LAUGHSH. Allen Smith is a funny man. He gets pud for it.He writes best-selling humorous books. This is his first magazinearticle in more than a year. Mr. Smith tells why he has givenup playing t!ie geegees—well, o/motf given up. There’s aChinaman in his story. You’ll like and laugh atNo Horse Can Do That to MehrKAMmSmHMYSTERY SHIP IH HEW YORK HARBOR!A floating palace of gin and sin, the big New York newspaper said,^ and proceeded to give a reporter’s eye-witness low down on thehigh jin^ aboard. Eye-witness, your eye! It was a hoax. It’s oneof Qie notable newspaper hoaxes bundled together to amuse you inNews Out of Their Hats kvAUw VortowU.T.1131-1133 E. 55th St.Complete Selectionof Beers andOther BeveragesMIDway 0524Blatz Beer IS THIS PEACEJUST A PAUSE?WaiOunler, TRUE’, Pa-cific correspondent, saysthe Japs know they lost.Lost what? Then don'tthink they lott Ike war! Inthis amazing Report tothe Editor, Will Ourslertells the hard, cold truththat this country had bet¬ter face now. Be sure youleadAre the JapsReally Licked ?if WBIOerdertree’s Netk 1 A beowtlfwl reprodwcHon ofDoon Cornwoirzrenorkoblo original oil oointing ofEmin Pylo“Pooco — Christmoz, 1945'poinfod foronly in 1^And of courseAnother original Petty Girlonly in ihie21 Feotures 144 pages ofman-tiie thrills in the bigholidoy fff/Q onnewsstands nowOel yeur copy tadoyV