m 0 imaronn54 YEARS OF SERVICE AND LEADERSHIPVOL. 5, NO. 11—Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1946, 31 PRICE 5 CENTSVote to Abolish Ph. B.!Famed Experts Will Lecture HereForum Sends4 StudentsTo DU Meet"Free Trade" TopicIn Denver TourneyThe Student Forum an¬nounced this week the namesof four students who will rep¬resent the University of Chi¬cago at the ^ocky MountainSpeech Conference at the Uni¬versity of Denver, February 14,15, and 16, in debates on the na¬tional topic, “Free Trade.”Evelyn Paper and AntoinetteTotino are to take the affirmativeside: Sheldon Stein and RichardEinstein, the negative. BertWax, Director of the Forum, willaccompany the group to Denveras coach.The participants were selectedTuesday, by a board of judgeschosen from the faculty. Theywere John Yarnell, Director ofStudent Activities; Harley Smith,Director of Dramatics; and DanielBell, Instructor in the Departmentof Social Sciences.The Speech Conference is anannual affair to which key West¬ern and Mid-Western universi¬ties are invited. Its program con¬sists of Discussion, Debate, andOratory.Other activities of the Forumthis week include a round-tablediscussion and a debate. One of the most outstanding lecture series ever booked bythe University will bring to the campus a group of speakersfamed in their respective fields.Entitled “The Works of the Mind,” and presented by theCommittee on Social Thought, the lectures will explain thenature and perfection of intellectual and creative work as car¬ried on by artists, scientists, and scholars. Each lecturer willspeak from his own experience onthe work of his art or profession;and he will demonstrate its valueby elucidating its nature, formu¬lating its purpose, and explainingits techniques.Senator Fulbright Opens SeriesOpening the series on Tuesday,February 19, the J. W. Fulbright,Democratic Senator from Arkansaswill speak on The Legislator.Succeeding lectures will includeThe Concept of Work on Febru¬ary 26 by Yves R. Simon, Pro¬fessor of Philosophy at NotreDame; The Artist on March 5 inFrench, by Marc Chagall, a leaderin contemporary painting who willexhibit soon at the Museum ofModem Art; The Sculptor onMarch 12 by Alfeo Faggi, whosesculpture in the Chicago area in¬cludes work in the Art Institute,the Church of St. Thomas theApostle, and the University ofChicago.Includes Frank Lloyd WrightThe Scientist will be presentedMarch 26 by SubrahmanyanonChandrasekhar, Profe-ssor of Theo¬retical Astrophysics at the Uni¬versity of Chicago and Director ofYerkes Observatory; The Architecton April 2 by Frank Lloyd Wright,internationally famous exponent ofmodern architecture; The States¬man on April 9 by Heinrich Bruen-ing, Chancellor of the GermanReich from 1930 to 1932, and Lit-tauer Professor of Governor at'theHarvard Graduate School of Pub¬lic Administration since 1939, and(Continued on Page 2)Mayer, Krueger Speak forFreedom-LoYing ColoniesThe anniversary of the All India Congress’ Declaration ofIndependence will be the occasion for a dinner and meetinga week from today, to be sponsored by the U. of C. Chapterof the Fellowship of Reconciliation, the Socialist Study Club,and Labor Rights Society.The meeting, which will deal with the problems of all Colonialpeoples seeking freedom, will have as speakers Maynard Krueger,Assistant Professor of Economics; Milton Mayer, of the Office ofPublic Relations, and Professor T. P. Sinha, a 'member of the AllIndia Congress, and former unofficial representative of that groupat the League of Nations in Geneva.It is hoped that the meeting will produce definite action, andthat cablegrams and telegrams will be sent to American and Britishauthorities, urging freedom for the Indian people. The meetingopen to everyone will be at 7:45 p.m. in Kent 106.Earlier in the evening, a dinner of Indian food will be served at IdajNoyes Hall, and Indian music and entertainment will be provided.A similar dinner two years ago, celebrating the same occasion, broughtout over 200 students, but it will be necessary to limit the numberMils year to 100. Reservations may be made by contacting RobertLemnier, Dorchester 5298, not later than Monday, February 11.* * *Elsewhere among political clubs AYD, the Negro Students’ Club,^nd the Anti-Discrimination Committee announce that they will co¬sponsor a meeting with Louis Burnham, prominent progressive leader,on Wednesday at 3:0C p.m. in Rosenwald 2. Burnham, who is Organ¬izational Secretary of the Southern Negro Youth Conference, willspeak on “The Southern Negro’s Fight for Democracy.”* * *Douglas Anderson, Chairman of the CIO’s Chicago Strike Com-will speak at a meeting to be given by Labor Rights Societyon February 14. Anderson will discuss “Latest Developments in the,^X^strial Crisis.” The meeting, open to all students, will be at Swift106 at 7:30 p.m. Concert toSpotlightHans LangeThe second of two recitals byRalph Kirkpatrick, harpsichordist,and Alexander Schneider, violinist,will be presented in Mandel Hallthis evening at 8:30 p.m. Schneiderand Kirkpatrick will play Mozart’sSonata in F Major, K. 376, and thenew Darius Milhaud Sonata forharpsichord and violin. The uni¬versity Chamber Orchestra, underthe direction of Hans Lange, willaccompany Schneider in Mozart’sViolin Concerto No. 5 in A Major,K. 219, and Kirkpatrick in Haydn’sConcerto in D for harpsichord andorchestra. Tickets, priced at $1.20,tax included, may be obtained atthe box office in Mandel Corridorbefore the concert.O’Neil In, University CollegeConcertOn Wednesday, February 13, at8:15 p.m., in Kimball Hall, 308South Wabash Avenue, the eighthconcert of the University Collegeseries will present Perry O’Neil,pianist and graduate student inthe Department of Music, HelenKotas, hornist, and Dudley Powers,’cellist, in recital. O’Neil and Pow¬ers will play Beethoven’s SonataNo. 4 in C Major, Op. 102, No. 1,for piano and ’cello; and with MissKotas they will play Brahms’ Trioin E Flat, Op. 40, for piano, Frenchhorn, and ’cello.The recital will be preceded bya lecture on “Modifications ofTraditional Form I” by Prof. Scott(Continued on Page 4) Campus Bigwig.. College WillBan OptionalCourse PlanStudents Now EnrolledNot Affected by MoveBy a decisive majority, theCollege Faculty Wednesdayapproved legislation abolishingthe Ph. B. degree and instituting a mandatory B. A. for a!Istudents entering the college afterSeptember, 1946.The action climaxed threemonths of bitter debate. Proposalsto appoint a committee to investi¬gate the current B. A. curriculumprior to abolishing the Ph. B. wasrejected at Wednesday’s confer¬ence.Students now in the college willnot be affected by the facultyaction, Dean Clarence H. Faustpointed out. Students enteringafter September 1946 in the firstyear of the College will be requiredto take three courses in NaturalScience, three in Humanities, threein Social Science, two in English,on, a language, and mathematics.Students entering as graduatesfrom high school will be enrolledin Social Sciences 2 and 3, Hu¬manities 2 and 3, Physical Science,3, Biological Science 3, English 3,and OILAll electives will be banned inthe College.The College committee on policy„ . . r. i. i. u T and Personnel will investigate theFeaturing a short story by James -o a -i j -nm TTi n i! 04. J T IB. A. curriculum and will considerT. Farrell, author of Studs LoniganJANE COLLEYPresident of the Inter-Organiza¬tional council and President ofInter-Club which will stage itsannual ball Friday night. (Storyon Page 2).James FarrellTo Write forUC Quarterlyand former student at the Univer¬sity, the new Quarterly Reviewwill hit the stands on March 15.Contained in the first issue willbe contributions by many otherwell known writers. Jeremy In¬galls, graduate student at the Uni¬versity, winner of the Yale YoungPoet’s Award in 1941 and authorof a book length poem, Tahl, in1945, has contributed a set ofpoems. Webster Ghiselan, of theUniversity of Utah faculty, has(Continued on Page 5) revisions.It is not yet known whether theCollege proposal will be referredfor final action to the University’council, highest faculty ruling bodyin the University.Kitchell to Dance HereEva Kitchell, well known dancehumorist, will present a programof dances here March 1 in theannual University Settlementbenefit.Weather Stalls Pre-FobsUnfavorable weather conditions have delayed the first ofthe government-leased pre-fabricated housing units which weredue to arrive here this week. The houses, expected Tuesdayafternoon, may not arrive until the first of next wek, accord¬ing to University authorities.West Stands AreGiven InstituteThe West Stands, home of Chi¬cago’s only handball and squashcourts, are no longer available foruse according to an announcementby the Physical Education Office.This space has been requisition¬ed by the new Institute of Metals,under the direction of ProfessorCyril Smith, which will use all ofthe West Stands except that partoccupied by the Metallurgical ing.100 of these houses will beerected on Greenwood field, andare part of a general housing ex¬pansion program begun by theUniversity to accommodate 500 ad¬ditional male students for thespring quarter.Much of the preliminary gj^ad-ing and installation of water andsewer facilities has already beendone on the block bounded byGreenwood and University ave¬nues, and 60th and 61st streets.Compactly built, the two andthree-room houses have plumb¬cooking and refrigerationfacilities as integral parts of theLaboratories and the rifle range.No relief is seen for handball structure. Some of the houses pro-and squash enthusiasts until the vide two bedrooms, and will ac-Physical Education Department’s commodate veterans with two chil-long-planned sports building is dren. Rental scales for the unitssecured. |will be determined by costs. Harper's WillBe Open onSundaysAs a result of numerous requestsfrom students, resulting in partfrom editorial comment in THECHICAGO MAROON, the CollegeLibrary, Harper Mil will be openon Sundays.Ralph A. Beals, director of Uni¬versity libraries, announced thisweek that the library will openfrom 1:15 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. eachSunday beginning this weekend.No other section of Harper’s willbe open. Beals pointed out thatopening the College library islargely an experiment and is con¬tingent on student response.Maroons Back Home for Minnesota Cage TiffSEE SPORTS PAGEI*age 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, February 8,f===^=Calendar of Events .Next Week onQuadranglesFRIDAY. February 8WORSHIP SERVICE. A Service of Responsive Reading. BondChapel. 12:00 m.-12:20 p.m.SWIMMING MEET. Junior Varsity vs. Fenger H. S. Bartlett Gym3:45 p.m.TRACK MEET. Junior Varsity vs. Lake View H. S. Field House.4:00 p.m.BASKETBTLL. Junior Varsity vs. Chicago Christian H. S. BarlettGym. 4:00 pjn.MATHEMATICAL BIOPHYSICS MEETING. “Studies in theMathematical Theory of Form of Trees.” Martinus Esser. 5822 DrexelAve. 4:30 p.m.INTIMATE THEATRE PROGRAM. Reynolds Club Theater3:30 p.m.THE HUMAN ADVENTURE. “Machiavelli.” WGN and M.B.SNetwork. 7:00-7:30 p.m.UNIVERSITY CONCERT. Alexander Schneider, violin; RalphKirkpatrick, harpsichord; University of Chicago Chamber Orchestra,Hans Lange, conductor. Mandel Hall*. 8:30 p.m.FIRESIDE TEA. “An Evening of Jewish Art.” Todros Gellar.Hillel 8:15. (Worship Service 7:30.)DRAMA. ‘Blithe Spirit.” Reynolds Club Theater. 8:15 p.m.FILM. “Grapes of Wrath.” Soc. Sci. 122. 7:15 pjn.FILM. “Colonel Blimp.” International House. 8:00 p.m.AYD OPEN MEETING. “An American Dilemma: Discrimination—Its Economic Causes.” Meyer Weinberg, Instructor of History, WrightJunior College. Ida Noyes Library. 3:00 p.m.SATURDAY, February 9TRACK MEET. Chicago vs. North Central College and MortonJunior College. Field House. 2:30 p.m.BASKETBALL. Big Ten Conference Game. Chicago vs. MinnesotaField House. 8:00 p.m.WRESTLING MEET. Chicago vs. Wheaton. Bartlett Gym. 9:00 p.m.DRAMA. “Blithe Spirit.” Reynolds Club Theater. 8:15 p.m.SUNDAY, February 10RELIGIOUS SERVICE. Rev. Marshall T. Steel of the HighlandPark Methodist Church, Dallas, Texas. Rockefeller Memorial Chapel11:00 a.m.ROUND TABLE “What Is the Solution to the Present LaborCrisis?” Clarence B. Randall, Vice-President of Inland Steel Co.;Harold Ruttenbberg, Director of Research for the United Steelworkersof America; Neil H. Jacoby, Vice-President of University of Chicago.WMAQ and N.B.C. Network. 12:30-1:00 p.m.RECITAL. Wheaton College Men’s Glee Club. Rockefeller Chapel4:30 p m.AVC INFORMAL DANCE. Ida Noyes. 3:00-6:00 p.m.OPEN HOUSE. Gates Hall. 7:30 p.m.MONDAY, February 11RECORD CONCERT. Ida Noyes. 4:00-5:00 p.m. Tea at 5:00.TUESDAY, February 12WORSHIP SERVICE. Dean Charles W. Gilkey. Bond Chapel. 12:00-12:20 p.m.LECTURE. “Neolithic Revolution.” Robert Braidwood, AnthropologyDepartment. Soc. Sci. Bldg. 4:00 p.m.DOCUMENTARY FILMS. “Turksib,” “People of the Cumberland,”“Land of Invention—Scotland.” Soc. Sci. 122. 7:15 p.m.INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL. 7:00 p.m. Maroons vs. Metallurgy;9:30 p.m. Business vs. Senior Medics. Field House.AVC REGULAR MEETING. 7:30 p.m.WEDNESDAY, February 13COFFEE HOUR. Discussion. Hillel. 4:00 p.m.U. of C. CHORUS. Reynolds Club. 7:30-9:00 p.m.INFORMAL BIBLE STUDY. Ida Noyes, Third Floor. Beveragesserved. 12:00 m.THURSDAY, February 14INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL. 7:00 p.m. Frosh Medics vs. Int.House; 9:30 p.m. Junior Medics vs. Soph Medics. Field House.RECORD CONCERT. Hillel. 8:00 p.m.Dorm RoundupMilton Mayer, Guest ofFoster, Speaks on A-BombReligiousYWCA SchedulesValentine PartyFor SettlementYWCA has several activitiesplanned for the week. At theiropen house today, “Y” girls willmake Valentines for children ofthe University Settlement, and aparty on Valentine’s Day will beheld for 35 children from the set¬tlement at Ida Noyes Hall.Saturday, the Inter-racialCommittee of the “Y” will spon¬sor a field trip through the Negrosection of Chicago, and throughslum and industrial areas of thecity’s West Side. Frazier Lane, ofthe Chicago Urban League, willact as guide.“Y” members will also attend adessert luncheon and a sympo¬sium on F'ebruary 12, to be givenat the KAM Temple at 50th ^dDrexel Avenue. “Prejudice—theThreat to Religion” will be thetopic of the symposium.* « «Rev. Edward Nugent, C.S.P., willbe guest speaker at Calvert Club’smeeting this afternoon. Father Nu- Featured on Foster Hall’s agen¬da for next week is a talk on“The Atom Bomb” by MiltonMayer, of the Office of Public Re¬lations, who will be a dinnerguest Wednesday evening.* * *Gates Hall invites the campus toan open house on Sunday, from7:30 to 10 p.m.* 4i *Manly House has announced aseries of Sunday afternoon con¬certs, alternating symphonic pre¬sentations with boogie sessions.House members will contributetheir own records, and will discussthem after the concerts. Music willbe supplemented by snacks.Manly has also invited DeanBernard M. Loomer, of the Divin¬ity School, for dinner on Wednes¬day.gent, a former chaplain at theUniversity of California, willspeak on “Education Experiences.”Refreshments and dancing willfollow the meeting at CalvertHouse.* « •A Valentine Dance will besponsored by the Congregational-ist Student Group on February 16.The dance will be given for allgroups of the Inter-Church Coun¬cil, and will be held in the theaterat Ida Noyes Hall. Socially SpeakingInter club Ball, Tea TopU of C Social CalendarInter-Club Council will give a tea, Wednesday, February13, in the Eiast lounge, Ida Noyes Hall, from 3:30 to 5:00, forall entering women interested in joining a club. All new womenstudents in the third or fourth year of the College or in theDivisions are invited to the tea at which the club system andrushing rules will be explained.Highlight of the quarter’s socialevents for club women is Inter-Club Ball tonight at the CrystalBallroom, Knickerbocker Hotel,Over 200 club women and theirescorts are expected to attend theball, which is one of the fewtraditional formal dances of theyear. Chaperons include manyclub alumnae as well as severalfaculty members, among whomare Mr. and Mrs. Durbin Rowland,Mr. and Mrs. T. Walter Johnson,Mr. and Mrs. F. Joseph Mullin,and Mr. and Mrs. Edward A.Duddy. Jane Colley, president, andEllen Baum, secretary, will leadthe grand marqji*Pledging news; Jacqueline Mc¬Kenna has been pledged by PiDelta Phi.The Calvert Club is giving itsfirst dinner dance on Saturday,February 16, at the Mural Room,Hotel Morrison. The dance willstart at 7:00.AVC Dances SuccessfulThe Sunday AVC dances from3:00 to 6:00 .at Ida Noyes aremore and more successful eachweek. They are open to the en¬tire campus, with a 48 cent ticketbringing free refreshments. If youdon’t bring your own date, host¬esses are supplied by Inter-ClubCouncil.Next week will see many part¬ies, among which are the InterFraternity all-campus dance at In-Experts , . .(Continued from Page 1)The Historian on April 16 by C.H. Mcllwain, Eaton Professor ofthe Science of Government at Har¬vard.“The Administrator”—HutchinsChancellor Robert M. Hutchinswill speak on The Administratoron April 23; John von Neumannof the School of Mathematics atPrinceton’s Institute for AdvancedStudy will speak'on The Mathe¬matician on April 30; ArnoldSchoenborg, outstanding moderncomposer and musical theorist willdeliver a lecture with recordingsand slides on The Musician on May7; and Mortimer J. Adler, Profes¬sor of the Philosophy of Law atthe University of Chicago will endthe series with his talk on ThePhilosopher, to be given May 14.QUEEN MARY’SCandies and Ice CreamCome in for a super-dupersundae63rd Streetat Greenwood Avenue4 MONTH INTENSIVECourse forCOUiei 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 BUSINESSBBEPiKKeO BY COilfG* MEN BND WOMENTHE GRECO COLIECEPrasManf, John Robort Grogs. S.C.D.OiMclor. rowl M. Foir. M. A temational House, Saturday theMortar Board-Alpha Delta Phiparty, Friday at the SouthmoorHotel; and the Beecher formaldance, also on Saturday.This WeekTonight the 500 Entry Is givinga dance. Wednesday night featuredold-fashioned Square Danceanat Ida Noyes Hall. The Phi SigmaDeltas are having a party Satur¬day night. 'The Classics Club gaveits second tea of the quarter Wed¬nesday.<D * •AnnouncementAll organizations planning adance or party of any sort mayregister the function with Marrgeurite Kidwell’s office. The partywill be. entered on the mastersocial calendar in order to pre¬vent as much conflict as possiblewith parties of other organizations. Serum HaltsFlu, SurveyHere ReveaNResults of a survey taken bStudent Health on 450 studentat the University gave hopefupromise for the new influenzserum administered last quarterAmong those students who wenvaccinated between Thanksgiviniand January 1, only 3 per cenwere touched by the flu epidem-ic. Of those not vaccinated 30 pejcent contracted the disease.Although these figures are high¬ly optimistic, it is hoped that finalresults foi^ the year will be aspromising. Results from those whosubmitted to blood tests will notbe complete for some time.MAROON Cartoonisf IsFeatured in MagazineFaculty sketches drawn by Cis¬sy Liebschutz, CHICAGO MA¬ROON staff artist, were reprintedthis week in The University itfChicago magazine, official alumnipublication.The magazine, published by thoAlumni Association features Pres¬ident Ernest C. C!olwell's fall quar¬ter commencement address and anarticle by Laird Bell on .Alliedpolicy toward Germany. Bell,former Deputy Director of theElconomic Division of Office ofMilitary Government, is a memberof the Board of Trustees.What’Sbehind this symbol?Dept. C.M. 4 N. Mkhigoa Ava.Cbfeaga 2, IIIImU This is the familiar symbol of the Bell TelephoneSystem that provides nation-wide telephone service—the best in the world.The American Telephone and Telegraph Companv,through advice and assistance, coordinates all BellSystem activities.The 21 Associated Companies provide telephoneservice in their respective territories.The Long Lines Department of A. T. & T. Com¬pany furnishes Long Distance and Overseas service.The Bell Telephone Laboratories,through constantresearch, develops new and improved communica¬tions apparatus.The Western Electric Company manufactures tele¬phone equipment, purchases and distributes supplies*and inslallscentral office apparatus for the BellSysteui.Communication is the business of the Bell System—to transmit intelligence quickly, clearly and at thelowest possible cost.BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEMDLidaf. Februtiy «, ItWVKE Regains Active StatusDelta Kappa Epsilon has been reinstated as an active fra>ternity, the Inter-Fraternity council announced Wednesday night.^ The* council also released a list of twenty pledges.Beta Theta Pi—David W. Wilder, Frank Higgins, DonaldPeak, Ray Paul, Dan Griffin, Russel Hanson and Ellis Burcaw.Phi Delta Theta—Conrad Benford, Carrol Cline, Irvin Hesley,Victor Lownes, Robert McAuliffe, Daniel McNamare, RichardMink, James Morgan, Richard Cable and Thomas Teeter.Phi Sigma Delta—Albert Freedman, Samual Furstenburg, LeeJaffe and Eugene Gootnick.Two fraternities announce changes in officers.Psi Upsilon—president, Paul Paulsen; vice-president, JamesHalvorsen; assistant vice-president, Moine Stitt; correspondingsecretary, John Bokmen; recording secretary, John Spencer.Phi Sigma Delta—master frater, Larry Fisher; stew'ard. GeneFisher; vice master frater, Edward Lichler; treasurer, EdwardLowenstein; consulting secretary, Ray Berndorf; recording sec¬retary, Dick Holtzman.Her# art the discs yau've beet seeking! A completeseltctien of classical and popular music, including:VOI.K BALLADSJosh White Woodie GuthrieBurl Ives Richard Dyer-BennetTed Glozer Georqe EdwardsEithne Golden Adolph StarkJAZZ"Hord to get" collector's Herns o«Decca BrunswickVictor BluebirdColumbia AschOdd Labial Ariiniim lorludiii|(;Slom StewartJohnny GuornieriRed NorvoCoiy Cole.Don ByasBilly EckstineHelen Humesefay McShonnA. J. F. LOWE and SON1217 E. 55TH ST. MIOway 0781-2-3-4Hang your Arrow Ties onthe wrong side of your bed!When you wake up on the grouch side some A.M,, . , with a tough day of textbook-tussling ahead, . . don’t reach for your Luger. Relax. on abright Arrow Tie!Nothing like a splash of that tasteful-but-terrificArrow pattern to cheer you up. And the ease withwhich you tie a perfect knot in it. is soothing, sir,definitdy soothing.Your dealer has plenty of Arrow Ties, in colorsand patterns that please.ARROW SHIRTS <md TIESUNDOIWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTS THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 3Two of the University’s outstanding economists will leave Chicagowithin the next few months, THE MAROON learned this week.Jacob Viner, Morton D. Hull Distinguished Service Professor ofEconomics, and Simeon E. Leland, Chairman of the University’sDepartment of Economics, will accept position at Prinoeton andNorthwestern university,respectively, it was re¬ported from officialsources.Professor Viner, aprominent campus fig¬ure, will spend his sab¬batical quarter as Visit¬ing Professor at theLondon School of Eco¬nomics, and will thensubmit his resignationin order to take up hisnew position as Profes¬sor of Economics atPrinceton.Viner has taught atthe University of Chi¬cago since 1917, exceptfor a period as Govern¬ment consultant duringthe first World War. Hehas also worked fromtime to time with theTreasury Departmentthroughout the Roose¬velt Administrator. He isthe author of severalworks on internationaltrade, and editor of theJournal of Political Economy.Professor Leland, at jM^esent in Panauna studying the tax systemof that republic at the request of the Panamanian Governmentwill teach through the Spring and Summer quarters, his officeannounced. On September 1 he will assume his new duties as DeanPROFESSOR SIMEON E. LELAND of the College of Liberal Arts andProfessor of Economics at North¬western.Chairman of the Department ofEconomics since 1940, Leland hasbeen on the staff of the Universityof Chicago since 1928. Beforethat time, he taught economics atthe University of Kentucky.Leland was a member of theIllinois State Tax Commission for10 years, and its chairman from1936 to 1940. Since 1942 he hasbeen Chairman of the Board ofGovernors o| the Federal ReserveBank of Chicago.News CapsulesProm BilledFebruary 22The traditional WashingtonProm, a war-time casualty, willbe presented again by the StudentSocial Committee on February 22.Bids, at $3.00, will go on saleMonday in Ida Noyes Hall from9 a.m. till 5 p.m.; and in Mandelcorridor from 11:45 a.m. until 1:45p.m.Inter-Dorm Quiz MeetCoulter House will compete with‘Foster Hall next Thursday in thesecond of a series of quiz contestspresented by Radio Midway. Win¬ning dorms will compete for thechampionship at the end of theseries. The programs are beingwriten by Marcia Auerbach.ALWAYS MilOERBi BETTER TASTINGP, COOLER SMOKINGL ^// the BeneHfs ofSmoking Pleasure ^A»»»BurCHESTERFIELDLioatrr A Ml— '41—eeo CBSFa^e 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON"Ye Shall Know the Truth and the Truth Shall Make Y^ou FFriday, February s. i,,.r 0 a"Needed: Foresighf and ActionMr. David Sander, THE CHICAGO MA¬ROON veteran’s editor, echoed the sentimentsof ex-GI’s on campus when he asked the Uni¬versity last week specifically what had beendone to alleviate the housing emergency. Mr.Sander, like all of us, is weary of well-phrasedpronunciamentoes vaguely pledging action “inthe future.”As a matter of actual record, however, theUniversity has acted with much more alacrityin solving the temporary problem than it hasin the long range sphere of action. The pre¬fabricated housing and the purchase of a newdormitory building, coupled with the crack¬down on enrollment, may be adequate tempor¬ary stopgaps.The problem of housing, however, is moresignificantly a long-range question. Once thecrisis is over, will the University again lapseinto apathy and refuse to face the necessityof new construction? For a dozen years, the Board of Trustees has been bombarded withproposals for new men’s and women’s dormi¬tories. The women’s residence facilities oncampus are hopelessly outdated and entirelyinadequate. The University has announced aplan for a College housing program, but it isabsurd to speak of such a program if the physi¬cal plant is lacking.Measures should be taken at once in draw¬ing up plans and in obtaining funds for theconstruction of both men and women housing.The faculty housing project should be launchedat the earliest possible moment.A large post-war building program shouldbe projected. It should include housing, a newUniversity administration building, the nuclearphysics institutes, and a student union.Prompt immediate action plus guaranteeof long-term building is essential to the successof the University program.y/elcome ReconyersionOwl and Serpent, one of the University’s oldest and-mostdistinguished undergraduate honorary societies, may be revivedby alumni. For nearly 50 years before the war the honorarygroups were highlights in the student body scheme of things.If well directed their revival is to be welcomed. The Uni¬versity should establish criteria for such societies. Selectionshould be limited neither to academic excellence nor to extra¬curricular contribution, but should be granted to students whosynthesize both and are true representatives of that whichChicago is attempting to produce.Such organizations could perhaps supply the tangible incen¬tive which is so badly lacking in student life on the Quad¬rangles. Their attempts at revival will be watched with interest.A Reason for EverythingLiberal education is not without its moments of humor.An excerpt from a student newspaper at the University ofToronto should be ample to demonstrate the point.Asked the Toronto publication last week: “To what enda liberal education for women? Does she need a liberal educa¬tion to keep house, to push a pram, to wash diapers? A liberaleducation is more important in marriage than in a career. Aliberal education will help form the characters of her children.A liberal education will make her a more tolerant companionin marriage, helping this legal tie for protection of the familyto become for her a spiritual tie as well. A liberal educationwill make her a better citizen of the community. A liberally-educated woman will know WHY she is washing diapers!iiarnonThe University of Chicago Official Student Newspaper1945 ALP 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 ManagerManaging EditorNews Editor ....Feature Editor...Copy Editor ....Spoiiij Editor ... THE EXECUTIVE EDITORSRuth Wachtenheim Circulation Manager. . Joan Kohn. .Libero De Amicis.Antoinette TotinoRichard Fine James E BarnettExchange Manager Donna K GleasonGeneral Manager .... Norman MachtArt Editor Cissy LiebschutzPhotography Editor.. .Edwin SuderowEDITORIAL ASSISTANTSBarbara Barke, Ellen Baum. John Below, Don Bushnell, Babette Casper,Claire Davison, Judy Downs, A1 Eckersberg, Catherine Elmes, Rose Enscner,Lucien Fitzgerald, Murray Harding, Ray Horrell, Eleanor Hoyt, Shirley Isaac,Patricia Kindahl, Lerry Krebs, Tess LaVentis, Gerald Lehman, Sidney Lezak.Norman Macht. Fayette Mulroy, Alan McPherron. Anne Norris, KathleenOverholser, Hillard Anne Perry, William Phillips, Joan Rein*gle, EleanorSaunders, David Sander, Betty Stearns, Helen Tarlow. Virginia Vlack, WilliamWambaugh.BUSINESS ASSISTANTSFlorence Baumruk, Helen Brandenberg, Charlotte Block, Valerie Kopecky,Herb Leiman, Muriel Thompson, Natalie Waechter, Betty Watson, Gwen White.Concert . . .(Continued from Page 1)W. Goldthwaite of the Departmentof Music. Tickets, priced at $1.50,tax included, may be obtained atthe box offjce on the evening ofthe concert.Francis Poulenc Program FridayThe Students’ Committee of theRenaissance Society is sponsoringa recital of the music of FrancisPoulenc, to be presented in theauditorium of International House,on Friday, February 15, at 8:30p.m. Janet Fairbank, soprano, andHenry Jackson, pianist, will col¬laborate in performance of thesong cycles Chansons polonaises(1934) and Tel jour, telle nuit(1936-7). Miss Fairbank will alsoMiig- Uic Aiiieilcciii plexmele of Sold American • • •Listed among the happen¬ings of the month in THEUNIVERSITY OF CHICA¬GO MAGAZINE is the an¬nouncement that Subrah¬manyan Chandrasekhar,Professor of Theoretical As¬trophysics, has been award¬ed the Sir Cattanmanchi Ra-malinga Reddy NationalPrize for Mathematics bythe Andhra University ofIndia.Poulenc’s “Bleuef* and ChansonI du clair tamis. Mr. Jackson will' play Mouvement perpetuel, Yalse' (1919), Toccata (1928), and severalI other works. The Critic'sCorner...By WILLIAM WAMBAUGHWednesday night in Mandel HallRalph Kirkpatrick, harpsichordist,and Alexander Schneider, violinist,played an all-Bach program. TheKirkpatrick-Schneider duo hasalways been one of the anchor jrocks of the University concertseason, and one hopes that thisfruitful association will long con¬tinue. They played the Sonata No. 6in G Major and the Sonata No. 1In B Minor together, with a pro¬jection of Bach’s music for thiscombination which is unrivaled atthe present time.The finely drawn line and in¬cisiveness of Schneider’s tone aresupported, but never ’ obscured,by Kirkpatrick’s harpsichord. Thispatrician quality of Schneider’s,such a virtue in ensemble playing,is a liability in solo work.Playing the Partita No. 2 in DMinor for violin alone, the resultsounded like an exposition of thework by a pedagogue rather thana performance of what can be oneof Bach’s richest works. IsaacStern, who previously in theseseries, has performed the G Minorand A Minor sonatas, has the rich,warm tone necessary to the full-blooded projection of these works.Anything short of this cheats thework of realization, and reducesit to the level of mere technicalexposition.-Bach’s unaccompanied sonatasand partitas require a devotion totechnical mastery so acute as toconceal the technique they exact.Schneider has not devoted himselfto these sufficiently to judge bythe result. Delicate tone and tech¬nical straining combined to pro¬duce a performance which leftbare bones unclothed with livingflesh.Ralph Kirkpatrick gave a per¬formance of the Chromatic Fan¬tasy and Fugue which was tech¬nically clean and precise. His me¬lodic line, unfortunately, was diptoccasionally and not unrolled toits full scope. Firm, solid tone,however, more than compensated.Hillel Plans LecturesOn Judaism of TodayHillel’s Winter Lecture Series on“Jewish Religion Today’.’ will bepresented on four successive Wed¬nesdays, beginning February 13.Dr. Jacob B. Agus, who has writtenextensively on the philosophicalaspects of Judaism, and is theauthor of “Modern Philosophies ofJudaism,” will give the first lec¬ture. His topic will be “OrthodoxJudaism in the Modern World.”The lecture series will be heldat Karasik House, 5715 WoodlawnAve., and is open to everyone onI campus. I Abe KrashEducationalOtherwise . andThe appearance on campus of a new humor magazme, andthe announcement that novelist James T. Farrell has con¬sented to author a short story for the new University literaryquarterly, has temporarily focused attention on campus publi-cations. Those two items present an excellent excuse for asearching analysis into University student journalistic efforts, a franksurvey of their shortcomings, and a forecast of their future.Student publications are in the process of reconverting; they arerecovering from the ill effects brought about by the late interna¬tional unpleasantness. During the -war, struggling under the exigenciesof printing and manpower shortages, student newspapers and journalsstruck a new low in excellence and readability. But it was not alwaysso. For 50 years U. of C. publications have been among the foremoststudent journals in the land. One of the first great American Uni¬versity student newspapers, THE MAROON fathered such journalisticnotables as correspondents John Gunther, Vincent Sheean andFredrick Kuh; columnists of the calibre of Howard Vincent O'Brienand Charles Collins. Harold Ickes, the “monolithic curmudgeon” wasits first editor. For years Chicago’s journalistic front flourished withcreative effort. The pictorial annual. The Cap and Gown, was oneof the most brilliantly produced yearbooks in America. Politicaland literary journals of the highest quality abounded in profusion.For nearly a decade the decline has been under way. It wassimply accelerated by the war. The grip which a narrow groupmaintained for years on campus publications slowly strangled theinflux of new talent. But it was the new college plan with itsre-emphasis on education and its obliteration of the class-structurewhich heralded chaos for publications. By blotting out the classdivision and reorganizing the University, the new program deprivedpublications of badly needed older talent.* • *Cynicism vs. PublicationsEvert more fundamentally, however, a new air of cynici.<m hasarisen in recent years between the campus and publications. Theefforts of student journalists have been greeted with sneers ofderision and contempt. The ultimate result has been the disintegra¬tion of publications. It may now be known that if there had not beenactual interference in the form of financial aid by th*during the war, THE MAROON, last surviving member of a or.ce-powerful journalistic coterie, would have collapsed for lack of fundsIn recent months the University has reversed its position of in¬difference. For weeks on end the editors of THE MAROON engagedin policy discussion with the Administration, The stand of indif¬ference has been junked and has given way to active support interms of new quarters and facilities. The new arrangement reassertsthe inviolable independence of THE MAROON, but it is significant inthat it indicates the recognition by the University that student publica¬tions are an integral and vital part of the campus, and that it isessential that they be supported.4> * *Ara Thtir Shortcomings Justifiad?Why then it is asked are U. of C. publications not equal inmerit to .those of other Universities? Why, for example, is THEMAROON a weekly rather than a daily as it once was? And whydoes the campus lack a literary journal, a yearbook?The answers are manifestly quite simple. They lie in the nature ofa student publications here and in their unique role. Unlike otherUniversities there is no journalism school at Chicago and there islacking a steady stream of trained talent, essential to the successof any publication. Furthermore the University maintains that pub-'lication should be amateur and it hence refuses to permit studentsto accrue financial gain by virtue of their contributions to publica¬tions. In asserting this position the University automatically chopsdown the two great sources of excellence in every University publica¬tion: Academic credit or profit to the individuals. No large publica¬tion can be cited anywhere which operates without either of both ofthose advantages.Is such a policy defensible? Certainly it is in consonance with thespirit and tone which the University hopes to instill in all studentactivities. Other institutions have professionalized undergraduate pub¬lications. The result, it is true, has been excellent productions. Butthe end of a good publication cannot justify any means, and theresult in too many universities has meant open professionalizationwith subsequent loss of the original purpose for the founding ofstudent newspapers, viz, The publication of student thought andopinion, by and for students.• * •What of the Future?By the same token it should be recognized that such a policy, Inthe last analysis, must mean that the era of great publications atChicago is at an end. The sheer weight of academic program andthe nature of the organization of the University must necessarilylimit the time and effort which can be expended on publications.The determination of the University to maintain amateur standardsand its refusal to permit leaders of publications to rationalize theirsacrifice in time and effort in return for funds assuring their educa¬tion must inevitably cripple, or at the minimum seriously handicap!any large extension program.Nonetheless a new type of publication is arising at Chicago. Bis the result of genuine interest on the part of students involved,a very real sense campus publications are still adjusting to a newUniversity scheme of things. They are in a state of flux and presenta gold mine of ppportunity and potentiality to students both inCollege and the professional schools. It is vital that they be keptindependent of University control, but that they be supported in tnesheer physical sense of space and equipment, and even more ?o mterms of attitude and overall policy.Even more important it is essential that University publicationstruly reflect the new campus and the new student which has arisenat Chicago, totally unlike any other campus and any other student^University publications must be truly representative of a great aca¬demic institution. They must reflect its scholarship, its fundameniaconcern with the issues of the day, its hopes for a new and betterworld.This Is the role and this is the future of Chicago journalism.Friday, February 8, 1948 THE CHICAGO MAROON Pag* •Chancellor's Ideal of AdtdtEducation Lives in U CollegeBy ISUKMAN MAC/MXIn Chancellor Robert M. Hut¬chins’ latest report on the stateof the University, he said: “Wecan be certain . .. that the charac¬teristic phenomenon of the yearsahead will be increasing leisurefor all the people ... Adult educa¬tion must fill the vacuum whichthe reduction in the hours of laborwill create in our lives.”Thus Chancellor Hutchins hasexpressed the moving force be¬hind the University of Chicago’sadult education program. In addi¬tion to the regular courses of theUniversity, the program presentscourses which aid adults in secur¬ing better positions or improvingtheir present business methods.Some applicants are seeking de¬grees, but a majority of the 2500quarterly enrollment attend classesfor the general broadening valueof the course itself. UniversityCollege is the medium throughwhich this opportunity is provided.Not a New PlanThe University College andHome Study Department are nota revolutionary , result of theHutchins administration. Shortlyafter his election in 1902, Presi¬dent William Rainey Harper pre- I sented to the Board of Trusteesof the new university his originalj educational plan. Its purpose was.. to extend college and univer¬sity instruction to the public atlarge . , , and to extend its use¬fulness ... as widely as possible.”Tuition in the downtown col¬lege varies with the department.Regular college and divisionalcourse fees are as high as thoseat the University. The Home StudyDepartment extends its intellec¬tual counsel to 11,000 correspond-ance students at a slightly lowerrate. Many of these letter-learnersare members of the armed forcesall over the world working fordegrees or acquiring generalknowledge while biding their timeawaiting relief.The college correspondencecourses for GI’s have a wide rangeof prices from which to choose. Asoldier eager for college geometrypays $16.50 for three and one-thirdsemester hours of credit in planegeometry. If a GI has a longingfor costume selection in the HomeEconomics Department, it will costhim $30.Executive Program PopularOne of the prize presentationsof University College is its Execu-Official List Registers 91Student Groups on CampusBy CHARLOTTE KERNGuesses by the average University of Chic&go student asto how many student organizations function on the Quadranglesrange from “about a billion’* to “maybe seventeen with thelittle ones thrown in.’’ Both replies are nothing more thanguesses since the office of the Dean of Students lists ninety-onerecognized student groups.Nine fraternities are legally•xjtfiont on campus at this time.Of these none has a stated pur¬pose if the information in the filesof Student Organization is to befollowed to the letter. However,114 U. of C. men participate in theactivities of these groups. Women’sClubs outnumber the social groupsby having 12 clubs and 190 mem¬bers. Tau Sigma Upsilon is theonly women’s club that goes onrecord as having a purpose, whichis, “to provide a framework forsocial life among members of thevarious classes, etc.”Dues for organizations vary. The Women’s Athletic Association withits 250 members is the largestgroup on campus and requires nodues. At least one of the womeiVsclubs sets dues at $30 a year. Con¬trasted against these two is theNegro Student Club which has116 members and has dues of $1quarterly.Organizations to satisfy all ideals,ideas, and interests from A to Zare open to all students on cam¬pus. The general requirementfor admission to almost all groupsis an interest in the policies of theorganization. Only a few clubsspecify select members.People Are Buying"THE WHITE TOWER"James Ramsey Ullman . . . . $300"THE EGG AND I"Betty MacDonald $^75"THE AGE OF JACKSON"Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. . ."IT’S A SECRET"Henry Hoke $2^0DONT MISS THE' BOOK BARGAINS ATHALF PRICEHumor — War BooksGood Fiction and Non-fictionU of C BOOK STORE tive Program. This is a course ofstudy designed *to give business¬men who missed the opportunityof university education a chanceto obtain the education they findthey need. Supported by Dean Coxof the School of Business, this pro¬gram aids both labor and manage¬ment. Firm heads and officials en¬roll seeking to improve correspond¬ence techniques or business man¬agement methods. Union leadersattempt to secure ideas for organ¬ization or different striking meth¬ods. The University College isopen to anyone who feels the needor desire for the courses the part-time study system provides.Another feature of the down¬town branch of liberal educationis the public lecture series whichdeals with a wide variety of sub¬jects; Chamber Music, GovernmentDebt, and Philosophy of Art inChina, are a few of the topics pre¬sented. A highlight of the lecturecourses is Mortimer J. Adler’s“Great Books” ptogram. Manyprominent labor leaders and socialand educational workers speak in¬formatively during a lecture series.Houle Is DeanFifteen months ago, Cyril O.Houle (pronounce Hyule) was ap¬pointed Dean of University Col¬lege. Mr. Houle moved his pipesand papers into an office vacatedby a man who did much for thecause of adult education, Carl F.Huth. Despite his silver-gray hairand stern executive appearance.Dean Houle has assumed this im¬portant post at the educationallytender age of 32. This prominentposition in progressive educationis no idle job.The University College holds itssessions in the late afternoons,evenings and Saturday mornings,for the convenience of the mem¬bers of the student body who workduring the day. Classes are heldon the eighth, ninth and tenthfloors of the Association Building,19 South LaSalle street.James Farrell...(Continued from Page 1)sent in four poems from a book tobe published in April by E. P.Dutton; other poetry has been sub¬mitted by Marie Boroff, a graduatestudent here.Also included in the magazineare a short story by Paul Bartlett,writer for the Saturday Review ofLiterature and Kenyon Review;an essay on music by Cecil Smith,Chairman of the Department ofMusic; and a chapter from a forth¬coming book by Cleanth Brooks,Visiting Professor of English.Professors Walter Blair, GeorgeWilliamson and Napier Wilt, of theDepartment of English; andCharles Hartshorne, Professor ofPhilosophy, compose the panel offaculty consultants.Editor Carolyn Dillard of At¬lanta, Georgia, is a graduate stu¬dent in the School of Social Serv¬ice Administration. She has beendirector of the Georgia W.P.A.writers project. Associate Editorof Versecraft Magazine and Di¬rector of Publications for the RedCross South Eastern Area. The Aristotelians“But, Ronald are you sure this is according to the right rule,at the right time in the right way •.Sidelights on FootlightsCalls "Blithe Spirit'Good Fun, PoiishedNoel Coward’s “Blithe Spirit," pro¬duced by the Players Guild, February4-f) in the Reynolds Club Theatre.Actors listed first appear on February4, 6, 8, those listed second on February7, 9.Ruth Mary AleyAnn BarberEdith Rosaline BiasonJean CookeChas. Condomine David WeaverSid LevyMrs, Bradman. . . Margaret StevensonDr. Bradman.... Franklin AlexanderMadame Arcati. . Felicite PrattHelen AuerbachElvira ..Martha McCainRoberta UngerBy BETTY STEARNSThe Players Guild productionof “Blithe Spirit,” which openedMonday night in the ReynoldsClub Theatre, is good fun, andconsidering the state of most en¬tertainment today, that’s admit¬ting a lot. To be faced with theproblem of saying somethingsearching about this Noel Cowardplay is like trying to analyze adried gourd. It’s nice and shinyon the outside but has nothingwhatever on the inside. “BlitheSpirit” was meant to be polished,sophisticated and above all enter¬taining, and not. I’m sure, to putany problems.Play About NovelistMr. Coward’s play is about anovelist who, because he wants toget some material for a book, in¬vites a medium to conduct aseance at his home. This the me¬dium does so well that the nov¬elist’s first wife is “recalled” fromthe dead, much to the distress ofthe writer and wife number two.Great Load on ActorsRelying heavily on some prettyobvious situations for humor andnot being one of Mr. Coward’sbest pieces, “Blithe Spirit” putsa tremendous load on the actorsif it’s to carry any punch at all.Fortunately, both casts last Mon¬day and Tuesday nights managedvery well. Much credit is dueHarley Smith for his smooth di¬ISBELL'SRESTAURANTthree locations590 Diversey Pkwy.940 Rush St.1435 Hyde Park Blvd. rection, in virtue of which thepace never lagged an instant, andfor the first time in many monthsthe actors knew where they weregoing on the stage.It seems quite natural to com¬pare the two casts playing “BlitheSpirit,” and this early in the run,anyhow, the award goes to thesecond group for presenting amore polished performance.Miss Unger Takes HonorsHonors go to Roberta Unger,who as the writer’s first wifeseemed to me to be almost flaw¬less. She was very, very goodindeed, and gave I should sayabout the best single performancewe have seen on campus for along time. May we see more ofher, and soon. Not that therewas anything at all wrong withMartha McCain’s portrayal of thesame role. Her Elvira is quieter,more British, not so “blithe,” quiteprobable, but not as enchanting.Felicite Pratt, to turn to theMonday cast, was magnificent asMadame Arcati. She not only heldup the Monday night show, butalso managed to steal many ofthe scenes. Her medium had morebravado in it than Helen Auer¬bach’s, which probably accountsfor the fact that she got morelaughs.Jean Cooke and Rosaline Biasonas the maids both presentedslightly different interpretations,and were both fine. Ann Barber,as Ruth, was self-possessed, morein command of the situation thanwas Mary Aley. She had, in addi¬tion, a sympathetic quality whichMiss Aley lacked.Charles Not SatisfyingSince I was not satisfied witheither David Weaver or Sid Levyas Charles, there is really notmuch room for comparison here.Levy, although not very suave,seemed more at home with hispart. He had some very goodmoments, and some very badones, too. Weaver was smooth inplaces, but has a tendency torecite his lines at breakneckspeed. If he’d slow down hisperformance a little I think th*result would be gratifying.Franklin Alexander was allright as the doctor; Margaret Ste¬venson as his wife was pretty bad.Set Well DoneThe set, aside from a fireplacethat would have heated HarpegLibrary, looked very coiy andlivable. 'Perhaps it was getting back tothe Reynolds Club Theatre, per¬haps it was Mr. Smith’s direction,but the fact remains that “Blith4Spirit” is enjoyable, and at longlast, is something worth .seeing. .4\Page 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, February 8, 184^David Sander omVETERANSLawmakers Glib,But G-I's WantHomes, Not TalkLate last week, several of us“professional” veterans went downto Springfield to emphasize to asmall Senate Committee the im¬portance of Governor Green’s call¬ing the State Legislature intrspecial session on Housing,The total delegation numberedfifty men, all veterans from vari¬ous and Sunday organizations, andwe had decided to meet forstrategy at the city’s large hotel,the Abraham Lincoln. Perhaps tenof our group were not white, andthe management of the LincolnHotel assured us, on inquiry, that“there was no law in Illinois bar¬ring persons from public placesbecause of their color.” Relieved,since we were here on more im¬portant business, we went into thehotel’s main dining hall, the“American Room.”Let it be here noted, and thendism ssed for lack of words tomatch feeling, that in the Ameri¬can Room of the Lincoln Hotel inthe Illinois capitol, we were re¬fused service because of the mixedQI BillboardAll veterans who are on terminalleave during the Autumn Quarter of1945 can now receive refunds for pro¬rated shares of tuition which they paidduring that quarter. For informationon procedure the veteran should go tothe Office of the Adviser to veterans.* * *Henceforth Forms 3A and 3B will notbe accepted for single items unless suchitems clearly constitute a final orderfor the quarter. The overhead cost ofwriting up a single form 6 (VeteransOrder Voucher) is more than 2.5 cents.If you hand in four forms 3A at dif¬ferent times for different texts, theoverhead, to say nothing of extra timeused by an overtaxed typing force, ismore than $1 as compared with about2.5 cents for the cost of one combinedorderBesides being expensive, form 6 ishard to get. An order for 10,000 placedlast October for November delivery didnot reach here until January 10. Use asmany forms 3 as seem necessary butplease cooperate by handing them allin at once. The veteran is requested tofollow the instructions contained in themodel forms 3 posted on the bulletinboard outside the Office of the Adviserto Veterans.* * *All veterans may take advantage ofadvance registration which v/ill beginat the end of this month. By registeringin advance the veteran will avoid thecrowd of new students registering atthe beginning of next quarter.So You*re NotPhotogenic . • . Huh!Well ... you may be right—but you can’t possibly be sureuntil ’Dolph Moore has acrack at it— . . . the informalportrait at Incredible prices.^Dolf MiHire6132 S. Ellis Ave.DOR. 4905U.T.1131-1133 E. 55th St.Complete Selectionof Beers andOther BeveragesMibway 0524Blati Beer nature of our group! If this bedemocracy, make the least it. .The Senate Veteran’s Compensa-Install NewHead of CTSRev. Arthur Cushman McGif-fert, Jr., was inaugurated on Mon¬day of this week as president ofthe Chicago Theological Seminary,in a large and colorful ceremonyin Rockefeller Memorial Chapel.In his inauguration address.Rev. McGiflfert said: “If we areto survive the threat of the atomicbomb and instead to make theatomic fission a boon to mankind,it will be because the peoples ofthe earth shall have succeeded inworking out on a planetary scalethe same principles of coordinationwhich we are w’orking out on amicrocosmic scale in institutionalinterrelations and in the field oftheological teaching.”The inauguration of Rev. Mc-Giffert as fifth president of CTSalso opened the 15th annual “Min¬ister’s Week” conference of theseminary. “The Church in theAtomic Age” has been the themeof the conference. tion Committee listened to usexhort them for as long as welasted—four hours. Our reasonsfor asking a special session onhousing were manifold, eachreason being based on carefullygathered statistics.The eminent domain law needsquick amending to make immedi¬ate use of land possible for build¬ing temporary dwellings (we mustnow wait six months after land iscondemned); a revolving fund ofmany millions must be establishedby State grant to make veteranhome-building practical; emer¬gency dwellings must be builtthroughout the State to house theincoming and homeless GI’s;the building codes must be re¬examined, and attempts made todecrease the unit-cost of each newhome; the U. S. Congress must beimportuned by the state to passthe Wagner-Ellinder-Taft HousingBill; a state of Illinois HousingEmerbency must be declared andavailable building materials “com¬mandeered” tob e used only forWell, the Senators ho-hummedand hawed, made numerous tripsto the Smoking Room, asked, fromtime to time, enough questions ofus to keep us awake, and then wew'ere dismissed politely by Sena¬tor Peters, who heads the commit¬tee, saying: “Thank you very muchgentlemen. We know how muchi tmeant to you to come all the waydown from Chicago to talk to us.Something good always comes ofthese meetings.” A VC to Open New OfficeIn Reynolds Club MondayThe opening of an office in the Reynolds Club, campus¬wide action to invoke a Housing session of the State legislatur "and a regular program-meeting of its members and non-mem¬bers, are the three events of importance to veterans on camit was announced this week by the campus chapter of th’American Veterans Committee. ®AVC’s new office, on the second Miller said, marking this step asa “foundation of coordinated or¬ganization activity.”On Monday, members of AVCwill distribute petitions through¬out the campus which urge Gover¬nor Green to recognize the needof State action in this housingemergency. This measure, a spe¬cial session of the legislature toact in the Housing crisis, is needed,AVC feels, to aid everyone, butespecially campus veterans with¬out home.The regular program meetingwill be held Tuesday night in acampus building. Notices, it is an¬nounced, will be posted as tospeakers and place of meeting.floor of the Reynolds club, willbe opened late this week, accord¬ing to Sherwood Miller, secretaryof AVC. “Our office will serve asa gathering place for veterans,”AVC ContinuesDances at IdaThe series of Sunday afternoondances in Ida Noyes Hall sponscft*edby the University chapter of theAmerican Veterans Committee hasproved to be popular enough towarrant continuation, reports Miss■ Dorothy Kidwell, Social Adviser.The attendance has proved, saysMiss Kidw’ell, that the dances arefulfilling a (definite need in the! social program for veterans and allI other students and that the Sundayafternoon time was well chosen,j All students are invited to at-I tend. The dancing begins eachSunday at 3:00 and continues until6:00 p.m. The admission price ofI 48 cents includes refreshments. ClassifiedCLOTHING FOR SALE. Ex-servicemanwishes to sell clothing, dinner jacket,tails and one brown suit, size 35 or :)«’Tailored in Canada. English fabric. CallyiNc^nM_4902 evenings.Room or apartment wanted. Cpl. wiflExch. one room furnished Kitchen¬ette apt. in Madison near U. of Wise,campus for apartment or room nearU. of C. Call Mrs. David Goc^man.DORchester 9100.kmiUemr'fGood News for Unsuspecting T.B. VictimsHere is news that marks another stepahead in the fight against t. b.—news about free tests and new x-rayequipment.As a means of locating possibly oneand a half million undetected cases oftuberculosis, the U. S. Public HealthService plans to offer chest x-ray teststo nearly every American during thenext five years. This survey is madepossible through the use of new equip¬ment which produces chest x-rays onsmall film, thus permitting mass exami¬nations at reduced cost.The development of the new film andthe special fluoroscopic screen was notaccomplished overnight. Organic chem¬ists, physical chemists, physicists, andother technically trained men were re¬quired to make exhaustive studies be¬fore the problem was solved. Specialsensitizers had to be found. Phosphorsand activators had to be formulated forthe screen. Both screen and film had tobe of ultra-fine grain, and the spectralemission of the screen had to be adjustedto the spectral sensitivity of the film.Men of Du Pont are proud of theirpart in the development of this new aidto medical science. The fact that theirefforts helped to contribute a new bene¬fit to society is a heart-warming in¬spiration.• • •Chemical Pest Controlfor more and better food’’Eating”—somebody has remarked—*'is a habit.” It certainly is! Men,women and children all have a firm,fixed habit of eating ... so enough foodmust be grown for them to eat.Du Pont chemists, plant pathologists,entomologists and engineers have helpedthe farmer to increase the nation’sfood supply through their never-endingsearch for better ways of protectingcrops. The development of new fungi¬cides is a typic^al example.Du Pont men were faced with theproblem of finding chemicals to be usedlit treating fungus diseases of plants. Miniature X-Ray Pictures May Uncover 1,500,000 Hidden Casesunder conditions in which the use ofcopper and sulfur proved harmful. Afterlong and intensive research they foundthe answer in the salts and organic de¬rivatives of dithiocarbamic acid—suchas the iron and zinc salts of dimethyldi-thiocarbamic acid, and tetramethyl-thiuramdisulfide.Agriculturists now know Du Pont’siron salt of dimethyldithiocarbamicacid as 'Termate,” and the zinc salt ofthe same acid as ’’Zerlate.” These fungi¬cides are products of Du Pont research—research that is helping the farmer tobigger crops of better quality.• • •Now—Faster Dry CleaningTwo Du Pont products—’’Perclene”perchlorethylerie and ’’Triclene” tri-chlorethylene—have made dry cleaningquick and safe. These fluids clean clothesspeedily, so that delicate garments needremain in the machine only a few min¬utes. They leave no telltale cleaningodor. rQuestions College Men Askabout working with Du Pont“WILL I GET LOST IN ABIG COMPANY?”At Du Pont, every effort is made tosee that individual ability is recog¬nized and rewarded. New chemistsand engineers work in small groupsunder experienced supervisors. Asaptitude is shown, they are givenmore Responsibility. While offeringthe broad avenues of promotion thatgo with size, Du Pont’s group systemassures college men of the sympa- \thetic, friendly conditions of employ¬ment commonly associated withsmaller organizations.More facts about Du Po/if—Listen to “Cavaicado of Amoilca,” Mondays, 8 P.M. EST,on NBC •Its. u.s. PAT.Off-BETTER THINGS FOR BETTER LIVING*.THfOt/GW CHEMISTRYf. I. DU PONT Dl NEMOUaS A CO. (INC)wajawoTON OS, piutwaasFriday, February «, 1948 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page XGophers Invade Maroon LairCoulter, DoddCop l-M GamesTuesday evening at 8 p.m. five men in green skippedspiritedly onto the Field House floor to play a game of basket¬ball with five hopeful boys in white. Approx one hourlater Messrs. Karler and Co. of Coulter had amassed a recordscore in smothering Chamberlain House, 32-11.Only once during the hour didthe game resemble a struggle.After spotting the Coulterrors anearly 10-3 lead, Chamberlainfought and fouled and fought itsway to within four points of thehalf-time Coulter 15.Karler Leads AttackThe galloping greenmen, al¬though grounded twice before, tooktheir second victory with a dis¬play of their usual powerful diver¬sified attack, featuring the speedyforward, Ralph Karler. The leaguescoring leader put in five fieldgoals and three free throws, boost¬ing his total to 35 in four games.Chamberlain suffered its third set¬back in four tries.l)(>dd Trounces LinnThe second game of the evening was almost as monumental as thefirst in that the league-leadingDodders came within one point ofthe newly established high markby defeating Linn, 31-17. Afterskinning Linn early in the firstperiod, Dodd doodled through theremainder of the game with itssecond team in most of the time.In taking its fourth straighteasy victory, devastating Doddjumped Linn into a sixth place tiewith Chamberlain.The schedule for next week:Tuesday:Dodd vs. MathewsCoulter vs. MeadThursday:Linn vs. VincentC'hamberlain vs. SalisburyCoed Contests ... by YlockHiking, dropped from the sports calendar during the war,is being revived this quarter by popular demand. The firstpost-war meeting of the house and divisional hiking repre¬sentatives is scheduled for 5 p. m. Monday, February 11th,at Ida Noyes. The re-institution of a hiking group on campuswill involve much planning; MissBurns of the Physical Educationdepartment requests all represen¬tatives to attend the groundworkfirst meeting.* * «Make your reservations soon forthe VfAA Annual Dinner to be held February 28 at 6 p.m. Highlightsof the evening will be the awardsto the outstanding team and themost valuable player. Tickets areavailable at Ida Noyes or may bepurchased from WAA house rep¬resentatives.STUDENTS!CHICAGO SUNoffers you work to suityour needsArrange your own hours*Here's a chance to be yourown boss❖See AL ELDRIDGE in Room 202Reynolds ClubhouseAny Day Between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.CHICAGO SUN Minnesota Vet... Chicago ReturnsTo Midway FloorAfter Road TripBy MURRAY HARDINGFollowing the shattering defeat at the hands of Illinoislast Monday, Coach Ndrgrens, Maroons returned home to pre¬pare f<jr tomorrow night’s game with Minnesota. It is the next-to-last home game of the season for Chicago.The Minneapolis squad features fast breaks, intricate passing,blocks, and close woven maneu-DON CARLSONLocal cage fans have an oppor¬tunity to watch one of the Con¬ference’s best forwards tomorrownight when Minnesota’s Don Carl¬son takes the floor against theMaroons.Mer-Men DropSeason OpenerOpening their season on Jan¬uary 30 in Bartlett Gym, the Ma¬roon mer-men dropped a dualmeet to Illinois Institute of Tech¬nology by the wide margin of 54-22. Chicago’s next tank struggleis on February 16, same place,against Indiana.The Techawks started out suc¬cessfully by capturing the medley.They then proceeded to sweep allfirst places, with the exception ofthe 440-yd. free-style, ending upwith a clean victory in the relay.Steckmesser proved to be Chi¬cago’s chief point winner, swim¬ming the 440-yd. free-style in afair 6:32 to take the Maroonssole first. He also copped secondplace in the 220-yd. sprint. Rich¬ardson of Chicago placed secondin diving. vers aimed at “setting ‘em up” forshort shots. With 6'8'' Jim Mc¬Intyre at the pivot spot, the Goph¬ers have been remarkably effec¬tive, and, until two quick defeatsby Iowa and Purdue dropped themfrom the ranks of the undefeated,they w^e definite contenders forthe Big 10 championship.Mi'Intyre at CenterThe Minnesota starting five willinclude the above mentioned Mc¬Intyre at center, Don Carlson and iTony Jaros at forwards, and War- ;ren Ajax and Ed Kernan capablyholding down the guard spots.The last four named are all re¬turned vets, two of whom, Jarosand Carlson, had outstanding cagerecords at Minnesota previous totheir entry into the service.Carlson set a Minnesota scoring(record of 134 points in ’40-’41j which has since been eclipsed. He! is rated by Gopher coach Mac¬Millan as one of the best all-around defensive and offensiveplayers he has ever coached.Jaros ETO StarJaros earned a major letter as asophomore in '41-’42, and laterwas chosen to the E.T.O. army all-star team following VE day.Ed Kernan, although a war vet,is a freshman, as is McIntyre.Kernan won 9 major letters inhigh school in football, track, andbasketball.Through January 28th, Minne¬sota had scored an average of 58.6points per game, higest in the con¬ference, as compared to their op¬ponent’s average of 48.6. Jaroswas high individually with 67points for an average of 13.4 percontest.DeGraw Top ScorerChicago, on the other hand, hasan average of 32.3 points per game,in contrast to their opponent’saverage of 66.7. Fred DeGraw isthe chief Maroon threat with 57points for an average of 9.5 agame.After the game tomoirow, theteam leaves town again for the first of a two gam'" series withOhio State on Monday. The follow¬ing Friday the Maroons travel toAnn Arbor for a game with Michi¬gan, and then return home to closetheir season against Ohio, Febru¬ary 22nd.Track TeamSeeks WinNumber OneNorthwestern continued Chica¬go's victory-less varsity trackseason by handing the MaroonCinder-men a 571/4-46V2 defeat inthe Field House on February 2.The track squad will go afterits first win tomorrow at 2:30 inthe same place, when they meetNorth Central and Morton JuniorCollege in a triangular contest.Chicago proved its superiorityin the distance events for the sec¬ond time, since Adams and Mul-cahy ran one-two in both the mileand the two-mile events. Thewinning time for the mile was4:41, while the longer event wasrun in 10:48. Bokman of Chicagoturned in the best performance ofthe day when he succeeded intaking the 880-yd. middle distanceevent in 2:03.6.Learn aModeVs SecretsRealize your own potentialitiesby appointment withTrac V5747 BLACKSTONEDOKCHESTER 4846•OTTLED UNOa AI/THO«TY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY lYCoca-Cola Botfliog Co. of Chicago, loc.Inming thecampuscalendarStriking out on a promising musicalventure • • . the Renaissance Society'sStudent Committee has invited thecampus to have a taste of Gallic witand originality when Janet Fairhankand Henry Jackson givean all Poulenc recitalFriday night atInternational House.Addinganotherpolished noteto the evening isAnina Paipcke... the Renaissance Society’sstudent secretary. She chose this blackrayon crepe dress, because it has an up-to-date French look that seems so right forthe occasion. Just incidentally . . . it’s newsin semi-formal wear with that new lengthand gaily printed cotton top you take offfor dancing . . . It’s perfect for any eveningdate . . . Comes in sizes 10 to 18 . . .Price $49.95. {And remember the place tofind itis Misses* Dresses—Sixth Floort Souths State)Written by: Betty Steams.Cartoons by: Cissie Liebshutz