1 Men's Honor GroupsHold InitiationsBy SID I.EZAKThe men’s honor societies, Owland Serpent, Iron Mask, and Skulland Crescent, started the schoolyear with initiations of the men•who excel in activities and schol¬arship in the senior, junior andsophomore years, respectively. Thesocieties resumed activities lastyear after a four-year wartimelull. Uniformly, they hope tokeep their standards of admissionhigh and make their organizationsrepresentative of the campus as awhole so that election will be abona-fide honor.New Owl and Serpent MembersOwl and Serpent, king of cam¬pus honor groups, initiated fivecampus leaders in a 50-year-oldritual. Ira Corn, student mana¬ger of the Student Association;Lew Johnson, captain of the base¬ball team; Ed Armstrong, ex-Blackfriar wheel; Ray Poplett,Editor of the Maroon, and FredDeGraw, basketball strongman,were the five new initiates.Iron Mask InitiatesIroji Mask, organized on cam¬pus since 1896, for recognition oftop junior men, initiated BillBoylston, Dick Gibbs, HarmonCraig, Marv Greenberger, BillMontgomery, Jim Patton, JimRadcliffe, Ben Vineyard, andMarsh Wiley on Monday night.r.8 New Skull and CrescentsSkull and Crescent in a massceremony at the Sigma Chi houseadded 38 members to their ranks.The new Skulls are Anson Cherry,Lou Fitzgerald, A1 Staz, Joe Skon,Bob Schlagel, Bob Smith, BobKlein, Charlie Reeves, Russ Han¬son, Jules Strickland, KennethSears, Harry Rose, Bob Wiley,John Dolan, Bob Fenton, WendellAlexander, Bob Anderson, IrvingScott, A1 Popham, Price Jackson,Ray Freeark, Jonny Sharp, DickAtiderson, Bob Murray, BobJones, Jim Barnett, Dick Atkin¬son, John Schwartz, Bob Rose, JoeSparrow, Bill Lowry, Robert Mc¬Dowell, Bill Hey, John Bucking¬ham, Abrams, Goldstein, Cdstoff,Willie Meehan, Geist, and MillardElms. Forum toDebate -Four members of the Universitydebate team will appear in thefirst public debate of the seasonWednesday, October 23 at 7:30p.m. in the Graduate EducationBuilding, room 126.William Birenbaum and LowdenWingo will take the affirmativeside of the national university de¬bate question of the year, •ShouldLabor Have an Active Share inManagement.” The negative willbe represented by Sheldon Steinand Philip Ruben. Stein was amember of the team which repre¬sented Chicago at the RockyMountain speech conference lastyear. The others are newcomersto the squad.Two other members of the Stu¬dent Forum, Walter Good and BertSimon, will speak on the negativeside of the same question thatevening at the Lakeshore Speaker’sassociation.Intercollegiate ScheduleDuring the course of the fallquarter, debate teams will competeagainst the following universitysquads; Loyola University, Mun¬delein College, Northwestern Uni¬versity, The Lakeshore Speaker’sassociation and Ohio Stale. Otherlocal forensic and political organ¬izations offer competition for de-(Continued on Page 3)Krogman andFriend—•Dr. Krogman, our leadinganthropologist, stole thelimelight from the local pile-driver yesterday when hewas seen walking across thecampus with a huge skeletonslung over his shoulder. Ex¬plained Dr. Krogman to themany curious spectators:“Someone has to move thisthing and I seem to be theone.”Committee Report toInter-Org Not ReadyBy JERRY HALLAMHamstrung by a small attend¬ance with less than 20 of over 100campus organizations represented,Inter-organizational council yes¬terday afternoon stumbled into itsthird quarter of existense. Thenieeting was held in Ida Noyesat 4:30 p.m.Chief purpose of the meetingwas to hear a report from PeteGunnar’s committee to study thepossibility of representative stu¬dent government here.Report Not ReadyThe report, however, was notready. Jane Colley, I-O president,asked for opinions from the dele¬gates present on the feasibility ofstudent government at Chicago.Most of the delegates had littleor nothing to say, and the girls’dormitory representative assertedthat the girls were mostly disin¬terested.Ira Corn next pointed out thatstudent support of the activitiesticket has been very poor. Cornsaid that sales* have succeeded^ inspite of the lack of backing byeither the student body as a wholeor any group within the studentbody.Drawing an analogy, Corn fur¬ ther asserted that in hi§ opinionstudent government cannot be suc¬cessful as long as the majorityof students on campus are not%interested in the campus and itsactivities.Hard Work AheadThe discussion of student gov¬ernment ended with Gunnerpointing out that a good deal ofhard work will remain to bedone even after I-O gives thegreen light to a student govern¬ment plan. The constitution willhave to be written and approvedby I-O, approved' by the Boardof Trustees, and then voted on bythe students, he said.Other business of the meetingincluded the election of DietzSchulze as secretary and a discus¬sion of the community fund drive.The latter led to a discussion ofthe possibility of I-O holding onetag day a year. The proceeds ofthis tag day, it was proposed,would be distributed to all thoseorganizations that ordinary usethis method to raise money.Nothing definite was decidedand the meeting adjourned withthe decision to meet at 4:30 p.m.next Wednesday. Howarth Co-opCompromise OutReturnOf PulseBy Oct. 28Pulse, the Time-like campusnews magazine, will de^nitely beout October 28. Originally plannedfor the first of the month, publica¬tion of the magazine was delayeduntil arrangements were completedwith the printers.The publishers, Paul W. Bryderand Leslie E. Waller, promise abigger and better Pulse this year*.The magazine will be a slickpapered, 48 page survey of every¬thing of interest to the student inChicago and on campus. Like Time,Pulse plans no competition withnewspapers, but will condense,organize and interpret the newsinto pleasurable reading.Cartoons by CissieInterspersed with Cissie Lieb-schutz’s cartoons and scores ofpictures, the review of news willbe broken down into many fea-tiwrcd departments. Entertain¬ments, amusements, and culturalactivities in Hyde Park, Wood-lawn an^ Kenwood areas will becross-indexed every month.Included in the monthly review¬ing service will be I’eports on cur¬rent books, popular, classical andjazz records, the theatre, neigh¬borhood movies, and art on cam¬pus. Radio Midway will run itsown feature article.Pulse plans to publicize everystudent organization on campus.During the course of the year,complete accounts will be givenof the agenda and organizationof each group.Full Length FeaturesBryder and Waller promisedseveral* full-length features on(Continued on Page 9)Douglas,Rowan toSpeakCongresswoman Emily TaftDouglas and Representative Wil¬liam A. Rowan, congressman fromthe university district, will speakat an open meeting in Mandelhall at 4:30 p.m. October 30.Sponsorship of the meeting is inthe hands of AVC, the CHICAGOMAROON and the newly formedcampus chapter of the Young Citi¬zens PAC. Len Schroeter, chair¬man of the AVC committee handl¬ing arrangements, explained thatthe meeting is part of AVC’s gen¬eral program of arousing campusinterest in the fall elections.The Republican candidates op¬posing Mrs. Douglas and Rowanhave also been invited to partici¬pate in the meeting. They areWilliam G. Stratton, opposing theincumbent Mrs. Douglas for rep¬resentative-at-large for the stateof Illinois and Richard Vail, run¬ning against Rowan, the incum¬bent in the second Congressionaldistrict.Neither Stratton nor Vail haveas yet accepted the committee’sinvitation to participate.MAROON SCHOOLThe second and final classof the MAROON trainingschool will meet tomorrowafternoon at Z p.m. in theMAROON offices on the sec¬ond floor of the Reynoldsclub.Students who could notattend the first class are in¬vited to attend this session. S-F SquadOn TourThe field work committee of theStudent Federalist organization isplanning to send speaking groupsover the Chicago area to talk tovarious high school and collegeassemblies on the problems ofworld federation. Pat Keeney,chairman of field work, said thather group was setting up a speak¬ers’ bureau to select, train and as¬sign student federalists who even¬tually might tour a large portionof the mid-west. “We’ll probablydo some organizing for S. F., too”she. added. The committee willhold auditions next Monday at 2p.m. in Burton Court.Another important group in S. F.is the committee for public infor¬mation. Campus polls on federationquestions will be conducted. ThePolitical Research Bureau willengage in querying congressmenand other political figures as totheir position in international af¬fairs and reporting to the public.The Research Committee, anothersub-committee, will study the var¬ious plctns and problems in federalworld government. “We on C. P. I.have great plans” stated MikeDaniels, “but I hope no one mis¬takes us for the Communist PartyInternational!”Quincy Wright and G. A. Bor-gese spoke last night before aStudent Federalist Forum , Poll.kneeling on “What Should the U.B.policy be toward the ifniteef Na¬tions?” After a discussion, a pollwas taken on the question. TheForum meeting in November willbe on the control of atomic powerand will feature a nuclear physicistand a sociologist."Little Foxes"Offered NextBy BETTY STEARNSFrom the office of the Assist¬ant Dean of Students comes theannouncement that George Blair,campus drama head, has beenapp>ointed director of Theatre-Stu¬dent Radio Productions. CharlesLown, Players Guild technicalmanager, will be known officiallyfrom now on as theater designer,and Caroline Rose will act asBlair’s assistant. Miss Rose, whoworked with Blair at the Univer¬sity of Georgia, has a B.A. indrama, and is studying for anM.A. in philosophy at this Uni¬versity.Blair has announced that Lil¬lian Heilman’s popular drama.The Little Foxes, will be theGuild’s first Fall quarter produc¬tion. The production, which willbe directed by Blair and designedby Lown, will open in Mandel hallNovember 21 for a thfee-nightrun. The cast includes MarthaMcCain, Dawn Pfeiffer, Lois Shep¬herd, Christine Fitzpatrick, LewisMusil, Mark Ashin, Ronald Reif-ler, Harvey Rose, Richard Law¬rence, and William Alton.“Ghosts” in DecemberHenrick Ibsen’s sensational play,“Ghosts,” will be presented by theGuild in the Reynolds club earlyin December. This experimentalproduction will make maxirnumuse of space and time and willgive training to inexperienced ac¬tors. “Ghosts,” double cast, willrun four nights and four after¬noons. Tryouts for “Ghosts” willbe held Thursday, October 24,(Continued on Page 11) Refusing to stand .by thecompromise agreement itsagents had drafted with stu¬dent representatives, the Oak-land-Kenwood Property Owmers Association pressed to havethe City of Chicago evict mem¬bers of the Howarth Co-opfrom a recently-purchased res¬idence at 4850 Greenwood ave.The compromise provided thatthe Co-op could occupy the build¬ing until an impartial arbitratorruled the housing shortage wasover. As a result of the Associa¬tion’s non-acceptance, the City ofChicago’s suit against HowarthCooperative is scheduled to beheard before Judge Dougherty' inthe License Court, October 24th.Howarth House, owned cooper¬atively by University of Chicagostudents, is being prosecuted bythe city following PropertyOwners’ complaint that Co-ops area violation of the jroning ordinance.Unoccupied at the time of itspurchase, Howarth House now ac¬commodates thirty people.Because of its great distancefrom campus, the Co-op plans tomove farther south. According toRay Munts, its president, the moveis at present impossible.“We will accept any compro¬mise,” Munts declared, “that rec¬ognizes the difficulties studentsare having in finding a place tolive.”Contacted by telephone, an of¬ficial of the Property Owners’Association declined to comment.DunhamTo PlaySonny Dunham and his bandwill furnish the music for the an¬nual Inter-fraternity ball, it wasannounced yesterday by I-F coun¬cil.The council also announced No¬vember 27 as the date for the tra¬ditional function, which this yearwill be held in the Congress hotel.Plans for a beauty contest leadingto selection of an I-F ball queenare under way, and, full detailswill be in next Friday’s MAROON.Ten Finalists in ContestPresent proposals call for ap¬pointment of a committee by thecouncil to consider photographssubmitted in the contest. 'Ten fi¬nalists will be chosen from theentrants, and selection of thequeen .will be made on the basisof interviews,Dunham’s band, famous forSonny’s trumpet and trombonesolos, is widely known for itssmooth and modern arrangements.For several years Dunham jriayedwith Glen Gray before forming hisown outfit. His present group isthe result of several years of re¬vision and revamping, and he iswell on the way to regaining hisformer extensive popularity.Russ AustinBack Soon“Russ is on his way home, andI expect his ship to arrive in NewYork shortly,” says Mrs. SonjaAustin, wife of Russell Austin,University of Chicago delegate tothe International Students’ con¬ference held in Prague fromAugust 17 to August 31.Austin, elected delegate in acampus-w’ide vole last May, wasalso elected chairman of the 25-man American delegation.The two-week conference set it¬self three objectives: the con-(Continued on Page 3)%■■■V.'if-■4;.■ttr' Calendar of Events ICAGO MAROONNext Week onQuadranglesKathleen Overholser, Calendar EditorItems to be included in the MAROON calendar must be received inthe MAROON office by noon, Tuesday, of the week of publication.Address all notices to “The Calendar Editor.”OCTOBER 18ANNUAL MIDWEST CONFERENCE ON INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS.Theme: “Industrial Relations under Conditions of High-level em¬ployment and The Wage-Price Spiral. Programs with completeinformation may be obtained at the School of Business, Haskell102, Leon Mandel Hall. 9:30 a.m.LECTURE. “Great Contributions of World Cultures. Persia: The cul¬tural Bridge between Asia and The Mediterranean.” Sunder Joshi,Lecturer in the University College. University College, 19 S. LaSalle St. 6:45 p.m.BRIDGE LESSONS. Ida Noyes Library. 6:45 to 9:00 p.m.LUTHERAN STUDENT ACTIVITIES. “Lutheranism and the Human¬ities. Chapel House. 8 p.m.SPECIAL FILM SHOWING. “Foreign Correspondent” with Joel Mc-Crea, Loraine Day, and Herbert Marshall. International HouseAssembly Hall. 8 p.m. Admission $0.50.CHESS CLUB MEETING. South Lounge Reynolds Club. 2 p.m.OCTOBER 20UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE. Canon Bernard Iddings Bell,Advisor to the Bishop of Chicago on educational affairs and Uni¬versity pastor to Episcopalian students. Rockefeller Chapel.11 ajn.OPEN HOUSE. Kelly Hall. Refreshments, dancing. 2 to 6 p.m.OCTOBER 21LECTURE. “Mental Telepathy-Trick or Science?” Dunninger withdemonstratioiMl from the audience. Sinai Temple Fonun, heldat Hyde Park High school Auditorium, 62nd and Stony Island.8:15 p.m. Admission $0.90.OCTOBER' 22MEETING. Christian Science Organization. Thorndike Hilton Chapel.7:30.LECTURE. “Civil-Military Relationships in American Life-Recruit¬ment and.Training of New Armed Forces.” .Hanson W. Baldwin,Military ^itor of the New York Times. Leon Mandel Hall. 4:30p.m.LECTURE (ILLUSTRATED). Cezanne by Sir Kenneth Clark formerlyDirector of National Gallery in London. Leon Mandel Hall. 8:30p.m.RELIGIOUS CLASS. “The Greeks fr(«n the Beginning to the Olym¬pian Conquest,” third in a series of classes on “Christianity andClassical Culture.” De Sales House, 5735 University Ave. 7:00 p.m.RELIGIOUS CLASS. “The Existence of God,” third in the course onthe “Problems of Being” De Sales House. 8 p.m.LECTURE-FORUM. Third lecture in the new lecture-forum series“Health Problems of Nuclear Energy” by Dr. J. J. Nickson, instruc-(Continued on Page 4)Come to theRUMBACONTESTEvery Thursday Night—9:00 P.M. to 11:00 P.M.Danceto theSubtleMusic ofDon Orlando(fermeriy of ibo Choi Faroe)And His Fompus Lotin-Americon Bond .Sunday BrunchAn endless variety of deli¬cious foods in a club-like at¬mosphere of charm andconviviality. A real treat tostart the week. You’ll seeyour friends here. Servicefrom 11:30 a.m. to 2:00p.m. Budget Prices.Group PartiesYou’ll be surprised how in¬expensively you can haveyour next party at the fa¬mous BREAKERS. Plenty ofParking Space!Plenty ofMusic!HOTEL SHERRYPlenty of Fun!**The Breakers**53rd and the Lake FAIrfax 1000 700 EntryQives DanceTonightBurton-Judson’s 700 entry isstaging an informal dance tonightstrictly for residents of the houseand their dates. Records, refresh¬ments, and an entertaining floorshow presented by Dot Gregory,Lois Cone, Fred Grunfeld, DickGrossman, and Don Chapp willround off th^ social evening.Kelly Hall cordially invites thecampus to its open house thisSunday, October 20, from 2 to 6p.m. Refreshments, dancing, andthe upstairs rooms open to thegeneral public are promised byNancy Fink, social chairman, assecurity for an enjoyable Sundayafternoon. Mday, October 18, IttgDon ShieldsAYC Will ElectProject HeadsNext meeting of the campusAVC will be held Wednesday at7:30 p.m. in Kent 106. On theagenda will be the election ofchairmen for the political anddomestic affairs committees, to re¬place the posts, recently resignedby Ned Rosenheim and Russ Allen.The rest of the meeting will bedevoted to discussion on a na¬tional dues referendum, a reporton atomic energy control, and theplatform of the campus delegationto the Chicago area AVC conven¬tion to be held October 25, 26, 27at the Stevens hotel. Acting-Chairman Dick Pelz terms thismeeting very important and urgesthat all campus members and vet¬erans attend.Hava Yom Joiaad tliaSTUDENT ASSOCIATIONYET? DONIH1BLD8.The TravelingBazaarAny University women who would like to tryto fill Janet Halliday’s shoes are invited to peruseMademoiselle magazine’s conspicuously posted an¬nouncement in the MAROON office (2nd floorof the Reynolds Club, last door to the left). Fortliose of you who don’t remember her, Janet lookedat the same ad two years ago and decided she’dtake a crack at Mile’s College Board. Well, sheended up editor of their ’45 College Issue and fromthere won Vogue’s Prix de Paris. Bazaar (staginga one column campaign for this generation’s ex¬patriate movement) regrets to add that she turneddown her trip to Paris just to get married, butanyway the race is on again; so if you’re interestedcome in and look the ad over.So now the Editor (that’s Poplett, you’ve heardabout him) says we’ve got to talk some more about the Clubs. It seemssome messy circulation deal has been arranged with Inter-Club Coun¬cil, and club girls are apt to take a happier attitude about selling theMaroon if they’re mentioned in the columns. So take a long lingeringlook at the gal who sells you this issue. She’s a club girl and likes tobe recognized as such. If you’d like to know what clirf) she belongsto, take another look. If she’s a reasonable facsimile of a Sigma andacts like a Mortar Board, you can bet your boots she’s a Chi Rho Sigma.If she’s quasi-Quad looking type, she certainly won’t be a Quad,Mortar Boards, Sigmas, Quads, and Wyvems, never look like MortarBoards, Sigmas, Quads, and Wyverns if they can help it, because almostevery other kind of club girl on campus tries very hard to. Which isjust about enough about clubs.Nick Melas, Phi Gam’s prize wrestling star, is sparking a full blownrevival of the Order of the C, once powerful lettermen’s organization,that was in danger of going the way of football. All interested C menshould watch the next few issues of the MAROON for details ofmeetings.By the way, those of you who have been reluctant to buy Activitiesbooks had better get busy. Sales have been so successful that the com¬mittee has been able to sign Desi Arnaz and his orchestra for November1 C Dance . . . C Dance that is. The more tickets sold the better thebands that can be got. Maybe if a few more books are sold, Mr. Arnazcould be pursuaded to bring his wife along. And spealdng of theActivities committee, have you gotten a look at the executive boardlately? Dietz Schulze has a big white patch on her eye and Tom Rem-mington has his arm in a sling. There’s theoretically no connection.PERSONALITIES IN THE NEWS DEPT.; Debbie, a small blackCocker pup, property of Mrs. Anson Cherry, would be a likely candi¬date for ILtppa Beta Phi if KBPHI initiated women. Debbie has beentablehopping in U.T. and has discovered beer. As a matter of fact Mrs.Cherry is covered with shame when forced to admit that Debbie hasnot only discovered beer, she is positively addicted to it. It’s becomequte a problem keeping her out of U.T.Note: The bleachers set up along side the construction job blossomedout with a large sign last week: “Reserved for the Committee on SocialThought.”THE BIRTH OF A NATIONInterpretations of American history are a drug on the market. It is a great relief to be ableto read original documents and get unprejudiced impressions (except insofar as we are our¬selves prejudiced) and savor the personalities of the men who made and reported events.The Edwards Lithoprinted Facsimiles of documents of the American Revolution—the origi¬nals are in the Clements Library of the University of Michigan—cover the revolutionary pe¬riod from Lexington and Concord to the surrender of Cornwallis. Because the typewriterhad not yet brought a deluge of verbiage, the letters and documents are all brief and to thepoint. Personalities stand out in high reli/ef—Washington's letter to Lafayette, beginning''my dear Marq,” Rachel Revereds affectionate note of warning to her husband, Major An-dre*s pathetic letter written on the eve of his execution, Mrs. Benedict Arnold*s tardy dis¬covery that treason did not pay her, even if her husband did escape to England, Sir HenryClinton*s rather naive attempt to conceal a message within a message, Cornwallis* stiff, formalrequest for surrender terms, and Washington*s equally formal, but far less unbending an¬swer—and the flavor of the revolutionary period becomes far more palatable than academichistorians have ever made it.What we now know as on-the-spot reporting, done in the days when penmanship was an artand punctuation more than a series of dashes, makes the birth of this nation as exciting asFOREVER AMBER, in its way, that is.PART I—Lexington and ConcordPART II—Tfce Tragedy of the Rfaywrighf GeneralPART 111—20,000 Pounds for West Point! The PM That FailedPART IV—Tho Amenities of YorkfownPART V—The Americans vs. the BritishPART Yl—Women of the ResolutionMANY OUTSTANDING BOOKS ON AMERICAN HISTORY ARE NOWAVAILABLE, AND WE SUGGEST:Commager and Nevins: HERITAGE OF AMERICAJames T. Adams: ALBUM OF AMERICAN HISTORYCurti: GROWTH OF AMERICAN THOUGHTDeYoto: YEAR OF DECISIONCurti: ROOTS OF AMERICAN LOYALTYJoseph Dorfmon: ECONOMIC MIND IN AMERICAN CIVILIZA¬TION, 2 Volumes *INIVERSin OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORErFriday, October~18, ?®46Desi Arncn and Band Will 'Play at Daneis November IDesi Arnaz and his big nameband will be featured at the *‘C”dance to be held November 1 atIda Noyes hall. The “C’* dance,which promises to be the biggestsocial event of the quarter, issponsored by the Student SocialCommittee in conjunction with theStudent Activities Association.Band Is Smooth and LatiiiyDesi Arnaz, who recently ap¬peared in the title role of themovie Cuban Pete, and his 19-piece band are currently featuredon Bob Hope’s show. They havejust finished an engagement at theChicago Theatre. The Arnaz bandis famous for its Latin rhythm,but,has built up a popular reper¬toire of smooth and slow dancemusic. Arnaz has the extremegood fortune of being the husbandof Lucille Ball.The big affair will begin at 9pm. and is scheduled to go onuntil 1. There will be dancingin the gym, the foyer, and on thesecond floor. A coke bar will beset up on the third floor.Dance Is SA FunctionAdmission to the dance is $1.50per person or free of charge tomembers of the Student Associa¬tion, who present their associationbooklet at the door. For thosewho have not yet joined the Stu¬dent Association, arrangementshave been made with the Bursar’soffice to enable students to paytheir dues and pick up their book¬lets at the information office.This service will be available forthe rest of the quarter. The Stu¬dent Association will also have adesk set up at the dance for thosewho have found it inconvenient togo to the Bursar’s. Arrangements have also beenmade for those vet wives whosehusbands are members of the Stu¬dent Association to attend thedance free. Complimentary tick¬ets will be given out at the mainoffice in Ida Noyes before thedance. There will be a tax of25c on each complimentary ticket.Campus Activities CoordinatedThis dance has been made pos¬sible by the Student Association.It is the first attempt at the Uni¬versity of Chicago to coordinate allcampus activities. From the re¬sponse that the Student Associa¬tion has gotten from the studentbody it is apparent that the asso¬ciation has been very well re¬ceived. With the kind of enthusi¬astic support that the associationhas had from the students thisquarter, the Student Associationwill be able to plan more, biggerand better dances and social func¬tions for the benefit of the Uni¬versity as a whole.N.Y. Times MilitaryEditor to Speak HereHanson W. Baldwin, New YorkTimes military editor, and PaulH. Appleby, assistant director ofthe Budget Bureau, will give thenext two lectures for the CharlesR. Walgreen Foundation for thestudy of American institutions.On Tuesday Baldwin will speakon the “Recruitment and Trainingof the New Armed Forces.”“Civilian Control of a Departmentof National Defense” will be Ap¬pleby’s subject Thursday.EARLYBIRDSo lio eoteliM • worm. Who wantsa worm thasa days? Fact is, whatha raally catehas is a WARMovarcoat at what promisas to baa substantial saving ovar futurapricas. At Eria you'll find maltons,eovarts, twaads and soft flaacas—all in dashing naw 1947 sjtylas.Pricas start at $29.75. It's a surabat thay won't ba ehaapar latar,so HURRY. HURRY, HURRYIFOOTBALL FORECAST by Jimmy ivontPradictloas ora tS% Aeearofa. On tba olr Taasdayand Tkvrsdoy, Radio Station WIND, t:4S to 9:00 P.M.CLOTHING COMPANY,17 E. ilRD ST., COR. MARYLANDJuRt a few block, fraai the U. of C. campiu. North aide atOre—646 N. ClarkSt., cor. Eric. Both atorca open Monday and Thuraday cveninsa till 9:00.BIS'S®Froe boaMM IVICir. Write JMb M. HyL D. 1375 B’way. N. Y. II THE CHICAGO MAROONSA MembersAsked toMeet Oct 29A full meeting of all membersof the Student Association will beheld on Tuesday, October 29, itwas announced last Tuesday byIra Corn. The announcement fol¬lowed a decision of the executiveboard to appoint standing commit¬tees to conduct the Association’sbusiness. All students holdingactivity tickets are members ofthe Student Association and thecommittee members will be chos¬en from among them.To Elect Permanent MembersAt a second Student Associationmeeting, to be held later in thequarter, permanent members ofthe executive board will be elect¬ed, Corn announced. The methodof nomination and election will beexplained at the meeting on the29th.Any member of the StudentAssociation who wishes to serveon one of the five committees tobe set up at the first meeting onOctober 29 may apply to Ira Cornin the Student Association officeon the second floor of the Reyn¬olds Club.* The committees willinclude: financial, constitutional,policy, ways and means and thesecretariat.Sales Campaign to ContinueThe principal job of these com¬mittees will be to plan the con¬tinuation of the activity ticketsales campaign in the next twoquarters, following the pattern laidin the present campaign, whichnetted sales of over 1,500 tickets.Active so far in the sales cam¬paign have been: Nancy Kerr,Harmon Craig, Lois Swan, BobJones and Evelyn Schmitt. Inter¬club and I-F Council also aided,as well as Mr. Hoeppner at theinformation desk in the Bursar’soffice.Austin . . .(Continued from Page 1)sideration of responsibilities ofstudent youth in the post-warworld; the creation of a new worldorganization of students; and theorganization and coordination ofstudent activities on an interna¬tional scale.American youth organizations,such as the YMCA, YWCA, Na¬tional Catholic Youth council, Na¬tional Intercollegiate ChristianYouth council, American Youth forDemocracy and others, as well asten universities, sent delegates tothe conference.MAROON’S DEPT. OFDESPERATION(Notice on Social Service Administra*tion Bulletin Board)“MEMORANDUM TO S.S.A. STU¬DENTS;Please sign for visit to Cook Coun¬ty Psychopathic Hospital on BulletinBoard at Cobb 115.”Be Sure to Bring Your I-D Cardyour exoct place at all Hmas. No fumbling,NO lost placos. No tost tim*. Just put HIn your book whan you start roodSng. Hhohh your ploco to tho lost pogo.INTRIGUING . Mechanically perfoct.Tho tab flips up and bock os you turneach page... slides back and marks yourploco as you press the book closed. Pockedio o smart box with instructions inside.AN IDEAL YEAR ROUND «IR AT^|00Sold *n book and stotionery departmentseverywhere. If you cannot be served byyour local store, moll us $1.00 postolmoney order and wo shall send you on"E-Z Mork" directly postpoid.SAPPHIRE PRODUCTS. D«P»-28 West 22nd Sf.. New York 10. N. Y.Mede hi U. S. A: * Pat. No. 2387607 Pa«« SInternational House Hews• French Club Meets Today• Show Heart of Paris TonightPolifieal UnionFormingA meeting of all studentsinterested in reviving theStudent Political Union,active before the war, willbe held today at 2:30 p.m.in the Reynolds Club thea¬ter.Carlson WinsAMA Awardfor SerxieeDr. Anton J. Carlson, authorwith Victor Johnson, of the out¬standing physiology textbook. TheMachinery of th^ Body, was nom¬inated at the San Francisco ses¬sion of the AMA to receive thedistinguished service medal of theAmerican Medical Association.Famous for his original studiesaffecting every possible phase offunction in the human body. Dr.Carlson was professor of physiol¬ogy at the University of Chicagofrom 1909 until his retirement in1940 with the title, Frank P. Hix-on, distinguished service professoremeritus. The Journal of theAmerican Medical Associationsays: “His name ranks with thatof the great physiologists of alltime not only for his scientificstudies but also for his demon¬stration of courageous leadershipas a citizen and as a man of learn¬ing.” •• * eCarl F. Wittke last Saturday re¬ceived the Ohioana medal forAgainst the Current: the Life ofKarl Heinzen, published by theUniversity of Chicago Press, atthe annual Ohioana meeting inColumbus.Chosen as the best biographywritten by an Ohioan in 1945,Against the Current was one offour outstanding works honoredby the Ohioana Library Associa¬tion as a part of its program tostimulate interest in books by orabout Ohioans, books with Ohiobackgrounds, and music by Ohi¬oans.Dr. Wittke is professor and deanof the College of Arts and Sciencesat Oberlin College. He has beenespecially interested in the history,of immigration to the UnitedStates for many years and, inAgainst the Current, tells the storyof a 19th century radical reform¬er—a voluntary exile from Ger¬many to the United States—whoseobservations on the events of histime have striking meaning fortoday. ^Forum Debate(Continued from Page 1)bate and round table groups allduring the year.Denver in FebruaryThe Rocky Mountain speechconference, which draws championteams from the middle and farwest universities, will be held inDenver February 13,14, and 15.University of Chicago speakerswon second place in the contestlast year and Hubert Wax, Forumdirector, said that he expected totake a winning team to the mile-high city this time.Debate team members and roundtable groups are taken from themembers of the Student Forum.The Forum sponsors two radiobroadcasts each week during whichfour students informally discuss aproblem current in national orinternational affairs.Wax said today that there wasroom for more members and urgedall interested students to inquireat the Forum office, room 303 inMandel hall. Office hours are from1 to 5 pjn. Mondays through Fri¬day. By CARROLL ATWATERAt International house this aft¬ernoon, the French club will holdits second meeting of the quarterin Room A at 4 p.m. There willbe informal conversation and teafor all who come. Friday nightthe movie postponed from lastweek, Gribouille or Heart of Paris,will definitely be presented. Star¬ring the late Raimu and MicheleMorgan, Gribouille will be shownin the assembly room at 8 p.m.,admission of 50 cents payable atthe door.On Sunday afternoon residentsof International house and theirguests are cordially invited to alibrary shower presented by thePhilippine Women’s Sponsor com¬mittee. All books and librarysupplies donated by guests will besent to the Philippine Women’suniversity in Manila.Folk-dancing will be held asusual in the assembly hall Tues¬day evening, 8 to 10 p.m., admis¬sion 10c for residents, 25c fornon - residents.. On Wednesdayevening, Oct. 23, the Scandina¬vian group will convene in RoomA at 7 p.m. The Spanish clubwill occupy Room A on Thursdayevening, Oct. 24, at 8 p.m.The foreign language tables areonce again in session, under thefollowing schedule: Scandinaviantable, Wednesday at 6; Greek ta¬ble, Thursday at 6; German ta¬ble, Friday at noon; French table,Friday at 6. All students andcommunity members are invitedto brush up their accents at theseepicurean gatherings in Int House’scafteria.YCPAC CanvasesDistrict, SeeksDouglas SupportMembers of the Young Citizens*Political Action committee aremaking a house-to-house politicalcanvas of the area surrounding theuniversity on behalf of Represent¬atives William A. Rowan and Em¬ily Taft Douglas, candidates forre-election in the November 5election.Monday night at the YC-PACmeeting, Dick Watt, representingthe Independent Veterans commit¬tee for Rowan and Douglas, out¬lined the political issues involvedin the campaign, reviewed thepast action of the candidates inoffice, and instructed the mem¬bers in the techniques of politicalcanvas work.Present Committees Kept IntactDuring the meeting it was votedto keep the present executive com¬mittee members in office until thefirst general meeting followingthe national election. Committeemembers are: Chairman, MartinLewis; secretary-treasurer, Flor¬ence Cohen; committee chairmen:action, Fred Zimring; membership,Kathis Podolsky; publicity, Mur¬ray Newman; members-at-large,Ruth Rosner, and John Schwartz.Interested students may obtainmore information about tne workfrom the temporary Yc-PAC officeon the third floor of Mandel hallin the present AVC office. Theoffice will be open from 3 to 5p.m. Monday through Friday un^til the election.BRIDGE LESSONSA six-weeks series ofweekly bridge lessons spon¬sored by Ida Noyes councilwill begin this evening at6:45 p.m. in the library ofIda Noyes hall. The lessons,which will be taught as informer years by Mrs. Lea¬vitt, arc offered free ofcharge to all students, theirwives or husbands, faculty,alumni, and University em¬ployees.Page 4CHIlirasii Maroiin THE CHICAGO MAROONThe Univenity of Chicaco Official Stadent NewapapeeACP AU-Amertcan, 1945, 1946Published every Friday during the academic year by THE CHICAGOMAROON, an Independent student organlxation of the University of ChicagoMember Associated Collegiate Press and Intercollegiate Press. Time and TideBy TERRY DE HUECKAs I write, a voice, deep with emotion, is coming across the thou¬sands of miles separating us from now historic Nurnburg. Slowly,carefully enunciating each word, it is describing the climax of aperiod in our civilization. The voice belongs to an American news¬paperman, who is telling his country that tonight eleven men are dead,one by his own hand, the remainder dangling at the end of a piece ofhemp. By the time you read this, these eleven men will be returningto the earth from which they came.In the words of Justice Jackson, their execution represents the“moral expression of world opinion!” To hundreds of thousands of ?^^Friday, October 18, 1940Student RegisterIf you have changed youraddress or phone numbersince the time of your lastregistration, and wish to belisted in the new student di.rectory, notify the Regis,trar’s office of the changeimmediately.Many students have failedto put their addresses ontheir registration cards, andthey should notify the Regis¬trar.BOARD OF CONTROLRay Poplett, Editor-in-ChiefJames Barnett, Business ManagerHarlan Blake, Staff MemberTHE EXECUTIVE EDITORSManaging Editor Bill MontgomeryNews Editor Toni Sav alll 1 Sports Editor Anson CherryFeature Editor Don Shiiilds Veto rani’ Editor Ralph J. WoodDramatics'Editor Betty Stearns I Copy Editor Louise HetielEDITORIAL ASSISTANTSMuriel Abrams, Carroll Atwater, Harlan Blake, Muriel Dcutsch, John Dolan,Andy Foldi, Lloyd Fo&dick, Bill Greene, Jerry Hallam, Mary Kay Harding. BiilHey, Ed Kaufman, Barbara Kohn, Harold Krome, Larry Lee, Sidney I^zak,Emerson Lynn, Katnerine Overholser, Charles Reeves, Jules Strickland, DickVoegell, .Bob Wright, Mary Zinn.mJames E. Barnett, Business ManagerRobert S. Bell, Assistant Business ManagerCirculation Manager. .William Lowery | Exchange Editor Russel SeboldBUSINESS ASSISTANTSDawn Pfeiffer, Betty StearnsEDITORIAL AND BUSINESS OFFICES. The Reynolds Club, 5706 SouthUniversity Avenue. Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones MIDway 0800, extension161 (Editorial Office), extension 1576 (Business Office).ADVERTISING RATES. Quoted on request. Address all communicationslo the Business Manager. The Chicago Maroon._Crowded Higher EducationOver 8,100 day-time students now flock to classes at Chicago.Some live in the residence halls, some in International house,some in co-ops or pre-fabs. Some live with their parents in con¬venient and plush ten-room apartments in the Cloisters; othercouples share small flats and do their own and others* cookingfor the privilege of a place to live. Still others can find no cam¬pus housing at all, are forced to commute from points as far asAurora and Hammond, Ind. Housing is inadequate.Book-stocks, too, are low and incomplete. With a soaringdemand for texts due to sky high college enrollments and ashortage of newsprint, hundreds of books are out of print, can¬not be obtained without waiting months. Students are forcedto resort to combing the second-hand shelves or doing without.Classrooms bulge. Swarms of students descend on discus¬sion-type courses so that professors long used to easy-goingseminar procedures must convert to lecture arrangements.Classroom discussion, questions and bull sessions in most casesmust be minimized.Robert M. Hutchins once told an entering class; “you havecome here for a college education, and we’ll try not to get inyour way.” Few are trying deliberately to put obstacles in any¬one’s way, but the obstacles continue to mount. They are largelythe product of circumstances in the post-war world. But thepursuit of an education today takes increasing amounts of ap¬plication and individual fortitude. Higher education, in onesense, comes higher now than ever before.Foctory^odernNext fall the University’s executives and deans will moveinto a brand new administration building. A new comer will beadded to the 85 modern Gothic buildings that make up the quad¬rangles. But the newcomer will not be modern Gothic; it willbe plain unadulterated modern.In 1925 Holabird and Root turned out the first set of plansfor this structure—three stories of modern Gothic with a centraltower. These were later scrapped for the present design.We may be old-fashioned, or perhaps just well-indoctrinatedInto a world of gargoyles and leaded windows. But as far aswe’re concerned the 20-year-old plans still win hands down overthe design in factory-modern finally adopted.this Week on Quadrangles(Continued from Page 2)tor in tile department of medicine, division, of roentgenolo^.University of Chicago. University College, IS S. LaSalle it. 7:80p.m.OCTOBER 23LECTURE-CONCERT. “The Musical Tradition of Vienna in the Nine¬teenth Century” by Siegmund Levarie, Lecturer; concert by JohnWeicher, Milton Prevee, Dudley Powers, Vaclav Jiskra, and PerryO’Neil. Kimball Hall, o;15 p.m.OCTOBER 24LECTURE. “Civil-Military Relationships in American Xife-CivilanControl* of a Department of National Defense.** Paul H, Appleby,Assistant Director, Bureau of the Budget. Leon Mandel HaU. 4:80p.m.MEETING. AVC. Kent 106, 7:30 p.m.INFORMAL RECORD DANCE. Ida Noyei Theater, 7:80 to 9:00 p.m. others, who participated in their own way in this most recent holocaustit is revenge for those we left on the battlefield, in the concentrationcamp and elsewhere. To millions it is proibably meaningless, for theiropinion is but a reflection of those more directly involved. A judg¬ment made at second hand is second best to say the least.Essentially we have here a problem in human values. “An eye foran eye; a tooth for a tooth” is indeed a rough yardstick by which tomeasure the actions of our fellow human beings. And that our thinkingon this matter has been quantative rather than qualitative is impossibleto deny. Many of us have realized this and have exchanged the mili¬tary school for an academic one to this end. But the number is reallysmall, and in this country millions must consider human values interms of their immediate environment, whilst ignoring them at theinternational level.Justice Jackson points to the execution of these eleven leaders ofhate and war as the result of world opinion. In this he is wrong, asthe acquittal of the remaining three has indicated. Their death is dueto the opinion of those who actually fought the war, and whose leaderscondemned them. But in erring as he did. Justice Jackson pointedunwaveringly to the problem. The creation of an international standardof human values is imperative if war is to be avoided. In future, publicopinion must make itself heard. To do so, it must educate itself, if itis not to be perverted. Wars can only result from clashing humanvalues, and these in turn find their source in twisted, distortedideologies.Somewhere, there must be a common factor. Whether it lies Ineconomic or social thought, or in our own hearts is a question, but thatit exists‘is suggested by the deaths of these eleven men and the thou¬sands who preceded them. Look for it, and find the means to permitothers to seek it. I think somehow we will find it in ourselves if welook hard enough.The Editor's MailboxAnvers, BelgiumOctober 5, 1946To the chairman of the Association of Students, Chicago Univei-sity:The students of the Colonial University of Belgium send their bestgreetings to the students of the University of Chicago.As chairman of the Colonial University General Association ofStudents, I have to assure their relations with foreign students, aimingat international friendship. So I thought to organize a system of cor¬respondence with some countries.We have heard many times of your University which is very pop¬ular and well-known here in Belgium. So we decided to write youabout this.Are there among your students some who want to correspond withstudents of the Colonial University of Belgium? It would enable stu¬dents of both countries to exchange ideas about their studies, sportsand everything which interests them. It would be also a good way tolearn a foreign language.If there are some (boys or girls) you could send me their names andI would put them in relation with one of my students (we are onlyboys). , .We are studying the political, administrative and colonial sciences,law, commercial sciences.At least we would like to get information of your studies, organ¬ization of students, life in the University, etc.I hope to receive a quick answer. Meanwhile, I send you, in nameof the committee, our student greetings.Freddy HengtgenChairman of the Colonial University ofBelgium Association of StudentsEditor’s note: The foregoing letter was received by the UniversityStudent Association. Students interested may obtain further informa¬tion by contacting Ira Corn, Student Association manager! in the Asso¬ciation’s office in the Reynolds club.A great deal of heat but not much light was shed on the questionof “legality” at the October 10 meeting of A.V.C. A “law,” as I under¬stand it, is that which the authorities decide to enforce and there arelaws against practically anything. In the city of Chicago on most issuesof public import you are breaking the law if the Police Department isagainst you. A little historical perspective will serve my point. GeorgeWashington in 1776 fought the good fight but, it’s funny now, he wasacting illegally. The Americans who fought against Franco in 1937,give them what label you will, fought together for nothing less than toprevent World War II. Their action was “illegal.”The fight for an adequate housing program is the good fight. Thequestion of legality will come up again. Let’s not hamstring A.V.C.with pet phrases.Sid RudnerPlon Students' DayPRAHA, Oct., 1946.The executive committee takespleasure in announcing to you theformal establishment of the In¬ternational Union of Students atthe recent World Students’ Con¬gress.The first task of the lUS is toorganize and coordinate all effortsfor the celebration of InternationalStudents’ day. We ask you to doyour best to make this day a greatsuccess as an expression of inter¬national students cooperation. . . .We hope that this letter willhelp you to make youf own plansfor November 17, 1946.THOMAS MADDEN,Secretary of the InternationalUnion of Students. Meosurieg the Heartbeotof the Compef • • •PULSEiivicTHiifiE^SraMATINIITODAY 2:36tefRktre fl TONIOHTlER[IM eirti. Dali;h'lw: Cvai. 3tlira Ualtai Artlita ta TICHNICOLOIIIfofs AH PtrferjneiKf 1 of Im The Directorypress October 19. goes toMost Foscinoting BulletinBoard of tho Week(Homo icenomics Deportmont,•laine HolllSEMINAROctober 22ndtSensation of TasteNovember 5th:Food PoisoningOpera HouseSunday, Norsmber lOfhOne Afternoon & Evening Onlyle Periee le ConcertDUKE ELLINGTONAnd His OrchestraGood SmU Now at tha Box Offic0 andtha Univaraity of Chicago InformationOffica. S1.20 Sl.SO, S2.40, St OO(Tax Inc.)Opera HouseSunday, November 3rdOne Afternoon Etening OnlyIs Periee In Concert“The Sentimental Oestlemon”TOMMY DORSEYAnd His Top Flight StarsGood Saata Now at tha Box Offica and attha Univaraity of Chicago InformationOfficaSl-20, Sl.SO, S2.40 S3-00 (Tax Inc.)• OPERA HOUSE •proudly presentsAMERICANS FINESTCONCERT SERIES8—Great Concerts—8Sun. Aft., Dac. 8thCincinnati Symphony Orch.la^aiie Geiieiw, Coiidiict{ii9Sun. Aft., Dac. 15thGlodyf SworthoutMetropeliten Meno-Soproiie*Wad. Eva., Jan. latHurok's Russion Balletwith Morkovg 4 PolliiSun. Aft., Jan. 12thArtur RubinsteinThe Meiter PiowlstSun. Aft., Jan. 19thGordon String Quartetwith Leii Bennemian. HarpistSun. Aft., Jan. 26tliJon Ptercetending Metropolitan TetterSun. Aft., March 2ndJoseph SzigetiPeirees InterHetlonaf VIclielstSun. Aft., April 20thMorion AndersonMost Perfect Voice of Our TimeSUBSCRIBI NOW FOR BNTIRI SBRIf^OF RIGHT AT A SAVING OF 33V»%(No SmgU Seat Sales)Mein Floor—First 28 rows 4^2,80Next 8 rows 16.80Laat 6 rows 14.40Ift Balcony-First 5 rows 16.80Next 7 rows 14.40Lest 7 rows 10.80Upper BalconyFirst 8 rows 9.60Last 9 rows 8.40Box Saats, as. 22.50All pricas includatax. ForPromptAtteRtieeAddressaPERAHaUSE.DEPT. UC20 N. WaekerChicago 6. Ill<Subserifiions fUM receired-Good seats nmr ^ bt^Jnsce or by mathtmuMiJmm ■—;Viday» October It, IMt THE CHICAGO MAROO]The Music StandBy ANDY FOLDIThis week-end marks the halfway point in the current operaseason. The opera is probably the most popular “off-campus’*musical entertainment in the city; Mr. Hoeppner at the infor¬mation office, at least, is kept busier with opera ticket ordersthan for any other event.So far the most interesting attraction has been the presenta¬tion of the double bill, AmeliaGoes to the Ball and EmperorJones, both in English. The for¬mer is a gay work by Gian CarloMenotti, a composer who stemsfrom the Puccinian school ofrealists; the latter is a musicalsetting of Eugene O’Neiirs playdone by Louis Gruenberg, and israther a dramatic monologue forthe hero with a tense orchestralbackground, than an opera. AsEmperor Jones, Lawrence Tibbettagain proved that he is one of thefinest actors on the operatic stagetoday, though vocally he is a mereshadow of his former self.The rest of the repertoire is afamiliar one, though Madame But¬terfly and Sampson and Delilahhave not been heard here in a longtime.Continental Artists SingConditions in Europe have againpermitted the importation of con¬tinental artists to this country, andthe opera company outdid itselfin engaging many excellent singerswho have never been heard inChicago. So far, we have heardSet Svanholm in Tristan, Ferruc¬cio Tagliavini in La Boheme andButterfly (he will also sing Tjoscatonight) and Italo Tajo, a bass whoreminds one of Ezio Pinza, inAida, Samson and in Gioconda.(Tajo and Tagliavini were visitingthe University last Tuesday butremained very Inconspicuous dur¬ing their brief stay.)Tonight two naw artists from LaScala in Milan will make their de¬buts in Tosca: Carla Castellan! inthe title role and Piero Guelfi asBaron Scarpia. The French so¬prano, Janine Micheau is to appearin La Traviata and as Micaela inCarmen. ^Recommended OperasOf the operas that will be per¬formed during the last three weekswe would like to recommend Sam¬son, Tosca and especially Lohen¬grin. The latter promises to be oneof the highlights of the season; itwill be conducted by Fritz Stiedryand sung by a superb oast, headedby Torsten Half in the title role.Only the shell of the crown ofsome baby teeth falls out of achild’s mouth and the root'is ab¬sorbed, according to the Encyclo¬paedia Britannica. This is true ofthe central milk incisors whichgenerally fall out during the sev¬enth year. 85 OriginalsSold at ShowBy Richard WickstromA week before closing, the Ren¬aissance society’s exhibition ofPictures Up to $20 has sold ap¬proximately 85 pieces of art, mostof them to University of Chicagostudents. The show contains out¬standing prints and drawings, wa¬ter colors, a few gouaches and anumber of serigraphs, or silkscreen prints. The student pur¬chases seemed to be motivated byan aesthetic taste rather than byfamous names, since many worksby well known artists remain un¬sold.Bekker and SloaneThe prints and drawings are, byall artistic standards, the mostlaudable part of the show. DavidBekker’s two prints. Musician andDiscourse, show his technical mas¬tery of the medium and employfine combinations of the etchingand drypoint methods. JohnSloane’s three small etchings con¬trast with Bekker by showing theorthodox etching technique. Sloaneuses pure line for tone'and value;in all three prints. Subway, Stairs,Antique a la Francaise and Wash¬ington Arch, he exhibits accuratedraftsmanship and keen powersof observation.Chicago Artist ^Frances Foy, a Chicago artist,shows a delicate, linear etchingcalled Rock Garden. Chang andChap, two color block prints byAdrian Troy, show an excellentsense of pattern and color andhave a thrilling oriental quality.■William Cropper and LawrenceJones use strong, forceful diagonalconstruction to build their com¬positions which tell the story ofthe homeless and unwanted peo¬ples in Uprooted Poland.Leonard Pytlak’s Evening Strollis dominated by deep darks donewith a brush on the lithographstone which adds freedom andmovement to this striking print.Also worthy of mention amongthe prints are H. Sternberg’s For¬est of Flame which combines deli¬cate value changes with strongvertical elements, and Pigeons inthe Grass, by Elie Zimmer, which U. Scientists UseRadioactive AtomsBy MARY K. HARDINGSeven University scientists head research programs on campususing Carbon 14, radioactive carbon, a by-product of atom" bombmanufacture. By using radioactive carbon scientists are able to tracewhere and how carbon is used in organic substances.Raymond E. Zirkle, director of the institute of radiobiology andbiophysics, is chairman of the University hazard committee whichclears all requests for Carbon 14 to insure that safety precautions willbe observed. andRadioMidway440KWCHIMONDAY7:45: Artistry in Rhythm, Dolanand Greenwald8:00: Mystery Play, “The HangmanWon’t Wait”8:30: The Cohening Tower, Art Co¬hen8:45: Change of Tempo, Chaitinand Cone9:00: One Hour of the World’s BestMusicTUESDAY7:45: Artistry in Rhythm8:00: Radio Midway Roundtable8:30: Jazz records with Paul Jack-son8:45: Campus Announcements,Wally Riley9:00: One Hour of the World's BestMusicWEDNESDAY7:45: Artistry in Rhythm8:00: Radio Midway Reporter8:15: Change of 'Tempo, UnusualRecords8:30: News and commentary,Charles Van Cleave8:45: Oral Interpretation, JeanCooke9:00: One Hour of the World’s BestMusicTHURSDAY7:45: Artistry in Rhythm8:00: Jazz Midway Roundtable8:30: Jazz Records with Moe Cohen8:45: Campus Life9:00: One Hour of the World’s Bestmusicis a simple but effective designof two stylized birds.Pen and Ink DrawingsCharles Locke displays a vigor¬ous pen and ink stroke to obtainexcellent results in his drawingsof Trees, Ruins, and Rocks andTrees. An ink drawing of threefigures done in broad tones anddescriptive line is the best ofMartyl’s three works. MahonriYoung is represented by three pendrawings out of his sketchbook.Boardman Robinson’s AncientApple Tree and Squatting Figureare two fine examples from hisearly sketchbook.A subsequent exhibition at the(Continued on Next Page)iOT1ia> UNOa AUTHOIBIY OT THE COCA^XXA COMPAHY lYCOCA-COU iOTTLING CO. OF CHICAGO. INC. Each scientist submits his projectto his respective department forapproval and provision of funds.Orders are sent direct to the Man¬hattan project.The amounts used are verysmall—^Dr. Zirkle has obtained twotenths of a millincurie—-one tenthousandth of an ounce—^whichwill last several months. A mil-licurie of Carbon 14 costs about$400.Carbon 14 is easy to ship, ac¬cording to Dr. Zirkle. His ship¬ment arrived in the form of awhite powder, barium carbonate,which is contained in a plasticvial which fits into a lead cylinder.This in turn is placed in a woodenblock and sent by express.The Manhattan project has amonopoly on the sale of Carbon14, because a cyclotron, or atomsmasher, must run for manymonths to in'oduce a millicurie.The Manhattan project is the onlyorganization in the country whichhas the equipment to produceradioactive substances in anyquantity.Dr. Zirkle is using Carbon 14 tostudy the way in which cellulosewalls of plant cells are formed.William L. Doyle, associate pro¬fessor of anatomy, is studying thegenerative processes of one-celledanimals.Earl A. Evans, Jr., head of thebiochemistry department, will usethe. substance to study the sumtotal of chemical reactions whichconstitute the existence of a livingcell, which he calls intermediarymetabolism.James Franck, professor ofphysical chemistry, is investigat¬ing the process by which carbondioxide and water are transformedinto organic products by use oflight energy from the sun. He isusing single-celled green algaefor this study of photosynthesis.William D. Harkins, professoremeritus of chemistry, is tryingto discover what happens whenrubber is produced syntheticallyby a process called emulsion poly¬merization. This process is theone which the United States usedto make synthetic rubber duringthe war.Konrad Bloch, assistant pro¬fessor of biochemistry in the insti¬tute of radiobiology and biophy¬sics, will use Carbon 14 to inves¬tigate the manner in which livingcells use food for energy needsand in the process of continuousrebuilding of tissue.Willard F. Libby, professor ofchemistry, is trying to improvemethods of using radioactive car¬bon as a tracer in fundamentalphysical-chemical studies.PULSEThe magazine for you • •watch for it. BrittleBy BARKE and BUSHNELLWalking past the Zoology stepsthe other day, we saw two youngmedical students gazing raptly atthe Lab. “I hear the new cada¬vers have come,” breathed oneecstatically. “Yeah,” enthused theother, “let’s go up and look ’emover.” And off they bounded, faceslit up with happy anticipation.Speaking of cadavers, we at¬tended the two open houses givenlast Sunday by Beecher and Blake.Recognized, however, were ToniSpeare, president of Beecher; MaryAlice Reed, head of Blake; EdWood, John Casey, Art Cohen,Ruth Lundeen, Dave Bushnell,Carol Skeen, Paul Martelli, “Trust”Mulligan, Warren Sights, JackFineberg, Bill Montgomery, BetsyStone, Sue Hendall, and the Bur¬ton Judson boys, also two AlphaDelts who got bored with theirown open house.More PeopleWe promised to get Joan Hayes’name into the MAROON one ofthese weeks. However, we’re alsosupposed to write some littlething of interest about these fa¬vored people and, as far as we candiscover, she hasn’t done a blastedthing since she almost caughtpneumonia running around the55th st. promontory barefoot.Also having a gay time wereToni Wheeler, Lyle Hansen, GraceDober, “Mac” McFarland, B.Barke, Mike Clarke, Jeanne Mc¬Farland, and John Sharpe at theU. of Illinois A.K.K. dance givenlast Saturday. The wild eveningended - with the explosion of abeer keg spigot giving^ everybodypresent an alcoholic shower bath.Y Annual Get-togetherThe Y’s annual get-together,even without any exploding Sber-kegs, was said to be just as ex¬citing. The evening was high¬lighted by something new in theway of food lines. Prexy MaryKellogg took the lead as the toot¬ing end of a railway train andhauled the hungry ones up theIda Noyes stairs in a mild versionof the good old conga!Things to DoFor something to do, all we canoffer is the opening of the IdaNoyes Council weekly recordingconcerts given at 3:30 every Mon¬day afternoon in the East Lounge.Food and music are free with theconcert. Some of the music con¬nected with the Humanities Icourse will be played. For otherinteresting divergencies use imag¬ination and facilities offered atIda Noyes and Poromontory Point.Hew Radio ShowArtistry in Rhythm, a new rec¬ord show, hits the airwaves Mon¬day night. Gerald Greenwald andthe writer are collaborating toemcee this program, which willattempt to catch the trend in pop¬ular music on campus, and air theresult.Monday night also sees the be¬ginning of a dramatic series withthe presentation of The HangmanWon’t Wait. Coming are scripts onUniversity faculty . . . Bizarre andunusual records are the feature ofChaitin and Cone’s Change ofTempo show.Call NowMake an AppointmentFor Your Yoarbook Portraits2 Professional Prints withEvery Order atSpecial Student Rateshalo studio1603 E. 55th Street Fairfax 1084Pac* • THE CHICAPO M4SOONA VC Protests Zoning LawsShown above are members of the campus A VC carryingsigns in protest of local zoning restrictions which keep housesunoccupied.AYC Seeks to LoosenLocal Restrictiye ZoningEfforts to remove zoning regulations prohibiting familiesin the Oakland-Kenwood area, (just north of campus), fromtaking in'either roomers or boarders, even though space mightbe available, is being undertaken by the campus AVC.First action in this housing drivestarted last Saturday with a hous¬ing rally and survey and has beencontinued through this week withletters to churches and other civicgroups.Today’s action tentatively callsfor a delegation from the chapterto visit Mayor Kelly and demandthat he take action to lift thehousing zone law temporarily.Kelly’s answer will be discussed ata housing tally to be held at 1 p.m.at 5000 Ellis avenue,A parade of AVC members willstart out from the Reynolds club at1 p.m. tomorrow to the rally at50th and Ellis, where housing ex¬perts will address the group. Oneof the speakers will be Sydney Or-dower, executive secretary of theChicago area AVC.With the inauguration of thenew cell system the entire 800member chapter is expected toparticipate in tomorrow’s rally.The cell system is a plan devised tocontact all members of the chapterwithin an hour of notice by thechairman.The program tomorrow will usethe figures of last week’s surveymade in the area bounded by 47th,Ingleside, 52nd and Kenwood. Thesurvey covered 250 houses andshowe dthat about 15 per cent ofthem had extra room available,but unusable because ofthe zoninglaw.This included 12 houses of 19 to30 rooms, either empty or inhabit¬ed by caretakers. Some of thesehomes have been vacant for tenyears and all are for sale, but onlyto single family units, not to apart¬ment situations.■ Wakerlin to SpeakGeorge E. "Wakerlin, professorof physiology of the University of.Illinois college of medicine, willspeak on “Experimental Hyper¬tension”, at 4:45 p.m.- Friday in theassembly room of the Chicago In¬stitute of Medicine, 86 E. Ran¬dolph.Ten-thousand ton Great Lakesore carriers can be loaded in onlyninety minutes. The ore is dumpedinto the ship through chutes. Un¬loading the vessels usually takesabout four hours.TYPEWRITERSAdding MachinesBOUGHT - SOLDAND EXCHANGEDGuoranteed RepairsPrompt S«rvic«LEIYAOffice Machine Co.5449 LAKE PARK AYE.HYDE PARK 9651We Pick Up and Deliver Sell 85 WorksAt Art Show(Continued from Precedii\g Page)Renaissance galleries will be aone-man show of Robinson’s work.It will be shown in conjunctionwith the publication of a mono¬graph on Robinson by the Uni¬versity of Chicago Press.Gouaches and Water ColorsThe gouaches and water colorsin the show are rather disappoint¬ing. South of the Museum byBeatrice Levy and two temperasby Frances Badger, North Woodsand Composition, are virtually theonly works in this group whichrecognize the possibilities of thewater color medium. The restlack the spontaneity, directnessand the rich color which this me¬dium offers and most of themdegenerate into mere coloreddrawings.Gene Pettit’s serigraph entitled“Frosty Morning is a suggestive,dreamy landscape in grays andbrowns and presents an interest¬ing variation of surface pattern inits texture. Louise Freedman’sAftermath and Robert Gwath-mey’s vivid Singing and Mendingare other notable examples of theserigraph medium, which utilizesoverlapping areas of color andgives a poster like quality to thework.The next exhibition of the Ren¬aissance society is an exhibitionof modern art from the privatecollection of Mr. and Mrs. EarleLudgin of Chicago. . Driva for Booksfor Greece to EndTomorrow is the last day tomake contributions to the currentdrive for books for Greece. Ever>'student and faculty member* isasked to contribute textbooks andjournals to be sent to fellow stu-,dents in Greece. jCollection boxes can be foundin the Book Store, at the Commons ientrance, at Harper reading roomand at International house. Friday, October 18, 1945SSome salmon live to be 100 yearsold. Carp have been known toreach the age of 150 years.The library of Congress is thelargest and most costly librarybuilding in the world, the origin¬al cost was nearly $7,000,000. Jalz at OperaJazz and swing fans are in fora real treat for the next fewweeks; Tommy Dorsey and DukeEllington will play afternoon andevening concerts at the CivicOpera House.On November 3 Dorsey, the“sentimental gentleman of swing,”will offer a concert gamut fromsymphony to boogie woogie.America’s genius of jazz, DukeEllington, with his famous or¬chestra, will be presented by DownBeat Magazine in two concerts atthe Opera House Sunday, Novem¬ber 10.New Scheduleat WellesleyWellesley, Mass.—(I.P.)—A newplan of curriculum at WellesleyCollege which provides new .sub¬ject requirements, offers a differ¬ent program for honors work andsuggests three ways in which un¬dergraduates may make use of thesummer vacation has -been an¬nounced by the college.This plan is the result of athree-year study made by the Fac¬ulty Committee on Long TermEducational Policy. During the•three years the committee hasconsidered suggestions for changemade by members of the Faculty,the alumnae, and the studentbody, and their report contains athoughtful re-evaluation of a lib¬eral arts program of educationfor women. Wellesley is the firstof the women’s colleges to haveadopted by a unanimous vote ofits faculty a revised curriculumafter a prolonged study such asHarvard made in its report, ’’Gen¬eral Education in a Free Society.”The committee underlined in itsreport that women’s colleges ingeneral have not had as unre¬stricted a free elective system asmany of the men’s colleges. Asa result, changes in the curric¬ulum which would ensure a com¬mon background of knowledge forall students—Harvard’s notion of a“core of knowledge”— have been,easier to make within the frame¬work of the curriculum as it al¬ready exists. Religious Groups ActiveBy MARY ZINNCampus-religious organizations arc getting into the swimthis week with a variety of events.Calvert club is starting a survey course in religious relevancyto be held at De Sales house every Tuesday at 7 p.m.* On thisThursday, October 24, Father Mahon, a student, is to speakat 3 on “Primitive Religions in the Near East.”Canterbury club meets at Ida Noyes Wednesday, October23, at 7:30 with a speech by DrBrownlow TalkLouis Brownlow, trustee of thepublic administration clearinghouse, will give two lectures atthe University of Chicago nextweek. On Wednesday, October23, he will talk on “Leaves froman Autobiography: State HouseReporter,” at 4:30 p.m. in the So¬cial Science building. Friday’s lec¬ture, also scheduled for 4:30 p.m.,will be “Leaves from an Autobi¬ography: City Hall Reporter,”Admission is free and withoutticket. Brownlow has lecturedfrequently on the Midway campus.He is a lecturer emeritus in polit¬ical 'science at the UniversityISBELL'SChicago's MostCELEBRATEDRESTAURANTS143S E. 51 st Street940 Rush Street590 Diyersey Place Wilbur G. Katz, dean of the lawschool, on the general conventionof the Episcopal church and inparticular about the church and re¬union, remarriage and divorce. Adiscussion will follow. This meet¬ing is open to Canterbury clubmembers and their guest?.Social Events ProminentChapel Union has plans for an8 p.m. gathering on Sunday, Octo¬ber 20. Held at Chapel house, thetopic is, “Am I Right, Am I Wrong;How Can I Tell?” The followingWednesday brings the Dig and Doparty from 8 to 10 p.m. This eventis shrouded with an air of mystery—it’s not a barn dance, not abridge journament, and not a tea.Wednesday, October 23, alsobrings the Westminster club to¬gether for a social hour at Chapelhouse at 4 p.m. On the next day,Thursday the 24th, you’ll find theMethodist Student league at Chapelhouse from 7 to 8 p.m. A meetingof the Lutheran Student associa¬tion follows Friday at 8 p m.The Methodist Student leagueplans an outing at Palos Park’s, YMCA cabin for the weekend ofOctober 26 and 27,Hebrew StudiedHillel Foundation is holding aFriday night service tonight andplans to have one every week at7:45. Tonight at 8:15, Dr. SamuelBlumenfeld, dean of the collegeof Jewish studies, will address thegroup.Sunday afternoon at 2:30 Hillelholds tea dancing, and from 7:30to 10:30 that night there will be anopen house.The Hillel Foundation also plansseveral courses for its menibers.On Wednesdays and Fridays at10:30 a.m., elementary Hebrewwill be given; Thursdays at 3:30p.m., a seminar on Jewish thought;and on Tuesdays at 7:30 p.m., therewill be a dance group. For thoseinterested in the choir, rehearsalsare held Thursdays at 6:45.Every Weeka Cartoon “by Cistio" In -The CHICAGO MAROON“It Sorvot Yon Right!"Wow! This jobsore keeps me hopping!"** fitting all the new dial and manual switch-Ij board equipment and long distance facilities into BellSystem central offices all around the country is keeping memighty busy!In a single big dial exchange there may be 4,000 milesof wire. I may have to solder 2,500,000 connectionsbefore everything’s ready for you to dial a number!** Besides imtalling this complex apparatus, I build it.That’s part of my job as manufacturer for the Bell System.‘*I also purchase all manner of things for the Bell Tele¬phone Companies . . . and distribute these supplies to themalong with the equipment 1 make.“Ever since 1882, I’ve been helping to make our nation’stelephone service the best in the world. Today. . . withthe Bell System’s construction program of more than112,000,000,000 in full swing. . . I’m busier than ever.“Remember my name .. . it’s Western Electric."Western ElectricA UNIT OF THE BEU SYSTEM SINCE 1882fYidftSTy Octoljttr 19, 1946Forum onFM Station TKE citii^CO MAR^N Paf e 7Members of the Student Forumrecorded the second in a seriesof round table talks, Monday,October 14 which are being broad¬cast every Tuesday, from 12:30 to1 p.m., through the auspices ofWBEZ, local frequency modula¬tion station. The programs aredesigned as an aid to educationin the Chicago public school sys¬tem.The discussion panel dealt withthe topic. Resolved: Labor shouldhave a direct share in managementof industry. The problem was dis¬cussed informally pro and con.No definite decision was reached,although all participants agreedthat a need existed for revision ofpresent labor-industry relation¬ships.Hubert Wax, director of the for¬um, acted as moderator and Low- den Wingo, Stanley Durka, JohnVelton, and Harold Kome dis¬cussed the issue.Art LectureSir Kenneth Clark, former di¬rector of the National Gallery inLondon, will deliver an illustratedlecture on Cezanne at 8:30 p.m.Tuesday, October 22, in MandelHall (57th street and Universityavenue). The guest lecturer issponsored by the William VaughnMoody Foundation at the Univer¬sity of Chicago.Tickets will be available withoutcharge at the information officeThe fee for advanced coursesin the Lowell Institute, Boston,was once two bushels of wheat aterm. This fee was stipulated inthe will of John Lowell, Jr.,founder of the Institute, who diedin 1836.Wim STYLTft m THI MCTUIU Documeiifary FilmScheduleThe followinz films will beshown by the Documentary Filmcommittee on October 22 and Oc¬tober 29 in Social Science 122:October 22 at 7:15 p.m:“Man of Aran,” produced byRobert Flaherty. The story ofpeople living on the isolatedisland of Aran.October 29 at 7:15 & 9:15 p.m.:“La Marseillaise,” producedby Jean Renoir. An epic ofthe French Revolution. Thecast is headed by Louis Jouvetand Pierre Renoir.Other films will be announcedlater.B'nai B'rithThe B’nai B’rith Hillel founda¬tion at the University held an openhouse Sunday, September 29, atHillel house. Welcoming the 300guests were Rabbi Maurice Pekar-sky, director of the Foundation;Maynard Wishner, president of theHillel student council, and ex-President David Parson.The MCKINGMAMStyle No. 6627 seenWATCHIN6 roOTBALLPRACTICEW.L.DOUGLASfSHOE CO., BROCKTON IS. MASS.♦4002 W. MADISON ST. ^ ^ ^^*1321 MILWAUKEE AYE.SOUTH BEND—*210 S. Michigan St.*LADY DOUGLAS STYLES AT MODERATE PRICES Replaceable filter In newFrank Medico Cigarette Holders,filttrt the smoke.• Cuts down nicotine. ‘ *• Cuts down irritating tars.• In zephyrweight aluminum.• Special styles for men and women.• $2 with 10 filters, handy pouchand gift box.5. M. FRANK & CO., INC., NIW YORK 22•ll III.AUTOMOBILESERVICEBy Factory Trained MechanicsWe Service All MakesLake Park Motors, Inc.LINCOLH-MERCURY DEALERS5601 Harper Ave. Hyde Park 3445We Buy Cars for Cash OldAcquaintanceBy RALPH WINDERThis column is dedicated to thosepeople we all meet and love becausethey make us feel they are no differ^ent from ourselves. These are notnecessarily the Big Men On Campus. . . yet they stand out in everygathering because by their cogent,pertinent and unoffensive remarks, orsubtle silence, it is obvious they haveproperly evaluated all those presentand have grasped and solved the sit¬uation at hand.John Pine first received noticeas president of the junior class atOak Park High school the sameyear he improved the suburbanleague shotput record by a consid¬erable distance. He was vice-president of his senior high cla.ssand president of the freshmanclass at Dartmouth.’The achievements of friend Pineat college were quitp extensive.He was an assistant trainer on thefreshman football team, oh thefirst team of dear old Dartmouth’spractically unbeatable crew, astandout for two years on thewrestling team, on two occasionsreaching the collegiate wrestlingfinals. \“B” Average at DartmouthHe managed to maintain a nicesolid B average .while earning hisB.A. Dartmouth thought enoughof John to elect him one of thefive members of the Dartmouth%college alumni executive commit¬tee.John hopes to teach college afterhe has finished his M.A. here,with Latin American and UnitedStates history as his major.The lower deck of the stacks ofHarper is John’s hideout duringthe daylight hour when he is notin class. He is one of the prouda.ssets of that outstanding groupof Chicago scholars, the GraduateHistory club.Gin Rummy and Beer SteinsIn addition to his scholastic andother athletic achievements, Johnhas found time to become an ex¬cellent swimmer, ice skater, andhockey player. Versatile Johni bowls a nice comfortable 100 andwas the first bowler on record tohave a gutter ball go so far astrayas to knock down pins four alleysaway.When a gin rummy dpponent iscornered, John soothes the victimsof his baffling game with musicfrom his record collection, selec¬tions to please either cat or classi¬cist. In addition to his recordsJohn has gathered some beersteins that are guaranteed to raisea thirst.Harriet and BozoJohn’s wife Harriet never stopsraving about his tidy housekeep¬ing and the tasty dishes he cooksfor her. She also goes dreamy overhis dancing and claims that ball-K««p Up With tlia Campus-■Raad tk* 'CHICAGO HAROON"It Urn, Ye. Rlflit!" Chicago Roundtable-iUnite EuropeSpeaker SaysA federation of Europe is a“great” idea which may be theway by which the gap betweenthe east and the west can bebridged, George N.’ Shuster, presi¬dent of Hunter College, New YorkCity,, declared last Sunday on theUniversity of Chicago Round Tablediscussion.“The fundamental assumptionof such a federation, however,”Shuster continued, “is the com¬plete disarmament of Europe. Un¬less total disarmament of all coun¬tries of Europe is guaranteed,there can be no peace. Such afederation should include all thecountries of Europe except Eng¬land and Russia. These two pow¬ers, together with the UnitedStates, should play the role of su¬pervisors—or guarantors—of thefederation. They would ensurethat 'disarmament were complete;that the economic system weremaintained on a democratic basis;and that the federation fitted intothe United Nations system.“The crux of the realization ofa federation,” Shuster pointed out,“is in proving to Russia that thisis a good idea. I am hopeful thatwe can prove it.”“Russian security,” he con¬cluded, “could be protected bysuch a federation through the cre¬ation of a neutral zone. It hasalso positive economic advantagesto Russia.”Participating with Shuster inthe Round Table discussion of“Can Europe Federate?” wereWalter P. Sharp, chairman of thedepartment of government at theCity College of New York, andLouis Gottschalk, professor of his¬tory at the University of Chicago.Professor Sharp, emphasizingthe importance of unity in Europefor keeping peace, said that realprogress in the United Nations cancome only if Europe can live as a,cooperative family of nations. A*“United States of Europe,” hesaid, cannot be developed at once,but it is an aspiration which mustbe worked toward by various.stages. It might begin, he said,in the form of a confederationmuch like that which the UnitedStates had in the 18th century.Professor Gottschalk empha¬sized the fact that federation is away toward peace and that thereare cohesive forces at work inEurope, as well as growing recog¬nition that nationalisms in Europehas outlived their usefulness.Barn Dance TuesdayA big barn dance has beenscheduled for Tuesday (October22) in the Ida Noyes gym from8 to 9:30 p.m. This dance, opento all’students in the University,is a good chance to mix and meet.Miss Alicia Hawkins of GeorgeWilliams university will call thedances in traditional barn dancestyle. Free cokes and fun can behad by all.room exhibitionists often stop topick up a few pointers.One of the best character refer¬ences John has is his guide andconstant companion of nine years,his dog Bozo. Bozo and John firstmet at Seeing Eye, Inc.On Records With ReevesJu»t to prove that a record shop can have everything, let megive you the scoop on a couple of longhair deals down at Lowe’s.You remember this summer there was some Harpsichord goin* on’saround here. It went fine, and those who have been wanting moreof the poor man’s piano can get Bach’s “Goldberg Variations” byWanda Landowska. A fine relaxed thing is Mahler’s “Songs of aWayfarer” turned out by Carol Brice. Another album, but farfrom relaxed is Ethel Merman’s raspy “Annie Get Your Gun.On the jump side of the shop, and if it’s fast and fine horn youlike, don’t miss Les Brown’s “High on a Windy Trumpet” backedby “Lover’s Leap.”A. J. Lowe & Son1227 E. 55tli Street MIDway 0781-2-3^ - ir' 17Put • TBZ CHICAGO UAROQN*1 Friday, October 18, 1946Strozier Presents KeysTo Forum Debate SquadsBy B](LL HEYKeys were presented to tenmen>bers of the 1945-1946 Inter-Collegiate Debate team of the Uni¬versity of Chicago at a StudentForum-sponsored discussion heldlate Thursday afternoon in theUbraiy of Ida Noyes Hall by Rob¬ert Strozier, Dean of Students.Winners of the debate awardsfor participation in debatingmatches and work in Student For¬um during the past season wereMarqueeta Mack, Evelyn Paper,Richard Bemstien, Paul Huebner,Antonette Sevalli, news editor ofthe MAROON, Sheldon Stein, Cur¬tis Crawford, Charles Khan, IrvingFasan, and Harry Gourevitch.Praises ForumIn presenting the keys as arecognition of outstanding workin debate, Mr. Strozier compli¬mented Student Forum for its con¬tributions to the University com¬munity and to the metropolitancommunity activities in the cityof Chicago. Referring particularlyto the series of summer Forumradio broadcasts over a Chicagoradio station, Strozier pointed outthe value of such an activity tothe University and to the city.He emphasized the activities ofthe Forum this year in participat¬ing in the Columbia Broadcastingsystem’s “American School of theAir” series on Friday mornings.The Dean of Students was intro¬duced to the assembled group,kept to a small size by adverseweather conditions, by HubertWax, director of Student Forumfor the past year.After presenting the awards,Strozier in turn indicated severaldirectors of various student acti¬vities o< the campus who werepresent at the discussion and re¬commended that interested stu¬dents personnally carry on in¬formal conversations with men andwomen responsible in activities oftheir choice over cokes and cookieswhich were served at the round¬table discussion.Meet Next WednesdayWax noted that Student Forum’snext meeting, at which presentmembers of the ■ debate squadwould debate the question Re¬solved: That labor should havea more directr part in industrialmanagement, would convene in theGraduate Education building.Room 126 on Wednesday evening;October 23 at 7:30 p.m. He saidthat all members of the Univer¬sity would be welcome at theopen meet. Students interested inbecoming members of the debatingteams should attend, according toWax. An election of new officersfor the current year will takeplace before the debate.Organ RecitalsRenewed HereSunday afternoon organ recitalsat Rockefeller Memorial Chapelon the University of Chicago cam¬pus were resumed last Sunday.Frederick Marriott, organist andcarillonneur for the Chappel,played the first concert.Works to be played next Sun¬day are: Tallis’ Third Mode Mel¬ody; Clerambeault’s Prelude;Bach’s Fantasie and Fugue in AMinor; Bach’s O Mensch, bewein’dein’ Sunde Gross; Franck’s Choralin B Minor; Bingham’s Twilightat Fiesole; and Dupre’s Finale fromSeven Pieces.The recitals were discontinuedlast spring because of extensiverepair work on the organ. Fromnow on carillon concerts will begiven at 4 p.m., followed by theorgan recitals. Admission is freeand open to the public. Bouquets, BoosMeet Debate onHutchins-AdlerBy BARBARA KOHNThe Hutchins-Adler philosophyof education was discussed beforean audience of approximately 450at a symposium sponsored by AYDFriday evening, October 11, atKent 106.Hubert Bonner of the Depart¬ment of Sociology presented ananalysis of the Hutchins-Adlerphilosophy of education. A critiqueof their philosophy was offered byDenton Geyer, Chicago Teachers’college, and Herman Reinstein,teacher in the Chicago publicschool system, who spoke on alter¬native philosophies of education.The moderator was Bernie Kaplan,student in the Department of So¬ciology. .“Man is not mainly a psycho-biological, but a metaphysical en¬tity,” Bonner asserted. “As such,regardless of varying environment,human nature is unvarying. Man’seducation, therefore, also shouldbe unvarying, and in the collegemodeled after the Hutchins-Adlerphilosophy of education the stu¬dent is acquainted with the greatideas of the past.”Hutchins-Adler PhilosophyQuestionedIn evaluating the Hutchins-Adler philosophy of education,Geyer pointed to strong as wellas weak i)oints. He criticized thereduction of the role of science toone of verifying truths arrived atby the way of metaphysics. Hefurther asked the questions: Whois to select the great books? Whatcriteria for selection are to beused? And finally, can the youngstudent absorb and fully imder-stand such books as ImmanuelKant’s “Critique of Pure Reason”and others, in the time allotted forthem and at the age he reads them?Advocates ExperimentalismHerman Reinstein contrasted theHutchins-Adler philosophy of ed¬ucation with the experimentalistphilosophy which stresses thestudent’s development throughexperience, while the Hutchins-Adler philosophy conceives of thehuman soul as absolute and un¬changing. “Education cannot bedivorced f^om life,” said Reinstein.He pointed out that educationmust take into consideration thesocial forces operating in society,which, he suggested, the Hutchins-Adler philosophy tends to ignore.A lively discussion followed thespeakers* presentations. AUMODEby ReinsbergEgg malts are back in fashion,but so far the Coffee shop hasblocked all efforts to reinstatethis nuclear nourishment. Mem¬ory of an unhappy event is stilltoo vivid.Zekiel Crunk, contestant in theannual Marathon Bridge game,had made advance arrangementsto be served double egg maltedmilks every hour at his table inthe C-shop, never once relin¬quishing his chair for food, classesor nature.Over a week Zgkiel maintainedthis championship pace. His on¬lookers had all but conceded thecrown, when a partisan onlookerslipped two rotten ones in thechampion’s drink, which Zeke un¬thinkingly bolted.So violent was Crunk’s reactionto this treachery that he overthrewthe card table and, bellowingoaths, began pelting the manage¬ment with his half-dozen remain¬ing fresh eggs. Crunk was dis¬qualified from the game, and theC-shop has to this day omitted“Zekiel’s Folly” from its sodafountain menu.Sex Lectures5120 South Parkway.The public ii cordially invited.Form Chess Club Herelounge of the Reynolds club.Aceompanisl WaRtedFor SingerVicinity 47th ond Stony ItlondONE HOUR, TWO NIGHTS' A WEEKPhone Long Beach 347190% Loans to VeteransFor Purchase of HomesUp to September 1, the VeteransAdministration had guaranteed atotal of 293,931 home, farm andbusiness loans for veterans underthe GI Bill. These loans have aface value of $1,429,331,000, ofwhich VA has guaranteed or in¬sured $657,958,000. Nearly 90 percent are for homes, VA says. SEMPER FIDEUS! *Whatever your college colors, you will find themamong our new oxford striped neckties in col¬lege colors.. , , always faithful to our motto—maximumquality for minimum price—these ties are just $1.Pay no more.Good-looking matching handkerchiefs go for alittle small change.^fortper faithful. •* Ijyttoiijssums ahp ms— Zionist MeetNext WeekIntercollegiate Zionist Federa¬tion of America, University chap¬ter, will have its first generalmeeting next Tuesday, October 22,at 8 p.m. in Ida Noyes library.Guest speaker will be Rabbi Sid¬ney Jacobs. Rabbi Jacobs is di¬rector of activities at the Collegeof Jewish Studies and also theeducational consultant for theZionist Youth commission.The topic of his talk will be“Palestine in Conflict.” This is thefirst in a series of “behind thenews” analyses of the Palestiniansituation which IZFA will sponsorthis quarter.At their first membership meet¬ing, October 2, the group electedits officers for the year. Theseare Lya Dym, president; MiltShulman, vice president; JaniceGoldman,* corresponding secretary;Goldalie Meyer, recording secre¬tary; Sam Rosen, Alive Arvey,Hannon Costeff, David Neiman,June White, and Harley Flanders,executive members at large.Rural mail carriers had to trav¬el 1,435,059 miles every day lastyear to serve their 29,500,000 pa¬trons. Iron MaskTea Oct. 28Iron Mask, Junior men’s honorsociety, in inaugurating its policyof reaching closer and moie in¬formal faculty-student relation¬ships, is holding its first of a seriesof teas, Monday, October 28, inIda Noyes Hall from 3 to 5 p.m.This first tea will give students achance to meet top members ofthe Administration at close range.“It is hoped,” said Pete Gun-nar, head man in Iron Mask,“that President Colwell will helpthe boys fire the opening gun inthe series by speaking at this firstmeeting.”All students of the universityare cordially invited by Iron Maskto take advantage of the oppor¬tunity to meet the interestinggroup of men and women whokeep the intricate machinery of agreat university in working or¬der, and set the policies whichwill improve the machinery itself.1500 Can't Be Wrong—JeiR the Student AsieelotloeTodayll-F SOCIAL SCHEDULE. 194M7! Fall Quarter Type Function Given Byj Fri. Nov. 1 Open Party Psi U.IT Fri. Nov. 8 3-way Dance Pi Lams, Phi Delts, Alpha Delts“ Fri. Nov. 15 Open Party Phi GamsFri. Nov. 22 Open Party Sigma Chi\ Wed. Nov. 27 I-F Ball I-F CouncilFri. Dec. 13 3-way Dance Betas, Dekes, Phi SigsWinter Quarter^ Fri. Jan. 17 I-F Informal I-F CouncilFri. Jan. 24 Open Party DekesFri. Jan. 31 Open Party ZBTsi Fri. Feb. 7 3-way Dance Phi Gams, Sigma Chi, Phi PslFri. Feb. 14 Open Party BetaFri. Feb. 28 . Open Party Pi LamsFri. Mar. 7 Open Party D. U.Spring Quarters Fri. Apr. 11 Open Party Phi Psi’sFri. Apr. 18 3-way Dance ZBT, Psi U, D. U." Fri. Apr. 25 Open Party Phi SigsFri. May 2 Open Party Alpha DeltsFri. May 9 Open Party Phi DeltsFri. May 16 I-F Formal I-F CouncilDe Gustibusl^onDisputandum*There’s no law against go¬ing around dressed in sevenArrow oxford stripe neck¬ties . .. and you really haveto admire this fellow’s in¬dividuality.You can display your goodtaste by buying just one oftwo of these eye-catchingstriped ties in authentic col¬lege colors. Only $1 at youfArrow dealer.Might as well get a match¬ing handkerchief whileyou’re at it. Then your get-up will be indisputably O.K.^ber€ is no disputing about tastes*ARROW &mT5 and TIBSUNnfRWEAK • HANildimiin • SPORTS SHIRTSmtf:Friday, October 18, 1948 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 9Ahe Krash—Political AndOtherwise . .By now it should be fairly evident to all concerned that forbetter or for worse, fraternities, with the blessing of the Admin¬istration, are here to stay. As such the debate in last week’sMaroon purporting to represent diverse views on the desirability or non-desirability of fraternties on this campus was equi¬valent to kicking a dead horse.'But the salient question, thoughtemporarily obscured by the swirlof rhetoric, still remains. Terselyphrased it is simply: what direc¬tion are fraternities going to take?Taken at face value, the conten¬tions of the affirmative in lastweek’s verbal clash would utterlydestroy any justification whatso¬ever for continuance of the fra¬ternity system. None of the al¬leged benefits fraternities conferupon their members could not behad jn the University dormitorysystem, once the current housingcrisis has been eased. Any logicaland effective defense of fraternitiesmust rest on the assumption thatfraternities, in one sense oranother, can render benefits ofreal value which no other insti¬tution here can equal.Similarly, the charge levelledby the negative writer, whichsimply does not apply to the cir¬cumstances at hand, is so muchpuerile prattle. It may be truethat fraternities at some univer¬sities “germinate class warfare’’;the charge that they do so at thisinstitution is unwarranted. Thosewho wish to denounce fraternitiesat this university must do so whileconsidering the unique nature ofthe University and the equallyunique nature of fraternities onthese Quadrangles. The evidencewould seem to support the con¬clusion that fraternity membersare drawn from a roughly repre¬sentative cross ssction of thecampus.This is hardly to say, however,ttiat a strong case cannot be madeagainst the existence of the fra¬ternities. It could be asserted withgreat cogency and Justification thatfraternities, by exercising discrim-inaton and by encouraging trivial¬ity and anti' inteilectualism, aresabotaging the education programand moral objectives of the Uni¬versity,It is indisputably true that indi¬viduals and organizations, con¬ fronted with the exigencies of life,must exercise selectivity; thecapacity of fraternity houses, anddormitories as well, is not un¬limited. The right to select friendsaccording to an individual stand¬ard is certainly not to be denied.But it is not an unqualified pre¬rogative. It is unquestionably im¬moral for that standard to includeany distinctions based upon raceor religion.Furthermore, selectivity in thepast has operated virtually on aone-way boulevard. While elo¬quently maintaining “everyone’sright to select his own friends,”the fraternities have culled theirprospective brothers from newarrivals before the rushees havehad adequate time to exercise thatright of selection intelligently.With the imminent advent of thenew era in which pledging is de¬layed until the divisional level,prospective fraternity men willhave a better opportunity to cul¬tivate real friendships with fra¬ternity members, and among theircontemporaries as well, before de¬ciding to become members of amore restricted group. For thefirst time true mutual selectivitywill exist.The first principle of a goodfraternity system at this Univer¬sity should be that it is in basicharmony with the spirit and pur¬pose of the institution. If thepurpose of the University is thecultivation of the intellect, thenanti-intellectual activity is a con¬tradiction in terms. The univer¬sity dormitory system, like a longmoribund giant, is slowly lurchingto life. The Administration hasfinally come to realize that theprogram in the classroom, to be ef¬fective, must be supplemented indaily living. It is to be hoped thatthe fraternities will see the samelight.Both proponents and critics ofthe system should face the factsboldly and act accordingly. Con¬ ventional education is dead atChicago; conventional fraternitiesmust also perish. Most emphatic¬ally this is the showdowm for thefraternity system. The burdejj^ ofproof rests squarely with thefraternities. They must justifytheir existence in positive terms.They should be given a fair oppor¬tunity to do so. (AK). The Scientific Method ♦ *WHITEHEADCHOSENDon Whitehead was electedpresitient of the InternationalRelations club at the organization’squarterly business meeting heldMonday afternoon in Social Sci¬ence 122. Membership in the clubis composed of 150 students working for masters’ and doctors’ de¬grees in the University’s inter¬national relations program, underthe chairmanship of Dr. QuincyWright.Named to succeed Thomas Farras vice-president was Harold PFord. Isabelle Kohn won the postof secretary-treasurer, succeedingMarjorie Litt.Main business of the meetingwas to welcome forty new members of the club. Other businessincluded a report from the voca¬tional committee by James Adamsa report by the club’s inter-orgrepresentative, Tom Remingtonand an interpretation of the Inter¬national Relation committee’s ac¬ademic standard ruling by Web¬ster Cash, student advisor.Program and social committeeswill be announced later this weekaccording to Whitehead. The meeting is scheduled for the first partof November. A series of socialget-to-gethers is also planned.Music LecturesThe second of the music .department’s lecture - concerts willtake place at Kimball hall onWednesday evening at 8:15 p.m.Siegmund Levarie will lecture on“The Musical Tradition of Viennain the 19th Century.” The musicalpart of the evening will includeBrahms’ C Minor piano trio (Opus101) and Schubert’s “Trout” quin¬tet (Opus 114).The artists featured in the sec¬ond half of the program are JohnWeicher, violin; Milton Preves,viola; Dudley Powers, violoncello;Vaclav Jiskra, double bass; PerryO’Neill, piano.Pulse ReturnsHAVE FUNMake Money•SeUtUMOTOR ETTE{%»St€tdcMt^ShlrUy Malohon, "Mlit Phofoflath" of 1944, shown using the“MOTORETTE" for Community Fund mttstngtr ttrvic*.WANTED! Aggressive sales representativefor new three-wheel automobileIF YOU-Are ambitious ana sales minded.Are willing to devote the necessary time.Are capable of handling this successfully without interfering with yourstudies.then you can-Earn generous commissions. Get valuable sales experience.Drive your own demonstrator model.You MUST- ACT PROMPTLY-Call Estobrook 2211 for oa The last day for appointments isInUrvitw appoinlllKilt. Saturday, Octobar 19tli.•k SEE THE MOTOREHE AT OUR SHOWROOMCONVEYOR SERVICE COMPANY4S50 W. WASHINGTON BLVO. • CHICAGO 2;. ILL. (Continued from Page 1)current topics in contrast to thestraight recital of news. On theeditorial page, letters-to-the editorwill be given full prominence be¬side one page of editorial comment.An inquiring Pulse reporter willtally pro’s and con’s for a monthlycampus poll.In addition to Bryder and Wal--ler on the permanent editorialstaff, Joseph Greenberg is businessmanager. The news editor is PaulE. Singer; advertising manager,Marjorie Fuller; production man¬ager, Norma K. Niles; and herassistant, Louise H. Hetzel. CissieLiebschutz is art editor and LoisSwan is head of circulation.ClassifiedFOR reliable baby sitter service callBob Grey oar Warren Hill. Midway6000. Hourly rate, 50c.CHINA MINK coat for sale; like new;size 14-16; reasonable. Call HydePark 5711.LOST; beaded Indian pin, two incheshigh, predominantly tan, form ofwarrior; reward. Nancy Oestreich,room 622, International house. Fair¬fax 8200. Ah ha! Now tail me, which was It with you, my boy, heredityor environment?I took myself over to the CivicOpera House the other night tosee and hear a little item called,“Operations Jazz,” presented bya nice guy by the name of PaulEduard Miller. I came in on adramatic production; Sidney Bech¬et’s soprano sax in a blues, as onlyhe can play it, and THAT voiceof Studs Terkel blasting from no¬where on the history of jazz. "Wewere in the mood.And to keep us there Gene (Hon-eybear) Cedric took the first setwith Max Miller on piano (moreabout Max later). The first thingthat you notice is that Gene lookslike a Honeybear, and then youhear that mellow sax and forgetwhat he looks like. Gene tooknumber on clary, which was allright; but I’d just as soon he’dstick to that lovely horn of his.Jimmy McPartland’s Sextet fol¬lowed up with old timers likeRoyal Garden Blues, Jazz MeBlues and Rose Room. McPart-land plays a nice trumpet, withgood ideas, but something musthave been wrong Sunday, becauseJimmy showed an awful lot oftone irregularities, only some ofwhich could be put down to ac-coustic changes as. he swung hishorn from side to side. The restof the group was, one might say,nondescript; except for the drum¬mer, who had a little trouble withthe beat.And then came the prize pack¬age of the evening, for me atleast; the Max Miller Trio. Hereis one of the best all around jazzpianists that I have even heard;man who has technique, ideasand feeling; the perfect combina¬tion. Starting out with Caravan,his left hand playing a base thatI could sit and listen to for hours;he followed up with a compositionof his own, called Fantasia of theUnconscious, which does for jazzwhat Stravinsky did for the clas¬sics. He used a doubled chordalfigure in this number that makesyou think he’s using more thanthe ordinary number of hands andsome hocus-pocus besides.The Bud l^eeman Sextet cameon with a sax trio that was fine.With Bud on his tenor and BillDohler on alto, Bechet picked upIII-HAT CLUB..• Drinks• Bnferfainmenf• FoodMARVIN SCHROEDER,Propritfor • ( , \\S0 EAST 55fh STREET his soprano and made with thelead. These three, with drummer,Ken Smith held audience atten¬tion all by their lonesome. Bechetwas king of the soloists for thegroup, with Bud playing somenice clean ideas. Dohler did a nicejob on ideas, but he was a littleweak in tone.Then came Paul Jordan and hisOctet with something new anddifferent. Different, but not par¬ticularly new. He had orchestrat¬ed his own compositions for thelittle octet; when they really need¬ed a twenty-five piece band. Icaught a few Ellington ideas andsomething else, which I didn’tidentify until the second set.Finally, the “star” of the eve¬ning came on—Dizzy Gillespie, there-bop trumpet. Diz played onenumber doing his usual straightchorus, then swinging into re-bop.Unsuspectingly he started the sec¬ond number. It came time for theMax Miller piano solo; and whathappened? Re-bop from our littlefriend. From here on it was touchand go; featuring Diz and Max.They gave each other quite a bitof competition. Diz did a nice job,Miller same. I still don’t knowwhich one walked off with theacting honors. And so to intermis¬sion time.Having alternated betweenStuds Terkel and Ken Griffin asnarrators we now had an additionto the family in the form of DavidGarraway, Mr. 11:60 p.m. Heopened the program with the Free¬man sextet doing I Found a NewBaby and I Got Rhythm. I’reemanand Dohler did a duet this timeand both showed up well.'Then with a quick switch in theorder of the program, we got aSidney Bechet session with Becheton his soprano, Cedric on tenorand Miller on piano. Cedric didn’tshow up too well here, but Bechetwas the star on the set; evenMiller played chords and stayedin the background.Then came Georgie Barnes'six, with Barnes himself on guitar,Frank Rullo on vibes and BoydRolando on tenor. Rolando andBarnes took nice solos, althoughguitar solos always bore me ifthey last longer than eight bars.Back to Paul Jordan again, onlythis time he surprised me. Withstraight orchestration, he soundedmuch more like jazz; modern jazz;but jazz. I finally identified thesomething else from the first Jor¬dan set—a bit of Copland.And for the grand finale, Dizand Max Miller again. Diz cameout holding tenderly to the handof visiting fireman Stuff Smith*He and Diz cracked a few jokes,then Stuif left the group to theirown devices on Sweet Georgia ,(Coniinued on Next Page) <4.E*agt 10 '^/.'ii''-?,■ . . .'Li ‘Dolls made in ancient Japanwert dressed, led and generallytreait^ as though alive. Theywera given to mothers to keepOvil away from their children. Fi?'--a*'’' ■ TJ3I: CHICAGO MAROONThe temperature of a victim ofcholera may rise after death. Thelimbs of the dead person may alsomove due to peculiar muscularcontractions. Great groups of Monarch but¬terflies migrating in swarms, flyall the way from Canada or theUnited States in early autumn tothe Gulf States. FridayTSetober 18, 1040Thomas Masaryk, first presidentof Czechoslovakia, who died in1937, once worked as a black¬smith. He .later worked as a tu¬tor in order to finish his educa- ComContestsTRIPLE KING IN THE REALMOF BASEBAUV^4^ Aww<55S«....THEY SATISFY!Att 0#ll AIjERlCA-CH ESTfRFfflO IS 10RSPLEASUREbettertasting . By VlackThe intra-mural hockey tourna¬ment opens Monday, October 21with a game between Kelly halland Hitchcock V. The tournamentwhich will draw the best hockeymaterial on campus, will matchteams from all the women’s dormsexcept Gates, Snell, and the foursections of Hitchcock which aredivisional. The divisional women,however, are represented by ateam made up of members from nosingle hall. The final game of thetournament, to be played Thurs¬day, November 21, will see Fostermatched with Beecher. All gameswill begin at 3:45 p.m.The Junior Varsity (first andsecond years of the college) willplay their first game of the sea¬son October 22 against Hirsch onthe Jackson Park field. Twogames are scheduled with Hirsch,two with Faulkner on the yct-to-be-completed program.The season began for the Var¬sity hockey team with a gamewith the Chicago Club team IIlast September 29 on the JacksonPark field. Opponents later onthis season will include variousNorth Shore club teams and TeamI of the Chicago club. Novemberwill bring the Midwest SectionalTournament at St. Louis and theNational Tournament at NewYork.The tennis tournament schedulehas been drawn up; the firstmatches are to be played today.A table tennis tournament isanother of the W.A.A.-spon.soredactivitites planned for the Fallquarter.The biggest item on the comingweek’s schedule will be the SquareDance party to be held October22 in the gym at Ida. The dance,to run from 8 to 9:30 p.m. is opento all individuals who can showa University identification card oran Ida Noyes activity card—thelatter is a group which includesmembers of the faculty, alums,and employees. Miss Alma Hawk¬ins, associate professor at GeorgeWilliams college, ^will give thecalls. No admission will becharged.Don’t forget the bridge lessonsbeing offered every Friday nightat 6:45 in the Ida Noyes libraryas of tonight.Every Wednesday night at IdaNoyes is open recreation nightwith a variety of activities offered.Again, a University identificationcard or an Ida activity card is theonly admission required. Theactivities offered include rollerskating, swimming, bowling, tabletennis, pool, billiards, and bridge.The hours are from 7 until 9 p.m.Reservations may be made forthe bowling alleys and the bad¬minton courts any night in theweek at the main office in IdaNoyes.A certain amount of confusionexists on campus about tourna¬ment team eligibility. Accordingto Miss Walters of the physicaleducation office, a student maynow be a member of a club, or¬ganization, or house team whereformerly her first responsibilitywas to her house team. Divisionalstudents, however, must play ondivisional, club, or organizationalteams, not on house teams.OFF BEATBy "WEEZ"(Continued from Preceding Page)Brown. 1 decided I liked Dizbetter on straight stuff, eventhough he lacks technique. I saidMax Miller, need I say more?For those of you who missedthe concert, you might want tolook up some of the pieces onGreen Recordings. If you’v^hever.heard Max Miller, you might dropinto the Congo Lounge of thenorth side’s Stratford Hotel anddig you a set.And if you’d like to hear som<;good jazz, try some of the P^nlEduard Miller jazz concertsKimball HaU, November 9 andD^floail.>er 1.f^day» October 18, 1848 THE CHICAGO MAROONThe Sportlightby Anson CherryThe University of Chicago’s bas¬ketball team went into pre-seasonconditioning last week in antici¬pation of a 17 game schedule thatwill have the Maroons invadingfive mid-western states.Paced by last-season lettermenFred De Graw, Johnny Sharp, andRay Freeark, the Maroons havebeen going through light drillsonly. Team scrimmages will prob¬ably not begin until next week,and serious practice not until afterthe eleventh of November. Morethan thirty players, includingmany with outstanding highschool, prep and college cage rec¬ords have turned out for this year’ssquad.Walt Riley and Arm Lillien aretwo other lettermen from the 1945-46 season. C-men returning frompre-war seasons are Lark Flana¬gan, Bob Finnegan, and Dave andPaul Zimmerman. Height, the onething that was lacking on lastyear’s squad seems to be predom¬inant this year. There is Patton,six feet-five inches of high-scoringcenter from the University of Pitts¬burgh, and Jack Fons, another sixfeet-five incher who played atWilson Junior coliege before thewar.Other skyscrapers are Lyle Han¬sen (6'3"), Sears (6'3"), Lou Dei-telbaum, a minor C winner (6'2"),Menking from Indiana State uni¬versity (6'3V^'0. A1 King, Purduetransfer (6'41^")» and Johnson, aHarper high school standout is 6'5''.Lubera, star forward at Todd highschool joins five U high graduateson what should be Chicago’s finestbasketball team in many a year.The boys from last year’s JuniorVarsity include Dolan, Eubanks,Reaven, Philon and Faust.Norgren lists Bradley, Bdloit andDe Pauw as the “tough ones” onthe 1946-47 schedule, but pointsto the talented men listed aboveas a means of getting over them.The Maroon 1946-47 basketballschedule, with Chicago’s homegames in caps:December 7, ILLINOIS TECH;Dec. 14, Knox College; Dec. 16,De Pauw University; Dec. 20,COE COLLEGE; Jan. S, BRAD¬LEY COLLEGE; Jan. 6, CoeCollege; Jan. 10, Bradley Col¬lege; Jan. 15, Illinois Tech; Jan.18, GRINNELL COLLEGE; Jan.24, Washington University; Jan.31, Beloit; Feb. 5, Southern Illi¬nois; Feb. 10, WASHINGTONUNIVERSITY; Feb. 17, GrinnellCollege; Feb. 22, SOUTHERNILLINOIS NORMAL UNIVER¬SITY; March 1, KNOX COL¬LEGE; March 8, BELOIT.Odds ’N Ends: Has anyone no¬ticed the Athletic bulletin datedOctober 15? If the bulletin is to be believed, Coach Hermanson hasdecided that his Junior Varsitysoccer team is a group of diminui-tive supermen, for he has themscheduled to play Tilden in Staggfield at 3:45 on Wednesday, whileat 3:30 on the same day they areto play Kelly at Gage Park, overfive miles away. More power toyou Alvar!Saving the Best for Last Depart¬ment: In case anyone has won¬dered why the glamor-gals of theathletic department had been ne¬glected in this column, let me sayright here that in traditional Maroon policy, we have merely been“saving the best for last.” MrsJuerger, switchboard operator inthe Phys Ed office, Gloria Unter-berg, Metcalf’s gorgeous blondesecretary, and Mrs. Goldstein, In¬tramural office secretary, are thethree young ladies whose nameshave gone hither-to-fore unmen¬tioned in introducing our athleticstgff to you. All hard-workinggals, they help considerably tobrighten the otherwise dreary at¬mosphere that is Bartlett gym. MEETIKG OFC-MENAll C-men on campus areasked to attend an importantmeeting next Wednesday(October 23) at 4:30 p.m. inthe trophy room at Bartlettgym. MaroonSoccer Squad DropsOpener to Wheaton, 5-1Former UC StudentCops Fencing MeetTwenty-five of the nation’s topfencers, including three membersof the United States fencing teamat the 1936 Olympic games inBerlin, competed for the MiddleWest individual fencing cham¬pionship in matches with the foil,epee and saber at the U. of C.’sBartlett gym last Sunday.Each contestant fenced all othercontestants with three weapons,the foil, epee and saber; the Mid¬dle West individual championshipgoing to the entrant with thehighest number of bout wins,Mack Gilman, former U. of C.student. David Wallace, North¬western graduate, was second,with Leon Strauss, vet student atChicago, finishing third.The meeting was sponsored bythe Amateur Fencers’ League ofAmerica, and was under the direc¬tion of A. B. Hermanson, UCfencing instructor.Little Foxes—(Continued from Page 1)from 2 to 5 p.m. in the Reynoldsclub theatre.Blair has also stated that allstudents interested in any phaseof dramatic or radi<J work shouldpresent themselves for an inter¬view. Blair will be interviewingstudents who wish to participatein these activities on Tuesdayand Wednesday, October 22 and23, from 10 to 12 noon, and 2to 5 p.m. Gophers Bop UCCross CountryTeam, 35-20Last Saturday morning theMaroon cross country team wentout to Washington park wishfullythinking that they might start thecross country season with a vic¬tory. Minnesota however, had dif¬ferent ideas, and won the meet,20 to 35. For Chicago it was amoral victory, with Johnny Adamscopping first place. The Gophersgobbled up the next five positionsunfortunately, and that was “allshe wrote.”Adams lead all the way untilabout 300 yards from the finishline, when he was suddenly over¬taken by Ray Good, Minnesota’stop runner. At this point Adamsturned on the steam, sprinting theremainder of the distance and hitthe tape first. The winning timewas 13:59.6, while Good wasclocked in 14:00 flat for the 2 and5/8 mile course.Newman, Brown, Wilder andNelson finished in that order forMinnesota, while Mayer-Oakes,White, Benedek and Roberts tookthe other scoring positions forChicago. It was the first meet ofthe season for the locals,' and hadbeen pushed up a week ahead ofschedule, finding the Maroons notquite prepared. They should bein better shape for the next meetso we’ll be looking forward to awin.WHEN YOU WANTREALLYGOOD FOODENJOYED BY UNIVERSITY STUDENTSFOR OVER SIXTEEN YEARSRECOMMENDED BY DUNCAN HINES(PheipA.COLONIAL RESTAURANT(324 WOODLAWN AVEHUECLOSED WEDNESDAYS ROTC For YolsUnder New PlanKnoxville, Tenn.—(I.P.)—TheArmy’s plans to revamp and mod¬ernize its college Reserve OfficersTraining Corps program has re¬sulted in a “large increase” in thenumber of veterans and other menstudents at the University of Ten¬nessee applying for enrollment inmilitary training, reported Col.Claude A. Black of the U-T Mili¬tary Department.The revised ROTC plan is nowin effect here, with changes madein both the subject matter ofcourses and the pay scale oftrainees, explained Colonel Black.Under the old scheme, studentstaking the first two years of train¬ing were paid nothing, and thosein the second two years of ad¬vanced training received 66 centseach day the military class met.Under the new plan, those in thefirst two years will receive 66cents a day and those in advancedcourses, $1.91 a day.Revamped courses will includemany new military subjects, saidColonel Black. These include psy¬chological warfare, evolution ofwarfare, psychology of leadership,military history of the UnitedStates, geographical foundations ofworld military power, situation,occupied territories, and combinedair, sea and land operations. Play Morton JCHere TomorrowBy ANSON CHERRYCHICAGO (1) WHEATON (5)Sears G. FarrellEverson LFB. NelsonFrazier RFB. NewbernAtkinson LHB. JensenBiumberg GHB. MorrisMullins RHB. McArthurStrauss OL. RoachEubanks IL. MoffettEllis CF. DevriesBowles IR. BukerBoVbjerg OR. SuppleeSubstitutions:Chicago: Donahue, Gabinet, Gardner,Edgell.Wheaton: Winston, Lane. WaTd, Lop-ston, Voth, Ebersole, Van Dyck, Ries-ler, Thompson, Hutchins, Phillips.Soccer, in case the reader is un¬informed on the subject, is a gruel¬ing, running game played in two45 minute halves, with elevenplayers on each team. It is prob¬ably rougher physically than anyother form of athletics in whichAmerican universities participate,and just as interesting. Neverthe¬less, for some reason it fails todraw one iota of the fans thatwitness football and basketballgames, etc.Well, let’s see about last Satur¬day’s game. For approximately tenminutes the Maroons held Wheatonat bay, though the ball was con¬stantly down in Chicago territory.Suddenly Roach, Wheaton’s leftwing man, broke loose and bootedthe ball past the goalie for thegame’s first score. Just before thehalf ended, Phillips took a passfrom one of his team mates, pushedthe ball through the goal, andWheaton lead 2 to 0.Hie second half produced aharder fighting Chicago outfit, asthe Maroons held Wheaton to astandstill for oveV fifteen minutes,the teams sweeping up' and downthe field. Then Reisler of Wheatonscored and a few minutes laterEbersole hooted one and the scorewas four to nothing.At this time Donahue replacedSears in the goal. With the ballback in play Chicago found itselfin scoring territory, but ChetBowles and Bob Ellis were bothrobbed on beautiful shots at thegoal. Finally with about ten min¬utes of the game remaining, Ellisedged his way forward andpunched the ball through for Chi¬cago’s only score.In the minutes remaining beforethe game ended, Phillips, on oneof Wheaton’s frequent sortees intoChicago territory, kicked the balltoward the goal. Halfback DickAtkinson, in a frantic effort to prevent anotl\er score headed the ball,which went right through the up¬rights. The goal, Wheaton’s last,was credited to Phillips, and Thegame ended with the Maroons onthe short end of a 5 to 1 score.In defense of Chicago, it can besaid that Wheaton has an except-tionally fine team. The Maroonsplayed hard throughout the entiregame, despite injuries of one de¬gree or another to practically everyplayer on the team. Earlier in¬juries to several players preventedthe free use of substitutes by Chi¬cago. In spite of all this the scorewould have been much closer hadChicago received half the breaksthat went against them.Outplayed in the first half, theMaroons came back fighting in the CUT-RATE TICKETS ONSALEStudent tickets for theNorthwestern-College of thePacific game in Dyche sta¬dium, Evanston, on October26 are available in the ath¬letic office in Bartlett gym¬nasium now, according toKyle Ander^n. Tickets cost$1 and seats are located inDyche stadium’s east stands,behind Stagg’s College of thePacific team.jy Soccer TeamWins, 3-1, OverLake ForestBy CAPPYAlvar Hermanson’s varsity soc¬cer squad went down to defeatagainst Wheaton, but the Jayveeswere certainly able to hold theirheads high after their openinggame with Lake Forest. The ballwas down in Lake Forest territoryso consistently that the Chicagogoalie only had to make five stopsduring the entire game.Newbury scored the first goalof the game about eight minutesafter the contest had begun. LakeForest, on one of its infrequentexcursions into unfriendly terri¬tory posted its lone score just be¬fore the end of the first half.‘The second half was fifteenminutes old when Calish bootedChicago’s second goal, breaking thetie which then existed. Aboutthree minutes before the gameended, Bob Linciome added an¬other tally for the clincher.The Jayvee backs put up anexceptional defense, and on thewhole, the team looked betterthan it had at any time duringpractice. The passing was muchbetter than it has been, and LakeForest was outclassed during theentire game. The second game ofthe season was to have been playedagainst Tilden on Wednesday.PROMPT REPAIRSTYPEWRITERS and ADDING MACHINES* GUARANTEED WORKWE BUY TYPEWRITERSL. M. MITCHELL1228 E. 83RD STREET HYDE PARK 1301COkNU :Oli‘itlUtAM second, and were able to keep theball in the Wheaton half of thefield. Building up several scoringopportunities, Chicago was roboedon several close chances, Bowleswas all over the field on both de¬fense and offense, while FullbackHowie Frazier was Chicago’s out¬standing defense man.The game was Chicago’s first ofthe year, and Wheaton’s second. Aweek earlier the boys from Wheat¬on had been held to a scoreless tieby a strong Morton Junior collegeaggregation. Tomorrow morningat 11 a.m. the Maroons meet thissame Morton bunch and we’ll pre¬dict a close game. Come out andsee for yourself.Is ThtrtSomething You Wont toSell *RentBuyExchange?Try a MAROONCLASSIFIEDLeorn to DanceNowPRIVATE LESSORS: DAY ANDEVENING4LSOCLASSES SUN.. HON., TUES..WEDNESDAY & SAT., 8:15 P.M.•TERESA DOLANDANCING SCHOOL120t I. tJrdSt. Hy<* 3®*®Always something worth writing home aboutletter perfect on campusVours,Each week in the CHICAGO MAROON keep* posted on the styles that make shopping at MarshallField & Company a cherished Campus Custom*This week meet Nancy Kerr, Junior, andmember of the Orientation Board,Hi Marty:Oh, the irony of it all.Here I thought I was coming toan intellectuskl haven and what do Iget but a mud dip in the traditionaldunking site, Botany Pond...for sitting on theC-Bench, a privilege allotted toSeniors only. And I said thisschool had no customs!It's a campus custom too, to buyeverything for fashionable campuswear, at Marshall Field & Company.Here I am by the C-Bench dressedin my favorite casual...a lightweight wool plaid with long sleevesand tiny collar. In redor blue'with white, with contrastingblack belt, sizes 9 to 15, $19.95. s