VO* THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1946 31 PRICE 5 CENTSJon Hall Culls l-F QueenFrom Ten CandidatesBy PAUL KIELARCelebrating its forty-third an¬niversary as one of the out¬standing social events of theyear, the annual Interfraternityball will be held Thanksgivingeve, November 27 at the Casinoballroom of the Congress hotel,(onlinuous music, a precedentfirst introduced at the 1937 Greekformal affair at the Lake Shorechib, will be provided for the ex¬pected 700 couples by the orches¬tras of Sonny Dunham and Tom-iiiv Parker.' The featured event of the eve¬ning will be the crowning of the“Queen of the Inter-fraternityBall.” A committee headed byRalph Beamans and includingJames McBride, Steve Llewellyn,Marvin Bailin, and James Barnetthas chosen ten contenders for thetitular honors from photographssubmitted by the campus women’sorganizations.Anne B. Stauffer, Jo ^Gunnar,Bambi Golden, Carol Dragstadt,Muriel Nomland, Vici Fastung,Mary Withington, Sue Davidson,and Florence Baumruck are thecandidates for the coveted crown.Jon Hall, popular motion pic¬ture star, will choose the queenat a cocktail party sponsored bythe Inter-Fraternity council, whichwill be held at the Continentalhotel, Sunday November 24.The forthcoming affair has aglittering past to compete with.One of the many outstanding In¬ter-Fraternity balls of the pastwas the 1939 event held at theDrake hotel which featured themusic of Duke Ellington and hisorchestra. This year the Greekmen are out to break all records.During a p)eriod of three years,from 1932 to 1935, of the. annualaffair’s forty-two year history, theball was an all-campus affair.This year the formal dance is ex¬clusively for fraternity men andtheir dates.The fraternities plan to hold thetraditional pre-ball cocktail par¬ties at their respective houses toraise the curtain on what promisesto be a memorable culmination ofthf* autumn quarter’s social sea¬son.Kopecky ModelsAt "MagnificentDoll' PremiereModeling some of Ginger Rogers’gowns on the stage of the RKOPalace theater in downtown Chi¬cago, Miss Valerie Kopecky lastnight reigned at the world pre¬miere of the picture “The Magnifi¬cent Doll,” the story of Dolly Madi¬son. Miss Rogers is the star of thejusi released picture.Valerie, chosen last week as thequeen of the MAROON beer bust,defeated the candidate from North¬western university for the title ofthe “Magnificent Doll,” and thusearned the right to preside at thepietniere.The winner qf the contest, wortha $•‘>0 prize, is a member of Chi RhoSigma club at the University, and1^ currently acting as businessluanager of the Quadrangles, thecampus yearbook. Wednesday af¬ternoon, she presented a bust of^lis.s Rogers to Henrique Ricardothe Ricardo restaurant in the^"Uop, and a recognized lover ofart.Three prominent RKO execu-bves acted as judges for the con¬ical, presented as the feature of an^dvertising campaign to introducele movie-going public to the newpicture. At the I-F BallSonny Dunhom AYC Elections Lively; RussAustin States No BasicPolicy Split; Goals ClearNext Haroon Dec. 2Due to the Thanksgivingholiday, next week’s issue ofthe CHICAGO MAROONwill be published Monday,December 2, rather thannext Friday.Staff Meeting TodayAn important meeting ofall MAROON editorial staffmembers, reporters and fea¬ture writers, will be held inthe MAROON editorial of¬fices today at 2:30. TheBoard of Control requeststhat all members be presentSA-WSSF Plan CarnivalProceeds to Needy, PressAnother UC tradition will be revived early in Winter quarterwhen a campus-wide Carnival will be held. World StudentsService Fund and Student Association are co-sponsors. WSSF’sshare will be used to aid needy students and SA’s share will beused to aid student publications.Prospective dates will be Friday ~ ■“ ~ “and Saturday, February 7 and 8. I Chicago StudentPermission is being sought to use | AuthOTS EsSOythe Field house. A Ferris wheel, Burton Moore, College student, ismerry-go-round and sideshows author of an essay in the currentwill be run by professionals. Stu¬dent organizations will operatebooths.Stan Warsaw is chairman of theorganization committee. Also onthe committee are Tom Remington,Anne Duvendeck, Ed Armstrong,Ira Corn, Marvin Greenberger.Supporting organizations are theMAROON, the social committeea id the honor societies. (November 13) issue of the Chris¬tian Century, liberal Protestantweekly magazine of current affairsEntitled “We Grew Up Over¬seas,” the essay discusses readjust¬ment of the American Protestantchurch to meet needs of returningveterans. A former newspaperman,Moore re-entered the College thissummer after 16 months Armyservice in Europe.Harper BlackautRemains UnalteredBy DORIS KRUDENERDetermined to discover the factual basis of the long loudcries of the student body, a survey was taken this week of theactual candle-power in Harper’s main reading room. The resultsshowed conclusively the need for reform, readings ranging from9-foot candles to .8, the average being about 3.2, as comparedwith the recommended 12-foot candles evenly distributed. Thatthis situation has long been bad is common talk. In 1941, aMAROON reporter measured the lighting power and got ap¬proximately the same results. The question thus naturallyarises, what, if anything, has been done, and why not?That the high moguls of Harper are perfectly aware of thegeneral atrocious lighting condition was plainly displayed bythe words of Jes'sie Shera, chief of services division at Harper,who vigorously deprecated the whole library set-up with par¬ticular emphasis on the third floor reading room. Shera saidthat several factors have contributed to the stagnation of plansfor improvement. In the first place, a conflict between Build¬ings and Grounds and Harper has raged for years over whattype of lighting to install. The terrifically high ceilings drink*up a huge quantity of light and the walls are about 100 per centreflection-proof which automatically precludes the simple ex¬pedient of putting in brighter light bulbs, which are already at amaximum. The solution that seemed most satisfactory was theuse of table lights, and thus a few years ago, experimental oneswere placed on several of the desks. These were highly success¬ful until one day a representative of B and G wandered up. Hisesthetic sensitivities being offended by this proletarian displayof the practical, they were ordered out, and to date this impassehas not been overcome. ^More recently, the lack of materials, shift in librarians andtalk of a new library building have forestalled action.Shera was quite bitter about the whole thing, his remarksrunning somewhat as follows: “As it is impossible to use thereading room for study, it fails its function'completely ... butit would make a darn good bowling alley, and around thecountry there are some pretty fine examples of awful libraryarchitecture, but Harper beyond a doubt is the most horrible.” After a spirited debate on chapter unity at its meeting Thurs¬day, November 14, the campus AVC elected John Hoving, EdWood, Dave Booth and William Birenbaum to contested posi¬tions on the executive committee.Hoving and Wood defeated Lloyd Hogan and Russ Allen forthe position of area council dele-Curtain UpOn FirstPlay ToniteCampus first nighters will getup their best attire for the open¬ing tonight at 8:30 of Lillian Hell-man’s popular drama, “The LittleFoxes.” Produced by the PlayersGuild, directed by Guild headGeorge Blair, the show will havea two-day run in Leon Mandelhall with a matinee on Saturday.Tickets for all performances areavailable now at the InformationDesk or may be purchased at Man-del hall box office before eachperformance. Student associationmembers must present their booksto get seats.Starring in this quarter’s firstdramatic production is MarthaMcCain. Mrs. McCain, who hasbeen acting in and directing cam¬pus shows for three years, willtake the part of Regina which wasfirst played on Broadway, eightyears ago by Tallulah Bankhead.Supporting Mrs. McCain will beRonald Reifler, Lewis Musil, Rich¬ard Lawrence, Dawn Pfeiffer,Harvey Rose, Lois Shepherd, MarkAshin, Jacqueline Chalat, andWilliam Altore.“Ghosts” in DecemberMr. Blair has also announcedthat Ibsen’s “Ghosts” now in re¬hearsal will be presented early inDecember. The show which hasbeen a double cast will run foreight performances in the Reyn¬olds theatre. The cast of “Ghosts”includes: Regina Engstrand, BetsyDugan, Rita Blumenthal, JacobEngstrand, Al Polikoff, ArturGolab, Mrs. Aluing, Tracy Rich¬ard, Jean Cooke, Pastor Marders,Harry Gourevitch, Richard Hull-verson, Oswald Alving, ArthurHibbs and Frank Rus.Pulse BeatsUnder SASuperyisionAt a two and a half hourmeeting last Tuesday in theoffice of John L. Bergstresser,assistant dean of students incharge of student activities, theeditors of Pulse and the executiveboard of the Student Associationtentatively decided to approve an¬other issue of Pulse this quarter.This decision was reached onlyafter the editors of the U. of C.official student news magazine hadagreed to certain conditions re¬quested by the head of the Asso¬ciation, Ira Corn, and the dean’soffice. The two principal condi¬tions were that the present busi¬ness manager of the magazine bedismissed and that Pulse agree toaccept Association supervision ofits business and editorial staffs.Because of DeficitCorn revealed that the condi¬tions set down were the result ofa deficit of over $500 incurred byPulse to date. Since the Associa¬tion and^ the dean’s office must(Continued on Page 7) gates, Booth won the Civil Liber¬ties committee chairmanship overLen Stein, and Birenbaum de¬feated Tom Fineburg for chair¬manship of the Veteran’s Problemscommittee by sizeable majorities.Previous to the election PaulTodd, John Hoving and Gene Kap¬lan presented a bipartisan discus¬sion on chapter factions. Allagreed that the issues wereneither Communistic, as manyanti-AVCs would have the publicbelieve, nor of a fundamental na¬ture. The rift, it was explained,was originally political. In theelection of delegates to the areacouncil convention last October,a slate was presented by a groupin the organization which resultedin the forming of an oppositionbloc.Division Swings to PolicySince this original division,however, the emphasis has swungfrom a purely political movementto matters of AVC policy. Theincumbents felt that it is ulti¬mately better for the local organi-tion to take a strong stand andmake some mistakes than take nostand at all. The opposition, onthe oth~er Hand,“have been fighting“endorsement in toto” in favor ofinvestigation of the issue on itsindividual merits.Leaders of both groups claimthat even the most violent issues,the line to be taken in endorsingthe several month old AmericanAqtomatic Devices’ strike, theaction to be followed in the hous¬ing problem and the proposal toreduce AVC membership dues,have produced no sharp lines offactional demarcation.In commenting on the futurepolicies of AVC, President RussAustin remarked, “Differences inthe organization are certainly notof a fundamental nature and re¬flect only the democratic processin action. We can not reasonablyexpect absolute agreement on anyissue, but we do have unity ofpurpose in our fight to achievea more democratic and prosper¬ous America and a more stableworld.”Other highlights of the meetingwere a full report from delegatesto the area council on the Bonusand atomic energy issues and afinancial report by TreasurerSherwood Miller which disclosed(Continued on Page 7)WSSF Drivt BoginsThe world Student ServiceFund drive to raise $8,000 oncampus will begin Monday,November 25. WSSF wasformed during World War 1to assist students of war torncountries. It still maintainsthis function on an interna¬tional scale with its main of¬fices in Geneva.WSSF’s goal is to givemore people an opportunityfor greater education. Anequal share of the moneyraised is used in Europe andAsia. Aid will be given inthe form of’ books, medicalcare, subsistence allowances,and any other measure ofhelp that are deemed neces¬sary.F&ge 2 THE CHICAGO MAROONCalendar of Events November 22Next Week onQuadrangles%Kathleen Overholser, Calendar EditorHems 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.”NOVEMBER 22BAPTIST STUDENTS. Informal party, folk and social dancing,games, refreshments. Hyde Park Church. 8 p.m.YWCA OPEN HOUSE. Ida NoyeS, 2nd floor. 3:30 to 5 p.m. •PLAYERS GUILD. “The Little Foxes.” Mandel Hall. 8:30 p.m.Tickets may be obtained at the University Information Office.HILLEL FOUNDATION. Fireside with Benjamin N. Nelson, Asst.Professor of Social Sciences on “The Jew in the Conscience ofChristendom;” 8:15 p.m. Sabbath service at 7:45 p.m. Karrasikhouse.SIGMA CHI OPEN PARTY. “After Theater Night Club Party” atthe chapter house, 5615 Woodlawn from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.MILITARY GOVERNMENT DISCUSSION GROUP. All who havehad military government experience are invited. Soc. Sci. 106.3:30 p.m.BRIDGE LESSONS. Ida Noyes Library. 6 45 to 9 p.m.NOVEMBER 23PHYSICAL SCIENCE DINNER DANCE. Ida Noyes. 9 to 1.SSA CLUB. Workshop on Social Work and Social Action. First ses¬sion fiom 10 to 12 noon on organization and methods in thefield of social action. 2nd session from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. on theapplication of social action in the social work setting. Ida Noyes,2nd* floor, east room.PLAYERS GUILD “The Little Foxes.” Mandel Hall. Matinee per¬formance at 2:30 p.m. and evening at 8:30 p.m.POLISH CLUB THANKSGIVING DANCE. Folk dancing from 8to 9:30 p.m. and popular dancing from 9:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. In¬ternational House. Admission, $0.90. ,NOVEMBER 24BAPTIST STUDENTS. Presentation and discussion of the Friend’s“Work in the Settlement” at 7 p.m. followed by a social hour.Hyde Park Baptist Church.BADMINTON CLUB. Ida Noyes. 3:30 to 5:30 p.m.CHAPEL UNION. Robert Fairgraves, regional director of W.S.S.F.,will lead a discussion meeting on World Student Service Fund,filmr¥irip and bull session at the Chapel house at 8 p.m.OUTING CLUB. Outing party to the Indiana dunes leaves IdaNoyes at 8 30 a.m.HILLEL FOUNDATION. Book review “Thieves in the Night” at8:30 p.m Open house from 2 to 5:30 p.m. and from 7:30 to 10:30p.m. Kara:sik houseROUND TABLE DISCUSSION “The Free Flow of News and WorldPeace” by Seymour, general manager of International NewsService, Palmer Hoyt, editor and publisher of the Denver Post,and Quincy Wright, Department of International Relations atthe University of Chicago. 12:30 p.m. NBC.CHANNING CLUB. Square Dance Party at First Unitarian Church,57th and Woodlawn. 7 p.m.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE. Dr. Elton Trueblood, Profes¬sor at Earlham College. Rockefeller Chapel, 11 a.m.NOVEMBER 25PUBLIC LECTURE. “The Growth of Democratic Thought, 1800-1860” by Walter Johnson, Asst. Professor of History. UniversityCollege, 19 S. La Salle st Series admission for three quarters.$17.50.PUBLIC LECTURE. Boardman Robinson with his illustrations for“Spoon River Anthology” and more for “Moby Dick” and“Leaves of Grass” with selected readings. Mandel Hall, 8 p.m.INTER-ORGANIZATION COUNCIL. Report on the World Student. Congress at Prague by Russ Austin, U. of C. delegate and chair¬man of the United States Delegation. Also a program of'folk¬songs of many nations by William Johnson, Negro baritone, ac¬companied by Sonia Austin. Rosenwald 2. 4 p.m.NOVEMBER 26PUBLIC LECTURE. “Democratic Institutions in Postwar Scandi¬navia,” by Henry Goddard Leach. Oriental Institute. 4:30 p.m.UNIVERSITY CONCERT. Arthur Gold and Robert Fizdale, duo-pianists. 8:30 p.m. Mandel Hall. Single admission, $1.50.LECTURE. “American Ideals and International Politics” by T. V.Smith, Professor of Philosophy. 32 W. Randolph st. 7:30 p.m.Series admission, $5; single, $0.75.INTERCOLLEGIATE ZIONIST FEDERATION OF AMERICA. Rab¬bi Morton M. Berman, Chairman of the Zionist EmergencyCouncil of Chicago on “Objectives for the World Zionist Con¬gress.” Law South. 7:30 p.m.NOVEMBER 27CHAPEL UNION. “In and Outers” attending “Hamlet” leave ChapelHouse at 7:15 p.m.LECTURE. “Two Thousand Years of Chinese Sculpture and Paint¬ing; The Rise of Landscape Painting; The Great Masters of theSung Dynasty (960-1278 A.D.) by Ludwig Bachhofer, Professorof Art. Soc. Sci. 122. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.HILLEL FOUNDATION. Louis Zara, lecturer, in the last of theseries on “Bible Figures as Literary Chara-cters; David: Poet andMonarch” at 8 p.m. in the Karasik House .RECREATION. Swimming, bowling, roller-skating, and ping-pongat Ida Noyes from 7 to 9:30 p.m.WESTMINSTER FOUNDATION. Dinner at Chapel House at 6 p.m.followed by a discussion at 7 p.m.I-F BALL. Congress Hotel. 10 p.m. to 1a.m.NOVEMBER 28RECORD DANCE. Ida Noyes theater. 7:30 to 9 p.m.CHAPEL HOUSE. Thanksgiving open house. 5 to 9 p.m.HILLEL FOUNDATION. Thanksgiving open house from 2 to 5 p.m.and from 7-:30 to 10:30 p.m. I " ' - ■■■Men^S Honor Joan Turnbloom . , ♦Qroups toResume WorkSkull and Crescent, Iron Mask,and Owl and Serpent, the men’shonor societies, have begun theirfirst full scale activities since theywere forced to abandon them dur¬ing the war years, it was announcedthis last week by representativesof the groups. In spite of the un¬settled conditions caused by thewar none of the societies ever wentinactive and all carried on theirmembership throughout the war.Owl and Serpent, senior honorsociety, has led the campus sinceits founding 50 years ago. Electionof its officers is held secret and noannouncement is ma'de of those se¬lected for these posts. The mainactivity in which the society is ac¬tively engaged at the present -timeis the campus carnival which it issponsoring in conjunction withIron Mask, WSSF and the studentsocial committee. It is also in theI process of reviving political union,I the pre-war parlimentary debate! group.Iron MaskIron Mask, junior honor society,was founded at the University in1896 and consists of between 15and 20 members who are electedfrom those students in the firstyear of the divisions. Membershipis based upon interest in campusactivities and a scholastic averageof better than C is required of allcandidates for membership. Elec¬tions are held in the spring quarter.This year Iron Mask is assistingwith the school carnival plannedfor the winter quarter and withplans for the Washington Prom.Skull and CrescentSkull and Crescent, sophomorehonor society, announced that thenew officers for the coming yearhad been elected. They are CharlieReeves, president; Anson Cherry,vice-president; Joe Skom, secre¬tary; and Bob Klein, treasurer. Themain activities which the society isto sponsor during the coming yearare the sales of Student Associationmemberships and the support ofthe school athletic program. Theyalso plan to bring a number ofprominent alumni speakers to theschool to address the student body. it'"111 ■IIrran— WE CLEAN UP YOUR PAST'(LIPSTICK AND GRASS STAINS REMOVED)University Laundry & Dry Cieaning Service2ND FLOOR. JUDSON LOUNGEGirhf stop in on your way to Reader*s 250 New StudentsEnter in JanuaryThe Orientation committee an¬nounced Monday that approxi¬mately two hundred and fiftystudents will enter UC at thebeginning of the Winter quarter.As there will be no mid-yearregistration this year, the orienta¬tion period has been moved upfrom February to the first weekof January.Preliminary plans for introduc¬ing the new students to the campuswere discussed at Monday’s meet¬ing. However decisions have beenpostponed until the next sessionon Monday, November 25, whenthe reports will be in from theorientation advisory committee. The Traveling .BazaarPermeating the Phi Gam house from the dimly lit basemenf lo thnoisy third floor, the third 1-F sponsored party last Friday niglit fir^the largest crowd yet. Comments on the affair ranged from “wond^''^ful” to “fair” depending on whether one knew the whereabouts of fh 'liquid refreshments and one’s ability to navigate in the dark. M#'peaof the Spanish department, kept one third floor group in gay/^nir'twhile Dietz Shulze was busy on the first floor casing the joint %)r hpgetaway with the floral decorations.The same night saw those eager beaver law students desert ih^library for their annual dance and take time out to award Alice Tra«!nick the title of “The Sexiest Girl in Law School.” Meanwhile ihrest of the Wyverns were disporting themselves out in Flossmoorthe tune of “I’m Stickin’ by the Union” and Carol Atw'ater was dis¬covering that one doesn’t wear good nylons to a Druidic party;^"Congratulations to the new Deke initiates, survivors of that devil’spicnic known as Hell Week. Managing to survive were Bill VaughanJack Wilson, Phil Copenhaver, George Woodrich, John Turnbull, FrankSimpson and Jim Fegues. Speaking of the Dekes, a sight to behold istheir new’ (?) low, and I do mean low, slung car (?). Saw off-yourlegs and crawl in. -Whether the thirty-two gallons of brew or the murals on. the^wallsof Sigma Chi basement were the chief attraction is hard to tell;^but agoodly crew rolled out for the Maroon beer-bust last week. BetWtenthe beer, the songs (UT variety) and Sid Lezak’s announcements Jhcrewasn’t a dull moment. The baby guzzling beer was identifiedSl JoeKau.sser’s small fry in training to be a true Maroon'staff memberlikedaddy.The most dramatically rendered of the aforementioned ahnbunce-ments had to do with the engagement of MB Eunice Gilbertson toSigma Chi Dick Voegeli. The number of Sigma Chi pins out is reachingan all time high now with Sally Morris ar’d Jim Wharton, and VirginiaLodin and Bob Murray added to the ever growing list. Just to- loe dif¬ferent, an ADPhi got married. Ed Hofert and Jean Greaves iiedMhewell-known knot in Hilton a week ago yesterday.Many thanks to the Chi Rho Sigmas for their help in "?ellmeMaroons these last few weeks. Speaking of the Chi Rho’s, have, younoticed these ladies of the pearl-encircled pin dominating activitieslately? Led by beer-bust queen Valerie -Koperky, they’re in.^int;themselves known. ®Probably the best suggestion of the quarter was that marfe'byBlythe and Brittle last week, w'hen they pointed to the increasingproblem of off-campus people crowding students out of Uniyersitycafeterias. Eating conditions are bad enough without feeding'Hhew'hole neighborhood.* * *.SIDELIGHTS ON PEOPLE YOU KNOW: Between the drainingof the fountain in Hutchin.son Court and its boarding up last weekMuriel Abrams could be observed fulfilling along-standing arnbilionof walking straight across the court without having to decide whichway to curve around the fountain ... she just hied herself^jightthrough It. According to Jules Strickland, the best way to get' anywork done is to be committed to Billings for a spell . . . ostensiblythe V'ictim of a peptic ulcer, his wife diagnoses hysterical pregnancy. . . they’ve been married just nine months. Cissie Liebschutz an¬nounces an increa.se ii^ the number of her cartoon-portfolios to’be |printed; there will now be two thousand copies to keep her /fanshappy. Joining the list of about-to-be published is Jim Barnettl’the 'author of an historical novel, not yet finished, however. Set in'thelifteenth century in France it sounds suspiciously like a rivalCIorF. A. If you don’t know what F. A. is. you aren’t up on youffMestsellers.0 u..-tee yesterday. Plans for an tntia-mural program for B-J were\dis-cus.sed and formulated. AThe council had a lengthy^dis-cu.ssion of the proper attirr^^iordinner. Mead house had rai-sed/ob-jection to the wearing of neckties.'The council decided to activViy. . , , . , , vote in support of the presentHlin-:. , , , , , . mg room attire policy. - 4%««:pnpHiilA nf *QnAiilrArc KAinn r' .r iL . uThere W’as also a discussion" ofthe liquor and hours problems%NoB-J CouncilArranges forLecturesThe B-J council, meeting Tues-schedule of speakers was being ar¬ranged for the court. Every Wed¬nesday evening, beginning with thewinter quarter, a lecturer wdll talk decisions were reached on'>Vhc5:e•^ , .questions. It was decided totwaitm the courts on subjects of general j .ugather a consensus of opinioninterest.. before any recommendations .wl’tiluThe private dining room in the bgbasement of Burton lounge is now j The council has tentativS^e-available from Monday through | served two dates on the r^ialT ursday every week. Groups of j calendar for the w’inter quaiter.twenty-five or less may reserve The dance last week was a?p5o-the room, not less than a w eek in j nounced success, and on this -basis,advance, and have private waiter; future plans can be laid. #4service there. j meeting of the coyncilJohn Watt, athletic chairman of i will be held Tuesday, NovcM|berthe council, met with his commit-*26 at 8 p.m.Tonight and Tomorrow . . .“THE LITTLE FOXES”MANDEL HALLStaged by Players GuildU.T.1131-1133 E. 55th St.Complete SelectionOf Beverages \ Nationally DemandedOVERCOATSRight! They’re overcoats meuare asking for coast to coast . . .because they’re establishedfamous brands—and Erie has’em! Choose from the grandselection of nationally adver¬tised brands of hats, too.POOTIALL PORECAST by Jlmaiy EvaatPrcdictiees are l5*/a Accurate. Oe the Air TeesSey•Ml Jhmr%4mr, ■•«• Stetiee WINt. 1:41 H f P.M.tee CLOTHING COMPANY64S NORTH CLARK STREET ie Wt EAST ISHD STREET■OTH STOIK: Open Iveeiiiec MMdey mmd Tberadey Ml'Clesed Seterdey IveiriefcFriday, November 22, 1946 THE CHICAGO MAROON^Chicago. Mundelein Meef;Debate Labor ProblemsChicago’s debate team met members of the Mundelein col¬lege squad in the first scheduled debate of the year last Tues¬day night to consider the question, “Should Labor have a directshare in management of industry.” The debates were not judged.William Birenbaum and Lowden Wingo, judged by Forumdirector Hubert Wax a?"one of theUniversity’s top teams, took thenegative position versus MarionKing and Mary Lou Hafner ofMundelein.Outlining: the successful ''mul¬ti pie* management’* plan which iscomprised of two control boards,one manarement and the otherlabor representatives, the affirm¬ative team presented it as a curefor the incessant and calamitousstrugg:le between the worker andhis employer.Two Front AttackChicago’s negative attacked theplan on two fronts. They placedthe blame for the present state ofIndustrial unrest upon the effortsof labor and management to re¬establish themselves in a world atpeace after the highly , abnormalwar era. Having thus attemptedto destroy the need for a change,they turned to the plan and indi¬cated the features they consideredfaults. (1) Since the plan requiresa unanimous decision on the partof the labor board to insure estab¬lishment of a change in policy, theplan would lead to absolute con¬trol by either management or la¬bor. (2) Since any unanimous de¬cision by labor cannot be vetoedby management, labor would beable to take over an industrycompletely. This would mean arevolution in our economy, onewhich the negative held wouldnever be allowed by management.In rebuttal the affirmative em¬phasized the fact that men wererational creatures and that labor(Continued on Page 7) SA DebatesNew PlanAt a meeting of the membershipof the Student Association nextTuesday, November 26, in Rosen-wald 2 at 3:30 p.m., the new con¬stitution for the organization, willbe placed on the floor for approval.It was explained by the studentmanager, Ira Corn, that a quorumof the membership will be neces¬sary before any action can be takenon the constitution. Dean Berg-stresser, the assistant dean of stu¬dents in charge of activities, willspeak to the members, and com¬mittees which have been workinginformally, pending adoption of theconstitution, will be formally ap¬proved and set up, Corn said.In addition, Sid Lezak, of theexecutive board of the Association,is expected to present the decisionreached last Tuesday on the con¬tinued publication of the campusnews magazine Pulse to the mem¬bers for approval or rejection.Tom Remington and^ DietzSchulze, other members of theBoard, will bring the tax problemsto be faced by the Association nextwinter before the floor for discus¬sion. Another item of business tobe introduced is that of admittingwives as activities book ticketholders to the dramatic and socialevents provided for in member¬ship. Political UnionTo Hear PartyPlatforms TodayThe Student Political Union willmeet at 4:30 p.m. today in Rosen-wald 28 to receive platforms fromthe various political parties whichdesire to be represented. All stu¬dents who are interested in politicsare invited to attend.At a meeting* last Friday after¬noon, proposed party platformswere read by conservatives andseveral progressive groups.. A"World Government Party” alsoannounced its organization, al¬though it does not receive officialbacking from the Student Federal¬ists.The Student Political Union, acasualty during the war, is nowbeing revived- under temporarysponsorship of the Owl and Ser¬pent. After a campus-wide electionthe end of this quarter or the firstof next, it will consist of a mocklegislative body of about 75 mem¬bers, and modeled after the Eng¬lish House of Commons.Any political group which de¬sires to organize for the electionmay do so by registering its plat¬form with SPU and presenting apetition signed by 40 names, fromwhom its representatives may bechosen.AYC MeetDue to Thanksgiving, thenext AVC meeting will beheld Wednesday, November27, at 7:30 pm in Kent 106.Referendums on atomicpower and opinions of theNational Planning Commit¬tees on national policy, willconstitute the agenda.HOW TO BE AN ARTISTThe present housing shortage has taught many of us a great deal aboutliving in garrets. It used to be that only struggling artists, who also lived forweek.i .and months on cheese and crackers, occupied drafty rooms, but withinthe last few years much of the glamour has been rubbed off the romantic tradi¬tion. Nevertheless, BOARDMAN ROBINSON, by y4/hert Christ-Janer, whichis loyal to all those old traditions, is one of the most convincing biographiesin years.After discovering—-or perhaps it was his wife who made the discovery—that his own diet was hardly adequate for the two children who followed hisromantic marriage, Robinson turned to. illustration, newspaper cartooning, andfinally to teaching. He became an outstanding success in each of these fieldswithout achieving great wealth, but also without lowering his artistic standards,and some of the finest parts of this book are those in which his ideas andmethods are explained.No doubt most of the book’s success must be attributed to its restraint, forit is written in a minor key with both feet on the soft pedal, but a large shareof the credit must go to the critical analyses written by Arnold Blanch andAdolf Dehn, to the 126 plates of Robinson’s work, and to the remarkably fineprinting on exceptional paper. All these things add up to a first-rate book byany set of standards, one of the best in seven long years. This fact was recog¬nized by the American Institute of Graphic Arts when it selected BOARDMANROBINSON as one of the outstanding hooks of the month at the Trade BookClinic in October.- Uniyerslty of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE. CHICAGO. ILL. Campus PoliticsYoung Democratic LeagueOrganizes on UC CampusIn line with the increasingtempo of political activity oncampus, the Young DemocraticLeague is being organized. Ac¬cording to Marshall Wiley, tem¬porary chairman, "The purpose ofthe league is the advancement ofthe liberal principles of the Demo¬cratic party in state and nationalaffairs."Most of the avowedly politicalgroups on the campus have tendedtowards reaction or radicalismwhich the majority of the studentshave avoided because of the ex¬tremity of the views proposed.The Young Democratic Leaguewill combine a liberal policy withthe possibility of accomplishmentdue to affiliation with an estab¬lished political organization,” Wil¬ey explained.Charter members of the groupinclude; Bill Montgomery, RayPoplett, Betty Stearns, WilliamGreene, Sid Lezak, Mary Harding,Ira Corn, Grant Sieverts, NancyThomas, Harlan Blake and MaryBailin. ^Campus democrats interested injoining the League may contactWUey at But. 9022.* ♦ ♦USP Debates CivilLiberty to Fascists"Should Civil Liberties Be Re¬ said that in a true democracy thegovernment cannot use force torestrict the rights of any ofcitizens.e t e itsYPAC CompletesPlans for ActionNow that the heat of the No¬vember elections is dissipating,Young Citizens’ Political ActionCommittee is settling down to thejob of building a permanent or¬ganizational structure. At the lastexecutive meeting, plans were laidfor a flexible committee structureand for action during the comingmonths. The plans will be com¬pleted at the next executive meet¬ing to be held Friday, November22 at 3:30 in Classics 16. Thismeeting will be open and allpeople who are interested inYCPAC are not only invited buturged to come.An office for YCPAC has beenset up in the Activities room inIda Noyes hall. It will be staffedMon., Wed., and Fri. from 3 to 5.* * *Rightists OrganizeConservative ClubA right-wing group has been or¬ganized among the students of theUniversity of Chicago. Believingstricted to Native Fascists?” wasj^here should be a voice on thethe subject of a discussion spon¬sored by the United Student Pro¬gressives in Rosehwald 2, Tuesday,November 19. Ira Lattimer of theChicago Civil Liberties committeeadvocated restricting the activitiesof native fascists and John Lappof the National Civil Libertiesunion defended the right of everygroup to exercise the powers offree speech, press and assembly.Lattimer maintained that sincethe native fascists do not believein civil liberties they should notbe allowed the use of these rightsand that people who incite racehatred or any other aspect of fas¬cism should be silenced. Dr. Lappopposed this view by saying that ifwe were to limit the basic free¬doms to native fascists we wouldbe guilty of fascism ourselves. He campus for the conservative view¬point, several students organizedthe Conservative League, whichaims by lectures, discussion groupsand participation in campus poli¬tics, to declare the conservativeview of current issues and to enun¬ciate the logical basis of conserva¬tism.Mr. Stewart File, chairman ofthe Conservative League, states:"By presenting the right as well asthe left side of questions, we willassist in making campus politicsmore thoughtful. There are manystudents on the campus of conserv¬ative political opinion whom theLeague may serve.” Mr. File andthe secretary of the League, Mr.Raymond L. Holly, may be reachedin Room 334 of Burton-JudsonCourt.HI-HAT C LUB...• Drinks• Enferfainment• FoodMARVIN SCHROEDER.Propritfor : 1150 EAST 55th STREETNO WOMAN EVER LOVED...with more to loselM(K L SKIRBAU mi BRDCE MJUIIII«6Directed by FRANK BORZAGEOriiiAal Story Md ScrNntiliy byIRVING STONEProduced by JACK H. SKIRBAU iM PEGGY WOOD • HORACE McNAlLY • ROBERT k BARRATOlricioi ol Rlwloirobby. Jowph VilorNint. KXC • C«Ryn|bt by HtHfliort RtodoctMM. IntA UNIVERSAL RELEASEWORLD PREMIEREKOW SHOWINGRKO PALACEPage 4 D “THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, November 22, 194<j1-0 Votes Participation inUS Student Conference•‘A national Student conference will be held in Chicago onDecember 28-30 to which all universities and colleges as wellas all national student organizations have been asked to senddelegates’* advises Russ Austin of the Committee for the Chi¬cago Student conference. The conference is being called by theAmerican delegation to the WorldStudent congress held in Praguein August 1946 and the AmericanPreparatory committee for theWorld Student congress.“The purpose of the conferencewill be to hear a report of thenewly formed International Unionof students and to consider theformation of a National Union ofAmerican students” advises Aus¬tin. “Such an organization,” heexplains, “may serve as a basisfor unified action on issues ofcommon interest, may serve as me¬dium of exchange of ideas andmay help U. S. students to be¬come better acquainted with for¬eign students through student ex¬change and travel.”At its meeting Wednesday, No¬vember 20 the Inter-Organiza¬tional council voted that the U of Cparticipate in the Chicago studentconference and provided the nec¬essary machinery to elect four Uof C delegates. The qualificationsof candidates were laid down asAutumn quarter 1946 and Winterquarter 1947 residence and activemembership in some campus or¬ganization. The method of nomi¬nation will be either through offi¬cial nomination by a campus or¬ganization or through a petitionsigned by at least fifty bona fidestudents of the U of C.Election December 9The campus-wide election willbe held Monday, December 9 andan election committee of five waselected. Those elected are: JaneColley, chairman of Inter-Org.,Dietz Schultze, secretary andtreasurer of Inter-Org., StanLusby, Baptist student group,Howard Gautier, Calvert club andPete Delroot of Linn house, Bur¬ton court Jane Colley was electedchairman of the Committee.“I would like to call on all stu¬dent organizations and interestedstudents to participate in the elec¬tion of University delegates to theConference,” asks Austin.Russ Austin was chairman ofthe 25 man American delegationto the International Student Con¬gress. He has just returned fromthe Congress and an extensivetour of Europe. He will report tothe campus on the InternationalStudent Congress November 25 at4:00 p.m., Rosenwald 2.'Boardman Robinson'Honored by ClinicThe Trade Book Clinic of theAmerican Institute of Graphic Artshas chosen “Boardman Robinson”by Albert Christ-Janer as one ofits selections this month. The bookwas published by the Universityof Chicago press.Warren Chappell designed thebook, Oscar Ogg lettered the titlepage and jacket. Both men areformer students of the artist.The work contains 126 repro¬ductions of Robinson’s work, nineof them in color. It was chosen bythe clinic for its typographical andinterpretative excellence. ReligionStudent AssociationMembors • . .Don't fail to attond theAssociation mootingTuesday 3:30 - Rosonwald 2Exerette Your Eight to Vote onImportant Polity Matters!TYPEWRITERSAdding MachinesBOUGHT•SOLDAHD EXCHANGEDGuaranteed RepairsPrompt ServiceLEIYAOfRce Machine Co.'5449 LAKE PARK AVE.HYDE PARK 9651We Pick Up and Deliver English LectureThe English departmentannounces a lecture, “SirThomas Malory and Medi¬eval Aesthetics,” by Pro¬fessor Eugene Vinaver of theUniversity, Manchester, Eng¬land; Tuesday, December 3,4:30 p.m., in Classics 10.Admission is without ticket.Art Shop inInstructionSession NowAll those interested in creativearts are invited to attend thetwice weekly classes held in theArts and Crafts shop in B-J courtunder Burton lounge.Classes are conducted Mondaysand Thursdays, 2 to 4:30 p.m. and7 to 9:30 p.m. The program is veryinformal, no registration is re¬quired and pupils are allowed thewidest latitude in choice of work.The shop offers instruction inwater color and oil painting, dry-point etching, leathercraft andweaving. Bookbinding, wood-blockprinting and fabric printing arealso taught. All supplies are freeexcept handicraft materials; forthese a cost charge is made.The Arts and Crafts departmentis directed by Mrs. Joseph Ceit-haml and it operates under theoffice of Assistant Dean of Stu¬dents, John L. Bergstresser. Theprogram is open to all men andwomen students of the University.The workshop offers beginnersthe opportunity to try their handat clay modelling, painting, or justdesigning their own Christmascards. It affords people activelyinterested in the arts the chanceto see what other students withsimilar interests are doing.Each Summer Mrs. Ceithamlholds a large show of the workdone in these groups. Throughoutthe year smaller exhibits are heldin Burton and Judson Lounges. Chapel PlansThanksgivingOpen HouseHere is a special invitation toall students who will be oncampus on Thanksgiving dayChapel house will open itsdoors at 5 p.m. Thanksgivingday with an open house. Theyplan to serve doughnuts and cider.There will be dancing and bridge.* * *Robert Fairgraves, regional di¬rector of World Student ServiceFund, will speak Sunday night at8 at the Chapel Union meeting,presenting a first hand account ofstudent life and conditions inEurope. The presentation willfeature a film-strip and script onthe WSSF also. Opportunity willbe given for questions and discus¬sion. This event will be held atChapel house, and is open to allstudents.* * *Chapel Union has in store for itsmembers two theater parties. Firston the list is “Hamlet,” on Wed¬nesday, November 27. Groups willleave Chapel house at 7:30^ p.m.Saturday, November 30 brings a“Pop” concert, for which partiesdepart from Chapel house at 6:45p.m. Tickets for both events avail¬able at Chapel house.* * *The Methodist group has heldtheir election and results are asfollows: George Hood, of the schoolof business, chairman; BettySchroer, SSA student, co-chair¬man; Catherine Mortz, secretary;Raymond Lutz., treasurer; MarySnively, program; Louise Eugely,food; Everharding Pruitt, worship;and Jean Cox, publicity.The Methc^ist group meetsevery Thursday at 7 p.m. with din¬ner at 6 p.m. every other week.Their programs for this quartercenter about the development ofthe religious personality. However,there will be no meeting onThanksgiving day.n * *The Disciples Divinity housethis past week served as host fortwo events—the inaugural lecturesby Angus Dun of the William H.Hoover lecturship on ChristianUnity, and the fiftieth anniversaryof the Campbell institute.Dr. W. Barnett Blakemore, deanof the Disciples Divinity house andprofessor at the University- of Chi¬cago, presented the history of theHoover lecturship the first eve¬ning, and Bishop Dun indicated Walgreen LecturesAVC 'Most Encouraging'New Vets' Croup—WeeterUC Sanate ElectionsThe following members ofthe council of the UniversitySenate were elected to thecommittee of the council inthe election which closed5 p.m., November 11; JohnM. Beal, Ronald S. Crane,Dr. Paul C. Hodges, RobertRedfield, Hermann I. Schles-inger, Ralph W. Tyler,Quincy Wright.Sagitta mea toga gratiosa est(Arrow is my favorite toga)Your best buys in to^ai models) are those•ummum bonum shirts with the form-fittingMitoga cutA smooth-Lnetting Arrow tie just below dieAdam’s apple nnd a handsome matching Arrowbandkerchief in the breast pocket • • •Brother^ if you’re a badielor, cave!Amw MATCHIP setsJjytton’s NR Offers Pay forLocal Unit DrillsAll former navy enlisted menmay join the organized naval re¬serve which drills every Mondaynight at the Naval Armory, Ran¬dolph street, Chicago, Illinois.Navy men may join the unit inthe rating which they held on dis¬charge from the navy. Adequatetraining and recreational facilitiesare available. Advancements inrating are open for all men.Pay scale for drill nights rangesfrom $2.67 for Seamen 2c, to $5.50for CPOs. In addition, a two weekstraining cruise with full pay andwith liberty in a foreign portwill be offered each year. Armyand Marine Corps men may jointhe reserve as seamen first class.Interested men may ask EnsignJack Cornelius, Division 6, for de¬tails any Monday night, or theymay call Vincennes 5105 after 7p.m. any evening except Mondayor Thursday.in his opening lectures, of whichfive in all were given last week,the many ways in which the divid¬ed churches contradict themselvesby a constant reference in hymns,scriptures, and sermons to thechurch as “one o’er all the earth.”All the churches bear witness bytheir attitudes to the belief thatessentially the church is one andundivided. By C. N. STOCKTONThe political role of the Amei-lean war veteran was the subjectof last Tuesday’s Walgreen Foun¬dation lecture by Dixon Weeterchairman of research at Huntingtonlibrary, San Marino, California.“The youth of the depression andthe New Deal era, veterans look atgovernment as am agency for pub¬lic service, not as a regulatory in¬stitution. The old ideal of self helpfor them seems a little less certain.AVC EncouragingDiscussing the various veterans*organizations, Weeter said, “TheAVC is the most encouraging de¬velopment among veterans ofWorld War II. But although theAmvets have done valuable workin local chapters, their nationalprogram seems to be vague anddisheartening.”Dixon Weeter is an ex-Rhodesscholar who became a teacher andhistorian. His most famous book.When Johnny Comes MarchingHome, is an analysis of the prob¬lems and programs of veterans af¬ter the American Revolution, theCivil War, and the first WorldWar as pertinent to the needs ofveterans today.UN Topic of LectureYesterday afternoon Adlai Stev¬enson, alternate member of theUnited States delegation to theUnited Nations organization spokeon “Civil-Military Relartions in theU.N.” This lecture had been post¬poned last week because of thepress of Stevenson’s public duties.Adlai Stevenson is a Chicagolawyer and newspaper publisherwho has been in public servicesince Pearl Harbor. He has servedas special assistant to the Secretaryof the Navy, and to the Secretaryof State, and was a United Statesdelegate to the San Francisco con¬ference and the preparatory com¬mission of the United Nations inLondon this year.^*Gallia omnis in fres partes divisa est.. tife famous first words of CaesurasGallic wars • • *You’ll find the thretpart harmony of anArrow shirt, tie andhandkerchief ensem¬ble is the first andlast word on whatthe well-dressed col¬lege man prefers fora houseparty week¬end.So if you can’t quote Latin to your girl friend, you cankeep her interested in your non-pareil Arrow shirt, your^rinkle-resistant Arrow tie and your Arrow handkerchief—^rhich are paradoxically enough, all matching and matchless!^AJl Gaul is divided in three pmii,ARROW SHIRTS and TIESUNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTSNovember 2*, 1M6 THE CHIOgVGO MAROONo'*Plmi 20% Federal Ctelf Tat..;;. ^•‘~^'^-‘--i“>»»*BiSiilPage' 4 THE CHICAGO MAROON1-0 Votes Participation inUS Student Conference“A national Student conference will be held in Chicago onDecember 28-30 to which all universities and colleges as wellas all national student organizations have been asked to senddelegates’* advises Russ Austin of the Committee for the Chi¬cago Student conference. The conference is being called by theAmerican delegation to the WorldStudent congress held in Praguein August 1946 and the AmericanPreparatory committee for theWorld Student congress.“The purpose of the conferencewill be to hear a report of thenewly formed International Unionof students and to consider theformation of a National Union ofAmerican students” advises Aus¬tin. “Such an organization,” heexplains, “may serve as a basisfor unified action on issues ofcommon interest, may serve as me¬dium of exchange of ideas andmay help U. S." students to be¬come better acquainted with for¬eign students through student ex¬change and travel.”At its meeting Wednesday, No¬vember 20 the Inter-Organiza¬tional council voted that the U of Cparticipate in the Chicago studentconference and provided the nec¬essary machinery to elect four Uof C delegates. The qualificationsof candidates were laid down asAutumn quarter 1946 and Winterquarter 1947 residence and activemembership in some campus or¬ganization. The method of nomi¬nation will be either through offi¬cial nomination by a campus or¬ganization or through a petitionsigned by at least fifty bona fidestudents of the U of C. English LectureThe English departmentannounces a lecture, “SirThomas Malory and Medi¬eval Aesthetics,” by Pro¬fessor Eugene Vinaver of theUniversity, Manchester, Eng¬land; Tuesday, December 3,4:30 p.m., in Classics 10.Admission is without ticket.Art Shop inInstructionSession NowAll those interested in creativearts are invited to attend thetwice weekly classes held in theArts and Crafts shop in B-J courtunder Burton lounge.Classes are conducted Mondaysand Thursdays, 2 to 4:30 p.m. and7 to 9:30 p.m. The program is veryinformal, no registration is re¬quired and pupils are allowed thewidest latitude in choice of work.The shop offers instruction inElection December 9The campus-wide election willbe held Monday, December 9 andan election committee of five waselected. Those elected are: JaneColley, chairman of Inter-Org.,Dietz Schultze, secretary andtreasurer of Inter-Org., StanLusby, Baptist student group,Howard Gautier, Calvert club andPete Delroot of Linn house. Bur¬ton court Jane Colley was electedchairman of the Committee.“I would like to call on all stu¬dent organizations and interestedstudents to participate in the elec¬tion of University delegates to theConference,” asks Austin.Russ Austin was chairman ofthe 25 man American delegationto the International Student Con¬gress. He has just returned fromthe Congress and an extensivetour of Europe. He will report tothe campus on the InternationalStudent Congress November 25 at4:00 p.m., Rosenwald 2.'Boardman Robinson*Honored by Clinic water color and oil painting, dry-point etching, leathercraft andweaving. Bookbinding, wood-blockprinting and fabric printing arealso taught. All supplies are freeexcept handicraft materials; forthese a cost charge is made.The Arts and Crafts departmentis directed by Mrs. Joseph Ceit-haml and it operates under theoffice of Assistant Dean of Stu¬dents, John L. Bergstresser. Theprogram is open to all men andwomen students of the University.The workshop offers beginnersthe opportunity to try their handat clay modelling, painting, or justdesigning their owm Christmascards. It affords people activelyinterested in the arts the chanceto see what other students withsimilar interests are doing.Each Summer Mrs. Ceithamlholds a large show of the workdone in these groups. Throughoutthe year smaller exhibits are heldin Burton and Judson Lounges. ReligionChapel PlansThanksgiyingOpen HouseHere is a special invitation toall students who will be oncampus on Thanksgiving day.Chapel house will open itsdoors at 5 p.m. Thanksgivingday with an open house. Theyplan to serve doughnuts and cider.There will be dancing and bridge.« * «Robert Fairgraves, regional di¬rector of World Student ServiceFund, will speak Sunday night at8 at the Chapel Union meeting,presenting a first hand account ofstudent life and conditions inEurope. The presentation willfeature a film-strip and script onthe WSSF also. Opportunity willbe given for questions and discus¬sion. This event will be held atChapel house, and is open to allstudents.4> * «Chapel Union has in store for itsmembers two theater parties. Firston the list is “Hamlet,” on Wed¬nesday, November 27. Groups willleave Chapel house at 7:30^ p.m.Saturday, November 30 brings a“Pop” concert, for which partiesdepart from Chapel house at 6:45p.m. Tickets for both events avail¬able at Chapel house.* « *The Methodist group has heldtheir election and results are asfollows: George Hood, of the schoolof business, chairman; BettySchroer, SSA student, co-chair¬man; Catherine Mortz, secretary;Raymond Lutz, treasurer; MarySnively, program; Louise Eugely,food; Everharding Pruitt, worship;and Jean Cox, publicity.The Methodist group meetsevery Thursday at 7 p.m. with din¬ner at 6 p.m. every other week.Their programs for this quartercenter about the development ofthe religious personality. However,there will be no meeting onThanksgiving day.• * *The Disciples Divinity housethis past week served as host fortwo events—the inaugural lecturesby Angus Dun of the William H.Hoover lecturship on ChristianUnity, and the fiftieth anniversaryof the Campbell institute.Dr. W. Barnett Blakemore, deanof the Disciples Divinity house andprofessor at the University- of Chi¬cago, presented the history of theHoover lecturship the first eve¬ning, and Bishop Dun indicatedThe Trade Book Clinic of theAmerican Institute of Graphic Artshas chosen “Boardman Robinson”by Albert Christ-Janer ars one ofits selections this month. The bookwas published by the Universityof Chicago press.Warren Chappell designed thebook, Oscar Ogg lettered the titlepage and jacket. Both men areformer students of the artist.The work contains 126 repro¬ductions of Robinson’s work, nineof them in color. It was chosen bythe clinic for its typographical andinterpretative excellence.Student AssociationMembors . . •Don't foil to ottond thoAssoclotlon mootingTuesday 3:30 - Rosonwold 2Exercise Your Right to Vote onImportsmt Policy Matters ITYPEWRITERSAdding MachinesBOUGHT■SOLDAND EXCHANGED’ Guaranteed Repairs, Prompt ServiceLEIYAOfRce Machine Co.'S449 LAKE PARK AVE.HYDE PARK 9651We Pick Up and DeliverL^aiUi..e..ajAwiAiu..efc.jaiu.iiOiuiOi.a.o..i^aik...n Sagitta mea toga gratiosa est(Arrow is my favorite toga)Your best buys in to^as (1946 models) are thosetummum bonum shirts with the form-fittingMitoga cut.A smooth-knotting Arrow tie just below theAdam’s apple and a handsome matching Arrow .tumdkeremef in the breast pocket • • •Brother, if you’re a bachelor, cave!ARROW MATCHeV SITSTjytti ’ .» Friday, November 22, 194^Walgreen LecturesAVC 'Most Encouraging'New Vets' Croup—Weeter' By C. N. STOCKTONUC Senate ElectiansThe following members ofthe council of the UniversitySenate were elected to thecommittee of the council inthe election which closed5 p.m., November 11; JohnM. Beal, Ronald S. Crane,Dr. Paul C. Hodges, RobertRedfield, Hermann I. Schles-inger, Ralph W. Tyler,Quincy Wright.NR Offers Pay forLocal Unit DrillsAll former navy enlisted menmay join the organized naval re¬serve which drills every Mondaynight at the Naval Armory, Ran¬dolph street, Chicago, Illinois.Navy men may join the unit inthe rating which they held on dis¬charge from the navy. Adequatetraining and recreational facilitiesare available. Advancements inrating are open for all men.Pay scale for drill nights rangesfrom $2.67 for Seamen 2c, to $5.50for CPOs. In addition, a two weekstraining cruise with full pay andwith liberty in a foreign portwill be offered each year. Armyand Marine Corps men may jointhe reserve as seamen first class.Interested men may ask EnsignJack Cornelius, Division 6, for de¬tails any Monday night, or theymay call Vincennes 5105 after 7p.m. any evening except Mondayor Thursday.in his opening lectures, of whichfive in all were given last week,the many ways in which the divid¬ed churches contradict themselvesby a constant reference in hymns,scriptures, and sermons to thechurch as “one o’er all the earth.”All the churches bear witness bytheir attitudes to the belief thatessentially the church is one andundivided. The political role of the Amer-ican war veteran was the subjectof last Tuesday’s Walgreen Foun¬dation lecture by Dixon Weeterchairman of research at Huntingtonlibrary, San Marino, California.“The youth of the depression andthe New Deal era, veterans look atgovernment as an agency for pub¬lic service, not as a regulatory in¬stitution. The old ideal of self helpfor them seems a little less certain.AVC EncoaragingDiscussing the various veterans’organizations, Weeter said, “TheAVC is the most encouraging de¬velopment among veterans ofWorld War II. But although theAmvets have done valuable workin local chapters, their nationalprogram seems to be vague anddisheartening.”Dixon Weeter is an ex-Rhodesscholar who became a teacher andhistorian. His most famous book.When Johnny Comes MarchingHome, is an analysis of the prob¬lems and programs of veterans af¬ter the American Revolution, theCivil War, and the first WorldWar ars pertinent to the needs ofveterans today.UN Topic of LectureYesterday afternoon Adlai Stev¬enson, alternate member of theUnited States delegation to theUnited Nations organization spokeon “Civil-Military Relations in theU.N.” This lecture had been post¬poned last week because of thepress of Stevenson’s public duties.Adlai Stevenson is a Chicagolawyer and newspaper publisherwho has been in public servicesince Pearl Harbor. He has servedas special assistant to the Secretaryof the Navy, and to the Secretaryof State, and was a United Statesdelegate to the San Francisco con¬ference and the preparatory com¬mission of the United Nations inLondon this year.^'Gallia omnis in tres partes divisa esf''*... tbe famous first words of CaesurasGallic wars • • •You’ll find the diretpart harmony of anArrow shirt, tie andhandkerchief ensem¬ble is the first andlast word on whatthe well-dressed col¬lege man prefers fora houseparty week¬end.So if you can’t quote Latin to your girl friend, you cankeep her interested in your non-pareil Arrow shirt, yourcrinkle-resistant Arrow tie and your Arrow handkerchief—chich are paradoxically enough, all matching and matchless f^AU Gaul is divided in tbret parts.ARROW SHIRTS and TIESUNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTSNovember 22, 1246 THE CHIOgVGO MAROONfat'***®tytt«***.VV-ta''®"ooV*Mii$ 20% Fedaral ficlt* TotoPage 6 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday^ November 22, 194QIHaroonThe University of Chicago Official Student NewspaperACP All-American, 1945, 1946Published every Friday during the academic year by THE CHICAGOMAROON, an independent student organization of the University of ChicagoMember Associated Collegiate Press and Intercollegiate Press.BOARD OF CONTROLRay Poplett, Editor-in-ChiefJames Barnett, Business ManagerHarlan Blake, Staff MemberTHE EXECUTIVE EDITORSManaging Editor Antonette SavalllNews Editor Bill Hey Sports Editor Anson CherryVeterans’ Editor ... Ralph J. WoodFeature Editor Helen Tarlow photography Editor Dick ReddenDramatics Editor Betty Stearns Art Editor Clssie LiebshutzEDITORIAL ASSISTANTSMuriel Abrams. Carroll Atwater. Barbara Barke, Walter Bemak, HarlanBlake, Don Bushnell, Chick Callenbach, Elmer Casebeer, Earl Deemer, EleanorDenehee, Terry de Hueck, Jo Dermody. Muriel Deutsch, John Dolan, AndyFoldi, Lloyd Fosdick, Rona Green, Bill Greene, Jerry Hallam, Mary K. Hard¬ing, Louise Hetzel, Bill Hey, Ed Kaufmann, Barbara I^ohn, Harold Kome,Doris Krudener, Sidney Lezak, Emerson Lynn, Ray Munts, Mary Newsome,Kathleen Overhol.ser, Mark Reinsburg, Tracy Richards. Richard R. Roberts,Jack Siegal, C. N, Stockton, Joan Turnbloom, Viiginia Vlack, Dick Voegell,Richard Wickstrom, Ralph Winder Bob Wright, Mary Zinn.James E. Barnett, Business ManagerRobert S. Bell, Assistant Business ManagerCirculation Manager. .William Lowery | Exchange Editor RusseC tSeboldBUSINESS ASSISTANTSHarriette Brown, Duane Cozart, Jack Craig. Dawn Pfeiffer, RosemaryOwen, Betty Stearns.EDITORIAL AND BUSINESS OFFICES. The Reynolds Club, 5706 SouthUniversity Avenue, Chicago 37. Illinois Telephones351 (Editorial Office), extension 1576 (Business Office)ADVERTISING RATES. Quoted on request. Address all communicationsto the Business Manager. The Chicago Maroon.SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Fall Quarter; On campus, 50 cents. By mail, 75c.jynolcMiDway 0800, extensionPerils of PaulineMost of the argument against world government is based onthe assumption that the world is in imminent danger of anotherwar within five years and that we must rely on the haphazardmethods at hand to avert the onrushing catastrophe.This argument is reminiscent of the old “Perils of Pauline”movie technique. With a little planning Pauline could haveretired to a life of quiet domesticity after the second installment.But with maddening regularity she rushed headlong into periland prolonged the final resolution interminably. The ace inthe hole was the United States Cavalry, or its equivalent.Unfortunately, there is no one behind the scenes in worldaffairs to direct the show to its happy ending.- The UnitedStates Cavalry and its equivalents cannot save us. The onlyconsistent analogy is that we, like Pauline, continue to rushprecipitously into potentially dangerous situations with no logi¬cal plan of attack. The last-minute-rescue psychology has notserved us well.It has been said that man has never been able to achieveworld government in all history, therefore, we cannot expect toachieve it in the next five years. It must be added that man hasnot been able to achieve permanent peace either, therefore, histraditional methods are faulty. His faith in them is misplaced.The cavalry will not appear triumphantly on the horizon.But the final argument for world government is not foundon these superficial levels. It is this: That world governmentoffers no cure-all, but that within the frame of such an organi¬zation the problems which today seem incapable of solutioncan be faced on common ground and attacked in an atmospheremuch more favorable to solution than anything man has triedbefore. W.M. ‘Gu0sf BdHorial’CommunismA ThreatTo LiberalsThe recent wholesale resigna¬tion of outstanding figures fromthe ICCASP followed by theC.I.O.’s anti-Communistic resolu¬tion focuses attention on the ac¬tivities of Communists in the cur¬rent crop of “liberal” organiza¬tions. A small but vocal Redminority has consistently at¬tempted to infiltrate any organiza¬tion even remotely leftist in tend¬ency. The result has been em¬barrassment for such organizationsand a marked decrease in theeffectiveness of their work. Manysincere progressive groups, anx¬ious for support from any quarter,have concluded such misalliances,much to their ultimate sorrow.The aim of the interlopers is mostassuredly to discredit moderatedemocratic action.Liberalism and Communism Don’tMixAt the risk of being brandedas a “red-baiter,” it must be em¬phasized that “liberalism” (thatmuch maligned ambiguous term)and_Communism simply do notmix. Complete freedom for theworking class as for all others isinescapably bound up with polit¬ical democracy and at least somevestige of free enterprise. TheCommunistic ideology, at leastthe kind we have seen in Russiawill inevitably destroy this free¬dom. While in reality the Com¬munist menace in the U. S. isdwarfed by the real danger ofKluxxy fascism, all efforts topromote progressivism must becompletely divorced from any to¬talitarian concept.Communist Bogey a ShamThe coming Conference of Pro¬gressives and the promised unionof several “Action” organizationsis a portent of greater activityby non-Communistic left-wihggroups. It is to be hoped that intheir zeal, the door will not beleft open to out and out Commies.Although the Communist bogey inthe last election was a completesham, the American people havedemonstrated that they stand foursquare against even a hint ofbolshevism. Since any progressiveaction must have the overwhelm¬ing support of the Americanmasses, this definite feeling mustbe recognized or any future ac¬tions of a united liberal front willbe in vain.JACK SIEGEL The Editors Mailbox(THE MAROON reserves the right to abridge letters exceeding 250 wordLetters submitted must be signd, but names will be withheld forof publication if desired.)Student Activities and the LightingMany of the letters published in your gripe column and a few of theeditorials are concerned with the lack of student interest in activitiesand with improper lighting in public places on the campus . . twowidely differing situations, but both affecting the students. The firstquestion can be answered; the second can only be pondered overThe reason for lack of student activity is so obviously simple thjitI’m surprised the subject is puzzling. The quantity and quality of the.schoolwork is primarily responsible for this noticed lack of interestThis is the answer in its simplest terms. Opinions of other students aresimilar to mine. Another cause can be found in the fact that manystudents live some distance from campus; they obviously can’t be e.x-pected to stay on campus all day just to partake of activities.As for Chicago’s faulty illuminations, there indeed is a problemAre there any reasons why adequate lighting cannot be installed, whydrab walls cannot be made brighter, why cheerfulness cannot take theplace of gloom? If there are such reasons then they must be ofunusual nature. Surely it is not because of tradition; Chicago hasshown itself to be a shatterer of tradition. It cannot be for economicreasons; the school is widely known as one of the most richly endowedin the country. Lack of help? Poppycock! What can be the reason*' 1pose the problem of the decade.HENRY J. GOLDFIELDBooks for the Philippines?A University publication recently mentioned the collection of booksfor the Philippines. This is certainly a good idea, for the current blackmarket price of texts in the islands is high. In Cebu City, very ordinarytexts sell for $10 to $20In view of the recent Visayan typhoon, however, perhaps the edi¬tor of the MAROON can ascertain whether a mofe direct form ofrelief is needed there. Many in Samar and Leyte have never read abook; but they probably felt the recent storm. Let’s hold off on thebook drive for the Far East until we learn that books are the para¬mount need over there. I don’t think they are.W. H. JamesHoW to Got EloctedWant to get elected to anything? Here’s how. Pick any active in¬group-red-bait them, confuse the electorate, appeal to the specialgroups on the basis of religion and economic status, accuse the leadersof corruption and mal-practice. This is a proven formula not only forMississippi and Vermont but for the U. of C.Drop around to any AVC meeting. Watch this liberal organizationbeing torn apart by the same little people who in the pre-war dayslied to get control of a mid-year prom in the same vein that they nowdo to take over 1 percent of a national vet organization.AVC can play an active part in holding the line against the wave ofthe past that is now on us, only if people who say “I’m a liberal but . . ”would refuse to be routed by characters who have no program but tcplace themselves in the limelight.It might be interesting for certain people to find out who has goneto the concentration camps after the so called.“Commies.”JOHN J. KEATINGStudent AssociationMeeting . . .^ 3:30 P.M. Tuesday inRosenwald 2Attend and Use YourRight to VoteEx-AMG Men FormOrganization HereEx-AMG personnel are meetingtoday at 3:30 p.m. in room 106, SocSci building. The meeting is opento any army or navy men whohave had experience in militarygovernment in any theater.Purpose of the club will be to%discuss informally the problemsof military government. The or¬ganization will meet bi-weekly onFridays at 3:30 p.m. CHUBERTV THEATRB ■ BEG. TUES., DEC. 3rd(Bxfra Matinee Wed,, Dec, 41CIVIC THEATER-.t^aS^r"MATINEITODAY 2:30 TONIGHTAT 8:29ne Theatre GnJld preMataLAURENCEOLIVIER> la William Shakegpeare’nHENRYV"■■■I ■■■I W In TCCHNICOLOnRalaufld thrn United ArthttTw# p«rf». Dally (|no. Sun.). All laatt ratervaA^loat: E»e». 2:40, 1.80. Matt. 1.80. 1.20 (tax InaTGMd SfCits Al f •rfnrinaacti «t Its Oniek JHE MUSICAL TRIUMPHdirect from 2 YEARS OH B^WAY!EDWIN lESTEB ortsentscone OF /^noaumv ISBELL'SChicago's MostCELEBRATEDRESTAURANTS1435 E. 51st Street940 Rush Street590 Diversey PlaceOPERA HOUSE NOV. 15 4 WEEKS ONLY•A$f0 ON fHI UP! AND MUSIC 09with IRRA PETINA' ILAWRENCE BROOKS • ROBERT SHAFER • SIG ARNOIVY scon • WALTER KINGSFORD • KIRSTEN KENYON2S ARTISTS OF THi BALLiT RUSSE DE MONTE CARLO—MAIL ORDERS ACCEPTED NOW!—PRICES: Main Floor—$4.801 Mrzz.—lat 4 rowa. S4.80. balance $4.20: lat Bale.— iIst 6 rowa, $3.60, next 0 rowa. $3.00, balance $2.40; 2nd bale.—lat 0 rowa, $1.80. Ibalance $1.20. Extra Matinee Wed., Dee. 4: .Main Floor—$3.00; Mezz.—let 4 rowa s$3.00, balance $2.40; lat Bale.—let 6 rows $2.40; balance $1.80. Entire 2ndBale., $1.20 <thfreafte^, Matinee Sat. Only)-Main Floor—$3.601 Mezz.—lat4 rowa $.3.00, balance $3.00; lat Bale.—lat 6 rows $3.00. next 6 rows $2.40. bal<anec $1.80. Entire 2nd Bale., $1.20 (Tax Ine.)Piemee eneloee stamped self-addressed snvstsps tar return at tiehate Production Stagnd by JOHN P. KENNEDYMusical arrangnnsants . RUSSELL SENNETTBook revisions . . JOHN CECIL HOLMChoreography and ansembte . Theo. AdolphusVocal direction . . Pembroke DavenportScenery designed .... Peter Wolf^Costumes created ... Michael LucykMusical director .... Ray KavanaugkMUSICAL COMPANY OF 100GOOD SEATS NOW AT BOX OFFICE AND BY MAIL ORDERPrices Incl. Sun. Eves.: 1.20, 1.80, 2.40, 3.00, 3.80, 4.20. Sat. Mat. Only: 1.20, 1.00,2.40, 3.00 (Tax Incl.). Enel. Self-Addressed, Stamped Envelope. Information Fro. 7800Friday, November 22, 1946 THE CHICAGO MAROON nirW ■■■^y Page TKrash Defends UC SportsStand for Forum on WBBMAbe Krash, former editor of theJVIAROON, will represent theUniversity of Chicago StudentForum on a round table discus-Mon.of the question, “Are sportsover-emphasized in present dayuniversities?” over WBBM at 10fl.m. this morning.He will explain the attitudeheld by the University and de¬fend the faculty views againstthe expected objections of JoeDillon, representing Notre Dame,find Bill Rietmiller of Northwest¬ern. Fahey Flynn, sports editorof WBBM, will moderate the pro¬gram.Forum members broadcast adiscussion of the atomic controlpropositions before the UnitedNations over WBEZ Tuesday foruse in the public school systemsof Chicago. Frank Cliffe, BenDickenson and Gonzala de Lozada^poke on the program.Next week Forum members willdiscuss the Wagner-Dingell-Mur-lay bill, a national health insur¬ance plan, over the same stationTuesday at 12:30 p.m.Tuesday, November 26, the For¬um will hold a round table dis¬cussion on the labor managementquestion before a Hammond, Ind.,high school audience. HubertWax, director of the Forum, said Oppenheim Lectureson Hath AnalysisJoseph Oppenheim, a studentin the fourth year of the College,is currently conducting a free lec¬ture series in mathematical analy¬sis in the conference room next tothe Burton court library.The first lecture was given at7:30 Thursday, November 7, andthe lectures are slated to be givenon succeeding Thursdays at thesame time.Oppenheim hopes to develop adiscussion group studying highermathematics and its applications.Late entrants to the group will bebrought up to date with the workdone thus far.today that the trip representedone of the main objects of thegroup, the stimulus of thoughtamong people on pertinent issues.“The Forum,” Wax said, “doesnot restrict its activity to debatingand university round table discus¬sion. We try to reach as manypeople, representing as wide across-section of the population aspossible.”'Tm all over the map at once"*'TT certainly keeps me on the go ... my job of distrib-uting equipment and supplies to the Bell Telephonecompanies throughout the nation."Right now I’m busier than ever . . . delivering tele¬phones, switchboards, cable and countless other kinds ofapparatus and supplies. They’re all needed for the Bell Sys¬tem’s construction program of more than $2,000,000,000... to give you better-than-ever telephone service."1 maintain 29 distributing houses at strategic locations*where I keep some 10,000 different items in stock . . •and where I also repair telephone equipment."And that’s only part of my job. I’m manufacturer andpurchaser for the Bell System... and I install central officeequipment."Remember my name... It’s Western ElectricWestern EtectricA UNIT OF THE SYSTEM SINCE 1882 Information Please . . .Justice as you say is the interest of the stron9er. What,Thrasymaehus, is the meaning of this?Early RegistrationScheduleThe schedule for earlyregistration has been re¬leased by the Registrar. Allstudents now in residencewill register during this pe¬riod.November 25-29: Schoolof Medicine, Social ServiceAdministration.December 2-6: School ofBusiness, Federation ofTheological Schools, Gradu¬ate Library School.December 9-13: Divisionof Humanities, Division ofPhysical Sciences.December-16-20: Divisionof Biological Sciences, Divi¬sion of Social Sciences.December 2-20: Studentsin the College who have notregistered in advance forthe year 1946-47.Registration will takeplace in the office of theappropriate Dean of Stu¬dents from 9:00 a.m. to 11:45a.m. and from 1:30 p.m. to4:30 p.m.Chicago, MundeleinDebate Labor Issue(Continued from Page 3)would no$ cut its own throat byprecipitative action. They assertedthat their plan rested upon the“open-mindedness of business ex¬ecutives.” The Chicago team fol¬lowed its original line of attackin rebuttal.Mary Claire Lane and Ellen-mae Quan, Mundelein’s negativeteam, debated the same questionwith Harry Snyder and RobertBailey that evening in the StudentForum office. The main debatewas held in Cobb 110.Chicago will debate againstNorthwestern on December 5 atNorthwestern.SEE . . .“The UHle Foxes”tonight or tomorrow inMANDEL HALLV by the Players Guild AYC Election Lively;Claim No Drift(Continued from Page 1)that campus AVC is operating inthe red. After a report by thechapter investigating committee,the organization voted to endorsethe I8V2C wage increase strike atthe American Automatic DevicesCorp., target of recent attacks bythe police labor detail.UC Press PrintsMorgenthau BookHans J. Morgenthau, associateprofessor of political science at theUniversity, is the author of Scien¬tific Man vs. Power Politics, a re¬cent publication of the Universityof Chicago Press.The volume presents an analysisof the problems underlying ourpresent difficulties, taking up suchquestions as “What makes powerpolitics?” “How does internation¬alism often serve as escapism?”“Why are all ‘constructive’ plansfor peace doomed to failure?” andI others. Qraduates'tO'BeMay RegisterFor PlacementAll students expecting to re¬ceive bachelor’s, master’s or doc¬tor’s degrees up to and includingthe summer quarter 1947 are eli¬gible to register with the Office ofVocational Guidance and Place¬ment. This should be done im¬mediately. The office, in coopera¬tion with the departments andprofessional schools, acts as a cen-'tralized placement agent for allstudents of the university.At this time an advance regis¬tration is open to those studentsexpecting to receive degrees by thesummer quarter. All those inter¬ested in securing positions in teach¬ing, business or industry are ad¬vised to register. The office islocated in room 215, Cobb hall.Men and women interested inteaching positions should see MissMathews. Those desiring businessand industrial positions should seeMr. Calvin and Miss Fox respec¬tively.Many leading business and in¬dustrial companies representativeswill start coming to the Quad¬rangles within the next few weeksto interview graduates for r largevariety of positions. The inter¬views will be conducted in theOffice of Vocational Guidance andPlacement. Students who postponetheir registration will miss con¬sideration by many of these em¬ployers.Pulse to PublishUnder Supervision(Continued from Page 1)make a loan to Pulse amounting tothe sum of their debt in order tomake further publication possible.Corn explained that he consider¬ed it necessary to impose super¬vision over the business staff ofthe magazine and to place a mem¬ber of the executive board in anadvisory capacity to the editorialstaff.However, in appointing TomRemington to this post. Corn an¬nounced that his decision on be¬half of the Association’s member¬ship was subject to their approvalat the group’s meeting next Tues¬day at 3:30 p.m. in Rosenwald 2,Might Mean End of PulseShould the members at thattime not approve the arrangementit would mean withdrawal of As¬sociation support from the publi¬cation. This would lead to thedeath of Pulse only a few daysafter its first issue hit the stands.In promising to take steps to im¬prove the editorial content of thenext issue and agreeing to super¬vision of the business staff, LesWaller, editor, paved the way forthe next issue, which is expectedto be off the pres.ses about Derem-ber 10.UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO qnoooncesBOOKSTOREthe amazing newEVERSHA/tP ^'repeater PENWorld’s smoothest writing pen.Rolls the ink on drylIt’s self4>lotting. Even write*dry when submerged underwater.Writes for 3 months to 3 yeoreon one refill — cartridge.Reloods — with o cortridge —in 15 seconds.Can't look — at ony oltitudo.You con’t even shake the inkout.Writes on -ny ^oper or moteliol, Knon, textilos, otc.Mahos 4 to • carbon copiot al• timo.C/t' doesCA* moons Copillory Action. . . on oxclushre Evorshor^polontChicago, IH-hPage 8dialectics'Tv/as BrilligCabbagesand KingsHave you ever spent your timewatci^ig twenty-two men kick afootball around a field? No, ofcourse not. But there are peoplewho do (take my word for it) andthe attempt to arrive at a logicalexplanation for this sort of thingin the past has all but reduced meto a gibbering idiocy (which mayaccount for my presence at thisinstitution, or vice versa, ad lib).I have no doubt there are a greatmany other serious-minded peoplein this same predicament. Conse¬quently, I have determined toformulate as clearly as possible theresults of my researches in thisfield thus far and, it possible, pub¬lish them in the interests of Sciencefor whatever light they may throwori one of the most pressing prob¬lems of our time, viz.: How toavoid boredom in our leisure mo¬ments.Naturally, this problem cannotbe approached in any light orgiddy spirit but demands greatmental acuity and the most rigor¬ous scientific method if we are toadd anything substantial to ourpresent body of knowledge.Now that we fully understandeach other, let us proceed at onceto our problem. jAxiom 1: People are classifiable.,Axion 2: Classifications arepluralistic.Axiom 3: Time is relative.Axiom 4: Football is a waste oftime.Axiom 5: Roses are red.From axioms 1 and 2 we deducethat there are three classificationsof people, viz,, 1, 2, and 3. FromAxioms 3 and 4 we infer that foot¬ball is a waste of relatives. Axiom5 doesn’t seem to meari anything,however, so we are forced to desertSpinoza and fall back on James.Are You Following?We now have three classifica¬tions of people and fewer relatives.Experientially we discern thethree classifications of people to be(1) those who derive some sort ofesthetic satisfaction from watchingtwenty-two men kick a footballaround, (2) those who are esthetic-ally repelled by it, (3) capitalists.Those in the second class are ob¬viously abnormal; those in thethird class probably have ulteriormotives and therefore cannot besaid to be impartial. Consequently,we are reduced to an explanationof the first class, which is preciselythe point from which we started.Perhaps we need a new set ofaxioms. Let’s try these:Axiom 1: People are not classi¬fiable.Axiom 2: Classifications don’tmean anything any¬way.Axiom 3: Time and tide waitfor nobody.Axiom 4: Nobody cares.Axiom 5: Four Roses at anyother game wouldsmell as sweet.From axioms 1 and 2 we can in¬fer nothing. To axioms 3, 4, and 5,however, I devoted much researchin the sources and finally cameacross them under a footnote inEuclid, whose comment on themwas: “Hie.” Unfortunately, scholarshave been quarreling over the cor¬rect translation of this passage formany centuries. I for one submitthat Euclid was here laying thefoundation for Esperanto. G. A. R.Teresa DolanDancing SchoolLearn fo Dance NowHyde Park 3080BEGINNERS' CLASSES8:15-11 P.MRHUMBA—WednesdaysWALTZ—MondaysFOX TROT—Tuesdays, SundaysTANGO—SoturdoysPRIVATE LESSONSDAILY—11 A.M.-11 P.M.1208 E. 63rd St. THE CHICAGO MAROONAt the Settlement House . . iWorking with Polish and Mexican children in the craft shop atthe settlement house are board members Irene Lyons, Rosemary Ray¬mond and Ruth Lundeen.Student Volunteers NeededFor U of C Settlement WorkBy E. E. LYNNPoverty, illiteracy, delinquency and the lack of intellectualdirection were the crying needs which prompted the foundationof the University of Chicago Settlement in 1894.Today, after 52 years of social experimentation, the settle¬ment is an established force working effectively towards betterliving for the 2,500 people itserves in the mile-square centerof Chicago’s stockyard district.Student volunteers form the ma¬jor part of the settlement staff.They teach classes in manual arts;conduct choirs of neighborhoodchildren; organize social and ath¬letic clubs; and in fine, have aprominent part of every activitycarried on by the institution.Although the majority of activi¬ties are directed toward theyounger citizens of the area, thepurpose of the settlement goes farbeyond “keeping the children offthe streets.”Founded through the untiringefforts of Mciry McDowell, formerdirector of Chicago’s Social Serv¬ice Department, early leaders inthe board of directors determinedthe future policy:“The task of the Settlement isto be the wise, understanding, andgeqerous neighbor of a large popu¬lation of foreign origin who helpto do the work and share the des¬tinies of Chicago and the UnitedStates.”Cradle to GraveChildren from the age of 2 aretaken into nursery and kinder¬garten there and given completepre-school training. Social groupsof all ages are formed, cultivatinginterest in community problems,and enabling children of twentydifferent racial backgrounds towork out their problems of lan¬guage and custom together.Athletic activities are highlystressed. The two gymnasiums inthe sprawling group of buildingsare the most widely used facili¬ties the institute affords.Citizenship classes are held foradults. This work, as are manyother phases of the program, isdone in cooperation with city or¬ganizations. The settlement is part of thecommunity now, and its halls areused for lectures, banquets, andserve as much as a communitycenter for young and old, than acharitable institution.Need More WorkersAlthough the need for the workbeing done has not decreased, theworkers able to do it have. Beforethe WPA program was. halted,many teachers, case workers, andmaintenance personnel were sup¬plied by this organization. Thisimportant source of help has beencut off and the program of educa¬tion, particularly in the adult line,has been greatly curtailed as aresult. Workers are needed nowand the wages offered are per¬sonal satisfaction and practicalexperience.At present the following stu¬dents are donating time there.Rosie Raymond, girls’ gym in¬structor; Mildred Ziegmont, IreneLyons, Harriet Pierce, HarrietMartin, Alma Ward, Janet Myers,Ruth Lundeen, Stella Paluskas;all are instructors in Arts andCrafts.Julie Boyd and Merylyn Mendelmanage the game room. TerryO’Donnell and Jo Jennings pub¬lish a weekly newspaper writtenby members of the social clubs.Dorothy Gregory and Fred Grun-feld conduct choral groups; Mar¬iam Dubin directs dramatic activi¬ties; Enid Harris manages theGirl Scout troup; Polly Heirmanand Lenore Gold work in the playschool and Mary Jb Burkhardt islibrarian.. Student volunteers work with apermanent staff of 6 full-time em¬ployees and 10 part time workers,8 of whom are from the Univer¬sity.=uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinI OH RECORDS WITH REEVES I the Music StanBy FOLDIREVIEW OF THE PROGRAM PRESENTED BY THE ALBENERITRIO ON MONDAY. NOVEMBER 18.^ALBENERI TRIO: Alexander Schneider, violin; Benar Heifetz violoncello*Erich Itor Kahn, piano. ’ *PROGRAM:Trio. F Major, Opus 80 SchumannTrio, C Major, Kochel No 548 MozartTrio, D Minor, Opus 49 MendelssohnEncore: Finale from the B Flat Major Trio MozartThere are two aspects of whicha chamber music ensemble con¬sists, and seldom, if ever, can anensemble be wholly successful un¬less both of these aspects are pres¬ent simultaneously.1. Individually their membershave to be technically and music¬ally proficient on their particularinstrument; that is they have to beacquainted with all the tricks thatare necessary to play their instru¬ment and then to be able to dis¬criminate as to when these trickscan or cannot be used.2. The players have to have areasonably unified approach to theperformance of music, again tech¬nically as well as musically.If two string players of a cham¬ber music ensemble, for example,have to play a particular scalepassage together and they producethis scale through different tech¬nical means, the listener comes tothe realization, sooner or later,that the two instrumentalists donot blend properly. (Such occur¬rences are much more frequent invocal groups than in instrumentalensembles.) If these same twoartists approach the performanceof a composer’s works from dif¬ferent points of view, let us sup¬pose the extreme case that one ofthem believes in strict adherenceto the tempo whereas the otherone thinks that the particular com¬poser in question implied consider¬able leeway in his tempo indica¬tions, the performance will lackunity in interpretation.It is this latter feature, the dis¬unity of the approach to inter¬pretation, which prevented the Al-beneri Trio last Monday fromachieving the highest ideals ofmusical performance. With all theremarkable technical prowess as iwell as refined musicianship that {each individual member of theorganization possesses, they did;not succeed in presenting the jaudience with unity in approach Ito the musical problems at hand. ■When there was a ritardando, onemember slowed down less thananother, or possibly extended theritardando over a greater segmentof the passage than the other; inthe C Major Trio by Mozart, thisdisunity became even more evi¬dent when Mr. Bchneider’s prin¬ciples allowed a great deal of sen¬timentality in the interpretationof this work^ and Mr. Kahn’s prin¬ciples, on the other hand, did not.Consequently where imitation oc¬curred between piano and violin,the listener was confronted withtwo totally different interpreta¬tions of the same passage.This curious mixture of style ALAMODEby ReinsbergJulius Caesar to the contrary,“Belly” Blake is not a contentedman. He lives at Internationalhouse on the seventh floor, thewashroom of which possesses aportable wooden clothes drier.This morning Belly saw his op¬portunity. The drier was empty.Hastily he filled with soiled linenhis old army duffle bag, slungthis upon his shoulder and wad¬dled over to the launderette on55th street. To his horror he ob¬served another member of theseventh floor enter ahead of him.Equal to the emergency, Blakestuffed all his wash into one ma¬chine and set its time-gadget upfive minutes. When his clothesemerged they were still a bitsoapy, and his red socks had im¬parted a political tint to his whitedrawers, but Belly had finishedfirst.Realizing he could never out¬walk his opponent, the obese onehailed a cab. He reached theseventh floor washroom only tofind the drier loaded with wetclothes. In his absence anotherhouse member had laundered byhand.When last seen. Belly Blakewas crossing the Midway with adiscontented look spread over hisface and a dripping duffle bagdraped up>on his shoulder. Willsome charitable women’s dormi¬tory award him Bendix privi¬leges? Vwas least manifest in the Men¬delssohn D Minor Trio, thus mak¬ing it the highlight of the pro¬gram. The audience respondedvery enthusiastically to the excit¬ing performance of the Men¬delssohn Trio, in which Mr. Kahndistinguished himself especially byhis presentation of a cruelly dif¬ficult piano part; in accordancewith the unrelenting applause theAlbeneri Trio performed theFinale of Mozart’s B Flat MajorTrio as an encore.The Schumann Trio did notprove very gratifying as it is hard¬ly one of the most inspired crea¬tions of that German master.It should prove very interestingto hear the Albeneri Trio twoyears from now and see if per¬forming together frequently dur¬ing those two years has createdbetter coordination among thethree members of the ensemble.WHEN YOU WANTREALLYGOOD FOODENJOYED BY UNIVERSITY STUDENTSFOR OVER SIXTEEN YEARS\Let’s jump right into these pearls. Lowe’s isn’t the biggest shop intown, but their records sound just as good, and they don’t break anyeasier, so you may as well drop in and hear what they have. If youcan find an empty booth listen to “Cornish Rhapsody”; HarrietCohen on piano, backed by the London Symphony. Nobody mindsif you stay awhile, so catch a new ballad Eddy Howard wrote for hisdaughter, the name is "Lynn”; Jane Powell, Life cover girl Has putout an album—Some might say I’m prejudiced about Life covergirls, but Powell does sing fine. Let’s close up shop with a tune forrhumba fiends—"Babalu” by Miguelto Valdez. See you at Lowe’s.A. J. LOWE & SON1227 £, SStli St. MIDway 0791-2.3.4 |iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiilfiiiiiii;:■ S ' .\ • ■ ' ■ . - ■ - ; -r'. .. ■n RECOMMENDED BY DUNCAN HINESCOLONIAL RESTAURANT0324 WOODLAWN AVEKUECLOSED WEDNESDAYS^.j'riday» November 22, 1946 THE CHICAGO MAROONHerrick's Works DonatedTo UC by Robert Lovett Page 9By BOB CASEBEERA large collection of manuscripts and letters associated withthe work of Robert Herrick, distinguished novelist and one-timeprofessor of English at the U. of C., has been given to the univer¬sity libraries by Robert Morss Lovett. Lovett, professor emeri¬tus of English at the U. of C., was a close friend of Herrick.Original manuscripts of all thejnore important Herrick novels arejncluded in the collection. Amongthese are the manuscripts of TheCommon Lot, Together, Memoirsoi an American Citizen, and Waste,included also are a few of the pre¬liminary sketches for his laternovels.Unpublished Manuscripts IncludedMany short manuscripts, bothpublished and unpublished, andcopies of a number of Herrick’slectures are to be found in the gift.Some of the most valuable materialfor research purposes is providedin three autobiographical excerpts.Herrick started to write his me¬moirs in 1913 and later again in1931. They were never published.The first volume of what Her¬rick had hoped to be his majorcoirooi^inj"iank.MEDICO LFILTERED ^SMOKING li, / EJECTS THE STUBr Replaceable filter in newFrank Medico Cigarette Holders,filters the smoke.Cuts down nicotine.Cuts down irritating tors.In zephyrweight aluminum.Special styles for men and women.$2 with 10 filters, handy pouchand gift box.S.M. FRANK A CO., INC,, NEW YORK 72 work, a proposed trilogy calledThe Family, is in the collection,along with fragments of severalunfinished novels. Other items inthe accumulation of Herrick liter¬ary expression include: newspaperclippings of critic’s reviews, pub¬lishers’ contracts and royalty state¬ments, unpublished travel sketches,socialogical and political essays,manuscripts of several unpublishedplays, class notebooks and outlinesfor proposed novels, and diaries ofHerrick’s European trips.Letters Are InterestingLetters make up one of the mostinteresting parts of the collection.About 300 of Lovett’s letters toHerrick, written during the periodfrom 1893 to 1938, are among themalong with letters to Herrick byHenry James, Clyde Fitch, WilliamVaughn Moody, and William D.Howells.Herrick’s interest in the legiti¬mate theater is revealed in cor¬respondence between him andClyde Fitch. The Maternal Instinct, the only Herrick play everproduced, was performed in theGreat Northern theater by a Chi¬cago company. Two of his novels,The Healer and A Life for a Life,were motion picture productions.Novels Offer Sharp DelineationMost of Herrick’s novels wereuncompromising and sharp in theirtreatment of human nature. Fewof them give any indication of hisaffectionate self. The two workswhich show him in his most genialmoods are The Master of the Inn, aclassic in its own right, and TheLittle Black Dog, which received alimited printing by a Chicago pub¬lisher.In evaluating the new collection,Lovett said: “Herricjk’s pre-occupa¬tion with the technique of thenovel is perhaps the most interest¬ing aspect of his work from pointof view of research. He wrote crit¬icisms of other authors, especial¬ly Thackeray and Henry James,and with the possible exception ofHenry James, was the modernnovelist most interested in theI technical problems of the novel.I A student who is interested in thetechnique of the novel will findthe collection especially valuable.”i Valued as Research MaterialValue of the gift to Harper Me¬morial library is indicated by thefact that a graduate English stu¬dent is already using the collectionfor research material. Blake R. At the OperaUniversity ntiusic fans arein for a series of good con¬certs during November andthe first of December at theCivic Opera House on Sun¬day afternoons and evenings.Sold out for several weeks,Spike Jones will offer whatcould be termed a music de¬preciation concert Sundayafternoon.On December 8 EugeneGoosens brings his Cincin¬nati Symphony Orchestra foran afternoon concert. Thisorchestra ranked with theNew York, Boston, Philadel¬phia, Minneapolis and Chi¬cago Symphonies opens theOpera House’s special musicseries.The second concert of theseries will take place on De¬cember 15 when GladysSwarthout, Met mezzo so¬prano will present a recital.Probably' the most famousCarmen of our time MissSwarthout has made a namefor herself in concert, screenand radio work.“Sweethearts,” Victor Her¬bert’s operetta which openedat the Opera House last Fri¬day will continue for threemore weeks. Book ReviewMencken Does It AgainIn "Christmas Story”Reviewed by RICHARD R. ROBERTSCHRISTMAS STORY. H. L. Mencken. Knopf. New York, 1946, .31 p.p. .$1.00.Available at local bookstores.It is the regret of many brilliant young authors that Shakes¬peare, Mark Twain, Bernard Shaw, Anatole France, or perhapsT. S. Eliot chanced to discover the proper idiom—the very styleand method that these embryonic saints, philosophers, and war¬riors of the pen would have used if the Titans of Literature hadnot beat them to it. Thus the en-Nevius will write his doctor’s dis¬sertation on the novels of Herrick.Herrick was born in Cambridge,Massachusetts in April 1868. As astudent at Harvard University, hebecame prominant as an editor andcontributor to the Advocate andthe Harvard Monthly.Was Professor HereAfter graduation in 1890, he be¬gan teaching at the MassachusettsInstitute of Technology, and wrotestories for Scribner’s and the At¬lantic. In 1893 he came to theU. of C., first as an instructor, thenas assistant professor and profes¬sor of English until 1923, when heresigned. Before the outbreak ofWorld War I he wrote a regularSunday article series for the^ Chi¬cago Tribune. In 1935, he was ap¬pointed secretary to the governorof the Virgin Islands. He diedthere December 1938.Outing Club Goesto Dunes SundayFor its week-end activity, theOuting club is sponsoring a one-day trip to the Indiana dunes nextSunday. The group will leave thefront of Ida Noyes hall at *8:30a.m. Non-members of the Outingclub are especially invited to comealong.The Outing club treasury willsupply free lunch for all, so theonly expense will be $1.61 railroadfare. “The Corn Grinders” band isscheduled.Hospitalityin your handssSiIiiOTTlED UKDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BYCHICAGO COCA-COLA BOtTLING COMPANY OffbeatDuke Ellington and orchestracame back to the Civic OperaHouse last Sunday to give twomore “Ellingtonia” concerts. In¬cluded with some old favorites,such as The Mooche, Solitude andSophisticated Lady were somevery new things, reminiscent ofmodern classical composers. El¬lington has caUght on to SouthAmerican rhythms, also discords.On him it looks good.With an amazing record of be¬ing on jump ahead of most otherbands and musicians, Ellington andhis all-stars, presented a jazz con¬cert, that was a concert; not justa session. One thing that I’ve al¬ways like about Ellington is theway he features the men in hisband; gives them a chance to solo.For instance, there’s a high note.Cat Anderson, who showed beau¬tiful trumpet technique on a newpiece called The 8th Veil.No Ellington concert would becomplete without one of those sen¬suous Hodge solo’s. This time itwas Sultry Sunset. Which bringsme to a thought J had at the con¬cert about Ellington song titles.Where does he get stuff like, AVery Unbooted 'Character andJumpin' Pumkins?Ray Nance really got a featuredspot on the program; on somevery nice trumpet solos, and a vo¬cal during the series of encores.Nance is fine; does very funnyantics, but enough funny stuff isenough. Besides, it cut down theparts that Anderson and TaftJordon would have played on theprogram, and these two, beingtwo of my very favorite Ellingtontrumpeters, I got a little tired ofNance.Marion Cox crumped out St.Louis Blues. I couldn’t hear hereven from the fourth row. KayDavis did a smooth vocal withoutwords, an Ellington trick of usingthe voice as an instrument.- Jimmy Hamilton was featuredon clary. Hamilton has really im¬proved; he’s beginning to sounda lot like Benny Goodman now.Just to ring in an old contro¬versy, I think that is foolish to saythat Ellington isn’t as good as hewas several years ago. He'schanged his style with the chang¬ing times; a thing that I approve.He’s doing a good job on his newstyle; constantly experimenting.That’s good, too. So why arguewhether he’s come down the scale;he’s Just climbed a different lad¬der. thusiastic sophomore stumbles overthe writings of some mighty manand is heartened to find thevery frame of mind he had longbeen searching. Frustration comesquickly, because the literary worldis quick to spot plagiarists, andcritics are even quicker to spotimitations.Most critics have suffered thesame regret—that of learning thatTolstoy or Aldous Huxley, bysome dirty trick of fate, expressedthe same world-outlook in thesame writing THEY would haveused. Wary sentinels, the criticsjealously stamp out young imita¬tors of Great Men.Mencken and the American Lan¬guageOne great man who was muchimitated during the latter 1920’3has been forsaken by the newercrop of prose-fanciers, who clingto the icy, brittle, often obscureidiom of more recent development.This forsaken man is H. L. Menck¬en, the Great Hank, who evennow occasionally belches forth theAmerican language with the rum¬bling majesty of an ancient butferocious volcano.Hank’s targets were as nu¬merous and diverse as the peoplesof the earth. His heavy artillerygave no rest to frauds, mounte¬banks, charlatans, liars, hoodlums^rapscallions, phoneys, and spell¬binders. He never sold himself outfor the long green, or grovelled inthe dust before the feet of theBitch-Goddess Success.Hank’s old lava, even boiledover, has a stronger flavor thanthe ersatz if more self-consciouslyearnest stuff retailed today.Condensation of Great BooksChristmas Story, says Hank, waswritten to “surpass, transcend and'put an end to all other Christmasstories.” It is a vest-pocket edi¬tion of The Hundred Great Books,full of “psychology, sociologytheology (both moral and dog¬matic), ethics, aesthetics, econ¬omics, penology, psychiatry andsex appeal. It is aimed at infidels,and yet it should delight and rav¬ish the pious. It is as immoral as adecision by the Supreme Court ofthe United States, and yet it packsone of the damndest morals everrecorded in the literature of theWestern World.”If your bankbook is too anemicto warrant the purchase of Christ¬mas presents like a thousand dol¬lar gold mesh purse for madmoney, or a new platinum platedLincoln Zephyr ... buy Mencken'simpish Yuletide idyll.Main TMs Sim Heai^nrten!WOODWORTH'SBOOK STORE1311 East 57th StreetTEXTS • NEW BOOKS • STATIONERY • SUPPLIESOpen Evenings—Monday. Wednesday and Friday0Page 10 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, November 2Z, 1946STEVE OWENFAMOUS COACH 'Of THEN. Y. FOOTBALL GIANTSALL OVER A*«eiliCA'-CiNtSTERl^irri>Copyright 1944, Lootn ft Mriti Toiacco Cms. \ BlitheandBrittle IBy BARKE and BUSHNELLThe Chicago Maroon launcheditself into the social whirl with itsannual beer-bust last Saturday,Heads did reel, glasses broke, andthe beer flowed like wine, but we,being faithful to the reading pub¬lic, kept just enough of our witstogether to bring you the exclusiveinside story. With humble respectfor all members of the staff wepresent the facts: Ray Poplett wasfound singing “Poor Lir’ as atoast to Valerie Kopecky, the Ma¬roon’s “Magnificent Doll”; MissCampbell, of the Humanities De¬partment, came with Jim Barnett(could have been a blind date); SidLexak and Muriel Deutsch, quietlyand unobstrusively, managed to liftthe roof with their favorite rendi¬tions; Bill Montgomery and a crewof six stayed up until the wee-small hours attempting to wring afew more moments of happinessfrom places like the High-Hatclub, Kentucky Tavern, and such;we heard Harlan Blake ask formore beer in a voice that broughtresults from the Sigma Chi pledges;and jusf to make it short every¬body there knew what everyoneelse was doing and we all modestlyoutdid each other.Burton - Judson, collecting to¬gether its many-named entries,whipped up and served a soft andlow lighted dance with Dave Wolfeas the band to be digested. Likethe food at B-J we couldn’t com¬plain but had a suspicion that itcould be better. But Harold Home,Larry Reiser, Bob Beyer, BarneyZivp, Jim Phelon, and John Watt,members of the Student Councilwho gave the dance did a terrificjob of preparation and amongthose enjoying themselves were(just as a few representatives):Chuck Kahn, Walt Goedeeke, TomJohnson, Solveig Dahl, Gene Ro¬mano, Jean Cranston, Bill Pry-witch, Phil Rubin, Sally Fishman.Janet Benson, and many more whoshould be included.Not only has B-J stepped out in¬to the circle (Social) but followingright along were two of the felinedorms, Beecher and Kelly. KellyHall had as cigarette girls AliceGrey and Heather Akselrod, and asthe chorus surrounding MollyBowers'(who sings), Eugie Bab¬cock, Julie Stout, Terry Flambert,Alleen Coke, Betsy Dugan, andMarty Reynolds—all dressed inrather brief costumes (for somethe room grew chilly). Beecherhad, as alwatys, terrific food totake care of the itk-between mo¬ments. ,Now we’ll dispense with themasses and whisk you away to thenever-never land of Student Health—domain of the mighty flu-shot.Here we shall impart to you thetragic adventure of little JoanBeckman, resident of Hitchcock,who was anxious to donate herselfto science. After parting with asample of blood several times theusual size (an eager young doc¬tor let something slip and slicedopen a blood vessel by mistake),we find her prepared for theneedle.All is ready when up trips awhite-clad nurse to coo, “You’renot allergic to eggs, are you?” Yup,you guessed it, she was. So-o-o-othey sent her away, weak from lossof blood, scorned by science. And,to add insult to injury, they would¬n’t return the container of Beck¬man blood.As our closing word for theweek, we inquire with tears in oureyes, “What has become of theUniversity’s hallowed traditions?Nothing bothers us more than tosee pseudo-campus studients tread¬ing upon the sacred seal by theCommons. Let's give it some at¬tention and keep these desecratorsoff.Friday, November 22, 1«4«The SportlighweThis weekcolumn chock full of vital statisticsconcerning intramural athletics inthe University. After two monthsof participation in football andtouchball We have a pretty goodpicture of who are the strong con¬tenders for both college house andfraternity total point champion¬ships.The touchball season comes toa conclusion with Psi Upsilon wellout in front grabbing off 155 points.In second place is D.U. with 130while Phi Sig holds down thirdplace at 110 points. AD Phi andPhi Psi each carry 105 to tie forfourth place. Sigma Chi,'Phi Belt,— by Anson Cherrybring you a. Pi Lam, Beta, and Phi Gam each Maroon SportsV''4 ^ S Jl.'V^ ITS'H/nJc••• or WhitobyMISS SEVENTEINFigure-firming to your taste — inpetal pink, sophisticated block,or saintly white. "Power A/l/rac/e'*charms your curves with bi-direc-fional stretch. Slims you, trimsyou, controls with o caress! InQ'l'dle, ponty, or brief-brief...$5 to $10 at battar ttorM''•wn * € v/€ nT€ e nFOUNDATION!Now York 1. N. V. have 90 points, while bringing up'the rear with 60 are ZBT and the |Dekes. jOver in the College house league ,we have Mathews which is wellout in front of the pack with 100points. Second is Mead with 76,while a very close third is Doddwith 74. In fourth place is Vincenthouse with 65^2, and in fifth isChamberlin with 59’4. Coulter with56 points, Salisbury with 41 andLinn with 18 points complete thelist.In touchball scoring Walt Rileycontinued as number one scorerin the A Leagues with 74 points.Finishing in second place was teammate Ray Freeark who garnereda total of 45 points. Jack Fitz¬gerald and Bob Anderson of D.U.were tied for third place with 36points each. The only other playersto cross the goal line at least fivetimes were Phi Psi Wally Beattyand Alpha Delt Ken Sears withfive touchdow’ns apiece.In the B leagues scoring wasagain monopolized by D.U. and PsiU. Here it was Applebaum wholead with 32 points, while tied forsecond were Johnny Dolan of PhiPsi and Bud Schein of D.U. bothwith twenty points. Pep Paulsonand Bud Baker of Psi U were theB league’s other three touchdownmen.* * *Swimming Meet: In the prelim¬inaries of the intramural swim¬ming meet held in the Bartlett pool,Phi Psi seemed headed for a vic¬tory, knocking down 46 points. Insecond place for the day was PsiU wuth 27 points, while holdingprecariously onto third was DKEwith 16. The remainder of thepoints were pretty well distributed,with D.U. taking 10 of them andfourth place for the moment. Thefinals may change things a little,but it looks as though Phi Psi willbe the new swimming champs,with Psi U as runnerups.Odd ’N Ends: One of the chub¬bier Phi Gam brothers came up toyours truly the other day and de¬claimed the Chicago Maroon sportsdepartment as publishers of unre¬liable news. ‘Twould seem that inour last issue we stated that PhiSig B had beaten the Phi Gams,whereas it should have been theother way around. We hereby ex¬tend our sincerest apologies andheartiest congratulations to PhiGam for winning that game. •Be a BWOC•Be a C-Girl•Be aCHEERLEADERMEETING and TRYOUTSTuesday, Nov. 267:30 P.M.DANCE ROOMIda Noyes Hall PSI U Beats DUFor ChampionshipOwls SupremeIn Touchball Maroons WinFinal CrossCountry MeetThe Maroon harriers ended the1946 cross country season on aBy CHUCK VAN CLEVEThe old stone owl that percheson top of the Psi U front porch wasseen to give passersby a sly winklast week as he watched his pro¬teges sweep to complete victory cheerful note as they thoroughlywhipped the Purdue “B” squad 18to 39. Johnny Adams added an-CoedContestsBy YlackA substantial change in theaward system is being discussed oythe W.A.A. Executive Board andthe Physical Education department.The change, if effected, wouldmake' an award available on abasis of participaiion alone; atpresent, qualification for an awardis contingent on skill and/or lead¬ership.Jean Fletcher, W.A.A. presidentand Nancy Manchee, outing chair¬man, have recently returned fromthe state athletic association con¬vention at Jacksonville. They wereon hand to discuss and join, for theuniversity, the newly conceivedIllinois Federation of CollegeWomen; in fact, Jane can quoteyou hunks of the constitution, hav¬ing written substantial portionsof it. The Federation, designed tobring the women of the various in both the A and B touchballleagues. The torrid touchball sea¬son finally came to a close with .DU holding down second place in! first place to his long stringthe A league, while Phi Sig and of victories this season. Two otherPhi Psi were third and fourth. Chicago men, White and Mayer-In the B circuit the AD ^hi s. Oakes followed him in, both reach-D.U.’s and Phi Psi’s followed Psi'. , .U to the tape | finish line before the firstLed by the flying feet of Johnny j man.Sharp and long arms of Waltj Last meet on the docket for theRiley, Psi U capitalized with two Maroons is the Central A. A. U.first half scores and a safety to win cross country meet which is to be16-6. After an early counter by L..iJ i j n i n 4- •T- J .J T31 I held in Waveland Park. Partici-Fred DeGraw, the Gold and Bluecame roaring back on a kickoff | ^his meet will come fromreturn with Bob Anderson carry- j various midwestern colleges, highing the ball over to tie it up at six school and athletic clubs. Andall. But the Owls, playing theirusual rangy field game went aheadon Riley’s spectacular catch ofSharp’s long pass. The last halfwas somewhat in the Notre Dame-Army tradition as DU’s offensewas held in check and Psi Upsilonchalked up two more points on asafety. then, putting a definite close to theseason, • Coach Merriam plans onentering John Adams in the Na¬tional Championships.Since the first indoor track meetis not scheduled until early in Jan¬uary, it looks as though Chicago’sthinclads have a long period infront of fhem for the special pur¬In the consolation game for third pose of getting into runningplace, Phi Sig paced by Fisher and j shape. Last year’s varsity had bet-Rose laced the Phi Psis by 25 to 12 ^ ter look out on this account, for itcount. Rose caught four passes in is an eager group of freshmen andreturning vets who expect to makethe* oldsters look to their laurels.the end zone to score twenty-fourpoints, for the best individualscoring effort of the playoff series.The Psi U B squad clinched itschampionship by edging out a veryfine Alpha Delt squad 13 to 6. Af¬ter a scoreless first half the PsiU’s quickly gained seven points.Alpha Delt threatened to tie it up. ^wo events in the Illinois Divi-as Moore carried over for a touch- a.F.L.A. were held indown, but the conversion was gymnasium last Sunday,Chicagoans WinA.F.L.A. Meetmissed. Shortly before th'e gamecolleges and universities of the|^"ded Heffron carried the ball and Chicago students made a ck-answeep of all places. Rov Sieverstate in closer contact, will hold a across to give the Owls added in-, individual openconvention each year at a different, ^ j sabre competition. Roy was twiceschool. Outside of the national ^ si me w om j Big Ten and once Middle WestllA YEAR OFtime . ,W0 collea® '■%con oraer ■ •FOR ONLY $4.50 federation this is the first realeffort toward closer cooperation.Tickets go on sale sometime next^ ® trouncingweek for the quarterly W.A.A. din- ;ner to be held in Ida Noyes De had previously defeated, only towind up on the short end of a 39ftovat you $2.00 und*r TIME'* $4.50ycorly twbtcription pric«.>«$5.90 und*r TIME'* $10.40• y«or newtstand prico.A YEAR OPFOR ONLY $4.25•«vM you $1,15 umIm HR'. $5MyMrIy Mibtcriptien pric*«««$3.55 wndGT LIFE'* $7 JO• yaar prica.ViTiRANS OM till fot TIME aiMl un ol Nm popolv, MvlHGXlMidGd t* Ilia Artaod Nfm*:mu $3J0 A YEAR UFE $3.S0 A YEARIfood oiily FNitl Dm. II, 1944) Table tennis got under way lastcember 12. In addition to an excel- week with five matches beinglent meal, the get-together will played. Phi Psi eked out a five tofeature the presentation of this four triumph over the Phi Delts,quarter’s small c awards for tennis, ‘ with the Phi Gams slipping past Pihockey, and table tennis. Accord-'Lam by the same score. DU oblit-^-and Margery Bohnhoff third,ing to Irene Lyons, W.A.A. social ^ erated the Dekes, winning all ninechairman, tickets may be pur- : matches, while Sigma Chi trouncedchased only from house athletic; ZBT 7-2. Alpha Delt rolled overrepresentatives. - ' the Betas 8 to 1. champion in this event. LeonStrauss came in second in thisevent. Strauss was formerly divi¬sional epee champion.Arthur Cohen, a former Big Tenfoil champion came in third. In thewomen’s event, the open individualfoil, Kitty Wilson placed first, withMary Elizabeth Grnander secondFRIDAY'S■I Collegiate Kite IIINII THE BREAKERSthe new supper clubHOTEL SHERRY53rd AND THE LAKE IIPlenty ofMnsicPlenty ofFunParking SpaceToo—SUNDAY BRUNCHAn cndicft vanety of dciicioua foodiin a club-iikc atmosphera of charmand conviviality. A r«al traat to atartthe week. You’ll see your friendshere. Service from 11:30 a.m. to2:00 p.m. Budget Prices.ift iliiittli GROUP PARTIESYou’ll be surprised how inex¬pensively you can have yournext party at the famousBREAKERS. Fencing Coach Alvar Hermaii-son, who is also soccer coach hasannounced the award winners forthis year’s Junior, Varsity soccer.Major award winners are R. Cal-isch, R. Feitler, J. Geocaris, D,Hansen, R. Hansen, J. Leventhal,R. Lincicome, C. Reitinger, and H.Speer. Minor awards went to G.DeLazada and F. Whitehead. R.Chessick. E. Myers, S. Gordon, R.Moss, P. .Siaky, P. DeGroot and G.Hempel received the service shield.DC >|iBarry Hirschwald won the All-University Tennis championsh p bydefeating John Reuf 6-3 and 6-0.Hirschwald played through sixmatches to achieve his goal, andin so doing dropped only one setin the six.ClassifiedMEN—Opening for sales minded yng.men for an educational program;must be available for four hours, after¬noon and evening work. We need menwho want to earn at least $100 perweek. Apply 1 to 3 Mondays throughFridays at the Music Center, 0637 S.Halsted st.LOST, sorority pin, inscription AKA,with pearls, 2 diamonds and ruby.Contact Gloria Stewart, 742 E. 68th,Park 4732. Large reward.LOST, Black SheafFer fountain pen.Call But. 4.504.■There’s always something new to write home aboutletter perfeit on campusHi Marcy:First stop in the entertainment and travelwhirl, the University Information Officecan get you everything from railroadtickets to front-row seats for ’’Hamlet.'*Here I am on the premises in a MarshallField & Company casual. This MauriceEverett designed rayon gabardine dresswill take me anywhere, anytime, in perfectstyle. Meticulously tailored, buttonedfrom throat to hem, it comes in cleargray, bright navy and aqua. Sizes 12-18at $35 in the Sports Room.Yours,Meet Valerie Kopecky, student in the Sdioolof Business^ member of Chi Bho Sigma andBusiness Manager of Quadrangfes.Kadk tveek keep posted on the styles that make MarshallField & Company fashions an accepted campus custom^I'l