>4^University of Chicogo, Friday, October 10, 1947Usborne OffersWar AlternativeHenry C. Usborne, M. P., speaking in Mandel hall lastnight, predicted war as inevitable unless a central authorityis established which can legislate, interpret, and enforceworld law.He emphasized the critically short time which thepeoples of the world have for working out a system of world-- — • government, citing the prevailingNS A MeetsTo Plan ForComing Year fear of utter destruction amongr>eoples throughout Europe andthe universal loss of confidence inthe United Nations as clear evi¬dence of the urgency for immedi¬ate action.World Assembly by 1950Usborne, secretary of the Par-liamentary Committee for WorldState and campus levels of Na- Government, presented the plan oftional Student A^ociation got un- committee for convening aderway this week, in the wake o People's World Constituent assem-the national 1«A bly by 1950. This assembly wouldmonth at Madison WU^ The Illi- delegates from allnois Regional organization met . ,,Saturday at Loyola university, and »'h')se task would be tothe NSA committee of Student *<»-W f'^^eralGovernment here met Monday to ^ ,If the UN has developed into aneffective instrument for world gov- NSA AhSC ProblemsWilliams Proposes Referendum On TaxAs Administration Refuses SupportBy JACK SIEGELTax proposals and ratification of the NSA constitu¬tion will be on the ballot for the Student Government gen¬eral election as a result of action taken at Wednesdaynight’s session.A resolution presented by Ben Williams of the financecommittee provides a popular referendum on means ofraising funds for S G activities. Voters will be given an op¬portunity of voting “yes” or “no”emment by 1951, Usborne sug-plan its year’s program.Samuel Golden, national U of Cdelegate, who was elected regional ...chairman at the Madison conven- crested that the ^®sults of the as-tion, presided at the IllLnois re- he offered as a revi-gional meeting at Loyola. Golden si^nyy amendment to the UNsaid that permanent regional d'arter. As an alternative, he pro¬headquarters are now located at Posed that these plans be submit-the University of Chicago. ^ ^ *^he legislative bodies ofPrincipal actions of the state county for ratification as aassembly were adpptlon of a con- ^orid constituUon.stition and estab^hment of three , T^ere can be no ^ace withoutcommissions to carry out the chief There can be no justiceNSA activities in DUnois.^e con- without law. There can be no lawstitution. submitted by Mundelein, without x e n t r a 1 authority f ithcollege, must be ratified by each enough power to make, interpret,new school as it enters the state and enforce that law,” Usborneorganization. emphasized.Bill Birenbaum, another U of C Last night’s address, Usbome’snational delegate, was named only public speaking engagementchairman of the regional commis- in Chicago, was introduced bySion on international activities. A Rexford Guy Tugwell, professor ofcommission on national affairs political science at the University,was created by the assembly to This appearance was under thedeal with such subjects as student joint sponsorship of the Hyde Parkgovernments, student health, stu- chapter of World Republic and thedent rights, and academic free- south side and University chaptersdoni. This commission will be of United World Federalists.headed by William McDermott, ofDePauI University.The third of the newly estab-llslied groups is a cultural com¬mission ' with Miss Helen JeanRogers, of Mundelein college, aschairman. This group plans tocoordinate programs throughoutIllinois in such fields as art anddrama.Representation of colleges atthe regional assembly is fixed atdouble their representation in the(Continued on page 4) for the following schemes:1. A compulsiR’y flat rate of25 cents per quarter.2. A compulsory tax of fromtwo to three dollars per quarterin conjunction with an activ¬ities card for Student Union ora revived Student Association.3. Suggestion No. 1, non-compulsory.4. Suggestion No. 2, non-compulsory.Such a procedure was necessi¬tated by the Dean of Student’sand Central Administrations re¬fusal of the earlier tax proposalof the Finance Committee withoutgeneral campus approval. The or¬iginal plan called for a 25 centper quarter levy to be collectedduring registration.NSA Publicity PlannedAnother resolution, this timethe work of John Dooley and hisNSA committee will place theratification of the association’snew constitution up to the stu-A two dollar lee will be chareed Although the instru-.Zvii if irli “eht provides the alternative olto a*y new student at the Uni- .v i. i-v. i.ji.verslty ol Chicago who lalls to “PP*-®™! by Mch schools studentregister lor the required physicalexamination by next Monday. democratic aspectsOct. 13. the Student Health Serv- “ P”fice announced this week. ^ucational p r o g r a m lorNSA. It IS expected that a cam-All students required to take pus-wide meeting will be held tothe examination who have not acquaint the student body withdone so, are urged to the student program and function of NSAhealth service offices at Billings p^ior to the election,hospital at their first opportunity. ^he last meeting of the first/ - 73“ ^ ,,Assembly; also approved, a resolu-AH-Dofm Donee At B-J tton or appfikMIbn ^ the® conr-Chaplain James Currie Mc¬Leod of Northwestern Univer¬sity will speak Sunday atRockefeller Memorial chapel onthe topic, “Living While WeAre Alive.”Fee Charged ForLate Health ExamA mixed and dance for allresident and associate membersof the University House systemwill be held ^.tonight from 9 to12 in the Burton dining hall atBurton-Judson court.Johnny Marlowe and his or- mittee chairmen for their effec¬tiveness and energy in performingvital service that put SG “on itsfeet.” Estelle Turner, StudentNeeds, John Cotton Brown, CivilLiberties, Dave Green and NickResnick, Elections, Ben Williams,Finance, Ed McGowan, Social and FederalistsAnnounceFall PlansA resolution to “bend all effort*toward . . . placing., the citizenryof Hyde Park squarely on recordas favoring world government”was passed in the first meeting ofthe Autumn quarter held by theUnited World Federalists lastThursday evening at Social Sci¬ence Lecture Hall.Approximately 130 members ofthe organization elected new of¬ficers, heard reports of summeractivities and began making plansfor the coming year.Programming was started on anew series of lectures as a part ofthe UFW “Educate the Commu¬nity” campaign designed to spon¬sor public lectures and provide“leadership training” for other or¬ganizations wishing to participatein the program. The first lecturescheduled Henry C. Usborne, M.P.,of England as featured speaker.The new chairman-elect of theorganization is Robert T. MackJr. Other officers elected at themeeting were: Phil Jaynes, ViceChairman, with Mary Coleman,Amy Walten, Howard Lord, AlexPope and John Mellinger beingelected to the Board of Directors.Ex-chairman Tom Farr and JimCompton*’ comfilete" thi'^B d a rmembership.chestra will play for the dancers] Activated Coordination, Lenand refreshments will be served.The mixer is free to all dormi¬tory residents and associates andno dates are required. Schroeter, Publications, LarryKashdan and Dick Gable, Rules,Earl Greenspun, Public Relations,(Continued on page 3)Students Take Action OnChicago Housing SituationFrats PlanBig EventsThe first fraternity open partyof the fall quarter will be givenby Phi Gamma Delta tonight inthe chapter house at 5615 Uni¬versity avenue, from 9 until 1.Music for dancing will be'sup¬plied by Melvin Banks and hisorchestra.Decorations will be in the Fiji’straditional south sea island man¬ner, although no costumes will benecessary. Party chairman HalLyon has also promised that lavishrefreshments will be served.Encouraged by the success oflast year’s open parties, the fra¬ternities this year plan even biggerevents. Other functions in the nearfuture will include a Sigma Chiopen party on October 17, a Psi Ukard time$ party November 1, anda Phi Sig open house on Novem¬ber 7. More than 1,000 students signed a petition urgingenactment of a city rent control law, circulated Tuesdayand Wednesday by members of PCA and the Social ScienceEmployes union, and more than $50 was collected for peti¬tion expenses.The petition also requested Mayor Kennelly to declarea moratorium on evictions, tourge the assignment of judges to nounced. Fred Zimmring, outgoingRenters Court “wh/) are aware of president, has extended an invita-the serious problems facing ten- interested students toants,” to act immediately on an attend.adequate housing program, and toprevent landlords from lockingout tenants without due processof law.The petition attributed thehousing emergency to “real estateinterests’ inability or unwillingnessto build; and city, state and fed- can still be Jound, university liv-eral governments’ failure to act ing quarters are still jammed andon a housing program to meet will be for some time, Bursar A. F.present needs.” Cotton said this week.Municipalities are authorized to Applications for universityset up local rent control under a apartments are not being accept-bill passed last spring by the state ed for earlier than spring, 1949.legislature, under sponsorship of Married students with childrenthe Republican administration, will probably,have to wait a yearSuch local control could take ef- and a half to get into a prefab,feet only after federal controls ex- and those without children evenHousing PictureS.ooks E>arkThough rooms in private homes Modern Music SeriesStarts at Ida NoyesA new series of musical pro¬grams will begin Monday at 4 p.m.in the east lounge of Ida Noyeshall, it was announced this weekby the Student Union music de¬partment.The first program will be anillustrated lecture on contempo¬rary music and will be presentedby Leonard Meyer of the depart¬ment of music.Programs of recorded music willalso be offered from 2:30 to 4 p.m.,Monday through Friday in the'’Alumni room of Ida Noyes hall.Classical selections will be heardexcept on Wednesdays, when popu¬lar programs will be presented. Noyes Box Nite LifeHums At Cloister ClubApproximately 500 students andfaculty members attended theopening of Student Union’s NoyesBox, the campus “night club” atIda Noyes Cloister club, on Sun¬day evening, October 5.New features of the Noyes Boxincluded a larger dance fioor, col¬ored spot lights, and a remote-control phonogiaph system.Refreshments for the largecrowd were provided by Miss Mar¬garet Grimes, new director of theCloister club. A number of hostsand hostesses were present to makethings easier for the “patrons,”but comments ‘ndicated that fe¬males were in short supply.The Noyes Box is a dateless af¬fair and informal as to clothing.Cutting-in is not only permittedbut desired. Discussion is under¬way to provide occasionally forbands and other entertainment.Suggestions which will improvethe campus hangout are appre¬ciated.pire in March, 1948. longer. A few dormitory roomsThe first autumn meeting of will become available in the 1948PCA will be held at 3:30 p.m. to- winter quarter,day at Haskell 108. Nominations Cotton said he had no knowl-for officers will be made, and the edge of definite plans for anyprogram for the fall will be an- new residence halls. CONSERVATIVE LEAGUEELECTS FALL OFFICERSMembers of the ConservativeLeague met Wednesday night inSocial Science 107 to elect officersand map their program for thecoming year. Watson Parker wasre-elected chairman of the group,and John Armstrong was electedtreasurer. Raymond C. Holly wasappointed to serve as secretary. Directory ListingEnds TodayStudents wishing to have theirnames appear in the UniversityDirectory, a compilation of thefaculty, student body, and stu¬dent organizations at the Uni¬versity of Chicago, are urged topay all delinquent fees and com¬plete their registration sometimetoday.Students whose fees are de¬linquent after today cannot beconsidered for inclusion in thedirectory. Students who havechanged addresses or telephonenumbers since registration arerequested to rei>ort such changesto the Office of the Registrar assoon as possible.THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, October 10,Calendar of EventsNext Week onQuadranglesOCTOBER 10A.V.C. SOCIAL: 8-11 p.m., Reynolds club, south lounge.PHI GAMMA DELTA OPEN PARTY: 9-1 p.m.BURTON-JUDSON DANCE: For all college men and women. JimBarclay’s band.SWIMMING AT IDA NOYES: For men and women (and everyFi'iday thereafter).IiUTHERAN: All-Lutheran Reception, 7:30 p.m., east lounge ofIda Noyes hall.HILLEL FOUNDATION: Sabbath service, 7:45 p.m. 8:30 p.m.Fireside. Daniel Bell, instruction of social sciences in the college willspeak on “Redefinition of Judaism.”CALVERT CLUB: Religious discussion class led by Father Con-nerton, 7:15 p.m.INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: Speaker: D. C.Norman Bartlett, professor. Moody Bible institute. Ida Noyes, thirdfloor, 12:30-1:20 p.m.OCTOBER 11ASSOCIATION OF INTERNES AND M.D.’s DANCE: Ida Noyeshall.SQUARE DANCE: Sponsored by Student Union board, Ida Noyes.INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: Chicago areamonthly meeting of IVCF at 7:45. east lounge, Ida Noyes. Speaker: Dr.Joseph Free, chairman of the department of archaeology, Wheatoncollege.OCTOBER 12CHANNING CLUB: Meeting. 57th at Woodlawn. 1st Unitarianchurch. Professor David Riesman will .speak on the topic “FreudianEthics.” There will be a social hour and refreshments following histalk.FRIENDS: The 57th Street meeting of the Fiiends will meet atHull chapel of the Unitarian church (57th and Woodlawn) at 3 p.m.rather than at 11 p.m. as formerly.BAPTIST YOUNG PEOPLES' FELLOWSHIP: 7 p.m. at the HydePark Baptist church.BEECHER HALL OPEN HOUSE: 3-6 p.m.NOYES BOX: Ida Noyes, 7-11 p.m., food, fun, dancing.WRANGLERS: Mixer for all Disciple students, 6-8:30 p.m. at theDisciple church house.LUTHERAN: Choral vespers for the liturgically-minded Thorn-dike-Hilton chapel, 5-5:30 p.m.OCTOBER 13HILLEL FOUNDATION: Special meeting—Louis LIpsky, formermember of the Jewish agency for Palestine will speak on “Palestine:the Zionist Position.”OCTOBER 14CONGREGATIONAL: Congregational students’ supper meeting,5:30-8 p.m. at Chapel house. Dr. Victor Obenhaus will speak on “TheOutlook for a World Ethic.”CALVERT CLUB: Second lecture in the theology series . . . FatherDonough, 7:15 p.m.INTER-VARIETY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: Bible study, thirdfloor, Ida Noyes, 12:30-1:20 p.m.BRIDGE LESSONS BEGIN: Ida Noyes. Advance registrationnecessary (and thereafter on five succeeding Tuesdays).OCTOBER 15IDA NOYES NIGHT: Roller-skating, swimming, bowling, tabletennis—men and women (and every Wednesday thereafter). Fall EnrollmentListed at 17,900A record total of over thirteen thousand five hundredand 4,400 part-time students in down-town Universitystudents have registered at the University of Chicago,Ernest C. Miller, registrar, announced last week.Expansion of faculty has made it possible to admit9,100 full-time students on the quadrangles this autumnCollege.Largest increase was made CultUrOthe College, in which 1,300 newstudents were admitted to meet CISSSOS PldHllOClthe pressure of veterans and high tun i ^ ^^ Hil!el foundation classes in Jew’-school students. jsh culture will begin' next week“Last year the university was under the direction of Rabbi Pe-ablc to provide for 65 per cent l^^^sky and Oscar Kenig, withir ^ nror. Herbert Paper and Manny Feginmore students than before the war. ^ instructors.and it has been able to surpass Studies will include elementary,this achievement this year with- intermediate, and advanced spok-out lowering the quality of its ef- en Hebrew, the latter in coopera-fort,” Miller said. tion with IZFA; elementary andThe College, which admits stu- advanced Yiddish; modem Jew-dents after their sophomore year ish history; the Talmud; andin high school for a four-year pro- Jewish customs, ceremonies and;gram of general education, will folkways.have a total enrollment of 3.200 the field of creative arts, astudents this year, or 400 more choral group, a folk dance group,than last year. crafts workshop andj t ^ ^ ^ dramatics program includingThe divisions and P'ofess'onf puppetry are planned.schools approximate 5,900, whichis roughly comparable to the pre-war total of the university.Five thousand five hundred ofthe 13,500 students are veteransstudying under the G. I. bill ofrights. Two hundred and fiftywomen veterans and 50 Canadianveterans have registered. DocumentaryFilm SeriesAnnouncedFirst documentary films of thefall quarter w'ill be a group ofExperimental Art films, beingshown in Social Science 122, 7; 15p.m. Tuesday, October 14.THE POTTED PSALM, direct,ed by Sidney Peterson and JaniesBroughton in San Francisco un,dertakes a visual penetration ofthe chaotic inner complexities ofour postwar society. The approachis via a dream world.Other documentaries includeTEN DAYS THAT SHOOK THEWORLD (October 28), HISTORYOF THE ANIMATED CARTOONplus two Chaplin comedies (No¬vember 11), DOES IT MATTERWHAT YOU THINK, PUBLICOPINION, and GENERAL El-KC-TION (November 25).Fiction films on the fall sched¬ule include new version of Shake¬speare’s MACBETH, directed byDavid Bradley (October 21); arevival of THE EAGLE featuringthat matinee idol of silent days,Rudolph Valentino (November 4)*MAN WITH THE GUN, score byShostakovitch; and EMPERORJONES, the Eugene O’Neil mas-terpiece with Paul Robeson.YOU DON’T HAVECAMPUS PAPERS kiLEDIN REYNOLDS LOUNGEAs a service to out of town stu¬dents the CHICAGO MAROONwill maintain a file of over 40leading college newspapers inthe South Lounge of the Rey¬nolds Club.Maroon Associate BusinessManager Mel Lackey announcedthat the papers will be changedtwice weekly and all of the lead¬ing American and Canadian col¬leges will be represented. to be a Millionaireto join the Millions who wearFLORSHEIMSHOES FOR MENG«G GRILLat the Corner of57th end Stony IslandWe Coterto Forties TelephoneFAIRFAX2119Vast Planning NeedSeen By MerriamThe next five years will spelleither victory or defeat for Chi¬cago’s present great opportunityto remake its face, Alderman Rob¬ert E. Merriam (5th ward)) de¬clared Thursday at the seconda series of five lectures on Chi¬cago’s problems.Speaking on planning for agreater Chicago, Merriam outlinedthe development of the Chicagohousing program, which involvesthe expenditure of nearly 60 mil¬lion dollars in public funds forboth slum clearance and construc¬tion of new housing for low incomefamilies.Merriam warned that such avast program is more than just ahousing program, but entails thereplanning of entire communitiesand even the relocation of indus¬tries.BICYCLES RENTEDof 35c per hour When you measure value in termsof quality and longer wear, then bettershoes cost less in the long run. AndFlorsheim Shoes are better—as evidenced by the millionswho will wear no other.Georges Meiss Shop1003 EAST 55TH STREETAT ELLISOPEJV THVBS. ANO SAT. JVfGSTSFOOTBALLsersmeMcemsmrs■ ■■ « t£PAU>IMOS 'VOPOLAR. js-v10 na OFFICIALTOaXBA\XIN THC NATIONSUADINO OltmiRpNrJLAS51CS ANDANNUAL BOWLcames rxpM :COASTTOcoA^rr /V....ANDSPAIDINC MADETHE FIRST FOOTBALLfVER PR.ODOCEOm TNI UNITiD STATU^riJoy. October 10, 1947 THE CHICAGO MAROON»Student Union Board GetsFifty Per Cent Budget LiftJohn L. Bergstresser, assistant dean of students, toldmembers of 'the Student Union board at a meeting Tues- 5 C PmhIomCday evening that their t)udget for the coming school year ^ ^ ■ ■ WOldTlShas been increased by 50 per cent. (Continued from page i)He said that the Admmistration was pleased with the student ^F^uityactivities of the organization and . that T.he increase hadbeen granted in recognition of itsservices to the campus.Commending the board policy ofcatering to the campus as a whole,Bergstresser praised the “energy, were so cited.Permanent Staffs Set-upPresident Len Stein announcedthe ^ series of executive orders. ByMaroon Available To Parents extracurricular activities.New Members ElectedElections were held to filllast of nine posts open on the terms a permanent electionsefficiency and imagination” of its The eighteen-member board staff has been set up (George18 members. have the following officers Cooley has been appointed chief).’Mergers Announced Wednesday ' and Thursday, Oc-Spring: President, Michael Wein- * u «« ^Michael Wineberg, president of berg, Jr.; Vice-President PauUne P ^Crossing campus boundaries in its new program of t;he board, announced the absorp- Mathewson; Secretary Josephine general election, allexpansion, the MAROON’S business department announced Barke.today that over 3,500 letters have been sent to parents of men'inZde? lX"sec?eXt lo aXhestudents giving them the opportunity to subscribe to the mittee of the sub win neverthe- Gross; Dance, Lou Pitzger- retary and corresponding secre-paper less retain a separate appropria- SeXmeXp^^fw®tion from the Universitv “C’» Paul Weiss; Ex- in the Reynolds Club has alsoBusiness manager Jim Barnett and his assistant, dances and similar all-campus af- Gayden; Games, Gail been established. Both staffs areMelvin Lackey, said that the pro- —7 fairs have been planned by the ^formation, Marvin appointed from volunteers and+0 fiirnicV. nor subscrlbc for his family in nocf ^ Bailin; Musicfi Leonard Pearson; non-partisan,crftni wfts pljtnncci to xviFnisri pftr* ^ comiiniitt00 in tri0 pR-st* xrrwr/ik:-* n ±If. infnrmatinn about tha ram- the MAROOl^ offices. ^ ^^Iton Eggert; Out- Amendments Consideredents intoimation aDout me cam- Wineberg said that the merger jne Aaron Piiirr* Pprc^nnoi Tor.i, »pu.s and its activities. Subscrip- He said that sufficient sub- was intended to “fulfill the three- Daley Publiictv * Jim Ontpc- Rp Larry Kashdan of the Rulestlons are made on a quarterly scriptions have been received al- fold job of expanding recreational freshi^ents, Mae Svoboda;’ and crsufuttoaramendLnteTtheBarnett said that technical venture and indicated that the campus; avoidin,.; duplication and importantproblems made it impossible to so- service would become a permanent conflict; and providing SU mem-licit all parents and that any stu- part of the MAROON program. bers with a meaningful picture of Help NeededAtMan with a systemSimply pick up your telephone and youcan route your voice through any ond ofthousands of central offices—some with dialmechanisms so complex they stagger theimagination, yet so efficient they seem towork like magic—others staffed by compe¬tent, courteous operators whose standardsof work have long been a fine tradition.You command, in effect, millions of milesof telephone wire and cable.You can direct your call — one of some110,000,000 that will be made today — to any one of some 53,000,000 telephoneshere and abroad.The operation of this vast system is bigbusiness. It is a complex, many-sided busi¬ness in which thousands of college trainedmen are working in their chosen fields—development or researeh, engineeringplanning, accounting or statistics, publiccontacts, supervision of operations or otherphases of management. These men havefound highly interesting and rewarding changes enable representatives tcbe out of residence for one quar¬ter without giving up their seatsIhe executive council to call foiby-elections when representationfalls below 505 of authorizedstrength in any division, and peti-You may not be able to do any- ^e signed by 4 per centthing about the Fall of Pompeii of the student body instead of theor the Fiddling of the U.N. but previous 1 per. cent. These andyou can. do something about a other proposals will appear onmajor problem confronting theUniversity of Chicago Clinics. The •Clinics are suffering from the na- Reports Giventional shortage of nurses, as well John Brown, delegate to the Te¬as of other hospital personnel, cent NSA convention, delivered aVolunteers who will contribute a report on the proceedings. Hehalf day or more a week can do characterized the group as beingmuch to relieve the situation, just left of center in the Roose-They are never used as substi- velt tradition, in general agree-tutes for paid staff when paid ment about most issues, and vigi-staff is available. Last year more lant in avoiding any extreme left-than one hundred and fifty vol- wing infiltration,unteers including faculty and stu- Treasurer Lucas Clarkston gavedent wives, neighborhood house- a detailed financial statement andwives, and Uniyepity students, requested a $65 appropriation forgave service to Billings, Bobs Rob- the coming election. The reporterts, and the Orthopedic, hospi- and request were unanimously ap-tals. Just as many are needed for proved,this year. Many satisfying oppor-tunities are open to women witha desire to serve.Two training courses will beginthe week of October twentieth, be given Tuesday and ThursdayAides to nurses will be trained by mornings for a period of threeMrs. C. Howard Hatcher (R.N.) weeks, after which the traineesin a few simple procedures such may choose their day to give fouras bathing bed patients, making hours service. There will be or-beds, taking temperature and ientation talks by the head ofpul^, and tray service. The class- the Child Guidance Clinic, thees *will be held Mondays and Social Service Department, Pedi-'Wednesdays from nine until atrics Nursing Division, and thetwelve o’clock for a period of three Pediatrics Medical Department. Aweeks. Upon completion of the trained recreation leader willtraining candidates may select teach bedside games, games fortheir working day, and are re- small groups of ambulatory chll-quested to give a minimum of dren, and story telling,one morning a week for a period In addition to the Aides’ coursesof twenty-five weeks. This is a re- there are needs, for which no spe-peat course for Mrs. Hatcher, cial training is necessary, in var-many of whose trainees from last ious departments sUch as The Pa-year are still enjoying service at tient’s Library, X-Ray and Physi-the Clinics’ Hospitals. otherapy Department, Child Guid-The second course will be for ance Clinic, Supplies Department,women who wish .to work with and clerical assistants in the So-children as Playtime Aides. It will cial Service Department.THE BEEHIVEFALL GRAND OPENl!\GFeaturingJUJftP JACKSON AiVD BAIADSchroeter was elected tomembership on the Election Com¬mittee by acclamation.careers.BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM Try Our Jam SessionCHICKEN FEAST Every Sunday 4 to 8It Can'tBe Beat4 Featuring FamousStars From TheWorld of JazzTHE BEEHIVE55fh at Harper—Home of JiveTHE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, October 10, 1947Sidelights On FootlightsBy FRANCIS GEORGE STEINER“R. U. R.” by Karel CapekCriteria of criticism are a matter for controversy.Nevertheless, interest beyond the scope of locality or timemay fairly be taken as standard of value. What is great inLope de Vega lies outside the realm of Castilian farce, andMoliere can do without the allusions of contemporary wit.This quality may be achieved by the universality of theproblem, by tnf. eternal configura-tion of the mer involveb., or sim¬ply by creating a land of fantasywherein the action follows its ownpeculiar destiny.“R. U. R.”, Karel Capek’s fan¬tasy of 1923, lies somewhere in themiddle of these elements andshares in their quality The prob¬lem of man’s fights against thedomination of'his own machines, strange combinations of mishapsa grotesque nightmare at the time befallen,of Capek’s creation, has become a Last week a group of studentsreality. The survival of love, its had gathered at the proper timereawakening in the empire of ro- and place for their class. The in-bots, present a theme akin to the structor appeared, somewhat late,great works of all times. Love as striding briskly into the room. Heharbinger of real freedom, the fig- looked over the class with a criti-ure of a woman as destroyer and ^^1 announced that allredeemer, t h e j e are elements ^l^ose students without class cardshackneyed with us. And yet. the immediately repair to roomartist has create an ingenioussetting to his fancy. There is a These students having depart-twist of irony to the platter, a gave the rest of the classrealism reminiscent of Molnar. name. In his introductory re-The economic fallacy involved inhis reasoning, the artificiality of Frantic ProfStalks ClassIn the ensuing scramble toreach those first classes in timeand in the right classroom, many AVC Social of Reynolds 23AVC will give its first socialof the Autumn quarter tonightat 8 p.m. in both lounges of theReynolds club. Invitations to allveterans and their .friends areextended by Chairmen John J.Keating and David Green.The program’s featured enter¬tainer will be Jenny Wells, wellknown singer of old Americanand English ballads. Free re¬freshments will be served. THE MUSIC STANDBy James Qoldmanhis construction and the lame de¬nouement, do not condemn thework to oblivion. On the contrary,we can only praise the choice ofthe University Theatre. To use theancient formla, “R. U. R.” mayarouse pity and terror, but morethan that it should lead to thediscussion of such questions as:will our machines vanquish their been associated with the socialscience department for over tenyears. Whereupon a bolder mem¬ber of the class raised his handand said, “Sir, this is English 2!’’When last seen, the instructorwas pursuing the students thathad been sent to room 101.To turn the tables, a class wascalled to order by the instructorand his teaching started. Itseemed to be slightly over theDormitoryActivitiesUnder Waycreators? Are we on the verge of head of one timid young thing, soa mechanical, soulless universe? she finally raised her hand andWhere does redemption lie? The inquired if this were Bi Sci 3.play may not answer these ques- “No, young lady,” replied- the in-tions but it will make a vivid and structor, “this is biochemistry,artistic dilemma of them. Scenery You have the wrong class!” HalfIs really of no importance. The the class got up and left.acting itself should follow a cer- ^tain pattern of universalism. Thisis a difficult matter. But in allfairness, we may poin out thatmuch of the worK ’vill be up tous. It all adds up to an eveningof rare interest. Later on in theseason, Sartre will once againface us with the problem of man’sliberty. The scheme will be en- Dormitory activities for 1585tirely different, but we should keep residents are under way with ain mind the answers offered us dance tonight and a talk by Dr.by Capek. The latter stood upon Harold Urey next Wednesday asthe threshold of a world wherein the immediate highlights,his fancy assumes reality while Johnny Marlowe and his ten-the existentialist writes m the very pj^^e orchestra will furnish musicshadows cast by the coming of the for the dance in Burton diningrobots. from nine to twelve.In the program of the University Dr. Urey, Distinguished ServiceTheatre there is both a quality of professor of chemistry and Nobelthe eternal, and the severe impli- prize winner, will speak at 8:15cation of the actual. This, we be- p.m. October 15 in the Burtonlieve to be the true criterion of dining room. All College studentsan important season. The high are invited, according to Johnstandard of the works offered us Wilkinson, director of dormitories,should stimulate our attention, for Other talks will be by T. V.after all, the theater is the con- Smith on November 5, by Presi-stant rebirth of creation in the dent Colwell on November '18, andmind of each producer, each pro- by Professor Paul Douglas on De- NS A Plans(Continued from page 1)national NSA congress. Thismeans that the University of Chi¬cago, which elected six delegatesto Madison, is allowed twelve rep¬resentatives at the state assembly“The remarkable thing aboutthis state meeting,” Golden said,“was the unanimity of purposeamong the body of delegates TheIllinois region was notorious atMadison for bitter splits on prac¬tically every vote, but the meetingSaturday showed that NSA meanssomething when it says it canrepresent the interests of all thestudents.”Members of the Student Gov¬ernment committee on NSA metMonday afternoon at the Rey¬nolds club to hear Golden’s re¬port and discuss plans for thecoming year. John Dooley, com¬mittee chairman, presided.Plans were begun for a pub¬licity campaign to make U of Cstudents more conscious of howNSA will help them. One methodproposed was for the committeeto supply speakers to explain NSAat meetings in university dormi¬tories.Dooley announced that hiscommittee has several letterswritten to the University of Chi¬cago by students in Europeancountries, especially Germany,who want to correspond withAmerican students. Those who areinterested in answering such let¬ters are to contact Dooley.The committee will meet againat 4 p.m. today in the SG roomon the third floor of the Reynoldsclub to expand plans begun onMonday. The meeting is open toall students interested in learningmore about NSA. The performance of Pergolesi’s opera “The MusicMaster” in Mandell hall on December 7 and 9 will open theUniversity of Chicago’s musical program for the currentyear.Among the prominent singers engaged for the operaare Dorothea Brodbeck, coloratura soprano who won theChicagoland Music Festival vocal contest a few years ago, and RobertSpiro, who sang the Bach Cantata Number 56 with the CollegiumMusicum last winter. Costumes for the production are being designedby Ruth Page.Pergolesi’s “The Music Master,” first performed in 1731, is, strictlyspeaking, an intermezzo. Intermezzi were originally slight scatteredbits of comic opera presented between scenes of larger, more seriousworks to cover up the mechanics, time lapse, and noises of scenechanging. With the advent of “The Music Master” the intermezzoleached maturity and was presented as a complete opera of a lightnature. This form of intermezzo became tremendously popularthroughout Italy and France and was the progenitor of such operabuffa as Mozart’s “Cosi Fan Tutte” and Rossini’s “The Barber ofSeville.”Clitics and composers of the past seem to agree that the chiefmerits of the works of Pergolesi, such as “The Music Master,” arecharming and inexhaustible flow of melody, naturalness and fluencyand delightfully humorous aspects.Pergolesi himself lived only 26 years. He went to Naples at theage of 16 to continue his studies and remained there for most of hieshort lifetime. He composed a large amount of both secular and sac¬red music. When Pergolesi died in 1736 his name was known through¬out Italy and France; the popularity of his compositions was im¬mense. Today his fame rests chiefly on his “Stabat Mater,” his comicoperas or intermezzi, and “'Tre Giorni Son Che Nina,” a song he didnot write.Chsistian Croup MeetsInter-Varsity Christian fellow¬ship will hold luncheon meetingseach Tuesday and Friday from12:30 to 1:20 p.m. on the thirdfloor of Ida Noyes hall.Hannis Smith. Nightly recordconcerts at 9 in Burton loungeare proving popular. “If I don’t bring home Dentyne Chewing Gum,they attack!”“Boy! Do these kids make my life miserable if Iforget the Dentyne Chewing Gum! 1 can’tblame the little shavers, though. I’m as keen asthey are on that refreshing, long-lasting flavor.And Dentyne helps keep their teeth white, too.”Dentyne Gum—Made Only by Adamstagonist and each spectator!Filler Calls FirsfFall Square Dance cember 9. There will be moredances November 8 and Decem¬ber 12.Last year’s Interhouse councilIs being reorganized to coordinatethe programs of individual houses,which are already in progress.The first regularly scheduled Vincent house held an exchangesquare dance of the year will be dinner with Foster hall Thursdayheld tomorrow night at Ida Noyes night, while Linn traded withhall, the Student Union outing Kelly. Chamberlin plans housedepartment has announced. dinners soon in a private diningMusic will be provided by the room,new Outing orchestra and Aaron Burton library, with 750 booksFiller, department chairman, will and 200 record albums, is nowdo the calling. open under the direction of Mr. TERESA DOLANDANCING SCHOOL1208 E. 63rd St. (Nr. Woodlown)LEARN TO DANCE NOW!We can teach you to be a reallygood dancer. Our years of experi¬ence is your guarantee. No frills—just satisfying results. Let us helpyou now!PRIVATE LESSONSDAILY 11 A.M. TO 11 P.M.6 HIUR LESSONS |20.00Learn Waltz, Pox Trot, Rumba,Samba and Tango in class, 12 les¬sons, $10.00. Sun., Mon., Tues., Wed.,Sat. Evenings at 8:00.Phone Hyde Park 3080BOOKSSore!—Reflections on ViolenceJohn Rewald—^The ManetPastelsVaihinger—^The Philosophy of'As If'Schopera—The Bantu SpeakingTribesJAMES D.1313 E. 55TH STREET De Coulanges—Origin ofProperty in LandRobert Grovgs—The Future ofSweoringSigmund Freud—An Auto¬biographical StudyPaul Goodman—The GrandPianoSTAYERPLAZA 0800 WANTED!CAMPUS SALES REPRESENTATIVESTO REPRESENT"Flowers and Gifts of Hawaii"Biiftnore Flowers and Gifts, ond Flowers andGifts of Hawaii —its shop in the Royal HawaiianHotel in Honolulu — ship exquisitely fashionedCalifornia and Hawaiian flowers and lels hours-fresh via air-express at amazingly low prices.Our college sales representatives all registerabove-average earnings for part-time work sell-ng these California and Hawaiian flowers tofraternity and sorority houses, dances, proms,etc. Delivery guaranteed — or money refundedFor full details—write giving complete outlineof your sales experience. Furnish credit refer¬ences, and enclose photograph.BILTMORE FIOWERS AND GIHS423 C. Eighth Streot • Los Angeles 14, California "irS ALWAYS FORTHE GIRL IN THESee them at MARSHALL FIELD . CARSON-PIRIE SCOTT. WIEBOLDT'SFrti boDklit: “WAIDIOBE TRICKS". Writ! Iidy Bold, Ik.. Bipt L 1375 Braadway. Niw Tilt KDAlso for Young WomenSizes 12 to 20OPENMON.-THURS.-SAT.UNTIL 10 P. M. Store for Men1233 E. 63rd ST. JOINOUR LAYAWAYCLUBCORNER 63RD & KIMBARKj, .A__i44'€a/ir-to4iea/ir (Sc^Utility, good looks and flawlessstyle make this Arisiogramfoursome one he'll appreciateand cherish. Swank-craftedand, for that personalnote—each carries hisown initials.CAMPUS FAVORITES%100% All WoolGrey Flannel Slacks Ciatm$3.50BtU BuctitS2.50Coats of arms made famous by historic deeds of action. Aristo¬cratic in design — regal in color — Modern Medievals by Mano’ Karma. 100% virgin zephyr and worsted yarn that are asmasculine as a knight in shining armor. 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Let your own experience tellyou why Camels are setting a new record!rage 6Editorial Opinion THE CHICAGO MAROON Fridoy« October 10, I947The Maroon And The CampusDuring the MAROON reorganization of the past weekwhen the ambitions and possibilities for the future werebeing examined and crystalized, the place which a studentnewspaper holds in the ordered educational universe ofChicago University was clarified in terms applicable to allstudent activities. For this reason, and because it will an¬swer in advance many questions as to the scope and ex¬cellence of the MAROON itself, we think it worthwhile tooutline our position under the Chicago plan.The University is in the education business; it is big-time only in the academic field and it likes it that way.Thus the MAROON and all other activities are keptwithin the limits imposed by a purely volunteer basis forstudent participation and by continual emphasis on thecurricular responsibilities of the students. This last, by theway, is imposed by the students themselves. No classes aremissed to put this paper to press and later in the year,when comps are in the wind, this office will be deserted.There can be no question as to the essential rightness orwrongness of administration attitude in this regard; it mustbe accepted as given and further discussion must proceedon that basis. We happen to agree with it, though it helpsmake us the harried creatures that we are. If we didn’tapprove we suppose we wouldn’t be at this particularuniversity.Within the limitations described above there is possiblea good newspaper, and we intend to produce one. In ouropinion the MAROONS of the past compare favorably withpapers of. other colleges and universities, and with the ex¬panded and experienced staff we have so recently acquiredit is reasonable to expect an improvement over past per¬formances. hordes of screaming kids to grim tarred strips runningalong under the benches where they sat All this occurredto us, and then we realized that there v/as never any suchalternative so coldly put, and we went on to think aboutfootball.Still, it was hard not to compare—then and now . . .if it weren’t for that business of the west stands. The sub- LETTER TO EDITORstitution does not seem to have been a completely happyone, this shift of emphasis from sports to atom bombs, from SLIGHT CORRECTIONTo the Editor:First—a slight correction to thearticle on AVC. Bolte was not do.feated in 1947. He did not run, andwas throughout the conventictnone of the leaders of the “inde¬pendent Progressive” caucuswhose successful candidate wasChat Paterson.As an active AVC’er and a dele¬gate to the Milwaukee conventionfrom the Newark chapter, I findmyself In disagreement with PeteDay’s description of the “left” fac¬tion in AVC and in the various po¬litical organizations he describes.True, the term “left” has come tobe used to describe the Commu¬nist Party and its periphery. Butit is not true that what separatesthis “left” from others is that iturges militant action.I can give the best example ofthis by turning to the labor move¬ment. In the United Auto Work¬ers, the Reuther caucus is tradi¬tionally called the right wing. Yet,if you told any active Reutherman that the left wing stood formilitant action, he would laugh myour face. He knows that his owncaucus fought against incentivepay during the war when the Com¬munists were pushing it. He knowsthat the “left wing” bitterly op¬posed as radical and visionary thevery advanced General Motors.strike program of Reuther in1945-6, which tied together wages,prices and profits, and demandedthe right for the union to examinethe company’s cost accountingsystem to see what it could actu-(Continued on page 9>NostagliaThere isn’t even an echo in Stagg Field on Saturdayafternoon, these autumn days, though one can hear, whenthe wind is right, a slow and pregnant ticking coming fromthe west stands where time has been running out for someyears past to the acoempaniment of Mr. Hutchins prophe¬sies to that effect.We went over there the other day to work up this edi¬torial on football at Chicago University, and we found thatwe wouldn’t mind the silence and the emptiness so much The Maroon And SportsFootball in this country is becoming more and more aspectator sport, as indeed is almost everything else includ¬ing everyday life itself (as seen in the movies). This trendwas noticed some years ago by ihe people in charge ofthings at the University and sports, which at that timemeant football, was put back on an amateur, play for thefun of playing basis. Now we think that this move was notonly right but that it anticipated, by these many years,similar decisions on the part of other institutions as theysee the field house usurping the position of the administra-ton building.Both because we are quite content without the Frank¬enstein Football and because we recognize that sports area vital part of the University program the MAROON willput great emphasis this year on intramurals, house anddormitory leagues and games. A great many men take partin this activity, and its significance depends on this factmore than upon the success which U of C teams may havein intramural tilts.Our sports staff this year is large and mostly new. It isdetermined to present the intramural program, as well asthe activity of varsity and jayvee teams, thoroughly andfairly.YOURREYNOLDS CLUB BARBER SHOPHours 8 to 5—Soturdoy 8 to 16 Regiiiiterod Barbor$i to Serve YouSHfiVE SERVICEALL CAMPUS BARBER SHOPBASEMEIVT BEYNOLDS CLLB5706 University La Hue’sRestaurant'Something SpecialEvery Dag^*1606 East 55th St.FAIrfax 5553W$f ridoy, Oefober 10, 1947 THE CHICAGO MAROON Page 7Borberly Reports Over5,000 Vets On CampusMore than 5,000 veterans are enrolled in the Universityfor the Autumn quarter, Joseph E. Booerly, Advisor toVeterans stated Monday. An accurate count has as yet notbeen possible because of the flood of work entailed in get¬ting book and supply vouchers in order for this vast num¬ber of ex-GI’s.of clerks worked' checks can be expected in the World Gov'tPlea MadeTwo crewsmore than ten days straight to do mail. First Student UnionArt Show SuccessBy JOHN FORWALTEREvery art show has its criteria and by the criterionwhich the Student Union Board set up when it announcedthe show open to all University of Chicago students, theshow must be judged a success.The show was exceptionally fortunate in having judgesof understanding as well as learning. Dr. Giesburt of theArt department, University ofWriting in the October issue of institute- Sd DrKathlriM Kuh„„ ,, „ . , „v,- prevalent until ImpressionismtJis keeping 15 typists busy at All those Veterans new on the Common Cause, Univeisity of Chi- editor of the Art Institutes news swept the watercolorists.one time. campus and those who have not cago publication of the Committee Charles Woodruff showed a greatThe new headquarters for the yet completed forms for re-enter- to Frame a World Constitution, snow an excellent group of paint- technical sill in his CON-Office of the Advisor to Veterans ing the University, after last quar- Henry Usborne, M. P., states that non-professionals of such TEMPORARY CULTURE, thirdi}. in a brand new barracks at 940 ter, are asked to be present at much of the frustration in recent oackgiounds. The jury felt that jjjg gp dei^riptiveE 58th and Ingleside. Cobb hall, beginning October 13, at years on world government is due ^ne idea of the semi-annual Stu- study that his mes-Mr. Boberly wanted to Impress 4:30, for the purpose of filling to the illusion that World Govern- union Art bnow would be of need hardly be classed ason all veterans that he and his out forms to expedite subsistence ment can be created only by the to aiger numbers of stu- symbolist. The oil was far superior.staff are not working for the Vet- pay remittances. Postal cards will efforts of the statesmen of sover- successive time. t^hnique and sophistication tooran’s Administration. Instead, he be mailed to all veterans inform- eign national governments. awards of the judges went jjjg sculpture,said, they are pare of the Univer- ing them exactly as to what time “Events are beginning to show Dave Sander’s I DON’T UNDER-sity’s administrative staff. How- they are to report. Sessions of 300 ^j^at the only people who are con- Elmer Kline, THE EMPLOY- STAND MODERN ART, honor-ever, Russell S*. Cheney, training each will start at 4.30, 5.15, 7.15, stitutionally incapable of taking MENT AGENCY, 1st Prize. able mention, is a study of a ratherofficer from the VA, is available for and 8.00. needed steps to a world gov- Harold Turner Wilmoth, THE Van Gogh-ish figure on an emptyinformation and assistance in ob- All entering veterans should ernment are oddly enough, those WAY OF ALL PTLESH, 2nd Prize, surrealist plane. It is excellent intaming subsistence payments un- contact the Office of ^Advisor to v02-y folk termed ‘official.’” Charles Woodworth, CONTEM- its broad impresisonistic techniqueIn the crusade for world gov- PORARY CULTURE, 3rd Prize. and indicates that the painter isernment, the growth must come David M. Sander, I DON’T UN- handling his paint in a mannerfrom a “base” which is the whole DERSTAND MODERN ART, hon- that will distinguish it as oil, notof the world, covering all the o^able mention. ' watercolor as some oils seem,map and overshadowing national¬ismder Public Laws 346 and 16. As Veterans regarding refund of thematters stand now, it will be from application fees, beginning Octo-60 to 90 days before subsistence ber 15.The People You MeetBy HAL KOME Mace L, de Buy W e n n ig e r , Mace Wenniger’s STUDY NO.STUDY NO. 12, honorable men- 12, honorable mention, is a goodstudy of a nude, as is his No. 11.aport world government, not because they do not believe in itCampus neophytes may be a they took him to Woodlawn statrifle upset to find that they have tion, dressed and bandaged his the readiness of their own people,entered a school with about as arm, which he had used to break but because they cannot apparent-much ivied tradition as there is windows, and then they released ly believe that there is support form a run of the mill zoo hippo- him. Listen, haven’t you ever such a step in countries not theirpotamus pool. But it ain’t so. want-ed to eat salami? own.“One too often meets nowadays,statesmen who hestitate to sup- The tone of the ^ow was largely His NO. 14 has „composod of symbolist and real- Monet-Manet quality, of averageistic elements. Figure studies and execution. His watercolor sketch is4V, ^ uv ftbstractlons formcd smaller bad. His ink sketches are histhemselves, not because they doubt ... ,groups with several cartoons, pri- best work.mitives and odd pieces filling out Among the symbolists of the re-the remainder of the fifty-two maining group, Peter Small’s RE¬FLECTION was an effective dis-Elmer Kline had two good pic- tortion of a face reflected fromtures in the show. THE EMPLOY- metal. His drawing on this isbound as any school that still em- coming out of the movies, a stink- J?® ®«*er in MEOT AGENCY, tost and aploys beanies, lovers' seate and er called "Madonna of the Seven Reynolds club lounge during PEAR, a watercolor, are both TRAIT OF A P^ANOID ^ mter.lootball players. Having been in Moons.” I saw Jack headtog into ‘h® "®®'' *’®®''- So every time I "orthy of study His SPAWNING esting in ite idea, but his otoerattendance for not more than 11 the Wharf. So I called him Well ^ “'em in good GROUND OP CHAOS is rather two and Howard Hoffman's RE-nor less than 7 quarters tradition we all went to Jock and Ken's in^ *®“‘' "®‘'‘‘®' They love it.” muddy in execution but contains TREAT AT Df^KNE^ are ratherdecrees that a student i begins to stead and stayed there two maybe . When we Jinally left the place, some interesting textures. This is handling and sy^oli^.act “that way.” To illustrate my three Hours talking about things. invited Jack to come with us second show in two years in Lennon s SHANG-assertion I want to discuss briefly Jack left us once or twice to talk one more at our house, which he has received firsts. He "AI STREET SCENE was wella campus legend known to most to a couple of women who were “No, thanks,” he said, “I left a works well in several mediums. executed in a descriptive mannerof his fellows as Cheltie Mike, obviously campus intellectuals of woman at the Wharf. Christ, was Harold Wilmoth shows a great Her composition is good.(As a matter of fact, he is not the rankest sort. The last time he she boring.” deal of technical skill in his water- James Clifton gets quite a bit ofknown as Cheltie Mike or any came back he told us, “You know, “Thatother such ridiculous name; the those two are the kinds of kids see?guy’s bigger than I am.)Jack first gained a certainsmall local reputation the nighthe ate the salami. 63rd street wasstill a gay old place in those days,and Jack was in the habit ofpatrolling it regularly from Cot¬tage Grove to Stony Island. Theijjght he ate the salami he hadalready reached Stony Island ave¬nue before he even thought ofsalami. You know how sometimeswhen you eat a lot it makes you'thirsty? Well, this night Jackdrank a lot and it made him hun-gi-y. So he sat down on the curbat 63rd and Stony and askedhimself what he was hungiT for*And he told himself he was hun¬gry for salami. Now where the hellcould a man get salami at 2 inthe morning? In delicatessens, ofcourse. So Jack got his salami,and he ate it.What’s so “that way” aboutthat story? Nothing, except thatJack had nine whole salamis thatnight when the cops picked himup. Cop? Well, you see the deli¬catessens weren’t really open, soJack had to break four big plateglass windows to get at his sal-amis. Anyway, when the copspicked him up, and I meanpicked him up, he told them “AllI wanted was some salami.” Sc way,” see? Tradition, colors. His THE WAY OF ALL movement into his canvas, POR-FLESH, second prize, and his two TRAIT OF A WOMAN and WU-Italian watercolors are handled in (Continued on page 8)ORCHESTRA HALLTUESDAY EVENINGOCTOBER I4THAt 8:30JAZZ AT THEPHILHARMONICTickets now—$1.20to $3.00(Tox Inclwded)216 S. Michigon Are,CHICAGO Members of the University InterestecJ in Sacramentaland Liturgical Worship are Invited to Attend themmni coihmiimoii serviceEvery Sunday Evening 8:30 to 9:15BOND CHAPELJust South of Swift HollMusic By Male Cantors From the University ChoirCANON BERNARD IDDINGS BELLEpiscopal Church Pastor at U. of C.Hotel Windemere West WHm M IK NBOur Music Shelf is well stocked with New Books on theSymphony, Ballet, Record Guides ond JazzDROP IN ANDLOOK THEIR OVERThe Other Side Of The Record, Charles O’Connell$3.50.Stories of great recording ortists caught offguard by the author of the Victor book of theSymphony.Composers In American, Claire Reis .... $5.00Intimate sketches of American composers.Music in The Romantic Era, Einstein .... $5.00A history of musical thought in the 19th century.From Bach to Stravinsky, Eited by David Ewen$4.D0Critical onalysis of great composers by theirforemost critics.Really The Blues, Mazzrow and Wolfe $3.D0The Borzoi Book Of The Ballet, Grace Roberts$5.00A complete ballet guide.Batlei Prints in Our Art DepartmentUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOK STORE5802 ELLIS(Continued from page ")liam Koivtisto has one interest¬ing piece in his primitive IN THEUNIVERSITY DISTRICT: SUM¬MER EVENING. The handling ofclear depth in semi-darknessmakes this interesting.THE CITY b> Forwalter is anabstraction of some interest, butit lacks spatial interest. His twolandscapes have interest only mtheir sky effects. The THREE EX¬PERIMENTS by Keith Gilchristare variations jn a problem in¬volving movement enlarging froma central object. His EXPERI¬MENT NO. 2 seemed most inter¬esting. George Armstrong’sSCHLOSS HAGEMAN AM Ishould not be forgotten, nor shouldWilliam Rowe’s BLUE WINDOW.Margaret Stone has done a nicepiece of sculpture in her GIRL, awood sculpture. She has executedIt well and has exploited her ma¬terial rather well. The balance ofthe figure is good and she hasgiven it as much architecturalquality as it will nicely stand. Onehopes that the next show will carrymore sculpture of this quality. •Shulamite Dolnick’s work showsgood training, from her AT HOMEIN THE BERKELEY HILLS, buther other pictures contain colorand metss distortions which seempointless.Ibge 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, October 10, I947All Campus FraternitiesRun by I. F. CouncilDick Gibbs has his hands full as president of the Inter-Pi'aternity council, the body coordinating all fraternityactivities on the campus. I-F is composed of representativesof the thirteen U of C fraternities and is responsible formuch of the success of these organizations.The chapters pay no dues to the council but are assessedfor dances and parties, such as theone that was recently held in IdaNoyes hall. The council also regu¬lates the social calendar so thatconflicting events are kept downto a bare minimum.* I-F functions as the liaison be¬tween the university and the fra¬ternities, helping in arrangingfootball schedules and obtainingrushing lists from the university.The program for the comingyear will be highlighted by a for¬mal dance on November 26 at theSheridan hotel, the proceeds goingto charity. Other proposed activi¬ties and services include a lectureseries and a baby sitting servicefor veterans.Gibbs also offered a word aboutthe make-up of the chapters them¬selves. As of this year, the onlymen eligible* for membership are those in the divisions and profes¬sional schools. The fraternitiesmaintain their own houses, atwhich all members, resident or not,eat.City, men, incidentally, makeup one-half to one-third of thetotal membership They pay, inaddition to their meal fees, a par¬lor fee which goes toward the up¬keep of the house.There are no sororities on cam¬pus, but women’s clubs which haveno houses of their own replacethem. The female counterpart ofI-F coordinates club activities inthe form of the Inter-Club coun¬cil, of which Joan Lundberg ispresident.Tlie council is made up of theten presidents of the clubs andelects its officers from the council yearly. Its duties and functionsare identical with those of I-F.Among the annual events are adance, the proceeds going to theUniversity of Chicago Settlement,a “Spring Sing,” and various other! parties and activities. It sponsorsI a Red Cross tag aay and stages ai drive for the World Student Serv-I ice federation. The council works' in cooperation with Billings hos¬pital and provides Red Crossassistants.The clubs have been in existencesince 1894 and the endowment forIda Noyes hall came with the stip¬ulation that there would be nosorority houses Joan explainedthat the stipulation went out ofeffect ten years ago, but no houseshave been built yet. As a resultthe clubs meet in various rooms oncampus. The office of the councilis in room 203, Reynolds club.SU Meets to Fill Board ,And Committee OpeningsAnyone interested in working jwith Student Union, especially inconnection with decorations, re- >freshments, publicity, games ex-,hibits, arts and crafts, is urged by 'the group to attend a meeting inIda Noyes gym at 3:30 October 14.1 Downtown University ToObserve 50th AnniversaryUniversity College, downtown center of the Universityof Chicago, which was the first educational institution topioneer an extension of its campus facilities in Chicagois observing its fiftieth anniversary.A great center of learning for adults living in thegreater metropolitan area of Chicago, University College isfulfilling one of the functions of a ———— ,great American university as envi- citizens of a democracy in thesioned by the university’s first contemporary world is liberal edu-president, William Rainey Harper, cation, for only liberal education“While the last 50 years have tbe citizen to think,"seen the development of educa- ^^P^chins said. Since the atomiction for adults as a major re- ‘**5^ critical limits onsponsibility of the American uni- which we have to makeversity, adult education is now right decisions, the re-educa-entering its most significant phase. of all educable adults is an. . . and the pioneering is yet to imperative n^essity.”be done,” Chancellor Robert M. Univei sity College s attack uponHutchins said as the University gargantimus task ahead isof Chicago began commemorationactivities for its downtown center. i^. Basic Program for Liberal“Our .ta.sk is now to go beyond E^i^^^tion for Adu ts-both prothe mere extension of specializeduniversity instruction to would-be college students, and to dis¬cover and make available the kind grams in which the liberal art.s areexercised by mature students uponthe ideas and problems common toall mankind.The Basic Course of Liberal Edu,ol learning every citizen sl.ould inaugurated last year. Lshave.“The only effective educationPHIUP MORRISis so muchbetter to smoke!PHILIP MORRIS offers the smoker aa^Srtrabenefit found in no other cigarette. For PhilipMorris is the ONE, the ONLY cigarette recog¬nized by leading nose and throat specialists asdefinitely less irritating.Remember: Less irritation means moresmoking enjoyment for you.Yes! If every smoker knew what PhilipMorris smokers know, they*d all change toPHILIP MORRIS. the first systematized four-yearprogram for adults which emplia-sizes the fundamental idea.s ofwestern civilization.It sprang full grown from theGreat Books clas.ses introduced toChicagoans in 1944 by UniversityCollege. It emphasizes inforinalpractice in reading, .speaking, list¬ening, writing, and thinking aboutthe fundamental ideas of westerncivilization. Ito students range 111age from the early twenties to theearly sixties. They include busi¬ness executives, government em¬ploy eCo, clerks, salesmen, skilledworkmen, and housewives. Someof them did not complete highschool or college. Some of themhold college and higher degrees.All who succe.ssfully complete theBasic Program will receive a certi¬ficate defining their accomplish¬ment, and may in addition qualifyfor the award of the bachelor’sdegree.University College, with morethan 1,000 students expected toregister in its 24-tuition sectionsof the Great Books this fall, alsolaid the groundwork for the GreatBooks Foundation The Founda¬tion plans to develop a mas.s edu¬cation program to reach millionsof Americans in the next fiveyears. More than 20,000 persons in17 American cities and Vancouver,B. C., will participate in freecourses in the great books underthe auspices of »,he foundation andsuch community organizations asthe schools, libraries, and othercivic groups.S U ExhibitTRY A PACK. . .TODAYFridoy, October 10, 1947 THE CHICAGO MAROON Poge 9Cancer Program Will Require S5,150,000A $5,150,000 extension of facili¬ties to apply atomic resources tocancer research was describedhere by Chancellor Robert M.Hutchins of the University of Chi¬cago.An integral part of this program,0 campaign to raise the remaining$2,570,000 of the necessary funds,was announced at the same timeby Maurice Goldblatt, Chicagomerchant and president of theboard of trustees of the Univer¬sity’s Cancer Research Founda¬tion.Mr. Goldblatt also announcedthe acceptance by Thomas B.Freeman, chairman of the boardof Butler Brothers, of the cam¬paign chairmanship.In commenting on the cam¬paign, which will run to the endof the year, Mr. Freeman said, “Iam confident that the donors ofChicago, as did their predecessorswho built the city and the Uni¬versity, will provide this support.Provision of these facilities willcontribute importantly to the at¬tack on cancer, and to the city'sposition as the medical capital ofthe world.”Outlining the extension of facili¬ties, Chancellor Hutchins pointedout that the $1,600,000 NathanGoldblatt Memorial Hospital hasalready been provided for the pro¬posed Cancer Center.Another $980,000 has beenpledged toward the constructionof a huge 170-inch cyclotron, adevice for atomic experimentation.V hich has promising potentialitiesfor cancer research, Mr. Hutchinssaid. University scientists hope touse the cyclotron as a super-radia¬tion device for treatment of can¬cer.Since the total cost of the newcyclotron is $1,550,000, the imme¬diate objectives of the cancer re¬search campaign will be to raisethe remaining $570,000, it was ex¬plained.Another of the facilities whichthe fund-raising effort seeks toprovide is a $2,000,000 "isotope”building in which experimentalwork on radio-active materialsfrom the atomic piles can be car¬ried on. edge in this new area of scientificinvestigation.Second, the University Clinic isunique among medical organiza¬tions of the country, both in itsfull-time staff for teaching andresearch’, and its close working re¬lationship between basic and clini¬cal scientists. Thus, the pattern ofthe Clinics is such. Dr. Coggeshallsaid, that the backlog of relevantatomic knowledge can be applieddirectly to the cancer program.Third, cancer research is al¬ready well established on a largescale at the University, with a 22-man Committee on Cancer corre¬lating the work of seventeen basicand medical science departments.The University is currently ex-~pending more than $500,000 a yearon work relating to cancer and in¬vestigating of its cause.Among the more important con¬tributions from the Universityhave been the first discovery of achemical test for a form of can¬cer; the hormone - suppressiontreatment for cancer of the pros¬tate, and development of surgicaltechniques for removal of cancerof the esophagus and cancer ofthe pancreas, previously consid¬ered inoperable.Use of nitrogen mustard fortreatment of leukemia has openedup new avenues of investigation,and an improved technique fortreatment of prostate cancer hasbeen indicated in the use of an or¬ganic compound, urethane.Campus ClubsMust RegisterCampus student organizationswere reminded this week thatUniversity of Chicago regulationsrequire all such organizations tobe registered with the office ofthe Director of Activities, DeanJohn L. Bergstresser, room 202,Reynolds Clubhouse before theend of the third week of classes.In a statement to -the MA¬ROON, the Dean called attentionto the fact that if the organiza¬tions wished to be listed in theStudent Directory, immediateregistration would be required. University ClinicsCelebrate AnniversaryTwenty years of teaching and research which havecontributed significantly to the progress of the city of Chi¬cago as the medical center of the world was marked lastweek by the University Clinics of the University ofChicago.Opened October 3, 1927, and organized to promote the"advancement of medical science,” —the Clinics represented two impor- time development of the atomictant departures from usual prac- bomb.tices. The staff spends full-time The new $1,600,000 Nathanon teaching and research, engag- Goldblatt Memorial Hospital foring in no outside private practice. Cancer on which construction willThe Clinics remain today the only start early next spring, will pro¬medical development with such a vide the University with one of thefull-time plan. country’s three cancer researchThe other new element of the l^ospitals, and will be a center forClinics’ organization was that of expanded re^arch program,making all the University’s re- Initiated by million dollar grantssearch men in the basic sciences ^^om the General Education Boardpart of a cooperative effort Rockefeller Foundation,against disease. The Clinics has Clinics’ building cost approxi-thereby built up the country’s $8,425,000. There are fivehospitals: Albert Merritt BillingsHospitals, for general medicine;Bobs Roberts Memorial HospitalChildren,’ Chicago Lying-inHospital; and two closely affili-twera cuSns alTd ba“o sci^I hospitals for orthopedics, thelists have been demonstrated to Hicks and Nancylists nave been demonstrated to Adele McElwee Memorials. Thoughprovide the ideal arrangement for , hospitalsadvancement of medica ^lence >Dr. Lowell T. Coggeshall, Dean of search, they provide 522 beds,the Division of the Biological i„ the year ending June 30, thelargest privately supported scien¬tific "team” for medical investiga¬tionSciences, said yesterday. Clinics provided 186,300 patient-"An outstanding example of the days of care in the hospitals, andvalue of the advantages of these 166,900 patients were seen in theprinciples is in the University’s Max Epstein Out-Patient Clinic,program of cancer research, to Endowment of the Clinics is ap-which seventeen departments are proximately $20,000,000. The totalrelated.” cost of operation last year wasIts cancer research, on which $4,568,000.more than $500,000 is being ex-pended annually, will expand rap¬idly into new areas of researchmade possible by the release of LETTER TO EDITOR(Continued from page 6)nuclear energy. Dr. Coggeshall ally afford for the coming year,said, because the working* arrange- The fact is that the Communistment between medical and basic Party line varies according to Rus-scientists has made available to sian foreign policy. When Russiathe Clinics the experience gained and the U.S. are allied the Com-by nuclear scientists who spent munists become so conservativefive years in the University’s war- that they can accurately be called Bach ConcertOpens SeriesOn WednesdayBach’s Musical Offering, whichhas been played only once beforein Chicago, will be performed inthe opening lecture-concert of theUniversity of Chicago’s downtownchamber music series at 8 p.m.Wednesday evening, October 15, inKimball Hall.Siegmund Levarie, director of'the university’s Collegium Musi-cum and assistant professor ofmusic, will be lecturer and con¬ductor for the opening Jecture-concert. He will discuss "Bach’sMusical Offering” and conductthe program, which will includethe Brandenburg Concerto No. 5,as well as th'e Musical Offering.Miss Dorothy Lane, harpsichord¬ist who has appeared in a numberof University of Chicago chambermusic concerts. Miss Peggy Har¬din, flutist with the Chicago Sym¬phony Orchestra, and Maurice'Morovitsky, violinist, will join asmall chamber ensemble in pre¬senting the musical illustrationsfor Mr. Levarie’s lecture.the extreme right wing of the CIO,Furthermore, since the CommunistParty cannot and doesn’t want toclean out all the chauvinist poisonthat they have injected into theirfollowers during the past ten years,and since they cannot suddenlymake militants out of their bigshots in the unions, who havegrown fat and comfortable in thepatriotic years, any left turn thatthey make now, because of theantagonism between the two bigworld powers, the U.S. and Rus¬sia, will be an abortive and half¬hearted turn. That is why even to¬day there are substantial tenden¬cies in the labor mov^ement, whichare genuinely militant, and whichoppose the totalitarian Commu¬nist Party.Sincerely,Saul Mendelson.These radio - active materialssignificantly extend the means oflearning about biological proc¬esses, and also offer promise of anew means of treating some formsof cancer. Because of their radio¬activity, however, they presenthazards to existing types of build¬ings, which can be "contaimin-ated” even to an extent danger¬ous to life. The scale on whichsuch experimentation is to be car¬ried out in the cancer studies re¬quires construction of a buildingof a kind now not in existence, toniinimize the danger of contami¬nation.In explaining the medical sig¬nificance of the extended cancerprogram. Dr. L. T. Coggeshall,chairman of the University’s de-^partment of medicine, said the de¬velopment of atomic science hasadded new possibilities for discov¬ering the cause and cure of can¬cer.^ree factors combine to makethis University effort particularlyimportant. Dr. Goggeshal! said:First, University scientists havehad five years of experience indealing with atomic science, as aresult of their part in developmentof the atomic bomb. This experi¬ence represents. Dr. Coggeshallpointed out, a substantial advanceover the general level of knowl-Calvert Club AnnouncesRELIGIOUSEnquiry classFRIDAY EVENINGS, 7:15Conducted byRev. Joseph D. ConnertonDE SALES HOUSE5735 UniversityAli invited A "SHORV’STORY - -by ARROWWhy do college men prefer Arrow cut-and-sewn shortsover all others ?Easy! Because Arrow shorts are the most comfortableon the market—can't creep up like an Indian, due toArrow’s patented seamless crotch.Come in and see our stock of fine Arrow shorts, Arrow“Guards,” Arrow T-shirts and undershirts.moiv uHdmiAR Arrow ShortslArrow gives you four different models to choose from—elastic side, adjustable tie-side, elastic all aroundand French back—in white or stripes.^See your Arrow dealer for Arrow shorts. Every pairis Sanforized-labeled (can't shrink more than 1%),and comes with grippers or buttons. $1 to $1.50.ARROW SHIRTS and TIES- ■ - - — ' ■ —.. . ^1UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTSTHE CHICAGO MAROONPag* 10 Friday, October 10, 1947MedicalROTCFormedBy mutual agreement be¬tween the University of Chi¬cago and the War pep^art-ment, a Medical Corps Re¬serve Officers’ Training CorpsUnit (ROTC) has been estab¬lished in the School of Medicineeffective at the beginning of tinAutumn Quarter.The program of Instruction,which Is voluntary, consists of twoseparate parts.’ The elementarycourse is given during the fresh¬man and sophomore years. Theadvanced course Is given, duringthe junior and senior years.Tliirty-two hours of instructionper year will be given which, willaverage one hour per week? foreach of the four classes. Thejele-mentary course consists, of in- ;struction in basic military andMedical Department subjects.ynie 'advanced course consists of in¬struction in field medicine, surgeryand Military preventive medicine- Students enrolled in the ad¬vanced course are paid and mii.st 1a!gree to attend a summer training ^period of six weeks..Successful completion of.:, tliecourse makes the student eligibletc be commissioned in the MedicalCorps Reserve w’ith the rank of: Tst vlieutenant.- However, the studentIs not obligated to the Army , forany type of service.. Lt. Colonel Warren J. Barker ofthe Regular Army Medical Corpsis a.ssigned to the School of Medi-:Cine, University of Chicago, as the ;Professor of Military Science,and “Tactics. He is assisted by MasterSergeant Ray H. Hamilton of theRegular Army, Medical Depart¬ment. . V 1.’The ROTC Office is located.in.-Room P-118 at Billings Hospital.SU AnnouncesBilliards TourneyParticipation in the NationalCollegiate Billiurdste championshipby^ the University of Chicago willenable campus, billiard enthusiasts.to strut, their stuffthe StudentUnion games department has an-*nounced. ;Playoffs to determine eight play¬ers to represent, the Univepityin sectional competition wilL^beheld' this weekend at the Reynbldsclub. Competition is to be; inpocket billiards; straight rail, aridthree cushion billiards, all bothteam and individual play.:^^^^Regular eligibility rules will ap¬ply with only ’‘conventional” un-idergraduates allowed to compete^ADA MEETS MONDAY,McCulloch to speakThe University^ Chapter of theAmericans for Democratic Actionwill hold its first meeting of theAutumn quarter next Monday,Oct. .13, at 4 p.m, in RosenwaldHall.,, , . ;Featured speakers will includeDr. Frank McCulloch, Professor ofIjabor Relations at Roosevelt Col¬lege and member of the NationalBoard of ADA, and Sam GoldenIllinois State Chairman of NSA....The • meeting will be devbtt'dprimarily to the nomination ofchapter officers and the discus¬sion. of a Fall program.CLASSIFIED ADS,W ANTED: Student, wide forensic'‘ ex-jfperience.ii Must be able to teach speak-1- S' and debate. Apply Mr. Blrenbauin,Room 303, Reynolds Club between "10:30B.m., and 3:30 p.m.MEN’S SHIRT COLLARS TURNED.REASONABLE. Hyde Park 5976. ..fB; G. PIANO FOR PRACTICE. 50c Hour:Hyde Park 5976. , ’ - .; ^Copyright 1947, Lnoin * Mvem Tomcco Co. .TYPEWRITER, Corona Portable, excel■ i lent condition. Call MIDway 5735.FOR SALE: Sable dyed muskrat cpaLExcellent condition. Size 14 beige clptncoat. Lynx tuexod trim. Size 14 brownchesterfield. Call PLAza 0025.M.' ALWAYS MILDERM BETTER TASTING^ COOLER SMOKINGFriday, October 10, 1947- * tFraternities BeginGridiron Battles Page IIThe Fraternity league touchfootball season got under wayWednesday with four games beingplayed. The expert predictionsproved to be one hundred per centaccurate setting a new precedentjn pregame analysis. Fine passingattacks were the order of the dayand in each instance were the widejnai'gi^^ of victory.Phi Sig took up where It left offlast year taking the measure ofthe Dekes. 25 to 6. The Dekes werenever in the*game, as the Phi Sigsran the kickoff back for the firstof their touchdowns. D.U. scoredfourteen points during the firsthalf, and then completed the routof Phi Delta Theta with a twentypoint splurge in the second halfior a lopsided 34 to 0 final score.Sigma Chi showed great roomfor improvement against the PhiPsis. A great passing offense wasfeatured by the Phi Psis as they.scored all of their 38 pointsthiough the air. Casey and Pettycarried the scoring load, but theirentire team looked great in itsfir.st start of the season. ZBT.shov^ed a fine pass attack, also, asthey swept over the Betas, 19 to 0.This .should be a fine season forthe Fraternity league. They have.shown a great deal of Interest inall intramural sports through theyears and their turnout for theopening games indicates that therewill be a surplus of talent for eachgame. The “A” teams will be play¬ing on Stagg field every week forthe next five weeks, so come outand see them play. Up 16 MilesFor Ray DataFifteen large balloons carryingcosmic ray detection apparatuswere released for a high altitudeflight from Stagg field at the Uni¬versity of Chicago at about 6:15a.m. today, weather permitting.The flight will be under the di¬rection of Marcel Schein, VictorYgve, and John Smith of the uni-sity’s physics department.Residents of Illinois, Indiana,Michigan and Ohio—states overwhich the balloon-borne equip¬ment might drift—are asked tocontact the physics department atthe University of Chicago imme¬diately if they find the equipment.The balloons, which are at¬tached in a cluster to one set ofequipment, expand as they rise.Some of them burst in the strato¬sphere when th%y have expandedto more than ten times their sizeon earth. The unbroken balloons,which may ascend to more than 16miles, ease the fall of the appa¬ratus.Such high altitude flights fur¬nish the most satisfactory'methodof studying the powerful rays, sincethey change to half a dozen othertypes of radiation shortly afterentering the earth’s atmospherefrom outer space. Prof. Scheinsaid. Full Intramural ProgramIn Operation For Quarterthe field, firing it behind yourback, juggling it on your nose likea seal. TTie nice thing is there areonly six men on a team, and sothe contest never assumes the ap¬pearance of the struggle over aswollen medicine ball. This run¬ning game starts on about Oc¬tober 6, all games to be played inStagg field.In the middle of November, theswimmers will dive into the steamof the Bartlett natatorium on twosuccessive days to decide thechampionships, and the table ten¬nis playoffs will be on October13, no site set. Throughout theremainder of the school year, alot of other sports will rise on thehorizon. For now, how aboutthese?Red Cross Renews BabySitting, Other ActivitiesThe Red Cross will again pro¬vide baby sitting service for stu¬dent veterans this year, with sit¬ters recruited from the dorm.*5.Sitters will be asked to volunteerone night a month to this service.Plans for a Red Cross counsel¬ing center are underway, and it ishoped that classes in home nurs¬ing, nutrition, and water safetywill start soon. First aid kits are being InstalledIn all public buildings, and afghansquares knitted by the girls’ clubsare being collected. According to the Sports Bulletinof the ,University, "the purpose ofIntramural Athletics is to providean opportunity for every studentto get into some kind of com¬petitive athletics.” And that's it.You can participate in twice asmany sports as the six letterschoolboy from Prairiewind, Tex¬as who went to Notre Dame andfell into one of the specially de¬signed bottomless pits in the ath¬letic graveyard.Now the intramurals are splitInto three leagues. First, the In¬dependent league, which so farhas the smallest representation, isopen to any groups of Universitystudents, employees, or faculty.Some of the groups who were In¬dependent league champions lastyear are the Goldbergs, AlphaKappa Kappa, Jones Lab, theSoph Medics, and Int house. Anyorganization will do; so far onlytwo independent teams havesigned up for touchball, and Mr.Boycheff, head of the intramuralprogram, hopes to arrange aleague of six teams. Stop at theintramural office in Bartlett gymand enter your team.The second league is the Col¬lege House league, open to allstudents in the college and to anyother students living in the Bur¬ton-Judson Residence Halls. Last,tl\ere is the Fraternity league,composed of all campus frater¬nities recognized by the Univer¬sity. In addition, there are all Uni¬versity meets and tournaments.Some of these sports require a few of the seven, only two w'ere mem-practice workouts before the real l^rs of former MAROON staffs,thing, going on the theory thatthe individual needs supervision.Such a sport is wrestling, ama¬teur style, no biting, no scratch¬ing, no hotfoots. Practice forwrestling begins on the 24th ofNovember and play fox' keeps onthe 8th of December. OthQi: sportsrequiring some practice workoutsare tackle .football, track, - andweight-lifting. On October 10,golfers will play 18 holes of medal Record StaffMeets TodayThe largest MAROON staff inover five years will meet todayto iron out organizational bugsdiscovered in the process of writ¬ing and making up this first regu¬lar edition of the paper.Editors Emerson Lynn and Ar¬thur Day announced the tentativeappointment of seven new execu¬tive editors today, mentioning that Football SquadDrilling DailyThe pigskin »ame, in which par¬ticipants wear helmets, shoulderpads, and yards of tape, has comeback to the Midway as quietly asa guilty little boy sneaks up to hisroom. This marks the second yearof intersquad play, and there hasbeen a marked drop in participa¬tion, from over 125 candidates inthe initial year to 90 this time.The College houses, eight in num¬ber, are all trying to field a teamso that each outfit will play aseven game schedule. But thesquads are not limited to Collegehouse students—they are open toanyone in the University, any sizeor shape, speaking any language,with any political belief. You canbe 15 or 30, it makes no difference.If you like football, and aren’tgood enough to play for the col¬legiate dollar, this is up your alley.Six university coaches have a handin the proceedings and you talkto any of them any afternoon inNorth field after 3:30 about get¬ting a uniform. Those who arepracticing say they get a big kickout of it—and they never saw theheavy side of 150 even after aThanksgiving dinner. They walkup stairs without gripping thebanister and they don’t sag againstthe shower wall, so it must behealthy. Try it before the snowflies.Louis Lipsky TolkcOn Zionism Monday"‘Palestine: The Zionisrs Positich” will be the.topicof a speech to be delivered by Louis Lipsky, writer and lead-SURPLUSOUTLETnation and CottonSOCKS1st Quality. . Pair 15XipporFIELD JACKETSReconditioned . . $1991SWEATERS $All Wool .... 2 90up411 nootBLANKETSPerfect . $A65O.D. TROUSERSRe-Issue .$2.95New 5.45White Navytrousers $•129WAC SKIRTS 79cWAC SHIRTS 98eraincoatsWac $2.19Army 2.49Novy 5.95J. C. SALES CO.943 E. 55th St. Chamber Music GroupNeeds More Male VoicesTenors and basses are needed for”tL‘'univ«s"tTchampro"n-‘ >"6 member of the Zionist organization, at a special meet-ew __ Hillel foundation on Monday, October 13, at8 p.m.Recognized as one of the foremost theoreticians of theZionist movement, Lipsky has — ——for the Collegium Musicum, according to Dr. Sigmund Levarie,director of the organization.The Collegium, which consists ofa small chamber orchestra and amixed chorus, presents severalprograms each year of unusualand little known selections. Thoseinterested should contact Dr. Le¬varie at the department of music. ship, and the Jack Kramers ofthe U of C will step on the claycourts for singles play on October13, and for doubles on the 20.The first energy eater open toall teams is a small game calledtouchball. A football is used, andit is thrown, and perhaps evenpunted too. But there you takeoff, tipping and passing all overTHE MAROON IS YOUR PAPERLET IT RE A LETTER HOMESend a Subscription TodayThe MAROON BUSINESS OFFICEReynolds Club 201 Jim Barnett, Mgr. actively participated in the workof the Zionist organization ofAmerica, the World Zionist or¬ganization, and the American Jew¬ish congress, each of which heaided through his writings, ad¬dresses, and through organiza¬tional and administrative capaci¬ties.In 1927, on the occasion of his50th birthday, Lipsky’s two volume Three New House HeadsAppointed by WilkinsonJohn Wilkinson, director ofdormitories, has announced ap¬pointment of three new househeads.V. Alexander Nedzel, an atomicscientist with experience at LosAlamos and Bikini, is in charge of.series containing selections from Vincent house,his previous works on Jewish life Robert A. Horn, associated pro-was published. fessor of political science formerlyThroughout his affiliation with of Harvard, is supervising Cham-the Zionist movement, Lipsky was berlin.closely associated with Chaim Joseph Axelrod, assistant pro-Wiezmann and assisted him in the fessor in the humanities in thefounding of the Palestine foun- College, has been appointed headdation in America. of Matthews house.THEDOOR BOOK SHOPANNOUNCESA SHOWING OF ORIGINAL WATER-COLORSAND PERSONAL MANUSCRIPTS OFHEJ^RY MILLER66 featuring the bookInto The Night Lifecompletely done by serigraphyin facsimile of Miller'shandwritingBeginning Saturday, October Eleventhond Continuing for One Week 1947 Packard, $500—Mn.«t Sell...YES—The MAROON Offers the Campus a Weekly Classi¬fied Ad Column. Coll Your Ad in, MIDwoy 0800, Ex¬tension 1576.IF YOU NEED A ROOM, ADVERTISE ITIN THE MAROON991328 East 57th Street PLAzo 6445 UniversityNational Bank5< Check PLAN PAY-AS-YOU-GO offers alow cost checking plan whichis easily understood. Its onlycost to the depositor is FIVECENTS for each check writ¬ten and FIVE CENTS foreach item of deposit.UlYIVERSITY NATIOilTAL BA.^K1354 EAST 55TH STREETMEMBFil FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEMMEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION12 THE CHICAGO MAROON FrM«y, October 10, 1947«Store Hours^ 9.15 to 5A5theflog;;; this rousing college tune got a new twist whenChicago’s gridiron was deserted. Fashion-wise co-edsknow, however, that Field's casual styles are aseffective in the classroom as in the grandstand.Chicago students wave the flag for Marshall FieldCompany because they've discovered that for thebest in everything Field's can't be beaten.Muriel Deufsch wears a Jaunty wool crepe dresswith gored skirt, in gray, purple or dark green.Sizes 10 to 18, i14.95 in theModerately Priced Dress Shop—Sixth Floor, Middle StateFier perky Betmar cloche Is ofsoft felt in black, brown, navy,Kelly, white, Victorian green,red, coffee, wine, or gray. Small,medium or large, $5«95 > a notewe dote upon:Marshall Field & Companyis the University'sfavorite storeWritten by Betty Stearnsat the Hat Bars —First, Fifth and Sixth Floors