cfiaeoiiDiKooi)Vol.4, No. 37 Z-149 Friday, March 30, 1945 Price 5 CentsRed Cross Figures Now $916.36;Total Figures To Pass ThousandDorm and QnbReturns HighestAlthough not yet complete, theamount so far tabulated for the cam¬pus Red Cross drive that closed onFriday, March 23 now stands at$916.36. Of that amount $84.85 hasbeen contributed by Beecher Hall,$58.25 by Green, $15.10 by Kelly,$26.35 by Blake and $13.00 by PhenixHouse.Individual collections from JudsonCourt entries total $71.75 and $19.75is the Burton total. The Burton-Jud-son benefit netted $212.15 whichplaces the contributions of both dor¬mitories to date at $283.90.The Red Cross booths, in charge ofthe club women, netted $313.66.$151.00 of that amount are newmemberships.. Pledges from the clubsthemselves are not all in but are re¬ported to total $51.00 at present.In addition the chairman of thedrive, Bibs Ludgin, reports $15.00 inindividual contributions and $17.50from the Red Cross boxes.Estimates on pledges not yet re¬ceived are $300.00 for InternationalHou.se, $75.00 for Foster Hall and$30.00 for Gates which means thatfinal totals Vill exceed the $1000mark.Social ActionConference SetFinal arrangements for the comingConference on the Bases of Social Ac¬tion were made yesterday at a meet¬ing of the sponsoring committee. Theconference, which will be held oncampus from April 8th to 15th, willprovide an opportunity for campus¬wide discussion and analysis of un¬derlying reasons and motivations be¬hind social and political action.The conference is to be built aroundmeetings in various campus organiza¬tions. These groups will have com¬munity and faculty leaders who willlead discussions on the conferencetheme.The program will include a re¬treat at Promontary Point Saturdaynight. Dr. Victor Obenhouse, Profes¬sor of Social Ethics will lead the out¬ing.Final event of the conference willbe the special service in RockefellerChapel on Sunday April 15th, Speakerwill be Congressman Walter Judd,former medical missionary.Janet Davison, co-chairman of theconference is'in charge of choosingleaders for campus groups. Julia Mar¬wick is responsible for contactingthese leaders, and George Knight ishandling publicity. Acting as secre¬tary, treasurer and chairman of spe¬cial events are Dick Forestall, LoisGoldstein and Joe Brady. Co-chair-iTian Malcolm McAfee is responsiblefor coordination of all activities.Assisting as members of the boardare Nartcy Hubbard, Y.W.C.A. sec¬retary; A1 Painter, Interchurch Coun¬cil Advisor, Midge Carlson, NancyHarrison, Marjorie Horn, John Roe,Molley Allee, Dottie Sarchet, SandyAnderson, Ed Vorba and Jean West-man. Phoenix, Tempus Consolidote;Lenz to Lead Combined StaffsPhoenixf new campus magazine, and Tempus (formerlyCarillon) merged in a suprise move last Wednesday, March 27.The merger was an indirect result of a suggestion by MortimerAdler, who, together with Dean Kimpton, attended a meeting ofthe staffs of the two publications at the Burton Court lounge.The meeting was originally called to smooth out difficulties betweenthe two publications, and to insure co-operation between them.The pros and cons of a merger wereWar Stamp BallAt Int HouseApril SeventhIn preparation for the WarStamp Ball, to be held at Interna¬tional House Theatre on Saturday,April 7, a Blind Date Bureau hasbeen set up in Mandel corridor.Both the Ball itself and the Bu¬reau are sponsored by the WarStamp Committee.The Bureau will be open from 11:30to 1:30, Monday through Friday, untilApril 7, for the convenience of thosenot well acquainted on campus.During the past two weeks- the Bu¬reau has been doing a brisk business,selling bids, as well as signing uplonely fellows and girls. Price of thebids is $1.75 per couple. This includesthe purchase of two 25c war stamps.One of the attractions of the dance,which will be formal, is the electionof the Queen of the Ball. Any girl oncampus is eligible to be a candidate,and nomination boxes have beenplaced in Mandel corridor, at IdaNoyes, at the Bursar^s office, and atHarper M-15. Voting will take placeat the dance, where the purchase of aten-cent war stamp will entitle thepurchaser to one vote. Arthur Schnabelbrought out in discusssion, and bothstaffs agreed that it would be of greatadvantage to all concerned. The firstissue of Phoenix will hit the newsstands on campus in a few days, butwill not be a combination of the twomagazines. Succeeding copies willprobably also bear the name Phoenix,but will include work of both staffs.Bill Lenz, editor of Phoenix, will con- ^0Schnabel To ConcludeChamber Series; ChoirSings With Symphonytinue as editor of the combined groups.Veterans’ GroupPlans April DinnerFeaturing HutchinsAt a regular meeting last night theUniversity of Chicago Veteran’s Coun¬cil discussed “Veteran’s Organizationsin the United States.” Bert Wax spokeabout the American Legion and Rob¬ert Sorensen, graduate student in theDepartment of Sociology, acted asmoderator.The newly organized American Vet¬erans Committee was discussed, andaccording to Walter Eaton, vice presi¬dent of the Council, the conclusionswill be of great importance to allveterans.The Council has also announced thatplans for its dinner to be held April6th, featuring Dr. Robert Maynard(Continued on page three) ExperimentolDropEvening PlaysThe experimental theatre group,which was to have presented threeact plays early in April hasonedecided to suspend this evening pro¬duction schedule, since it conflicts withthe progress of the next O.D.P. play,“Driftwood”. The group plans to giveO’Neill’s “The Rope” in the ReynoldsClub Theatre April 20. This will bethe first show to be given there since1942.“Driftwood”, which was to have beenperformed last quarter, but called offbecause of Martha McCain’s illness,will go on April 13 and 14 in MandelHall. Others to appear in this newplay by Maurice Tei Dunn are RobertaUnger, Jean Cooke, Maribelle Smith,Elizabeth Reisinger, John Tarburten,Sid Burks, Curtis Crawford, RobertVoas, Ellen Englar, Margaret Tenney,Sis Ersner and Jean Cooke. ^Spring Quarter LecturersInclude Swisher, MerriamAmong the speakers to appear oncampus during the Spring Quarterare Professor Carl Swisher and Pro¬fessor Emeritus Charles E. Merriam.Beginning on Tuesday at 4:30 p.m.in Social Science 122, Swisher, whois chairman of the department of po¬litical science at Johns Hopkins Uni¬versity, and visiting Professor of Po¬litical Science at the University, willpresent ten lectures on “The Growthof Constitutional Power in the UnitedStates.”The series on “Government and theEconomic Order in the United States”by Charles E. Merriam, ProfessorEmeritus of Political Science beginsApril 12 at 3:00 p.m. in Social Science122. These six lectures will also forma part of the course “American Po¬litical Theories” to be offered duringthe spring quarter on Tuesdays andThursdays at 2:00 p.m. Both of theseseries are presented under the aus¬pices of the Charles R. WalgreenFoundation.Dr. Walter H. Judd, congressmanfrom Minnesota, speaking on April15, will be among the eight guestspeakers appearing in Rockefeller Me¬morial Chapel this quarter. Other speakers will appear as follows: April1: the Reverend Charles W. Gilkey,dean of the Chapel; April 8: TheReverend James Gordon Gilkey, SouthCongregational Chfprch, Springfield,Massachusetts; April 22: The Rever¬end Joseph F. King, First Congre¬gational Church, Oberlin, Ohio; April29: The Reverent Ernest F. Tittle.First Methodist Churdh, Evanston,Illinois; May 6: The Reverend WilliamH. Hudnut, Jr., First PresbyterianChurch, Springfield, Illinois; May 13:Dean Gilkey; May 20; Rabbi SolomonB. Freehof, Rodef Shalom Temple,Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; May 27:*The Reverend Fred W. Norwood, St.James United Church, West Montreal,Canada; June 3: A. Eustace Haydon,Professor of Comparative ReligionFederated Theological Faculty, Uni¬versity of Chicago; and June 10: DeanGilkey.Two public courses will be present¬ed during the spring quarter by theDivision of the Humanities.Edward K. Brown, Professor ofEnglish, will begin the series, “TheNovel in England from 1880 to thePresent”, on Monday. The ten Mon- atday evening lectures will start7:30 p.m. in Social Science 122.“Life and Thought in the MedievalMoslem World” is the subject of theten Wednesday evening lectures whichwill be given by Gustave E. VonGrunebaum,' assistant professor ofArabic. The series will begin at 7:30p.m. Wednesday in Social Science 122.Tickets for both courses may be ob¬tained at the Public Lectures office ofthe University, 6804 Ellis Avenue, orat the door of the lecture hall on theevening of the first lecture.Repeat MaroonElection TodayBecause of the deadlock resultingfrom Tuesday’s meeting to elect anew editor for The Chicago Maroon,another election will be held this aft¬ernoon at 3:30 in Lexington 6.Candidates for the office are HaroldDonahue and Abe Krash, both stu¬dents in the third year of the CoLlege.Forty-six of the sixty-four staffmembers attended the meeting onTuesday. Arthur Schnabel, internationallyeminent pianist, will present a soloconcert in the sixth and last ChamberConcert at 8:30 p.m., Monday inMandel Hall.Mr. Schnabel’s last appearance inChicago was at the Mozart Festivalof the Chicago Symphony .Drchestraunder the direction of Hans Lange,during 1944. His program for theChamber Concert will be: Beethoven’sSix Bagatelles, Opus 126; Schubert’sSonata ni A Minor, Opus ^2; and Bee¬thoven’s Thirty-three Variations on aWaltz by A. Diabelli, Opus 120.Composer, author, and teacher aswell as a concert artist, Mr. Schnabelhas toured Europe, Australia, Pales¬tine and the United States during thepast four decades.* >i> ♦This afternoon at 2:16 the Univer¬sity of Chicago Choir will repeat theprogram given last night with theChicago Symphony Orchestra in Or¬chestra Hall. The choir will be heardin three excerpts from the St. Mat¬thew Passion of Bach; the chorus OMan Bewail Thy Sin So Great, thechorale When I Too Am Departing,and the final double chorus In Debpest'Grief. The titles are of the same mu¬sic as announced last week, but HansLange, who will again conduct, hasg^iven the choir a different translationto sing.The orchestra will play the othernumbers on the program: the chorale—prelude A Mighty Fortress is ourGod; the Sinfonia to Church CantataIch steh mit einem Fuss im Grabe, byBach; the tone poem Ein Heldelebenby Strauss.“Tsar to Lenin”First OfferingOf Film GroupThe Documentary Film Group willofficially open the Spring Quarter ser¬ies with the showing of “Tsar to Len-on Tuesday at 8 :00 in Social Sci-inence 122. This film shows the actualevents from 1914 until 1920, the yearsthat shaped the downfall of Russia’sruling autocracy under Tsar NicholasHand the eventual rise to supremepower of the Soviet Union.Other Documentary films to beshown this quarter are “Men of Ire¬land”, depicting man’s struggle againstthe sea; “The Wave”, a story of theMexican peasants; a series of the warfilms; “Beachhead to Berlin”,“Brought to Action”, and the widelypublicized technicolor film—^“MemphisBelle”, and a group consisting of“T.V.A.”, “Grass”, and “The River”.“Grass” is the actual filming of theannual migration of a wandering Per¬sian tribe Jhat endures unbelievablehardships in order to secure grass fortheir flocks. “T.V.A.” is the story ofthe T.V.A. plan and the issues it hasaroused throughout the country. “TheRiver” deals with flood control.// Easter EscapadesSet for Tomorrow itThe first and second year Girls*Club formal “Easter Escapades” willbe held tomorrow in Ida Noyes loungeand library. Dancing with musicfurnished by Mel Parker and his or¬chestra will be from 8:45 until 11:45.An Easter theme will be carried outin the decorations.* 1rag* Two ^ ■ 'Tennis Squad MayPlay In Mq TenUnder Coach Nels Norgren, theUniversity tennis team has beenworking outside for the past severaldays. The Maroon tennis team, com¬posed of last year’s number one man,Glotzer and supported by Tully. Sha¬piro and Greenburg in that order, isexpected to make up one of the better4-man squads in the Big Ten. Thereare several other promising men prac¬ticing at the present time which maymake it possible for the University totake part in both 4, 6 and 8 manteam competition with several MidWest schools. "Dinner^ Five Games FeatureClose,^ Girls^ BasketballThe girls’ intramural basketballseason will be brought to a closeTuesday, April 3 when all teams whoparticipated in the tournament willget together for their annual basket¬ball dinner. The chop suey dinner,price 30 cents, will be served at sixin Ida Noyes. Awards will be pre¬sented and basketball games will beplayed. The program will run as fol¬lows.6:00 P.M.Foster Hall vs. Retsofs12th Grade vs. Gates Hall6:00 P.M.—ANNUAL BASKETBALLDINNER7:30 P.M.Delta Sigma vs. Tau Sigma UpsilonW.A.A. vs. Studemps8:16 P.M.Kelly Hall vs. Green Hall 6 Maroons ToRim In 47thAnnual CAAUPlaying host to the 47th annualCentral A.A.U. track meet at theUniversity of Chicago Fleldhouse,Coach Ned Merriam has announcedhis intention of entering a six mansquad tomorrow night at 7:30. Ledby Captain Paul Russell in the hurdleevents, the remaining men will prob¬ably include Bokman in the half mile.Rust in the distances, Turtelotte inthe dashes and broad jCimp and twoother members of the track teamwho have shown their capabilitiesunder fire. 'Maroons Place 2 MenCoach Merriam and a nine manteam went to the North Central In-vatational meet at Naperville lastSaturday and placed two men, onein the hurdles and one in the mile.Russell took a second in the high hur¬dles and Rust squeezed out a fifthplace in the 440. A s.coring IllinoisTech team scored over 66 points towin the meet with North Centralcoming in second. The Maroonsplaced eighth in a field of eleven teams.Adding to the 13 competitive sen¬ior events, and Public high schoolsfrom the city of Chicago will takepart in 3 half mile relay races. En¬tries in the meet are expected toinclude many of the private clubsin the city and central area and sev¬eral colleges and universities. Indiv¬idual entries will probably take upa large part of the field also. Themeet is tomorrow night at 7:30 atthe Fieldhouse. THE CHICAGO MAROON —Jack HUlTime InInstallmentlll: The Fairy TaleThis week the fairy tale be¬gins to look less and less like afairy tale. Coupled with KyleAnderson's good news on thebaseball schedule, the Universityhas announced that Chicago willresume all classes of competitionfamiliar to the Western confer¬ence with one big exception,football. Basketball, track, golf;baseball and tennis will all bereorganized with the definiteview in mind of taking partagainst the other schools in theconference.So, it looks as if some of theboys won’t be reduced to sittingin Ida Noyes and knitting nextfall. It is our earnest belief, asidefrom any 'objectionable language’that Chicago’s re-entry into realcompetition will go a long way to¬ward making up for the definitelack of unity which is now becom¬ing more and more apparent.In baseball,'things still aren’t set,but the picture looks a lot brighter.Anderson is doing his best to sche¬dule some crowd drawing games inthe belief that Chicago really hassomething to work with on the field.Now is only there will be more thanthirty people out for the first gameand is whoever does see the Maroonsplay, win or lose, doesn’t get sarcastic,things should go all right. This isour first real chance to show that Chi¬cago won’t be the ‘weak sister’ youhear so much about. Maybe in a yearor so, the sports writers of our nation’sgreatest newspaper will have to pickon someone else. We hope. Friday, March 30, 1945Maroon Ball Club Will MeetNorthwestern, Purdue, MichiganResponding to the Universityannouncement that after the waris finished the Maroon colors willreturn to all fields of Big Tencompetition except footballCoach J. Kyle Anderson, baseballmentor, has announced that thisyear's ball club will engage sev¬eral Big Ten schools on the dia¬mond.Games With Big Ten SchoolsAnderson released a skeletonroster which indicates games withNorthwestern and Purdue on ahome and home basis and the pos¬sibilities of games with otherWestern conference teams. Withthe schedule still in a nebulousstage in connection with the BigTen, Anderson has successfullyarranged to meet Western Michi¬gan, Illinois Tech, Wheaton andConcordia.Progress on the practice field onGreenwood avenue is proceeding ingood shape with a pitching staff offive men, all working into shape andan outfield which looks to be fairlywell set. Coach Anderson is expe¬rimenting with the infield at the pres¬ent time but Kurt Smith, newly ac¬quired third sackman, looks to be apermanent fixture at the hot corner.Going under fire for the first timestrong but untested Illinois Techawknine next Saturday, April 7, at theGreenwood field. The game is sche¬duled to go at 2:30 and every man onthe squad has expressed his hopesthat the University will come outand support what looks to be one ofthe best athletic teams that Chicagohas seen for many years. 21 Teams Run InPublic School Meet[Twenty-one schools sent their top trackteams to the University Fieldhouselast Saturday to compete for the juniorand senior indoor crown of the PublicLeague.Schurz. senior division champs, andHyde Park, junior title holders, areagain making the other teams toe theline this time by topping two- of threefeatures.Harry Lally’s triumph in the polevault gave Schurz’s four eighth’s edgeover their closest contender, HydePark, in Tuesday’s preliminaries. Lal¬ly’s eleven feet was just two and ahalf feet under Clark Shaughnessy,Jr.’s all time record for the league.Two other spectacular events were thedash and the triple broad jump. JimFuchs covered the sixty yeards in 0:6.4and Milton Jaffe, of Sullivan, estab¬lished the only new mark in this jumpwith a leap of 31 feet, 1% inches.Softball League MeetingResponding to the many requeststhat an intramural softball league beorganized, the University athletic de¬partment has announced that therewill be an organizational meeting inthe near future. In the meantimemen wishing to practice can obtainnecessary equipment at the Bartlettgymnasium cage and they will be al¬lowed to work out in Stagg field orthe Cottage Grove field.f-.Cv"Smart CoedsKnow the NewREAL ShampooMeans Soft^Smooth^ ^LustrousHair! Wko wants toDance with the Dollywith the harsh^ stringy hair?Think your hair could look better than ithas lately '/... Then try this amazing newReal bhampoo... feel the softness... seethe highlights! Developed from a special,private formula, REAL Shampoo’s finequalities can help you win that goodgrooming so essential for smooth campusmen and women. There is only one REALShampoo...If8 New—If8 Different—Buy it at • Fuir6-oz, actuaVsize • Full 8~oz, actual sizeUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis AvenueaFriday, March 30, 1945Burton Coort Elects Heads;Girls Dorms Hold Joint PartyBurton Court swung into the newquarter with separate entries and thecourt as a whole formulating pro¬grams for the rest of the year. At ageneral meeting Monday night newdinner dress rules were passed andplans for social activities were chart¬ed.Bill McGreger and Bob Petty wereelected presidents of 500 and 600 en¬tries at a recent meeting.Sunday night, March 25, Fosterand Kelly held a joint pajama par¬ty at 9:30 p.m. Bobble Salomon ofKelly MC’d the program, which waspresented by several members of bothhalls. After the program was com¬pleted, refreshments were served inthe form of ham and peanut buttersandwiches, milk, and ice cream bars.★ ★ ★Due to the resignation of AnnaNichols from, the position of vice-president of Foster Hall, an elec¬tion was held in which HarrietPierce was chosen to take over theposition.Redfieldf MerriamTo Speak on SpecialEaster Round TableSunday’s University of ChicagoRound Table broadcast will be dedi¬cated to a special Easter program,“Death and Resurrection in the Lifeof Nations,” at 12:30 p.m. over NBC.The four speakers who will par¬ticipate in the broadcast are: Rein¬hold Niebuhr, Professor of ChristianEthics, Union Theological. Seminary,New York; William Ernest Hocking,Professor of Philosophy, HarvardUniversity; Robert Redfield, Dean ofthe Social Sciences, of the Universi¬ty; and Charles E. Merriam, MortonD. Hull, Distinguished Professor em¬eritus of Political Science at the Uni¬versity. The girls of Foster have met theirdesignated quota of $75 for theR^ Cross. In the main, this wasaccomplished by personal donations,but the proceeds from the sale of theFoster paper “Talk a Little Foster”and the Foster caps contributed great¬ly to the success.At a house meeting held last Tues¬day night in Gates Hall the follow¬ing officers were elected for theSpring Quarter: president, DorothyHabin; vice-president and social chair¬man, Carol Yeomans; treasurer, JuneGilliam, and chairman of StandardsCouncil, Marilyn Porter.Board members were also chosenat the same time. They are: MollyAllee, Shirley Kipp, Anita Koenig,Donna Verstrate, Hank Goodman,Jack Kendal, Dick Forrester, BertBenet, Julia Marwick, Shirley Ander¬son, Marian Heinrich, and Sue Saxl.The first Fireside in the new HillelHouse will take place Friday even¬ing, April 6, at 8:00 p.m. The Houseis the gift of Mr. and Mrs. Max Ka¬rasik in honor of their son, RaymondKarasik, who was killed in World War11. This Fireside program, in thenature of an introduction to the Houseand to the Hillel program, will fea¬ture Rabbi Maurice B. Pekarsky, Di¬rector of the Hillel Foundation,speaking on the topic “In Search ofa Definition”. A number of musicalselections will also be presented. Nao¬mi Halperin, Chairman of The Fire¬side Committee, is in charge of ar- - THE CHICAGO MAROONPostwar ProblemsContest AnnouncedThe committee for the distributionof the Political Institutions Prizeshas announced the 1945 competitionfor two prizes, of $100 and $50. Thecompetition is open to any Univer¬sity student who will qualify for adegree in the calendar year, 1945.Each contestant is to choose a spe¬cific topic within the more generalone, “Post War Problems of Gov¬ernment”. The chosen topic should in¬volve the use of both general andspecific information, as well as econ-specific information, as well as eco¬nomic, political, and social-psychologi¬cal materials. Applications must befiled by April 1 in the office of Deanof Students, Cobb Hall, Room 203.Final date for submitting essays isMay 15, 1946.rangements.“Is There Anything Left In Reli¬gion?” will be discussed by Art Weis-ender. Will Sparks, Harold Donohue,Albert Friedlander. and Malcolm Mc-Affee at Social Science Institute, bet¬ter known as Hobo College, Saturdaynight.The roundtable is sponsored by theStudent Forum.The Y.W.C.A. has announced thatthe three new members on the Y’sadult advisory board are Mrs. ErnestColwell, Mrs. C^arencej Faust andMrs. Kenneth Rehage.Veterans’,,,(Continued from page one)Hutchins as guest speaker, are beingcompleted. The dinner, which is beingheld at the Windemere West Hotel,1642 East 56th Street, will cost $2.00,and is open to all veterans on campus,regardless of whether or not' they areregistered under G.I. Bill of Rights.All those interested in attending areadvised to contact A1 Thayer at But¬terfield 9778.4 MONTH INTENSIVECourse forCOllEGE STUDENTS am^ GRADUATESA thorough, intensive course—start¬ing February, July, October.Registration now open.★Regular day and evening schoolthroughout the year. Catalog.ASCHOOLOfBUSINfSSPKEFEklta) BY COLLEGE MEN AND WOAHENTHE GREGG COLLEGEPr*»id«nt, John Robort Grogg, S.CJ>.Diroetor. Pool M. Pair M.A.B«pl. C.II. « N. MM. An. TM. STAti 110CUaia 2. IH.This Week On CampusFriday. March 30Public Lecture. “The Chinese Mass Education Movement.” Speaker: Y. C.James Yen. Mandel Hall. 4:30 p.m.Record Playing. Room A of International House open for record playing.7:00-10:00 p.m.Roller Skating Carnival. Ida Noyes Gym. 7:30 p.m.Saturday, March 31All Girls Club Formal. Ida Noyes Hall. 8:30-11:30 p.m.Sunday, April 1Concert Broadcast. New York Philharmonic Orchestra. Home Room of Inter¬national House. 2:00 p.m.Religious Service. Rockefeller Memorial Chapel. Speaker: Charles W. Gilkey.11:00 a.m.Second Generation Alumni Easter Party. Assembly of International House.4:00-6:30 p.m.Easter Open House Tea. Home Room of International House. Informal danc¬ing in Room A.' 4:30-6:30 p.m.Viennese Waltzing. Assembly of International House. 7:00-9:00 p.m.Monday, April 2English Instruction. Room B of International House. 7:00-9:00 p.m.Record Concert. Home Room of International House. 7:30-9:00 p.m.Public Lecture. “The Novel in England from 1880 to the Present. The imme¬diate Background: Qeorge Eliot, Hardy, and Meredith.” Speaker: E. K.Brown. Social Science 122. 7:30 p.m.Chamber Concert. Guest Artist: Artur Schnabel, pianist. Mandel Hall. 8:30p.m.Tuesday, April 3Religious Service. Joseph Bond Chapel. Address by Edward S. Ames. Deanof Disciples Divinity House. 12:00 Noon.English Instruction. Room B of International House. 3:00-6:00 p.m.Public Lecture. Walgreen Foundation. “Democratic Concepts of the Consti¬tution.” Speaker: Carl Brent Swisher. Social Science 122. 4:30 p.m.Student Forum Meeting. Rosenwald 28. 7:30 p.m.Folk Dancing. Assembly of International House. 8:30 p.m.Wednesday, April 4English Instruction. Room B of International House. 7:00-9:00 p.m.Post War Discussion Group. Room A of International House. 8:00 p.m.Public Lecture. ^‘Islam in the Medieval World: The Mood of the Times.”Speaker: Gustave E. Von Grunebaum. Social Science 122. 7:30 p.m.Thursday, April 5English Instruction. Room B of International House. 3:00-6:00 p.m.Record Concert. Home Room of International House. 7:30-9:00 p.m.Chapel Union Names Officers;Hillel House To Be OpenedFinal election results from Chapel Union revealed Ann Duven-deck and Bob Collins were elected president and vice-president re¬spectively for the coming year. They will assume duties immedi¬ately, by presiding at the organization's next regular meeting. - ' — Pago ThrtMVocational Guidance OffersGvil Service PositionsSenior women who are interestedin learning of highly confidential cleri¬cal and research jobs may have theopportunity of doing so on Friday,April 6 at the Board of VocationalGuidance and Placement Office, CobbHall 215. Lt. R. Y. Austin of theU. S. Army Signal Corps will beavailable on that day for interviewswith interested students. Appoint¬ments for interviews may be madeon or before April 6 with Miss Mar¬garet Fox, extension 391.The duties of college graduates whoqualify as research aides will includethe analysis and interpretation ofclassified military information. How¬ever, Lt. Austin has stressed the factthat personal integrity, loyalty, andunimpeachable character will be ratedabove all other qualifications. Fa¬miliarity with research techniques isof great value since considerablestudy, reference work and project-type assignments are involved in thefulfillment of these positions. Suc¬ cessful applicants will be placed inspecialized schools at full salary pend¬ing completion of an investigation con¬ducted by the Army.All the jobs are Civil Service ap¬pointments, but no examinations arerequired. Salaries range from a mini¬mum of $1970 per year with 26 dayspaid annual leave plus 15 day sickleave. All positions are in Arlington,Virginia. Pullman fare to the placeof employment will be paid by thegovernment, and housing arrange¬ments made for all new employees.“Esperanto, the Language ofTomorrow”, will be the topic of alecture given by A. P. Anthony,educational director of the Inter¬national Language Foundation.The talk, supported by the StudentForum, will be given in Rosenwald28, on Tuesday, at 7:30.TRACKING DOWNTROUBLEThis laboratory, ready to move anywhere on shortnotice, runs down “crimes” against good tele¬phone service. Finding these threats is one of themany jobs of the Bell Telephone Laboratories’scientists.The “criminals” are such things.as threads oflint, traces of acids, or sulphur compounds in theair—any of which might damage telephone equip¬ment.In their interesting war work Bell Laboratories’scientists have heen on a new kind of hunt. Theyhave tracked down different materials for thosenow hard to get, found others that would serve inspecial,conditions, and have detected in capturedequipment the kinds of material the enemy uses.These are some examples among many of theways Bell System research is helping to serveAmerica at war.BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM^Service to the Nation in Peace and War** •BPage Four ■ ' ' ■■THE CHICAGO MAROONOfficial student publication of the University of Chicago, published every Friday during theacademic quarters. Published at Lexington Hall, University of Chicago, Chicago, Ulinoia.Telephone DORchester 7279 or MIDway 0800, Ext. 851.BUSINESS MANAGER; Alan J. StraussMANAGING EDITOR: Abe KrashDEPARTMENTAL EDITORS: Joan Geannopoulos, Jack Hill, Zonabel King-ery, Norman Macht, Betty StearnsDEPARTMENTAL MANAGER: Phyllis Riggio.EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS: June Arnold, Mary Ann Atwood, Barbara Barke, Ellen Baum,Charlotte Block, Flora Bramson, Dabe Broder, Robert Carter, Babette Casper, MitchellCotter, Jayni Cowen, Robert Delgado, Lorie Dodge, Judy Downs, Doreen Dvorak, CatherineElmes, Ellen Englar, Albert Friedlander, June Gillian, Samuel Golden, Eleanor Guttman,Betsy Harmon, George Hiton, Barbara Holdsheim, Jean Hubbard, Pat Kindahl, Joan Kohn,Frank Lewis, Lois Lowe, Marshall Lowenstein, Muriel MacChesney, Lorraine McFadden,Gene Miroif, Mary Beth Nelson, Jane Petersen, Philip Reilly, John Robinson, Robert Schall*man, Gwen Schmidt, Lolly Sharbach, Ward Sharbach, Marbell Smith, Helen Tarlow, EspeyVoulis, Mary Wong, Peggy Whitfield, Carol Wright, Beverly Young.BUSINESS ASSISTANTS: Florence Baumruk, Carol Chism, Barbara Gee, Mary Jane Gould,Connie Slater, Dorothy Taylor, Donatta Yates.The Democratic ProcessThroughout the history of The Chicago Maroon, yearly,quarterly, weekly, even daily internal upheavals have occurredwith all too persistent regularity to the detriment of the paper andthe morale of its staff. Publishers have been placed and replaced,-editors have been in and out. Boards of Control have been madeand unmade, to say nothing of.the on-again-off-again quality ofthe staff—^with a frequency that makes Maroon history read likea whirlwind. And behind all these appointments, seizures, andmanipulated elections has been the long arm of personal advance¬ment, guiding journalism—through campus politics and socialelites— up against a frowning Friday campus.For the past year, under the stable editorship of Fred Gottes-man who was able, as few editors have been in the past, to see Tiisway clear to putting aside his Bachelor of Arts to spend morningsand nights with the Maroon, and with the understanding assistanceof Dean Kimpton, the Maroon staff pitched together, and for themost part has done an excellent job. While a bewildering numberof improvements remain to be made, the total effort of the pastyear has resulted in many positive benefits and the campus hasresponded favorably.Now, the editor’s battered chair is once again vacant. Butfor the first time in nearly half a century of University of Chicagojournalism, politics has been subjugated to the fairness and square¬ness of a well regulated election closely adhering to the rulesstipulated by the constitution. For the first time in nearly halfa century democracy has come to The Chicago Maroon.Regardless of the outcome of this election we point with prideto the election itself. It seems to indicate that the Maroon hasplanted a sound foundation on which to build a better, biggerfuture. ... L. S.Betty StearnsSidelights on FootlightsEthel Barrymore was doing “Be¬linda*', Nazimova, “A Doll’s House”.Billie Burke and Henry Miller playedin “A Marriage of Convenience”, andA1 Jolson was appearing in “Sinbad”.The year was 1918. In May of 1918the Washington Square Players sub-stitiited plays by Eugene O’Neill andSusan Gaspell for a previously plan¬ned performance of “Salome”. TheO’Neill play, as you have guessed bythis time was “The Rope”, to be pre¬sented by the experimental theatregroup in - April. Whitf ord Kane,whom you’ll remember for his Bur¬bage in “Elizabeth the Queen”, andhis grave-digger in “Hamlet”, tookthe part of Bentley. Robert Strange,who has sold himself to the moviesrecently, but who acted in “MourningBecomes Electra” and “Both YourHouses” played Pat Sweeney.The NEW YORK TIMES reviewersaid of “The Rope”, that it has all thevigor of Mr. O’Neill’s sketches but itlacks the singleness and bigness ofmotions which distinguishes his workat best. “O’Neill, while still keepingin sight of the sea departs from thevirile, if broken sea characters ofBound East for Cardiff and In theZone. We have here mainly a studyof landsmen and degenerates. Theplay opens with the crooning and gib¬bering of an idiot child and the pro¬gressive senile dementia of her grand¬father. The others are harsh, sordid,and jarring, with a single thievingsailor lad to lend the touch of salt-seafrankness.” The critic praises Kane’s performance as the grandfather asthe most outstanding, not only for itsrichly colored artistic individualitybut extreme range in character as¬sumption. Apparently Mr. Kane wasgood, but we may hope Robert Carterwill give us reason for comparison.To get right down to April 1945. at¬tention should be called to the immi¬nent arrival of a number of worthwhileplays.The Theatre Guild will set forth“Swing Out Sweet Land”, “Jacobow-sky and the Colonel” and “Othello”,all within two months. Its first offer¬ing, “Swing Out Sweet Land” is nota¬ble for its staging by Loen Leonidoff,and dances by Charles Weidman andDoris Humphrey. It will play at theGreat Northern, beginning March 31.At the Civic Opera House, Mary Mar¬tin and John Boles will sing Perelmanand Nash lyrics to Kurt Weill’s mu¬sic, in one we’ve all been waiting tosee, “One Touch of Venus”. AgnesDe Mille did the choreography forthis musical comedy about a beautifulstatue brought to life. The HartBrothers, Moss and Bernard are most¬ly responsible for “Dear Ruth”, an¬other comedy, but with no music, toplay at the Harris. To quote Mr.Gibbs from THE NEW YORKER,“ ‘Dear Ruth’ is a variation of a goodmany other pieces about the girl andthe soldier on a brief leave, but it’s anintelligent one . . . really quite pleas¬ant.” THE CHICAGO MAROONU. of MarylondStudent HeadsSchool For HourA student at the University ofMaryland acted as President of theUniversity for one hour, while thePresident himself sat in the student’sclass. / Another student had his Eng¬lish Professor write a theme for him.Utopia? No, both students outdid ri¬vals in the University’s War BondDrive.★ ★ ★By a slight majority. University ofDenver students favor peacetime mil¬itary conscription. The men are defin¬itely against it, according to the poll,and the women for it.★ ★ ★The University of New Hampshirehas a faculty stunt night. Professorslet down their hair and put on a showfor the students.★ ★ ★A few weeks ago Professors atKansas State Teachers College passedout apples to the students. It wasthe 39th celebration of their annual“Apple Day.”★ ★ ★Hunter College students planned toequip 100 paratroopers during the66th War Loan drive. They endedup with four times the amount neces¬sary, or a total of $433,372.★ ★ ★This isn’t the only University thathad a “glamour boy” contest. Frater¬nity men at the University of Cin¬cinnati sponsored their own “Pin-upboys” during a recent WSSF drive.One chapter entered a dog mascot.Judy DownsServin' It HotUpon taking account of anyevening of music by Duke Elling¬ton, conscientiously offered, theconclusion is almost inevitablethat this is yet the greatest bandof them all. The Duke’s secondconcert at the Civic Opera Houselast Sunday, under sponsorship ofDown Beat Magazine was no ex¬ception.The evening was off to a rousingstart with a fervent Ellingtonian ren¬dition of the Star Spangled Banner;not once, from the first moment, werewe allowed to lost the distinct impactof the Genius. Nevertheless, the firsthalf of the program was splotchy andrather heavy laden, progressing froman elaborate. Rhapsody in Blue-ishBlutopia, through a riffy Midriff, thealways lovely Creole Love Call, Duke’slatest ballads, and finally culminatingin the excerpts from Black, Brown,and Beige. Upon this second hearingof three movements from Duke’s muchpublicized, little heard tone parallel,I sensed the Chicago audience wasyet puzzled, as was I. Perhaps in itsentirety BB & B offers a differentstory, but its excerpts, excepting spo-ratic moments, convey little meaning.The second half of the programfound the audience more relieved, theband more relaxed, and the musicmore regularly exciting. The hallrocked to It Don*t Mean A Thing IfYou Ain*t Got That Swing featuringa magnificent tenor ride from A1 Sears,swooned to Johnny‘Hodges on Moodto Be Wooed, moved with A1 Kibbler’seffective vocal of Strange Feeling andDuke’s whimsical piano on Dancers inLove.Responding to overwhelming audi¬ence insistence, Duke played a halfan hour over the regular schedulewith jamming on Frankie and Johnnieand Honeysuckle Rose. It took noDown Beat to prove Duke is still King. Q Friday, March 30, I94SoQuadranglesMiscellany. . .Popular PastimeLast week we mentioned some of our kid sisters who threwwater out of sixth-story windows. And this week we found thatthe little game is not confined to our kid sisters. As two of ourmore esteemed higher-ups in the Maroon strolled by Beecher Hail,a wild-eyed female appeared in the top-story window and hurled apaper bag filled with water at the afore-mentioned higher ups andscreamed, ‘‘DOWN WITH THE MAROON!” A voice from onhigh . . .« « *Inter ClubNew officers of Inter Club Council are Eso’s Jane Colley, president; ChiRho’s Ellen Baum, secretary; Wyvern’s Dorothy Klein, treasurer; Pi Delt’sJune Arnold, social chairman; and PDU’s Violet Adasunas, member-at-large.Already they’ve planned Inter Club Sing for May 13. Orchids to the out¬going CounciFfor a very good job and we hope the new members will do aswell.* * *Nothing in ParticularErie Thiemer has been promoted to second lieutenant on the West Frontand was decorated for bravery. Patty Meyers is back on campus with a newEso pledge pin and it’s said that she’s engaged. While we were browsingaround in the College Library we found a book titled, “Stories for Men”—we picked it up and signed our name to the charge-out card and found thatof 16 people who’d taken it out, 100 per cent were female. (It reminds oneof a famous story about a widespread advertising campaign for a book whichtold girls what they should know before marriage—thousands of curiouswomen sent in for the book and promptly sent it back—it was nothing morethan a cook book.)* 0 «How to Make Gym InterestingOne day last week we went past Barlett Gym late In the afternoon andsaw students straggling out at a very late hour, smiling happily to them¬selves. . It seems that a girl had been practicing acrobatics^ in the gym duringa men’s gym class in nothing more than a two piece bathing suit. .Could itbe that the teachers are now offering inducements to come to class?* « *Problem of the WeekOne of our spies was talking to a Tribune photographer and found thatthe photographer is making a survey throughout the girls’ dorms on thesubject of “Which would you rather have—meat or lipstick?”. The Trib mayhave pictures today on the results. Judging from the diet at the Commons,we’d say that you don’t get the meat anyhow.« * *Social BitsSaurday’s party thrown by Deke, Alpha Delt, and Psi U was quite thegathering, it’s said. Gay Deal’s back on campus—she married her Marinelast year. Beecher Hall’s initiation last week was highlighted by a threeminute talk on bust development. Susan Jean Boberg’s engagement was an¬nounced. Ann Kronquist and Erie FitzHugh plan to be married in April. Act¬ing president of Quad this quarter is Anne Putnam, just back in school.♦ « ♦Civilian Front, Department of ChangesThere is a butcher shop on 65th Street, opposite the post-office whichspecializes^in eye-catching signs. Their latest was one window filled with“Poney Meat for Puppies—NO POINTS” and another window advertising“Veal Breast—NO POINTS.” Bi Sci never told us this!I♦ ♦ «HeirloomOne of the bureaus in Beecher Hall has a closely guarded bottom drawer.In this drawer are*contained several embryos, gruesome remnants of one stu¬dent who majored in biological sciences. She left them in the drawer and theyhave been handed down from quarter to quarter to squeamish persons.* * *About the CampusLuanna and Mary Beth Nelson are hoping to find an apartment in NewYork this summer, preferably in Greenwich Village. There is a large signin Lexington 6 which sternly warn^, “No Necking PLEASE in this Room.”and in close proximity is another sign asking us to turn off the lights whenclass is done. Chapel Union’s outing will be held in May. Someone has fi¬nally told us why Rod MacLeish keeps the horsewhip in his room—he’s re¬serving it for one of his “friends” who once tried to stab him. In deferenceto the circulation department, we wish to print the names of two of our illus¬trious denizens of the ivory\ower who refuse to buy the Maroon unless theirnames are printed: The Monk and Fatso.4> .<1 *Our Fate Has ComeBecause of a very innocuous remark last week we have been doomed tothe ignominious fate of being hung in effigy. The boys at Burton who so noblysupported a good cause are planning a mass gallows party. We are crushed.Speaking of Burton-Judson, we hear that the machine in the 500 Entry brokedown and didn’t get their candidates elected.>t> * 4>Rabbits!Jere Royal is now the proud possessor or a champagne-colored rabbitpresented to her by sundry women in Gates Hall. The rabbit seems to begetting around—the other evening in the Commons the rabbit was tearingaround on the table and true to form, nibbling lettuce.0Friday, March SO, 1945 THE CHICAGO MAROONProf. Middeldorf Gives!Art Dept. Aims, Results Critic Finds Composer'sConcert Lacking(This is the second in a group ofarticles designed to acquaint the read¬er with the various departments oncampus, their work and their aims.)By Helen TarlowTo promote a critical understandingof art; to give an insight into its history—the Art Department, headed byProf. Ulrich A. Middeldorf, devotesits efforts. Professor Middeldorfstresses the fact that the coursesoffered are not limited to artists; thedepartment tries to avoid dispensingtechnical, vocational training.The department itself only emergedfrom the Education Department in1930; it has since developed into awell, equipped function of the Uni¬versity. Aids for the student takethe form of a slide department, con¬sisting of 45,000 slides, which permitfirst-hand study; the photography de¬partment, 450,000 strong; an excellentArt Library on the fourth floor ofGoodspeed; dark-room facilities that,during the war, are being used by theDocumentary Film Group. As for“places”, there is the seminar roomand kitchen, and the two galleries,the “big” and the “little”, where ex¬hibits are held.Another aid is the relation betweenthe Art Department and the Art In¬stitute. There is a constant exchangeof students, those seeking profession¬al training taking courses there, thoseneeding training in history and criti¬cism, coming here. Cooperation takesthe equally real form of sharing teach¬ers and facilities (most of our semi¬nars are held downtown, to be nearthe “real thing”) and mutual effort,with regard to exhibits and whateve|relse is underway. Prof. Middeldorfhas advocated for other schools thetying together of museum and studentDutch City PlanningAt Goodspeed ExhibitAn Exhibit of Modem Dutch Archi¬tecture and City Planning is now be¬ing shown under the sponsorship ofthe Renaissance Society in GoodspeedHall. They start you off with a fewpictures of the traditional Dutch archi¬tecture and for no apparent reasonalso show copies of a few famouspaintings that hang inside the build,ings.Buildings contructed after WorldWar I were also shown. They areinexpensive, well ventilated, light, andfairly attractive. By doing awaywith all ornaments and accenting thefunction they have acquired greatrhythm and power.I was particularly impressed by theway the Dutch had arranged thesebuildings in some of their large scaleprojects. They have planned wholecities on their drawing boards. Someare already made and in use. TheCommunity at The Hook is an exam¬ple of one. Since the people of theNetherlands started living in suchbuildings their health rate has goneap remarkably.Mary Ann ThomasMr. Y. C. James Yen will ad-dress a Mandel Hall audience thisafternoon at 4:30 p.m. on the sub¬ject of the Chinese Mass EducationMovement. Mr. Yen is the generaldirector of the Chinese NationalAssociation of the Mass EducationMovement. Admission to this pub¬lic lecture is without ticket. groups as an intelligent solution forboth.Cooperation is not limited to theArt Institute, however; art groupsand artists circulate freely at Goodspeed—proving that we have a milieuin our midst!Exhibits are handled for the mostpart by the Renaissance Society, agroup independent of the Art Depart¬ment. It was established before thedepartment existed by interestedmembers of the faculty and the com¬munity, to quote the constitution, “toprovide at the University such mate¬rial means and personal influence aswill contribute to the interest of thestudents and the members of theUniversity community in the cultiva¬tion of the arts.” Outstanding ex¬hibits in the past have been the exhi¬bition of John Sloan paintings, a morerecent one of Chinese paintings, and astill more recent one of Feiningerpaintings. John Sloan’s etchings havejust given way to an exhibition ofModern Dutch Architecture and CityPlanning which continues throughMarch 31. These exhibits perform aservice to the community and the Uni¬versity, constituting a valuable con¬tact with the “world outside”.The Student Art Club is more of acampus organization, and again it isto be stressed that participation isnot limited to artists. The club, whosepresident is Vivian Scheidemantal,puts on exhibits of student art, ar¬ranges for lectures, and other “artis¬tic” activities, but its major activity,is the tea held every Friday after¬noon, to which all are invited, and atwhich art and all other subjects areaired.Drop around sometime—the ArtDepartment would love to have you!U.T.1131-1133 E. 55th St.Complete Selectionof Beers andOther BeveragesMIDwoy 0524Blatz Beer From the point of view of last min¬ute changes, last Friday’s Composer’sconcert was the most hectic of theseason. The Malipiero and Bartokquartets were omitted because of thesudden illness of Rudolf Kolisch, firstviolinist of the Pro Arte Quartet. Butno explanation was given in the pro¬gram notes for the omission of theoriginally featured premiere of Tans-man’s Divertimento. I learned fromCecil Smith, Chairman of the MusicDepartment, that the program wasfound to be too long, and thus it wasdecided to omit the Tansman work,Mr. Smith acknowledged the, error ofthose concerned in not notifying theMaroon in time for publication.First number on the program, as itwas finally given was the Milhaud“Sonata on Anonymous Themes ofthe 18th Century”, for viola and pi¬ano, played by Germaine Prevost,violist; and Gunnar Johansen, piano.The music is very pleasing, havingclose affinities to that composer’sSuite Provencale for orchestra; butthe performance was too much of the18th century to do the work justice,that is, the work was played with adelicacy which was inappropriate tothe style.Mr. Prevost returned to play Stra¬vinsky’s Elegie for viola alone. Thework is written for muted violathroughout and requires very carefultone control for the successful enun¬ciation of its fugue-like double-stoppassages. Here Mr. Prevost’s inter¬pretation was very sensitive, worthyof the dedication Stravinsky gavehim. Of a completely contrastingcharacter was the Sonata for unac¬companied violoncello by Zoltan Ko-daly. This is a show piece for thecello. Every conceivable technicaltrick is employed; double-stop trills,brilliant broken chords, guitar-likepizzicatti, pizzicato counter themesand punctuation beneath the melody,wierd sur ponticello phrases, etc. Fora last minute substitute, Mr. ErnstOpen Daily Except Sunday7:30 a.m. • 7:30 p.m.SPIC-N-SPANClub Steak Our Specialty1321 East 57th StreetTO MY SWEETIEON THE FENCE OrldlnaiC^ltaracter ptnsWear a smila on your lullwith ona of thasa charmingpint. Oxidixad Silvar or An¬tigua Bronxa Finish. All havasafaty catchas, and pra-warprica.S-j-OO(Plus ^td. Tgx)* TRUMPET AND DRUMTHE PHILOSOPHERUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue Friedlander gave a truly remarkableperformance. The excruciatingly dif¬ficult technical feats were tossed offneatly and with a great deal of spir¬it. The music was very melodious,and, especially in the last movement,infected with the gayety and verve ofa Spanish dance.The Hindemith “Sonata for Trum¬pet and Piano,” which brought theconcert to a close, was, unhappily, theleast successful. The music itself isnot Hindemith’s best; at times it wasstrongly reminiscent of Matthias thePainter, but those were the bettertimes. However, the chief objectionlies in the performance. Gerald Huff¬man, the trumpeter, played with aninelastic tone, and little variation ofdynamics; whether this was due to aninability to grasp the music, or be¬cause of the technical difficulties, Icannot tell, but the result was not ahappy one. Dorothy Walters’ accom¬paniment was good, but suffered fromMr. Huffman’s excessive drive. Book Page RvrStuffAge of Thunder can best be de¬scribed as “exciting.” Not in thesense of an adventure story—^the ac¬tion in the book is secondary—^butratlier in an emotional sense. It’s alittle questionable whether the authorever did have a fully developed plot inmind, but we don’t think the readerwill be much disturbed by \hat.It is first, the characters, and sec¬ond, the dreamy out-of-this-world-yet-very-much-in-it quality that providestht excitement and quickening of feel¬ing that gives the reader a sense ofhaving had a deep emotional experi¬ence.We think you’ll be willing to foregothe plot and action for the privilegeof meeting the exotic characters anddigesting their views on life, love andwar. M.A.A.ClaisifiedWill stay with your children evenings. 60can hour. Call Mrs. Rice. But. 9831.Coop, Inter-Racial, 3 year established, nowhas few vacancies for men, women. Work andexpenses shared. Call FAI 1604 about 6:30.Professor desires furnished apartment, 3 to5 rooms, for May 1 through Sept. 1. WriteHarvey Wish, Smith College, Northampton,Mass,From Twilight to MidnightMarine Dining RoomOffers the Most in Dancing Time,Beautiful Floor Shows, ExcellentDinners in an Elegant AtmosphereEMIL VANDAS^ORCHESTRADOROTHY HILD DANCERSTWO VARIETY ACTSDancing: 7:00 to Midnight, nightly except MondaysShow Time: Tuesday thru Saturday 8:30 & 10:30Sundays: 7(i0 and 10:30 P.M.Monday Evenings: Organ musicDinner service as usual—and because there is no dancing orfloor show on Monday evenings, there is no cabaret orluxury tax levied.Telephone Longbeach 6000 for reservations.5300 BLOCK SHERIDAN R O A D 40’C H I C A G OPretty girl uith a pretty name. . . that's Patti Aldridgeof Seattle, Washington, and Kelly Hall . . .glamor-girl-of-the-tveek. Prettysmart, too ... shea's at the Universityof Chicago on a LaVeme Noyes scholarship. . . entered the College, second year level, inSeptember of ’44 . . . thinks it*s ^^unusual and wonderful.Patti’s plans for the future? Look at her picture here . . .then guess. Right! It is a career in fashion . . . particularlyin fashion modeling and drawing. Here, she demonstratesher knowledge of what’s good and what’s new . . .with a broad-sljouldered, narrow-waisted suit . . . douhlynoteworthy for its combination of two tones of wool.Uh-huh ... we thought you’d like it for your own ...so here are the statistics. Sizes . . . for the junior 9 to 15.Colors . . . citron, aqua or fuchsia-red with black.Place ... Marshall Field & Company, of course ...the Young Chicago Shop—Sixth Floor, South, StatePrice ... a most sensible $29.95!Meet the Best People* Every week, on this page,the Chicago Maroon will introduce you to anotherUniversity of Chicago glamor girl... a winning campuspersonality. And every week you’ll see her in anattractive costume she’s chosen at MarshaU Field & Compang*