Robert EvansMary HammelJohn CraneCharlotte FordAlan Graves PUBLI.<;HEREDITORBUSINESS MANAGERJUNIOR MA:--JAGING EDITORJeNIOR LAYOUT EDITORCOPYRIGHT 1941HARPER ARCHWAYAPANDOWNTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO189 1 194 1HE FIFTIETHANNIVERSARY CAP AND GOWNis published in a twofold spmt. First, it is offered to the campus of theUniversity of Chicago as a memorial to fifty years of progress; second,it is offered as an escape from the present world troubles. On these pa!Se:­the reader will find the University's fiftieth year accurately transferred topaper. There is no mention of the events of the outer world. The totali-tarian menace here is the obligation of the editors to choose only certainsituations for their copy. It is our sincere hope that the pic ture willappear satisfactory to our generation when at some future date they lookback on their college career, and further that the picture will portray butone step In the history of a great institution.ROBERT EVANs-PubliJherROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELSTORY OF FIFTY YEARS1891-1941Vivid in the memories of many men living today is the founding ofthe University of Chicago. In the fifty short years since 1891, it hasbecome one of the greatest educational centers in the world. Since avenerable old age can hardly account for this high reputation, it mustbe due to the vibrating enthusiasm of youth, for the University of Chicagois a young institution that has grown with the twentieth century andrisen with the prairie middle-west.Stephen Douglas, who believed in the possibilities of the great Mis­sissippi Valley, foresaw a brilliant future for the growing city of Chicagoand gave it its first institution of higher learning. At 33rd and CottageGrove Avenue, he established the first University of Chicago. It was abold venture, and finally in 1886 had to close due to financial difficulties.But the spark that had been kindled was not to die, for just threeyears later, the American Baptist Educational Society revived the ideaof a great mid-western university and, undauntedby Mr. Douglas' failure, made plans for the presentUniversity of Chicago. They appealed to John D.Rockefeller for the original contribution with whichto found the school. He, being a shrewd businessman, promised them six hundred thousand dollarsif they could obtain four hundred thousand dollarsfrom other sources. Thomas A. Goodspeed andFrederick T. Gates, encouraged by this challenge,collected the necessary money within a year, andon September tenth, 1890, the University of Chicagowas incorporated.But one million dollars does not make a uni­versity; the creating was yet to be done. Electedto head this new-born institution was WilliamRainey Harper, an exceptional young man whom everyone felt coulddo exceptional things with one million dollars. He refused! He held outfor two million dollars, the money necessary to found a school with facil­ities adequate not only for undergraduate teaching, but also the pursuitof advanced studies and research. Mr. Rockefeller, convinced of thesoundness of Mr. Harper's idea, wholeheartedly contributed the additionalone million dollars, and William Rainey Harper became the first presidentof the University of Chicago.President Harper immediately became the driving force behind theuniversity. His dynamic personality galvanized individuals and legis­latures into action, and the enthusiasm that had made him a great teachermade him as great a college president. At the same time that he raisedmillions of dollars among the people of Chicago, he won their personalinterest in the school. Men were intuitively convinced of the soundnessof his ideas. Eight college presidents were so impressed with his sincerity,that they left their high positions to come and teach at this progressiveinstitution. So, even before the university opened its doors, its educa­tional superiority was insured.Not only was President Harper interested in the curriculum of hisschool, but he also became the inspiration behind its beautiful buildingsand grounds. Even before a brick was laid; he and the architects hadplanned the compact campus, that would run along Chicago's Midway,a wide green plaisance made famous the next year when Little Egyptdanced the hootchy-cooch there before raucous World's Fair crowds.The architecture, an unobtrusive blend of Indiana limestone and Gothicdesign, was to be consistent throughout, and each building with its especialfunction was complete in itself and yet an integral part of the whole design.The initial building, Cobb Hall, was built the first year on land donatedby Marshall Field. From this beginning spread the eighty-five buildingsthat compose the campus today.On October first, 1892, the University of Chicago welcomed its firstclass of five hundred ninety-four students. From then on the doors neverclosed, for academic work continued throughout the summer, a planunique among universities. At the end of two years study, the title of"associate" was awarded to the students, and thus accentuated the divisionbetween the Junior andSenior College. Worthy aca­demic material that wouldhave been refused by profit­making publishing houseswas prin ted by the U n i­versity Press and thusreached an audience thatCOBB HALLwould otherwise have been neglected. By thetime of President Harper's death in 1906, theUniversity of Chicago had become a pioneer inthe field of education. I,The man who was chosen to succeed Presi­dent Harper was faced with the problem ofmaintaining the high standard, set by the firstpresident whose reputation still dominated theuniversity. Henry Pratt Judson, the formerDean of Faculties, overcame this handicap andremained president for seventeen years. At thetime of his ascension, he had already taught atthe university for fifteen years and had servedas acting president during President Harper'sillness, so that he knew his associates and hisorganization well. A more practical, less in­spired man than Harper, Judson turned his attention to the backing ofthe school and when he retired, left a financially strong university whosestudent body had increased eighty-six per-cent and whose endowmenthad more than doubled.His successor, Ernest De Witt Burton, is probably most noted forthe agreeable way in which his name combines with Judson's to formthe oft pronounced Burton-Judson Court. His services as Dean of Li brarieshad illustrated his ability as an organizor, but his untimely death in 1925brought his career as president to an early end.Max Mason was brought from the University of Wisconsin to succeedhim. A professor of mathematical physics, Mason was probably betterknown for his submarine detectors, invented during the World War I,than for all of his academic research. His reign of office was short, forafter three years he resigned to become director of natural sciences fort he Rockefeller Foundation.It was then in 1929 that Robert Maynard Hutchins was appointedpresident. His reputation was almost as fabulous as that of Harper's.At twenty-three he had been secretary of Yale University; at twenty­eight he had been made Dean of the Yale Law School and had, thereupon,reorganized it to suit his theories, and now at thirty, he had become presi­dent of a great university. His likeness to the first president did not endthere, for he, like Harper, had revolutionary plans for education and meantto make them work. His" new plan", so successful today, meant twoyears of a broad college education and two years of specialized study.All work was voluntary and a student could advance as rapidly as he wasable. Believing that fundamental ideas were being submerged under adeluge of facts, he emphasized philosophical courses and introduced tothe campus the Aristotelian trio, Adler, Mac Keon, and Buchanan. RushMedical School was made a graduate department, and the School of Edu­cation and the Law School were completely reorganized. Everywherea new spirit of enthusiastic inquiry and intelligent objectivity prevailed,and since then the University of Chicago has become known as the placewhere men think thoroughly and speak freely, a center of great advance­ment.Even today after twelve years of steady progress, President Hutchinsis still making remarkable changes. Some people do not sanction hisabolition of inter-collegiate football, but few disagree with his wideningof the university's research department to all parts of the world. Whetherthey approve or not, everyone agrees that he is makinga splendid attempt to keep education in pace with the times.This new objective of making the University of Chicagoa pulsating influence in the world around it is an appro­priate climax to its history, for surely it has done more thanmerely transmitt learning to thousands of studen ts. It haslent its talent to creating new knowledge that has enlightenedall mankind. Enrolled in the faculty are men whose prowressin science and literature have brought them honors fromall over the world. Ever since Albert Michelson discoveredthe speed of light and thus clarified a whole field of physics,there has been a stalwart tradition of superiority to uphold.RobertA. Millikin and Arthur Holly Compton both advancedthat tradition when they received Nobel prizes for theirextraordinary work in physics. Howard Taylor Rickettsdied seeking a cure for typhus, and George Dick is a namefamiliar to every school child as the discoverer of scarlettfever anti-toxin.So on through department and department, year after year, men seekmore knowledge to bring to the world. Arthur Dempster and WilliamHarkins are currently working endlessly and fruitfully in the shadowy,unexplored field where physics and chemistry meet. In the biology depart­men t, Professor A. J. Carlson is setting the pace with his scientific motto,"Va t iss the ef-fidence."All of these contributions will add to the progress of the passing yearsand make the university an essential part of the future. So at the turnof the next century, the University of Chicago will be just as great asit is today, for it will have advanced with time and will fulfill the requisitesof education in that age, whatever they may be.A u T u M NAUTUMN Psi UHard Times PartyQUARTER ACTIVITIESLate September saw the University open withthe usual bang. The only things different aboutthat opening Sunday were the faces of the peopleinvolved. Naturally a new crop of freshmen wereon hand, but nearly everybody was hungrily sur­veying the people who were to model their livesduring the coming school year. Central figure atthe men's dormitories was Psi U Dick Salzmann, whowas in charge of men's orientation. Naturally hewas surrounded by his fraternity brothers, however,this year saw fewer complaints against monopolyof freshmen by anyone fraternity than any year inthe recent past. Early men's rushing mode the oldmad-house rush just a little mader than usual atBurton- Judson. With th is exception everyth i ng was the same as it had been in the past. The even­ing was marked by freshmen chumming with upper­classmen in a way not seen until rushing got underRed Cross Drive18way, It is even rumored that Salzmann with AIGarFinkle and Bob Evans did a little imbibing thatnight, but the facts are not forthcoming on this,The women's dormitories presented an entirelydifferent scene, In the usual way things were farmore feminine, quiet, and better managed, despitethe success of Sa lzrnon s reformed on entation pro­gram, Most of the credit for the efficiency ofwomen's organization, Federation, was due to theeffort of Henrietta Mahon, who was the feminineBWOC of the week, Counselors proved to bemuch better on the Foster-Kelly side of the Midway,probably due to the fact that they had undergonea training course during the previous spnng quarter,Such a course has never been successful whenapplied to the male of the species,From Freshman Week events moved sWiftly intorushing, As October began to drop its leaves,fraternities prepared to bring the lamb to slaughter.Freshman Beauty Roff. Paulette Goddard and A. D. Phis,Motivating InFluence of the ritualistic events wasAlpha Delt Chuck Percy, who headed the Inter­Fraternity Committee, Percy, who had been arather gross violator of the code the year before,reformed and managed a practically honest rushingperiod. Key to his success was perhaps the short­ness of this year's open season, for there were noreally major violations of the rules. Top houseson the day of the final seduction were Psi Upsilonand Delta Kappa Epsilon Alpha Delta Phi, whothe night before had been ringing its hands andWishing they were its neck, got a break at the lastminute and pledged a fair class. All large housesseemed to prosper; little houses had a fairly toughtime. Fortunately or unfortunately as the case maybe, the lack of football did not materially affectthe fraternity situation.Club rushing which had led the WCly to theshortened season was slightly more drawn outthan the fraternity hunt. The Ouadranglers foughtit out with the Mortar Boards and came out topdog much to everyone's surprise. The Esotericsmainly battled the Sigmas but stole girls from allbig clubs. All four large clubs pledged goodclasses; no one was stuck. Miracle of the seasonwas Wyvern, which netted thirty-three girls.Smaller clubs mostly did well; the crop harvested19Homecoming Carnival.was better, if not much larger, than usual. Nastiestscandal of the year came on the day the girls wentto sign up. Ruth Steel, acting for Sigma, protestedthat the Ouadranglers had been "dirty" rushingwhen they had allowed some freshmen girls toattend Jane An::Jerson's wedding Donna Culli­ton, Interclub Head, who had been forwarnedabout the fact and had given her okay, stuck toher politic friends and precipitated a real row.Champion of the day was Ouadrangler PresidentShirley Burton, who walked out of a four hourmeeting, cool and collected possessor of a favor­able vote which numbered only the two mentioned against her. For weeks people were cuttingpeople in the Coffee Shop Even John Keller feltthe tenseness of the atmosphere under his pro­tective shell.Thanksgiving came with the Inter-Fraternity Ball,which was successful as usual. The average num­ber of pins were hung; the average number ofpeople were intoxicated Following an oldtradition, the Chi Psi's had a room in the Shermanin which they gave a perpetual cocktail party andprobably had the most fun of any group there.Shortly after this memorable event the Alpha Deltsforgave the Psi U's and the DKE's and joined themfor the annual Three-Way Party at the ChicagoTowers Club. The select party noticed only oneoutsider amongst the ranks, none other than JoeHanley His presence probably saved the even­ing for those tired of seeing the same old faces(most of the boys see joe only twice a week.)The parties were both huge successes; the Maroongave them both full Bazaars. It is rumored thatmore people got their name in that venerablecolumn after these affairs than ever had been inbefore.The quarter ended properly with Convocationin the Chapel. Head Marshall, john Stevens, andSenior Aide, Henrietta Mahon, shepherded thegraduates into line and through their paces. Butbefore the Christmas holiday, a number of prom­inent people resigned their jobs in campus activi­ties. Most important of these was john Bex, whoseresignation from the Maroon Board was demandedwhen others of that group learned that he hadbeen actually helping the Daily Chicagoan, whichmade its debut in january. Thus ended the social­scandal side of a full quarter. Faith may be main­tained in the human race only by rememberingthat many of the same students took and passed allthel r exams.ORIENTATIONThere is no one more lonely than a green fresh­man stranded on a college campus with nothingto do but smile sheepishly at other solitary new­comers. Everything about the school seems asgrey as its limestone walls. The dreary dormrooms are barren compared to Petty-covered wallsat home, and empty classrooms seem so formidable,thsv almost set one r::acking. Then, just as thefreshman is beginning to feel at ease, a rush ofself concerned upper classmen beseiges him andleaves him flabbergasted.Perceiving this disheartening welcome, theFreshman Orientation Committee and the Federa­tion of University Women got together and, despitetheir formidable titles, planned to have a raucousorientation for new students each year.The groups begin their work in the winterquarter by canvassing the campus to determine inMEN:Blumenthal, Weiss, Molkup, Blackwell. WOMEN:Front-Vanderwalker, Mahon, Goldstein, Allen.Back-Hamity, latham, Woodrich.Board of the Federa­tion of UniversityWomenHenrietta Mahon,PresidentVirginia AllenMarion CastlemanCharlotte FordAmy GoldsteinCorolvn GraboAnabeth HamityShirley lathamJanet VanderwalkerMarjorie WoodrichFreshman Orientation CommitteeRichard Salzmann,ChairmanWilliam BlackwellRobert BoyerJohn CraneJohn Crosby Kenneth GeppingerFrancis lynchKenneth MaclellanMilton WeissJoseoh Mol kupWilliam Westenberg21Registration in Bartlett.general what a freshman should know and thenduring the spring coach erstwhile counselors onwhat to show These counselors, chosen for theirpersonality and interest in people, guarantee thefreshmen a good time while attending all of theactivities.A week before school begins, these loyal under­graduates cut short their vacations and seek outtheir charges in order to show them the benefitsof college life. Many have already written eachotherduring the summerland although a glamourousphotograph of an upper classman may flatter be­yond recognition, they greet one another like oldfriends.The First night at school, all of the girls gather inthe dorms for a gay pajama party complete withcookies and cokes. Since the men are cordiallynot invited, they unconsciously congregate for acarefully (and subtely) planned bull session. Bothare always successful, since hag and bull sessions are advertised the world over as college require-ments.Then, to offset the boring freshman examinations,a day by day program is arranged. On Mondaythe Alumni Foundation gives a luncheon wherespeeches are cleverly mixed with courses, and atfour o'clock, the freshmen get their First glimpse ofDean Smith's sparkling personality.To impess the newcomers and to recruit thediminishing ranks, upperclassmen spend all dayTuesday boasting about extra curricular activitiesand exposing the ins and outs of the less formalside of school. To insure a good i mpressi on, theyend with a mixer where all the men, old and new,set out to Find themselves "the" freshman girl.Comes Wednesday and John Vanderwater cor­rals the whole class, clad in jeans and ten gallonhats, into a barn dance. Despite annual skepticism,the dance is always a big success, because John22Vanderwater is inimitable and because it's greatfun to let down one's hair and yell.The Dramatic Association next displays itsprowess. It always goes out of its way to give anexcellent performance for its guests, in order toi nspi re them to partici pate in or, better yet, attendits productions. After the show everyone adjournsto the Reynolds club for a theater party, a merryfree-for-all with more entertainment.This year Friday brought both disappointment andromance to the campus. The long awaited picnicat the Lasker estate had Lo be cancelled, becauseMr. Lasker was using it for his current honeymoon.No one wanted to interfere with love, so theypostponed the picnic to future years and werecontented with rollicking about the campus.Despite Chicago's publicized lack of school spiritwhere athletics are concerned, Saturday alwaysbrings huge crowds out for informal games andtennis matches. Freshmen compete with upper­classmen and often trounce them thoroughly. Theday, and as it happens the week ends, with a "C"dance in the Ida Noyes Gym, a traditional close toPhi Psi Rushing football Saturday that has outlived the foobtall.So the week ends! Its success is undeniable.Freshmen are completely at home on the ivycovered campus and happily reconciled to untidyrooms and never getting to bed before two AM.They strut about greeting new friends, freshmenand seniors alike, with the assurance of old timers.Upperclassmen, too, are fully oriented to ahorde of new faces. There are more "buddies"to borrow from and more friends to coke with.Club and fraternity members have actually met thescores of people they are rushing and have beenable to judge from appearances and not records.A freshmen with a string of activities in high schoolmight have turned out to be a bust, and one with ameek, unassuming high school record might havebeen hiding a "queen." And so the stage isalready being set for a more robust orientation,one much less to the satisfaction of the freshmen,, .. hell week.. when neophytes are no longerhonored guesLs but rather the goats of endlesspranks.Psi U Pledges.Melvin Douglas and Alpha Delts.231 B 91 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY 1941THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOCHICAGO. IL.LINOISOFFICE OF THE PRESIDENTApril 16, 1941To the Fiftieth Anniversary Cap and Go�n;Our Fiftieth Anniversary is a year ofcelebration of our distinctions of the past.Coincidentally, and more important for the future,it is a critical year of struggle for the con­tinuance of our distinction.We have much to celebr�te. When theUniversity sprang full-fledged from the minds ofits founders fifty years ago it immediatelyassumed a position of leadership in America andthe world. In the intervening half century wehave maintained our tradition of leadership onnew frontiers.The special significance of the Univer-sity of Chicago is that it is free. It is importanTnot only for its own sake that the Universityshould continue to hold the position it has enjoyed.The decline of free universities in this countryand thei� destruction abroad make all the morenecessary the intellectual and spiritual leadershipthis tn st Ltu t Lou is prepared to offer the world.Our celebration will go fo�vard to itsconclusion as planned. The Campaign must also meetour expectations. The University must go on fromstrength to strength.Sincerely yours,George A. Works James M. Stifler Frederic WoodwardCharles W. Gilkey Ernest C. Miller McKendree L. RaneyAaron J. Brumbaugh Robert C. Woellner William J. MatherOFFICERSOF ADMINISTRATIONROBERT MAYNARD HUTCHINSEMERY 1 FILBEYWILLIAM BENTON PresidentVice-PresidentVice-PresidentFREDERIC WOODWARD Vice-President Emeritus; Director of Fiftieth Anniversary CelebrationMARTIN J FREEMAN Entrance CounselorCHARLES WHITNEY GILKEY Dean of the ChapelWILLIAM JOHN MATHER BursarERNEST C. MILLER RegistrarWILLIAM MADISON RANDALLMcKENDREE LLEWELLYN RANEYOTTO STRUVERALPH WINFRED TYLERVALERIE C. WICKHAMJOHN ALBERT WILSON Assistant Dean of StudentsDirector of the University LibrariesDi rector of the Yerkes ObservatoryChief Examiner, Board of ExaminationDirector of AdmissionsDirector of the Oriental InstituteROBERT CARLTON WOELLNER Executive Secretary, Board of Vocational Guidance and PlacementGEORGE ALAN WORKSJAMES M. STIFLER Dean of Students and University ExaminerSecretary of the University27William Hay Taliaferro D EA N S OFWilLIAM HAY TALIAFERRODean of the Division of the Biological SciencesVICTOR E. JOHNSONDean of Students in the Division of the BiologicalSciencesARTHUR HOllY COMPTONDean of the Division of the Physical SciencesWALTER BARTKYDean of Students in the Division of the PhysicalSciencesGordon LaingAARON JOHN BRUMBAUGHDean of the CollegelEON PERDUE SMITHDean of Students in the CollegeZENS lAWRENCE SMITHAssistant Dean and Assistant Dean of Students inthe CollegeEARLE GRAYDean of Students in the Rush Graduate School ofMedicineCARL FREDERICK HUTHDean of University College28 Robert RedfieldTHE UNIVERSITYRICHARD PETER McKEONDean of the Division of the HumanitiesJAMES L. CA TEDean of Students In the Division of the HumanitiesROBERT REDFI ELDDean of the Division of the Social SciencesJOHN DALE RUSSELLAssociate Dean and Dean of Students in the Divisionof the Social SciencesLeon Perdue Smith William Homer Spencer Arthur Holly ComptonEDITH ABBOTTDean of the School of Social Service AdministrationEKNEST CADMAN COLWELLDean of the Divinity SchoolWILBER GRIFFITH KATZDean of the Law SchoolWILLIAM HOMER SPENCERDean of the School of BusinessLOUIS ROUND WILSONDean of the Graduate Library School29(Left-right around table)-Paul S. Russell, Arthur B. Hall, Laird Bell, Harrison B. Barnard, MaxEpstein, Herbert P. Zimmerman, President Robert M. Hutchins, Chairman Harold H. Swift,John Nuveen, Jr., Robert L. Scott, Charles F. Axelson, and Trevor Arnett.BOARD OF TRUSTEESOFFICERSHAROLD H. SWIFTWILLIAM SCOTT BONDLAIRD BELLJOHN F. MOULDS ChairmanFirst ChairmanSecond ChairmanSecretaryTrevor ArnettSewell L. AveryCharles F. AxelsonHarrison B. BarnardLaird BellW. McCormick BlairWilliam Scott BondJames H Douglas, Jr.Cyrus S, EatonMax EpsteinMarshall FieldHarry B. GearCharles B. Goodspeed TRUSTEESArthur B -. HallPaul G. HoffmanPo bert M. HutchinsAlbert D. LaskerFrank McNairJohn Nuveen, Jr.Ernest E. OuantrellClarence B. Randa IILessing J RosenwaldPaul S. RussellEdward L. Ryerson, Jr.Albert L. ScottPobert L. Scott Albert W ShererJames M. StiflerJohn SluartHarold H. SwiftJoh n P Wi IsonHerbert P. ZimmermanHONORARY TRUSTEESThomas E. DonnelleyCharles R. HoldenCharles E. HughesSamuel C JenningsFrank H. Lindsay30CLUB and FRATERNITY RUSHINGRushing is going around with a "fine,thanks" and a "why, I'd love to" on yourlips, and a "dig me a grave and let me die"in your heart. It is that period each fa IIwhen clubs and fraternities put their bestfeet forward to impress likely freshmen withthe virtues of their own organization and thevices of others.I-F. Head PercyThough most closely associated with fall quarter,rushing really begins in the summer. This gives themembers a better chance to become acquaintedwith the new students, and it also aids the Uni­versity in contacting High School graduates whoare undecided about collegeNew students are sized up as soon as they arriveat the University, but rushing does not legallybegin until after freshman week. Then comes thestring of coke dates, luncheons, and smokers,where freshmen meet club and fraternity membersat Informal gatherings. The fraternities each have I·C Head Cullitonthree open houses which may be attended by thefreshmen whether they receive invitations or not.Rules made and enforced by Interclub and Inter­fraternityCouncils control the seven weeks competi­tion.The best parties are held during closed rushing--the week before pledging Each club triesto have one function that is unusual. Cruiseparties and theater parties are fun. The MortarBoards had a wine party--which is all right if youlike that sort of thing. The Esoteric's party at PalosPark was a slacks affair and earned a plus for31Club gets girlvariety and fun. Breakfasts weren'tvery original but proved a good en­durance test for those who hadn't hada snack before starting out.First impressions are important. Inthe bull sessions which follow a func­tion, the appearance of a possiblecandidate is discussed as thoroughly ashis personality Too much lipstick oran unshaven chin can be just as fatalas an impossible introvert or an equallyimpossible extrovert.Rushing ends for the women with aformal preferential dinner the nightbefore pledging. The climax for themen comes the night of pledging Withdinners, theater parties, and variousstag affairs, fraternity brothers and theirnew pledges celebrate the fortunes ofthe day.This year 166 men pledged onNovember 8th. This number is slightlyless than the number that pledged lastyear, but the decrease was caused by asmaller freshman class. On November18th 150 women pledgedFraternity bags boyINTERCLUBGEIGERAlpha Chi ThetaDRY BURGHAlpha EpsilonFORDDelta SigmaDANIELSEsotericCULLITONMortar BoardCARLSONPhi Delta UpsilonBIESERPi Delta PhiBURTONOuadranglerSTEELSigma MARKSTriotaWHITINGWyvern COUNCILClubs may ignore and even slander one anotherdurmq intensive rushing, but when the last rusheeis pledged, they relax and lead a happy familylife. Controlling their competetive activities in thefall and their cooperative ones during the rest ofthe year is the Inter-Club Council. Besides settingup rules for rushing, pledging, and initiation, thecouncil gives a ball that is a hi-lite of the winterquarter and in spring sponsors the Inter-Club Sing,where each club sings its songs before spectatorsand judges and prays that it will win the cupawarded to the best choral group. It is pleasur­able competition and brings further harmony amongthe clubs.ALPHA' EPSILONDELTA SIGMAALPHA CHI THETASIGMAPI DELTA PHIMORTAR BOARDTRIOTAWYVERNPHI DELTA UPSILONESOTERICCHI RHO SIGMAOUADRANGLERPHI BETA DELTA33ALPHA EPSILONDELTA SIGMASENIORSCynthia DursemaGertrude EichstaedtHelen MyersChristine SmithPau line SockolovskyCaroline Willis SOPHOMORESMarge Abergjane ClaridgeMarsha DzubayFelicity FongerMary GrahamEmilie RashevskyDorothy Ann StejskalJUNIORSjean BoergerDorothy EinbeckerCharlotte FordEllen GroveAnna Mae HulingPatricia Smith34 Benson BergDeffenbaugh De RoseDring Dryburg BreidiganDe VolHoraAbergDursemaFonger J. ClaridgeDzubayFord P. ClaridgeEichstaedtGroveSENIORSDorothy BergVirginia BrownAnna Mae CummingsJeanette De RoseEva De VolKathryn DryburghMarjorie JansenRuth Mary Jan enDorothea DeFfenbaugh JUNIORSJune Rose ChetisterBeth DringHelen IttnerBetty ReichertElaine RoyM. Jansen R. Jansen Sefcik Servies Soderstrom Witt SOPHOMORESHilvie BensonJune BriedeganEleanor HoraBetty SoderstromEloise WittPLEDGESDorothy Sefci kPhyllis ServiesKarlstromMyersP. Smith Loughran.OuissenberrySockolovsky MossbergC. SmithWillisMartensReevesStejskal MassiasSiniVickMannsRashevskyStephens35 PLEDGESMarley Jo BreadyPat ClaridgeBetty HulburtEleanor KarlstromJeanne LoughranMartha MannsWilma MartensAgnes MassiasLois MossbergRuth PerkinsHelen OUlssenberryHelen ReevesMarjorie RollinsYolanda SiniMarcia StephensCarolyn VickHonorary Members:Mrs. Dudley B. ReedMrs. Edward A BurtMrs. Wi II iam Scott GrayMrs. Mary E. HayesCHI THETAALP HASIGMA SENIORSLois GartnerEvelyn GeigerFreda KingerLa Verne LandonMary Luell McClellandJUNIORSHazel CargillEdith LockerSOPHOMORESElizabeth WatersAlquistBormanCloughGilfillan BakerChittendenEvansJ. Goode BohnenClementsFooteGrenanderApprichBroderickComstockGlenn ArgirisButtsDischE. Goode BaumeisterChristophFarwellGreening36Cargill Gartner Geiger Locker Kinder McClelland WatersHackettE. MillerL. Rolf HaynesM.MilierRuby HoralMooreA. Steel E. JohnsonMoranA. Steel F. JohnsonNicholsTaylor KlopstegNebelTeberg MayerRegnellWestfall37 NOT PICTUREDCharlotte ElyCalista FryarJeanne GoenierLorraine KleinLois RoffDiana WinstonPI DELTASENIORSMary Emmeline EatonMarion HolstonElsie MacCrackenElizabeth McElvainMarjorie SchlytterBetty TuttleJUNIORSjosephine BeynonRuth BieserLouise CumminsLorraine Daleyjean Hamblyjeanne KnaussDoris KnudsenAbbie LukensGenevieve MahlumGene PierceMary jane T ornpki nsMary Alice WescheSOPHOMORESjoan AugustusHelen DeYoungMarjorie Gardnerl.vn HillPhyllis HowellRosemary McKeighanCecile Scharfenberg PHIPLEDGESMary BogieVirginia BrantnerDonis FisherDoris HendricksonMarjorie TompkinsEllen Tuttle Honorary Member�Mrs. HessMrs. Dixor.BieserEaton DaleyHalston DeYoungHamblyBogieFisher BrantnerGardnerMORTARBOARDAdamsEvansGrabo AllingFanningGraver BickertFerriterHarlan CoulterFlorianHinchliff CullitonGaidzikHopkins38SENIORSHelen BickertPrudence CoulterDonna CullitonMuriel EvansCarolyn GraboBlanche GraverMargaret Hechtjoan LydingBarbara PageElizabeth Muellerjane WarrenHendricksonMcKeighan Hill Howell Knauss Knudson LukensSchlytter Scharfenberg M. Tompkins M. J . Tompkins B. Tuttle MahlumE. Tuttle McElvainWescheLowryM. Peacock J. LydingPrice P. l.vdinqRathje MuellerRowlandJUNIORSBeatrice GaidzikClarabelle GrossmanPatricia LydingElizabeth MungerBetty jane NelsonMargaret PeacockMarylu PriceMary Park WelchDorothy Wendrick NelsonSill NewmanSmithSOPHOMORESSally Adamsjean HopkinsAlice Lowryjanet PeacockMargaret Ann Rathjejoan SillShirlee Smith39 PageWelch J. PeacockWendrickPLEDGESVirginia AllingElizabeth FanningSybil FerriterConstance FlorianNorma GlassVirginia HarlanGeorgia HinchliffNancy NewmanMary Louise RowlandTRIOTA '\WYVERNNot PicturedMarie AdamGeorgine BrownBetty CrawfordHelen DadyVirginia DadyDiana DouttDorothy HagerEloise ProcterJanet RissmanJoan WehlanWanda Wajniak AdamsBevilleCurtin AikmanBoatrightCuttle BohnClintonEarle BallCoxEichenbaum BanningCreightonEsperschmidt40ACTIVE GRADUATESSusan ElliottEthel LivingstonMarion SchoenfeldEster WeissRuth Young JUNIORSColumba GrazianRita Libermanjeanne MarksSo ph io Sorki nMarjory WaldsteinReva FrumkinBlanche LernerEunice WaprinNormo Yonover PLEDGESMyril HurwichCaryl I KousnetzCharlotte LandauReeva NovyElla OzeronPhyllis PeltzSarah RayorDella SilversteinRoselyn Smol i nMarjorie ThomasSENIORSjane Hirschfeldjean LevitanLila Miler SOPHOMORESLerner Levitan Liberman Marks Miller Silverstein Sorkin Y onoverFlynnMerkerPettyStevens HayesMolitorReynoldsStromwell LappMortensonRichardsSullivan A. MartinPetersRossThornston Martin McCarthyL. Peterson PetersonRome Barbara SmithTort Urbanek McMurryPetrieBeverly SmithWhiting MeganPetroneS. SmithWilson41SENIORSAlice CarlsonAnnette CuneoEdith DavisEloise HusmannPHI DELTA UPSILONSOPHOMORESBetty jane CharpierMary Elizabeth DavisElsie DrechslerMilly KeippelIris MillerPLEDGESHarriet EatonHelen jane EllsworthDorothy HoffmanLouise KachelMarjorie LiittEthel RasmussonCarlson E. DavisJUNIORSMargie DunnMarian HamlinShirley MooreAngela PerisichNadezdia Sabador jean RhodesDoris SiddallGeorgia TauberGeraldine WoutersHonorary Members:Mrs. M. jay ChapinMrs. Alice DuddyMrs. Alice E. ElanderMrs. Otis FisherMrs. Nina SandsMrs. Mary VilasMrs. Alma WildM. Davis Drechsler DunneESOTERIC•AmrheinCameron AndersonD. DanielsSENIORSMary jane AndersonMarjorie BergDoris DanielsMary HammelElinor LounsburyHenrietta MahonMadeline McNamaraMary Rice42 BeckwithF. Daniels G. BergDayton M. BergDunawayJUNIORSMargaret AmrheinGail Beckwithjean CameronMari lvn Daytonjoan DunawayMargaret ExterBeth FisherMary jane Geisert43HamlinRhodes HoffmanSiddall HusmannTauber KachelWoutersEatonKeippel EllsworthMooreHammelLounsburyReayTuell HibbardMahonRussellVan LiewHaightLathamRahillSteele HillerMcNamaraScanlonWagnerFisherHirschMullikenShimmin GeisertHowardPhillipsSimson Margery HibbardHelen HowardShirley LathamClarissa Rah i IIMary Louise ScanlonElizabeth ShimminSue SteeleSOPHOMORESFlorence DanielsAnn HaightNaneen HillerHelen HirschMary ReayBetty Van LiewJanet WagnerMargaret ZimmerPLEDGESGeraldine BergKay LawsonVirginia MullikenMartha Phi II ipsCarroll RussellBetty Lou SimsonDorothy TuellEdrey SmithCHI RHO 5 I GMA•Alder Allen Anderson Barlick Easton Harvey Hermes HowellAbrchornDuncanKuh BaneDicksonMcCarthy BothEatonMcKey BrooksHeadlandMahon BurtonHirschelMooney CaultonHooverOsborne DawesHowsonPatterson DonovanKreuderPearce44LandesMaskin LindleyMcCuePurvis ReeveSchwinn Simonini MacDonaldMcDowellScharbauThomsonQUADRANGLERSENIORSEva Betty AbrahamNan DicksonMary Elizabeth SnowPatricia WolfhopeJUNIORSjane ThomasMargery BrooksSh irley BurtonLouise EatonLuci lie HooverSOPHOMORESBarbara Quinn CoultonMerri I ee Dawesjoan DuncanMary Herscheljeanne KreuderBetsy KuhMarian McCarthyMEMBERSLibby McKeyMary OsborneAnn PattersonRosalie PhillipsMary RyersonElinor SchulzePLEDGESClark BaneVirginia BothDorothy DonovanBetty HeadlandLouise HowsonElizabeth MahonCarol MooneyHelen Pearcejayne RittenhouseGrace ShumwayMargaret StuartMary TrovillionPhillipsSchulzeThomas RittenhouseShumwayTrovillion RyersonStuartWolfhope45PHI BETA DELTAPHI BETA DELTASENIORSMarsha ThompsonDoris WiggerJUNIORLaura Lu T olstedPLEDGESMary Laura CollinsElizabeth CarneyEtta BrownEdith FlemingBernice HellerBarbara MonkBrown Carney Collins Fleming Heller Thompson Wigger46MARY ELAINEGRAHAM ROYDelta Sigma Alpha Epsilon IRIS LORRIANEMILLER KLEINPhi Delta Upsilon Sigma47FRATERNITIES<, ALPHA DELTA PHIBETA THETA PICHI PSI�DELTA KAPPA EPSILON�DELTA UPSILONKAPPA SIGMA�PHI DELTA THETA�PHI GAMMA DELTA�PHI KAPPA PSI� PHI KAPPA SIGMA� PHI SIGMA DEllAPI LAMBDA PHI�PSI UPSILONSIGMA CHI""ZETA BETA TAUKAPPA ALPHA PSI48INTERFRATERNITY COUNCILThe Interfraternity Council, existing mainly forthe purpose of regulating and coordinating thevarious fraternities, has widened the scope of itsactivities this year. In addition to regulatingrushing functions, the Council started off its term ofservice by cooperating with Interclub in the publi­cation of a booklet describing the advantages ofclubs and fraternities to freshmen. During theyear it sponsored a well-attended banquet atwhich Dean Brumbaugh told the Greeks his view­point on the fraternity system and included alongwith his criticisms some suggestions for improve­ment. Another successful innovation was thearranging of a series of talks given by Hugh Cole,expert military strategist, on the possibility ofinvasion of America and our part in the foreignsituation. I-F Council MeetingInterfraternity Banquet49ALPHA DELTA PHIFounded at Hamilton College, 18j 1.Chartered at Chicago in 1896.Faculty Members-Malcom Sharp, Ferdinand Sharp, E. V. L. Brown, Gordonj. Laing, Ernest Price, Edgar J Goodspeed, Arthur Bovee, Charles O.Gregory, Samuel Harper, Reger T. Vaughn, and Robert M. Hutchins.MEMBERSSENIORSjohn Argalljohn FralickHomer Havermalejoseph HowardLouis LettsCharles MoweryWallace OttomeyerCharles PercyCarl NohlWilliam MalinowskiJUNIORSArthur BethkeLester DeanRobert DeanLyle HarperNeil johnstonPaul jordan jerry MorrayCalvin SawyierPaul SmithHoward KaminRobert HigginsSOPHOMORESjohn AngeloGeorge DrakeDavid DurkeeGeorge FlanaganLindsay Leachjames MathesonRichard MerrifieldWilliam OstenburgRichard PhilbrickRichard ReedMilton RobinsonDavid SmithFront-Leach, Blakeslee, Reed, Matheson, Merrifield,Allen, Robinson.Back-R. Smith,Osstenbrug, Angelo, Stierer, Flanagan,D. Smith.Front-McWhorter, Johnston, Jordan, Sawyier.Middle-Taylor, Kamin, Meade, Bethke, P. Smith.Back-L. Dean, Morray. Robert SmithRobert StiererRobert ThompsonSimon AllenPLEDGESRobert AtkinsDavid BrownCarl BueRobert DilleThomas Hoegenjohn jorgensonHoward HusumWalter MichelWilliam McNicholsRobert SmidlEarl WheelerRobert Van EttenRobert ChristyIndividuals-Argall, Fralick, Mowery, Percy.Front-Smidl, Michels, Hoegen, Van Etten, Dille,Atkins.Back-Wheeler, McNichols, Husum, Christy.50BETA THETA PHIFounded at Miami University, 1839.Chartered at Chicago in 1892.Faculty Counselor-Merle C. Coulter. Faculty Members-Arthur Barnard,Merle Coulter, Howard Dunkel, Dr. Samuel Slaymaker, William H.Taliaferro, Winifred E. Garrison, Norman Maclean.SENIORSFrank J Harrison, Jr.John E. WilsonFrantz WarnerJohn P- JeffersonJUNIORSDaniel S. BarnesEugene R. LaterRichard OrrEarl M. RatzerJohn B. ZurmuehlenGregory HeddenIndividuals-Harrison, Jefferson, Wi Ison.Front-Dewey, Randolph, MacBride, Taylor, Sutton,Wi IIott, Senz.Back-Theis, Johnson. MEMBERSSOPHOMORESJohn J MongersonCharles MatherCharles DarraghEdwin H. ArmslrongJerome P. ScheidlerRobert Krcvb: IIPLEDGESJack BergerHugh Bonar.lohn A. CrawfordDon Dewey Lucien FitzgeraldGeorge Dana Jo hnsonCharles W. SuttonJohn D. TaylorRichard TaylorDonald E. ThiesJames A. WillottStephen lewellynRichard LieberJohn McBrideRobert MillerAlexander RandolphEdward SenzOrr, Warner, Heddon, Zurmuehlen, Ratz�r, Barnes,Taylor, Later.Front-Bonar, Mongerson, Mather, Kraybill.Back-Crawford, Scheidler.51Faculty Counselot+-kichcrd Hickey. Faculty Members­Fred Barrows,. Charles Child, Clark Finnerud,Richard Gamble, Walter Payne, William Watson,Richard Hickey.MEMBERSSENIORS Robert SagerRobert Clark Robert WeedfallWilliam Kester SOPHOMORESRalph Parks john CookGlenn Pierre Howard Hellerjames Richard Robert HullWilliam Westenberg Robert LawsonJUNIORS jay MullinPeter Briggs Frank Richardjames Degan PLEDGESNeill Emmons Morton BryantGerald Gingrich George HoldenDonald Marrow Melvin SmithBaxter Richardson William Vassar CHI PSIFounded at Union College, 1841.Chartered at Chicago in 1898.Smith, Bryant, Holden, Vassar.In::lividuals-Kester, Parks, Pierre.Heller, Mullen, Cook, Lawson.Front--Emmons, Sager, Richardson, Degan.Back-Marrow, Gingrich, Weedhll.52DELTA KAPPA EPSILONFounded at Yale in 1844.Chartered at Chicago in 1893.Faculty Advisor- Wellington D. Jones. Faculty Members--GilbertA. Bliss, Carl D. Buck, A. N. Freeman, H. G. Gale, Charles.Judd, Elmer Kenyon, Preston Keys, Frank McNair, ShailerMatthews, Wellington D. Jones.53 Front-R. A. Miller, Pyle, Lynch, Warfield, R. C. Miller.Middle-Siebert, C. Traeger, Frey, Thompson.Back-Hackett, Thorburn, Mitchell.Front-Folks, Leggitt, Boyd, Long, McCormick.Middle-NorriS, Morris, G. Lauerman, Raiman.Back-Gordon, Baugher, Ragle, Kincheloe.Front-Fox, Theimer, Shilton, Baker, Zerrier.Middle-Hansen, E. Lauerman, Tozer, Northrup,Barker, Lineberger.Back-BurriS, Leman, Moore, G. Traeger, Graham.Individuals-Matthews, Steinbach, Thomas, Tillery,Traeger, Wilson, Wolf.SENIORSRalph AshleyCharles BrownRobert CarterAlan Darling, Jr.Thomas GallanderGeorge GirtonRobert MatthewsRaleigh SteinbachHillard ThomasDale TilleryLawrence TraegerDonald WilsonWalter WolfJUNIORSJames FreyJoseph HackettFrank LynchRobert A. MillerRobert C. MillerCarroll PyleDavid SiebertJohn ThompsonRobert ThorburnClayton TraegerDonald WarFieldSOPHOMORESWilliam BaugherCharles Boyd, Jr.Eugene Folks MEMBERSHarold GordonRobert KincheloeGeorge LauermanJohn Legg ittVincent Long, Jr.Clyde LorenzWarren LorenzThierry McCormickBruce MitchellHenry MorrisJohn RagleRobert RaimanRex ThompsonPLEDGESRalph BakerNorman Barker, Jr.Allen BurrisKirk FoxStephen GrahamMartin HansonEdward LauermanCraig LemanRobert Li nebergerQuentin MooreGordon NorthrupJohn ShiltonJohn SponselErie Theimer, Jr.Forrest TozerGordon TraegerStanley ZeITlerDELTA UPSILONFounded November 4, 1834 at Williams.Chartered at Chicago, January 5, 1901.Faculty Counselors-fay-Cooper Cole, Harvey Lemon, Bertram Nelson.Faculty Members� Fred Adair, Charlton Beck, Fay-Cooper Cole, John Cover,Paul Douglas, Charles Gilkey, Willis Gouwens, Karl Holzinger, HilgerJenkins, Simeon Leland, Harvey Lemon, Lyndon Lesch, Robert Lovett,G. L. McWhorter, Harvey Mallory, William Mather, Edwin Miller,John Moulds, Bertram Nelson, Wilbur Post, "Henry Prescott, ConyersRead, George Works.MEMBERSSENIORSGordon AndersonJohn CraneEllsworth FarisWillard HarrisJames HillFielding Ogburn. George RinderRobert SmalleyRobert StraetzEvon VogtRichard Wilson JUNIORSGeorge ArthurRobin BuerkiGeorge CourrierGeorge CurlJames McClureGeorge NardiJake SwansonSOPHOMORESPaul ArmbrusterGeorge BallaAlfred BjorklandDonald Boyes James DemetryCarl DragstedtJack FitzgeraldMeritt GwinnWalter KemeticDonald MicksHarlan NaasDonald RandaAshton TenneyRobert TullyReed WhipplePLEDGESRobert ArensIndividuals-Crane, Harris, Ogburn, Hill, Rinder,Vogt, Wilson.Front-Balla, Boyes, Kemetick, Armbruster, Demetry.Back-Dragstedt, Tully, Randa, Gwinn, Whipple. Edward CooperiderLuther CooperiderGrover DalyDaniel EnersonEugene GleasonThomas HayArch HoyneFrank KellyMarshall NannigaDunlap OlesonJames StevensJames SutherlandHarry Tully •Front-Swanson, Arthur, Buerki, McClure.Back-Nardi, Curl, Smalley, Courrier.Front-Stevens, Kemetick, Hoyne, Gleason, Kelly.Middle-Sutherland, Arens, Nanninga.Back-Tully, Hay, Oleson.54KAPPA 5 I GMAFounded at the University of Virginia, December 10, 1869 ..Chartered at the University of Chicago on March 11, 1904.Faculty Advisor-james L. Palmer. Faculty Members-G. W. Bartlemez,Edward Duddy, L. M. C Hanson, james L. Palmer, W. A Thomas,Emmet Bay.MEMBERSSENIORSWayne BoutellEdward CernyNorman FosterBruce HowatBob HughesWalter KirkWilliam PaulingHarry ReadJUNIORSWalter Barlowjack /Edelbrock George Mayrose .AI ShnoorBill VollmerAlvin BullakSOPHOMORESGuy Centnerjohn Dwyerjohn DyerRoy EmeryDonald HawkinsIvan KeeverFank KennyFront-Schlageter, Edelbrock, Barlow.Back-Vollmer, Schnoor.Front-Noble, Dwyer, Dyer, Centner.Back-Swansbro, Beattie. Front-BickFord, Franklin, Mayrose, Erickson.Back-Wuesthoff, F. Smith, B. Smith, Phillips, Campiche.lndividucls=-Soutell, Cerny, Foster, Howat, Hughes,Kirk, Pauling.55 Bob MooreCharles NobleWilliam SwansbroHubert WuestoltFred BeattiePLEDGESjack CampicheEric EricksonMort FranklinNorman PhillipsBob SmithFrank SmithPaul BickfordIndividuals-Baumgart, Bex, Bimson, Castles, Doolittle,Peterson, Reker, Walker.Vineyard, Robert Oakley, J. Walsh, Blakeman, Bulot,Greenwald, Kruger.PHI DELTA Front-Blackwell, McKinsey, Ray Oakley( Tedrow.Back-D. Smith, Beach, A. Smith, Teague, Hand, L.Smith.Front-Erickson, McKnight, GustaFson, Sauer, Nye.Back-Axelson, Muir, Dabbert, Dahlberg, Randall, Hull,Humphreville, Finney.THETAFounded at Miami University, 1848.Chartered at Chicago, 1897.Faculty Advisor-Carey Croneis. Members in the Faculty--Walter Blair,Carey Croneis, Stanley Gordon, john H. Kamler, Thomas Park.MEMBERSSENIORSPaul Baumgartjohn BexLloyd BrimsonRobert BrownRobert Castlesjohn DoolittleRobert LewisAndrew PetersonFrank RekerAlan TeagueRobert WalkerBen WilliamsJUNIORSHarry BeachWilliam BlackwellKenneth GeppingerRobert Gruhn Chester HandRobert McKinseyRaymond OakleyDavid Smithjames TedrowWarren WilnerHotten YoderSOPHOMORESKenneth AxelsonAlbert DabbertRobert EricksonRichard FinneyWilliam GodsaveFred GustafsonRichard HullEugene HumphrevilleDonald McKnightRobert NyeRaymond Randall james TrowPLEDGESjoseph BexLloyd BI·akemanWells BowerTruman DahlbergWarren GreenwoldWilliam KrugerEdward MuirRobert OakleyClarence SauerLyle SmithBenjamin Vineyardjohn WalshRobert WalshBruce WarnockFOREIGN EXCHANGESTUDENTAlan Smith56Front-Dwyer, Riddle, Scott, Hutchin­son.Back-Parisi, Rider, Harmon, Lopatka,McCracken.Front-Wisely, W. PFeil, H. PFeil, Har­rison.Back-De Lorenzo, Briggs, French, Pitt­man, Price.PHI GAMMA DELTAFounded at Jefferson College, Cannonsburg, Pennsylvania, 1848.Chartered at Chicago, 1902Faculty Counselor--Zens Smith. Faculty Members--Zens Smith, RollinChamberlain, F. J Mullin, Frank O'Hara.MEMBERSSENIORSHarry BennerThomas R. FrenchArthur J LopatkaJoseph MarkusichMarvin S. PittmanWilliam E. PriceJUNIORSFrank BrunnerArmand Donian Thomas A. DvorskyAlexander HarmonFrancis D. MartinCharles Paltzer, Bernard PloshayJ Alfred RiderAllen N. WiseleySOPHOMORESGeorge E. BancroftRodney D. BriggsRobert De Lorenzo William WrightPLEDGESRobert AssumpacoRobert DwyerPaul HarrisonThomas HillDominic ParisiHartley PfeilWallace PfeilRobert ScottGeorg's Van Riper57PHI KAPPA PSIFounded at Jefferson College, 1852.Chartered at Chicago in 1894.Faculty Counselor--Gerald Bentley. Faculty Members-Charles Beeson, Gerald Bentley, Algernon, ColemanVernon David, Robert Park, Everett Olson.Front-Palmer, Bates, Zahrn, Evans, Monaghan.Back-Petty, Highman, Munger, Hoatson, Van Horne,P. Reynolds.Front-Cummins, Williams, Arquilla, Strick.Back-Deacon, Smith, White.Front-Meager, D. Reynolds, Bell, Erley, Kahoun.Back-Heinichen, Kistner, Wrobel, Oliver.In::lividuals-Abrohamson, Hankla, Lovell, Molkup.58 MEMBERSSENIORSMaurice Abrahamson-AI GreenWilliam HanklaVictor johnsonWilliam LovellCharles Luckowjoseph MolkupCharles SainsburyGeorge Stier�UNIORSz'Guido ArquillaRobert Cumminsjohn DeaconBruce DicksonAlFred GentzlerRobert O'Donnell'Chester SmithPhil Strickjohn WhiteSOPHOMORESLawrence Bates-Thomas EvansRobert Highman�mes HoatsonRobert MonaghanNed MungerEdward NelsonStuart PalmerDavid PettyPaul ReynoldsWilliam SelFWilliam Van HorneFred ZahrnPLEDGESWilliam BellWalter ErleyHenry HeinichenTed KistnerWayne MeagerRobert OliverRichard ReynoldsFrank Wrobeljack KahounPHI KAPPA S I CMAFounded at the University of Pennsylvania, 1850Chartered at Chicago in 1905Faculty Counselor--Robert L. Dixon. Faculty Members­Charles C. Colby, Robert L. Dixon.MEMBERSSENIORSWayne ArnoldHarry BigelowClyde MoonieRobert PearsonWilson ReillyCharles YoungFront - Nelson, Shreve, Ford,Knuepfer, Reilly, Moonie.Back-Schaeffer, Rothrock, Rus­sell, Bigelow, Stephens, Stan­cher, Hippchen.Individual-Bigelow. JUNIORSWilliam Nelson, jr.jack ShreveSOPHOMORESReed Bu ffi ngtonAlvin ConwayGilbert FordVaughan Grable Charles HippchenLarry JohnsDavid RothrockLee RussellWesley StancherPLEDGESjack Knuepferjohn Stephens59PHI 5 I CMA DELTAFounded at Columbia University, 1909.Chartered at Chicago in 1921.Alumni Advisor-Louis Landa.MEMBERSSENIORSMorton Postel neckGeorhe SchatzMilton WeissArt WolffJUNIORSTed BellMarshal BlumenthalLawrence CohenLester GootnickStanley LevySOPHOMORESWilliam BartmanArno!d GoldbergWilfred HalperinBernard HolzmanMorton PierceTed RosenLeonard ShaneFront-Solomon, Fisher, Holland.Middle-Barrash, Zimit, Baum, Rosen.Back-Shane, Pierce, Glabman.Front-Simon, Holzman, Bell, Levy.Middle-Rosenfeld, Goldberg, Fink, Mich.Back-Halperin, Blumunthal, Cohen.Individuals-Weiss, Wolff. PLEDGESSol GoldbergMarshall GoldbergMeyer BaraschWerner BaumLenny Fisherjack GlabmanWes HollandSanford MaremontH. james SolomanMarvin Zimit60PI LAMBDAFounded at Yale University, 1895.Chartered at Chicago in 1919. PHIFaculty Counselor---Ralph Gerard.MEMBERSSENIORSMilton FrieslebenWilliam HochmanRobert Lezakjulian LowensteinRollo Richman Solomon KamenskyWilliam LevyDavid LazarusSOPHOMORESMaurice BilskyHarold GreenbergerEdward HornerRobert jacobsjames KraneLeo LichtenbergJUNIORSjoel BernsteinRobert GreenbergFront-Kamensky, Krane.Back--Bernstein, Lazarus, Levy, Greenberg.Front-Pregler, Baron, Mandel.Back-Unger, Greenberger, Horner, Bilsky. Individual-Richman.Front-Wishner, Weber.Back-Daskal, Folk, Rubell.61 Herbert MandelRobert PreglerAlbert UngerPLEDGESMelvin DaskalGene Folkjames Frankeltori RubellGene WeberMaynard WishnerPSI UPSILONFounded at Union College, 1833.Chartered at Chicago, 1869Faculty Counselor-james Stifler. Faculty Members-Storss,Barrett, William Bond, Percy Boynton, Harold Gosnell,james Herrick, George Howland, Henry Morrison,Edward OliverMEMBERSSENIORSEdward FahertyGreg HuffakerRobert .jornpolisWilliam KimballRobert McNameeHugh RendlemanRichard SalzmannAI SchmusRoy Stantonjohn StevensBaird WallisJUNIORSRichard BolksDan CrabbWilliam GiblerAlan GravesHarold Lutzkejay NicholsKenneth MaclellanRichard MatthewsRobert I<eynoldsleonard SennSOPHOMORESjoseph von AlbadeWilliam BarnardRobert BeanMark Beaubienjohn CrosbyFrank Evans Sam FawleyWilliam FralickGeorge KrakowkaRobert MeyerBradley PattersonCharles PohlzonPLEDGESDonald AbelHillier BakerRichard BakerDaniel BarnardMarshall BarnardSearle BarryThomas Claragejohn CulpHarold HarwoodDuval jaroslyle johnsonRichard jonesErnest KellerKenneth MonsonRobert MurrayPaul PaulsonDavid SchoenfeldBenjamin SuttonCharles IidholrnRobert WadlundDaniel WilkersonMalcolm WoodVvtold jasusFront-lutzke, Reynoldst Maclellan, Nichols.Back-Senn, Graves, Crobb, Bolks, Gibler, Matthews .• - 'Front-Meyer, Evans, Crosby, Fawley, Bean, von Albade.Back-W. Barnard, Beaubien, Fralick, Patterson.Front-H. Baker, Tidholm, jaros, Ycsus, M. Barnard, Wood,Middle-jones, Abel, Sutton, Culp, Clarage, R. Baker.Back-johnson, Monson, Paulson, Wadlund, Harwood,. Barry, Schoenfeld, D, Barnard.Individuals-R. Evans, Huffaker, jampolis, Kimball, Mc­Nomee, Rendleman.Side-Salzmann, Schmus, Stanton, Stevens, Wallis.62Graduate MEMBERSRobert FisherTheodore StritterSENIORSBenjamin CoyteRichard jareckiThomas R. luskDonald Olsonjoseph Stampflee TennysonWillard WoehlckJUNIORSWinston AlsopRobert BowersRobert EastWalter KearneyWilliam MacleanWilliam O'leary.john UmbsFred WangelinSOPHOMORESRichard CassellThomas Cottrell Charles Hurstjohn TureanVincent Von HenkeEugene WarnerPLEDGESjohn BaumanFrancis BuhlF. Donald ClausDonald CoeWilliam DaimickeUrchie EllisFrank Ethertonlewis johnsonConstanti ne KontosAngelo TestaGordon TullochPaul Becker 5 I CMA CHIFounded at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, 1855.Chartered at Chicago, 1897Faculty Counselor-Volney Wilson. Faculty Members-CarlAplelbcch, Carey Culbertson, justin Glathart, WilliamHarkins, Frederick Koch, Rollo lyman, Horatio Newman,Charles Shannon, Eugene Trant, Volney Wilson.Individual-lusk.Front-East, Umbs, Coyte, Maclean, Bowers.Back- Jerecki, O'leary;Front-Cattrell, Fisher, Casse.ll.Back-Hurst, Warner.Front-Becker, Johnson, Ellis, Klaus.Back-Tullock, Coe, Kontos, Bowman, De-nike.63ZETA BETA TAUFounded at the College of the City of New York, 1898.Chartered at Chicago, 1918.Faculty Advisor·-·Mandel Sherman.SENIORSHarold AronsonArnold HasterlikMorton SiobinHart WurzburgJUNIORSCharles Bluesteinjay FoxGerald HahnMyles .jorrov,Richard KahlIndividual-AronsonFront-Jacobson, Olum, Levin, Claster.Back-Gelinsky, Leonard, Sa bath, Siottow, Diamond. MEMBERSMarvin Mitchell Gene SiottowHoward Winkelman PLEDGESRaymond WittcoffSOPHOMORESStanley ClasterIrving DiamondDavid EllbogenGeorge Gilinskyjames LeonardRichard LevinDaniel Sabath jerome BornsteinRalph EttlingerWalter GoodmanWalter Grodvjulien Isaacsjoseph jacobsonKenneth OlumRichard WallensStanley WarsawFront-Mitchell, Winkelman, Kahl.Back-Fox, Bluestein, Hahn, Jarrow, Witcoff.Front-Bornstein, Goodman, Warsaw.Back-Grody, Isaac, Wallens, Ettlinger.64KAPPA ALPHA PSIMEMBERSGRADUATES Clarence C. jamison L. Curtiss WashingtonMaurice Baptiste William Winters Sherman WhiteCornelius Brown Thomas Bogar SOPHOMORESNathanel Calloway john Rogers Marmaduke CarterHarold Gilbert Henry Whitlock Meredith johnsjesse Reed JUNIORS Thomas PittsJ. Ernest Wilkins, Sr. Thomas Duncan Fred SengstackeLucius W. Wimby Orlando Flowers Maceo WardKenneth Washington Steven A. johns Harry BaileySENIORS james johnson PLEDGESOliver W. Crawford Raymond McCants Thomas CoatesFaburn DeFrantz, jr. Maurice ScottFront-Reed, Gilbert, Wilkins, S. Johns.Back-Washington, DeFrantz,Crawford,Sengstacke, White, Jamison.Front-MeCanto, Pitts, M. Johns, Bailey.Ward, Duncan.Back-Rogers, Scott, Coates, Carter,Flowers.6566AUTUMN SPORTSSIX MANKyle AndersonAn end to the Chicago Football controversywas reached last fall when the Athletic Depart­ment, after considerable discussion, announcedthe adoption of six-man football as an experiment.Immediately arrangements we remade for aregular Intramural program of this Fast, excellentbut, until then, I ittle-publ icized game. KyleAnderson, vcrsitv baseball coach, took over the jobof supervising the play.All the University's standard football equipmentwas made available For players, and several grid- FOOTBALLirons of the six-man size were laid out on StaggField. According to the players, size, strength,and plain "beef" count for much' less in "PeeweePigskin", as they nicknamed the new game, thanspeed, skill, finesse, and brainwork. Because theplayers found it easy to form six-man teams theyplunged into the program with a will, and theAthletic Department, which had been under pres­sure for nearly nine months, relaxed as the veryfirst week proved the experiment an unmitigatedsuccess.Almost immediately, Anderson saw the advis­ability of Forming two leagues because of anobvious disparity in ability of his men. The noviceleague included four teams: Red Devils, Gophers,Bears, and Unexpecteds. A red-hot four-cornereddogfight saw the teams meet several times a week,with the Red Devils.Iincllv nosing out the Gophersfor the unofficial title. The Bears came in third.Two of the teams played an exhibition game atHomecoming.The heavier, older, and for the most part moreexperienced men in the advanced circuit Foundthat the eleven-man game was more suited to theirstyles of play, so the c+hletic department arrangedinformal scrimmages with other schools in the area.After dropping the opener to the American Col­lege of Physical Education, 12-6, these grid war­riors finished out their season undefeated.For the time being, the athletic program For fall68quarter has proved adequate, but it may be evenfurther expanded. The most significant fact in thewhole Football controversy is that this Fall moreuniversity men played the grid game than in anyyear of the past. Bob FitzgeraldBob GruhnDuke HarlanSix Man AwardsPaul Armbruster Hal HarwoodHilliard Baker Fred .jorosGeorge Balla Fred Kochjohn Bauman Conny KontosBob Bean julian LevinsonEd Cooperrider Bob ReynoldsLou Cooperrider Isaac RoosenWin Bostik Bob SimondWarren Daboll Bob Stein Ralph BakerGeorge BasichChuck BoydAI BurrisTom Dvorskyjack Glabmanjohn Ivyjohn Keller Ben Suttonjoseph Von Albadejim WillotVytold YasusEleven Man AwardsAdam KosaczBob MeyerNick ParisiBill SappBaird WallisBob WeinbergMerritt GwinDuke HarlanTed Howe69AUTUMN INTRAMURALSMathewsFront-Nicholas, Lynch.Back-Schlaghter, Gentzler, Goldberg, Schnoor, Warfield.Front-Traeger.Back-Wolf, Mathews, Rinder. Guiding the activities of the University's mostextensive extra-curricular program, Intramurals, isa group of four men led by Chairman Bob Mathewsand including Larry Traeger, Arthur Wolfe, andGeorge Rinder. They formulate Intramural policy,arbitrate and decide on disputes, and effect allchanges in the program. Well-qualified facultyChairman Wally Hebert is the actual drive behindIntramurals. With legendary efficiency and ex­actitude he placates those who feel that their clubshave received the short end of some questionabledeal, and settles all questions of eligibility.The brunt of the work falls on the shoulders ofeight junior managers, each of whom is assigneda sport a quarter. They write letters to campusorganizations with information on rules and regula­tions, and draw up the schedule or pairings. Afterthe season a report including statistics, play-offdrawings, and the manager's opinion of thecompetition is turned over to Wally Hebert.Touchball was the main sport of the fall quarter.There were seven entries from independent circles,four from the dorms, and twenty-two teams fromfraternities. Bad weather and an early winterforced postponement of play-offs, but the teamsFinished just before ThanksgiVing.The semi-Finals found the powerful Phi Gamsbeating the Alpha Delts, and the Phi Delts whip­ping Pi Lam. This brought the Fijis and Phi Deltstogether for the championship tilt. In as excitinga battle as intramural history has known Phi GamFinally outclassed its opponent.In the Independent circu it playoff four outfitsquclilied. The final battle found the Elites, arelatively new athletic group composed mainlyof First and second year men, beating the Aristo­telians for the league title. Elites then whippedjudson Court, dorm standard bearer, earning theright to play Phi Gam for the University Champ­ionship.Fiji players had ability, poise, confidence, andexperience. Probably not sowell-coordinated,theElites had great natural ability plus the bestpassing combination the season produced, Smidlto jorgenson. The lead changed three times in a70battle replete with thrills, but at the final whistlethe score card showed Elite on top, 25-19. Forthe second time in seventeen years of touchball anindependent organization won the crown.In a season when so many men stood out thereferees had a difficult time picking an All-Starunit. After rnrch discussion they chcse not one,but three.The first team is probably the best in individualability. Smidl and jorgenson, always spoken ofas a unit because they worked so well together,easily captured two positions. Speed, cleverness,and deceptive ball-handling made Art Lopatkathe best individual performer of the year. AnotherPhi Gam and all-star repeater was shifty ArmandDonian, field-general and passing star of his greatteam. AI Wisely, Phi Gam, proved his worth byhis dogged determination and all around play.Warren Lorenz, Deke and team-player extra­ordinary, was a remarkable pass-receiver andvery dangerous in the open. Ben Wilcox, big gunof the Phi Delt attack, completes this powerful unit.A good field general, Wilcox developed theoriginal Phi Delt shift, a constant headache toconfused opponents.The second and third All-Star teams were unitsthat could probably play just about as good ballas the first team.On the second team were: Slater-Geology,Shaver-EI ite, Li fton-Aristotel ians, Feldman-Aristo­telians, Nohl-Alpha Delt, Ottomeyer:Alpha Delt,and Krone-Pi Lam. On the third team were:Wiegel jailbirds, Paine - judson, WagenbergAristotelians, McCracken-Phi Gam, Rider-Phi Gam,Greenberg-Pi Lam, and Bernstein Pi Lam.The annual Intramural swimming tournament tookplace early in December, with the competitorsdivided into novice and advanced groups to in­crease participation and give the less experienceda chance. The result of the experiment was thelargest meet in I-M history. Due to a number ofsuccesses in the advanced group, Deke won themeet by a very comfortable margin. Burton Courtand Alpha Delt came in second and third.In the so-called minor sports, lawn bowling wasan important innovation this year. Roy Emeryemerged as champion after a short eliminationtournament, with John Cook coming in second.71Ernie Brogmus, last year's individual champ, sweptthe horseshoe tourney. Golf and tennis tourna­ments suffered from inclement weather and finallyhad to be postponed until spring.When intramural bowling was announced, someof the larger fraternities entered as many as twentyteams. A quick conference with Wally Hebertconvinced the Board that a revision of the partici- pation point system was in order. Under the newsystem, the advantage gained by entry of more thanfive or six teams was so negligible that sixty outfitsdropped from competition, but a record number offifty-three teams played for the title. The semi­finals found Phi Gam and Phi Psi beating AlphaDelt and Phi Sig.. The Fijis then proceeded totake the University crown by a clean-cut victoryover Ph i Psi.72CELEBRATIONS73FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATIONAUNCHED into its quinquagesimacelebration with "warmest con­gratulations for the fiftieth anni­versary of your world-famous(" institution" cabled from Czecho-" slovakia's Dr. Edward Benes, theUniversity of Chicago began a year of celebrationand campaigning. ""We are cejebrotinq the completion of success­ful years of displaying the enduring value of idealsfor which the university is a symbol," said PresidentHutchins in his now historical speech at the initialcommemorative service. The service in RockefellerMemorial Chapel was a most satisfactory begin­ning to a glorious year, opening as it did with aprocessional of trustees, faculty members, andalumni, whose many-colored mortar boards andgowns blowinq in the October breeze were color­fully Significant of the far spreading fame andirnportonce that the University has gained in thelast fifty yearsReminiscent for oldsters the following month wasthe successful "Deceitful Dean," a revival of thefamous play written by Teddy Linn and ElizabethWallace, and brought to the stage for the thirdtime in forty-one years, under the auspices of theUniversity Settlement Board. Hilariously funny,Dean Randall, Dean Smith, and other of the digni­fied faculty members entered wholly into the spiritof the antics. The play, along with the MaroonCarnival that turned the Field House into the GayNinety period, rescued the first football-less home­coming weekend from social inconsequence.Thus were the months of October and Novemberrepresentative of the coming veor.. ViSitors fromeverywhere were encouraged to have some partin the university's glory; national associations ofsocieties from those of home economics through thejunior colleges to those of church history havehad meetings in and around the University.Visitors saw the exhibits which have been pre­pared to illustrate the leadership of the school inlaboratory research, world-wide investigations,and methods of teaching. They thrilled to the viewof the great atom-smashing cyclotron in Eckhart and the repl ica of McDonald astronomical observatoryin Ryerson, the extension medical displays in Bil­lings, and others of early Christian art, modernpoetry, microphotography, geology, and modernforgeries.Musically, the anniversary sponsorship broughttwo productions. The orchestra, under Dr. Levarie,and the choir members gave "The Armorer," ahighly successful operetta. A triumph for MackEvans and his choir was the February broadcastconcert with the Chicago Symphony orchestra, afiftieth anniversary presentation.As the year progressed came the day whichmarked the anniversary of President Harper's letterof acceptance, significant because it was part ofthe quandary of the officials of the celebration.Two other dates from fifty years ago were of primeimportance; the quarter when President Harpertook office, and that when the doors opened to thestudents.To steer a middle course, the celebration wasconcentrated on the spring, 1941, university weekand will be again on a similar one the followingSeptember. Students, parents, and lriends wereinvited to share in the week of activities in therealms of the four divisions of scholarship. Moreimportant is the September celebration planned toinclude Alumni Day, luncheons, a University Sing,and chapel service. Delegates will be receivedat that time and there will be an anniversary con­vocation with the awarding of honorary degrees.Last, but not least, is the campaign for fundswhich has forged ahead all year under the direc­tion of Mr. Donald P Beau. Twofold in its efforts,it appeals on one side to alumni for endowmentsand on the other to loyal and appreciative students.Mr. Frederick Woodward spoke at innumerableluncheons and radio programs, ernphosizino theimportant features of university activity. Effortshave even been successful among alumni in theHawaiian Islands and the Philippines. On cam­pus, merry and profitable rummage sales, hag-stagdances, home movies, and boisterous coke-sellingin the dormitories proved that the students wereready to match the alumni in co-operation to thefullest to prove their appreciation.7475HOMECOMINGIt was a fortunate turn for Chicago's annualHomecoming that the 1940-41 season was alsothe Fiftieth Anniversary of the founding of theUniversity.In keeping with the theme of the celebration, themotif was the Floradora days of Maroon inception,culminating in a Gay Nineties Carnival. For thesecond time in half a century the Midway saw ferris-wheels, merry-go-rounds, brightly lit con­sessions and felt the general spirit of carnival.Traditionally, Botany pond furnished its annualdebauchery of mud, torn clothes, and soaking sub­juniors, and Homecoming queen Peggy Flynnpresented cups to Dke, Ouadrangler, and DU,winners of Victory Vanities and the decorationscontest.WolFhope Peacock Flynn Rathje RoFf76INTERFRATERNITY BALLLEADERS:Charles PercyRuth SteelGreg HuffakerDonna Culliton77MILITARY TRAININGLeave it to the University of Chicago men to beprepared for everything, including the draft. Evenbefore the Selective Service went into eltect,William Mather was busy organizing a coursewhich would teach the students what they neededto know in order to keep pace with the army. Itwould limber the boys up for their gruelling yearahead and get them used to "reveille" and"double-time march."The Basic Military Training Course began itsfirst session in the Spring Quarter 1941. EveryFriday night from seven o'clock until ten, threecompanies of men gathered at the field house todrill. Back and forth they marched, and at the command of attention they stood, hands at theirsides, chests out, stomachs in, a hearty lookingbunch even in the eyes of a sergeant. From a bookon "Basic Military Tactics," they learned thefundamentals of warfare. Movies of troop move­ments illustrated various aspects of army life toconvince the students that one year in the armywas not going to be so bad.Then in May, to prove that what they hadlearned was practical, the class went on an ex­cursion. For two days they camped out and ap­plied all they had acquired during the course.They practiced scrimmages and attacks, and evenlearned to like their own cooking. It was morefun than work and all part of the plan to get themen used to a visored cap and four four time.78CHRISTMAS PAGEANTOn the evening of December FiFteenth and sixteenth the University ofChicago choir presented the annual Christmas Pageant in the RockeFellerMemorial Chapel. The magniFicent voices of the soloists and the remarkablelighting eFFects made this one of the most outstanding of all the nativityplays in the history of the choir. As the rich tones of the reader, Mr. NorrisTibbetts, related the Christmas story, the play in pantomime unFolded.The seven scenes centered around the Following themes: a Dance ForAdvent, the Annunciation, the MagniFicat, the Road to Bethlehem, theShepherds and the Angel, the Advent, and the Adoration of the ChildEmmanuel. The service closed with the presentation of Christmas giftsby the audience and unison singing of Familiar carols by the choir and thecongregation.Miss Katherine Manning of the Physical Education department composedthe two dances which she presented, assisted by Caroline Brazen andHelaine Moses. The sequence of the play was arranged by Mock Evans,Director of the Chapel MUSic, and the music was in part arranged by him.Charles Stephenson and Oliver Statler handled the lighting.79 � . r:��'�� c�\�80WINTER QUARTER ACTIVITIESThe usual lull after Christmas never affects thestudents at the University of Chicago, for theyreturn to school in january, fresh from a NewYear's Eve hangover, raring to begin the biggestsocial whirl of the year.The men at Burton-judson Court set the paceby giving a colossal formal late in january. Aseven course meal and the melodious music of theColonial Club Orchestra kept the couples eatingand dancing until the wee small hours. A goodtime was had by all, for no sooner had the sunrisen on this dance than the men at the dorms began enthusiastically planning a repeat performance inthe spring.But the campus did not have to wait that longfor an exciting event, for the Skull and CrescentDance, the annual activity of th.e sophomoresociety, was scheduled for the very next week-end.Having it at Ida Noyes Hall and insisting on nocorsages for the girls have become traditions ofthis affair, but they did not keep this year's groupfrom giving an original and even better dancethan ever.Not to be outdone, the club women decided to82add to the season's jollity by giving a noteworthyInter-Club Ball. On the first Friday in February,couples streamed into the Congress Hotel. Cock­tai I parties given QY the various clubs had precededthe dance and insured a gay time during theevening.The big event of the evening, however, wasthe announcement of the winners of the DailyMaroon's Mardi Gras Contest. Patty Wolfhopeand Dave Wiedemann, glamour girl and boy ofthe campus took their bows amid great applause,while the chairman consoled the losers by sayingthat Dave Wiedemann won by only four votes.John Bex, the campus wonder boy, lately oustedfrom the Maroon, heard the tabulations and earlyMonday morning protested to Dean Randall thathe alone had submitted more votes for the Phi Deltcandidate than the winner had received. TheMaro()n, with a sudden pang of conscientiousness,admitted an error in the counting of votes, andRay Oakley became the new glamour boy. JohnBex gloated triumphantly, while Patty Wolfhopesighed sadly. There was no glamour for her in atrip to New Orleans without Dave, so she re- linquished her prize to Donna Culliton, runner-upamong the women.After Inter-Club, the crowd adjourned to Dave'sCafe, thus running the proverbial gamut from theritz to the dives. University of Chicago night owlshad also discovered Lionel Hampden at the GrandTerrace and were gathering there on every occa­sion to hear real jive.Then on the eve of Washington's birthday, thestudents celebrated "the" event of the year,Washington Prom. A big publicity campaign hadbeen busy for weeks arousing interest in the dance.Buddy Bates had a face full of cherries winningthe pie-eating contest, and a score of socialiteshad crashed through the ice on Botany Pondrushing for tickets. The Prom turned out to be wellworth this enthusiasm. Ted Weems played sweetmusic, just meant for dancing, and though manycarried their shoes home, they didn't regret aminute of it.In themeantime anticipation of the Mirror Show83had grown. As the days passed, fewer and fewerwomen came to class, and those who did soon fellasleep. This was a good omen symbolizing hardpractice and prophesying excellent routines.When the show opened, this forecast was provencorrect, for the chorus was terrific, climaxed by arollicking Bell Dance. Except for that, not muchcan be said for Mirror, except "Gezeinegezendtyoooo ail," which means Himmel, which meansthe whole show.Four performances were given, one for theAlumni, one for prospective freshmen, and twofor the student body. Thus it played before thecampus, past, present, and future. Friday andSaturday nights were anti-climaxed by fraternitydances. The Phi Psis gave their exclusive Blackand White formal, while the Alpha Delts andPsi U's went democratic and opened their housesto the whole school.The greatest excitement was yet to come. Forweeks students had been attending Big Ten basket­ball games to watch their team consistently lose.However, no matter how bad the defeat, there was always the consolation of Joe Stcrnpf's superbplaying. The end of the season saw Joe becomea candidate for the Big Ten scoring championship.At the last game he needed only eight points tocinch the title, and the whole school turned outto watch him make them. Eight points are not soeasy to get when they mean so much, and at theend of the first half Joe had scored only threepoints. The student body, however, was un­daunted and to express its great admiration, pre­sented Joe with a trophy symbolizing his goodsportsmanship. Spurred on by this faith in him,Stomp] began the second half with a spurt ofenergy and within a few minutes scored thenecessary points. The triumphant University ofChicago, hoarse from cheering and weak fromexcitement, carried Joe Stampf, Big Ten ScoringChampion, from the floor.Only two weeks of the Winter Quarter re­mained and the students suddenly reclizedj thotthere were classes to attend and books to read.So back to their cramming they went, sorry to seethe quarter end in more ways than one.84BALLITERCLUB85On Friday, the seventh of February, gaily dressedcouples danced far into the night to the strainsof the Colonial Club orchestra. Interclub Ball,held in the lavish Gold Coast Room of the CongressHotel was one of the most successful activities ofwinter quarter. From various individual club the scene of much activity-everyone was inter­ested in the smiles of the glamour girls posingbefore his camera.Whole crowds joined in the Conga whichappeared to be the favorite number of both thecocktai I parties two hundred couples gatheredtogether and were impressed with the smoothhospitality of the thirteen women's clubs. Theglowing colors of the girls dresses, the sombre blackof tuxedos, and the soft lights from the balconyblended to make the perfect setting for dancing.At this party was found all the gaity and glamourwhich some people assure us cannot be found atthe University of Chicago.Alumnae as well as actives were to be foundamong the smoothly moving couples on the dancefloor, all feeling very much a part of University life.During intermission club girls and their datesgrouped themselves at tables conveniently locatedin two rooms just off the dance floor or at the barin the foyer which served drinks of any type ordescription. A photographer had set up hisequipment in the corner of one room which was dancers and the orchestra. The view from thebalcony of their different interpretations of rhythmwhile muttering--one, two, three-boom!-wasquite unique. The sensations of the evening wereRuth Apprich, the pledge who wore a bare mid­riff gown, and Amy Goldstein and Bill Hochman,who were ecsi Iy the smoothest dancers on the Hoor.Highlight of the evening was the long awaitedannouncement of the winners of the Maroonsubscription contest, the prize of which was a tripto New Orleans and its far famed Mardi Gras.Donna Culliton, president of Interclub, expressedthe feelings of the audience when she asked theorchestra to continue playing until two, the dancehaving been originally scheduled from ten to one.To this year's Interclub Council goes three cheersfor a snappy and successful affair.86UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBEAUTY QUEENS�'l -EML C;RROLl' Tt1£flTfl£ • fl£IT; URftnTSunset neflfl UlneofffOnilt10LLYWOOD-7IDI -tlOLLYWOOOC-A lIf!Ofl nI-A*April 10, 1941Miss Lois Stromv,ell, Secretary"Can and Gown"Uni�erslty of ChicagoChicaGo, Illinois1ty dear lIiss Stir-omwe LLel�y first choice is Jane Moran. Second choice 1sLouise Baton and third is Faith Johnson.The photographs were all exceptionally lovely andbe Ln.; limited to choo s Lng only one girl, made thetask most difficult.I trust that my selections will meet with theapproval of those who have had the great privilegeof seeinc these younG ladies in person.EC/tl87· FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY QUEENJANE MORAN-exotic Sigma beauty picked by Earl Carroll as Chicago's numberone glamour girl, is in addition outstanding as a leader in campus activities, Wecan see by her pictures why she would be an asset to the Student Publicity Board,and she has also been active as costume chairman for DA, worked on the WashingtonProm Committee, was in Mirror this veer, and is an enthusiastic; member of the YachtClub.(oURToFBEAUTYCAMPUS LEADERSJACK CRANEMARY HAMMEL DONNA CULLITIONHENRIETTA MAHON ROBERT EVANSJOSEPH MOLKUP95CHARLES PERCYRUTH STEELJOHN STEVENSDALE TILLERYPATRICIA WOLFHOPE PEARL C. RUBINS RICHARD SALZMANNDRAMATICSMIRRORREV U E1941line members handled the backstage work. Theywere Shirley Borman, stage manager, MargeryBrooks, costume chairman, Anne Haight and ChloeRoth, properties, Dorothy Wendrick, box officemanager, Shirley Latham, publicity, Doris Daniels,head usher, James Tedrow, production manager,David Fisher, lightsi Ben E. Young, orchestro, Har-In keeping with the Fiftieth Anniversary celebra­tion, DA's sister production, Mirror, subtitled itssixteenth annual program "We hold the mirror upto the Nineties." In general this gives a fair ideaof the theme of most of the skits. By traditionMirror is a women's production, and this year RuthSteel headed the group with Henrietta Mahonacting as vice-president. Other members wereMarian Castleman, Betty Ann Evans, BlancheGraver, and Mary Hammel.The powers behind the throne in the women'sprize production were Frank Reker, who wrotemost of the music, Milton Olin, who providedseveral songs, and skit writers Harrison Alexanderand the ever-present Dick Himmel. In fact Himmelwas so ever-present that one of the Saturdaymatinee high school guests exclaimed, "Here comesthe star again!" when he appeared for the Fifthtime.A large production staff with only three rncscu-98 Steelriet Paine Hahn, settings; Helen Kurniker, dancedirector, and Angela Peyraud, cover design.Mandel Hall audience enjoyed a somewhatvaried program for two nights and an afternoon.Alumni had a chance to see it a day ahead ofscheduled regular performance. All in all therewere som� notably enjoyable moments, but theprogram was too long.The first part, titled "Then!", brought out somesurprising performances. One of these was DirectorDean Randall's music for the waltz, "One Nightin Vienna." Although he insists that there issomething hauntingly similar in Mendelssohn, bothproduction staff and audience took the sweepingstrains to heart and sent them humming over thequadrangles. Mr. Randall had another Finger inthe pie with Dick Himmel on the skit bearing thesuspicious title, "Mort and Bob; The Boys fromAthens (Georgia)." Accorded one of the mostpopular spots on the program was DA's new star,Sue Bohnen, who outdid herself in the Himmel­written skit, "Miss Behavior on a Hay Ride." Aquai nt southern scene, "The Vicissitudes of Ver­million," gave Betty Ann Evans a chance to exhibita home-made southern drawl and Connie Floriana round of applause for her composure and grace.Singing songs of their own, Betty Ann Evans andRuth Wehlan, who collaborated with the Quad­rangier trio (Barbara Caulton, Betty Headland,and Betty Kuh), added a touch of old-fashionedMahon Castleman Evans Graver Hammel99sentimentality and of torch-singing. Probably thebiggest surprise of the act was Mary Hammel'sacrobatic maneuvering in the finale. Practicallyunknown until then as a trapeze artist, Marycreated a stir little short of sensation.Opening the second half of the program, thedance routine "Belles with Bells/'went straight tothe hearts of the audience. Clever music writtenby Frank Reker was played by the girls on theirtinkling instruments fastened to wrists and ankles.This gave a good start to the second part of theprogram, which proved more popular and success­ful than the first half. The next skit, however, "TheOuizzie Kiddies," a Castleman-Polacheck take-offon a well-known radio program, was a dull spotin the entertainment. Breaking tradition, the Mir­ror Board performed in characteristic fashion intheir own skit, "Those Women/' which picturedthemselves in the dim, dark future. A parade ofbeautiful girls exhibiting typical U. of C. glamourpreceded the Himmel skit called "The ChicagoTheatrical Season." In some cases our young author may be said to have improved on theoriginal scenes, and in all cases they had a typicalHimmel touch. The plays represented were "LifeWith Father," "Ladies in Retirement," and "ThePhiladelphia Story." Alumnus Norman BridgeEaton acted in his own revival skit, "At the Switch"and gave capacity audiences some of their biggestlaughs. A close rival of this railroad roundhouseby-play was Ruth Wehlan's skillful and popularsong, "Wolf Stay 'Way from My Door." ArdisMolitor and Albert Droste, as well as Betty Head­land and Edde Armstrong, were handicapped byrather weak skits, but their singing was excep­tionally good, especially that of lyric sopranoArdis.Taken as whole, Mirror 1941 was a success.Like the little girl with the curl, the good wasvery good and the bad was very bad. But it ac­complished its part in the Anniversary celebrationby subtley persuading, by virtue of its wonders, agood percentage of local university eligibles todeclare their allegiance to this aging institution.100DoolittleD. A.Starting o� its Firtieth Anniversary season with abang, Dramatic Association gave woe-eyed fresh­men a taste of sophisticated comedy in its earlypresentation of lcst sprinqs DA revival hit,"GoodbyAgain/' with a cast studded with tried and truestars who have been responsible for most of theDA successes this season. Ruth Ahlquist, a spark­ling newcomer in '40, played the lead oppositeGrant Atkinson. In his usual capacity of comedian,Dick Himmel appeared in colloborction withDemarest Polacheck, ingenue Ruth Wehlan,Marian Castleman, Hattie Paine, and Betty AnnEvans.First o�icial production of the year was "DeathTakes A Holidov," with smooth-voiced AllenGreenman topping the list. It broke a three-yearattendance record in spite of the inexperience ofsome of the supporting cast. Versatile GraceFarjeon turned out another excellent performanceas Aida, who is in love with Death. His bestacting to date was done by Je� Mongerson, andRuth Ahlquist was again consistently good. JimTedrow and Bob Stierer deserve credit for execut­ing one of the best sets the Mandel audience hasseen. Out of 200 hopefuls, 35 came through forplaces in the Workshop training school and chancesfor experience in "East Lynn." U. High star SueBohnen won the lead for that melting mellerdram­mer. Appropriate for the Fiftieth Anniversaryyear, this 50-years' favorite tear-jerker made sucha hit that Workshop novices had to give an extraperformance. Supporting Sue's stereotyped LadyIsabel, transfer Bob Highman played the virtuous101Sir Archibald, and Marty Hanson, disguising hisoily-smooth part with a Brooklyn twang, kept theaudience in expectation of his evil designs as SirFrancis Levison. Other promising Firsts were poisedConnie Florian, confused Frank Etherton, andFrazier ("Stage-Presence") Rippy. To complete acompletely hammy production, Hattie Paine, RuthWehlan, and Director Dick Himmel added vaude­ville bits between acts.Quite· a contrast to the hilarious burlesque on"East Lynne" was Owen Davis's Pulitzer Prizewinner, "Icebound." Under Chloe Roth's abledirection, the stark New England drama sufferedfrom an overdose of new material. The best scenescame when the stage was occupied only by thetwo leads, Marian Castleman as Jane Crosby, anot-too-usual type of heiress, and Demmy Polacheck,the black sheep who should have been heir. Thelatter Flirted with Mike Rathje, a wild little nieceof his named Nettie. The main fault found with thesupporting players was stiffness or overacting, butas the novices gained experience the performanceloosened up.Again Sue Bohnen grabbed the lead for a Work­shop magnus opus when she starred in the title roleof "The Second Mrs. T anqueray." Another "EastLynne" foundling, Frazier Rippy, took a lead op­posite her. Charming Mimi Evans had a role ofthe same calibre as the dreamy part she played in"Death Takes A Holiday," and for the First timein many moons, Dick Himmel had straight dialogue.In the supporting cast, Ruth Whelan proved a star102herself. Altogether, "Mrs. T onquerov" was awell-balanced production and showed good cast­ing.Unusual in the annals of DA productions wasMaugham's "The Circle." Here the Workshop putforth real comedy instead of burlesque. BusyGrace Farjeon was off-stage this time as director,and one of '41 DA's brightest stars, Ruth Ahlquist,starred and scored once more, this time as flightlyLady Kitty. She shared honors with Polacheck, asmooth and smiling Champion-Cheney, and CharlesMurrah, the exasperating Lord Porteous. Amongthe supporting players Walter Welter had his Firstrole and did it well at times. The perfect butlerwas Frazier Rippy.Final vehicle of the season, "Yes, My DarlingDaughter," starred Ruth Ahlquist and Jeffrey Mon­gerson alongside a new addition to the ReynoldsClub stage, Hugh Bonar. Evelyn Taylor, as thesurprising Aunt Connie, also cut her eye-teeth onit. This comical but poignant story of a girl whowants to spend an innocent weekend with herlover before he goes away combined the lastWorkshop production with the annual springrevival. Another DA bull's eye, it ended success­fully a season that saw the blossoming of a fullcrop of new talent that promises to start the nextfifty years in a big way.John DoolittleDon WilsonBlanche GraverDavid FisherRuth WehlanDick HimmelJim Tedrow PresidentVice-PresidentBusiness ManagerStage ManagerChairman of ActingTreasurerProduction Manager103WASHINGTONWASHINGTON PROM COMMITTEE:Kenneth Maclellan, ChairmanArnold GoldbergRay OakleyShirley lathamlouise EatonJay FoxWalter AngristNeil JohnstonSTUDENT SOCIAL COMMITTEE:Dale Tillery, ChairmanWayne BoutelDoris DanielsJohn PlunkettGeorge SchatzAlbert SchmusPatricia Wolfhope PROMOn the eve of Washington's birthday ninehundred students came out in formal for the bigstomp of the year, the Washington Prom. TheStudent Social Committee and Chairman KennethMaclellan outdid themselves by holding the affairin the grand ballroom of the Palmer House andputting out 900 smackers for the lilting strains ofTed Weem's orchestra.True to tradition, four campus bigwigs werechosen to lead the Grand March. This year thehonor was bestowed on Doris Daniels, active inMirror, the Student Social Committee, and presi­dent of Esoterici Henrietta Mahon, senior aide,President of Federation, Vice-President of MirrorBoard, Secretary of the Student Fiftieth AnniversaryCommittee, and member of Nu Pi Sigma andEsoteric; John Stevens head marshall, chairman ofthe Maroon Board of Control, member of Owland Serpent and Psi Upsilon, and Dale Tillery,chairman of the Student Social Committee, memberof Owl- and Serpent and DKE. The grand marchlike all grand marches, was more crammed thangrand, but it ended with the spanking of Dale,who, it seems, was celebrating his own birthdaytoo. There is a legend that one of each year'sleaders has to be supported by the other three(nervousness ?), and this year was no exception.In fact, support came even from the second row.Not because of silly pre-prom publicity such asthe Delaware Crossing Derby on the Botony Pond,but because the committee was well-organized,this was a good Prom year, socially speaking.leaders:Doris DanielsDale TilleryHenrietta MahonJohn Stevens104105STUDENT SOCIAL COMMITTEEThe Student Social Committee was created to provide an adequate program of campus socialevents. Ordinarily its task is to augment the traditional a�airs with enough new ideas to make awell-balanced social calendar, but the committee this year had the additional problem of Findingsatisfactory substitutes for the activities associated with football. Under the leadership of DaleTillery, the problem was well met and a varied social calendar was presented to the student body.The year began with a series of Social C dances, well attended partly because unusually goodmusic was furnished. Freshman beauty queen Jean Ro� was the result of publicity stunts for the dances,at one of which she was presented to the student body.For a long time alums and students had wondered what would become of Homecoming with nolootbcll, but with the Fiftieth anniversary as the excuse for raising money, a gay nineties carnivalclimaxed the weekend's activities. Festivities began smoothly with the usual tuqo war, Botany Pondbrawl and a Victory Vanities; they passed safely the crisis caused by a rain at the time of the parade;and ended in the theme of Little Egypt and the can-can in the disguised Field house.The major winter quarter activity was the Washington Prom, which was moved to the PalmerHouse to a�ord a more glamorous setting and avoid the expense of decorations.The brain child of the SSe. was the Viennese Ball, but it became so big, it had to have its ownset of workers under the general chairmanship of George Sheldon. The university symphony orchestraprovided Strauss in the main ballroom, the Cloister Club of Ida Noyes, and Chuck Towey playedmodern strains in the library. E�orts of the committee were satisfactorily rewarded by the turnoutof a record crowd, which topped o� a bright social year.Wolfhope Schmus Daniels Tillery106STUDENT PUBLICATIONSMAROON**PULSE*CHICAGOAN*CAP AND GOWNCOURTIER107DA I LY MAROONChief claims to honor of the 1941 Daily Maroon were threeexcellent supplements, written by the Faculty, and edited by theBoard of Control. A new kind of project for the Maroon, the sup­plements were phenomenal successes. The first, a semi-scholcrivarticle by Adler on the inadequacies of his fellow educatorsaccompanied by scathing replies from the Fellow educators, wasthe best of the three an::! set a new circulation record for campuspublicctions. The second and third supplements contained exposi­tions of President Hutchins' attitude toward the war-not soscholarly, but equally controversial. The final one broke thecirculation record of even its predecessor, with 17,500 copiesdistributed.For the rest, 1940-1941 was just a slightly better-than-averageyear for the Maroons. Greatest improvements over recent yearswere achieved in make-up under the direction of Board chairmanand managing editor, John Stevens. USing new type face, morecuts, an:! larger headlines, Stevens adapted them artistically tomake the paper at least look more readable than it has in fiveyears. Credit for this also goes to copy editor William Hankla,who, as staff artist, designed the new streamlined Maroon flag.Other improvements included more thorough Faculty interviews,frequent though not always adequate student and faculty opinionpolls, and en occasional interview with President Hutchins, un­exciting except for the single time when the President's commentsabout basketball almost caused the ousting of Chicago from theBig Ten.In the editorials written, along with the "President Speaks," bygaunt, balding Ernest Leiser, who doubled as Feature Editor, theMaroon achieved relatively little of concrete value. Denied werethe value of the reading period, the merit of a Freshman council,attacked were the Hyde Park police, suggested was a program ofintercollegiate intramural touchball and a cleanup of the Big Ten.Except for printing an editorial recommending the election ofRoosevelt one day, and seeing him elected the next, all the editorialwriter could boast were reforms in Political Union, and minor im­provements in Skull and Crescent.News coverage was good. Scoops of the' year were the dis­covery of Maritain's arrival, the police repression of civil liberties,StevensHanklaLeiserRubins108the crime wave at the University,the radio broadcasts on the war,and the lightning visit of Wallaceto the campus. The Anniversarywas always fodder for big stories.Peecee Rubins, winsome, buxomassignment editor, dug out newswith imagination-so much imagi­nation that stories were some­times pure fabrications, serving,luckily, to amuse Maroon readers.Bob Lawson did a competent jobas sports editor.The calibre of news writingwas not so good, unfortunately.Except for reporter Dan Winograd,the staff's writing was medicore,and it lacked imagination andinitiative. What the staFf lackedin literary merit, it made up inloyalty and support, and evenwriting improved considerablytoward the end of the year.Features were inferior to last year,and, although more short semi­news articles were written, good,long feature stories were rare.Dick Himmel's Traveling Bazaarswere for the most part medicore,and the work of other Bazaar con­tributors was in general muchworse.Chief woes for the Maroon,1940-4 'l , were the troubles onthe business staFf. John Bex madegestures towards selling the paperup the river, when Fired, heworked furiously on rival publica­tion, The Daily Chicagoan, to putthe Maroon out of business. Thathe didn't succeed, is due mostlyto his Final successor as businessmanager, crack salesman andexecutive, Robert O'Donnell.109EDITORIAL S TA F FBoard of Control- William Hankla, Ernest S. Leiser, Pearl C. Rubins, John P. Stevens, Chairman,Junior Editorial Associates--James Burtle, Mark Fisher, Richard Himmel, Robert Lawson, DanielMezlay, Richard Philbrick, Robert F. D. Reynolds, Daniel Winograd.Sophomore Editorial Assistants- Marjorie Goodman, Mary Graham, Nancy Lesser, Richard Levin,Beata Mueller, Marshall Patullo, Chloe Roth, Shirlee Smith.Freshmen Reporters- Ruth Ahlquist, Werner Bourn, Beth Carney, Tom Clarage, Barbara Deutsch,Joan Duncan, Kirk Fox, Barbara Gilfillan, Ernest Hillard, Margaret Ann Keuffner, Craig Leman,Jeanne Loughran, James Maclear, Carol Mooney, Helen Pearce, Patricia Peterson, RayPoplett, Phil Reiff, Shirley Robin, Minna Sachs, Stuart Schulberg, Dorothy Tuell, ElizabethWaters, Joan Wehlan.Seated-Duncan, Fisher, Hankla, Stevens, Rubins, Leiser, Winograd, S. Smith.Standing-Carnev, Lesser, Deutsch, Goodman, Roth, Burtle, Clarage, Patullo, Philbrick, Schulberg,Baum, Rieff, Himmel, Tuell, Gilfillan, Mueller, Graver, Sachs.110BUSINESS STAFFROBERT P. O'DONNELL Business ManagerROBERT HIGHMANCHESTER SMITHELLEN TUTTLE Advertising ManagerCirculation ManagerOffice ManagerBusiness Juniors-Richard Bolks, Lyle Harper, William Van Horn, Myles Jarrow, Robert Pregler,Edward Rachlin.Business Assistants-Bill Bell, Stanley Dybvig, John Culp, Lois Mossberg, Dick Wallens.", Front-Bell, Bolks.Back-C. Smith, Tuttle, O'Donnell, Culp, Highman.IIIAngristBOARD OF CONTROL:Walter j. AngristIra S. Glick, ChairmanHarry ShollNews Editor+Leonerd T urovlinSpecial Features--Max KaplanFashion Editor-Beverly WardOffice Manager-Mary ToftLayout Editor-Phil GalliersPublicity and Circulation-HendrikjacobsonEditor's Assistants--Hartley Pfiel,Audrey joyce. PULSE • • • OFFICIALPulse, student magazine at the University, started off the yearauspiciously by being placed on probation by Dean Randall.Editors Glick, Sholl, and Angrist, busy during the summer planningprogram for the year, forgot the little matter of clearing up lastyear's accounts, and until that little matter was taken care of, Pulsecid not publish.First important activity of the year was the attempted embezzel­ment of Pulse's freshmen beauty contest by the Maroon. As soonas probation was lifted, Pulse announced their queen, preceedingthe scheduled !VI.aroon announcement by two weeks. For their.pains editors Glick, Sholl, and Angrist got dunked if) Botany Pond.Later their choice for queen was confirmed in by the Maroon.A quick survey of Pulse's erratic activities reveals that they chosePhi Delta Theta typical campus lroternity, made Bex the man of theyear, and slapped his phizz on the cover, had on another cover apicture of Hutch, which has been reprinted in hundreds of publ ica-Front-Kaplan, Sholl, Glick, Angrist,jacobson, Turovlin.Back-Munger, Markus, Enerson, Lew­ellyn, Pfeil, Banning.112STUDENT MAGAZINEtions throughout the land; organized a women's defense group, acharm school, all contributing to the general cultural tone of thecampus; organized with Bex the Daily Chicagoan, nurtured it throughtwo issues, then left by request of the Deans office; gave more com­plete coverage of all campus activities, but still were not able toraise the level of intellectual interest of the magazine; played toomuch poker, still once or twice gave indications of sincerity andintelligence.The make-up and lay-out of the magazine were some of the best,but the quality of writing varied as did the proof reading. Six-manfootball was given an eFfecive impetus by the inter-collegiatebanquet sponsored by Pulse, and high school seniors as prospectivestudents were impressed by a special edition of the magazine.Except for an unoccasioned quarrel with the Maroon, the Pulsestaff members were pretty good little boys, stepping on nobodiestoes--much. GlickCIRCULA TION STAFF:Karen Grenander, Mary T oft,HelenQuisenberry, Sarah jane Peters,Betty Crawford.OFFICE STAFF:Dorothy Hager, Wanda Wojniak, LouHoover, Virginia Banning.BUSINESS STAFF:joel Bernstein, Bob Thompson, BobPregler, Bill Oostenbrug, PaulHarrison, jim Frankel, David Petty.ARTISTS AND PHOTOGRAPHERS:Bud Barcalow, Lorretta Horwich,Bill Kester, Martha Manns, EddieStoll, Len Schermer, Marilyn Robb,Steve Lewellyn, Angela Peyraud.CONTRIBUTING EDITORS:C. Sharpless Hickman, Carl Larsen.113DA I LY CHICAGOANNed Munger-EditorLeonard Shane-Managing EditorFred Gustafson-Business ManogerKen Axelson-Advertising ManagerRobert McKinsey-CirculatingManagerFounded by john E. Bex.Editorial:Bill BartmanCharles HurstBill SelfLeonard FisherShirley DoBosGeorgia Hinchliffjames SolomonBradley PattersonRobert HighmanAlbert Eckerling jackie HoralPaul SimonWilfred Halperinjohn WhiteTed FeinbergMilt Weissjosephine BeynanDan Fogeljack GlabmanAubrey joyceBusiness:Trudy DahlbergDon McKnightBernard HolzmanPhotography:Steve Lewellynjohn SandersonDan EnersonSports:Leonard Fisher Out of anguish and esoteric plans for a new campus magazine, theDaily Chicagoan was born. Planned originally as a peeve to theDaily Maroon, the Chicagoan made its appearance in front ofCobb early in January. Finances for the suckling were takencare of by John Bex who resigned, under pressure, as Maroonadvertising manager and took over the job of mother to the Pulseboys' brain-child. Within a Few weeks the organization Folded,in trouble with the Dean's office as well as with the Maroon.Reorganization saw the resignation of Pulseman Wally Angrist andthe turning over of the paper to Ned Munger and Lenny Shane.Fraternity brother and apt-pupil, Fred GustaFson succeededBex on the business side. Due largely to the efforts of the latter,the Chicagoan was given a chance to operate on trial until eitherits advertising ran-out or circulation became steady. The chane ewas enough.For a while the novel size and proFusion of cuts made up Forthe Chicagoan's inadequate campus coverage, but with time thereporting became more inclusive and the campus started to readthe paper. Under the University's supervision a special issuewas published For Freshmen, and later the Chicagoan arranged witha metropolitan radio station of little merit to give students fiFteenminutes on the ether in which to express their talents. SpringQuarter found the Chicagoan on its way to becoming a successfulcampus enterprise.Front-Gustafson, McKinsey.Back-Bex, Horal, Munger, Axelson, Shane.114CAP and GOWNIn keeping with the Fiftieth Anniversary of the University, the1941 Cap and Gown was planned to be as distinctive as belitsthe marking of an epoch. Publisher Evans and Business ManagerCrane immediately made arrangements to spend an additionalthousand dollars over and above the annual budget of the publi­cation, most of this money going to defray the expenses of addingcolor to the book.Not only did this year's book call for more work, but progresstoward its completion was slowed by one obstacle after another.All through the Fall and Winter, contracts were made, the layoutplanned in accordance with the 1941 theme, pictures taken ofclub girls and senior students, and lists checked and re-checked.In the middle of winter quarter, the pressure of Mirror presidencybecame too great, and co-managing editor Ruth Steel resignedfrom the Board of Control. Followi ng in her footsteps just as theintensive work should have gotten under way was Bob Matthews.That left Evans, Crane, and Editor Mary Hammel to carryon.With affairs left unorganized and the deadline treacherouslynear, it looked for a while as though the birth of the Fiftieth Anni­versary Cap and Gown would be indelinitelv postponed. ButBob Evans tore back and forth ably pacifying printer and engraver,Mary Hammel went madly to work assigning and re-writing copy,and the book was gradually put under control. None of thiswould have been possible without Charlotte Ford and AlanGraves, who worked steadily though quietly in the backgroundfrom early Fall, sticking faithfully through every crisis to the veryend. When resignations were in the air, they were promoted toBoard positions, Charlotte as junior Managing Editor and Alanas junior Layout Editor.In the meantime jack Crane took time out from the law schoolgrid to run a beauty contest, judged by Earl Carrol in Holly­wood, and, more important, a subscription contest, prize for whichwas a trip to Mexico City for some lucky boy and girl.The last two weeks before this attempt at an adequate repre­sentation of Chicago's 1940-1941 student life went to press, theLexinqton office was more than a hub-bub; it was a mad houseof people with pencils and rulers, people with typewriters, peoplewith cardboard and glue, and interspersed were people withsubscriptions and money.The only prayer of the entire staff was that the book wouldbe as successful as the coupon-Filled Student Handbook which115 EvansHammelCranewas put out in the Fall. The little green merchandise certificateswere the result of an idea in the fertile brain of john Bex andentitled the owner of a handbook to milk shakes, a hamburger,a movie, record needles, a bicycle ride, a reduction on a corsage,and many more valuable items. In spite of the fact that the wholeCap and Gown staff became slightly indisposed (after they usedup the left-over coupons), this successful beginning of the yearwas an encouraging note and became a spur to renewed effortwhen work on the yearbook moved hesitatingly.BOARD OF CONTROLRobert Evansjack CraneMary HammelCharlotte FordAlan Graves PublisherBusiness ManagerEditorjunior Managing Editorjunior Layout EditorASSOCIATESBeth FisherHelene Eichenbaumjanet WagnerAnn HaightMark BeaubienChris FryarCraig Leman ArtEditorialSeniorsSeniorsLayoutClubsSportsPHOTOGRAPHYjohn ThompsonSteve Lewellynjohn SandersonBruce Mitchell Photography Fd itorAssociate PhotographerGenevieve HackettNan WarnerBUSINESSPhil StrickRobert EricksonLois StromwellGeorge NardiRobert Walsh Circulation ManagerAdvertising ManagerOffice ManagerBeverly GlennCharles Wernerjohn Bex116117 STAFF:SENIORS:Harold AronsonArthur Brightjean McLainErnest LeiserP C. RubinsHeuston Smithjim WalshJUNIORS:Gail BeckwithEdry SmithRichard Himmeljo Ann MitchellLouise EatonEllen GroveMargery BrooksSOPHOMORES:Frank EvansSam FawleyGail GrassickDick MerrifieldCarolyn VickEmi Iy RashevskyAnn PattersonBetty Van Liewjoan DuncanVirginia HarlanAlice LowryFRESHMEN:Helen jane EllsworthNancy NewmanGeorgia HinchliffeMarylouise RowlandConstance FlorianDorothy LindleyDorothy TuellMarley jo Breadyjeanne LoughranHelen ReevesMarcia StevensCOURTIERThe biweekly appearance of the small butmighty Courtier is eagerly awaited in the men'sand women's dormitories on both sides of theMidway. Since the highest ambition of this humor­ous and entertaining newspaper is to make liFe inthe residence halls congenial and pleasant, it isunique in campus publications.Indispensable For a complete understandingof the enjoyment of college liFe is a certain amountof reliable data which the Courtier collects throughits comprehensive system of keyhole watchers.With this inFormation in hand, the staff can carryout the aim of the publication.News of dormitory activities, unusual events inthe past I ives of residents, and Features of generalinterest are published in the Courtier, which thusis a means of increasing Friendliness between thevarious halls as well as a medium through whichevents are announced to dorm members.The development of inter-dormitory parties isstimulated and special groups are encouraged.For example, in Burton and Judson Courts a CameraClub has been founded and innumercble bullsessions are sponsored. Since the Dean's office subsidizes the Courtier,copies are distributed Free of charge to variousplaces over the campus, including all the residencehalls, the inFormation office, the Coffee Shop, theReynolds Club, and Ida Noyes Hall. The totalcirculation of each issue has risen to approximatelyone thousand copies.The staff members who guide the Courtier arein the main Burton-Judson men, partly because theheadquarters are located up in Burton near thelibrary, but some representatives from across theMidway are working and more are welcome.News and Features Monroe FeinByron MartinTom HillBeata MuellerHeinrich SchultzCharles PercyLarry SeiverHarry GatesCopy, Make-up, CirculationAcross the MidwayCensorSteve LewellynLoren MarshPaul VollmarSeated--Marsh, Fein, Schultz, Mueller.Standing-Martin, Hill, Lewellyn.118ORGANIZATIONSBANDWOMEN'S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATIONDOLPHINPOLITICAL UNIONRIFLE AND PISTOLSTUDENT FORUMSETTLEMENTYOUNG WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATIONCOMADSCHOOL OF BUSINESS COUNCILSTUDENT PUBLICITYINTEREST CLUBSTARPON119UNIVERSITY ofLaw students, medical students, and representa­tives of all the other schools in the University Findin the Band a culture] and recreational activity.It provides the members with many stimulatingmusical experiences without monopolizing theirtime to the detriment of their University studies.Today's Band, in its sixth year under the leader­ship of Harold Bachman, remains within the tradi­tion of the University. It is a purely amateurorganization and surprisingly few of its membersare majoring in music. In the selections that itplays and because of the way in which it playsthem, the Band has attained a considerable degreeof musical merit.Among the activities of the Band are the falland winter concerts in Mandel Hall, the musicalbackgrounds of the basketball games, and theWednesday night tWilight concerts which are heldout-of-doors in Hutchinson Court during May.Occasionally social gatherings are held in theBand library, at wh ich refreshments are served andrecordings played. A training band has beenorganized for those students who have not thetime for regular evening rehearsals, but enjoyplaying the music of the concert group, and forthose who as yet cannot fulFill the requirements ofthe Concert Band.Most recent of the many famous composers whohave directed the band is Roy Harris, whose"Cimarron," written especially for the Universityof Chicago, was performed at the 50th Anniversarywinter concert from the original manuscript. Band­alumnus Hilmar Luckhardt personally directed his"Golden Anniversary March" in manuscript at the CHICAGO BANDsame concert. Other original manuscripts intro­duced by the Band include Morton Gould's"Second American Symphonette" with its ever­increasing-in-popularity second movement entitled"Povonne," Felix Fourdrcin's "Symphonic Episode"and Jaromir Weinberger's "Afternoon in theVillage." The arrangement of "Begin theBeguine" by student-member Reid Poole hasbecome one of the most popular renditions of theBand upon numerous occasions.120JOHN KORFROBERT FOUCHALAN GRAVESJOHN KARNGLEN BIGELOWHERBERT P. ZIMMERMANNFLUTES AND PICCOLOSjeanne KnaussHugh BonerBertrand DreyfussHarry Le GrandAlfred Pfanstiehl ALTO CLARINETSWilliam BlackFrancis jarvisBASS CLARINETSNorman FosterAnton GeiserOBOES AND ENGLISH HORNEdmund NeilsonCarl PritchittEdna BrownDavid Probert SAXOPHONESGeorge SternbergRay AlbanoWilliam KesterIvan KeeverPeter TiemstraEldon BeerCQRNETS AND TRUMPETSRobert FouchBruce WarnockAlan GravesMarvin ParkGeorge SharpStanford MillstoneDon PaddockSamuel BuonafedeBASSOONSAdele MendelssohnHelen MortonCLARINETSjohn Korfjohn ArnoldStewart OlsonMax Kraningjordan CanzoneGlen BigelowHarold SteinhauserWilliam CarrollRobert MohlmanCarl SteinhauserRay CalkinsRuth BieserRichard PeckRobert EastmanLawrence johnsonLoren MarshDavid Probert FLUEGEL-HORNSWilliam CampbellMark BeaubienFRENCH HORNSReid Poolejohn jamiesonRichard MenaulWalter ErleyWilliam Dawson121 PresidentTreasurerHistorianExecutive CommitteeNonstudent Member of the Executive CommitteeHonorary Alumni MemberTROMBONESPaul WochasRobert jonesHarry BeachOuentin MooreCharles RyanMabel WachowskiBARITONESRobert BassCharles Rileyjohn BuzzellVincent Von HenkeElmer HinkleBASSESRobert BigelowTom RemingtonElmer KaileySTRING BASSCharles ToweyHARPFlorence LambertPERCUSSIONjohn DearhamAlbert VaitusRichard MoneyHerman WiegmanKenneth WiedawWOMEN'S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATIONMen get all the glory as far as universityathletics are concerned, while women play onwithout jeers or cheers, but girls come out with asmuch sportsmanship and not so many bruises. Theyplay basketball and baseball like professionals andrival champions in archery and tennis. Sports likefootball, which people say are too strenuous forwomen (although -there have been attempts toorganize an amazon eleven) they learn to appre­ciate, so they will be as good sport fans as theyare sport fiends.Many games need team work and competitionto be successful, so the Women's Athletic Associa­tion was organized to coordinate affiliated clubsand provide events of interest to all. Tournamentsare frequent, and the winners of the intramura Ibasketball tournament and of the tennis tournamentare presented a cup which is a lasting memory ofthe victory. But the W.A.A. does not devote allof its influence to practiced cthletes, it tries tobring neophytes into the group by offering instruc­tion in every field of sports and guarantees to turnPetty Herschel the most fragile hot-house flower into a healthysportswoman.The ultimate honor a girl can achieve in W.A.A.is to become a "C" girl. There is no stone bencherected for her and, instead of a bulky sweater shegets only a small recognition pin, but the distinc­tion is there, and everyone immediately recognizesher as a good sport.PresidentVice-PresidentSecretaryTreasurer Caroline AllenShirley PetersonAnnabel BrownMary HerschelVirginia Both Mary PetrieJoanne Gerould Miriam PettyMary Graham Eloise ProctorSara Jane Peters Florence RobinsonLois WhitingAllen Both Graham122DOLPHIN CLUBFront-Fein, Mowery, M. Robinson.Middle-Moore, Percy, Speck, Bobjerg, Argall, Luckhardt.Back-Bethke, Fischer, Baugher, Reed.University men who have shown outstandinginterest and ability in water sports are members ofDolphin Club. Under the sponsorship of CoachMcGillivray, winners of freshman numerals andswimmers who have participated in national inter­collegiate meets are organized for the purposeof promoting swimming and other water sports.Now in its fourth year as a campus organization,Dolphin Club assumes as its particular function thesupport of the swimming and water polo teams ofthe University. To this end the club sponsorsmeetings of the members of the teams for purelysocial purposes, thereby promoting closer acquain­tenceship and an increase in team spirit.In addition, the club recognizes promising newswimmers and encourages them to tryout for theteams, thus acting as a reservoir of new teammaterial and giving new championship swimmersa start in the right direction. Also, arrangmentsare made for outstanding swimmers to be sent to meets which they might not otherwise attend.Off-campus sports relationships are strengthenedthrough Dolphin's activities in encouraging contactswith swimmers from other schools. This year theIowa Dolphin Club was entertained. Visitingaquatic teams are met, introduced, and entertainedby members of the club, thus promoting. friendlyrivalry and good-sportsmanship.As part of its social functions the club participatesin exchange splash parties with the members of itssister club, Tarpon. Highlight of past seasons hasbeen the water carnival, put on by the Dolphinclub with the assistance of the comelvswimrnersof Tarpon. Due to a change in club policy, whichsh i fted emphasis to off-campus contacts, the Car­nival was not given this year. It is hoped, how­ever, that under the newly elected president, AshTaylor, the club will be able to present thisimportant campus event again next AutumnQuarter.123POLITICALMomentous mouthings"Vote for prosperity and see whom you get."Don't forget your duty; aid Britain." "Johnnywants a job, not a war." From the sidewalks ofCobb to the corridors of Mandel, students wouldrather argue over the foreign policy than discussthe latest jive. They delve into the whys andwherefores of each issue and come up preparedto defend their stand. Enthusiastically they ex­pound their theories and are branded as radicalsand scatter-brains, but actually there are no moreardent defenders of democracy.Three years ago interest became so active, andarguments so violent that students felt the need ofa campus parliament. Anything to relieve the UN IONtension in the coffee shop! So a senate wasmodeled after the Oxford Union, to be the forumfor all ideas, radical, conservative, and liberal.There were seventy-Rve seats, divided equallyamong the factions. The members could argue totheir hearts content, but they had to conduct them­selves in a true parliamentary manner and at theend come to some rational decision. It was justwhat the student body wanted, and its success wasphenomena I.But the members were not sotislied, thei r organi­zation was not democratic enough, not enoughlike an actual government, so they decided to holda poll among all students to learn their politicalviews. This campus straw vote would determineparty strength in the union and the seventy-fiveseats would be filled accordingly. The leaderwhose party held the majority of seats wouldbecome prime minister. He would choose hiscabinet, and together they would determine theissues to be brought before the congress. If atany time the prime minister was not backed by amajority vote of confidence, he was overthrownand the opposition would elect its head and be­come the government. Here was a unique debat­ing society, one with a plan that would hold theinterest of all its members and be profitable besides.It worked very well. Of the seventy-five seats,twenty-six were conservative, ten laborite, andthirty-nine liberal. Since the liberals were themajority, they headed the government and de­termined the policies of the union. Then came thefirst reversal. The liberals backed the govern­ment's stand when it prohibited a scheduled speechby Earl Browder, but the conservatives and thelaborites demanded that all men be allowed their124Burtle Blowsfreedom of speech. The vote of confidence didnot pass, and the prime minister was overthrown.In November, with the liberals again in power,the question of whether or not a president shouldbe allowed a third term was discussed. Theunion argued endlessly unti I the conservatives andthe laborites finally joined forces in condemninga third term and defeated the liberals. This timethe conservatives expanded their policies in adetermined eFfort to hold onto their power.But issues were arising for which there seemedno agreement. Calls for a vote of confidence wereso frequent that serious meetings were becomingfree-for-alls. So they adapted themselves to thenew circumstances and replaced the cabinetsystem by a senatorial one. A steering committee,composed of three members from each party in­troduced the issues and conducted the debates.An oFfense or defense, prepared at a caucusmeeting, was presented by each party, and a votedecided the outcome. This new system provided a broad analysis of all points of view and a truedemocratic rationalization.It is just as it should be, for clear thinking isnecessary in order to discuss issues that are asimportant as these arising today. After all, mem­bers of Political Union are the future politicians ofour country,--the men who will some day fill theCongress of the United States. Wi II they havethe liberty then that they have now? If they haveanything to say about it they will, so let them rave.President Joseph MolkupSecretary-Treasurer George HandConservative Party Dave EllbogenSocialist Party Alan GarFinkleLincoln WolfinsteinLiberal Party William HanklaRay WhitcoFf125R IF L E and PISTOLThe fact that riflery is fast becoming a top-flightsport is evidenced by this year's heavy schedulesfor the Varsity, Rifle Club, Freshmen, and Women'steams. The rifle range located in the west standsof Stagg Field is the scene of noisy activity everyafternoon and several evenings during each week.All visitors are welcome at the range, wherenovices can secure instruction and both amateursand experts are afforded opportunity for practiceand eventual perfection.The Varsity Team carried on many of itsmatches via the postal route, which is an efficientmethod in common use in all parts of the country.It consists of mailing targets shot at the home rangeto other schools which are competing in the contest.The team was fairly successful throughout theyear in this type of competition and capturedfourth place in the Dewer meet. The team representing the Rifle and Pistol Club,an organization composed of both men and women,this year captured a beautiful trophy and theimpressive title of "Southern League of ChicagoChampionship. "The girls' team, which includes some unusuallygood shots, did its part in making the rifle squadwell known. In the recent Women's ProneChampionship of the University of Chicago, a goldand a silver medal were awarded to the bestand second best shots in the meet, respectively.Frances Farwell, who won the gold medal, cer­tainly deserved it, for her score was a perfect 100out of 100 shots. The women's team, consisting ofFrances, Barbara Moss, Jean Riha, Betty Fanning,and Mary Jane Greening, held postal meets thisyear with such Fine teams as those from MaineUniversity, Creighton and Wheaton Colleges.Front-Totura, Seidman.Back-Kelly, Sears, Wiles, Noble, Gleason.12fiDuring the month of March, the annual FieldHouse Tournament was held in a building com­pletely transformed to provide shooting space forsome of the best riFlemen from all parts of thecountry. A fast and accurate line of Fire wascarried on by the 550 competitors, which wasan increase of 150 over last year's registration.The marksmen entered in this tournament werepaced by Mrs. Davis, who set a new world'srecord, in what was a very exciting moment forthe spect ators.The rifle range has also been the scene ofdefense activity as Coach Russell Wiles has beenteaching 1200 men the fundamentals of riflery.The members of the Citizens'Military TrainingCorp, as this group is called, have proved theirinterest in this vital defense by their rapid improve­ment in use of the arms.PresidentVice-PresidentSecretary-treasurerWomen's RepresentativeTeam ManagerFreshmen Team ManagerWomen's Team ManogerCoachVARSITY RIFLE TEAM:W. H. Searsjoe HackettCharles NobleRobert Kubistajoe SeidmannHarry BennerCarl Prichettjoseph Savit Joe HackettW. H. SearsHugh BennettFrances FarwellW. H. SearsEugene GleasonFrances FarwellRussell Wiles127STUDENT FORUMStudent Forum is the clearing house for rhetoricand logic on a campus with a far famed intellectualreputation. Promoting discussion and, through avariety of audience opportunities, offering aunique outlet for the students interested in ex­pressing their ideas and in gaining experience inpublic speaking, it had a membership of eightythis past year.Discussion groups within the organization haveweekly meetings, and, in addition, members carryon all the inter-collegiate speaking activity doneby the University, present round tables before highschools and civic groups, and produce and partici­pate in the discussion radio programs done bystudents.The following are some of the events handledby Student Forum members. Six women went toMadison, Wisconsin, to participate in the Women'sBig Ten discussion tourncment, four members wentto Peoria for the Bradley Conference on Higher Educction, eight members were part of the NationalCongress of Delta Sigma Rho at the Stevens Hotelon the problems of National Defense and Housino,two men took a Big Ten debate trip to Iowa andMinnesotaj and eight men won a four way tie forfifth place in the Big Ten men's debate tournament.Altogether the Student Forum filled seventy-fiveengagements before civic organizations, and theyintroduced the round table discussion techniqueto high schools by sponsoring an all day roundtable tournament on April 19th for the high schoolsin the Chicago area.PresidentTreasurerBoard Members Joseph MolkupWebb FiserJames EngleRobert RammPeggy ZimmerSTUDENT FORUM DIRECTORGeorge E. Probst.Front-Zimmer, Karlstrom, Apprlch, Davis, Cargill, Whitegrove, Rashevsky, Ford.Middle-Poplett, Fiser, Molkup, Engle,Durka.Back�Blackwood, Madigan, Nutter, Hill, Tullock, Landry, Hinton, Probst.128UNIVERSITYSETTLEMENTThe ideals of democracy, education, and a higherstandard of living, fostered by this university, arenot just idle words. They are achievements.Each one is practiced, and a successful compositeof all three is the University Settlement; democraticfor it accepts people of all nationalities and forgetsclass consciousness in the throes of working to­getheri educational, because it oFfers classes foryoung and old, civic, since it tries to alleviatepoverty and build a better city.This settlement is a philanthropy of the studentsthemselves. Their contributions support it. Theyvcluntorilv serve it. All of this student support isorganized under the University Student Settle­ment Board which makes a deliberate eFfort tokeep students interested in their protege "behindthe yards" and makes the settlement a major partof schoc I activity. AronscnChairmanSecretaryFinance DirectorRobert BeanMary ColleyEva De VolKinereth DushkenWilliam HanklaRobert .jompolisBetsy KuhAlice LowryMarcia Merrifieldjewell ParsekFront-Parsek, Brooks, Aronson, Kuh, Dushkin, Wagner.Back-Sill, Richardson, Stiener, Bean, Lowry, Roth. Harold AronsonMarge Brooksjay FoxRobert ReynoldsChloe RothBaxter RichardsonSara Richmanjoan SillRobert SmithRobert StiererClayton Traegerjanet Wagner129Y. w. c. A.More than an activity, more than just anothercampus interest, the Y. W. C. A. is a fellowship ofgirls united in seeking an adequate personalphilosophy of life based on the principles ofchristianity, democracy, and the building of aworld community.Fundamental to the Y. W. C. A. is its all­inclusiveness. The only criterion for membershipis the individual's expressed interest in the purpose.Differences in race, in financial or social status, inreligious affiliation, in political points of view­only serve to enrich the experience of the members.Highlight of the program this year was theArctic Carnival held in March. Sideshows andpenguins lined the snowy paths of Ida Noyes, anda real igloo was imported for the occasion. Barkers urged the hardy explorers who attendedto try their luck at "Glaciated Worms/' whilethe "Mounlies got their Man" in a thrilling melo­drama. The Cabinets plan and integrate theprogram of the association, which includes cozys,luncheons, interest groups, student-faculty lunch­eons, and outings.Esther DurkeeMarjorie WoodrichJane CooneyPhyll is RichardsDorothy PowellMrs. Wilbur L. Beauchamp PresidentVice-PresidentSecretaryTreasurerExecutive SecretaryChairman of theAdvisory Board130COMAD CLUBOutstanding women in the world of business arefeatured at the biweekly Wednesday meetings ofComad, the women's social organization of theSchool of Business. Unde� the leadership of •president Kathryn Dryburgh, vice-president Gert­rude Eichstaedt, secretary Florence Kozeny, treas­urer Marion Holston, and social chairman EstherRosenbaum, the girls are entertained as well asgiven ideas for positions after graduation.An outstanding function is given each quarter.In fall Comad plays hostess to the faculty, and inthe winter they have their get-together with themen. The last and most important function of theyear is an alumnae luncheon in the loop. Comadspeakers try to help the under-graduates by ex­plaining the route to their own successes and bydescribing the nature of business opportunitiesfor women.SCHOOL of BUSINESS COUNCILMixing Business and Pleasure.Hallowe'en, Christmas, and Valentine Day are among the holidays celebrated socially by business stud­ents, for the student counci I' s attempts to integrate the school are best occornpl ished at informal gatherings.To this end, open houses using the full facilities of Ida Noyes Hall are held every quarter..The principal event of the year is the faculty-alumni-student dinner which is held in June. At this time,Delta 'Sigma Pi and Comad keys are��rded to the man and woman whoreceived the highest! grades on thebachelor's examination.The council includes three memberselected by public ballot plus one re­presentative each from Ccmad Cluband the two professiono] fraternities.Front-French, Dryburgh, Bertram, Gale.Back-Clark, Gross.131 Richard French PresidentVice-PresidentRay BertramKathryn DryburghRichard GaleDavid ClarkHerschel Gross SecretarySecretaryMembers at LargeSTUDENT PUBLICITY BOARDFront--Bethke, Teberc.Middle-Allen, Wallace, Graver, Darling.Back-Oakley, Price.Baird WallaceAlan DarlingVirginia AllenMary Lu PriceDorothy T ebergArthur BethkeRay OakleyChester Hand Co-chairman of BoardCo-chairman of BoardClerical ChairmanSocial ChairmanSecretary and Check-up ChairmanAthletic ChairmanTours and Dramatic ChairmanPress Relations Chairman The University of Chicago has an enviable repu­tation among the universities that draws studentsautomatically to its doors. But any school nomatter how Fine, just like any reputable product,has to advertise in order to reach a great manypeople. Everyone at the University of Chicagofrom the president to a Flunking freshman is inter­ested in seeing that his school gets its share ofworthwhile students year after year.The formal side of the school's advertising cam­paign is taken over by school oFficials, but aninformal, very eFfective part is carried on by thestudents themselves. Their eFforts are organ i-zedby the Student Publicity Board under the sponsor­ship of the Entrance Counselor, Martin J Freeman.So with advance knowledge of who is interestedthey set out to increase the enrollment.The university's academic prowess is alreadywell-known, so the Student Publicity Board appealsto the student's fun-loving nature and his desirefor a social life. Activities in the fall include onlytours of the campus and perhaps a play or teadance. Pressure increases as the year progresses.DiFferent high school students are invited to everybasketball game and are treated as royally asorphans at a circus. Six hundred attend theSaturday matinee of Mirror and watch beautifulco-eds (pardon! university women) strut their stuFf.After the annual scholarship exams in spring, theBoard relieves the tension with tours, tournaments,and teas, and by the time the curtain falls on thethird act of a Blackfriars' matinee, the sale isclinched. The freshman enrollment is heads andtails above last year's.132INTERESTCombining valuable recreation with lurthercnceof a particular knowledge is the purpose of severalInterest Clubs, open to men and women of theUniversity, with or without experience.Eckhart Hall is headquarters of the JuniorMathematics Club, which engages professors andother authorities as speakers for its weekly meet­ings and discussions. It has grown to include afairly large number of undergraduates interestedin the Physical Sciences.A new organization which has proved to bevery popular is the Ski Club, under the leadershipof Peter Rondon, a former member of the BritishOlympic Ski Team. After lessons and motionpictures on skiing technique, the teom venturedonto the small ski slide erected in Stagg Field,where novices picked up a little practical ex­perience. A weekend of winter sports at IronMountain, Michigan, proved so successful that theclub returned severol times to the fomed resort.Besides a number of experienced skiers, the clubnow includes several who learned the sport onlylast winter.•The University Yacht Club was organizedsevere] years ago by a group of students interestedin sailing, The group bought several dinghyswhich the present club owns and keeps in theBurnham Park Lagoon during the spring quarter.Subjects dealt with in weekly meetings of the clubin Eckhart Hall include talks on yachting techniquessuch as knots, navigation, meteorology, boat con­struction, and sailing in general.In spring when the weather is favorable, themembers visit the lagoon for short cruises in thedinghys, CLUBSUnder the direction of AI Pfanstiehl, CampusNewsreel has been active in preserving a Filmrecord of undergraduate life. Members collabor­ate in Filming events of note which are shown forthe student body once a quarter, Occasionallythe group shows famous old films with the newsreel.Top-Van Liew.Bottom-Darling, Levy, Hackett,133TARPONSponsored by Tarpon, women's swimming club,Olympic diving champion, Jane Fauntz, paid anextended visit to campus during March. All uni­versity women as well as club members wereprivileged to take advantage of her diving in­struction given in the purple glow atmosphere ofthe Ida Noyes Hall pool, which is Tarpon's head­quarters.Although famous swimmers and divers are an­nually brought to the University by the club, itsmain purpose concerns the interests of its activemembership. One of the traditional parties is theinvitational affair with the Terrapins of Munde­lein College, who came down to the south sidefor games and relays in the Ida pool. When theboys of Dolphin vacated the freedom of Bartlettfor one evening of splashing and eating at Ida,they learned that the girls could cook as well asswim. Dolphin returned the social favor butserved ice cream bars and bakery cakes.This year the girls had more time for partiesbecause Dolphin decided not to give its annual water carnival as part of which Tarpon had al­ways performed a graceful ballet besides individ­ual and dual stunts. The club members did someballet work at their weekly meetings but nonefor public exhibition.Tarpon functions actively on Iy during the autumnand winter quarters. It is one of the sportsclubs of the Women's Athletic Association andtakes part in the functions of that organization.Membership in Tarpon is open to any universitywoman interested in water sports although shemay have no more than an elementary ability.To provide for a" degrees of advancement thereare four classes of members, tadpoles, frogs, Fishes,and sharks, and the aim of each Tarpon is to im­prove her technique and pass progressively moredifficult tests. Admittance to the tadpole class isgained after accomplishing simple dives and balletstunts and the standard swimming strokes. For thelast few years there have been no sharks, whomust demonstrate skill in speed and endurancetests as well as advanced dives and Rgures.Front-Barbara Smith, Graham, Beverly Smith, E. Spence, S. Smith.Back-Brown, Apprich, Quisenberry.•134RELIGIOUS ORGANIZATIONS135INTERCHURCH COUNCILDominant in most of the campus organizationsis the trend toward unity and a better under­standing of other people. Disagreements havebecome not a reason for segregation but an in­centive for greater" tolerance and closer relation­ships in order to have a deeper retrospection ofone's own ideas. In religion this has becomevery apparent.Interchurch Council invites all Protestants, re­gardless of their sect, to share in its activities.Since its conception three years ago, it has grownrapidly until today it represents more co-operatingdenomination.s than any similar council of otheruniversities in the United States.The organization recognizes the place of de­nominations, but, since it also realizes the needof a unified Christian spirit, it proposes that mem­bers forget their dl FFerences of worship and co­ordinate their ideas in a unanimous philosophy.Its activities are meant to demonstrate to thecampus the vitality and worth of religion and toencourage participation in an eFFective churchprogram. Gang at Indiana' Dunes, PlattCottage, Spring Vacation.In order to carry out this objective, four com­missions are organized, each covering a certainphase of the council's work, namely education,worship, social service, and recreation. The Firstand most publicized activity is the annual CountyFair in which all of the churches of the communityas well as the students participate to make it ahighlight of the fall recreational program. Through­out the year there are fellowship dinners andchapel evensongs, and on Easter Morning thenoteworthy performance of sunrise service.To bring news of the council's activities to allof the congregations within it, The InterchurchNewsletter, is edited by Howard StaFF and con­tains news of coming events, past celebrations,editorials, and trivia.Betty Leonard PresidentBetty Jane Blocki SecretaryRobert O. Wright Treasurer136CHAPELUN IONTo many students Chapel Union recalls to mindbarn dances at which a whole jean-clad campusenjoys itself "do-si-do-inq" to the tune of "Turkeyin the Straw" Some are reminded of outingswhere they work up an appetite for hotdogs andpop by tramping through the woods. Still othersthink of samovars, student faculty meetings, andSettlement expeditions. Actually Chapel Unionis all of these things, but even more it is meeting,discussing, playing, and working with colleaguesfrom every class and corner. It is democracy,social and sociable.Like any union, whether of nations or of trades,the most important part is the people who com­prise it. In Chapel Union there are people fromall parts of the world. No one religion or racedominates, for everyone is on a par. Rich andpoor alike join and are synchronized into a com­mon class. Ideas are as varied as backgrounds.Some members are passionately concerned withVickie and AI Pitcher the problems of labour and employer. Some aredevoted to the cause of racial understanding inan age of social obsessions. Some strive to in­vigorate the cold air of an impersonal universityby bringing faculty and student together-withnotebooks laid aside. And some seek a phil­osophy with which to explain this world, sotwisted and torn today. Whatever their viewsmay be, they are heard, and they become foreach member a part of a broadening conceptionof life that makes living more worthwhile. Theirirregularities blend into uniformity as the mem­bers learn to work and play together, and theirsuccessful cooperation provides an outstanding ex­ample for the rest of the campus.137CHRISTIAN SCIENCEThe oldest religious group on the campus is theChristian Science Organization, founded in 1911.It has as its purpose the enlightenment of theUniversity community on the subject of ChristianScience and the promotion of fellowship amongstudents who are Christian Scientists. Busy witheducational and social pursuits, college studentsare too often inclined to subordinate religiousfellowship. It is, however, still a necessary partof a full, well-balanced life and not to be neg­lected.The members of the Christian Science Organi­zation Find fellowship in their common religiousbelief. Rather than add one more social groupto the long list of student organizations, they pre­fer to further their friendships in a more signiFicantway. Once a week they join together in Thorn- dyke Hilton Chapel for a service, half of whichis devoted to readings and the other half totestimonies. Elected each quarter is a reader,upon whom rests the duty of conducting an authen­tic and successful service.The activities of the Christian Science Organi­zation are not, however, limited to Tuesday even­ings. Monday through Friday during the noonhour a study room is maintained in Swift Hallwhere students frequently meet to read and dis­cuss the Bible and authorized Christian Scienceliterature. Notable lecturers in the field of re­ligious education are provided by the Board ofLectureship in Boston to speak to the group twicea year. They are sponsored by the First Churchof Christ, of which Mrs. Eddy herself was pastor.Social activities are confined to receptions inthe fall and summer for students who have ex­pressed their preference for Christian Science.For the rest of the year the organization de­pends on its own merit, and it seems to havemade religion prosper in its own right on acollege campus.READERSSonya SammelBetsy KuhHazel CargillJohn Leggitt Summer QuarterAutumn QuarterWinter QuarterSpr: ng QuarterEXECUTIVE COMMITTEELois GartnerBruce YoungMarjorie BergJane Lentzner PresidentSecretaryTreasurer138According to its constitution, the function of theCalvert Club, which has more than doubled itsmembership during the past year, is to foster thecommunal life of the Catholic students at the Uni­versity in its social, intellectual, and liturgical as­pects.To increase knowledge and love of the liturgythe winter week-end conference, held at Dodd­rige Farm, Libertyville, home of the Ladies of theGrail, was devoted to a series of lectures onliturgy in relation to dogma, art, and moral action.At Christmas time the club drew from liturgymaterials for a brief Nativity pageant presentedin Bond chapel.Through a program of lectures and discussionsthe Club contributes to the student's intellectuallife. New viewpoints on Catholic culture andphilosophy were presented by jacques Maritain,French philosopher, Rev. Gerard B. Phalen, presi­dent of St. Michael's College at the Universityof Toronto, and Dr. Daniel O'Grady of NotreDame. A wide range of topics was covered bythe speakers at the weekly Wednesday luncheonsin Hutchinson Commons.A social program was the third aim and achieve­ment of the club. Skating parties, roller and ice,and informal dances were held. Most of theliturgical and intellectual functions had their socialside. Thus, the Christmas pageant was followedby a reception and supper in the Swift common CALVERT CLUBroom. The feast of St. Thomas Aquinas was cele­brated not only by a Thomistic lecture but alsoa banquet and open house at Ida Noyes Hall,Crowning events of the year were the twoweek-end outings at Childerley Farm, the firstduring Fall quarter and the second early in Mayto celebrate the dedication of the farm to theCatholic students of the University. Betweenmorning Mass and firelight discussions there wasplenty of time for hiking and baseball.William F. Strube (resigned)Leonard DaysMargie j. DunneRuth P MurrayRobert j. Hughesjerome G. Kerwinjanet Kalven }Robert B. Heywoodjerome TaylorGeraldine C. Wouters 1Robert L. Meyer � Literature and Publicityjohn T. Farrell JPaul L. Kram 1john M. Phelps rRobert L. Meyer JVictoria L. Puddicombe LSamuel I. Clark fRichard j. Duddy )Ruth P Murray �Marjorie A. Sullivan J PresidentActing PresidentVice-PresidentSecretaryTreasurerFaculty AdvisorLiturgical ActivitiesIntellectual ActivitiesMembershipFinancesSocial ActivitiesFront-Duddy, Taylor, Heywood,Kalven, Days, Dunne, Murray,Wouters.Back-Farrell, Phelps, Landon,Meyer, Clark.139MEADVILLETHEOLOGICAL SEMINARYThe Meadville Student Association is the socialorganization of the specialized student body ofthe Seminary. Although its membership is re­stricted to students of the Theological School, thereare numerous points of contact with other groupson the campus.One distinctive activity of the association isopen for everyone to attend, that is, the vesperservice held each afternoon during the academicweek in the Hull Memorial Chapel, which is thechancel of the First Unitarian Church at Wood­lawn and 57th Streets. This worship at eventideeffects an integration of the events of the day,and provides inspiration for social participationin days to come.The periods of worship are for the benefit of liberal students and are in no way related to theformal preparation of theological students for theministry. One by one the Meadville students taketurns conducting the service. That means the con­ductor freely selects desirable readings andthemes, each student endeavoring to use themost interesting material ovoiloble for carryingforward those views he regards as of primaryimportance.Because Meadvi lie students are also studentsin the University, very close and happy relation­ships exist between the Meadville Student As­sociation and campus activities such as intramuralsports, the enterprises of I iberal pol itical groupsand movements, and the more academic confer­ences of the Divinity School qnd of ChicagoTheological Seminary.Front-Henniges, Kueh, Weston, Redman, Luening, Heyward.Back-Pope, Bose, Soerheide, Bush, Booth, Hruby, Steirnotte.140Front-Latham, Russell, Hammel, Sullivan, Nelson, Rowe.Back-Thompson, Harvey, Duncan, Schroeder, Dryburgh, Petty, Proctor.IDA NOYES HALLMary HammelMarjorie SullivanEloise ProctorGertrude SmithMarguerite KidwellLois WhitingMuriel FrodinMary HerschelMiriam Petty ChairmanSecretaryY. W. C. A. RepresentativeFaculty MemberFaculty AdvisorSenior Officerjunior OfficerSophomore OfficerFreshman Officer Shirley LathamBetty jane NelsonAnn SchroederMuriel ThompsonSENIORSCatherine DryburghMary HarveySue LandisLois WhitingMary Hammel SOPHOMORESMary HerschelMarjorie Goodmanjoan DuncanMary ColleyMarjorie SullivanJUNIORSMuriel Frodin FRESHMENRuth Rowejoanne GerouldBetty Lou SimsonCarroll RussellMiriam Petty141One of the most beautiFul and most Frequentedbuildings on campus is Ida Noyes Hall. In ap­pearance it resembles an English manor house,For it is a composite of elegance and grace. Ivysoftens its stately gothic lines, and green lawnsstretch from its threshold. Inside there is a har­monious blending of many different periods offurniture, typical of an English mansion. Softcolored draperies curtain English casements withheavily carved frames, and vivid Persian rugs addthe only note of bright color.Its use as a woman's recreation hall does notin the least detract from its homelike appearance.Scores of girls tramping through its halls withbadminton rackets and roller skates do not seemincongruous, for detached from its surroundingsone might think it was the home of a graciouslady thrown open to a crowd of rowdy week­end guests.So it might have been, for Ida Noyes was oftenhostess to joyful groups of young people. Herhusband, La Verne Noyes, seeking a proper mon­ument for his wife decided upon a building wherepeople could find all of the Facilities For havinga good time, for that seemed the most appropriatetribute. Ida Noyes was born in New Englandand came to the Middle West to attend college. Here she remained the rest of her life and be­came one of the most admired women of her time.Although she herself was rich, her interests werewith the poor. She wished everyone might havean education, or at least a chance to be happy,and she worked persistently for that cause. Itwas beFitting, then, that a hall where all classesand all races could come and leave a troubledworld behind them was dedicated to her.Since the day it opened its door in 1916, ithas been the popular meeting place of universitystudents. Some come merely to read or I isten torecorded music, but some come for more livelyentertainment. There is roller skating or bad­minton in the gymnasium; bowling and golf prac­tice are downstairs. A beautiful swimming poolbeckons all mermaids, and lying under its glass142roof one feels as if she were on the sands ofMiami Beach. For almost anything one wants todo, Ida Noyes Hall has the Facilities and, as luckwould have it, people already using them.Its spacious halls are often invaded by socialcommittees and turned into ball rooms. The gymis the home of the "C' dances during the Fallquarter and the Cloister Club is the beautiFulsetting for the annual Skull ad Crescent dance.This year the Student Social Committee thought itwas an appropriate place to reproduce a Vien­nese Waltz with modern innovations. In theCloister club the soft strains of Strauss waltzespropelled hundreds of couples around the floor,while far away in the Ii brary a modern bandbeat it out and young moderns, discontented with old-fashioned waltzes, jived. Long after the lastclassroom is emptied, Ida Noyes Hall is stillclamoring with excitement.In the last Few years the hall has been usedmore and more For organized school activities.Taking over the responsibility of these activitiesis the Ida Noyes Council, an organization becom­ing more and more prominent' in university affairs.Membership on the council is honorary and to itare elected only twenty girls, Five From each class.They meet twice a month and plan interestingevents to add to the school's social life.To begin the year in a very general but thoroughway, they sponsor an open house during the earlyfall. At this time bundreds of people flock tothe hall to have fun doing countless things and toget in on the additional entertainment and re­freshments.So many university women live off-campus or inscattered dormitories that it is hard to get themall tcgether for any reason. Yet that is part ofthe great purpose of Ida Noyes Hall. In accord­ance with that idea, the counci I gave First an"Off-Campus" luncheon in the Cloister Club andthen an "Inter-dorm Dinner" on Halloween Eve.143Both were very successFul in bringing togetherhundreds of girls who had never met beFore.Christmas is always ceremoniously celebrated inIda Noyes Hall, probably because it a�ords such an ideal background For yuletide traditions. BeFore leaving on vacations, the girls gathered inthe Cloister Club For a Christmas luncheon. Ahuge Christmas tree, brilliant with decorations,stood in the corridor and carolers paradedthrough the rocims singing joyfu] hymns. Anyparty with so much Christmas spirit is always sue­cessfu I.On Twelfth night the greens were traditionallyburned? by Professor Rowland. The� ceremonyclimaxed an evening of dining and dancing inwhich the whole school participated.In the spring the council concentrated on morecultural a�airs. A musical tea provided an en­joyable afternoon for the music lovers. After arecital of classical music by an instrumental quartet,the I isteners relaxed over a cup of tea.The year was climaxed by the Tenth AnnualStudent Art Show, judged by Mrs. Robert M.Hutchins, Mr. George Kepes, and Mrs. Henry G.Gale. At t�e opening tea awards were pre­sented to Shirley Pavlicek, Joshua Holland, Theo­dore Klitzke, and Charlotte Krevitsky. This is thelargest project of the year and in 1941 includedan emphasis on the history of the furnishings ofIda Noyes.All of these activities sponsored by Ida NoyesCouncil tend to make the hall even more popular.It is no longer just a place to go when one hasnothing else to do; it has become a center forsocial events on campus--a special place wheres�ecial things happen.WI N T E R S P 0 R T S145BASKETBALLAlthough the 1940-41 basketballsquad completed its worst conferenceseason in last place by vi rtue of 12straight defeats, Captain Joe Stampfsaved the team from complete ignominyby wi nni ng the Big Ten scori ng titleand setting a new conference freethrow record.As the season progresse::J and itbecame apparent that the team washopelessly doomed to the conferencecellar, all attention focused on Stcmp]as he made his bid for the individualscoring title. The team was offensivelyineffective, averaging only 31 pointsa game to their opponents 51, butCaptain Joe maintained a scoringaverage of 13. 8 points. This gave hima 166 total for the season and a 4146point edge over Gene Englund, bril­liant center of the Wisconsin Badgers,who are the Big Ten and NationalIntercollegiate Champions. The un­precedented number of foul shots was agreat help to Joe in his title quest.Since the objective of all opponents wasto check the Maroon big gun, theyusually put two guards on Stompl andnever hesitated to treat him roughly.The resulting fouls enabled Joe to sink82 rree throws and thus establish a newBig Ten record, replacing the previousmark set by Joe Reiff of NorthwesternUniversity.In non-conference ti Its, the team dida little better, winning 4 games andlosing the same number. They droppedthe season's opener to Georgia andNorgren147StampMcMahonSiskaNorrisKrakowkaGeppingerNorgrenWagenbergNelson later lost to Western State} De Paul}and Loyola. The four victories wereover Illinois Tech} North Central}Marquette and Princeton. This lastwas the most exciting game of theseason. The Tigers overcame a 29-23lead in the last four minutes Lo send thegame into an overtime period in whichStompf's free throw anj McMahon'slong shot gave the Maroons a 32-31victory.Under the direction of Coach NelsNorgren the team's style of play duringthe major portion of the season di Fferedthis year from that of the past. The teamstarted out using a fast break offenseand a rigid man-for-man defense. Thefast brea k, however} never successfu Ilymaterialized} and the team turned toplaying a strictly defensive game. Thedefense was also quite ineffective be­cause of the lack of tall guards. Of­fensively} Stampf carried the greatestburden. Fons} although brilliant atti rnes, was not consistently so, and Joealone cou Id not counter-balance theweak defense. Late in the seasonNorgren changed back to the zonedefense of former seasons, but even thisdid not help. All in all, it was a dis­couraging season, but there is alwayslots of hope for more success next year148MAJOR "("joe Stampf, Captainjack FonsEd NelsonChuck WagenbergOLD ENGLISH "("jim CrosbieBob HixsonGeorge KrakowkaMike McMahonFred ShaverPLAIN GARMENTBob LiftonDewey NorrisFrank SiskaBud Wi I kerson WilkersonHixsonKretschmarFonsStampfLiftonShaverCrosbieNUMERALSjohn CulpDan FogelHowie Husumjohn jorgensonEd NitchieBob OakleyBob SmidlDave ZimmermanRESERVE NUMERALSMeyer BarrashIrving BurnsteinHoward FlotowGene GleasonLew johnsonCharles Nortonjpbn Walsh1!1�., •. (149WRESTLINGFront-Stone, Balla, Littleford, Zafros, Pyle.Back-Vorres, Stehney, Parker, Getz, Mustain,Bates. Hampered throughout the season by ineligibility,the Maroon wrestling team nonetheless camethrough to make its strongest showing in severalyears.Captain Willis Littleford was the standout of theteam, winning all his bouts but one during theregular season and going all the way to the finalsin the ConFerence meet before dropping a closedecision to Roberts of Wisconsin. Tough and wiryafter a year as a ranger in Yosemite National Parkthe capable Willy became a Favorite with Bartletlhabituees. One of Coach Vorres best 165pounders in recent years, the relentless Marooncaptain met and deFeated several top-notch wrest­lers.Big belligerent Milt Weiss won the consolationBig Ten title among the big fellows. Milt develop­ed into a consistent winner as the season pro­gressed. In the Northwestern meet he pinnedTuFfy Chambers, Captain of the '41 Wildcat gridteam. Bob Mustain, sophomore light-heavyweightfro� Proviso, made a strong showing in his division,salvaging the only Maroon victory in the disastrousIowa State Teachers meet. Sam Zafros at 136and Carroll Pyle at 128 pounds were both clever,Fast, scientific wrestlers who won regularly.Although Chicago has never won a Big Ten150title in this punishing sport, Coach Vorres hasproduced a number of tough, skilled matmen and isknown allover the country as an expert in thegame. At present the wiry little mentor is workingon a book designed to cover the whole scienceof amateur wrestling. When the volume is releasedfor publication, it will be the biggest, finestcollect ion of wrestl ing information ever assembled,a sort of wrestling bible and dictionary. MAJOR '.C'Willis LittlefordCarroll PyleBernard StoneMilt WeissSam ZafrosStarting the season with a decisive 28-8 win overt�.e American College of Physical Education, thelV.aroons dropped three in a row to Illinois Normal,Franklin and Marshall, and Pennsylvania. Twowins from Northwestern and Wheaton precededthe Iowa State Teachers 21-3 drubbing. Anotherclean-cut victory over the Purple concluded theregular season. OLD ENGLISH "C'George BallaLawrence BatesFrank GetzBob MustainMartin OndrusBill MasseyAndy StehneyIt is remarkable that the East places so much moreernphosis en the mat sport than most other parts ofthe country. The Maroon grapplers returned fromthe Pennsylvania trip with glOWing accounts ofpacked stands and big crowds. Although metro­politan areas are not renowned for supporting thesport, a surprisingly large number of fans turned outto watch some of the home contests. Enthusiastspoint out that in few other sports is a man so muchon his own as when he stalks across the paddedcanvas. PLAIN GARMENTEd CernyJohn IvyDick ParkerPete PollisSlim SomervilleNUMERALSAllen BurrisJohn BuzzellMarty HansonGlenn MoranDick ReynoldsRESERVE NUMERALSIsrael KosloffBud LauermanFrank Wrobel151Hampered from the start of the year by badbreaks including the loss of Captain John Argallthru ineligibility, Coach McGillivray's seagoingMaroons fought through a valiant season, emergingfrom a tough schedule of eight dual meets withthree victories.Leading performers on the outfit were ArtBethke, junior breast stroke ace and easily one ofthe three or four best in any college in the country,Bill Baugher, chunky, powerful sophomore free­stvler, and Leo Luckhardt, lanky sprint specialist.Several promising men showed great improvement SWIMMINGFront-Baugher, Luckhardt, Bethke, Moore,Brown.Middle-Crosby, Bovbjerg, Leach, Thorburn,McGillivray.Back-Ragle, Richardson, Smith, Matheson.MAJOR "("Bill BaugherArt BethkeLeo LuckhardtCraig MooreOLD ENGLISH "("Chuck BrownJohn CrosbyLin LeachBaxter RichardsonFront-Ragle, Smith, Percy, Bethke( Fischer.Back-Leach, Matheson, Luckhardt, Thorburn,Robinson, Reed, McGillivray.during the winter and will be regular performersnext winter, these include Craig Moore, letterwinner in back stroke, Baxter Richardson, distanceswimmer, and John Crosby, Sophomore divingartist.Bethke's excellent condition and natural abilitykept him undefeated all the regular season, but inthe conference and again in the nationals he lostto Dick Skinner, Michigan's ace of the decade.At the close of the season the College SwimmingCoaches Association honored Coach McGillivrayby electing him Preside;-)t.152WATER POLOMAJOR "("Chuck Percy, CaptainPaul SmithA perennial standout amongChicago's athletic teams is thecrack water polo unit. Coachedby E. W. McGillivray, nationallyknown authority, the Maroonswound up this year in secondplace in the Big Ten behind thefighting Wildcats from North­western.Players included a number fromthe swimming team, who easilykept in excellent condition andbecame adept at this grueling,punishing game. Champions inthe second division of the Chi­cago Water Polo Associationwere the Maroon "B's" Theregulars placed fourth in the exper­ienced loop.Although only men eligible forvarsity could compete in BigTen contests, other games wereopen to graduate students andineligible players. Van DeWater, Argall, and others thusappeared in a number of theseti Its. OLD ENGLISH "(" PLAIN GARMENTHarry Fischerjim Mathesonjack RagleDick Reedjohn Speckt:!ob Thorburn Bob BovbjergChuck MoweryMilt RobinsonAsh Taylor153FENCINGOne of the most successful coaches in America istowering, blond, blue-eyed Alvar Hermanson,Fencing Instructor at Chica£lO and trainer of thelast few Olympic teams. Une of the best threefencers in the country himself, the big Norsemanas Maroon mentor has produced a number of top­notchers.This year Coach Hermanson's white-clad swords­men emerged for the seventh consecutive season asBig Ten Conference Champions, a record un­equalled by any other Chicago athletic team.Co-Captain Herb Ruben was crowned foilsindividual champ, while joe Molkup and Co­Captain Siever were one-two in the sabre. Beforethe season several experts had predicted thatNorthwestern would oust Chicago from its usualtitle, but Molkup came to the rescue in the lastbout of the evening to salvage victory in thecrucial match.The superb record of the Fencing team attracts alarge number of candidates every year, and, asHermanson is a past-master at developing the potentialities of his men, Chicago's tenure asking of Big Ten schools in this sport seems reason­ably secure.MAJOR "("Herbert RubenPaul Sieverjoe MolkupBen PritzOLD ENGLISH "("Norton GinsbergBob Krovbi IIjay MullenRay NortonDon RichardsBob HullPLAIN GARMENTCarl DragstedtTom HillTaylor MorrisFront-Ginsberg, Richards, Ruben, Siever, Pritz, Molkup.Middle-Norton, Morris, Hill, Mullen, Hull, Wilder.Back-Kraybill, Hermanson, Dragstedt.154Handicapped by undeniably bad breaks fromthe start of the year, the Maroon muscle men cameback strong to place third in the Big Ten. GYMNASTICSWith famed mentor "DL" Hoffer disabled by anoperation, Erwin Beyer, Captain of the Maroonteam two years ago and former National all­around champion, took over the duties of Coachand did a really amazing job. Beyer is one of themost promising young coaches in the Midwest. lllinols, soon to be crowned new titleholder, thennosed out the Fighting Maroon's by a 541.25 to540 count, a real heart-breaker that should havegone to Chicago.� Captain Courtney Shanken performed all­around, but his twin, Earl, had to restrict hisactivities somewhat because of a badly sprainedwrist. Superbly poised Glenn Pierre handledeverything but tumbling with skill and Finesse. BigAlan Robertson, in spite of a wrenched back,dropped only one decision on the mat during theregular season. Jim Degan, ring man par excel­lence, completes the list of regular performers.Winning the opener from Southern IllinoisNormal, Beyer's apparatus men dropped two roadtrips to Minnesota's defending champs and PennState before whipping Iowa handily at Bartlett, MAJOR "("Courtney Shanken, CaptainEarl Shanken .AI RobertsonGlenn PierreOLD ENGLISH "("Jim DeganPLAIN GARMENTHowie HellerGeorge LauermanDon RobertsonFront-Pierre, C. Shanken, A. Robertson, D. Robertson, E. Shanken.Back-Beyer, Heller, Degan.155WINTER INTRAMURALSAlways an important period for the Intramuraloffice, the Winter Quarter sees a very large per­centage of University men file in and out of Bartlettto take part in the heavy program. With snowblanketing the ground and cold making it impos­sible for outdoor recreation, Intramurals step intothe breach with an extensive sports schedule thatincludes tournaments in basketball, wrestling,squash, bowling, table tennis, and badminton.First to get under way was the basketballtournament. Because of the pol icy of emphasison novice teams, entries doubled. Fraternity andorganization A and B teams banded together toform an experienced loop, whereas C D, and Eoutfits comprised the novice circuit. This arrange­ment increased participation by giving less skill­ful players an opportunity to compete on equalterms.As in touchball, a number of leagues composedeach loop, and competition for the first six weekswas mainly between the members of the sameleagues. The playoffs determined the divisionchampions and finally the University champions.The winners:University Champions·-Delta Kappa EpsilonFraternity Champions-Delta Kappa EpsilonIndependent Champions--Social Service Ad-ministrationDormitory Champions-Snell HallEmployees Champions-Reynolds ClubFraternity Novice Champions·-Phi Kappa PsiLeague winners:Alpha: Psi U. A.Beta: Phi Gam A.Gamma: Alpha Delt ADelta: Delta U. A.Kappa: Deke A.Chi: Delta U. B.Rho: Deke E.Eta: Alpha Delt D.Phi: Deke C.Tau: Phi Psi C.Sigma: Bar AssociationUpsilon: C. T. 5.Omega: Elite A.Dorm: Snell Hall156Delta Kappa Epsilon, University Champion, wasundoubtedly the strongest team in competition.With a strong, well-balanced Five coordinated byhours of practice and scrimmage into an integratedunit, Deke A survived a tough season without asingle defeat. Members of the team were BobMathews, Ralph Ashley, Erie Theimer, Rex Thomp­son, and both Bob Millers.Toughest outfit Deke ran up against was AlphaDelt. Earl Wheeler's great ability on tip-in shotsmade AD Phi a very strong offensive team, andmany thought Deke lucky to win by a basket in aclose, hard-fought battle. Phi Gam, with ArmandDonian pacing a brilliant offense, lost a heart­breaker to Deke in the semi-Finals, 30-28.In the novice loop, two teams stood out in frontof the Field, Phi Psi C and Deke Pledge C team.After sweeping opposition aside all season, thetwo outfits met in the Finals, with Phi Psi winning alackadaisical contest, 8-7.Responsible for the precision and regularity ofplay in the tournament was Coach Hebert's ablestaff of referees. Mostly varsity men, the officialsknew the game well enough to keep play fast andexciting. Though few fouls were called, all gameswere cleonly contested. Even the players, sooft�n given to complaining of unfair discrimination,were thoroughly satisfied with Referees Ed Nelson,Pcrisi, Sawyier, et al.Early in February the wrestling meet was run offunder the direction of Donald Warfield. The threeday tourney took place in the Wrestling room onthe ground Floor of Bartlett Gym. Extending theperiod an extra day proved a wise step, for thenno man had to wrestle more than twice in one day.Again, there were two divisions, novice andadvanced, with bulk of the competitors in the formerbracket. Eighty two men competed in this meet.Wise choices of Warfield and Hebert werethose of varsity men Zafros, Littleford, and othersfor referees. Varsity Coach Vorres had a Fieldday watching and enjoying the grappling meethappy that he might be free from worry this onceat least, and spending all his time seeking pros­pects.The first day matches in the five heavier divisionswere run off down to the Finals. Following this ,157the lighter men met and eliminated participants ineach class down to two contestants. On the lastday of the meet, Finals in both divisions and allclasses were run off. Phi Psi scored 75 points towin, with Deke following one point behind.Elites with 45, Alpha Delta with 26, and D. U.with 25 filled in the places.The bowling tournament was not finished duringwinter quarter, but ran down to the finals, withJailbirds and Alpha Delts knotted for first place,The last contest was left for spri ng quarter.Harvey Rubin took the squash title by beatingGene Folks of Deke, while Henry Brooks won thebadminton tourney. Neither hand ball nor tabletennis were completed by the close of the quarter.Unofficial tabulations released in March placeDeke well at the head of the list, followed byElites and Alpha Dell. Jailbirds, defending champsare far down in fourth place. The Deke lead offifty points looks rather formidable, but it is a triHepremature to pick a favorite.Coach Hebert's winter program may be classedas perhaps the most successful ever seen at thisUniversity. A larger percentage of studentscompeted than has since the time of compulsorygym. At almost any hour of the day there wereseveral teams working out on the big Hoor at Bart­lett.158This year saw a rejuvenation of the organiza­tion of C men, winners of a major award, whichhas always been more or less active during theUniversity year.During the month of December, all winners of theC who were still undergraduates met in theTrophy Room at Bartlett to start their work. Firstact was to change the name of their organizationto the Varsity C Club. Next they elected officers.Art Lopatka, Student Marshall and outstandingbaseballer and captain, became President, withjoe Stampfl later to be crowned Big Ten Basket­ball scoring king, Vice-President. Track Captainjim Ray was Secretary and Treasurer and WillisLittleford, Wrestling leader, Sergeant-at-Arms.The club continued to meet at intervals through­out the winter in preparation for a banquet. ThisC-men VARSITY CLUBtook place early in April. Awards for winterquarter sports were made with President Lopatkapresiding. As this book goes to press, the Exec­utive Committee, composed of the four officers andthe other team captains, is planning anotherbanquet for june, honoring award-winners inspring sports.At present the outlook for the organization isbright, and the two banquets are evidently estab­lished as regular events on the University calendar.Membership in the "C" club is a goal towardwhich every University athlete strives. The rosterof ex-members includes such famous names asWalter Eckersall, jay Berwanger, Fritz Crisler,Wally Steffen, Bill Haarlow, and George Lott.Crowning point in the athlete's college life alwayscomes at the banquet as the coach congratulateshim and hands him his Maroon emblem.159160S P R I N GSPRING QUARTER ACTIVITIESSpring quarter on the OCiadrangles got underway in a bluster of March weather. The firstweek saw the weather undergo a change for thebetter, and the first Sunday saw loop the openingof Arsenic and Old Lace. The students interestedin histrionics used this gruesome tidbit for theirentertainment during the early days of the quarter.The campus seemed to drift into activity rather thanrush into it in the usual manner.Hell weeks were the vogue in entertainment forthe fraternity men and the club women, and morethan a few of the students got off to a rather poorscholastic start because of this. The Dekest as perexpectation, dished out the most harrowing horrorSocial Sciences Field Trip. of the trial periods. Craig Leman spent a weekdead on his feet. Lineberger looked quite as bad.The rest of their pledges were conspicuouslyabsent from campus haunts due mainly to inabilityto wolk, tclk, and engage in the other humanpursuits necessary to social existence. The PsiU\ who had undergone some very thorough antiHell Week propaganda earlier in the yeart gavetheir bunch a rather decent four day holiday. Theytook them to the movies, made them drink theirmilk,'mollicoddled the boys until some of the visitingfiremen wondered what the whole system wascoming to. On the other hand the Alpha Deltsand the Phi Psi's carried on much in their usualmanners. Neither one made their pledges partic-1112Viennes3 Ball OusensMoran, Eaton, Bickertularly noticeable, and no fraternity at all madetheir little darlings really objectionable for achange.Women's hell weeks are a diFferent matter. Itis rumored that Dick Baker and Helen Pearcecreated a momentous little song about Betsy Kuhduring the Ouadrangler horror week. Manypeople in Foster seem to have heard the ditty at anearly hour, but the serenaders were never appre­hended. True to form, the antics of the femaleinitiates attracted little attention. Even the pledgesA Peak at a Deke seemed to take matters with apparent equanimityalthough hell week did interfere with a date ortwo.As the sun climbed higher and Easter ap­proached, Dick Salzmann got the wheels movingunder the vast Blackfriars publicity organization.The peace of a lovely Good Friday was marred bythe horrible spectacle of University seniors gettingthemselves shaved in front of the C-Bench as apreliminary to the annual mustache race. Downand out favorites were Bud Aronson and Docjampolis. For many there was no hope of even asmall showing. The contest on the whole wasrather amusing but slightly ludicrous. The moreintelligent students went their various ways andmany spent that noon hour in church.Dark shadow over the Spring quarter was thespectre of the Local Draft Board. Many sludentsmust prepare to enter the services of their countrywith the First days of july. The closer this spectrecame, the more enthusiastic became student sup­port of Mr. Hutchins' "stay out of war" program.The ·fact is illoqico] but true. Spring further sawthe Cap and Gown elect jane Moran BeaulyOueen in a really fair contest. She was chosenfor the book by tarl Carrol. Along with her, theimpressario chose Louise Eaton and Punky johnsonas second and third choices. jane was introduced163at Blackfriars opening night; as though she neededan introduction to the campus.Major happenings of the Spring Quarter are ofcourse the elections of those who are to leadthe campus during the coming year. At press timeClayton Traeger was Prexy-to-be of the I-FCouncil, taking over Percy's well-handled job.Dink Maclellan took over the Student Social Com­mittee. Dorothy T eberg, supporled by the MB'Sand the Sigma's, nosed out Marge Brooks forpresident of Mirror, but the latter was immediatelyelected to the top job on the Student SettlementBoard, thus throwing another Quad back into thestride of BWOCs. Shirley lat ham carried thetorch of Esoteric in the ranks of the campus leaderswith her position as head of Federation. Chi RhoSigma got Virginia Allen in as president of Inter­club. Most of the men waited longer to hold theirelections, so this review is incomplete. Major formal parties of the Spring came alongwith the Blackfriars season. Fraternity housesgave their usual blowouts for the elite. Earlier,however, Ouodrcnoler. Esoteric, Sigma, andMortarboard got logether for the first Four-Way.The party proved to be quite successful despite thedoubts of many persons as to the ability of theyoung ladies concerned to tolerate the presenceof their rushing rivals. Most of the participants inthis three (rather four) ringed affair were com­paratively well oiled by their respective cocktaildebauches held previous to the piece de resistance.Final affair of the year is the Sing. The crowdwill be as good as ever, and certainly the powersthat be will prevent the tricky June weather fromdeluging the fraternities as they march down theramp to the strains of the brotherly love notes.The brayi ng wi II probably be even better thanlast year.164Salzmann"Could you tell me where the men's washroomis?" With these words the greatest University ofChicago president since Hutchins made hisappearance on the Mandel Hall stage in the37th annual production of Blackfriars, "Dust it Off"Sprung fom the brain of Maroonmen Martin andHimmel, "Dust it Off" was set in the vicinity of theUniversity's hundredth anniversary. It concernedthe struggle of seventeen presidents sinceHutchins" to raise money. Cast as Eldridge Ebble­bert, the eighteenth president who boomerangedto raise ten million dollars for the University, wasBlackfriars favorite, Robert R Miller.Kester BLACKFRIARSClaire, the female lead, was written with a[usion of Mimi Evans and P.C Rublns in mind. Sheturned out to be one of the most delightful char­acters in the show, as portrayed by Deke "Punk"WarField. Up the ranks from specialty jitterbugsIn Blackfriars, "Punk" slithered through the showwowing the audience with his suggestive voiceand crack rendition of the hit tunes. His biggestsuccess was Fitzgerald's "Life Ain't Like theMovies"Opposite Claire, was stalwart Tim, nephew toEldridge Ebblebort. Played by blonde EddieArmstrong, also a Blackfnars' veteran, the maleKurk165 PaltzerBoard of Superiors:Richard SalzmannCharles PaltzerWalter KurkWilliam Kester AbbottPriorScribeHospitallerJunior Managers:AI SchnoorDale JohnsonBud ArquillaFrank BrunnerWalter BarlowDave FisherPhil StrickFred Wangelin CompanyProductionPublicityBox OfficeTechnicalLightsDesignBusiness Sophomore Managers:Compa ny-ChorusCast Dick MerriFieldJohn DyerProduction-Asst. to ProducerCostumes Don CronsonBob FisherState Properties Frank KenneyHand Properties Johnny LeggittBusiness--Advertising Frank EvansScore Dick CassellOffice Manager Fred KretschmarProgram Joe Von Albade166Newspaper and RadioCitySophomore Managers:Design-PoslersStage SetsTechnicalPublicity-Campus .Neighborhood Bill Van HorneDick ReynoldsTom CottrellJack CampiechePaul BickfordBob MonaghanFred ZahrnHubert WuesthoFfFred BeattieBill VollmerJack PfiefferBill SwansbroRoy EmeryFrank ReedLeonard ShaneJim Hoatson lead finally came to something. Armstrongcombines a good voice and better acting job tomake Tim a real person.Slinky, seductive Sophie, the campus Widow,strutted in the Form of Freshman poet, Frank Hick­man Etherton. Soph is the gal who successivelysnake-eyed halF the University into Falling in lovewith her. In no disguise was Nels Fuqua, peren­nial sophomore, played by John Crosby who spentmost of his spare hours in the Psi U house actinglike Fuqua.As the curtains parted opening night six statues,draped classically in pillars, decorated BarryForno!'s striking set. The six statues were John D.RockeFelierand the five presidents of the University.167The statues came to life to cavort through the showand help the plot along and sing a couple of songs.Hutchins, the cut up, cut up in the person ofBlackfriars' Abbot Dick Salzmann, who whistledat the girls, held a seance with Mortimer Adler,played the big man who wasn't there in fast order.Tall, impressive looking Salz made a Fine tall,impressive looking Hutch.First appearing as statues, the "dead end boys"later appeared as portraits in the president'soffice, then as angels, and Finally as the realsubstances, giving J Pierpont Potscke, the richalumnus, the works. Milt Weiss used his two hund­red odd pounds to help blast out the back ofMandel Hall with his one scene with Ebblebort.He played Potscke.Martin and Himmel had a character in mind thatwould be patterned after the famous high pressuredcampus promoter type. They wanted a whiz­bang sort of a guy, so Whiz Bang came to be MushBlumenthal, also a Blackfriars veteran, who rolledthrough the whole show on roller skates, slappingpeople on the back, cooking up deals, and makinga hit with the audience.The supporting cast included Don Thies, FredBeattie, Henry Brooks, Ash Taylor, Dick Lieber,Don McKnight, Lenny Senn, Bob Highman, DanBarnes and Ken Axelson. The chorus as usual practically stole the show.This year they were Far better than usual under thecrack direction of petite Dorothy King, formervaudeville star. The prize package of the chorusroutines was the beautiful ballet number with the"girls" draped around a fountain and a specialtysolo by Sol Kamensky. Everything from trickyopening chorus straight through to the balletshowed sparkle and verve in the eyes of thepadded boys.Integrating force of the whole show was theproducer-director William M. Randall who tackledthe Blackfriars job this year for the First time. Forthe past three years Randall has directed Mirror,the annual women's revue, and this time he showedthe same directorial knack in producing the allmale musical comedy.Bob Swenson composed the title song, "Dust itOff", and from the minute it was sung, through theentire panorama of University lore and humor,Blackfriars' 37th revue showed bright lights,luster, original talent, and the freshness of maleyouth.When the president, Eldridge Ebblebort, de­scended to Mandel stage in a parachute wavinga ten million dollar check, the University found anoble successor to Hutchins.Front-Schnoor, JohnsonMiddle-Kretschman, Wangelin, Strick, BarlowBClck-Arquilio168SPRING SPORTSTeam members who saw action in the earlygames of the season include:Art Loptka, CaptainEarl Shanken Robert MoreBill OostenbrugSeymour Hirschberg Rodney BriggsAaron MandersGeorge BasichDominic ParisiRobert C. Miller Kenneth JensenCourtney ShankenRobert GruhnDoc JampolisBrightest in several years are the Maroons'baseball prospects for 1941, with a young alertteam bolstered by several capable veterans. BASEBALLCoach Kyle Anderson expressed satisfaction overthe early showing of his nine and predicted animprovement in Chicago's Big Ten standing. Lastyear the Maroons won only one Big Ten gameand finished deep in the cellar.Heading the returning veterans is Captain ArtLopatka, bulwark of the hard-working mound staffand speed-ball artist. A graduate of Austin Highof Chicago, Lopatka has developed into a highly­respected pitcher as well as a dangerous slugger.Art works about a third of the games from themound and plays left field in the rest. Last yearhis eighth inning two-run homer gave Chicago itslone victory, a 2-1 win over Purdue.170Other C winners on the team are Sy Hirschbergand Aaron Manders. Hirschberg, a product ofMorton High of Cicero, tends the keystone sackwith sure-handed skill and Finesse, while thespeedy Manders bulwarks the outfield. Threejuniors, minor lettermen, are jack Fons, th irdsacker, and Ken Garverick and Johnny Beeks,both hurlers. Tall, lithe Fons is capable at hisimportant post on the hot corner and ought to geta major this year. Both Beeks and Garverick helpa great deal in easing some of the pitching burdenfrom l.opotkos burly shoulders.A number of promising sophomores who wonnumerals last year now play with the Varsity.Big Bill Oostenbrug, only port-sider on the squad,handles his six-foot-two-inch frame admirablyaround first base besides sending many lusty drivesfrom his big bat into right field. Powerful GeorgeBasich, another Morton product, does most of thereceiving; in his first year as full-time back-stop,Basich is rapidly developing into a smart catcher.Cool-headed, dependable place-hitter is NickParisi who divides his time between infield andoutfield. Good in the clutch, Nick greatly in­creases the batting efficiency of a team notoriouslyweak at the plate. A trio of good, up-and-comingpitchers are Lin Leach, of Culver, Sy Allen fromMorgan Park Academy, and Bob Meyer of Mor­ton. Star gymnast Earl Shanken practiced with theteam for a while last summer, showing such promisethat he reported for varsity ball in April, quicklyearning a reguJar position as shortstop. Earl'sfielding is superb, but ably competing against himfor the job is slugger Armand Donian, also a juniorreporting for the first time. Another dependableball pl�yer is Charley Miller, who doubles asfielder and catcher.This polyglot group of ball players has beenwelded into a pretty good team by the persistentcoaching efforts of Kyle Anderson. This is theninth year of Terre Haute's pride as Maroon Varsitymentor. As an undergraduate, Anderson playedinfield for three years, graduating in 1928 ascaptain. He played through one season with thePittsburgh Pirates of the National League, but leftprofessional ball after he was made a free agentby Judge Landis in a disputed option agreement.In the Western Conference, Northwestern, whowas co-titleholder with Illinois last year, looksstrong, and Iowa and Minnesota both boast strongoutfits. Illinois lost five regulars by graduationbut should give the other three teams a run fortheir money. The Maroons might fit in somewherenear the top; their chances look as good as thoseof the other schools, who all have players suffer­ing from injuries and ineliqibilities. A big boostout of the cellar, at least, is indicated.Front-Manders, Hirschberg, Hurney, Calageratos, Levit, Cowan, Fons.Middle-Graverick, Miller, Reynolds, Sotos, McCracken, Lopatka, Beeks.Back-Anderson, Gruhn, Heller, Higgins.171The following is the spring Schedule: April 26 Michigan at Ann ArborApril 3 Milliken at Decatur May 2 Illinois at ChicagoApril 4 Kentucky State at Murray May 3 Illinois at ChicagoApril 5 Western State at Bowling Green May 9 Iowa at ChicagoApril 11 De Pauw at Chicago May 10 Iowa at ChicagoApril 12 De Pauw at Chicago May 16 Wisconsin at MadisonApril 15 Notre Dame at Chicago May 17 Wisconsin at MadisonApril 18 Northwestern at EvansLon May 24 Illinois Tech. at ChicagoApril 19 Northwestern at Chicago May 30 Minnesota at MinneapolisApril 25 Michigan at Ann Arbor May 31 Minnesota at Minneapolis172TENNISAlthough Coach Wally Hebert lost his two co­captains by graduation, Chicago returns to Big Tentennis competition with a relatively strong squad.They hope to at least throw a good scare into asmug Northwestern team which Figures to repealas Champ.Captain Carl Sawyier, junior ace who workedin the number three spot last year, holds down theFirst post. The lanky star is the latest Maroonwhose name will go down in tennis history as anall-time Chicago great. Especially noteworthyhave been Chicago's tennis teams of the past few years. Famous players have competed under theMaroon colors, giving the squad a heritage to befound at few other schools. George Lott, NormBickel, Scotty Rexinger, Chester and Bill Murphyare just a few of the nationally famous stars whoworked on Maroon teams.Sawyier's toughest Big Ten opposition will comefrom Northwestern's famed Seymour Greenberg,defending champ, but Captain Cal's speed andsteadiness may well surprise the Wildcat ace.Wally Kemetick Figures to hold down the secondspot, with Bud Lifton pushing him at number three.173TENNISFront-Levy, Norian, Sawyier, Fox, Shostrom.Back-Herbert, Kogan, Jorgenson, Weedfall,Lifton. Several good men are still competing for the re­maining places. Sawyier and Lifton will probablyperform as top doubles combination.Although Coach Hebert does not bank tooheavily on a Big Ten title, he has high hopes forthe next two or three years, with one of thestrongest yearling squads in University historydeveloping daily under his tutelage. Bob Smidl,johnny jorgenson, brother of last year's captain,Ed Nitchie, and Frank Lazarus have all demon­strated their worth and show great promise. Theschedule is:April 18 Augustana at ChicagoApril 14 Wisconsin at ChicagoApril 26 Michigan at ChicagoMay 2 Iowa at Iowa CityMay 3 Minnesota at MinneapolisMay 6 Western State at ChicagoMay 10 Notre Dame at ChicagoMay 12 Illinois at UrbanaMay 14 Northwestern at EvanstonMay 19 Purdue at ChicagoMay 20 Kalamazoo at ChicagoMay 26 Northwestern at ChicagoMay 29-30- Conference meet at Chicago31june 11-12- N.C.A.A. District Qualifying Meet13-14 at Evanstonjune 23-24- N.C.A.A. Meet at Merion Cricket25-26-27- Club.28.174GO L FLeast publicized and therefore among the leastsupported of Maroon sports is Golf. This IS sur­prising, for two years ago Chicago came intopossession of one of the finest courses in the country,Dr. Lasker's Mill Road Farm course.Chuck Tanis, well-known pro from OlympiaFields, coaches the team which practices occa­sionally in fall and early winter in Stagg Field.Inexperience and lack of interest by enough ofthe studenl body wi II probably keep the 1941team from elevating its dismal status in Big Tencompetition.Last year's captain, Harry Topping, who turnedin several fine performances in the seventies, waslost by graduation, leaving the team without asingle top-Hichter. AI Schmus, Ed Rachlin, FrankBrunner, and AI Wisely are taking over theranking positions.The Maroon golfers last year managed to takeone dual meet, from the Boilermakers of Purdue,9 1-2 to 8 1-2. They dropped their other Big Tenmeets to Northwestern, Iowa, and Wisconsin.Three men, Topping, Wisely, and Schmus, repre­sented the Maroons at the Big Ten Conferencemeet held at Columbus, Ohio. Winner of the meet was Illinois, closely followedby Michigan, Minnesota, and Ohio State. Chicagoplaced tenth, just behind Purdue. Captain Top­ping ranked thirty-ninth individually. Best per­formance of the meet was Ohio State's crackerjack,Billy Gilbert. Dropping in several eagles andbirdies the first day, Gilbert hit a 72 hole total of298. Right behind was Palmer of Michigan.Slarting slowly, the Wolverine ace did not hit hisstride until the last day, and through a series ofbad breaks, he missed tieing Gilbert by one stroke.Several men were close to 300, but no one couldapproach the two leaders, who were safelyahead of the field.Chicago's chances of elevating her standingdon't look too bright at the moment, but there isalways the chance that the expert Coach Tanis canunearth some talent in time for the Conferencemeet.The schedule is:April 28May 2May 17May 19June 9June 18-19 at Olympia Fieldsat Madisonat Olympia Fieldsat Lafayetteat Mi II Road Farmat Mill Road FarmillinoisWisconsinIowaPurdueNorthwesternConferenceFront-Afton, Bohnhoff, Schmus.Back-Swec, Rachlin, Wiseley,Kerns.175Press Photograph er John ThompsonChicago emerged from its winter quarter indoortrack season with a pretty fair record. Twoseniors, Captain Jim Ray and Shot Putter HughRendleman, formed a nucleus to steady the lessexperienced men. Ray competed with markedsuccess in both broad jump and high jump, besides INDOOR TRACKrunning the hurdles. Big Iowa-bred Rendlemanheaved the shot-put farther than any other Chicagoathlete ever did and scored heavily in the eventall season.Heading the list of sophomores is crack-miler176OUTDOOR TRACKRay Randall, who needs just a little more experi­ence to rank with the top two or three men in theBig Ten. Little Ray won his event several timesagainst tough competition, clicking off a neat 4:26against Illinois. Bob Kincheloe, pole-valuter fromUniversity High of Chicago, started the season atthe twelve-and-a-quarter foot mark and by Marchhad cleared thirteen. Bud Long and Bob Fitz­gerald are both natural sprinters who need pol ishand experience. Trudy Dahlberg runs the mile,while John Leggitt handles the two-mile grueler.A strong Freshman team bodes well for next year ,and Coach Merriam's prospects are improving,The team moved outside in April, working dailyin Stagg Field instead of the huge Field House,and all evidence points to a successful springseason. The schedule is:April 25-26 Drake Relays at Des MoineMay 3 Wayne at ChicagoMay 10 Northwestern at Evanstonand MinnesotaMay 16-17 Conference at MinnesotaMay 24 Purdue at LafayetteJune 1-6 Central Inter-collegiate meet at MilwaukeeJune 17 PaciFic Coast-BigTen Meet at Los AngelesJune 20-21 N.C.A.A. Meet at Palo AltoRendleman Puts the Shot177SPRING INTRAMURALSAlthough the coming examinations and warmweather should dull the athletic enthusiasm ofUniversity students, actually the converse holdstrue. Coach Hebert can always depend on theadvent of spring to bring out more participants inintramurals than any other season of the schoolyear. The spring intramural program is accordinglyenlarged to take advantage of the weather andto provide for increased participationg.Five meets and tourneys make up the officialspring Intramural calendar. Most important ofthese is softball, starting early in April. As in fallquarter touchball, there are a number of fraternityleagues, dorm leagues, and independent loops.Competition runs nearly every day, except forbreaks in the weather, and each team averagestwo contests a week.Faci I ities for softball are excellent, besides Greenswood Field, units practice at two other diamondson campus. Most of the fraternities entered at leasttwo teams to take advantage of the participationpoint system. Besides playing their regularlyscheduled games, many Find time to practice anhour or two every day.Softball is better suited to Intramural play thanbaseball for a number of reasons; the men need nogloves or other regulation equipment except softsoled shoes, a much smaller Field can be used, theball is slightly larger and travels more slowly thana hardball, and there is much less likelihood of theplayers receiving injuries. Slow pitching isdemanded, and the batter and even the Fieldershave a much greater chance of getting in on theplay. In I-M hardball contests, actual play oftendegenerates into a mere game of catch betweenthe pitcher and his receiver. In softball, action is178almost continuous, and every player must be con­tinually on his toes.Winners in each of the Fraternity leagues willmeet in playoFfs to determine their color-bearerThe independent and dorm leagues will also nametheir title holders, who will meet to determinewhich finalist will then tangle with the Greekwinner. To the victor will go the universitychampionship.A big outdoor track meet is the second con­spicuous event on the Intramural calendar. Everyorganization is expected to compete in both thenovice and the advanced leagues. This meet comesoFf early in May. Events will probably be thesame as For the Indoor Meet.A doubles table-tennis tournament held withthe help of the Reynolds Club started at the be­ginning of the quarter with a very large number ofentries. A team golF tournament completes thelist of competition for teams. Matches are playedat the convenience of participants at any courseof their choosing.An individual tennis tournament, started in thefall, draws to its conclusion early in June, whenFinals are played. This tourney is purely forindividuals who like the gamei no man can scorepoints for his club or Fraternity by success in thiscompetition.The spring program, with its Five sports, keepsparticipation going strong oFficially. Meanwhile,inFormal recreation in the swimming pool locatedin Bartlett Gym, in the rest of the gymnasium, andin the West Stands' handball courts and riFle rangesupplies an even larger number of students withtheir relaxation. Chicago's intramural programis undoubtedly one of the Finest to be found inany University, and under Wally Hebert's abledirection promises to stay at the top.179180ACTIVITIES AND HONORSREYNOLDS CLUBAcross the hall from the Coffee Shop and com­peting with it for campus relaxation honors is theReynolds Club. The comfortable lounge andnoisy game rooms often I ure conscientious studentsfrom their classes in Mandel Hall. Six barberchairs serve as embarrassing reminders to CampusSamsons as they pass on to the ping pong tables.Everywhere one goes there is fun to be had andfriends to meet, so the only real competition theCoffee Shop affords is women, for the ReynoldsClub is reserved for men only.Donated by Mrs. Reynolds in honor of herhusband, Joseph Reynolds, it was formally dedi­cated in December, 1903. A husky, brawlingsteamship captain who came to own a wholesteamship line, Reynolds would have approvedthe manly atmosphere of the club. It was downto earth and meant to provide the whole schoolwith a good time.Director of the building and its Iccilities isHoward Mort, who this year was less active in, order to do Alumni Relations work in connectionwith the Fiftieth Anniversary Drive. But responsi­ble for special activities is the Reynolds Club Council. This council is composed of fourteenmembers and operates through an executivecouncil and four committees, social, stag, tourna­ment, and publicity, each committee dealing witha special aspect of the club's function. Especiallyorganized for efficiency, the constitution of thecouncil provides that not more than two activemembers may be members of the same fraternityand that if any member fails to do his share of workhe is dismissed from the council by a three fourthsvote of the members. Thus, effectively set up foraction, the counci I sets out to provide a wellrounded program for university students.The Reynolds Club plays an important role inorienting new freshmen at the beginning of theschool year. There is no better place for coun­selors to bring their charges if they want to insurethe freshman a good time, and most counselors,realizing this, Fill the Club in fall and impress thenewcomers with the unheard of social life at theUniversity of Chicago.A Program planned especially for freshmanweek is also sponsored by the Council. A pingpong tournament was an original way to Fill anFront-Zauric, Merrifield, Krakowka, Crane, Lowenstein, Brown, Steffee, Cummings.Back-Rielly, Cornwall.182afternoon. Then during the evening after D. A.'sperformance, there was an open house--with oldfashioned Bingo and new fangled dancing.Sticking to its practice of catering to men, theReynolds Club gives three stags a quarter. At thestags an outside speaker gives his views on someinteresting subject+-non-ocodemic and then re­freshments are served as the men relaxed andtalked over the lecture.Basketball dances at the Reynolds Club after the Saturday basketball games are a tradition amongcampus activities. A room strung with Big Tenbanners and jammed with rollicking couples ispictured in almost every year book. Yet this yearthe dances were even more popular due to certaininnovations. First the Council featured name bandslike Billy Scott from the Pump Room and Tony Cabotfrom the Blackhawk. There was no need to gofarther for good music. Secondly, there was theadded entertainment of Aoor shows at whichcampus personalities performed and one club and183one fraternity sang their songs in practice for'competition in spring. Thus Reynolds Club dancesthis year became special events on campus.Bridge fiends also found an activity much to theirliking-the Campus Bridge Tournament. A matchpoint play-off was meant to really test the playersand settle once and for all the arguments brewingin the' C' Shop. Everyone entered, club women,fraternity men, and independents. But not sotishedwith letting one foursome hold a title too long, asecond bridge tournament was scheduled forspring when the champions were made to defendthemselves, The affair looks to becoming a bi-annualevent.Not only bridge tournaments but also billiardsand ping pong tournaments kept competition keenon the campus. Those freshmen who were sogreen the First week had become experts (throughconstant practice and neglected studies) andusurped many a senior's throne.Movies and general activities livened thegruesome exam week and then a Final dance afterInterfraternity Sing Finished the year. This danceserves as a climax to the evening of song and madeit a really festive occasion.All of the activities at the Reynolds Club gavethe students at the University of Chicago a lot ofpleasure to balance the hard work they did.Billiards became the Favorite sport of people whohad never seen a green Felt covered table beForethe previous September, and lazy relaxation acommon practice. But iF none of the more strenuousactivities appealed to the men, they could alwaysFind nostalgic pleasure in reading the "hometown"newspaper in the library.John Crane, PresidentMarshall BlumenthalJack BrownKenneth CornwallRobert CumminsAlFred GentzlerJulian LowensteinHarold SteFfee184FRESHMAN COUNCILThree years ago an organization called theFreshman Council was founded. Its purpose wasprimarily to integrate the freshman class, and itconsists of nine students elected by the membersof this neophyte group. with a questionaire to learn in ..... what types ofactivities most of the freshman are interested. Asa consequence of these results, suitcble clubs -;mbe created.At its weekly meetings are discussed the socialand academic problems that are confronting theclass. With its high hopes for the future, the FreshmanCouncil stands as one of the most potential organi­zations on campus.This year the council has sponsored severalfreshman-faculty luncheons to which such notablefaculty members were invited as Joseph Schwab,Reginald Stevenson, and Maynard Krueger. Incooperation with the Freshman Council of theNorthwestern University a very successful basket­ball dance was given. Besides taking an activepart in helping to raise money for the StudentFiftieth Anniversary FundI the council participatedin the Homecoming Week celebration. It plansto survey the Freshman class during spring quarter Bob Dille-PresidentEla i ne Sega I-Secretary- TreasurerSue BohnenBetty RosenheimBill McNicholBob MurrayMary TrovillionDoris WestfallLois RegnellCampaign in Circle185INTERNATIONALOne of the Finest institutions on the Universityof Chicago campus for the development of inter­racial good will is International House. The factthat so many races and nationalities can livetogether for even so much as one quarter is anoccompl ishment that modern education can beproud to claim as peculiarly its own. Violentlyopposed diFferences in philosophy, ethical beliefs,and governmental outlook are brought togetherin a spirit of intelligent examination. Conduciveto, and probably a vital factor in, this intelligentmodern attitude is the beautiful building in whichthese traditionally antagonistic races are housed.During the school year the International Housewas host to over eleven hundred student andfaculty members of the University of Chicago andother educational institutions in and aboutChicago. Thirty-three diFferent countries, tbeAmerican territories, and foreign residents of theUnited States were represented among membersof the heterogeneous group of residents. Aninteresting repercussion of the war situation ontwo continents is the greater percentage offoreign born students on the campus this year.Refugees from the stricken universities of Europehave sought out the great American universitiesthis year in larger number than ever before.The majority of members of International Houseare graduate students who have come to theuniversity to pursue learning beyond the elemen­tary college level. These knowledge seekers areacutely aware that higher learning today necessi­tates an international outlook for ultimate under­standing of their positions in life.A commendable activity is the frequent showingof Foreign films at International House, one of the HOUSEFew places in the city where they can be seen.Only the best quality pictures are presented, andthese are given in every available modernlanguage. Essential to international understand­ing is knowledge; these pictures bring to theiraudiences concrete knowledge of the racialidiom they represent. At the same time the ele­ments of American culture From Disney to dramaare brought strikingly to the attention of foreignborn students. These movies given in a spaciousauditorium bring divergent minds together in acommon understanding through the power ofdeeply Felt emotion and spontaneous laughter.So all residents could express their ideas on themanagement or programs of the house, the studentgoverning body was organized. It is headed thisyear by Warren Henry, who is assisted by FranzOppenheimer as vice-president. This group issubdivided into committees to take charge of thespecial activities of the house. Marion Hayes aschairman of the Social Committee works in co­operation with Patricia Oliver, who plans all thehouse social activities. Ernest Sture assists staFfmember James Wellard plan the intellectualactivities of the house, and Lung Mao is chairmanof the house committee. Two representativesErnest B. Price186f rom each Floor make up the rest of the dormitorycouncil and their job is to take up particular prob­lems which may arise with the commiltee in charge.In this way, all the residents cooperate in makingInternational House a pleasant place to live ..The intellectual group sponsors roundtable dis­cussions and social gatherings with refreshmentsand dancing on alternate Wednesday nights. Therecent topic of discussion for this group has beenthe complex results of the Versailles treaty. Adance is scheduled for each quarter, but the mostpopular features are the frequent Sunday nightsuppers for house members, after which well­known and authoritative speakers and musica Inumbers, given by the house male quartet, arepresented. Tennis, ping-pong, bridge and chessdevotees are encouraged by tournaments whicharouse a great deal of interest and enthusiasm.Frequent record concerts of the world's greatmusic are given, and new books in all languages and magazines are provided. Various popularexhibits, such as art and photography, are spon­sered for the enjoyment of the sludents.Perhaps the most popular occasion of the yearis International Night, at which time each room isdecorat�d by a di fferent nation, and entertainmentand dancing follows, patterned after the style ofeach country. The proceeds of this event areused for Scholarships under the direction of theStudent Council.Today, foreign students bring more to us than wecan give to them. The facts are clouded by a mazeof censorship so that only those who know foreignconditions by having once been a part of themcan truthfully interpret them to us. Thus it is thatInternational House plays a vital role in the main­tainence of the University of Chicago's reputationfor being a world center of international under­standing.187BURTON -JUDSON COURTSFront-Bartlett, Steinback, Malinowski, Fein.Back-Vineyard, Paulsen, Vande Water, Barker.Burton with its water-Fights, broken panels, andnoisy liFe and Judson with its older, more seriousstudents, are the largest dormitories on campus,accommodating almost Four hundred students.Complete Facilities, such as are Found in any goodmen's club, contribute to the enjoyment of liFe bythe residents. Miss Gertrude Binns, the directorof the Courts, supervises the meals, which areserved in the two spacious dining rooms.Among the more important Facilities is the librarywith its collection of several thousand books, in­cluding all the readings in the College surveycourses and a very complete collection of the moreimportant periodicals.Resident entry heads control the activities ofthe students when such activities consist in tearingdown the building, stone by stone, but the groupwhich is responsible for directing the social liFe ofthe Courts is the Dormitory Council, headed byBill Malinowski. Now Five years old, the Council­sponsored winter formal has become one of theFinest dances on campus. A little newer, butfollowing in the good tradition, is the annualspring Formal held during the first week of May.For informality there is the costume dance at Hallowe'en, when the Courts take on a MardiGras air.Probably the most favorably received Functionsof the year are the Council Courtier sponsored teadances, held each Sunday afternoon and presidedover by the wives of the entry heads. Also jointlysponsored are the after-show dances which followMirror and Blackfriars.Not neglected are athletics, for intramuralcompetition sees Burton-Judson teams figuringprominently throughout the year. The swimmingteam came in second, claiming a cup which nowrests in honor in the Judson oFFice. Teams intouchball, basketball, and baseball have alsomade good showinqs.B-J Winter Formal188Other sundry activities of the year includeregulor symphony concerts, from records ·of course;occasional concerts in swing, and a glee club whichputs on frequent programs during the year.In all things that the Council plans, the chief aimis to make Burton-Judson the ideal place to liveon campus, a place which presents the opportunityfor a truly well-rounded life to the college student.Opportunity for quiet, undisturbed study is offered,while at the same time the atmosphere is not any­thing like a church; the residents are not botheredin the merrymaking they carryon as long as theresults are not too obviously noisy or destructive.The fact that this freedom does prevail has attractednot only independents but a great number o]fraternity men who prefer the Courts to their own President Cheek of Rockford College and Dean Gilkey,Dinner Guests."houses," among them Chuck Percy, head of theI nter-Fratern ity Counci I.As tar as possible the Courts are run by residents.bino Marchello, the student-head, supervises thework of the waiting staff, and Bud Steinbach is co­ordinator of the office. Traditions are strong intne service staff, and among them is that of havinga Waiters' Ball every year as the middle of Aprilroils around. This informal dance is one of themore popular events of the year, but only bonafide servicemen and their guests may attend.For those students who like to belong to anational fraternity and still live in the Courts, theChicago chapter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, whichhas its headquarters on the second floor of the 800entry, is one way to solve the problem by compro­mise. But fortunately it is not necessary to join afraternity to enjoy the companionship which comesfrom belonging to a closely knit body, for withinthe larger unit of the whole Court there is organi­zation by entry and floor, voluntarily formed.Within these groups residents find friends much asin the fraternal organization.Acknowledged old-timer among the residents is"Doc" Miller, who, legend has it, had the wallsof Judson Court built around him. But he does notgo completely unchallenged, for many residentslook back on seven, eight, and even nine years oflife in the Courts. What better recommendationcould there be?189FACULTYChicago has probably more prominent facultymembers than any other University with the excep­tion of Harvard. First, of course, comes FatherHutchins, who has been prominent in the "IvoryTower" circles for his revolutionary educationaltheories for practically decades. This year, how­ever, marked his entry into the world of profanity.He started out repudiating Mr. Roosevelt, whomhe had earlier supported, by making a speech withthe intention of persuading the American publicto insist on staying out of war. But Mr. Hutchinswas in agreement with side-stooge MortimerAdler in giving all aid short of war to Britain.This speech was met with violent opposition on thepart of the faculty; many members signed a petitionwhich stated that they disagreed with Mr. God.That, of course made them ridiculous in the Tribuneand heroic in the Daily News. Not long after­wards, Mr. Hutchins made his second appearancefrom the cloisters in a momentous speech whichw. H. Spencer Robert M. Hutchinswas broadcast to the public as well as deliveredto a rather ineffective cross-section of the Americancattle from the Chapel.Under the able tutelage of Mr. Crane of theEnglish Department, this speech of the President'swas answered also over a nation wide hook-upthe follOWing Sunday. The actual speaking partsin the answer were taken by the reverent MistersMcKeon, Spencer, Kerwin, and Douglas. The nextTuesday the Daily Maroon published a super­momentous supplement carrying for the secondtime the rhetoric tour de force of Mr. Hutchins plusthe combined answers of the "inner sanctum." Asusual, the Maroon made more monetary incomeMortimer J. Adler190than either of the opposition groups made psychicincome. Thus ended the political activity of theUniversity faculty.The fall of the year saw the election of Mr.Roosevelt and the election of Mr. Douglas. It alsosaw the Republican triumph of a non-entity overthe U. of C. 's beloved T. V. Smith, and Mr. Mac­Lean's thorough indoctrination of his classes infavor of Roosevelt instead of Willkie. No onehears of the latter any more.But this is only half of the story about the Uni­versity faculty. The unsung heroes are here, ifthey are any place. At least one of these, how­ever, has received some public recognition of late.That one is Tom Pete Cross, who is probably thegreatest living teacher of Old Irish. Mr. Crosswas celebrated over a radio program under theauspices of the University a year ago last spring.Old Irish is more important than many people think,and Mr. Cross has spent many years teaching hisone or two students the life of St. Patrick and thewhole of knowledge about the history of languagewithout once having his praises sung. Now hehas had this hollow honor.How many people in the University of Chicagoknow that Hugh Ross Williamson has written abook about the poetry of T. S. Eliot? He has, andhe also teaches a course on that difficult person.Mr. Blair, also of the English department, haswritten a number of mystery novels for the con­sumption of the general public. It would be unfairhere to reveal his pen-name. Dr. Haydon haswritten a new book which does the author as wellas the University much credit. Our social sciencedepartment is considered the best by students atPaul H. Douglas Hugh M. ColeChapel Hill, because of the faculty. Even a manfrom Harvard complimented the University lastfall. And do the undergraduates know that Pro­fessor Nef was host to Jacques Maritain whenthat venerable old Thomist was here a year ago?The Philosophy department can boast of somegreat men. Charles Hartshorne, in a slight degreea disciple of Harvard's Whitehead, has written aJohn U. Nef191monument in modern philosophy called BeyondHumanism and, if you don't believe it is good,just try to buy one. He is working now on a newbook which we hope will be even greater thanthe promise shown in the last one. Every winterMr. Hartshorne's classes get an undeclared holidaywhile the venerable gentleman goes to meet hisfellow philosophers. According to him, you can'tbelieve what you read in their books exactly.You must question them in person to be sure whatthey mean.Back to the English and the most famous depart­ment, we can hardly skip over David Daiches, theman Hutchins chased all over Europe. ButHutchins got him, and we have him. Mr. Daichesis a Scotsman and teaches all sorts of things. Hislatest explosion in the world of the educated washis new book, Poetry and the Modern World. Toparaphrase Mrs. Bond, the "curate" of ModernPoetry Library, the book is momentous in its inter­pretations of the more difficult moderns. This refersespecially to Eliot and the grand W. B. Yeats.James L. Cote Wilbur K. JordanMr. Daiches' classes are some of the most interest­ing in the University.The history department boasts of Mr. Cate, whois also Dean of the Humanities Division in Mr.Faust's Place. A fairly new name on the Uni­versity's list of scholars is that of Wilbur Jordan,history professor and Editor of the U. of C. Press.Mr. Jordan comes from Harvard, teaches EnglishHistory, and can boast of giving the most inter­esting lectures in the University. The most recent'faculty member in the public eye is Historian HughCole, who gave a series of lectures on the subjectof military tactics during the spring. His timelypredictions on the outcome of the war wereWidely read in the Tribune.This ends the role call for this year of the Uni­versity's famed, unsung, and favorite professors.192VOLUNTEERS at the HOSPITALSOne of the newest organizations on campus, theVolunteer Group of the University of ChicagoClinics is relied upon to perform many of the extracourtesies which can mean so much to patients andto their relatives visiting the hospital and the out­patient department. These volunteers serve invarious departments of the clinics, each giving atleast one period a week to a definite assignment.Their work is highly valued by the hospital adminis­tration, both for the practical help given and forthe additional graciousness which the volunteershave been providing in increasing measure sincethe service was instituted by the Auxiliary Com­mittee of the University Clinics in 1935.The Volunteers are distinguished by white capand the maroon uniform which has the insignia"Volunteer" on the left sleeve. For each Fiftyhours of service a chevron is awarded, and, when two hundred hours have been completed, theAuxiliary Committee presents the volunteer witha maroon and gold pin.The group plans several teas during the yearand various doctors of the clinics are invited toexplain their departments to the girls. A tea isalso held during Freshman Week to interest thenew women students in hospital work. The spreadof this Field is indicated by the increasing numberof girls who show an inclination for the service.Jean Elvin PresidentCalista Fryar Vice-PresidentJoan Olson Secretary193Front-Durkee, Evans, Mahon, Grabo, Bickert.Bcck+-Schlvtter, Steel, Rubins, Hammel.STUDENT AIDESNo greater honor can come to a senior at theUniversity of Chicago than to be appointed aideor marshall to the president. Such an achievementmeans that student has been high in scholastic workand distinguished in service to the university. Itmeans that he is one of the twenty most promisingmembers of the senior closs, for only ten men andten women are. given the privilege of aiding thepresident. Henrietta Jane Mahon, Senior AideHelen Louise BickertMarion Jay CastlemanEsther May DurkeeBetty Ann EvansCaroline Elizabeth GraboMary Marguerite HammelPearl Claire RubinsMarjorie Bea SchlytterRuth Lorraine SteelAppointed at the end of their junior year, theaides and marshalls are invested ceremoniously atthe Interfraternity Sing. At that time their prede­cessors present to them the maroon-tasselled mortar­boards, gifts from the president of the universityand symbols of their close relationship to him. L. P. SmithHenceforth they are his assistants. At banquets,receptions, and other o�icial functions, the oidesand marshalls are hosts and help to receive theguests. Their chief and most impressive duty ispresenting the seniors for graduation at eachconvocation. Then, when their turn to graduatecomes, they are awarded their degrees at the endof the service apart from the rest of the senior class.194Front-Percy, Aronson, Stevens, Burke, Vogt.Back-Molkup, Ruben, Salzmann, M:Jthews, Lopatka.STUDENT MARSHALSjohn Paul Stevens, Head MarshalHarold Lawrence Aronson, jr.Vincent john BurkeArthur joseph LopatkaRobert Warren Mathewsjoseph james MolkupCharles Harting PercyHerbert Edward RubenRichard SalzmannEvon Zartman Vogt, jr.Stevens, Mahon Thus special recognition is given to them For theirservice during the past year.This year the aides and marshalls were especiallyimportant For they officiated at Fiftieth Anniversaryceremonies. Preceded by Dean Leon PerdueSmith, head marshall of the university, and the sixFaculty marshalls, they led the procession at thededicatory service which opened the anniversaryyear. AFter the celebration they guided dis­tinguished visitors about the campus on specialtours of interest.To their own class, they also offered theirservices. Although there was no attempt toorganize the graduates as in the past, the aidesand marshalls did strive to increase membershipin the Alumni Foundations, realizing that here laythe Future unity of the class.The aides have a special alumnae organizationwhich meets once a year during the Alumni SchoolWeek. The speaker on these occasions is MarionTalbot, First dean of women at the University andone of the original members of President Harper'sfacu Ity.195AWARDSThe Civil Goverment Prize for excellence in the comprehensive examination in the introductory coursein the Social Science is awarded toPAUL BARTON JOHNSON, First SOL SIEGEL, Second RICHARD LOUIS LEVIN, ThirdThe Lillian Gertrude Selz Scholarship for the First-year woman ranking First in the comprehensive examina­tions of the College is awarded to:MARGARET ANN KUEFFNERThe Henry Strong Educational Foundation Fellowship in Physics is awarded to:RALPH EUGENE LAPPThe jeanne d'Arc Medal for proFiciency in the French Language is awarded to:LOIS ELIZABETH SPOONERSecond-year Honor Scholars, selected for excellence in the work of the First year in the College:Fred Donald Bloss Margaret Ann Kueffner William Henry RussellGeorgia Disch Bill Louis Letwin Elliot Mitchell SchreroWilliam joseph Durka Richard Louis Levin Frank Raymond SecoyRichard Arnold Fineberg r: .: /alyn Levison Sol SiegelRichard Anson Finney Max Levitan Dorothy Rose SindelarFelicity May Fonger Seymour Nathan Lozansky Richard Alfred Svehlajoyce Kathleen GoodfellowPaul Gutt Herbert Seymour Mandel Richard William ThomaLawrence Friedman Markus john Gerson UllmanGerald Stephen Hahn james Cobb Matheson Murray Lionel WaxFrances Emily Hern Robert Stephen Merrill Celia Sonia WeinerThomas BrumField Hill Richard Gould Mershon Charles Arthur WernerAlexander Robb jacoby Robert W, Moore Velma Lois WhitgroveRobert William Keyes Eileen Catherine Murphy Wentworth Wilder, jr,Lionel Dewey Norris, jr. Paul George WolffDonald jerome Yellonjohn Franklin Kimbeljean Irl King Charles MurrahGeorge Frank Krakowka Bradley Hawkes Patterson, jr, Norma C. Davis Y onoverRobert Grove Krovbill Robert Marcus Raymer196AWARDSHonorable Mention for excellence in the work of the College for the year 1939-40:Helen Anita ArnoldWayne Arnoldjerry Berl i njoel BernsteinStuart Bernste i nWilliam Albert BrilliantRobert Miller Brownelljames Lindley BurtleDorothy Ei n beckerEdward Ira ElisbergRobert Gene EttelsonMarjorie Ann EwingBernard joseph FinkleCharlotte Marie FordBenum Wesley FoxDorothee FriedlanderHerbert Norman FriedlanderAlbert GoldsteinHerbert Irving GoldstoneRaymond Dennis GoodmanRuth Marian GracenickRichard Spellum Hagen Eleanor Anne HartzlerRobert Welton Hemenwg.yjohn Marshall HowensteinEdward Albert Lord IdePaul Barton johnsonWilliam Harper johnsonHerbert Ernest KubitschekLouise LandmanSaul Levinjoseph Solomon Levingerju! ian Scott LorenzPau I Francis Lorenzjames J McClure, jr.Robert Leo MeyerShirley jane MooreErcole MottaViacheslaw Alexander NedzelMelvin Micklin Newmanjohn William NicholsonStewart Irvin OostDaniel OrloffRichard Howard Orr Samuel QuitmanCharles Hubert RaethLester RiceBaxter Key Richardsonjoseph Alfred RiderHenry Leonard Ruehrjohn Robert RussellCalvin Parker SawyierHarry Scha FfnerWalter SeloveLeopold julius ShapiroNaomi Violet SmithIrene Mary SperosAndrew Frank StehneyLewis Louthan TaylorCharles William WegenerBernard Ben Sion Weissbourdjack Blue WelchonsHarold Stalets Wilsonjames MacQuaid WilsonLesler WinsbergRamyond Herbert WittcoFfThird-year Honor Scholors, selected for high scholastic achievement in the comprehensive examinationsin the College:Helen Anita Arnoldjames Lindley BurtleDorothy EinbeckerEdward Ira ElisbergRobert Gene EttlesonDorothee FriedlanderHerbert Norman FriedlanderRaymond Dennis GoodmanRobert Welton HemenwayPaul Barton johnsonSaul Levinjoseph Solomon Levingerjulian Scott LorenzErcole Motta Viacheslaw Alexander NedzelMelvin Micklin NewmanStewart Irvin OostDaniel OrloffRichard Howard OrrSamuel QuitmanCharles Hubert RaethCalvin Parker SawyierHarry SchaffnerWalter SeloveAndrew Frank StehneyCharles William WegenerBernard Ben lion Weissbourd197AWARDSDivisional Honor Scholars! selected by the departments for excellence In the work of the Firstthree years:Shirley Jane BillHistoryDorothea Amanda DeffenbaughPsychologyFrederick Futter ElkinSociologyFrances Marguerite EngelmannChemistryJames Bruce EnglePolitical ScienceMary EI izabeth GrenanderEnglish Language and LiteratureWalter John Hipple! Jr.Engl ish Language and LiteratureLouise LandmanPolitical ScienceJohn Francis McNeil isGeology and Paleontology Jane MorrisHome EconomicsAaron NovickChemistryWalter PorgesHistoryJoan SchultzSociologyGeorge SeltzerEconomicsWilliam Larew SlaytonPolitical ScienceRobert Willson StokleyPolitical ScienceElmer Beaumont TolstedMathematicsHenry Maurice WallbrunnZoologyWilliam Oliver WebsterBi ochem istryGraduate Honor Scholars:Adrienne Marie BorkeSociologyRichard Viggo BovbjergZoologyRobert Charles BoyerSociologyThomas BrillPhysicsWilliam Alexander EarlePhilosophyDonald Leroy FabianRomance Languages and LiteraturesViola Marina FarmakisGermanic Languages and LiteraturesEdward Joseph FurstPsychologyJohn Albert LaceyOriental Languages and LiteraturesSamuel WolfensteinHistory Morton Harry LeonardPhysiologyHarry George MonteithChemistryAnne RowellBotanyEsther Eleanor SchummGermanic Languages and LiteraturesAntoinette ScolaRomance Languages and LiteraturesMorton R. SolomonEconomicsAlbert SomitPolitical ScienceJohn Frederick SpeckChemistryJesse Ernest Wilkins! Jr.Mathematics198PHI BETA KAPPASPRING 1940Helen Patricia ShrackDorothea DelfenbaughSvea GustafsonRobert W. StokleyJohn McNellis .William R. RemingtonRobert S. MinerPierre S. Palmer, Jr.John A. BauerWalter PorgesVincent HollanderRebecca M. SlutskyHarold KaplanMonrad Gotke PaulsenErika WeigsandHilda O'BrienSam WoodsJane MorrisJoan M, GoodwillieMary-EI izabeth GrenanderLarry BermanGeorge Richard BarryWilliam Henry SpeckAaron NovickGenevieve HatFieldElmer T olstedJ Ernest Wilkins, Jr.AI ice T erwi II igerFrederick ElkinJean GoreElizabeth AustinJoan LonginiJoan SchultzEthel FrankSusan ElliottBetty Ahlquist Frances Marguerite EngelmannVirginia May ClarkPhyllis Ilet�Bruno Von LinbachChankey N. T ouartMartin LevitGeorge SeltzerJoshua JacobsWalter J RockierWillard Jay LassersKent V. LukingbealLewis Sanford GrossmanRobert Benjamin HummelWilliam O. WebsterSUMMER AND AUTUMN 1940Thomas Bri IISherwyn L. EhrlichJohn O. PundersonChester FeldmanKenneth E. WilzbachNorton Jay ComeRalph H. GoldnerJames B. EngleArthur H. Parmelee, Jr. Henry M. WallbrunnCharles W. PfeilferJulian R. GoldsmithViola Marina FarmakisMelvin B. GottliebJohn A. LaceyFlorence SamuelsFred GrossEugenie WolfThomas P. SingerLois Elizabeth Ebinger WINTER 1941Alexander L. George1995 I GMA XIAUTUMN 1940Taylor Richard AlexanderHerbert Stoker ArmstrongFrank Ambrose BeachMichael G. BerkmanRuth BlairMatthew Harold BlockMadeline Palmer BurbankHorace Robert ByersRose EngelWilliam Emerson FryeHarry Thomas GettyWarren Elliott HenryBeeford Helmholz JunkerMaurice Eugene KirbyMary Sakraida KunstHorton Meyer LaudeArnold LazarowWilliam Armand Lessa Leonard NormonLleberrncnnChanning Bruce LyonRalph MansfieldFitz-Hugh Ball Marshall, Jr.Leonard Charles MillerAlbert MilzerRaymond Gorbold MurrayEwald Berger NyquistHarold Rawson ReamesRoy Ringojerome Michael SachsNorbert John ScullyChalmers William Sherwinjean Irwin SimpsonVictor Paul StarrSol William WellerHarry Wexlerjoseph Oran YoungWINTER 1941Sam BerkmanEdward BiggGlenn Wilson BrierWilliam Dudley BurbanckAI Bertie CarsonRollins Henry Denneston, IIErnest Paul DuBoisThomas Michael FloydWilfred King GummerElizabeth Seley HemmensFrederich Thompson HoldenRobert Charles KloveWasley Sven Krogdahl200 Jules Helbert LastWayne Russell LowellHerman MeyerLorenz August MeyerBenjamin Frank MillerFrancis Charles MoreyRogen Anson PriorHorace Wakeman NortonPaul William Schaferjay Steward SeeleyRobert Blackwell Smith, jr.Edward Louis UllmanNed Blanchard WilliamsNU PI 5 I CMAFront-Rubins, Graver, Mahon.Back-Durkee, Culliton, Evans, Hammel.Marian CastlemanDonna CullitonEsther DurkeeBetty Ann EvansBlanche GraverMary HammelHenrietta MahonPearl Claire RubinsRuth Steel201OWL and SERPENTBaird WallisRichard Salzmannjohn StevensDale TilleryRobert MathewsCharles Percyjoseph MolkupHarold AronsonArt Lopatkajoe StampF202I RO N MASKKenneth MaclellanClayton TraegerDavid SiebertRobert ReynoldsArthur BethkeNeil johnstonCalvin SawyierRobert A. MillerRobert Thorburnjames McClure jacob Foxjames TedrowChester HandRaymond Oakleyjack Fonsjoseph Bernstei nMarshall BlumenthalRobert CumminsAI fred Gentzl erFront-McClure, Johnston, Reynolds, Traeger, Bethke, Maclellan, SiebertBock=Bernste!n, Fox, Blumenthal. Oakley, Miller, Tedrow, Gentzler, Cummins.203SKULL and CRESCENTBradley Patterson �odney BriggsWilliam Baugher Morton A. PierceAI fred Conway Robert PreglerJohn Coot Theodore RosenThomas C. Cottrell Gene SiottowBarry Crafton Jack RagleCarl Dragstedt Robert SmithGerald Hahn Robert TullyWilliam Rainey Harper, Jr. Richard LevinRobert Lawson Robert BeanLindsay Leach Mark FisherHerbert Mandel Edward ArmstrongDonald McKnight Fredrick ShaverRobert Monoghan Dick ReynoldsEdgar Nelson Jerome ScheidlerFront-Pregler, Harper, Noble, Nelson, Leach, Randall, Armstrong.Back-Cottrell, McKnight, Tully, Patterson, Mandel, -Drnqstedt, Scheidler, Bean, Shaver, Dwyer, Cook,Lawson.204FIFTIETHANNIVERSARYGRADUATES205GRADUATES NINETEENEVA B. ABRAHAMWatson, IllinoisSocial SciencesOuadrangler; President of KellyHall 3, 4.CHARLES J. ADDALIALinden, New JerseySocial SciencesTransferred from Union JuniorCollege.MARY JANE ANDERSONRockford, IllinoisHumanitiesEsoteric; Student Publicity Board1,2,3; Mirror 1, 2; Fresh­man Counselor 2, 3; Y. W.C.A1,3.IRENE ANTONOWTerre Haute, IndianaBiological SciencesCLIO ARGIRISChicagoHumanitiesY. W. C. A; Chapel Union;Neo Hellenic Society.HARRIET F. AUGUSTUSChicagoSocial SciencesY. W. C. A Cabinet 1, 2, 3, 4;Chapel Union 1, 2, 3, 4;University Choir 3, 4; Fresh­man Counselor 2, 3; Boardof Social Service and Religion3,4.ANNETTE BALLGlen Ellyn, IllinoisBiological SciencesWyvern; University Choir 4;Y. W. C. A 3; W. A A 3;Maroon 3; Dramatic Associa­tion 3; Transfer Orientation4; Hospital Volunteer 3, 4.206 FORTY-ONEMAURICE E. ABRAHAMSONVermillion, South DakotaSocial SciencesPhi Kappa Psi; Track 2, 3; Uni­versity Band 1, 2.ROBERT L. ADELMANChicagoPhysical SciencesHORACE M. ANGELLHastings, MichiganSocial Service AdministrationTransferred from George Wi 1-Iiams; Transfer Counselor 3.JOHN L. ARGALLRochelle, IllinoisBusinessAlpha Delta Phi; Chapel Union1,2; Maroon 1; Water Polo2, 3, 4; Swimming team 2,3;Captain 4; Dolphin Club 2,3, 4; Varsity C. Club 4.HAROLD L. ARONSON, JR.ChicagoLawZeta Beta Tau; Owl and Ser­pent 4; Iron Mask 3; Skull andCrescent 2; Student Marshall4; Student Settlement 2, 3,Chairman 4; Cheer Leader 1,2, 3, 4; Maroon 1; Cap andGown2;FreshmanOrientation2,3; S.F.AC. 4; Social Com­mittee Advisory Council; U.of C. Bar Associayion.MARGARET W. BAINLangdon, North DakotaBiological ScienceTransferred from Wayland Jr.College; Chapel Union 3, 4;Y. W. C. A 3, 4; ZoologyClub 3, 4; Westminster 3, 4.JOHN W. BARNESBelford, New JerseyHumanitiesTransferred fro m MonmouthJunior College; UniversityChoir 3.ERNEST V. BARRETTSanta Ana, CaliforniaLawPAUL A. BAUMGARTChicagoBusinessPhi Delta Theta; Beta GammaSigma.GLADYS C. BENNETTChicagoBiological SciencesTransferred from Herzl juniorCollege.MARJORIE E. BERGChicagoHumanitiesEsoteric; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3;Rifle Club 1, 2; FreshmanCounselor 2; Chapel Union1,. 2; Mirror .4; . ChristianSCience Organization 1, 2,3, 4; University Singers 1;Peace Council2;Piano Majorat American Conservatory ofMusic.GEORGE M. BERGMANChicagoSocial SciencesFreshman Orientation 4; ChapelUnion 4; Student AdvisoryCouncil Director 4.ESTHER SCHUMM BERNDTSONChicagoHumanitiesChapel Union 1, 2, 3; Y. W. C.A. l' 2, 3, 4; Lutheran Club 2.JOHN BEXFort Wayne, IndianaBusinessPhi Delta Thetau N v E ANN G. BAUMGARTChicagoHumanitiesTransferred from Stephens Col­lege; Ouadrangler.HARRY H. BENNERChicagoBusinessTransferred from Washingtonand Lee University; RiAeTeam 1.DOROTHY JANE BERGChicagoSocial SciencesTransferred from Knox College;Alpha Epsilon; Y. W. C. A.3,4.MARJORIE S. BERGERChicagoSocial ScienceMaroon; Freshman Counselor.JEAN R. BERKSONChicagoBiological SciencesGRACE BERNSTEINChicagoSocial Service AdministrationTransferred from NorthwesternUniversity.HELEN L. BICKERTChicagoBiological ScienceMortar Board; Student Aide4;Y.W.c.A. 1,2,3,4; Cabinet1, 2, 3; Ida Noyes AdvisoryCouncil 2, 3; Mirror 2, 3;Home Economics Club 4; Capand Gown 2.R s T Y o207 F ( H G o( AGRADUATESHARRY BIGELOWChicagoLawPhi Kappa SigmaLLOYD A. BIMSONChicagoSocial SciencePhi Delta Theta; Track 3.BERNICE j. BLUMWilkes-Barre, PennsylvaniaBiological SciencesChapel Union 1, 2; HillelFoundation 4.JEANNE L. BOGERAurora, IllinoisSocial ScienceTransferred from Howard andNorthwestern Universities,Christian Science Organiza:tion; Negro Student Organi­zation 3, 4.RICHARD V. BOVBjERGWilmette, IllinoisBiological SciencesSwimming 1, 2, 3, 4; DolphinClub 2,3,4; Soccer 4; AlphaZeta Beta 3, 4.MARGARET BROSINMilwaukee, WisconsinBiological SciencesTransferred from the Universityof Wisconsin.VINCENT j. BURKEPeoria, IllinoisSocial Sciences NINETEEN208 FORTY-ONESHIRLEY j. BILLChicagoHumanitiesTransferred from Wright juniorCollege.MARY G. BLANCHARDSouth Bend, IndianaBiological ScienceY. W. C. A. 1, s, W. A. A.Board 2, 3; Chapel Union1, 2; Pegasus 1. 2.JANE BLUMENTHALChicagoHumanitiesTransferred from Vassar.. WAYNE S. BOUTELLElburn, IllinoisLawTransferred from the Universityof Southern California; KappaSigma;Washington Pr?m Com­mittee 3; Student Social Com­mittee 4.ROBERTA BRISGALLChicagoSocial SciencesCHARLES W. BROWNChicagoBusinessDelta Kappa EpsilonALAN D. CAMERONWinnetka, IllinoisLawTransferred from Beloit Collegeand University of New Mex­ico; Sigma Alpha Epsilon.TURNER CAMPLong Beach, CaliforniaBiological SciencesTransferred from Long BeachJunior College; Sigma Chi.MARIAN j. CASTLEMANChicagoHumanitiesMaroon 1, 2, 3; Mirror 1, 2, 3;Board 4; Dramatic Associa­tion 1, 2, 3, 4; FederationBoard 3, 4; Student Aide 4;Nu Pi Sigma 4.EDW ARD V. CERNYChicagoBusinessKappa Sigma; Football 1 ; Wrest­ling 1, 2, 3.LILA CHUKERMANChicagoSocial SciencesTransferred from NorthwesternUniversity.S. RUTH CLAYMANChicagoHumanitiesUniversity Choir 1, 2; HillelFoundation 2; Jewish StudentFoundation 1; UniversitySingers 1.PATRICIA CLOUGHGlencoe, IllinoisBiological SciencesTransferred from Frances ShimerJunior College; Sigma.SELMA j. COHENChicagoHumanitiesu N Ev R s T Fy o209 c ALICE M. CARLSONGary, IndianaHumanitiesPhi Delta Upsilon; Maroon 1 iCalvert Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Presi­dent 3; Interclub Council 4.JOHN R. CASTLESChicagoHumanitiesTransferred from Princeton Uni­versity; Phi Delta Theta.BERNARD CHESLERChicagoPhysical SciencesChemical Society; IntramuralBaseball 1, 2, 3; Football 1,2,3.DAVID CLARKChicagoBusinessSHIRLEY B. CLONICKChicagoSocial SciencesFreshman Counselor 3.ELEANOR COAMBSChicagoBiological SciencesTransferred from Lewis Institute;W. A. A. 2; President 3, 4; IdaNoyes Council 3; Y. W. C. A.4; B. W. O. 3; BadmintonClub 2, 3, 4; Freshman Orien­tation 3.WILLIAM COLNERChicagoPhysical SciencesChemistry Society; IntramuralBaseball, Basketball, Foot­ball.H c A G oGRADUATESFRANCES j. COONEYChicagoBiological SciencesY. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; ChapelUnion 4; University Choir 3,4; B. W. O. 3, 4.THOMAS COVELLChicagoHumanitiesTransferred from George Wi 1-Iiams junior College; Black­friars 3i Collegium Musicum3,4.OLIVER W. CRAWFORDAurora, IllinoisBiological SciencesKappa Alpha PSi; Football 2, 3.ISABELLE DABINChicagoSocial Service AdministrationTransferred from Wright juniorCollege.ALAN G. DARLINGSchenectady, New YorkBusinessDelta Kappa Epsilon; StudentPublicity Board 1, 2, 3, 4; Co­Chairman 4; Freshman Orien­tation 4; Yacht Club 3, 4.EDITH L. DAVISChicagoHumantitiesPhi Delta Upsilon; Maroon 1;Chapel Union 2, 3, 4; Y. W.C. A. 1, 2; Cabinet 3, 4;Choir 3i Peace Council 3;Labor Problems Council 3;W. A. A. 1, 2; InterchurchCouncil 2, 4; Refugee AidCommittee 2.S. ARTHUR DeBOFSKYChicagoLawTransferred from Wilson juniorCollege and DePaul Univer­Sityi Nu Beta Epsilon. NINETEENPRUDENCE M. COULTERChicagoBiological SciencesTransferred from the Universityof Michigan; Mortar Board;B. W. O. 1, 2; Mirror 1, 2, 4;Y. W. C. A. 1, 2; Ida NoyesCouncil 1; Cap and Gown1,2; Maroon 4.JOHN N. CRANEChicagoLawDelta Upsilon; Cap and Gown1, 2, 3, Business Manager 4;Political Union 1, 2, 3;ChapelUnion 1, 2, 3; Freshman Ori­entation Council 3,4; Tennis1,2; U. of C. Bar Association3. 4; Reynolds Club Council3, 4; President 4; DebateUnion 1, 2.DONNA M. CULLITONChicago, IllinoisHumanitiesMortar Board; Maroon 1; Pulse2; Cap and Gown 1, 2, 3;Dramatic Association 1, 2, 3,4; Student Publicity 1, 2;Interclub Council President 4;Nu Pi Sigma 4.DORIS DANIELSChicagoSocial SciencesTransferred from NorthwesternUniversity; Esoteric; InterclubCouncil 4; Student SocialCommittee 4; Mirror 2, 3;Freshman Orientation 2, 3;University Choir 4; DramaticAssociation 2;T ransfer Orien­tation 4.JOHN DAUBENSPECKFalmouth, IndianaPhysical ScienceTransferred from George Wil­liams College; Chemical So­ciety.HERMAN L. DAVISChicagoSocial ScienceTransferred from Central Y. M.C. A. College.FABURN E. DeFRANTZ, jR.Indianapolis, IndianaPhysical SciencesKappa Alpha Psi.210 FOR T Y ONE,,'u N v RE JEANETTE DeROSEChicagoBiological ScienceAlpha Epsilon.KATHRYN L. DRYBURGHChicagoBusinessTransferred from Morgan Parkjunior College; Alpha Epsi­lon; Interclub Council 4; IdaNoyes Council 3, 4; ComadClub President 4; Y. W. C A.3, 4; Trcnsfer OrientationCommittee 3; Bowling Club3; Student Council of theBusi ness Schoo I 4.CYNTHIA DURSEMASocial ScienceChicagoTransferred from University ofIllinois; Delta Sigma; TransferOrientation 4; Y. W. C A.3,4.MARY EMELINE EATONMarshall, MichiganSocial Service AdministrationTransferred from Western Col-lege; Pi Delta Phi; ChapelUnion 3; Transfer OrientationCommittee 3; Fencing Club 3.ROSE ESPERSCHMIDTChicagoSocial ScienceWyvern; Maroon 3; DramaticAssociation 1; Mirror 1, 2;Y. W.CA.MURIEL L. EVANSChicagoBiological ScienceMortar Board; Ida Noyes Coun­cil 1,2, 3; Dramatic Associa­tion 4; Refugee Aid Com­mittee 3; Tarpon 1; Mirror 4;Freshman Counselor 2; HomeEconomics Club President 4.EDWARD L. FISCHLCicero, IllinoisLawNu Beta Epsilon.s y o (FT211 JOHN C DOOLITTLEDes MOines, IowaBusinessPhi Delta Theta; Dramatic Assso­ciation 1, 2, 3, President 4;Student Publicity Board 1, 3;Washington Prom Committee3; Iron Mask 3; Intramurals1,2,3,4.ESTHER DURKEEChicagoSocial Service AdministrationY. W. C Ai, 2, 3, President 4;Student Aide 4; Nu Pi Sigma4.CELIA EARLEChicagoBiological ScienceWyvern; Y. W. C A. 1; ChapelChoir 2, 3, 4.GERTRUDE EICHSTAEDTMilwaukee, WisconsinBusinessTransferred from the Universityof Wisconsin; Delta Sigma;Comad Club 2; TransferOrientation 1.BETTY ANN EVANSGary, IndianaHumanitiesSigma; Student Aide; Nu PiSigma; Dramatic Association1, 2, 3, 4; Mirror 1, 2, 3;Board 4; Radio Workshop 4,Shakespeare Guild 4.ROBERT O. EVANSChicagoHumanititesPsi Upsilon, Blackfriars 1; Poli­tical Union 2, 3; Cap andGown 2, 3, Publisher 4; Dra­matic Association 3.JEANNE EVA FLORIANChicagoHumanitiesTransferred from Wright juniorCollege; Art Club 4.H ( A G oGRADUATES NINETEENNORMAN G. FOSTER·ChicagoPhysical ScienceKappa Sigma; Blackfriars 1, 2, 3,4; Freshman Orientation 2, 3,4; Mirror 3, 4; Band 1, 2, 4;University Symphony Orches­tra 4.THOMAS R. FRENCHStockton, CaliforniaBusinessTransferred from the College ofthe Pacific; Phi Gemme Delta;Blackfriars 3, 4; U. of C.Flying Club.EDW ARD J FURSTChicagoSocial ScienceTransferred from Wilson .luniorCollege; Phi Delta Theta;Phychology Club.LOIS GARTNERLa Porte, IndianaSocial ScienceAlpha Chi Theta; ChristianScience Organization 1, 2, 3,4; Y. W. C. A. 1.EVELYN j. GEIGERBerwyn, IllinoisBusinessAlpha Chi Theta; Comad Club3, 4; Interclub 4; LutheranClub 1, 2, 3, 4; Y. W. C. A.1,2,3,4.VIOLET ADAMSChicagoBiological SciencesWyvern; Y. W. C. A. 1; Mirror2; Freshman Counselor 3;Pulse 3.CAROLINE GRABOChicagoHumanitiesMortar Board; Ida Noyes Coun­cill, 2, 3; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2,3,4, Second Cabinet 2; B. W.O. 1, 3; Dramatic Association1, 2, 3, 4; Mirror 1, 2, 3;Student Aide 4.212 FOR T Y ONEJOHN F. FRALICKChicagoPhysical ScienceAloha Delta Phi; Chapel Union1, 2; Cap and Gown 1; Fresh­man Counselor 2.RICHARD T. FRENCHSan Diego, CaliforniaBusinessDelta Sigma PiALAN M. GARFINKLESacramento, CaliforniaBUSinessTransferred from Sacramento.junior College; PoliticalUnion 4; Youth for Democracy,Executive Committee 4; InterCo - op. Council ExecutiveCommittee 4; Graduate Busi­ness and Economics Club 4.KENNETH E. GARVERICKSomerville, New jerseyPhysical Science.BERNICE GLiCKSONChicagoHumanitiesDebate Club 1; jewish StudentFoundation 1; Hillel 3; Editorof the Hillel Reporter 4;Maroon 1; Freshman Coun­selor 2.BERNARD A. GOURWITZDetroit, MichiganBusinessTransferred from the Universityof Detroit.ROBERT S. GRUHNWilmette, IllinoisSocial SciencePhi Delta Theta; Baseball 1;Football 3.MARY HAMMELJoliet, IllinoisHumanitiesEsoteric;Stude�t Aide; Nu PiSigma; Ida Noyes Council2, 3, President 4; Foster HallPresident 4; Cap and Gown2,3, Editor 4; Mirror 1, 2, 3,Board 4; Calvert Club 4;Freshman Counselor 3, 4;Dramatic Association 2, 3, 4;Tarpon 1,2,3; Y,W,C.A.1,2;University Flying Club 4,WILLIAM B, HANKLATulsa, OklahomaSocial SciencePhi Kappa Psi; Maroon 1, 2, 3;Board of Control 4; PoliticalUnion 1, 2, 3, Executive Com­mittee 4; Settlement Board2,3,4; Chapel Union 1, 2.FRANK j, HARRISON, jR.Streator, IllinoisLawBeta Theta Pi; Phi Delta Phi;Orchestra 1, 2; Choir 1, 2;Skull and Crescent 2; Track3,4.BETTY JANE HAYNESChicagoSocial ScienceTransferred fro m Carleton;Sigma; Mirror 1,2; Y. W. C.A. 1, 2; Cap and Gown 2.BERNICE HELLERChicagoHumanitiesHillel Foundation.RUTH S. HERRONChicagoHumanitiesHillel FoundationWALTER j. HIPPLEChicagoHumanitiesBeta Theta Pi; Orchestra 1.u N y E HAROLD H. HAMMENAppleton, WisconsinPhysical Science.ALFRED HARRIS, IIWyncote, PennsylvaniaSocial Science.MARY ELEANOR HARVEYDes Moines, IowaSocial ScienceChi Rho Sigma; Y. W, C. A. 1,Tarpon 1; Ida Noyes Counci I1, 2, �, 4; Student HealthBoard 3; Chairman Red CrossDrive 3; Youth for Democracy4.ELMER j. HEINECKEBlue Island, IllinoisPhysical ScienceTransferred from Thornton juniorCollege.EDWARD j. HERMANNChicagoHumanitiesTransferred from Wright juniorCollege; University Choir3,4.JAMES R. HILLChicagoSocial ScienceDelta Upsilon; Tennis 1, 2, 3, 4;Interfraternity Council 4.MARION L. HOLSTONAustin, MinnesotaBusinessTransferred from Macalester; PiDelta Phi; Transfer Counselor3,R 5 FT y o213 ( H ( A G oGRADUATESROMAN P. HOl YSZChicagoPhysica I ScienceTransferred from Wright juniorCollege.ERWIN W. HORNINGChicagoHumanitiesJOHN M. HOWENSTEINOklahoma City, OklahomaHumanitiesROBERT J. HUGHESChicagoSocial ScienceKappa Sigma; Calvert Club 2,3, 4; Wrestling 1; Baseball2,3; Freshman Orientation 1.ASUOUO U. IDIONGAbak, Nigeria, West AfricaBiological Science.ROLAND D. JACKElChicagoPhysical ScienceTransferred from Armour Instituteof Technology; Alpha ChiSigma.MARJORIE E. JANSENFlossmoor, III inoisHumanitiesT iansferred from Thornton juniorCollege; Alpha Epsilon; .Y.W. C. A. 3, 4; Transfer Ori­entation 4; Chapel Union3, 4; Christian Science Or­ganization 3, 4. N NETEEN214 FOR T Y ONEVIOLET A. HONOROFFChicagoBiological ScienceTransferred from Purdue Uni­versity; Chapel Union 2, 3;Hillel Foundation 2, 3.BRUCE B. HOWATChicagoBusinessTransferred from Morgan ParkjuniorColiege; Kappa Sigma.GREGORY D. HUFFAKERChicagoBusinessPsi Upsilon; Student Social Com­mittee 2, 3, 4; Blackfriars 1, 2,3,4; Interfraternity Council 3.ELOISE A. HUSMANNChicagoSocial Service AdministrationPhi Delta Upsilon, Y. W. C. A.1,2, 3, 4; Cabinet 2; HockeyTeam 1.HELEN D. ISENBERGChicagoSocial ScienceHillel Foundation; ChapelUnion; Avukah 1, 2.ROBERT W. jAMPOLISChicagoBioloqicc] SciencePsi Upsilon; Football 1, 2, 3, 4;Skull and Crescent 3; Black­friars 2, 3,4;Settlement Board1,2,3,4.RUTH M. JANSENFlossmoor, IllinoisHumanitiesTransferred from Thornton JuniorCollege; Alpha Epsilon; Y.W. C. A. 3, 4; TransferOrientation 4; Chapel Union3, 4; Christian Science Or­ganization 3, 4.JOHN P. JEFFERSONChicagoSocial ScienceBeta Theta Pi; Maroon 2, 3;Political Union 2, 3.JANET R. JOHNSONChicagoMAX KAPLANHarbor, IndianaSocial ScienceTransferred from Wright juniorCollege; Pulse 3, 4; Board ofControl 4; Campus PeaceCouncil 3; Youth for De­mocracy 4; Freshman Orienta­tion 4.WILLIAM L. KESTERCaripito, Venezuela, So. Am.FREDA KINDERChicagoSocial ScienceROBERT E. KOENIGChica.goPhysical ScienceInterchurch Council 1, 2, 3, 4,President 3; University Choir1,2,3; Board of Social Serv­ice and Religion 4; RefugeeAid Committee 3, 4; Chair­man 4.FLORENCE A. KOZENYBerwyn, IllinoisBusinessTransferred from Morton juniorCollege; Comad Club 3, 4.u v EN R 5 T Fy o215 ( ALBERT F. jEZIKChicagoPhysical ScienceSwimming Team 2; WrestlingTeam 3; Band 1, 3; ChapelUnion 2.EARL L. jURMAChicagoBusinessLAWRENCE KEATINGChicagoBusinessTransferred from Carthage Col­lege; Delta Sigma Pi.WILLIAM A. KIMBALLShaker Heights, OhioBusinessPsi Upsilon; Football 1, 2, 3;Blackfriars 3; Maroon 4.EMILY KIRCHHEIMERChicagoHumanitiesTransferred from Vassar Col­lege.LENORA K. KOOSChicagoHumanitiesUniversity Choir 1.OTTO j. KRALOVEC, jR.River Forest, IllinoisBiological ScienceH ( A G oGRADUATESHYMEN B. KRIEBERGChicagoBusinessLomba Gamma Phi.WALTER KURKChicagoBusinessKappa Sigma; Blackfriars l' 2/ 3/Scribe 4; Intramurals 1/ 2/ 3/Manager 3; Football 1/ 2;Freshman Orientation 3/ 4;Transfer Orientation 3/ 4.LOUISE LANDMANBrooklyn/ New YorkSocial ScienceStudent Forum 1/ 2; Cabinet 2;Chapel Union 1/ Board 2;Ellis Co-op. 2! AmericanStudent Union 1/ 2; PoliticalUnion 1.FRANCES j. LAPPChicagoHumanitiesSYDNEY LEEDSChicagoBusinessTransferred from Wilson juniorCollege; Lambda Gamma Phi;Intramural Baseball 3/ 4;Football 2/ 3; Band 3/ 4;Orchestra 3/ 4.MARVIN S. LEVINEChicagoPhysical ScienceAlpha Phi Omega.ARTHUR j. LOPATKAChicagoSocial SciencePhi Gamma Delta; Owl andSeroent 4; Student Marshall4; Boseb rll 2/ 3/ Captain 4;Varsity C-Club President 4. N NETEENTHADDEUS j. KUKULAChicagoHumanitiesTransferred from Notre Dame;University Choir 1; Wrestling1.EMILY S. LANDESKansas City/ MissouriHumanitiesTransferred from Kansas Cityjunior College; Chi RhoSigma; Chairman of TransferOrientation 4; Ida NoyesCouncil 4.LUCILE LAPIDUSChicagoSocial ScienceStudent Forum 1; Bowling Club2.JAMES R. LAWSONCody/ WyomingHumanitiesDramatic Association/ 1/2/3/4.ERNEST S. LEISERIndianapolis/ IndianaSocial ScienceMaroon 1/ 2/ 3/ Board of Con­trol 4; Secretary of the S. F.A. c.; Band 1/ 2/ 3; Youthfor Democracy/ PublicityChairman 4; Pulse 1.JEAN P. LEVITANChicagoSocial Service Administration.PAUL F. LORENZSt. joseph/ MissouriBusinessDelta Sigma Pi; Beta GammaSigma.216 FOR T Y ONEu N v RE ELINOR LOUNSBURYOak Park, IllinoisHumanitiesEsotericTHOMAS R. LUSKWashington, D. C.Social ScienceTransferred from Catholic Uni­versity of Washington, D. c.;Sigma Chi.HENRIETTA j. MAHONIron River, MichiganHumanitiesEsoteric; University Symphony1, 2; Campus Newsreel 1;Freshman Counselor 2; Feder­ation Board 3, President 4;Mirror 1, 2, 3, Board 4;Dramatic Association 1, 2, 3,4; Student Directory 1, 2; B.W. O. 3, 4; S. F. A. C. 4;Student Social Committee ad­visory Board 4; Senior Aide;Nu Pi Sigma.GORDON L. MARKWARTChicagoHumanitiesROBERT W. MATHEWSNorfolk, NebraskaBusinessDelta Kappa Epsilon; Cap andGown 3,4; Student PublicityBoard 1, 2, 3; Intramural Staff2, 3, Chairman of the Board4; Basketball 1, 2; Owl andSerpent 4; Student Marshall4.EDWARD M. McKAYChicagoPhysica I Sci encesAlpha Phi Omega; Delta Up­silon; Blackfriars 2, 3.RUTH McMURRAYChiccqoSocial ScienceTransferred from Wi'lliam MeadsJunior College; UniversityChoir 3, 4; Collegium Musi­cium 3.s y o FT (217 WILLIAM H. LOVELLChicagoSocial SciencePhi Koppe Psi; IntramuralBoord 1, 2; Maroon 1,2,3,4.JOAN K. L YDINGChicagoBiological SciencesMortar Board; Cap and Gown1,2,3; Pulse 1; Y. W. C. A.1; Mirror 2; Dramatic Asso­ciation Opera Board Chair­man 3; Freshman Counselor 34; Student Advisory Council4.AARON B. MANDERSChicagoLawPi Lambda Phi; Wig and Robe;Baseball 1, 2, 3; Varsity C­Club 4; U. of C. Bar Associa­tion.RICHARD C. MASSELLNewton, MassachusettsSocial ScienceTransferred from the Universityof Pennsylvania; C hap e IUnion 2; Editor ChapelOut­look 2; Maroon 2, 3; Pulse 3;Transfer Orientation Commit­tee 3; American ProblemsCouncil 3.FRANK H. McCRACKENRiver Forest, IllinoisBusinessPhi Gamma Delta; Baseball 1, 2,3; Freshman Orientation 2, 3;Student Publicity Board. 2;Varsity C-Club 4; Intra­murals.JEAN M. McLAINJoliet, IllinoisHumanitiesTransferred from Joliet JuniorCollege; University Orchestra4; Calvert Club 3,4; Cap andGown 4.ROBERT P. McNAMEEChicagoLawH A G o(GRADUATES NINETEENFRANCES P. MEGANChicagoHumanitiesTransferred from Carleton Col­lege; Wyvern; Mirror 3; PulseOffice Manager 3.SHIRLEY P. MEYERSPittsburgh, PennsylvaniaSocial ScienceTransferred from the Universityof Wisconsin.LILA L. MILLERChicagoSocial ScienceTriotc, Hillel Foundation.DOROTHY H. MILLSMidland, MichiganSocial ScienceTransferred from Radcliffe Col­lege; Maroon 2; AmericanStudent Union 2, 3; Univer­sity Choir 3, 4.CRAIG MOOREEaston, PennsylvaniaBusinessSwimming 4.MARY JANE MORRISONChicagoPhysical Sciencejunior Mathematics Club.ELIZABETH C. MUELLERMilwaukee, WisconsinHumanitiesTransferred from MilwaukeeDowner College; MortarBoard; Mirror 1; Youth forDemocracy 1; Freshman Coun­selor 3.218 FOR T Y ONEMURIEL E. MENGESChicagoSocial ScienceTransferred from the Universityof Wisconsin.MARGARET MIKKELSENRockford, IllinoisHumanitiesTransferred from Pacific UnionCollege; Delta Sigma; Y. W.C. A. 2.MARJORIE L. MILLERChicagoHumanitiesTransferred from Wright juniorCollege; Christian ScienceOrganization 2.JOSEPH j. MOLKUPBerwyn, IllinoisSocial SciencePhi Kappa PSi; Student Marshall�j S. F. A. C. Chairman;youth for Democracy, Presi­dent; Fencing 2, 3, 4; Owland Serpent 4; Student Forum1, 2, 3, President 4; PoliticalUnion 1, 2, 3, President 4.ALEXANDER j. MORINChicagoSocial ScienceCHARLES R. MOWERYSpokane, WashingtonMedical SchoolAlpha Delta Phi; Water Polo1,2,3; Dolphin Club 2,3, 4;Yacht Club 3, 4; Ski Club2, 3, 4; Chapel Union 2, 3.MAXINE MURPHYGilbert, MinnesotaBiological ScienceChi Rho Sigma; Chapel Union1, 2; Debate Union 1, 2, 3;Interclub Council 4; StudentPublicity Board 2; TransferOrientation 4; UniversitySingers 1.HELEN M. MYERSChicagoSocial ScienceDelta Sigma; Y. W. C. A. 1,2;W. A. A. 1, 2, 3; DramaticAssociation 1, 2; ChapelUnion 3.WILBUR T. NELSONChicagoBiological SciencesTransferred from Wheaton Col­lege.FIELDING OGBURNChicagoPhysical SciencesTransferred from UniverSity ofVirginia; Delta Upsilon.FLOYD A. OSTERMANChicagoBiological SciencesTransferred from the Universityof Louisville; Alpha BetaZeta.FLORENCE L. PANTERChicagoHumanitiesDramatic Association 1; Hillel3,4.RALPH S. PARKSChicagoPhysical SciencesTransferred from the Universityof Illinois; Chi Psi; Band 2, 3;Campus Newsreel 4; Black­friars 1; Cap and Gown 3, 4.WILLIAM C. PAULINGArlington Heights, IllinoisSocial ScienceKappa Sigma; Blackfriars 1, 2, 3;Intramumls 1, 2, 3; Inter­- fraternity Council 4.u v EN LAWRENCE S. MYERS, JR.Flossmoor, IllinoisPhysical SciencesChapel Union 1, 2, 3; AndersonSociety 1, 2; Chemical Sociaty3, 4, President 4; FreshmanOrientation 2.HARRIET J. NOBLEChicagoHumanitiesY. W. C. A. 1.ADRIENNE B. OLCZAKChicagoSocial ScienceKENNETH H. OTTENSpringfield, IllinoisBiological SciencesTHOMAS G. PAPPAGEORGEChicagoBusinessDelta Sigrna Pi; University Sym­phony Orchestra 3.LESTER PATINKINChicagoBusinessLambda Gamma Phi; Blackfriars3.CHARLES H. PERCYWilmette, IllinoisSocial ScienceAlpha Delta Phi; Student Pub­licity Board 1, 2; Blackfriars1, 2; Settlement Board 1,2;Skull end Crescent 2; Fresh­man Orientation 3; Iron Mask3; InterfraternityCouncil Presi­dent 4; Owl and Serpent,President 4; Student Marshall4; SWimming 1; Water Polo1,2,3, Captain 4.R s oT y219 F c H c A G oGRADUATESMARGARET L. PERRYIndianapolis, IndianaBiological ScienceNursing Education ClubGLENN L. PIERREPark Ridge, IllinoisBusinessChi PSi; Alpha Epsilon Delta;Gynmastics Team Captain;Varsity C-Club.HELEN F. PLACZEKChicagoHumanitiesTransferred from Morton juniorCollege.OGDEN H. POOLEChicagoBiological ScienceTransferred from George Wil­liams; Zoology Club 4; AlphaBeta Zeta.HYMAN RATNERChicagoPhysical ScienceTransferred from Wright juniorCollege.FRANK A. REKER, jR.ChicagoBusinessPhi Delta Theta; Hockey 1; Band1, 2, 3; Mirror 1, 2, 3, 4,Blackfriars 1; Campus News­reel 1; Maroon 1; RiAe andPistol Club 4; Dramatic Asso­ciation 1, 2, 3, 4.WILLIAM H. RENDLEMANDavenport, IowaBiological SciencePsi Upsilon; Track 1, 2, 3, 4;Football 1, 2, 3; FreshmanOrientation 2, 4; Blackfriars4. N NETEEN220 FOR T Y ONEANDREW G. PETERSONNormal, IllinoisBusinessMARVIN S. PITTMANStatesboro, GeorgiaHumanitiesTransferred from Morton juniorCollege.CARL W. POCHChicagoBusinessTransferred from Wright juniorCollege; Delta Sigma Pi.WILLIAM E. PRICEScranton, PennsylvaniaSocial ScienceWARREN A. REEDER, jR.Hammond, IndianaBiological ScienceTransferred From Wabash Col­lege and Indiana University;Phi Gamma Delta.HERBERT RENBERGTulsa, OklahomaBusiness.Pi Lambda Phi; Maroon 2; Pulse2.ROLAND I. RICHMANChicagoBusinessPi Lambda Phi.GEORGE G. RINDERChicagoBusinessDelta Upsilon; Wrestling 1;Band 1; Blackfriars 1; Capand Gown 1, 2, 3; Intra­murals 1, 2, 3, Board 4; Fresh­man Orientation 2.ESTHER R. ROSENBAUMChicagoBusinessComad Club 3, 4; Radio Work­shop 4; University Singers 1;Avukah 1, 2; Hillel Founda­tion 3, 4; Dramatic Associa­tion 1.PEARL C. RUBINSChicagoHumanitiesMaroon 1, 2, 3, Board of Con­trol 4; Student Aide 4; Nu PiSigma 4.MARY E. RUNYANNew Castle, IndianaHumanitiesTransFerred from Ball StateTeachers College and theUniversity of Michigan; ZetaDelta Pi.MARION j. SALLOChicago Heights, IllinoisSocial ScienceHillel Foundation 1, 2, 3, 4;Hillel Bulletin 2, 3; DramaticAssociation 1; FreshmanCounselor 2; Maroon.ROBERT W. SCHAFERjackson, MichiganLawJronsferred from jackson juniorCollege; Pi Delta Phi; LawReview; 'Banister's Club.ALBERT E .. SCHMUSNaperville, IllinoisSocial SciencePsi Upsilon; Student Social Com­mittee 2, 3, 4; Golf 3,4; Base­ball 2; Cap and Gown 1;Blackfriars 1.u N v E R s FT y o221 ( BENNETT P. ROSENChicagoLawTransferred from Illinois Wes­leyan University; Nu BetaEpsilon.JANE ROSSRobinson, IllinoisBusinessTransferred from the Universityof Illinois; Alpha GammaDelta.VIRGINIA RUBYHighlands, MassachusettsSocial ScienceJON R. RUSSELLChicagoBiological ScienceRICHARD SALZMANNDubuque, IowaHumanitiesPsi Upsilon; Football 1; Track 2;Freshman Orientation 1, 2, 3,Chairman 4; Blackfriars 1, 2,3,4, Manager 2,3, Abbot 4;Student Marshall 4; Owl andSerpent 4.MARJORIE B. SCHLYTTERChicagoHumanitiesStudent Aide 4.JOHN E. SCHRODERChicagoPhysical ScienceH ( A G oGRADUATESCAROL J SCHUHMANChicagoSocial ScienceTransferred from the Universityof Wisconsin; Tarpon Club3,4.HELEN B. SCHWARTZChicagoSocial ScienceEMILY F. SHIELDChicagoSocial ScienceELEANOR C. SHLIFERChicagoSocial ScienceJEAN SINNESSDevils Lake, North DakotaBusinessTransferred from Carleton Col­lege; Comad Club.MYRA G. SLATERBay City, MichiganTransferred from Bay City juniorCollege.W. H. ROGER SMITHChicagoBusinessTransferred from Morgan ParkJunior College. NINETEENELEANOR SCHWARTZChicagoSocial ScienceGLADYS B. SHELLENEChicagoPhysical ScienceMethodist Student League 4;Inter-Church Council 4.LLOYD B. SHIELDSChicagoBusinessTransferred from Wilson juniorCollege; Basketball 1.VIVIENNE P. SIMONChicagoSocial ScienceHillel FoundationWILLIAM SIRIAudubon, New jerseyPhysical ScienceFencing 1; Chapel Union 3, 4.CHRISTINE E. SMITHjohnstown, PennsylvaniaSocial ScienceDelta Sigma; University Choir 1;Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 1, 2, 3;Chapel Union 1, 2; FreshmanCounselor 2, 3.PAULINE SOCKOL VSKYCicero, IllinoisSocial ScienceTransferred from Morton juniorCollege; Delta Sigma.222 FORTY.ONEu N v RE JOHN F. SPECKLansing, MichiganPhysical ScienceSwimming 1, 2, 3, 4; Water Polo1,2,3,4; Dolphin 2, 3, 4.ROY F. 5T ANTON, jR.East St. Louis, IllinoisMedical SchoolPsi Upsilon; Fencing; Swimming1; BlackFriars 1, 2; Manager2; Peace Committee 2, 3.RALEIGH R. STEINBACHYankton, South DakotaSocial ScienceDelta Kappa Epsilon; Basket­ball 1.OPHELIA STEPHENSCicero, IllinoisBusinessTransferred From Morton juniorCollege.MAURICE K. STRANTZLogansport, IndianaSocial ScienceChapel Union 1; Debate Union1; Student Forum 2, 3; Politi­cal Union 2.ELIZABETH F. SUTHERLANDHoricon, WisconsinPhysical ScienceTransFerred fro m Waylandjunior College;Chapel Union3,4; Y. W. C A. 3, 4; West­minister 3, 4; MathematicsClub 3, 4.ELEANOR THOMASChicagoHumanititess T Y co F223 LA V ANCHA M. ST ALMOKChicagoHumanitiesTransferred From Kansas Uni­versity; Art Club 3, 4.RUTH L. STEELChicagoBiological ScienceSigma; Interclub Council 4;Mirror 1, 2, 3, 4; President 4;S. F. A. C; Nu Pi Sigma 4;Student Aide.Cop and Gown1,2,3; Y.W.CA. Cabinet 3.ELLIS P. STEINBERGChicagoPhysical ScienceChemical Society; Basketball 1;Tennis 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3;Band 1, 2,3,4.NATALIE STONEChicagoHumanitiesTransferred From Hazel juniorCollege; Avukah 3.EVE RET STRAUSPaterson, New jerseyBusinessTransFerred From Weslyan Uni­versity; Hillel Foundation 3.RALPH E. TElTGENMilwaukee, WisconsinPhvslccl ScienceHILLARD B. THOMASHutchinson, KansasHumanitiesTransFerred from Hutchinsonjunior College; Delta KappaEpsilon; Transfer Orientation4; Maroon 4.H Gc A oGRADUATES N NETEENELIZABETH THOMPSONChicagoChi Rho Sigma; Ida NoyesCouncil and Advisory Board;Christian Youth League; W.A A "C" Club.DALE TILLERYLong Beach, CaliforniaSocial ScienceDelta Kappa Epsilon; StudentSocial Committee 1,2,3, Chair-man 4; Washington PromChairman 3; Courtier BusinessM:mager 2; Cap and Gown3; Blackfriars 1; Student Pub­licity 2; S. F. A C. 4; Skulland Crescent 2; Iron Mask 3;Owl and Serpent 4.LAWRENCE CARL TRAEGER IIIElmhurst, IllinoisBusinessDelta Kappa Epsilon; Football1, 2; Wrestling 2; Intra­Murals 2, 3, Board 4; IronMask 3.MARIE ULLMANChicagoSocial ScienceChi Rho Sigma; Chapel Union1, 2; Student Forum 1, 2, 3;Mirror 1, 4; Student PublicityBoard 2; Transfer Orientation4.ELINOR URBANEKChicag.oHumanitiesTransferred from George Wil-.Iiams College; Wyvern, Y. W.C.AHARVEY DAVID VERNONChicagoPhysical ScienceEVON Z. VOGT, JR.Ramah, New MexicoSocial ScienceDelta Upsilon; Chapel Union1,2, 3, President 4; Skull andCrescent 2; Iron Mask 3;Student Marshall 4.224 FORTY-ONEVERYL JANET THORNSTONChicagoHumanitiesTransferred from Morgan ParkJunior College; Wyvern;Chapel Union; Pulse; Y. W.C. Ai Radio WorkshopMELVIN T. TRACHTChicagoBusinessAlpha Phi Omega; ScoutingClub 2, 3; University Choir2/ 3; Westminster Cabinet;Interchurch Council 2, 3, 4.LESLIE TURNERSavannah, GeorgiaBiological ScienceMAURICE JACKSONUNDERWOODWillow, OklahomaLawTransferred from the Universityof Oklahoma; Delta Chi.WILLIAM J. USHERChicagoPhysical ScienceTransferred from Wilson JuniorCollege.EVA E. DeVOLGrand Rapids, MichiganSocial ScienceTransferred from the Universityof Michigan· Alpha Epsilon;W. A A' 3, Cabinet 4;Chapel Union 3/ 4; Settle­ment Board 3, 4.ROBERT LEE WALKERChicagoPhysical Sciences.Transferred from Harvard; PhiDelta Thetab· Freshman Gym­nastics; Foot all 3.DON HALE WALLINGFORDChicagoLawBar Association; Barrister Club.JAMES EARL WALSHOak Park, IllinoisPhysical SciencesBand 3; Orchestra 3; juniorMath Club 3; Chapel Union3.ELLEN WATTSLeland, IllinoisBiological ScienceMILTON HARRY WEISSSouth Bend, IndianaSocial ScienceTransferred from Notre Dame;Phi Sigma Delta; Football 2,3; Wrestling 2, 3, 4; Swim­ming 2;Water Polo 2; RefugeeAid Committee 3, 4; DolphinClub 2; Iron Mask 3; Fresh­mon Orientation 4; Youth forDemocracy 4; Pulse 4; HillelFoundation 3, 4; Intramurals2, 3,.4; Daily Chicagoan 4;"C" Club.JUNE WETHERBEEChicagoSocial ScienceLOIS E. WHITINGChicagoHum:mitiesTransferred from Wells College;Wyvern; B. W. O. 3;W. A. A.3, 4; Executive Committee ofIda Noyes Council 3, 4; Y.W.C. A. 2,4; Maroon 3; Fresh­man Counselor 3; HospitalVolunteer 2, 3.ROSEMARY WILCOXHammond, IndianaHumanitiesAlpha Chi Theta.u N v E B. BAIRD WALLISDubuque, IowaSocial SciencePsi Upsilon; Student PublicityBoard 1, 2, 3, Co-Chairman4; Football 1, 2, 3; Iron Mask3; Owl and ::'erpent 4; Fresh­man Orientation 4.ELIZABETH A. WASHBURNChicagoBiological SciencesLEONARD W. WEIGELChicagoBusinessDelta Sigma Pi.CHESTER A. WESTEvqnston, IllinoisBiological ScienceTransferred from Duke Univer­sity; Sigma' Chi; Beta OmegaSigma.TOM MURRAY WHITEChicagoHumanitiesFootball 1; Blackfriars 1, 2;Dramatic Assciation 2, 3, 4.LOIS WIETZKEChicagoHumanitiesJOHN C. WILLARDChicagoPhysical ScienceTransferred from Armour Insti­tute of Technology.R s FT y o225 c H c A G oGRADUATESDONALD S. WILSONHinsdale, IllinoisBusinessDelta Kappa Epsilon; Football1, 2, 3; Skull and Crescent 2;Iron Mask 3; Dramatic Asso­ciation 2, 3, 4; Blackfriars 1,3.JOHN E. WILSONChicagoBiological ScienceBeta Theta Pi; Basketball 1, 2, 3;Track 4.RICHARD B. WILSONChicagoBusinessDelta Upsilon; Blackfriars 2;Skull and Crescent 2; Gym­nastics 2; ·Cap and Gown2,3.ARTHUR M. WOLFChicagoSocial SciencePhi Sigma Delta; Intramurals 1,2,3, 4, Board 4.WALTER E. WOLFFUrbana, IllinoisSocial ScienceDelta Kappa EpsilonDONALD H. WOLLEDPeoria, IllinoisLawTransferred from Bradley Tech;Executive Council of the U. ofC. Bar Association 3, 4; LawReview; Political Union;Chapel Union; Transfer Ori­entation Committee.ELIZABETH P. WRIGHTRochester, IllinoisHumanitiesChapel Union; Y. W. C. A;Pegasus Club. N NETEENEUNICE E. WILSONMilwaukee, WisconsinHumanitiesTransferred from the Universityof Wisconsin; Y. W. C. A.3,4.MARJORIE G. WILSONChicagoHumanitiesDANIEL j. WINOGRADChicagoSocial ScienceTransferred from Wilson JuniorCollege; Maroon 2, 3, 4.MARVIN BERNARD WOLFChicagoBiological ScienceHillel Foundation; BaseballTeam 3; Chapel Union 2, 3,4; Intramurals 2; BadmintonClub 4.PATRICIA WOLFHOPEPontiac, IllinoisHumanitiesTransferred from MacMurrayCollege; Ouadrangler;·Washington Prom Committee;Student Social Committee;Transfer Orientation 3; Ma­roon 2, 3; Homecoming Com­mittee 3.JACK WOO LAMSRoss, CaliforniaSocial ScienceAlpha Delta Phi; Football 1,2;Dramatic Association 3; Base­ball 1; Intramurals; C. A A.Instructor 4.HA HEN S. JODER, JR.Lakewood, OhioPhysical SciencePhi Delta Theta; Rifle Club 1;Band 1, 2; Courtier 1, 2;Kappa Epsilon Pi.226 FOR T Y ONELORRA YNE E. ZIDEKNew Buffalo, MichiganHumanitiesStudent Art Club.STANLEY D. ZURAKOVChicagoPhysical ScienceELIZABETH TUTTLEChicagoBiological Science.u N V E R S T Y o F227 ROBERT JOHN ZOLADChicagoBusinessTransferred from Wright JuniorCollege; Sigma Alpha Epsi­lon; Rifle Club 4.ELIZABETH McELVAINPinckneyville, IllinoisSocial SciencePi Delta Phi( H ( AGOPROFESSIONAL FRATERNITIESMEDICALALPHA KAPPA KAPPAPHI BETA PIPHI CHIPHI DELTA EpSILONPHI LAMBDA KAPPANu SIGMA NuPHI RHO SIGMALEGALDELTA THETA PHIDELTA ZETA MuGAMMA ETA GAMMANu BETA EpSILONPHI DELTA ALPHAPHI DELTA PHIWIG AND ROBESCIENTIFICGAMMA ALPHASIGMA PI SIGMASCHOOL OF BUSINESSDELTA SIGMA PILAMBDA GAMMA PHIEDUCATIONPHI DELTA KAPPA228LAMBDAHYMEN KRIEBERGALBERT WASSERMANALFRED H. GROSSSYDNEY LEEDSHYMAN AFRICKBERNARD AKWARALPH DEITZBERNARD LOLMICKJACK DONISBYRON EpSTEINLESTER GORDONHIRSCH GRAFFHAROLD LEVINLESTER PATINKINNORMAN PINKERTLEONARD PRES KILLMARSHALL SMITHBERNARD WEILAND229 GAMMAPresidentVice-PresidentTreasurerSecretary PHIFront-Stebenau, Dallagher, Vlark, Keating.Middle-Lorens, Weigel, Packard.Back-Papageorge, French, Conrad, Drigot, Hyman, Stolp, Wilson, Steinhau ser,Woods, Davis, Poch, Dixon.DELTA 5 I CMA PIFACULTY: GEORGE H. BROWN, ROBERT L. DIXON, JR.R. F. BERTRAM THOMAS W. HYMAND. D. BURRIS LAWRENCE W. KEATINGDAVID CLARK PAUL F. LORENZWALTER F. CONRAD RAUER H. MEYERJOHN G. COOK HENRY S. PACKARDRICHARD A. DALLAGER THOMAS G. PAPPAGEORGEWALLACE M. DAVIS CARL W. POCHALBERT W. DRIGOT JOSEPH W. PRACHTREYNOLDS S. DYBVIG LEONARD W. WEIGELRICHARD T. FRENCH HAROLD S. WILSONMARTIN HEICHEMER230 tJJr8tA�CREDITSJAHN AND OLLIER ENGRAVING COMPANYROGERS PRINTING COMPANYPHOTO-REFLEX STUDIOSRA Y PHOTOGRAPHERBANKERS PRINT SHOPJOHN THOMPSON-PHOTOSSTEVE LEWELLYN-PHOTOSJOHN SANDERSON-PHOTOSEARL CARROLL'S HOLLYWOOD RESTAURANTPARTRIDGE AND ANDERSON COMPANY231OUR ADVERTISERS IN D E XHanley's .. Page.234.236.244. .... 244.239. 246. 246. 244. .. 244. .. 239. 247. 243. 242. 244Berghoff Brewing Corporation. .. . ...Cable Piano Company ...Campus Tobacconist .. . .Carl Adams Funeral Home .Critchell-Miller Insurance Co.Ed's Market. .... ...Favorite Hand Laundry ..Georges Mens Shop ..International House Gift Shop ...Jahn and allier ..Kidwell Florist ...Lavery Motor Company. . . . .. . .Max Brook. . :............ . .Mickelberry's . . . . . . .. . .Midway Chevrolet Co... . .Otix & Co .Phelps and Phelps. . . . ... 246.240. 239. .. 244.243. 236Photo press .Poinsetta Hotel .Rinella · .244. .... 245.241.238.244.239. 246. 246.246. .... 237.235· .246· .236Rogers Printing Company.. . . . .. . . . .. . .Royal Plaza Hotel. . . . . .. . .South Shore Buick .Spic and Span. . .Spies Brothers. .. . ..Stineway Drug Cornponv.Straders Radio Shop .St. Xavier College .Swift and Company .University of Chicago Bookstore .University of Chicago College .University State Bank ..... . ...233Chicago Branch 812 South Morgan Street Monroe 8120234The PERFECT SOUVENIRTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO SONG BOOKFiftieth Anniversary EditionThis new and Delightful BookReflects the Spirit and Mem'ories ofYour University LifeA Source of Pleasure for Years to ComeRecent MIRROR and BLACKFRIAR HITSFavorite FRATERNITY SONGSPopular INTERCOLLEGIATE TUNESEnlarged Edition: $2.00University o] Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis AvenueSUBTERRANEANTITTERINGSby R. Rampart RoarZ. Rkxel GueswooHeavy is the head that wears the crown, so youcan imagine what Jean RoFf felt like when she waswearing two freshman beauty queen crowns. Theundisputed beauty's title was disputed by theMaroon and Pulse. Under the sanction of theStudent social Committee the Maroon, withErnest Leiser judging the freshman pulchritudematerial, had picked a beauty queen named RoFf.All set to announce her at the Social C. Dance, theMaroon kept RoFf a secret On Wednesday Pulsecame out with La RoFf on the cover announcing heras the freshman beauty queen. A light ensued andRoFf abdicated the Pulse stool for the Maroonthrone In her court of honor were Helen Pearce and Ginny Alling. Pearce Fitted in to thesocial whirl to a T, except that she had a mind ofher own. So the outspoken blonde beautymanaged to remain an independent thinking womanin the midst of a conventional social whirling fresh­man week. Pearce after a run of a couple ofmonths settled down with Dick Baker's Psi U pin.Pearce pledged Quad, depledqed, repledgedthen Finally joined. Ginny Alling pledged MortarBoard and to date is unattached. Locale CShoppe, Alpha Delt environs.The campus leaders of the year were all set togo. Johnny Stevens, head marshal and chairmanof the Maroon bocrd, was back in circulation.Orientation head Salzmann steered the freshmaninto an adequate adjustment of the ways andContinued on page 236235At Cable'sside-by-side for easy comparison, you will find all thesenationally famous makes.Pianos • OrgansRadio-PhonographysRadiosMason & Hamlin • ConoverKnabe • Cable • FischerEstey Grand and SpinetPianosThe Everett OrgatronWorld's finest electronic organRCA Victor and MagnavoxRadio-PhonographsVictor ColumbiaDecca Bluebirdand Okeh RecordsCAB L EPIANO COMPANY228 South WabashOpen EveningsVISITING PARENTSAND FRIENDSwill mark you as one who knowshis way about if you provide themtip top accommodations oFfered by-POINSETTIA HOT E L5528 Hyde Park Boulevard,DORchester 7500USE YOUR BANKIt can serve you in many waysSA VING ACCOUNTSCHECKING ACCOUNTSLOANS ON CONTRACTS IN DEFENSEPROGRAMREAL ESTATE LOANSTRA VELERS CHECKSSAFE DEPOSIT BOXESUNIVERSITYSTATE BANK1354 East 55th StreetMember 0/ Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation wiles of University lire, with senior aide andEsoteric (but not esoteric) Henrietta Mahon doingher bit for the freshmen women. Unconforminggenius Bob Evans, Cap and Gown publisher, gavethe campus egg in their beer with a student hand­book full of coupons giving buyers free access toanything from a motor overhauling to a free pantspress while you wait. Stinky Steel was presidentof Mirror with vice-president at the helm Mahon.Also on the Board were the girl of many boards(Mortar Board, Publicity Board, Mirror Board,DA Board) Blanche Grover, Cap and Gowneditor and trapeze artist (Esoteric) Mary Hommel,crackerjack actress Sigma (of course) Betty AnnEvans, who was also the outstanding star of abastard production of "Hamlet", in which sheplayed Opheliai and Marian Castleman, dark­haired poet and skit writer Chuck Percyhead of Owl and Serpent made the First honesteFforts at fratern ity rush i ng reforms. Rush i ng andpledging were moved up and pledging increasedBud Aronson, head of the student SettlementBoard began collecting dirty shirts early to give tothe University sponsored settlement Interclubpresident Donna Culliton remained looking likesomething out of Harper's Bazaar throughout aknockout drag-in cat Fight over club pledging withOuad Shirley Burton Dale Tillery mug­wumped the Student Social Committee through ayear of successful dances topped by a gianthomecoming carnival, at which secretive Nu PiSigmas were Little Egypts. The Vienese Ball,something new in campus entertainment, hadEmpress Louise Eaton looking like something outof old Vienna . Maroonwoman PC Rubinsdynamited her way to campus fame.And so the student leaders highlighted Campushistory by making it. We'll turn now to a quickperusal of the other side of campus life, the faculty.Faculty members, usually content to spend theirtime in studying, raising families and playing intheir own faculty circles, found themselves blossom­ing this year in dead social earnest. With theFiftieth anniversary drive in progress, the universityfound that a prospective donor liked nothing betterthan to talk informally with sime scholar, to discoverthat "those professors" were real guys after all.Consequently, there were numerous universityfunctions at which the faculty dined with thecitizens of Chicago interested in the university.the highlight of the faculty-public alliance came inApril when over 5,000 citizens visited the campusContinued on page 2'11236America votesSWIFT'S PREMIUMthe best ham of all!• In the homes of America, what brand ofham is preferred? To find out, an inde­pendent research agency made a nation­wide poll. It interviewed thousands andthousands of women. asked simply "Whatbrand of ham do you think is best?"SWIFT'S PREMIUM Ham won decisively! It actua II y got more votes than the nextthree mentioned brands COMBINED.No other brand has such rich mildness,from Swift's exclusive Brown Sugar Cure.No other has its mellow tang, from specialSmoking in Ovens. Ask for SWIFT'SPREMIUM.FOR EASY COOKING(Blue Label) READY TO EAT(Red Label)REMEMBER, THE MEAT M A K EST HEM E A L!:237SOUTH SHORE BUICK, Inc.invites you to seeBUICK'S 4 LATEST CREATIONSSMALLER LOW PRICEDWITHBUICK'S FAMOUS "SPECIAL FIREBALL ENGINE"-FOUR MODELS-'Business Coupe. . . Convertible Coupein addition to our regular 1941 line.·974.00 Delivered in ChicagoA PHONE CALL WILL BRING A DEMONSTRATORTO YOUR DOOR"Try Buick's Revolutionary Compound Carburetion""Horse-power increase with greater economy."SOUTH SHORE BUICK, INC.7320 Stony Island Ave. SOUTH SHORE BUICK, INC.7405 Stony Island Ave.Midway 6400238We Manufacture the following honor societyand clubs' pinsSKULL and CRESCENTIRON MASKNU PI SIGMAWYVERNDELTA SIGMAOUADRANGLER.ESOTERICPI DELTA PHIMORTAR BOARDSIGMACHI RHO SIGMA*SPIES BROTHERSINCORPORATEDReliable Since 187827 E. Monroe Street ChicagoRandolph 4149MANUFACTURING JEWELERSAND STATIONERSWars and Accidentsare causedthey don't happenThe U. S. War Department says-244,357 men killed in our six major wars whichcovered a period of 15 years of actual warfare.The National Safety Council says-485,658 people killed in our country as theresu It of Auto accidents in the 15 years from1926 to 1940 inclusive.No sensible person wants war, but most of uswant automobiles in spite of their appallingcasualty record.So·--our advice to you isDrive carefully and buy good insurance.CRITCH ELL-MI LLERINSURANCE AGENCY175 West Jackson StreetChicagoWe sell good insurance 1941 Underwriters and DistributorsofMunicipal and CorporateSecurities*OTIS & co.1868 (Incorporated)Established 1899135 South LaSalle St. ChicagoCleveland New York Denver CincinnatiSan Francisco Columbus Toledo DetroitInternational HouseGift Shop1414 East 59th Street-Chicago*Unusual selection of Imported GiftsJewelry Men's GiftsScarfs Collector's ItemsIndian Prints Wood Carvingsetc. etc.Hand-bleached and Hand-woven239Back to the Midway ...MORTON B. WEISS, '18andSAMUEL N. KATZIN, '18CHEVROLET DEALERS for NINETEEN YEARSare happy to announce their new dealership• •CHEVROLET SALES, PARTS AND SERVICENEW CHEVROLET CARS AND TRUCKSALL MAKES AND MODELS OF USED CARS• •Open Evenings and SundaysSPECIAL ATTENTION TO THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITYMIDWAY CHEVROLET CO.6522 Cottage Grove Ave. All Phones Midway 3500for four days, dined with the professors at lunchand listened to special lectures in the evening.All this faces into insionificcnce however incomparison with the three big faculty contributionsof the year-Mortimer Adler's attack on professors,two speeches by Hutchins on peace and thesubsequent answer by the faculty committee andthe publication of Random House Aristotle editedby Richard McKeon, Dean of the Humanities.In late September brilliant but erratic MortimerJ Adler delivered an address before the Confer­ence of Science and Religion in New York City.Little was known about the speech on campus,few had read Sidney Hook's reply in The NewRepublic and interest was null. Then, the DailyMaroon printed the text of the speech, madeknown the full import of Adler's "God and theProfessors" and things began to pop. Adler'sthesis was that the professors were as nihilistic asHitler and were as much to blame for the downfallof democrocv, he then presented eight philosoph­ical propositions and eight religious propositionsthat the professors must accept to be saved. Tothis charge, President Hutchins made no reply butthe other faculty members were more voluable.First to the defense was Dr. Crane, chairman of thedepartment of English whose answer to Adler wasa scholarly and gentle demolition. He was follow­ed in quick succession by Malcolm Sharp, professorof law, who had taught law classes for severalyears with Adler. The professors articles camepouring in and finally the Maroon issued a supple­ment containing the Adler attack, the answer ofNew Yorker Sidney Hook and the answers ofuniversity men Crane, Sharp, Quincy Wright andFrank Knight, along with "a plague on both theirhouses" by Milton Mayer, assistant toHutchins.President Hutchins delivered his first peacespeech over a nation wide broadcast when theargument over the passage of lend-lease bill wasat its height. The speech which was considered"isolationist" and anti-lend lease brought forthterrific reaction from the faculty. A Maroonsupplement indicated that politics had indeedmade strange bedfellows for here were Hutchinsand his colleague Mortimer Adler in strikingopposition, while "Vat iss the evidence Carlson"and unsuccessful socialist vice-presidential can­didate Kreuger: long time enemies of Hutchins onhis educational policies, backed him up. In turnthomist Adler was lin ked with social scientist WirthContinued on page 213241 Will Convince You!JOHN SEXTON & CO.-Chicago-BrooklynFULL HOTELSERVICEREFERENCESREOUIREDROYAL PLAZA APT. HOTEL*Modern 1, 2, & 3 Room Apts.Complete Kitchen, from $50.*A Block and a Half from Campus6139 Kenwood Ave. DORchester 1270See the 1941 Style Leaders*J. A. LAVERY MOTOR CO.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO CAMPUS FORD DEALERFORD CONVERTIBLECOM P LET E LI N E 0 F S P 0 R T MOD E L SAUTHORIZEDFORD - MERCURY - LINCOLN - ZEPHYRDEALER6127 COTTAGE GROVE 6529 COTTAGE GROVEMIDWAY 5300242PHOTO PRESS*OFFSETLITHOGRAPHY*731 So. Plymouth Ct.Phone Wabash 8212-3-4CHICAGOQuality FlowersatSensiblePricesWe Specialize in Corsagesfrom $1.00 upPROMPT DELIVERYFLOWERS TELEGRAPHEDANYWHEREJ. E. KIDWELLFLOWERS826 E. 47th St.Phone Kenwood 1352 and Douglas who no wise could be counted asAdler's friends. This be as it may, there was noconnected faculty opposition until Mr. Hutchinssecond speech-a Sunday Chapel Address entitled"The Proposition is Peace. This speech did notdiffer substantially from the First, but was moredecidedly "isolation". To this speech a facultygroup replied over a national wide network.The committee composed of Professors LyovdWarner, Jacob Viner, Ronald S. Crane, LouisWirth, Jerome Kerwin, Richard P. McKeon,Bernadotte Schmitt, Paul Douglas and WilliamSpencer stated that "the proposition is not peacebut freedom" and that Hitler not the United Stateswill decide.McKeon's edition of Aristotle with its authorita­tive introduction had been in the state of becomingfor the past year. Rumors had gone round campusto the effect that the translations were done byMcKeon, that it would contain all the known worksof Aristotle and so forth. Upon publication, thebook proved to be a collection of the basic worksof Aristotle in the Oxford translations with abrilliant introduction by McKeon, which wasacclaimed by students as well as scholars.243S. RINELLA & SONSWHOLESALEFRUITS AND VEGETABLESTEL. VICtory 2217BUS. CANal 5421-5449 221 WEST 23rd STREET HANLEYSWishes theClass of 1941The Very Best of LuckFor Pipe Smokers-TobaccosBlended to SatisfyYour PersonalityTry Our No 11 MixtureCAMPUS TOBACCO CO.1324 East 57th StreetJoseph c. Shorris-TobacconistA Cozy Corner at Phelps and PhelpsFor More than 10 YearsUniversity of Chicago PeopleHAVE ENJOYEDPhelps & PhelpsCOLONIAL RESTAURANT6324 Woodlawn AvenueRecommended by Duncan Hines,Author, "Adventures in Good Eating."LUNCHEONS 35c up DINNER 50c to $1.25Also A la CartePRIVATE ROOMS AVAILABLE FOR PARTIES.CALL HYDE PARK 6324AIR CONDITIONEDCHAPEL AMBULANCEPRIVATEEverybody Knows Carl J. 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LaSalle StreetCHICAGO, ILLINOIS245Gbe llnluef5itp of Cnir.l�1OumvcnSJr,1! COLL(.(;(IN THE LOOPSTRADERS955 East 55th StreetPlaza 7800EVENINGSLATE AFTERNOONSAND SATURDAYSCOLLEGE, PROFESSIONAL, BUSINESS, andST A TISTICS COURSESANNIVERSARY GREETINGSSt. Francis Xavier College for WomenChicagoTwo-Hours Once or Twice a Week, Autumn, Winter,Spring..ED'S MARKET DOWNTOWNPUBLIC LECTURESandLECTURE-CONFERENCESFresh Meats, Poultry and Fish1154 E. 55th StreetFor announcements, addressFavorite Hand Laundry1308 E. 53rd StreetPhone Hyde Park 3794 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE18 South Michigan AvenueDearborn 3673�.;t1i"'£j)'�i �'i5!�nu"�Td.!! �A�';"fj�,t.f,�� t3- g..O� C��3rti, -2300 W.95th ST.Southern FoodNO LIQUOR SERVEDSTINEW A Y DRUGSChicago's Most Outstanding Drug Store.Conveniently Located on the CampusPatronizeOurAd vertisers246,JJ\HN" OLLIER EI\ICRA\lII\I,C enMakers of Fine PrintingPlates for Black and ColorArtists and Photographers817 W. 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STATE STREETNorth: 4535 Broadway South: 6302 Stony Island Ave. West: 433B West Madison St.Oak Pork: 724 Lake St., Phone: Village 7177 Evanston: 329 Howard St., Phone: Greenleaf 2005248