(!Pbe Batlp ilkiroon IVol. 39, No. 113 Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1939 Price Three Cents'— , - ■ .1Martin, Topping Head DailyMaroon Board of ControlCLEAN-UPName Aids,MarshalsFor ’39-’40Hutchins Appoints Tess,Pfeiffer To Head His“Representatives.”Twenty members of the juniorclass at the University of Chicafrowere honored today in their appoint¬ment by President Robert M. Hutch¬ins to serve as student marshals andaides, the highest student honor inthe University, during the academicyear which begins next fall.The tw’enty, ten men and ten wom¬en, are selected on the basis of schol¬arship and participation in studentactivities. They serve as representa¬tives of the President at formal Uni¬versity functions.Head MarshallCharles Pfeiffer, chairman of theReynolds Club council and secretaryof the Political Union, was selectedas Head Marshal.Other marshals are Robert Bigelow,chairman of the Freshman Orienta¬tion Committee and member of theorchestra; John F. Culp, III, chairmanof the Interfraternity Council; Alex¬ander F. George, captain-elect of thefencing team; Martin Levit, co-cap¬tain elect of the baseball team; Rus¬sell J. Parsons, member of the trackand football teams and chairman ofthe Student Publicity Board; ChesterB. Powell, member of the track team;Charles V. Shostrom, member of thetennis team; William H. Speck, mem¬ber of the Chapel Union and theswimming team; and Harry F. Top¬ping Jr., member of the golf teamand Business Manager of the DailyMaroon,Senior AideLaverne Tess, member of theYWCA cabinet, was named SeniorAide.Other aides are Katherine Adams;Betty Ahlquist, secretary of theYWCA; Ruth Brody, of the Daily Ma¬roon Board of Control; Janet Geiger,president of the Interclub Council,member of the Board of Women’s Or¬ganizations, Mirror Board and theYWCA; Mary Elizabeth Grenander;Thelma I.selman, chairman of the Fed¬eration of University Women; AretaKelble, president of the Ida NoyesCouncil and member of the Board ofWomen’s Organizations and the Capand Gown staff; Marjorie Kuh, chair¬man of the Student Settlement Board,president of the Christian ScienceOrganization, and member of theBoard of Women’s organizations andthe YWCA Cabinet; and PatriciaShrack, member of the YWCA Cab¬inet and the Cap and Gown staff.Name Hirsch,BiedcrmanPulse HeadsPulse executive-appointments, an¬nounced yesterday, make Emil Hirschnew Editor-in-chief, Irwin Biedermannew Business Manager. The editorialboard for the campus news-magazinewill be composed by John Patrick, IraGlick and Robert Davis. D. HaysSolis-Cohn and Walter Angrist willhead advertising aiid circulation staffs.Instead of a Board of Control toformulate magazine policy, final de¬cisions will rest with the Editor-in-chief and Business Manager. Mem¬bers of the editorial board will havespecific functions. Patrick being arteditor, Glick managing editor, andDavis feature editor.Breaking publications precedent the1939-40 Pulse executive board will in¬clude two sophomores, both indepen¬dents: Angrist and Glick.Hutchins’ ReceptionThe time of President Hutchins’reception for members of the grad¬uating class and their parents hasbeen changed from 4 o’clock Tues¬day to Monday evening from 8:30to 10. It will be held in Ida NoyesHall. Fraternities VieIn Annual SingTomorrowClosing a week of alumni reunion,and ending the 1938-1939 social year,fraternity men and alumni will gath¬er together around the fountain inHutchinson Court tomorrow night,and raise their voices to chorus outagain in the 29th annual Interfra¬ternity Sing.Aides and MarshalsTomorrow night, the 20 men andwomen selected as the outstandingscholars and leaders in the Class of’40, will don caps and gowns as Pres¬ident Hutchins’ Aides and Marshals,in front of the assemblage of studentsalumni, and outsiders gatheredaround the Court to hear the Sing,Blankets will be awarded to the Uni¬versity’s graduating C-men as a trib¬ute for the services they have ren¬dered their alma mater. And theweather will be fair!According to Zeta Bete Dick Glas-ser, who with John Culp, head of theI-F Council, and Walter Young,makes up the student committee incharge of the sing, there will be morecompetitors for the quantity andquality cups than last year, when1900 hundred students and alumnifrom 16 fraternities vied for the cups.I)KE and Psi U IneligibleLast year’s quantity and qualitywinners. Delta Kappa Epsilon and PsiUpsilon respectively, will be ineligi¬ble for the cups they won last year,and the 16 fraternities singing thisyear, are rounding up all availablealumni for tomorrow night.The sing will be broadcast againthis year at 9 o’clock over an NBCnetwork for those who can’t be amongthe 12,000 odd people attending thesing.Track, TennisBaseball TeamsElect CaptainsCaptains of the three major springathletic teams for the 1940 seasonare John Davenport, track. Art Jorg¬enson and Charles Shostrom, tennisco-captains, and Marty Levit and“Sparky” Colagaratos, baseball co¬captains.Shostrom and Jorgenson, unde¬feated number two doubles team,will suceced the undefeated numberone combinations as leaders of thesquad. Shostrom, hero of the thrillingthree-set final in the number threedivision of the Big Ten Tournament,is undefeated in Conference competi¬tion. At present he is participating inthe City Tourney, in which he isseeded second behind teammate ChetMurphy, and one notch above Wildcatace Marvin Wachman.Psi U brother Art Jorgenson hasheld the fourth singles spot for twostraight seasons.TrackTrack captain John Davenport isalso co-captain of the football team,a member of Owl and Serpent, and amember of Alph Delta Phi. In trackhe specializes in the 100 and 200 yarddashes and the broad jump. In hissophomore year he won Big Tenchampionships in both the indoor andoutdoor meets. This season, althougha consistent point winner in dualmeets, he failed to defend either ofhis titles.Diminutive baseball co-captain Col¬agaratos has long been known as thespark-plug of the Maroon nine. Hehas held down the second base spotfor two years. Levit, in addition tobeing first string catcher on the base¬ball team, is a University Marshall,a member of Owl and Serpent, anda senior member of the freshmanorientation committee. After electingtheir new captains the team votedCliff Gramer most valuable player.Name Members ofNu Pi SigmaAnnouncement was made yesterdayof the newly elected members of NuPi Sigma, senior women’s honorarysociety. Those elected include BettyNewhall, Natalie Clyne, MarjorieKuh, Areta Kelble, Janet Geiger,Thelma Iselman, Ruth Brody, RuthNeundorffer, and LaVerne Tess. During the school year a certainnumber of stories are always un¬earthed which Maroon editors squelchbecause of Journalistic Ethics. Thisyear has been no exception to therule. But tradition be hanged:Things Unprinted Till NpwBogart of the law school came toChicago just eleven gears ago withthe unwritten agreement that whenDean Bigelow resigned he woidd step^nto the deanship of the law school. . . Bigelow failed to resign asscheduled, but stuck for eleven years,when Katz stepped into his shoes,leaving law school faculty and Bo¬gart o]>en-mouthed . . . there is a 71year old man tinkering in the Iran¬ian room of Oriental Institute . . .some day in the dim future the roommay he opened . . . tfte whole set-upof the 201 exams in Social Scienceswill he changed next year . . . twoexams will be given, in all lyrobahil-ity, one in general methods and rela¬tions in the Social Sciences, and theother on the courses . . . If you havetaken credit for the courses you maynot have to take the comj/rehensivein them . . .As announced before the electionof this year’s Federation Board, noJewish girl will ever be allowed tohead The Federation of UniversityWomen ... In fact, the headship ofwomen’s activities is a gentile job. . . There is a Sloan gift for radioagain this year ... it was HughCampbell’s grades, not his financesthat didn’t hear up under the strain. . . the University tvill probably pullout of the University BroadcastingComjHiny, as stated in Pulse, but itis also true that the other Universi¬ties in the group may also give upthe project ... a man at Orientalhud a venomous snake named for him. . . Ruth Brody was appointed editorof Echo, the supplement to Cap andGown, at the end of last year by theRefugee AidAnnouncesFinalSubscriptionThe final report of the Committeefor Refugee Aid and War Relief re¬veals that $4697 was collected to helpat least seven scholarship students atthe University and the victims ofwar-torn China and Spain. $2097 ofthis sum was collected in cash whilethe balance represents the cost ofroom and board which have been of¬fered by various organizations.Room and BoardRoom and board for one year wasoffered by Zeta Beta Tau and PiLambda Phi while Kappa Sigma,Beta Theta Pi, and Alpha Delta. Phihave each arranged to serve mealsto one refugee student. Ellis Co-opwill board two students and Inter¬national House has offered a roomscholarship for another two.Jack Reader, owner of Reader’sDrug Store has consented to servemeals to one refugee for six months,it was also announced.The University Scholarship Com¬mittee has already voted scholarshipsfor seven refugee students, all ofw'hich have been accepted. The Uni¬versity has not yet met to considerthe final sum collected by the stu¬dents but upon the basis of the totalalready raised, the Refugee Aid Com¬mittee feels that at least nine stu¬dents will be aided.Far Eastern FundThe Far Eastern Service FundCommittee which is enabling Chinesestudents to reestablish their univer¬sities and continue their studies hasreceived $827.08 from the sum collec¬ted at the University.The Medical Bureau and NorthAmerican Committee which is con¬ducting a drive for relief of Spanishrefugees in France and for iettle-ment of these refugees in Latin-American countries had received$399.44The American Friends ServiceCommittee has received $399.44. retiring hoard yet at the beginningof this year she was informed by thenew group that there would be noEcho . . . Echo, of course, came out. . . there have been several rapistsaround campus . . . Bill Frankel hadequal authority on the Student Pub¬licity board with Merriam, accordingto Bob, did almost all the ivork, yetCap and Gown failed to mention theco-chairman set-up . . . Alan Bondthe Abbot of Blackfriars may go toMedical School and be unable to con¬tinue at the job . . . Dave Martin,who is the new chairman of the Ma¬roon Board, last year at this timewas laying plans for a rival neivs-paper which was to run the Maroon joff campus . . . Jay Berivanger was jproposed as an aldermanic candidate iagainst Douglas in the last campaign I. . . the Mortar Boards and the Sig¬mas each year gang up on the Eso¬terics and the Quads to put theirown candidate into the top positionon Mirror Board . . . in the middle ofthis year the Daily Maroon had hada staff insurrection, led by Leiser andMartin, which died in childbirth, on¬ly child being a sports editor on the'Board of Control . . . Pulse’s LifeSaver contest winners are pickedfrom Pulse friends ... the jokeswhich win from an available humormagazine . . . John Reiner is devel¬oping a formula to make himself im¬mortal, . . . plus that ... he has car¬ried home btickets of blood from thestock yards from which he is usingfor the base of a new wrinkle re¬mover . . . Courtenay Crocker willprobably run the whole works ofthe Courtier, Dorm paper, next year j. . . BWO is the campus’s best or¬ganization for organizations, sakeL . .at the meetings the main businessis when the next meeting will takeplace . . . Hattie Paine and Pete At¬water did “Little Girl Afreud,” theMirror skit, at five o’clock one morn¬ing in the Circle . . . the new Pulseis so set up that the Board of twomeans nothing . . . on all matters ofcontroversy Hirsch has two votes. .Hutchins Speaksat ConvocationService TuesdayPresident Robert M. Hutchins willaddress the graduating class Tuesdayafternoon at 3 in Rockefeller Memo¬rial Chapel at the convocation serv¬ices, it was announced yesterday. Hewill also speak at 11 Tuesday morningwhen the higher degrees are awarded.Admission to the services is by ticketonly, but if all seats are not filled byticket-holders, those without ticketswill be admitted.For the services on ConvocationSunday, Dean Charles W. Gilkey ofthe University Chapel will speak at11 Sunday morning. All graduatesand their friends are invited.799 degrees will be conferred atthe services Tuesday, the 196th con¬vocation of the University. Thisbrings the total number of degreesconferred by the University duringthe four quarterly graduation cere¬monies of the academic year to 1,776.Pfanstiehl, Fouch,Anderson, KorfHead Maroon BandAfter their last twilight concertlast week members of the UniversityBand Association elected new officers.The president for next year is Al¬fred Pfanstiehl, flute player; RobertFouch is the new vice-president.Other officers include the secretaryand treasurer. Dale Anderson, andthe historian, John Korf. RobertMiner, retiring president, is a mem¬ber of the board of directors; whileNoel Weaver is the non-student mem¬ber, and Dr. Charles Goetsch the hon¬orary alumnus member. Brody, Grody, Cornelius,Meyer and Richman Al¬so Head Staff.Announcement of the MaroonBoard of Control for 1939-1940 wasmade lagt night. David E. Martin isthe new chairman of an EditorialBoard composed of Ruth Brody, Har¬ry Cornelius, William H. Grody, andAlice Meyer.Heading the Business staff will beAlpha Delta Phi Harry Topping asBusiness Manager, and Roland Rich-man, Pi Lambda Phi, as advertising.The Business staff is returning to theorganization of year before last withTopping having a controlling vote.This year there were two co-equalbusiness managers. Topping is also aStudent Marshal and a member ofOwl and Serpent.The organization of the EditorialBoard will remain essentially as itwas this year, with the five membershaving special tasks but equal voteson determining the policy of the Ma¬roon. Only change in the official set¬up is the addition of a sports editorto the Board.Martin, who is in the Humanitiesdivision, is an independent. A trans¬fer student from Wabash, he is alsoa member of the advisory committeeof the Student Social Committee. Hewill handle features, copy, and re¬write work next year.Cornelius, Phi Kappa Psi presidentof the Peace Council is in the Socialdivision. His official title will be make¬up editor.Ruth Brody, a Senior Aide, andHumanities student, will be the as¬signment editor. Grody, member ofZeta Beta Tau and a Social Sciencesstudent, is the new sports editor.Alice Meyer, Humanities student, will(Continued on page 2)42 StudentsSelected ByPhi Beta KappaForty-two honor students at theUniversity of Chicago have beenelected to Phi Beta Kappa, nationalhonorary scholastic society, CareyCroneis, associate professor of Geol¬ogy, who is head of the local chapter,announced today.The group honored will be initiatedinto the Society at the 40th annualmeeting of the Beta of Illinois chap¬ter Monday in Judson Court.G. A. Borgese, professor of Italianliterature, will give the annual ad¬dress, on “Portrait of an AmericanUndergraduate.”Those elected to Phi Beta Kappawere Walter J. Blum, John Britz,Yale Brozen, Morris H.Xohen, Gwen-dolin L. Cooper, James Davran, Ray-na DeCosta, Alfred De Grazia, Jr., A.Donovan, James A. Dunkin, DieterDux, Leonard M. Edwards, Robert S.Fouch, Hanna M. Goldman, FrancesL. Greenfield, Judith E. Graham, Mar¬jorie C. Hamilton, Cynthia A. Hawkes,Milancie Hill, Edward R. Hoffman.Byron Kabot, Luana M. Kekkonen,Wasley Krogdahl, William C. Lewis,Robert H. Lochner, Joan A. Lorr,Kullervo Louhi, Kathryn I. MacLen-nan, Rita M. McGuane, Burton N.Navid, Joseph Rosenstein, Leo Seren,Frederick G. Smith, Joseph Sondheim-er, William B. Sowash, Shirley A.Star, Louise H. Tonness, Philip Weh-ner, Anna E. Wehman, LeonardWeise, Joseph E. Wilson, Frances G.Winn.Hold Free DanceAfter I-F SingClosing its first year of activity si¬multaneously with the University so-ial year, the Reynolds Club Councilwill hold a free all-campus dance inbo^ lounges after the Interfratcr-nity Sing tomorrow night.The newly chosen Councillors willhave charge of the open house, andhave announced that the Coffee Shopwill be open for refreshments. Tradi¬tional player at Reynolds Club dances,Chuck Mowery’s orchestra will furn¬ish the music for the dance, andMargery Grey will provide the vocals.idbi^iauui •ilrtaiiinifftfriiiiiir' mm illPage Two THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY. JUNE 9, 1939FOUNDED IN 1901MEMBER ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATEPRESSTb« Daily Maroon Is the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicago,published mornings except Saturday, Sun¬day and Monday during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 5881 University avenue.Telephones: Hyde Park 9221 and 9222.A'ter 6:30 phone in stories to ourprinters. The Chief Printing Company,148 West 62nd street. Telephone Went-worth 6123.The University of Chicago assumes noresponsibility for any statements appear¬ing in The Daily Maroon, or for any con¬tract entered into by The Daily Maroon.The Daily Maroon expressly reservesthe rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper. Subscriptionrates: $3 a year; 34 by mail. Singlecopies: three cents.“Entered as second class matter March18, 1903, at the post office at Chicago,Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.nCPRCSENTtO FOB NATIONAL ADVtBTISINO OVNational Advertising Swrice, Inc.College Publishers Representative420 MADiaoN Ave. New Youk, N. Y.CHICASO ■ BOSTOS • Los AS61LSI • SAB FBABCISCOBOARD OF CONTROLEDWIN BERGMANLAURA BERGQUIST, ChairmanMAXINE BIESENTHALMAX FREEMANADELE ROSE^ITORIAL ASSOCiATESRuth Brody, Harry Cornelius. _ WillinmGrody, Ernest Leiser, David Martin, AliceMeyer, Robert Sedlak, Charles O’DonnellBUSINESS ASSOCIATESRichard Caple, Richard Glasser, RolandRichman, David Salzberg,Harry ToppingNight Editor: William GrodyYear's EndThis is our resolution for theUniversity’s student relationspolicy for next year—to decidewhat sort of an undergraduateschool it is going to have, andthen to set about getting it inthe most effective way. Our sug¬gestion is that it decide to havean undergraduate school whichstresses study and learning andthinking, that its undergraduateactivities be almost entirelyunrestricted, and deemphasized.We suggest that official honor,at least, be given mainly forscholarship, that activities be re¬warded only by the pleasures ofw'orking on them, and that ifthey are not worth working onfor this reward they be allowedto die an unbolstered death.♦ * ♦The selections of Aides andMarshals for this year weremade on the basis of personalpreference and on an arbitraryrating of activities. In the mindsof the alumni, these senior hon¬ors go to the brightest represen¬tatives of their class, to thosestudents who best characterizethe University’s ideals. On thewhole, those selected this yearhave mediocre grades. There aremany C averages, and a goodsprinkling of D grades. Athletesare rewarded out of proportionto their publicized place in theUniversity activities schedule,and students are chosen for thecomplacent conservativeness oftheir organizations.This year Dean Smith has hadtoo much power in determiningwho shall be Aides and Marshalswith apparent power to add andremove at will. He is not par¬ticularly interested in the gradesangle, and his citerion of a goodselection is an attractive studentwho has a respectable activityand no dissenting ideas. Polit¬ical activities, are taboo. In or¬der to bring the office of Aidesand Marshals into their properplace in an intelligent Univer¬sity, we suggest that a B aver¬age be set, with possible excep¬tions for really outstanding ac¬tivities. An active faculty com¬mittee should discuss the possi¬bilities with the outgoing groupof student Aides and Marshals.Departments should be allowedto recommend outstanding stu¬dents. There should be no omis¬sions of such notable activitiesleaders as Jack Conway. If prej¬udiced preferences are discardedand serious discussion of candi¬dates is substituted. Aides andMarshals may become an honorworthy of its traditional stand¬ing.* * tsThe undergraduate school isgetting soft. The divisions stillrequire steady and hard work in many courses, but the College iseasy now, too easy. Studentsloaf away their College days be¬cause they know that one solidmonth of cramming will sailthem through any set of compre-hensives. Studying is no longerthe style. This is the fault ofthe curve grading system. Nomatter how stupid the class,there are limits on the numberwho may fail, and there mustalways be a substantial groupgetting A’s. ^Handling students roughlypays good dividends. The Eng¬lish department knows. Theirlow-grade policy frightened stu¬dents into studying so thorough¬ly that there was not one failurej in this year’s New Plan Englishj Bachelor’s. The department is{jubilant over the excellent pa¬pers that were handed in. TheCollege could, with profit, trythe same tactics. Students cometo the University with the inten¬tion of studying. As soon asthey find out that it is not alto¬gether necessary, they stop.I They would learn to study and tothink, too, given a little morecompulsion, and would studythroughout the year, not cramat the end.The College faculty is show¬ing signs of weakening. Livelierstudents would help to perk upthe instructors, but more moneyto hire and keep good instruc¬tors, more prestige awards forCollege teaching, are needed.The Social Sciences course inparticular has openings for newmen. Here is an opportunity tobring in a group that could be¬come as famous as the Humani¬ties instructors of four yearsago.Ik Ik 4iThe relations of the Dean’soffice and the students need agood shaking up. If once theUniversity stops honoring re¬spectability plus activities andstarts to make good grades bothmore difficult of attainment andmore honorable, it will be large¬ly due to a change of heart onthe part of those officials whodeal with students in their ex¬tra-curricular capacity. The cur¬rent attitude is one of profoundmistrust and disrespect, plus acensorship of liberal and radicalactivities which was once non¬existent, then veiled, and nowrapidly coming into the light.This is a good move, since anhonest censorship is far moredesirable than behind-the-backdiscrimination. However, thiswould so effectively destroy theUniversity’s reputation for com¬plete student freedom that itwill probably never be carriedbeyond the whispering stage.As an alternative, we suggestvery definite rules of the gamewith respect to student activitiesand student rights, and a strict¬ly impersonal enforcement ofthese rules by an official withtolerance, sympathy for stu¬dents, and an ability to interfereto the absolute minimum. Instudent-administration relation¬ships now there is far too muchtendency to let widely broadcastpersonal prejudices toward stu¬dents and activities determineissues unfairly. Activities needthe auditing service which theDean of Students office provides.Aside from that they need to belet alone in most instances, andin rare cases they need an un¬prejudiced adviser whom theycan trust completely.From the Dean of Studentsoffice activities require lesscharm, less unasked and unneed¬ed interference, more simple butimpartially enforced rules, morehonesty.♦ ♦ ♦These reforms will not makeof the University a Gothic heav¬en. They will, however, bringback two important things, first,faith in regulations and in thehonorable intentions of the ad¬ministration towards the stu¬dents, second, and more import¬ant, increased respect of study,discussion, and scholasticachievement.It is essential for the healthof the University that they bemaae. Cowles Economics CommissionMoves To University in FallHeadquarters of the Cowles Com¬mission for Research in Economics,and of the affiliated Econometric So¬ciety, will be brought to the Univer¬sity this autumn, President RobertM. Hutchins of the University an¬nounced this week.“Because the Cowles Commissionhas led the movement to integrateeconomic theory with mathematicsand statistics, its removal to the Uni¬versity of Chicago will make the Uni¬versity the most important center inthe country for the study and devel¬opment of economics as an exactscience,” President Hutchins said inhis announcement.Yntema Is DirectorTheodore Yntema, professor ofStatistics at the University, has beenappointed Director of Research of theCommiesion. Oskar Lange, associateprofessor of economics, and H. G.Lewis, who has been appointed in¬structor in Economics, will be re¬search associates of the Cowles Com¬mission, In addition to research underthe auspices of the Commission, allthree will devote part of their timeto teaching in the field of mathemati¬cal and statistical economics.The Cowles Commission is a non¬profit organization which conductsand encourages investigation ofproblems of current economic impor¬tance and the formulation of economictheory, particularly through the de¬velopment of the quantitative ap¬proach of mathematics and statistics.Advisory CouncilAdvisory Council of the CowlesCommission consists of the followingwell-known economists and statisti¬cians: Arthur L. Bowley, Universityof London; Irving Fisher, Yale Uni¬versity; Ragnar Frisch, University ofNorway; Wesley C. Mitchell, Colum¬bia University, and Carl Snyder, formany years associated with the Fed¬eral Reserve Bank of New York.The Commission was founded in1932 by Alfred Cowles III Chicagoanwhose interest in research into in¬vestment and finance problems led tohis maintaining during the previousten years a private organization forsuch research. His broadening inter¬est in the problems of economics ledto the foundation 6f the Commission.Commission HeadquartersThe Commission’s headquarters atpresent are located in ColoradoSprings. During the last five yearsresearch conferences have been spon¬sored by the Commission, with anotable group of internationallyknown economists and statisticiansparticipating. Members of its re¬search staff have taught courses, ineconomics and statistics, chiefly forgraduate students, at Colorado Col¬lege for the past seven years. Withremoval of the Commission, the teach¬ing program will be conducted at theUniversity.Resigns Postto Direct 50thAnniversaryVice-President Wood¬ward Plans Celebrationfor University.Frederic C. Woodward, vice-presi¬dent of the University since 1906, willretire from his position September 30and at the same time will assume hisnew duties as director of the Univer¬sity’s 50th Anniversary celebration,which is scheduled for 1941. Wood¬ward’s assistant will be Howard Hud¬son, associate editor of the Univer¬sity of Chicago Magazine.No Definite PlansNo definite plans for the celebra¬tion have been made as yet. Wood¬ward said, but the committee willbegin meeting in the fall, as soon asWoodward has resigned his vice-pres¬idential duties.The celebration, however, will prob¬ably be held between June and Sep¬tember of 1941. During this period,a number of honorary degrees willprobably be awarded to distinguishedmen and it is hoped that several sci¬entific societies will hold their meet¬ings in Chicago. These plans, how¬ever, are in no way definite.“The University has made full useof its fifty years as its positionamong educational institutions of theworld proves,” President Hutchinssaid. “But the celebration will look,not to what has been accomplishedin the past, but to the promise of theUniversity’s next fifty years of serv¬ice to Chicago, the country, and theworld.” One of the important activities ofthe Commission has been in sponsor¬ing and encouraging the publicationof important research in economic-statistical problems. Four mono¬graphs have been issued, and othersare in preparation.The Econometric Society, foundedin December, 1930, and affiliated withthe Commission, which has fosteredits rapid development is an interna¬tional organization for the advance¬ment of economic theory in its rela¬tion to statistics and mathematics. Itsmembership comprises distinguishedeconomists, statisticians, and math¬ematicians of 37 countries, leaders inthe effort to give scientific exactnessto economic methods and theorythrough the application of mathema¬tical-statistical techniques.Bowley Is PresidentArthur L. Bowley, professor emeri¬tus of Statistics, London School ofEconomics, is president of the So¬ciety. Joseph A, Schumpeter, profes¬sor of Economics, Harvard Univer¬sity, is vice-president; Cowles is sec¬retary and treasurer. Benzedrine IsDangerous DopeReaction May Cause Ex-am Drowsiness; DrugHarms Heart.Board of Control Despite repeated warnings, stu¬dents continue to take benzedrine inan attempt to get a year’s studyinginto the last few nights. Consequent-ly medical authorities at the Univer¬sity again are informing studentsthat under no conditions should theyattempt to dose themselves with thedrug to keep themselves awake cram¬ming for examinations.Dr. E. M. K. Ceiling of the depart¬ment of Pharmacology said, “Ofcourse it is undeniable that benze¬drine will keep you awake for a while.But its after-effects may be serious,and if you miscalculate the time ofdosing yourself, the period of rear,tion—of depression and drowsiness—may come during your examination.VACATION ISCOMING(Continued from page 1) | Moke youT Summer par-be the editorial writer.Promotions were also made to theposition of Editorial Associate. Onlyseven of the eight places providedfor in the constitution were filled. Theother selection will be made by thenew Board of Control next year.Raised to Associate jobs were Mar¬ion Gerson, William Hankla, PearlClaire Rubins, John Stevens, HartWurzburg and Marian Castleman.Ernest Leiser was selected duringwinter quarter.Named as Business Associates wereWilliam Lovell, Orrin Bernstein, JohnBex, and Julian Lowenstein. Soph¬omores promoted to Business Assist¬ant were Bob Greenberg, Myles Jar-row, David Lazarus, Ernest Wuliger,and George Williams.Sophomores named for the positionof Editorial Assistant included BobReynolds, Wally Angrist, LeonardTurovlin, Lester Dean, Elvira Vegh,Richard Himmel, Kenneth Prince,James Burtle, Betty Kesner, PhyllisHansen, Dan Mezlay, Dorothy Fantl,Chester Hand, Judy Forrester andRichard Clinton Massell. ties more fun. more enter¬taining. with late musicalhits.New songs, the rightprice. Come in and we'llall be happy.If you haven't a phono¬graph let us provide it.Our rates ore reasonable.THE MUSiC BOX1209V2 E 55th ST. PLAZA 3325TRAVELING?Check Up on Your Cco: FreeStandard LubricationWashingComplete ServiceBrown's Stondard Service Station1101 E. 55th St.. Comer Greenwood Ave.Midway 9092GOLDEN JUBILEE RED CROWN FOR LONG MILEAGEThose beautiful new dresses you’vebeen noticing ’round campus thesedays — many, many of them arefrom the unusually large and inter¬esting collection we are now showing.And you’ll be delightedly surprisedwhen you come in to find how very,very modest the price is for so muchbeauty.Priced toSuit CollegeBudgetCampusCharmer!Batt Style Shoppe941 East 63rd StreetHyde Park 1900New Plan English Bachelor’sExam a Suceess; All Pass THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1939 Page ThreeBy MARION CASTLEMANNot one of the 24 students whotook this spring’s New Plan Bach¬elor’s examination in English failed.This does not mean that the Englishliterature faculty had a sudden char¬itable impulse as a reaction to theirflunking sprees of a few years back.It does mean that a new system inthe teaching of English literaturehas triumphed.This year the new examination w'asgiven its first real trial. Facultymembers awaited the results with asmuch anxiety as the students, for thequestions, as compared to those onformer comprehensives were undoubt¬edly difficult and required a type ofscholarship hardly hinted at in theolder tests. Speculations as to theoutcome were many. Some said thata few .students who had shown thenecessary critical abilities would dowell, but that the others would becompletely terrified by the difficultyof the examination. Only a fewdared hope that reading skills taughtin required courses would be evidentto some extent on every examina¬tion pajjer.Thus what was most surprisingwere the quite adequate answersgiven to questions about workswhich had never been discussed inany of the available courses. Espe¬cially notable was the caliber of theanswers to a question concerningColeridge’s “Christabel” which thestudents had to read independently.The only question where the majorityfell down was on a linguistic problemconcerning “The Playboy of the Wes¬tern World.”A general correlation exists be¬tween the excellence of the answ’er tothe question and diligence in coursework. But at the same time severalquestions requiring independent anal¬ysis were answered better than thosethat allowed the student to parrotwords of wisdom dropped by the pro¬fessor. In addition the questions werecomposed and graded not independent¬ly by teachers of the undergraduatecourses, but by a committee includinggraduate professors who were com¬paratively ignorant of the make-up of the class and its training. Thus theEnglish department seems justified indrawing the conclusion that studentswho took the New Plan examinationcan actually apply the skills learnedin courses such as Literary Criticismand Analysis of Ideas to the inde¬pendent reading of English literature.The impetus for the revamping ofthe English department came threeyears ago when on a Bachelor’s ex¬amination students showed so inade¬quate a knowledge of their subjectthat 52';^ were failed. The new ex¬amination, as stated in the booklet,“Requirements for Degrees in Eng¬lish” aims “to test the quality of thestudent’s training.. .rather than thequantity of his information.” Thelatter is tested independently as apreliminary examination. Inevitablythen the English department can nolonger be the last resort of Pulse’s“fashionable club girls.”Ellis, S,S.A.Co-ops MergeFor SummerUniversityPress PublishesNew BibleFor the first time an Americantranslation of the Bible will includethe Apocrypha, left out of most Eng¬lish versions since the Puritan period,when the University Press publishes“The Complete Bible: An AmericanTranslation” October 3. J M. PowysSmith and Edgar J. Goodspeed arethe translators of the complete Bible.Also on the summer publication listof the Press are more monographsfor the first two volumes of “TheEncyclopedia of Unified Science.”Among these are part four of volumetwo, John Dewey’s “Theory of Valua¬tion,” scheduled to appear July 18;and part 10 of volume one, Joseph H.Woodger’s “Techniques of TheoryConstruction.”In July, “The Demonstration Lab¬oratory of Physics,” a monographsetting forth the Chicago method ofproviding some laboratory experiencefor elementary courses in the physicalsciences, will appear. Harvey Lemon,professor of Physics; and Fitz-HughMarshall, member of the Junior staffof the Physics department, are theauthors.Covering American words fromdewberry to emporium, part seven of“The Dictionary of American EnglishOn Historical Principles,” edited bySir William Craigie and James R.Hulbert, is also scheduled for sum¬mer publication. Others on the listare “Investigating Library Problems”by Douglas Waples, professor of Edu¬cational Method in the Graduate Li¬brary School; “Administering Unem¬ployment Compensation” by R. ClydeWhite, professor of Social ServiceAdministration; and “Congregation-alists,” part of the series of “Re¬ligion on the American Frontier.”"OUR SPECIALTY"The Latest and FinestIn Men's Dress WearRENTEDA COMPLETE LINE OFTUXEDOS, nJU DRESS. SILK HATS.SUMMER FORMALS & ACCESSORIESJACK'STUXEDO SHOP25 Years Service In Chicago's LoopDEArborn 048936 W. Randolph Stiodt Setting a new precedent, both theEllis Housing Co-operative at 5558Ellis Avenue and the S.S.A. co-opera¬tive at 5342 Ellis are definitely goingto operate during the summer quar¬ter. The S.S.A. Co-operative hasbeen closely affiliated with the EllisCo-operative. Rents in both houseshave been cut from $11 to $10 or $9per month. Several rooms are stillavailable in both co-ops. Anyone in¬terested in securing a room shouldcall Midway 1921 as soon as possible.Leonard Edwards has been electedpresident of the housing co-operativewith Verl Lewis, Forest Mills, andBob Stokley executive board membersfor the summer quarter. Frank Kel¬ler will serve as house manager.The Ellis Student Club eating co¬operative with which the housing co¬operative works in close conjunctionhas temporarily closed in order tomake an inventory of its equipment.A small amount is being paid toeach member in dividends. The eat¬ing co-operative will reopen for thesummer quarter June 19—two daysbefore the quarter officially begins.Receives DegreeProfessor Emeritus Charles H. Bee¬son received the L.L.D degree at thecommencement of Indiana UniversityJune 5. Professor Beeson is a mem¬ber of the University’s Latin depart¬ment.William W. Sweet, professor of theHistory of American Christianity, isthe author of “Congregationalists.”Among the summer books is “En¬vironmental Factors in Christian His¬tory” edited by John T. McNeill, pro¬fessor of the History of EuropeanChristianity; Matthew Spinka, as¬sociate professor of Church History;and H. R. Willoughby, associate pro¬fessor of New 'Testament History.“Sleep and Wakefulness” by Nathan¬iel Kleitman; and “Libraries andReaders in the State of New York” byDouglas Waples are also on 'the list. Hutchinson Court' ■ .fit; ■‘tiJ* » ' • ‘J’ Y '^ . r., ^^ ^ 5-r* V*.. ' -ft, I j| • ' J ^ A^ ifScene of I-F SingSloan Foundation Grants $40,000For Radio Round Table ResearchContinuing the support it gave lastyear to broadcasting of economic in¬formation, the Alfred P. Sloan Foun¬dation has made a grant of $40,000to the University of Chicago, Presi¬dent Robert M. Hutchins announcedthis week.The gift will be used to improveand experiment with the UniversityRound Table, top ranking educationalbroadcast, which is carried Sundaymornings over a national network of58 stations to some two million listen¬ers. Providing informed discussion ofimportant national and internationalproblems, the Round Table has alarge economic content.Sloan FoundationThe Sloan Foundation was estab¬lished by Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., Chair¬man of the Board of the General Mo¬tors Corporation, who gave it an en¬dowment of $10,000,000 in securities.In establishing the Foundation,Sloan said it would concentrate on“the promotion of a wider knowledgeof basic economic truths generally ac¬cepted as such by authorities of rec¬ognized standing and as demonstratedby experience, as well as a betterunderstanding of economic problemsin which we are today so greatly in¬volved, and as to which we are soimportantly conceimed.”As in last year’s grant, the sumgiven the University represents ap¬proximately the equivalent of the in¬come from a million dollars of theSloan Foundation’s endowment, onthe basis of the University’s averageyield on its own endowment.Full ControlIn making the new grant, theFoundation again expressly stipulatedthat the University was to have fullcontrol over its expenditure and soledecision as .to the kind of economicinformation disseminated.Last year’s grant enabled the Uni¬versity to undertake the publicationof transcripts of the broadcasts, andto supplement the text with addition¬al material. Circulation of the tran¬scripts now averages over 4,000 aweek. Research assistance has beenprovided for the participants in thebroadcast. The support from theSloan Foundation also made possiblean increase in the number of authori¬ties outside the University who tookpart in the broadcast. 'The numberFOR THEGRADUATE-BOOKS-- Always Please -Remember your friends who oreleaving this quarter.NO EXTRA CHARGE FORGIFT WRAPPINGSuggestions-Dialoquac oi Plato—2 Vol. Boxed—$5.00Dorothy Parker—Here Liee. Collected Stories—$3.00Romance oi Leonardo da Vinci; 100 Illustrations—Boxed—$5.00Mark Van Doren—Collected Poems—$3.50O'Brien—Best Short Stories—1939—$2.75John Dos Passos—Adventures oi a Yormg Mon—$2.50Jennings—Next to Volour—$2.75John Gunther—Inside Asia—$3.50Millay—Huntsman. What Quarry—1st Editions—$2.00Beard—America in Mid-Passage—$3.50nCTION - BIOGRAPHY - TRAVEL - ART - POETRY - DRAMAWOODWORTH'SBOOK STORE1311 E. 57th St. Open EveningsVWWWWWShJVVWSWWWWVWWWSWWWVWWVftiVWVJ. of stations carrying the program in¬creased from 38 to 57 during theyear.Sherman Dryer, radio director ofthe University, is currently engagedin a critical analysis of the RoundTable to determine the particularqualities responsible for its nationalpopularity, and to develop techniquesto improve the program.Old Timers WinOver Varsity Nine“Bless my soul”, drawled Grandpabetween puffs at his corncob, “whatis this older generation coming to”.“I hear tell now that the old brokendown Alumni went and knocked offKyle Anderson’s varsity baseball fel¬lers for the second year in a row.”“Yep,” quoth the Sage of the Arm¬chair, “they beat ’em 6-2 yesterdayand what made it even more furriblewas that Kyle playing with the grads,was the one who broke the game up”.He come right up to bat in the firstof the sixth with three men on andwhaled that potato for a double whichcleaned the bases and put the gameon ice.“Old Tat’ Page started for thegrads on the mound and had thoseyoungsters whiffin, until he tired andleft the box in the sixth. Why Pathas been pitchin for the Alumni forthirty years. Now I remember backin ’07 when .” Nobel PrizeWinners SpeakAt UniversityFive Nobel prize winners will headthe array of physicists taking part inthe international symposium on cos¬mic rays to be held at the UniversityJune 27-30. Most of the leadingworkers on cosmic rays, in the UnitedStates and from abroad, are to ap¬pear on the program.Dr. Arthur H. Compton, Charles H.Swift Distinguished Service Professorof Physics at the University, is direc¬tor of the symposium. Awarded theNobel prize for his discovery of the“Compton effect,” he was a pioneerinvestigator of cosmic rays.Other WinnersTennis Rackets$1.65 to $17.50Balls. Presses, and all accessoriesShorts. Sox. Shirts. Shoes, etc.Most complete stockWOODWORTH'S1311 E. 57ih SL OPEN EVES.Near Kiiid>ark Ave. DORchester 4800HANLEY’SBUFFET1512 E. 55th St.COME DOWN AND SINGIfyou can’t find “College Spirit”on the Campus you will findit all at “Mike’s.”DROP DOWNbefore, after, during anythingon campus (in fact anytime)and you’ll find a congenial at*mosphere.We welcome all Universitystudents, but we only servethose of age.HANLEY’SOver forty years ofcongenial service Other Nobel prize winners of theprogram are: Dr. Victor F. Hess, pro¬fessor of Physics, Fordham Univer¬sity; Dr. Werner Karl Heisenberg,professor of Theoretical Physics, Uni¬versity of Leipzig; Dr. Robert A. Mil¬likan, and Dr. Carl D. Anderson, Cali¬fornia Institute of Technology.The international aspect of the sym¬posium is indicated by the attendanceof Dr. Pierre Auger, head of the Phy¬sics department of the Faculte desSciences, Paris, who is known as the“Compton of France”; Dr. J. Clay,University of Amsterdam; Dr. BrunoRossi, University of Manchester; Dr.Walter Wilhelm Bothe, head of thephysics department, Kaiser WilhelmInstitute, Heidelberg; Dr. Alfred Ba¬nos, Jr., director of the Institute ofPhysics, National University of Mex¬ico.American PhysicistsLeading American physicists in ad¬dition to the Nobel prize winners onthe program include Dr. W. F. G.Swann, director of the Bartol Re¬search Foundation, and Dr. ThomasHope Johnson, assistant director;Scott E. Forbush, the Carnegie Insti¬tution, Washington, D. C.; Dr. Man¬uel S. Vallarta, Massachusetts Insti¬tute of Technology; Dr. E, I. Wollan,University of Chicago and the Chi¬cago Tumor Institute; Dr. R. B.Erode, University of California; Bar¬on Serge A. Korff, and Dr. and Mrs.C. G. Montgomery, of the Bartol Re¬search Foundation.Enjoy a SummerSemesterof SIGHT-SEEINGKlorious^GERniAIIYIt's a yaar of college knowledge tobrowse in person through the pageantpages of picturesque Germanyl Jointhe thousands of travel-fond youngpeople who, summertimes, measure outthe breadth and depth of Germany'skaleidoscopic countryside ... by bike... by hike ... by faltboat.Stirring sports reign everywhere.Join in. Whack out body kinks in alightning set of tennis. Rival par on !smooth, forest-bounded links. Ofcourse!—dive deep, joyously, into thetingling mirrored waters of cool se¬cluded lakes. 4 .--'*1^Dusk is the calm zenith of daytime'sthrilling career. Stop over, stay at a |modest-priced hotel, or inexpensivelyat one of the 2,000 conveniently situ¬ated Youth Hostels that are wholesome |and healthful and spotless-clean. Eve- |nings, sit leisurely with fellow students, jenjoy throaty songfests, share friendli¬ness, gaiety, good cheer, .atflThis summer, Germany is your semi¬nar in travel, health and good times I {A versatile day there costs no moreth*n the average show at home!4/1/ /o Reductions in Roil Teres'Travel Marks" save about 40"/Consult your Travel Ag.n* and write forbooklet "C"GERMAN RAILROADSINFORMATION OFFICE391 NO. MICHIGAN AVI.Il **1*^ Ij'i lil Mfftwitil iiiiii i 'iPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY. JUNE 9, 1939Name Counselors ForOrientation WeekBob Bigelow, chairman of theFreshmen Orientation Committee, an¬nounced yesterday the names of 150men chosen as freshmen counselorsfor next year. A few late applicationshave not been acted upon as yet, andthe Committee still needs more men.Football players who have put in ap¬plications are being held back andwill not be sued unless necessary, forit is felt that football practice wouldinterfere with their duties as coun¬selors.Next year the orientation programwill not be used unless necessary, forwill continue throughout the year,with the exception of the fraternityrushing period. After this is over,those men pledging houses will bestricken off the list as being prettywell taken care of, and the Commit¬tee’s attention will be turned to theindependents, encouraging them totake full part in campus social af¬fairs and engage in worthwhile activi¬ties.Counselling All-Year JobBigelow emphasized the fact thatthe Committee is trying especiallyhard to get the idea across that coun¬selling freshmen is a serious year-round job.NamesThe 150 men counselors are: JackFralick, Paul Smith, Lester Dean,Neil Johnston, Ralph McCollum,Richard Cantzler, Gordon Murray,Paul Struck, John Doolittle, RaymondMalmquist, Wanen Wilner, JamesMun, John Thompson, Lorin King,William Lovell, Maurice Abrahamson,WMlliam Caudill, Frank Meyers, BillHankla, Harry Cornelius, John Wil¬son, Donald Warfield, Alan Darling,Charles Martin, Richard Norian, Mor¬ton Postelnik, Carl Pritchett.Chester Hand, George Sheldon,George Olson, Raymond Oakley, Rob¬ert Kyhl, Bob Boyer, David Smith,Evon Vogt, Henry Read, NormonFoster, Jack Johnston, William Plum-ley, Joe Markusich, Elmer Tolsted,George Hand, Dalton Potter, Benja¬min Crocker, James Frey, John Al¬len, David Siebert, Clayton Traeger,Ronald Crane, Robert Snow, John Ar¬gali, Charles Mowery, Bexter Rich¬ardson, Donald Marrow, Robert So¬ger, Domeneco Panarese, Bob Strouse.Robert Freedman, Richard Hall, FredWangelin, George De Baere, EverlyBerry, Dan Crabbe, James Began,John Lohmson, Charles Schlageter,Charles Hippchen, Harold Steinhaus-er.More NamesBud Arquilla, Vernon Kerns, Rob¬ert Crow, John Jefferson, WilliamWestenberg Robert Weedball, JimRichard, William Kester, MarshallBlumenthall, Melvin Steinberg, VictorHershman, Arnold Goldberg, ThomasGreen, Allan Dreyfus, Robert Jacobs, jCharles Buestein, Wolcott Beatty, jGeorge Williams, Ralph Teitzen, IMaurice Shantz, Louis Kaposta, Ross | Cardwell, Daniel Barnes, Earl Rat-zer, Richard Orr, John Zurmuehlin,Jack Campbell, Peter Briggs, Wil¬liam Jeffrey, Arthur Bethke, JohnHowenstein, David Rothrock, RichardKahl, Marvin Mitchel, Jay Fox, Ed¬ward Morganoth Allan Shapiro, W.B. Dunn, Gilbert Ford, Lee Russell,Walter Barlow, Sol Schachtman, Ber¬nard Schachtman, Calvin Sawyer.Bruce Dickson, Emil Weis, JosephHockett, Robert Foster, CharlesBrown, Harold Wright, FrancisLynch, John Levinsohnn, RobertSmalley, John Stevens, Richard Wil¬son, James McClure, Robert Straetz,Harry Beach, ‘John Crone, RobinBuerki, Jay Nichols, George Nordi,Roland Richman, Dick Himmel.Charles O’Donnell, Robert Howard,Dayton Caple, Alfred Gentzler, Rob¬ert Afton, Phil Strick, Douglas Fener-man, Ben Williams, W. C. Bohnhoff,Walter Clark, Alex Somerville,Charles Vogt, Robert Gooden, RobertStuhn, Joseph Christion, RobertHughes, Thomas Glomore, RobertKoenig, Gregory Hedden, Myles Jar-row, Richard Law, Benjamin Coyte,John Culp, James Charlton, GeorgeFogle, Bill Nelson, Louis Washing¬ton, George Crandall, Milton Weissand Azad Sarkesian.Nine Fail HistoryBachelor’s ExamNot quite one-third of the studentswho took the Bachelor’s examinationin History failed. Three students re¬ceived A’s, whereas nine failed. How¬ever three of the failures were stu¬dents who had failed previously andwere taking the examination over.Thirty-one students took the exam¬ination, and two students whom theHistory department had counted onto come through on top, were unableto take the test. Thus the examinationis probably not so fatal as wild re¬ports would have it.UNIVERSITYTAVERN1131-33 EAST SSthMIDWAY 0524Fried ChickenWITH FRENCH FRIESAND COLE SLAW2ScFree Delivery Alumni HonorDean BigelowAt Law DinnerProfessor Harry A. Bigelow, retir¬ing dean of the Law School of theUniversity, will be honored by alum¬ni and faculty at the annual dinnerof the Law’ School Association inHutchinson Commons of the Univer¬sity Tuesday night.Bound VolumneDean Bigelow, who has reachedthe retiring age of 65, will be givena bound volume of approximately athousand letters from students he hastaught during his thirty-five yearson the faculty. Holder of the JohnP. Wilson Distinguished Service Pro¬fessorship, Dean Bigelow, authorityon the law of real property, will con¬tinue to teach courses in that fieldafter he retires as dean. He has beenhead of the school since 1929, and in¬stituted in 1937 the reorganizationof the Law’ School which seeks acloser relationship between the lawand the problems of modern society.Dean Bigelow has been trustee of In-sull Utilities Investment Inc., since1933.Vice President Frederic Woodward,former member of the Law Schoolfaculty, will present Dean Bigelowat the dinner. The new dean, 36-year-old Wilber G. Katz, will be presentedby Dean Bigelow’. Deans of all thelaw schools in Chicago will be guestsat the dinner. Thurman W. Arnold,formerly of the Yale Law School,and assistant to the attorney generalof the United States, will be thechief speaker. Whistler Ruth Tupes^Kullervo Lonhi^Top Business GradsRuth Tupes, who has gained prom¬inence in Chicago as a concert whis¬tler, proved her scholarship merit aswell last week when she received theComad aw’ard, given the highestranking graduating woman studentin the School of Business.Kullervo Louhi, who came to theUnited States from Finland in 1922,was awarded the Delta Sigma Pikey, given the highest ranking grad¬uating man in the School.Miss Tupes, a graduate of Mor¬gan Park High School and MorganPark Junior College, entered the Uni¬versity in the fall of 1937 and madean “A” in her Bachelor’s examina¬tion this quarter.She started her concert career ear¬ly, appearing as a whistler in theHost House of the 1933 Century ofProgress. She likewise has had or¬chestra training and plays the flutein the Beverly Symphony orchestra.Her hobbies are bowling, swimmingand horseback riding and she hopesto go into the field of office and .salesmanagement.After you have tried the special deals,cut prices & so-called bargains in ten¬nis rackets, you will findIT PAYS TO BUYTHE BESTGordon's Sport Shop5757 Cottage GroveH.P. 6501 Medieval InstituteConvenesOn CampusStarting June 27, members of theMedieval Institute will convene inroom 106, Swift Hall, to take part ina series of lectures and conferenceson the civilization of the thirteenthcentury. The session will last untilAugust 16.Among those speaking are RichardP. McKeon, dean of Humanities, Wil¬liam A. Nitze, head of the depart¬ment of Romance languages, andFerdinand Schevill, professor of Mod-ern History. The range of lecturesubjects extends from “Mutations inthe Political Equilibrium of ThirteenthCentury Europe'’ to “A MedievalCharacter, Sir Lancelot.’’ Adnii.ssionis w’ithout charge and without ticket.Thf only re«l B«r-B-Q Pit for milM aroundTOOTSY'Snviiciena Old Southern Style Bar-B-Q RihtFREE DELIVERY6306 MARYLANDPLAZA 66444 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSErot COllEOt STUDENTS AND CtADUATtSA thorough, intonsiv*. stonograpkic couru —ttorting Jonuory 1, April 1, July 1, Oetobor 1,lutorosting Booklet aont frm, without obligation— writ* or phont. No aolieitort ttmployfd.moserBUSINESS COLLEGEEAUl MOSEt. J.D. PH t.Rofulor Courtotfor Bogtunort.optu to HighSchool Grmdumtn only, $tort first Mondayof ooch month. Advmnctd Courses startony Monday. Day and Efontng. EveningCoursaa open to men.ltd S. Michigan Avu.,Chicago, tondolpli 4347sc^staXial 'iJlaininqIf you are not placed within thirty days afteryou graduate from our college, all tuition pay¬ments will be refunded in full.COEDUCATIONALOnly four-year high school graduolet enrolled.STEWART 678079th and Halated StreetsChicago, IllinoiaTHE REYNOLDS CLUB COUNCILsponsorsDANCE AFTER THE SINGwithChuck Mowery & his Orchestra & Margery Gray, vocalistinBoth Lounges of the Reynolds ClubNo Admission Charge 10:30-1:00 P. M.