FORICTORYBUYUNITED STATESNDS * STAMPS the DoUa TIhAoonI No. 79 Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY. MAY 12. 1942^rmy Officers Explainew Training PlansArmy Air Corps’ recently form-plan for the training of hosts•ers will be explained at a meet-be held Thursday afternoon atn Rosenwald 2 under the direc-jf two army officers, MajorFort Devens, Massachusetts,in Dement, the Chicago Area'o r p s Recruiting Officer, andCate, faculty advisor for therps.divisions, three flying and five1, which are offering commis-under the Army’s reply to thes V-1 system of procuring col-len, will be discussed. Applica-for entrance will not be consid-ntil May 26, when another meet-Ij be held under the supervisionjtain Dement.Unlike V-like the V-l plan, the Army pro¬does not call for curricular re¬lents, although those acceptedferred until they have obtainedlachelor’s degree. The three fly-anches open are those which leadtely to the ratings of pilot, navi-and bombardier, while five sec-vhich grant commissions on theI are armament, engineering me->iry. communications, and pho-ihy. Because the University of-10 engineering work, the firstentioned, engineering and arma-cannot be offered, since both re-previous experience,jptance in the program is depen-ipon the applicant’s score on administered by the Army, andon educational attainments. Un-e present war situation becomespressing than at present, thoseed will remain in school. In-tion on the test asserts, “a wellntelligent man should have littlee in passing this examination.”Physical Itequirementssical requirements demand thatacuity must be 20-20, and colornormal, with minimum -heightnches (64 for pilots), and maxi-74. Maximum weight is 2003, the minimum 105.ase a student whose applicationen accepted by the Army with¬er graduates from school, hejected to a training period, dur-lich he receives $75 a month inm to $1 a day subsistence. Uponssion, the student receives $246flying officer, and $183 as a1 officer.[Continued on page four) Buy U. S.War BondsLawson Heads Hew Maroon Board;Paper Publishes Over SummerMaroons Beat Gophers to BreakTwo Year Losing Streak Dick HimmelWinning their first Big Ten gamein over two years, the Maroons splita doubleheader with Minnesota atGreenwood Field, dropping the opener,16-0, but coming back Saturday toearn a 9-5 victory.Saturday’s triumph snapped a twen¬ty-five game losing streak and wasthe first Big Ten victory for Wie Ma¬roons since a 2-1 win over Purdue onApril 27, 1940. Only Captain SyHirschberg had the distinction of play¬ing in both contests.Miller LeadsSparked by the powerful bat ofCatcher Bob Miller who collected threehits in five times at bat and drovein four runs, the Maroons bunchedtheir ten hits. Rodney Briggs, givenample support by tight defensive play,turned in his best hurling performanceof the year, allowing five runs on onlyseven hits, striking out four, and walking four.The Maroons jumped to an earlylead by scoring in the first inningwhen Sy Hirshberg singled with twoout, stole second, and came home onCharley Miller’s single. The thirdproved to be the Marooo’s big inningin which they netted four runs onthree singles and two walks. LouCooperrider started the inning with asingle, advanced to second on Hirsh-berg’s walk, and scored on Miller’ssingle. Hirshberg scored on DeweyNorris’ sacrifice and Bob Reynolds’single drove in Miller and Earl Shan-ken from second and third.More RunsTwo more runs were added in thefourth, when Rodney Briggs andCourtney Shanken, who had previous¬ly drawn free tickets to first, camehome on Miller’s sacrifice and Earl(Continued on page two) . Announces AppointmentsMeiklejohn Surpasses Eulogizersat Symposium in his HonorBy HARLAN BLAKETwo vital young leaders in Ameri¬can education met last Friday nightin Mandel Hall. They met to pay hom¬age to an aging pioneer in the field ofliberal education, Alexander Meikle¬john. He was a great man in his day,and liberal. But he was aging, so theyeulogized, and spoke with the recklessconfidence of the modems.Then the old man spoke. He was de¬liberate and formal. But eulogies tothis man? He rose far above his eulo¬gizers, in liberalism, in life. He hadtaught them 20 years ago. He mightwell teach them again.Keezer, Buchanan, HutchinsThe speakers were Dexter M.Keezer, President of Reed College,now on leave in the Office of Admin-onference on ‘New’orld Order’ Saturdaylents led by a panel of four willfor three hours next SaturdayI Social Science 122 to give theiron the kind of world they \youldI see after the war and the man-which they want such reorgan-1 to come about.meeting is sponsored by Stu-Forum, Chapel Union, SocialistInter-co-op Council, Fellowshipconciliation, Calvert Club, andCommittee For Democracy,ers of the panel are Maynarder, of the Department of Eco-3, Horace Cayton, Sociologist,1 Lohman of the Department ofogy, and Holland Schloerb, as-i minister of the Hyde Parkit Church.turing three major themes, theence will be divided into threeminute sessions with a short re-etween each. “Major Objectives. New World Order,” “Concretesals For World Organization,”‘Effective Action Now For AA^orld Order” are the topics tocussed. Maynard Kreuger. . . campus conferrer istration, and Scott Buchanan, Deanof St. John’s College. PresidentHutchins was chairman.Keezer opened the symposium witha condemnation of “retreating to .an¬tiquity and steeping students with thecontents of a few classics. . . ” He ad¬vocated liberal education based on ad¬justment to the community, citing acours“ of study of the effects of thebuilding of Coulee dam, which, hesaid, aroused great student interestand was an example of the trend mod¬ern education should take.Classical EducationScott Buchanan, under whose gui(T-ance the “100 Great Classics” coursewas administered, opposed Keezer’svie' s with a statment that a classiceducation was the ideal basis of lib¬eral education, and condemned colleg¬es that teach specialized courses “ofwhich they themselves know nothing”and that “fail to lead beyond them¬selves and reflect the world.”After an introduction by PresidentHutchins, Dr. Meiklejohn resolved theviewpoints of his two ex-students in aInter-ClubSing May 16The annual Inter-Club Sing will bepresented this year on Saturday after¬noon, in the garden of Ida NoyesHall. All clubs will participate, andalthough the name of the winner willbe announced at the conclusion of theSing, the club will not receive the cupuntil that evening at the Sing-Swingdance.The dance, which is open to every¬body, will be held in the Louis XIVRoom and on the terrace of theShoreland Hotel. Music for this affairis to be furnished by the orchestrafrom the Gold Coast Room of theDrake Hotel. Bids are selling for$1.10, and all money over the neces¬sary amount for expenses will be usedfor the benefit of service men oncampus. much larger whole. “Disintegratingreligion,” Meiklejohn said, “accountsfor the present plight of the Americancollege. And it is that same disintegra¬tion that accounts for the presentplight of civilization.”Political Motives“The ruling motives of our schoolsare not religious. T’ney are political.For good or for ill, we are committedto teaching by the goveimment . . . .We reconcile God and ‘intelligent self-interest,’ and the appeal to reasonseems always ... to run along the lineof our own self interest.”“I believe, however, that the daysof our cultural disintegration are rap¬idly passing by . . . The new worldwhich has been yet powerless is to beborn. It is this new world that willgive meaning to education. Every pu¬pil must be learning for it . . . Hu¬manity has something to do.Learn and Teach“That is why we must learn and(Continued on page four) In announcing the new appoint¬ments for the Maroon staff for nextyear, retiring board chairman DickHimmel also revealed that a new or¬ganization will be in effect starting-this summer.Himmel further stated that the Ma¬roon would definitely continue publish¬ing through the summer. The fre¬quency of publication, however, is tobe determined by the incoming board.Hierarchy Replaces BoardReplacing the traditional Board ofControl will be a hierarchy, headedby a publisher with control over theeditorial, office and business staffs ofthe paper. Bob Lawson will occupythis position for the coming year.Next in line is an editorial man¬ager in direct charge of the editorialstaff but responsible to the publisher.The duties of this office include writ¬ing assignments and supervision‘overthe reporters. Minna Sachs was ap¬pointed to this position.On an equal basis with the editorialmanager is the new editorial writer,Phil Rieff. The formation of editorialpolicy will be formulated by thesethree people.Senior BoardCompleting the senior board but notparticipating in the determination ofeditorial policy are Chloe Roth andElizabeth Jane Waters, copy editors;Beata Mueller, feature editor. Thesethree in conjunction with the publish¬er, editorial manager, and editorialwriter will decide policies of person¬nel, including advancements and de¬motions.In charge of the office staff and re¬sponsible to Lawson, an autonomousbody in its divorce from the businessstaff, will be Barbara Gilfillan.Heading the business staff is BillBell, who also will be responsible tothe publisher. Advertising manager isAlfred Bodian and Ellen Tuttle is thecomptroller.New Junior HoardThe change has also affected thejunior staff, hitherto known as Edito¬rial Associates. The present title isJunior Board of Editors, headed byCo-chairmen Ray Poplett and JimMacLear. Also on the board are CraigLeman, who will act as sports editor,Beth Carney, who will be actingfeature editor for the summer, JoanWehlan, assistant office manager, Har¬lan Blake, Charlotte Leviton, JaneRobertson, Jean Cleary, Bill Todd, BillLetwin, and Werner Baum.(Continued on page four)Houses Approve TwoWeek Fall RushingFraternities last week approved ofproposals for a two week rushing per¬iod and a limited accounts-receivableplan submitted by the I-F council.President-elect John Crosby has an¬nounced. Downed by a seven and sixvote was a bill to limit pledges tofifteen per house.Under the new rushing rule, whichalong with the accounts plan waspassed almost unanimously, intensiverushing will begin one week afterFreshman week, continue for twoweeks. The accounts measure calls fora committee made up of the treasurersof the houses who will set a ceiling onbills which Greeks can run up withtheir houses.Two other measures proposed bythe council were acted on and approv¬ed by the houses. A scholarship bill provides for committees in each houseto look after elimination of noise andother factors likely to raise scholasticaverages.The other proposal is a suggestedcheck-up of fraternity back yards,some of which evidently are in a sadstate. Passing of a new zoning regu¬lation making this 'district a residen¬tial neighborhood, and several com¬plaints from neighbors led to theclean-up campaign.Remaining business to be taken careof, Crosby said, is to make specificrules for the new rushing period, anddraw up next year’s rushing schedule.A committee was appointed Friday bythe I-F council and is now under¬taking this job, working under thecouncil’s general decision that regula¬tions will be few but strictly enforced.taPage Two THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. MAY 12. 1942Editorial •Robert M. HutchinsLet us now praise famous men.Let us praise Robert Maynard Hutchins, the leading- educa¬tional reformer of my time; a monument to the rationality ofman.It is said that his life is devoted to the reform of Americaneducation. He has pursued his goal with abnormal courage, and un¬relenting force. And he has met with some success.But Robert Maynard Hutchins will fail to reform Americaneducation if the nation and, perhaps, the world is not reformedwith it; indeed, before it. The spot on his record, his tragic flaw,has been his reluctance to become something more than an in¬tellectual participant in the one struggle between good and evil.The spot on his record is not something he did, but something hedidn’t do. It is a sin of omission, not a sin of commission.Hutchins cannot cure American education by separating itfrom its diseased body. His devotion to a single ramification of amuch wider illness is self-defeating. It weakens the possibilitiesof a cure.Dr. Hutchins realizes that he is dealing wdth a sick educationin a sick world. Everj' symposium on the school system chantsthat same theme. Hutchins has attended many symposia. How canhe hope to cure American- education when it is only one rottenlimb of a rotten body. The whole^rotten w'orld must be cured. Hiscause in education is hopeless, with only failure as an end, if hiscure is not part of a more general cure within and without thisnation.To fight for reform of American education, Hutchins mustfight, openly and specifically, which means socially and politically,for a successful reform of the other open sores on the face of theworld. None of them can be cured unless all are cured. Betterlearning and better teaching are possible only in a better world.This, then, is our chief criticism. Hutchins has been silent ontoo many issues on too many occasions. He has been only half-a-leader. He must become a leader of more than the Chicago Plans.(He must, because he can.) He must instruct our sorrow's aroundWashington Park, for example. No action that ser\'es to degradehuman dignity is too significant, or insignificant, to warrant silenceon the part of a modern leader. If there is the ‘good’ and the‘right,’ me must know what they are.If Hutchins had been put in charge of the educational systemof a Fascist nation, as the Duce put Giovanni Gentile in charge ofItalian education near the beginning of the Fascist era, Italy’s edu¬cation would still be Fascist today. Hutchins is not a Fascist.Fortunately, he is not a Giovanni Gentile. But the President ofthe University of Chicago can work no miracles in education in aworld that is not concerned with the individual human being andthe general welfare. Gentile could have created nothing but aFascist school because he worked in a Fascist world. Hutchinscan create nothing but a school in the image of the world in whichhe lives.Hutchins, in his dreams of the fulfillment of freedom, democ¬racy, and human dignity, can never be satisfied if the world dreamof the supremacy of human rights, which would guarantee hisdreams, are not satisfied. 'His life’s work hinges on the outcome of the world duel betweengood and evil. It is a duel that goes on everywhere, leaving no en¬deavor unaffected. It is a struggle of education, of Germany, ofthe many Washington Park’s, of industry, of labor, of religion, ofall action on every question.Why, then, does he not participate in the whole fight ? For onthe outcome of the whole fight depends the outcome of his specialfight. He must speak out, explain, cite details, elaborate, and speakout again (as he has done in education) on every social and po¬litical problem of good and evil. Then he will be a moral leader,and he will attract an able flock of fighters to his banners.If Hutchins does not become a real moral leader, he is helpingdefeat himself and the aims which he understands and believes inwith the conviction that comes w’ith understanding. He must helplesser men understand and, thus, believe in the human freedomsby declaring himself on specific issues; by being active in thestreet fights between good and evil that go on around him.If Hutchins does not become a moral leader, he is shirking hisduty as a guide and teacher. To insert generalities into sermonson generalities is not enough.The people must be told over and over again what are thealternatives in a given situation, and what are the possible criteriaof their action.Crowds are not thinking organisms. Their leaders must bethinking leaders; clarifiers and critics. Hutchins is a thinker. Hemust also be a leader.Countless numbers of people, today, have little grasp of thedownright contradictory character of their interests. Beneath theceiling of the great fog of present day sloganizing, they still pur¬sue, and have faith in, their contradictory interests.Now these countless numbers are seeing the effects of theircontradictory interests. Now, more than ever, they are wonderingwhat they can do. Many of us, despite the war unity, are confused,and look with a certain resigned futility on the happenings in thefour comers of their earth.“Where we gonna go?”“How we gonna get there ?”“What we gonna do?”“Who we gonna fight?”' “If we fight, what we gotta whip?” These lines from an Oklahomafolk song are the questions thatthe people ask their leaders.If Hutchins understands theproblem, he must attempt to an¬swer these people. Each timethat there is an issue betweengood and evil, he must tell thepeople what the problem is,“Where we gonna go? How' wegonna get there ? What we gonnado? Who we gonna fight? If wefight, what we gotta whip?”We must fight with convictionif we are to win the war and“conviction implies understand¬ing.” So much is said in Hutch¬ins Chapel Sermon.If Hutchins understands hemust impart that understandingto the people so that they mayfight their fight with conviction.Without an understanding ofwhat freedom, democracy, hu¬man rights, and human dignityare, the American people maywell continue to cleave to theircustomary faith in the hollow,high-sounding fetishes that nowserve to cover the “sum total ofthe prejudices of the Americanpeople, of the American way oflife...”Most of the people do not un¬derstand the relevant meaningsof our native symbols and slo¬gans in their relationship to eventhe most obvious hypocracies ofthe time, such as racial and re¬ligious discrimination. TheAmerican people may well bebleeding in “mere defensive so¬cial, economic, and political op¬erations, mere defense of thestatus quo...”This will lose the war. It willalso lose the peace.Come out from behind thatcollege presidency, Mr. Hutchins,and be a moral leader.The practicing democrats needyou.TheLeaderThe world needs moral leader¬ship. Moral leaders must be bigmen. The lesser men all over theworld crave big men. Up to nowthe big men have also been badmen. So the lesser men die invain war, and live in frightenedpeace, and prepare for more vainwar.The kind of moral leader thatthe practicing democrats andlesser men of today must find isthe kind of a man that RobertMaynard Hutchins is.Hutchins is the stuff that themyth-makers love to touch. Heis 6’4” in his stocking feet, andhe could be a sophisticated AbeLincoln walking around the Mid¬way at night. He photographswell. He has all the requisitesthat moral leaders need from apurely charismatic view-point.But, more than that, he is alsoa teacher.“The function of a teacher,”said Alexander Meiklejohn, “isto stand before his students asthe intellectual leader of histime.” Hutchins is a teacher inevery sense of the word.He can be a moral leader. Thepeople are the audience and stu¬dents of a moral leader. And ev¬ery problem, is, to our kind of amoral leader, an intellectualproblem.R.M.H. is cultured and inter¬ested in the fulfillment of the“aspirations which we have cher¬ished but never attained, the as¬pirations toward freedom,, de¬mocracy, and the supremacy ofhuman rights.”*(Continued on page four) University Art SlidesHave Weekly ShowingSymphonyCloses SeasonSundayTo climax the University’s musicseason, the University Symphony willjoin with the University choir andthe choir of the Fourth PresbyterianChurch in a concert, Sunday after¬noon, in Rockefeller Chapel at 4:30.The concert will be the last appear¬ance of the season for the Universitysymphony and one for which theyhave been working with Charles Buck-ley and Dr. Frederick Stock for sev¬eral months.Brahms’ RhapsodyThe concert will open with theBrahms’ Rhapsody for Contralto,Male Chorus, and Orchestra, whichwill be followed by five MysticalSongs by Vaughn Williams, which willreceive their first Chicago perform¬ance. Based on texts by the Englishpoet, George Herbert, they are scoredfor baritone soloist, chorus and or¬chestra.Chorus and orchestra will combineagain to present Holst’s Tiffn Back,O Man, which will be followed by theorchestra alone in the Gluck Over¬ture to “Alceste”.Works by BachThe choruses will then presentworks by Bach, Gibbons, ^huetz,Bortniansky, and Rachmaninov, whichwill be followed by an organ numberby Frederick Merriot, the Bach Ada¬gio from the Toccata and Fugue in CMajor.Men in charge of the program areBarrett Sprach, conductor of theFourth Presbyterian Church choir.Mack Evans of the University choirs,and symphony director Charles Buck-ley. Soloists will be Maurine Parzy-bok, contralto^ Bruce Foote, baritone,and Paul Nettinga, tenor.Tickets AvailableTickets may be obtained in the Uni¬versity Information office, or at theMusic building.The program will be repeated at theFourth Presbyterian Church at 8:00,Sunday evening, May 31.From acting Lady Macbeth toplaying a flighty young Victorianmay sound like a comedown for anactress, but for Jeanne Simonini itmarks a big step forward in thetheatrical world. Jeanne no longerhas to emote in the cold barenessof the Coffee Shop. She now hasall of Mandel Hall stage and halfof the University Players for back¬ground when she is Raina in thePlayers’ Friday night production of“Arms and the Man.’’Another University Player hasalso changed her stage personalityfor “Arms and the Man.” NormaEvans, long a sweet and slightlyholy person when on Mandel stage,has become a two-timing flirt forthe play. As Louka the maid, Nor¬ma steals her mistress’s boyfriend.4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSE'OR COUEGC STUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough, tnttnawt, stonographtc eeurst—itarting Januarv 1, April 1, July 1, Octobor 1.InUrtsting BookUt unt fr**, without obligatum— writ* or phono. Pfo tolictton omployod.moserBUSINESS COLLEGEPAUl MOSIR. J.D. PH.t.any Mondn ")ay mnd Evoning. StringCoursos op4M to mon,114 S. Michigan Ava.« Chicago, Itandolpk 4347.another flati-polc sitter? He^ . can’t last! Yes^'>be can . . ,th^iTTian is pravinca point . . aftereatinj' the won-V derfiil food at Through the co-operation of the De-partment of Art.and the UniversityArt Club, students on the campus ofthe University will be given opportu¬nity to view slides of famous works ofart. Beginning yesterday, and on ev-ery Monday thereafter at 12:30, theunrivalled slide collection of the De¬partment of Art is to be made avail¬able in classics 10 for one-hour pub¬lic showings of selected works fromthe history of art.Designed to familiarize studentswith the slide collection of the Depart¬ment of Art, each Noon-Hour ArtShow will consist of a sTiowing of aseries of slides, arranged in chronolog¬ical order, based on one aspect of thehistory of art. A graduate student ofthe Department of Art will be pres¬ent to answer questions.In correlation with the Moody Foun¬dation Lecture by Frank Lloyd Wrighton today, the first Noon-Hour ArtShow yesterday was devoted to char¬acteristic examples of Wright’s archi¬tecture. The program for the remain¬der of the quarter follows:May 18. The Painting of expres¬sionism.May 25. Michelangelo.June 1. 'The Gothic Cathedral.June 8. Raphael.June 15. Cezanne.All-request showings will be pre¬sented in the near future.RESTAURANT123 E. OAK ST.V »> u can p c r-.fi'rm any irnag-inalile feat . . Gophers—(Continued from page one)Shanken’s fiy to center field. The Ma¬roons picked up another tally whenCooperrider singled, advanced to sec¬ond, and scored on Miller’s drive. Chi¬cago concluded its scoring in the sev¬enth when Dewey Norris, who hadpreviously singled, romped home onNick Parisi’s hit.Friday Was SadFriday’s game was just the oppositeof Saturday’s. Minnesota scored 16runs on 19 hits off Bob Meyer. BillAnderson, lanky right hapder, heldthe Maroons to two hits—a double byHirshberg and a single by CourtneyShanken. Lew Johnson was the onlyother Maroon to reach first base,drawing a pass in the third inning.Today the team will meet CampGrant in an exhibition at GreenwoodField.Jr if it it it it tt it it itLEX 1162 E. 63rdPush Back SaatsPhone Dor. 1085Doors Opan 12:30 -:- 'how Starts 1:00 DailyLast Timas—Tuasday, May 12thHEDY ROBERT RUTHLAMARR YOUNG HUSSEYIn"H. M. PULHAM ESQ "plusLARAINE DAYIn"A YANK ON THE BURMA ROAD "Wad. k Thursday—May 13 A 14FRANCES LANGFORDIn"ALL AMERICAN CO-ED"plusKENT TAYLORin"MISSISSIPPI GAMBLER"itititititititit^iiKIMBARK63rd & KimbarkOpan 12:30 15c to *:30Last Timas—Tuasday, May 12thi"Canal Zone"pMs"Shepard of the Ozarks"plus"Riders of the Desert"Wad. & Thurs.—May 13 4 14MARGARET JAMESSULLIVAN STEWART"The Mortal Storm"'MICKEY ROONEYin"Andy HardyMeets a Debutante"/THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY. MAY 12. 1942NOW.FOR COLLEGE MENJ NOafOmCEHy TRIUHIHC PLAN^ New Deferred Service Plan Allows You to Continue Your Education ^In the skies over America the mightiest airfleet in the history of the world is inobilizingfor victory!So fast is it growing that there is a plac^here — an urgent need here — for every col¬lege man in America who can qualify forOflicer’s Training.The U. S. Army Air Forces need FlyingOfficers and Ground Crew Officers. And manyof them must come from the ranks of today’scollege students — men who make their plansnow for the necessary Aviation Cadet training.Thanks to a newly created Air Force Re¬serve plan, men of all classes — aged 18 to 26,inclusive — can enlist for immediate serviceor continue the scholastic work required forgraduation before being called to active duty.You must meet the requirements for phys¬ical fitness, of course. In additiop, you take anew simplified test to determine your abilityto grasp the training. A college man shouldpass it easily.$75 A MONTH DURING TRAININGThose accepted who wish immediate duty willgo into training as rapidly as facilities permit.As an Aviation Cadet, you are paid ^75 amonth, with subsistence, quarters, medicalcare, uniforms, equipment, traveling expenses.In 8 months you can win an officer’s com¬mission as a bombardier, navigator or pilot —and, be well started on your way to serveAmerica and advance yourself in aviation.MANY BRANCHES OF SERVICEThere are also commissions awarded inground crew service. College men particularly THREE ENLISTMENT PLANSFOR COLLEGE MENJaaiers—Sophomores—FreshmaRMay Coatiaao Their Edacotioa1. A new plan allows Juniors, Sophomoresand Freshmen, aged 18 to 26, inclusive,to enlist in the Air Force Enlisted Re¬serve and continue their schooling, pro¬vided they maintain satisfactory scholasticstandings.All College Mea May Enllsffor Immediate Service2. All college students may enlist as pri¬vates in the Army Air Forces (unawigned)and serve there until their turns come for ,Aviation Cadet training.3. All college students may enlist in theAir Force Enlisted Reserve and wait untilthey are ordered to report for AviationCadet training.Upon graduation or withdrawal fromcollege, men will be assigned to active dutyat a training center as facilities becomeavailable.If the necessity of war demands, the de¬ferred status in the Army Reserve may beterminated at any time by the Secretaryof War.Tfc* new Army Air force fnihfed Reserve Plon(s part of an over-all 4rmy Enlisted KeserveCorps program shortly to be announced. Thisprogram will provide opportunities tor collegemen to enlist In other branches of the Army ona deterred basis and to continue their educationthrough graduation If a satisfactory standard ofwork Is maintained. In ease of necessity theSecretary of War shall determine when they maybe called to active duty.If Is understood that men so enlisted will havethe opportunity of competing for vacancies InoRfeer's candidate schools.This plan has been approved In fhe belief fhafcontinuance of education will develop capacitiesfor leaderslilp. (keserve enlistment will netalter regulations regarding established R.O.T.C.plans.) will be interested in the requirements forArmaments, Communications, Engineering,Meteorology, Photography. If you have engi¬neering experience your chances of getting acommission are excellent.This past year about 80% of all AviationCadets were commissioned as SecondLieutenants — about 67% as flying officers.Those who do not qualify remain in the AirForces on an enlisted status and have furtheropportunities.As a Second Lieutenant on active duty withthe Army Air Forces, your pay ranges from^183 to ^245 a month.ACT AT ONCEIf you want to fight for America, this is whereyour blows will count.If you want the best training in the world,and years of solid achievement in aviation —the great career f »ld of the future — this iswhere you belong. Your place is here — inthe Army Air Forces.If you plan to enlist immediately, start get¬ting your necessary papers ready for the Avia¬tion Cadet Examining Board when it meets inyour locality. For complete information, seeyour Faculty Air Force Advisor. You cantake your mental and physical examinationsthe same day you apply. Get further informa¬tion now. i, i, i,NOTE: If you wish to enlist and are under 21, youwill need your parents’ or guardian’s consent. Birthcertificates and three letters of recom¬mendation will be required of all ap¬plicants. Obtain the forms and sendthem home today — you can thencomplete your enlistment before anyAviation Cadet Examining Board.SEE VOUt FACULTY Alt FORCE ADVISOR FOR FULL INFORMATION(Or Apply to Your Local Recruiting and Induction Station)U. S. ARMY RECRUITING AND INDUCTIONSTATION: 460 South State Street. ChicagoAVIATION CADET EXAMINING BOARD:Room 283, Court House, Chicago Other Army Recruiting and Induction Stations are in the followingcitiej: DANVILLE ROCKFORD ROCK ISLAND PEORIACAIRO EAST ST. LOUIS SPRINGFIELDOther Aviation Cadet Examining Boards are located in the followingcities: CAMP GRANT SCOTT FIELDTHE SPECIAL EXAMINING BOARD WILL VISIT UNIV. OF CHICAGO SOONPage Four THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. MAY 12. 1942Illinois SuccumbsTo Maroon PowerChicago’s varsity tennis team gavewhipping Illinois 6-2. Cal Sawyier aft¬er ragged playing at the offset, fin¬ished in excellent style, drubbing theIllinois No. 1 man, Gates, 6-4, 1-6, 6-2.Kemetick, starting in very poor formlost the first set to VonSprickelsen,0-6; then settled down and took thenext two sets, 6-3, 6-2. Bill Self tookSaikley, third singles, easily by thescore of 7-5, Self took Saikley, thirdsingles, easily by the score of 7-5,6-2. Johansen, playing fourth singles,edged out Lothrop, 6-3, 6-4, whileClapper, of Illinois, severely whippedMichels, 6-4, 6-3. Martin, last singlestook Pilz, ^6-1, 5-7, 6-3.In the three doubles matches, Chi¬cago won the second doubles, lost thefirst, and third doubles was disquali¬fied because Illinois team was unableto finish the match. Final scores infirst doubles, were. Gates and Von¬Sprickelsen drubbed Sawyier and Lif-ton, 6-2, 6-4, Self and Kemetick con¬quered Saikley and Lothrop, 6-4, 6-s,and third doubles was disqualified.Chicago Drops Match to IrishWinning its eighth consecutivematch, Notre Dame took Chicago’svarsity team, 6-3, taking four out ofthe six singles and two out of threedoubles matches. Winning from Chi¬cago on Friday, Notre Dame’s tennisteam went on to whip Northwestern,giving Notre Dame its first undefeat¬ed tennis season' since 1927. Sum¬maries of the match were as follows:In the singles matches, Canale, thetop Irish man, edged out Cal Sawyier,9-7, 4-6, 6-1; Kemetick, second sin¬gles, took Parks, 6-2, 6-4 whileFaught of Notre Dame, defeated Jo¬hansen, 6-2, 6-4. Michels, Chicago fifthsingles, licked Biittner, 6-4, 4-6, 6-3,while Shafer, Notre Dame, took thelast singles, taking Mailin, 7-5, 3-6,6-4.Sawyier DefeatedNotre Dame’s Canale and Faughtdefeated Sawyier and Michel 5-7, 6-2,6-2; Parks and Ford whipped Keme-Tfclc and Self, 6-2, 6-3 and Martin andJohansen took Biittner and Doutel, inone other closest matches of the meet,6-4, 10-8.Iowa Mops Up TrackTeam, 86 to 36Capturing two and sometimes threeplaces in each event, Iowa’s Trackteam mopped up the Maroon runnersand jumpers, 86 to 36 Saturday inStagg Field. In four events, namelythe 100, the high hurdles, the lowhurdles, and the broad jump, theHawkeyes refused to share the spoils.Only in the mile, 440, and discuswere Chicago men able to crash thevictory column in the single events,while the mile relay team of Gepping-er, Gordon, Suttoii and Wilner alsowon. Randall, in the 880 and mile,Wilner in the 440, Kincheloe in thevault, Rider in the weight events,Boyes in the high jump, Dahlberg inthe two mile, and the aforementionedrelay made Chicago’s 36 points.Tingley WinsFencing TitleTwo Maroon fencers and one alum¬nus paced the Illinois Division of theAmateur Fencing League to the Mid¬west championship in the FieldhouseSunday, capturing titles in two of thefour events. Need FarmWorkersIn order to relieve a critical short¬age of farm workers, the governmentis calling on men and women studentsof colleges and universities to serve asfarmhands for the coming summer,the University W’ar Activities bulletinissued last night announces. “Studentstaking advantage of this opportunityare assured of healthy outdoor workwhich contributes directly to the wareffort,’’ the release states.See W'oellaerStudents interested in further de¬tails or in making application shouldgo to the Board of Vocational Guid¬ance and Placement, Cobb 215, RobertC. Woellner, executive secretary, saidyesterday. Present plans have setMay 18 as the application deadline, >although there is some possibility ofan extension of this date.Assignments will be made as soonas a student is available, and his serv¬ices will be used until September 1,and in some cases possibly longer.There will probably ^ some fluctua¬tion in wages, but the average will betwo dollars a day and maintenance.Assignments will be made to any farmin the State, and the work and livingaccommodations will be carefully su¬pervised by the Farm Board.Need WorkersIn explaining the need for workers,the bulletin states: “Due to the greatneed of farm produce to feed ourarmy and those of our Allies, it is im¬perative that all farms in the Nationbe made to produce their capacity.This increased demand plus the num¬ber of farmers who are in the ArmedServices has resulted in a criticalshortage of manpower.’’Three BetasWin Prizes inAdams ContestThree Betas covered themeselveiwith glory Friday by walking off withthe three cash prizes in the FlorenceJames Adams Reading Contest. JeffMongerson garnered the first prize of$75, Edwin Armstrong won the sec¬ond prize, $50, and Robert Ray Millerwon $25.Preliminaries for the contest wereheld last Tuesday, when all contest¬ants read for four minutes each. Fivefinalists were selected by the judgesto compete Friday.In the finals, contestants each hada ten minute period to read their se¬lections. Dramatic readings and mono¬logues are frowned on in this type ofcontest, and poems must be read fromthe book rather than iecited frommemory.Although the number of contestantsis unlimited, each must be registeredfor at least two courses and musthave been in residence 6 quarters. Noformer winners may enter.Judges for the contest were Profes¬sor Davis Edwards, Professor LeslieWarren, and Mrs. A. J. Bmimbaugh,Besides being fraternity brothers, thethree winners are all Dramatic As¬sociation stars, and were last seen to¬gether in “The Little Foxes.’’Meiklejohn—(Continued from page one)Loyal Tingley, alumnus NationalDueling Sword Champion in 1939, fol¬lowed up his victory in the Divisionalmeets which gave him the HermansonCup by taking the Midwest title whilelosing only one bout in the entiremeet.Ray Siever, Captain of the Ma¬roons, and Big Ten Sabre Champ,added the Midwest crown to his lau¬rels while Art Cohen, freshman star,captured second place in the sameevent.These men were all developed byCoach Alvar Hermanson; Tingley andSiever had no fencing experience pre¬vious to their matriculation at theUniversity. teach . . . The human spirit is wearyof cunning, of craftiness, of self-righteous aggressiveness.” To educatefor the future, Meiklejohn concluded,is the real purpose of modern liberaleducation. The future will, in turn,set right that system of education.The sjTTiposium was part of a threeday meeting held in his honor by for¬mer students. Meiklejohn was presi¬dent of Amhurst for many years, isnow associated with the “liberal col¬lege” in the University of Wisconsin.Skull and Crescent will hold itsinitiation tonight at 7:30 in Lounge !A of the Reynolds Club. i Editorial—(Continued front page two)The new moral leaders mustbe cultured men who are inter¬ested in the fulfillment of theaspirations which we have cher¬ished but have never attained,the aspirations toward freedom,democracy, and the supremacyof human rights.The peace will certainly be lostif the moral leadership of thepeople does not point the way,specifically, and repeatedly, andunderstandably, to those goalswhich we have cherished buthave never been able to call ourown.P.R.Training—(Continued from page one)Mathematici! are stressed as desir¬able prerequisites for all divisions,with two years of college, and oneyear of Physics required for com¬munications. Meteorology aspirantsmust have three years of college cred¬it, with emphasis on engineering andscientific subjects. Amateur or pro¬fessional experience in the camerafield are required for the photographicfield, with three years of work in geol¬ogy'or chemistry.Board—(Continued from page one)In addition to acting as spokesmenfor this group, Poplett and MacLearwill be in charge of the freshmanstaff, including the freshman trainingschool.The sophomore board is composedof Dorothy Tuell, Gerry Chapman,Barbara Bezark, June Cohen, RuthCohn, A. W. Freyman, Dorothy Sper-ber, Richard Switzer, Bill Daeraicke,Marilyn Robb, and Paul Patton.Settlement NetsNew High of $285.The Settlement Board announcedthat the results of its drive to raisemoney for the University Settlementby selling tags last Wednesday andThursday were highly satisfactory.The sum total collected for the twodays was approximately $285, whichmarks this as one of the most success¬ful attempts by this organization tosolicit funds. A great deal of the cred¬it for this fine showing must be giv¬en to the club girls for their co-opera¬tion and work in selling the tags.NEWSPAPER ASPIRANTSDo you wl$h a job as a newspaper writer?We can help you obtain one. Our personalizedservice has aided many. Interviews by appoint¬ment only. S. W. Meyers.THE NEWSPAPER INDEX20 E. Jackson Blvd., ChicagoHarrison 7490The Daily MaroonFOUNDED IN 1902The Daily Maroon is the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicago, pub¬lished mornings on Tuesdays and Fridaysduring the \utumn, Winter, and Springquarters by The Daily Maroon Company,6831 University Avenue. Telephones: HydePark 9222.After 6:30 phone in stories to our printers.The Chief Printing Company, 148 West 62ndstreet. Telephones: Wentworth 6123 and 6124.The University of Chicago assumes no re¬sponsibility for any statements appearing inThe Daily Maroon, or for any contract enteredinto by The Daily Maroon.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves therights of publication of any material appear-’ing in this paper. Subscription rates: $2.75 ayear, $4 b> mail. Single copies: three cents.Entered as second class matter February 23,1942, at the post office at Chicago, Illinois,under the act of March 3, 1879.MemberPissodoted Cblle6iaiG PressDi&tribulor ofCblle6icite DibestBOARD OF CONTROLEditorialRICHARD HIMMEL, ChairmanJAMES BURTLE ROBERT REYNOLDSBusinessEDGAR L. RACHLIN, Business ManagerHoward Kamin, Advertising ManagerWilliam Bell, Circulation ManagerLynn Tuttle, Compt. oilerOfficeBARBARA GILFILLAN, Office ManagerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESRobert Lawson, Nancy Lesser, Beata Mueller,Philip Rieff, Chloe Roth, Minna Sachs,Elizabeth Jane Waters, Shirley Smith andWerner BaumBUSINESS ASSOCIATESRichard Wallens. Alfred Bodian, Irene Forte,Milton Dauber, Muriel Burns,Barbara OrtlundNight Editors; Beth Carney, Bill Daemicke,and Gordon Northrup Frank LloydWright SpeaksTonightFrank Lloyd Wright, leading Amer¬ican architect, will deliver the next inthe Walgreen series of lectures, inMandel Hall tonight, 6t 8:30. The sub¬ject of Wright’s lecture will be “Ar¬chitecture in a Post War World.”Wright is not only a leader in theutilitarian movement in modern ar¬chitecture, but may be called thefounder of the American architectur¬al school. He has been an exponentof the functional theory in architec¬ture, and has often recommended acomplete re-planning and rebuildingof war-scarred cities.He started his career in Chicago in1893, and soon rose to success in theworld of design. He is the architectof the Imperial Hotel in Tokio, Japan,and of numerous other buildings ofnote.Wright is the founder and conduc¬tor of “The Taliesin Fellowship,” acultural experiment in the arts. Oneschool is situated at “Taliesin,” hishome, in Spring Green, Wisconsin, andthe other in Phoenix, Arizona. Thereare about forty apprentices partici¬pating in this fellowship.Wright is also an author, and hisworks include “The DisappearingCity” and “Architecture and ModernLife.” The latter was written in con¬junction with Baker Brownell ofNorthwestern University.Tickets for the lecture may be ob¬tained free of charge at the Univer¬sity Information Office in the PressBuilding.Dick JacquesDies in CrashRichard Jacques, a former studentof the University is tVie latest warcasualty. He crashed in an armytraining plane in Texas last week.In a recent letter, Jacques statedthat he was participating in maneu¬vers which required him to fly over180 miles an hour 26 feet off theground. It is thought that it was dur¬ing this type of training that hisplane got out of control and he crash¬ed.Jacques had been in the army forseven months and was to get his wingsnext week.He graduated from the Universityin 1940. Jacques came from Milwau¬kee, was a Psi U, and earned the nick¬name of the “Mouse Man.”FOR RENTTwo or three' monthii, $75.09 per month fromJune or July Ist—four room cottoKe--run-ninit water, electricity, fireplace—secludedfrom woods and brook—convenient to beachesand transportation. Suitable for two or threepersons. Two hours from South Side. WriteKindelsperKer, Harbert. MichiKan, or callSunday, May 17th.Read Swedenborg's"DIVIHEPROVIDENCE"lOc in paperat University and otherbookstores B O O K SYou MustNot MissThe Childrenby NINA FEDOROVA $2.50War-Korchod China in tha timo of Japanosaaggroulon with Whito Russian rofugoos strug¬gling against hopoloss odds is tha sottingchoson for this romarkablo book.Children of Abrahamby SHOLEM ASCH $2.50Twonty-fivo short storios and skotchos of theJewish people, in various lands and periods,by the author of such outstanding novels as"The Naiarene" and '‘Three Cities.". What the CitizenShould Know Series.. (each) $2.50New books in this timely and informative seriesinclude "What tho CItiton Should Know aboutthe Air Forces" by Lt. Col. Harold H. Hart-nay, "What the Citizen Should Know abouttho Army Engineers,"' by Major Paul W.Thompson, "What the Citizen Should KnowAbout Civilian Defense" by Alter H. Bingerand Hilton H. Railey, and "What the CitizenShould Know about Modern War," by Fletch¬er PraH.Only One Stormby GRANVILLE HICKS $2.75This it a picture of what it happening inAmerica t<^ay, a book which faces life andblinks nothing. The "Main Street" of our time.Ill Fares the Landby CAREY WILLIAMS $3.00This it a book about our agricultural revolu¬tion, a specific American problem, loadedwith danger, which mutt be solved i«ist atSurely at we solve our world problems.America Speaksby PHILIP GiSBS $3.00What this famous English novelist and warcorrespondent saw and heard in America dur¬ing hit recent lecture tour.Time Runs Outby HENRY J. TAYLOR $3.00An American business man's flying trip throughEngland, France, Germany, Finland, Spain andPortugal just before the war broke out. Heminces no words in railing what ho taw overthere.How Japan Plans to Winby KINOAKI MATSUO $2.50The Japanese plan of attack and strategyagainst tho U. S. at written for Japanete homeconsumption by a Japanete Naval Intelligenceofficer and published in Japan in October,1940. Tho original copy was purloined fromthe hotel room of two Japanese officers inLot Angeles.Ramparts of the Pacificby HALLEH ABEND $3.50The crack Far Eastern correspondent of theNew York Timet analyzes the whole situationin the Pacific area.The Emergence ofAn American Artby JEROME MELLQUIST $3.75In this lively and revealing introduction tothe new general of American artists, the entirefield of modern American art since 1900 itmade clear and vitally interesting. It makesart ezeiting by showing that it issues from ei-clting human beings.Tve Come a Long Wayby HELENA KUO $3.00The adventurous life on three continents of acharming young Chinese newspaper woman.Her unique autobiography tells of her up¬bringing in China, her flight to Europe fromwartime China, of her work in England and onthe continet, her escape from Hltler's'armies,and her trip to the United States.The Last Time I Saw Parisby ELLIOT PAUL $2.75Here it a living picture of life on that street,of the people who were hit neighbors, thosehe liked and disliked, both in the years ofgaiety and the years of betrayal.Available at theU. of C. Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.