laORYBUTUNTTSD STATESBONDS * STAMPSVol. 42. No. 86 Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. FRIDAY. JUNE 5. 1942 PRICE THREE CENTSInstituteGives FallCoursesThe opportunity to earn army andnavy commissions will be available tomen who have had college science andmathematics courses, at the Univer¬sity’s Institute of Meteorology, Dr.Carl G. Rossby, director of the Insti¬tute, announced today. Applicationsfor the course, which opens in Sep¬tember, now are being received.College and University studentsapplying for admission to 200 avail¬able positions as army air forcesaviation cadets or naval aviation en¬signs were urged to make sure theywill have sufficient mathematics andphysics to fulfil requirements by thet’me the course opens.Requirements for Course“It still may be possible for interest¬ed young men to take advantage ofsummer sessions in completing theirrequirements, but it is essential thatthe Institute be informed of their in¬tentions immediately,” Dr. Rossbysaid.Naval aviation cadets are commis¬sioned as ensigns upon being accept¬ed for the course; army air cadetsare commissioned 2nd lieutenants im¬mediately upon successful completionof the training. The ensigns receivefull pay and allowances amountingto $183 per month while in training;the army cadets receive compensationof $140 to $145 per month.Requirements for both groups in¬clude mastery of integral and differ¬ential calculus and at least one yearof college physics. In addition, physi¬cal tests must be passed. Age limitsthe army group are from 18 tothe navy’s limits are from 20 tofor30;27.liistitute's Third CourseThe University of Chicago is one offive institutions of higher educationin the United States giving advancedtraining in meteorology, and is theonly one of the five between the At¬lantic and Pacific seaboards.The present course is the thirdgiven by the Institute; more thansixty-six graduates of the , earliercourses are already in active serviceat air fields and stations.Addition of the new group of 200next fall will bring the totalnumber studying to become weatherexperts on the Midway to more than320, the bulk of whom will be armyair cadets, the remainder in navakaviation, the Civil Aeronautics Au¬thority, or the U. S. Weather Bureau.DA Head TellsOrganization’sPlans for ’42- ’43A second “Those That Are Fools”,a Greek tragedy, a Renaissance com¬edy and a contemporary play will begiven by the Dramatic Associationnext year, DA president Bob Millerannounced yesterday.Among the other innovations whichthe organization hopes to put into ef¬fect next year is a closer cooperationbetween the various campus dramaticgroups. As a step in this direction thesummer production will probably begiven jointly by DA and the Univer¬sity players. This play will also bepresented for the incoming studentsfreshman week.Since two of the plays will be cos¬tume productions more work in cos¬tume designing and execution will bedone by the organizatiori next year.In past years DA has given few pe¬riod plays and the costumes that wereused were usually the work of pro¬fessionals.Of the four shows for next year“Those That Are Fools H” is the onlycampus-written show. Dick Jacob andDick Lieher who wrote the original“Fools” are already at work writing Letter From The EditortDear Sttidents:Usually when the publisher of a newspaper takes typewriter in hand, heis trying to placate the readers, get advertisers, or get new readers. 1 haveno such intention in mind. Instead, I say that all those who fit into the saluta¬tion can go to hell IThe ctaff of tl J paper thinks it puts out a pretty fair newspaper. Atleast, it’s as good as this campus deserves. In fact, it’s a lot better. There isneither appreciation of the amount of work the staff puts in nor in the fin¬ished product.I do not claim that the Maroon is the sole recipient of this so-intelligentattitude on the part of pseudo-sophisticated and smug semi-intelligensia. Im¬bued with the idea that anything requiring overt physical action is per sebad, these cloistered juveniles deride all student activities. Secure in the knowl¬edge that mere parroting of the thoughts of textbook writers and Medievalphilosophers is the good life, these intellectuals are happiest when discussingsuch matters as the war, the reconstruction period. Truth, and all other mat¬ters in which their opinions are so influential.I don’t think that all people who work on student activities are stupid.They are certainly no more stupid than the rest of the students at this Uni¬versity, haven of the physically and mentally unfit.The Maroon has no more gripe coming than does athletics certainly. Ifclaims to have no more. Cap and Gown fell victim to the onslaughts of theivory tower dwellers. Puhe, Student Social Committee, Dramatic Association,fraternities—all have felt the impact of this tremendous inertia. This is notaimed at Maroon-haters but at activity-haters in general.There are many factors entering into this attitude on the part of thestudent body, admittedly. Th^e are many commuters; there are many peopleworking their way through school without much spending money. But by farthe most important is the intellectual sura which every student thinks im¬mediately surrounds him upon a thorough condemnation of everything thatsmacks of the mundane. Obviously, activities are mundane. They are not con¬cerned with first principles; they are not concerned with the good life;they do not indulge in involved rhetoric to couch more involved thoughts whichwould be truisms or absurdities if said simply; they are not Thomistic noranti-Thomistic. Since they are none of these things, student activities are notgood.These self-same activities may be but the childishr actions of power-madindividuals to a large portion of students, but to some they perform valuablefunctions. Perhaps if a more tolerant attitude were to be assumed by theseacademic Babbitts, they would discover that these activities might have somevalue for them (horrors!). But this is obviously wool-gathering.Certainly, the physical conditioning classes would benefit a great manymen whose underdeveloped mental powers shine brightly in comparison totheir oh-so-robust physiques. They will certainly make fine soldiers in theUnited States Army—as far as the Axis is concerned.All this to say, the Maroon is printing no more this quarter save for anAlumni Issue Friday, June 21, which students can buy for 5 cents.Love,Bob Lawson Form New InstituteTraining CommitteeTo inform students of the opportunities for gaining militarytraining through the Institute of Military Studies a Student Pre-Induction Training Committee has been formed.Headed by Harry Roberts the committee is composed of juniorand senior instructors in the course. The sixteen members includeEllsworth Paris, Ned Monger, Jerry Burke, George Wilkerson,Phil Jaynes, Bernard Lizenby, BobAhrens, Bernard Katz, Buddy Lifton,Craig Leman, John Bauman, JonasSiegel, Milton Robinson, Bob Landry,and John Crosby.BerwangerTells AUAbout V-5KruegerSocialist to HeadParty Lieutenant Jay Berwanger of theNavy Air Corp will be in the Dean ofStudents’ Offices throughout today inthe role of liaison officer to give in¬formation to men with a desire to flyfor their country and to enter NavyV-5.After a preliminary visit to campuslast Tuesday, Lieutenant Berwangerfound a high proportion of the menin the residence halls had enlisted inthe various branches of the serviceunder the specialized program offeredto college men. He plans to have com¬parative figures ready in the nearfuture on the tremendous enlistmentsthat have taken place during the lastyear.While on campus Lieutenant Ber¬wanger also wishes to see membersof the Navy’s V-1 program sincechanges in the status of potential air¬men and V-l reservists have recentlybeen made.Students who were freshmen orsophomores during the academic yearof 1941-42 and who were then eligiblefor enlistment in Class V-l but didnot enlist may do so anytime prior toNovember 1, 1942. In the future en¬listments in V-7 will be open only tostudents who have enlisted in V-l.Maynard C. Krueger, AssistantProfessor of Economics, was electedNational Chairman of the SocialistParty late Monday night at the partyconvention in Milwaukee. Krueger’selection came unanimously followingNorman Thomas’ declining of thenomination.Election of the University profes¬sor came in the closing session of thethree-day convention. Krueger, whoran for vice-president on the partyticket in 1940, was also re-elected to ithe national executive committee, alsowith Thomas.In turning down the proffered nom¬ination, Thomas said: “I am decliningto be a candidate because I do notwant the Socialist Party to be calleda one man party.” He has beenNational Secretary of the executivecommittee since 1936.The new party head, thirty-sixyears of age, comes from Missouri,has his B.A. and M.A. from the Uni¬versity of Missouri. Krueger alsospent three years in Europe studyingat the Universities of Paris, Berlin,and Geneva. In 1927-28 he was In¬structor in history at Albion College(Michigan), and from 1928 until 1932he taught in the School of Finance andCommerce at the University of Penn¬sylvania. In ’32 he came to the Uni¬versity.Krueger has also been a frequentspeaker on the Round Table broad¬casts. Maynard KruegerSocialist HeadThe Dean’s office announced thatthe rule regarding freshmen livingin fraternity has not been rescind¬ed and that freshmen will not beallowed to live in fraternity housesthis summer. The InterfratemityCouncil had requested that the rulebe lifted because of housing condi¬tions and the financial condition offraternities.the skits and music. The show willagain satirize different aspects ofcampus life.Both the Greek tragedy and theRenaissance comedy will be chosenwith the idea of helping students tak¬ ing the Humanities survey. The mod¬ern play will also be one which willbe of practical benefit for Humanitiesstudents.Much of the renewed interest in the(Continued on page four) Do YouHave aB^?By JANE ROBERTSONDo you have a private bath? Resi¬dents of a south side block were re¬cently asked this question amongothers when they received a question-aire supposedly having to do withcivilian defense.A note accompanying the question-aire read as follows: “Dear friend, astudy of the block is being made inan attempt to discover the problemswhich arise in the organization of ablock for civilian defense. For thispurpose a questionaire is attached,which, it is hoped, will be filled »^utin full. It is completely impersonaland no signatures or addresses arerequired.” Two pages of questionsfollowed, including these:Approximate salary?Do you like your present location?To what religious organization doyou belong?Are you connected with a politicalorganization ?In which social class do you con¬sider yourself, i.e. upper, middle, orlower ?Do you believe this city will exper¬ience air raids during the war?Insulted and angry residents wroteletters; one called at the PlaisanceHotel which was the return addresslisted on the questionaire. The callerwas directed to .^he home of Lee N.Hon, a mild young man with glasses,who said he had sent out the ques¬tionaire and what' was wrong with itanyway. The only trouble was thatHon is not a block captain nor yet acivilian defense official. Hon is asociology student at the University. Publicize Summer SessionsThe first undertaking of the com¬mittee will be to publicize the sum¬mer session of the Institute whichopens June 25. The course is limitedto one thousand men and will begiven in two sections. Since thereare more than seven hundred nameson the overflow list from the springquarter, preference will be given tothose who were unable to attend.Preference will also be given tomen with 1-A selective service rat¬ings. “Half of the men in previouscourses have enrolled even thoughthey had 3-A deferments,” Arthur L.H. Rubin, the director of the Insti¬tute said. “This high proportion isconvincing evidence of the recogni¬tion by Chicagoans that all the na¬tion’s resources of manpower mayhave to be tapped in fighting thewar.”Since the immediate need of thetraining is obviously greater for class1-A men, however, it was decided theyshould be given preference, he ex¬plained.3,850 Have AttendedMore than 3,850 Chicagoans, manyof whom are now in the fightingforces, have attended the Institutesince its foundation. The course isdesigned to provide training in thebasic military skills including riflemarksmanship, close and extendedorder drill, mapping, elementary tac¬tics, communications, and militaryetiquette. It is open to Chicagoans be¬tween 16 and 48 as well as to stu¬dents and staff of the University.Membership in the Institute’s basiccourse also serves as a prerequisitefor advanced trainir - in five fields ofhigh potential military utility.Laves TellsMaroon AboutWashingtonBack at the University on a week'sleave. Associate Professor of Politi¬cal Science Walter H. C. Laves, nowwith the Office of the Co-ordinator ofInter-American Affiairs, gave the Ma¬roon his impressions of war - timeWashington in general, and of the Di¬vision of Inter-American Activities inthe United States, in particular.Much Being AccomplishedAddressing himself to Washingtonin general. Laves declared, “Theweather is hot, and the living condi¬tions are bad, but in spite of ail hin¬drances, an amazing amount of workis being done. Everyone is character¬ized by a complete willingness to sacri¬fice and the will to win.”“People who go to Washington ontwo week’s trips,” Laves continued,“and then come back with the ideathat it is a mad-house are trying in ashort time to understand a very com-^plicated set-up.”Seeks U.S. InterestTurning to his own work as Direc¬tor of the Division, Laves said thathis group is concerned mainly with theeducation in Latin American Affairsof the adult voting portion of the U.S.population. Realizing that most adultsare thoroughly ignorant of’ LatinAmerica, and further that “they do notcare since they do not understand,”the Division has been directing itsprincipal efforts to getting people in¬terested. This has been done by send¬ing information to civic groups, farm(Continued on page four)THE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY. JUNE 5. 1942 \Page TwoEditorialsYe Shall Know Them-Edwin A. Lahey tells a story.It seems that John L. Lewishas cut himself off in his prime.From the nation’s foremost la¬bor leader to an irritating dema¬gogue; that is the Lewis story.But it is more than an individ¬ual tragedy. It is more than aregrettable feature on a badman. The decline and fall of Mr.Lewis, who is reported to havetold the President that he andthe President were the most im¬portant men in the country, isan American episode in the fallof the democracies since 1932.How can there be a democraticvictory ? We are not certain asto who are the democrats. Theleaders of what the newspapersblandly call the Center and theLeft have usually proven them.-selves to be ambitious politicalmerchants, anxious to peddletheir wares at a suitable price.Picking true equalitarians fromthe ranks of the democrats hasbecome an increasingly difficulttask.Ostensible Socialists becomeFascist dictators, and men listedas labor leaders build pleasuredomes that would make KublalKhan wince in his poverty. jThe prospects for selectingthe democrats worthy of thename becomes more and morediscouraging as one remembersthat one of the professed leftistsof Octavius Caesar’s time soldout to the local reactionaries for30 pieces of silver. The only vis¬ible change, in these last 1942years, has been a gradual rise inprice. The wage scale for menwho can fool the people longenough to hurt them has goneup with the growing complexi¬ties of the task.There is some truth in the re¬actionary slogan that “mostdemocrats are liars.’’One valid test for democrats isthe company they keep. “Bytheir enemies shall ye knowthem.’’ That explains a greatdeal. By his enemies shall yeknow Harry Bridges. By his en¬emies shall ye know John L.Lewis. The company John L.Lewis tried to keep when he be¬came a frustrate politico is theenemy of Harry Bridges. This,then, is the cross a democratmust carry if he is to be a dem¬ocrat.By their enemies shall yeknow them.Our Ancestors —This is “Be Kind To Conserva¬tives Week’’ on the Midway. Bekind to conservatives and theywill be kind to you.CLASSIFIEDLOST: Larire gny »rt notebook at Commons.Reward. E. Thompson, Mid. 0800—Ext. 1029Freabmen—Sophomores—Part time and anm-mer work with National Company. Unusualeaminsrs. Apply 36 S. State—Room 1014—8 to 6 P.M. It is from long associationwith what the late Dean Math¬ews called “our contemporaryancestors’’ that we have acquir¬ed this curiously tolerant qual¬ity of mind. Of course, it takes asense of humor to be friendlywith conservatives but we havealways had a certain sentimentfor them; as we have for alltradition and antiquity in mod¬ern dress.During this week we hope tobe able to walk right up to thenearest conservative and slaphim on the back and tell himhow fine the weather was. Re¬membering our generally ob¬noxious liberal attitude, we nowintend to apply all the arts ofhigh comedy as we pretend toagree that this is the best of allpossible worlds, and it would bebetter if Brooks can keep an eyeon Roosevelt.We hereby agree that our lit¬tle stock exchange and our bigsteel magnate is the peak towardwhich civilization has beencrawling since the dark ages. Ifthere were any free enterprizesystem loose in the world wewould certainly include that inour list. But, alas, free enter¬prise never worked its way outof Adam Smith’s best work offiction.Just to be nice, we will, fora limited time only, be pleasedto hear that heaven is pavedwith bad intentions and thatBrooks is good for the nation.Lately, the conservatives havedeveloped a genuine flare fororiginality. It seems that we aremoving toward a better worldmuch too quickly and we betterslow down or we won’t get there.“Our present government...”writes a young man who is study¬ing to be a downstate conserva¬tive ... “will inevitably get thereand I don’t think the processshould be speeded up. It takestime to satisfactorily change anational philosophy and a wayof life.”Progress, obviously, must bekept in check, lest it have aharmful affect on the status quo.The conservatives, unable tobash union heads and put littlechildren to work in the coala/^ Couht(PaiitLond.^aduatkA,., We Aodtetwice ad mmtcf cxdiUUtUivcAaoe f^aduatsAoviutatfeft um>fo»mt»ooKUTTnt vooiunuf &1lu6KE66 COUEGt<i4f. MUUgon at MadhoaSt, ChkoqoTH. snta leei \U. T.1131-1133 E. 55th St.COMPLETE SELECTION ,OF BEERS ANDOTHER BEVERAGESFREE DELIVERYMID. 0524BLATZ and SIEBENS BEERS mines as they did in the goodold days, fear Progress becauseProgress is dangerous when it iscontemporary. Improvement cango too far, as it obviously has inthe l&st nine years.Any conservative with a his¬torical outlook on life can tellyou that the improvement inmankind since his childhood hasbeen tremendous.It is obvious that the worldhas progressed too quickly sincethe Age of the Two Kingdomsin Egypt. Things, unfortunately,have been bent completely out ofshape by modern reformers whoseem dissatisfied with the wayimprovement has flourished inthe past 6,000 years.Murder, legalized oppression,pillage, mass suicide, wars forthe interest of the few, and allthe rest of what we call the un¬just and undemocratic ways ofdoing things, will not be eradi¬cated over-night. “In comparisonwith other countries we domighty well.” Progress is a slowprocess and perhaps the con¬servatives are correct in cau¬tioning us that we are expectingtoo much of mankind in theshort space of the next century.It took something like 6,000years to get into our presenthigh state of civilization, andlook where we are.Progress takes time. Give theconservatives another chance.P. R.It it It It it it It it it it1162 E. 63rdPush Back Sa«HPhone Dor. 1085Doert Open 12:30 Show Starts 1:00 DallyFri., Sat., Juna S, iW. C. FIELDS"NEVER GIVE A SUCKER AN EVEN BREAK"plusRICHARD ARLEN JEAN PARKER"TORPEDO BOAT"Sun., Mon., Tuts., Juna 7, 8, 9BOB HOPE - VERA ZORINA - VICTOR MOOREIn"LOUISIANA PURCHASE"ELLEN DREW BRIAN DONLEVYWILLIAM HOLDENIn"THE REMARKABLE ANDREW"it it it it it it it it 4.^The Daily MaroonFOUNDED IN 1908The Daily Maroon is the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicago, pub¬lished mornings on Tuesdays and Fridaysduring the Autumn, Winter, and Springquarters by The Daily Maroon Company,5831 University Avenue. Telephones: HydePark 9222.After 6:30 phone in stories to our printers.The Chief Printing Company, 148 West 62ndstreet. Telephones: Wentworth 6128 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 pai>er. 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.MemberP^ssockaled GDlle6ia!e Pi'essDisc ribu tor ofGollebioie DibesIBOAED OF CONTROLEditarialRICHARD HIMMEL, ChairmanJAMES BURTLE ROBERT REYNOLDSBasineasEDGAR L. RACHLIN, Business ManagerHoward Kamin, Advertising ManagerWilliam Bell, Circulation ManagerLynn Tuttle, Compt.ollerOfficeBARBARA GILFILLAN, Office ManagerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESRobert Lawson, Nancy Lesser, Beata Mueller,Philip RielT, Chloe Roth, Minna Sachs, •Elizabeth Jane Waters, Shirley Smith andWerner BaumBUSINESS ASSOCIATESRichard Wallens, Alfred Bodian, Irene Forte,Milton Dauber, Muriel Burns,Barbara OrtlundNight Editor: Charlotte Levitan By BILL LETWIN andBEATA MUELLERIt seems that there are three kindsof people as far as the Bazaar isconcerned. They ran^re from bad toworse according as they spend theirlives trying to get into the Bazaar,spend their lives trying to stay outof the Bazaar, or achieve an earlydeath trying to write the Bazaar. It'sa little foolhardy to enumerate all thepeople in each of these classes sowe’ll satisfy ourselves with categori¬cal descriptions.The "Boy, I made it!" type ...The prototype here is the man onwhom someone has got somethinggood. It’s so good that the someonecalls up the Maroon every other Wed¬nesday with a frantic catch in hisvoice and a great gasping to saythat he of the first party was seenwith so-and-so and is.i’t that a suresign that he’s two-timing that one heleft behind at Foster? “He” for hispart calls up every other Thursdayto denounce the rumor.We would like to pass relativemoral judgments on “he” and “some¬one”. We cannot decide, however,which one of them is more revolting.This type is least bad. At least theyknow what they’re looking for. Thereexist at present two subdivisions.There are the people who get intoevery Bazaar that was ever written,or will ever be written. Now that theyhave gotten into this one, we’ll sortof forget about them.The second type is one of the chiefreasons for incipient heart-failure onthe part of our new Postmaster Gen¬eral (You try and name him.) Theseare the kiddies who’ve been wantingto “make” the Bazaar worse than anyfootball player ever wanted to “make”his letter. When the great event final¬ly occurs, they send out great bundlesof the Maroon to their aunts anduncles in Forth Easthampton, Georgia,thus occluding all East-bound mailtrains for weeks. For this reasonalone the Bazaar ought to be pro¬hibited.The "Gee, I hope they didn'tget me today" crowd . . .These are also the people who sitday after day in the Coffee Shop be¬cause that is the place Bazaar writ¬ers used to write about and nightafter night in Hanley’s and U.T. be¬cause Bazaar writers still write aboutHanley’s and U.T. when there is noth¬ing better to say.The Spectators . . ....not Addison or even Steele, butBazaar writers. First, not chronolog¬ically, but first in the hates of hiscountrymen, the granddaddy of allBazaar writers, is Himmel. Himmel itwas who made glamor,, who unmadeglamor when it pleased him, who was baptized in Botany Pond more oftenthan the minds of men remember.This is the true badge of a Bazaarwriter, the confirmation of his powerand grace, the sign that makes himmore blessed if he ever gets to heaven,which is dubious, and thrice damnedwhen he goes to hell. Only one otherever came near this distinction, butbeing a lady she escaped the sousingpromised for naming a souse.The others are only lesser lights—Letwin who is conscious of the sig¬nificance of society, Harlan Blake whois conscious of the significance of So¬ciety, and likes his name in a bylineof a Bazaar if it can’t be in a Bazaar,and Auntie Bea who is simply mali¬cious, without partiality.Innocent Bystanders . . .... those who read the Bazaar afterit is written, and those who kibitzwhile it is in birth. They also servewho only stand and watch and if theresult is stillborn 'hey feel no guilt.Such is Robertson, best-beloved andmost acidulous kibitzer, who com¬plains now reading over our should¬ers, “But I was in the Bazaar lastweek.” Such is Switzer the Silent,also called Charlotte, because he isa freshman. All Maroon staff fresh¬men are called Charlotte, and this isno reflection on Switzer’s character.Such is Rieff who reads not but onlylooks at the number of pages writ¬ten, saying, “Sorry, you can’t printthat, my editorial needs the whole sec¬ond page today.” And tomorrow andtomorrow and tomorrow, day afterday till the last syllable of recordedRieff.Das Bazaar ist all. Hoch der Tag!KIMBARK63 rd & KimbarkOp«(i 12:30 - 15c to 4:30Fri. & Sot., Juno 5 6 6"Paris Is Calling"plusJANE WITHERSin"Young America"plusELISSA LANDISin"Lone StarSun., Mon., Tues., June 7, 8, 9"Right To The Heart"plus"Case of Jimmy Valentine"plusGENE AUTRYin"Rancho Grande"SAY ‘BOO TO BAGGAGT BOTHER...AMD TAKE YOUR TRAIN CAREFREE!Don’t start your vacation cluttered up with luggage prob¬lems when a phone call to Railway Express relieves youof all such troublesome details. We’ll call for your trunksand bags, speed them to your home, and save you timeand expense. 'The low rates include insurance, and doublereceipts, to say nothing of pick-up and delivery at no extracharge within our regular vehicle limits in all cities andprincipal towns. You can send "collea”, too, when you useRailway Express. Just phone for information or service.XPRESSInc.THE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY. JUNE 5. 1942 Page ThreeBorgese Writes onPope’s War PolicyBy WERNER BAUMLatest issue of The Nation, recentlyreferred to as a somewhat pink mag¬azine by a Chicago morning news¬paper, features an article by G. A.Borgese entitled “The Pope’s Neutral¬ity.”Borgese is a Professor of ItalianLiterature at the University and aformer Italian statesman.Attacks Papal SpeechBorgese attacks the war ideas ofPope Pius XII as expressed in hisbroadcast of May 13 in which theAlumni MagazineUnreflectiveBy PHILIP RIEFFThe ethics of local journalism be¬ing what they are, we take this op¬portunity to publicly reprimand ourelders by making a few left-handedsuggestions to the University of Chi¬cago Alumni Magazine. On the standswith its May issue the Alumni Maga¬zine continues to be quiet and ade¬quate without reflecting the realUniversity of Chicago.The Alumni Council has made themagazine too much for alumni, andconsequently it suffers from over¬doses of nostalgia, and trivia.Loaded With SentimentThe University of Chicago maga¬zine is the obvious choice for mirror¬ing the present life of the quadrang¬les. It has no financial worries, andit is competently written. Yet it isnot used as an organ with which theconstant intellectual and doctrinalstrife on the Quadrangles might beaired for past and present Universitypeople.More articles of contemporary sig¬nificance by different faculty menwould give the Alumni and the Stud¬ents a true picture of; the University.At the moment, the magazine is load¬ed with sentiment such as “I’ll NeverForget,” and ineffectual understate¬ment such as Cody Pfanstiehl’s “OneMan’s Army.” Cody’s quiet prosemakes Army life even more uninter¬esting than it really must be.Articles AmusingOf course we would not eliminateDavid Daiches’ “Notes For A Dilet¬tante.” Daiches is both amusing andinstructive. The other articles, how¬ever, are usually merely amusing.The University has always beena leader in social, political, and educa¬tional thought. The Alumni Magazinecould fulfil an important function ifit set itself to the task of being a non¬partisan reflection of this thought. Pope said: “We make a warm, fath¬erly appeal to satesmen that they maynot let any occasion pass that mayopen up to the nations the road toan honest peace of justice and mod¬eration, to a peace arising from afree and fruitful agreement, even ifit should not correspond in all pointsto their aspirations.”Borgese cries out again^ thisbroadcast which he terms a “declara¬tion of neutrality absolute” and asksthe Pope to align himself with theUnited Nations who have in mind“the demolition of all hatred andslaughter.”Terms Neutrality DesertionSays Borgese: “Many, it is to behoped, will now become aware thatthe ‘captivity’ of the Pope, muchmore than physical in Fascist Italy,is moral and doctrinal under the sys¬tematic command of his allegianceand responsibilities.”“The neutrality of an institutionthat for nearly two thousand yearshas specialized in the supreme busi¬ness of discriminating between moralvalues may imply for many. Catholicor not, some kind of desertion” ac¬cording to Professor Borgese. Try LuringMonkeys DownWith BananasBy MARILYN ROBBLittle men in white coats are run¬ning wild on campus today lookingfor two monkeys which escaped fromRicketts Laboratory early yesterdaymorning. The monkeys got loose whileattendants were unloading theircrates from the trucks on which theanimals had just arrived from theEast.The fact that the monkeys are newadditions and haven’t had time tothink of Ricketts as their home iswhat worries the authorities. Othermonkeys have broken loose fromRicketts, but these knew where theybelonged and came back to the lab¬oratory before sundown.The monkeys were to be used in ex¬periments on the reaction of the di¬gestive system to food poisoning.However, they were not to die.A late news flash has just informedus that the monkeys have been rumor¬ed to be in the top of an old eucalyp¬tus tree in the center of WashingftonPark. Five new laboratory assistantsarmed with ripe bananas and netshave just gone into action. We hopethe monkeys enjoy the ripe bananas.They’re probably the most excitingthings they’ll have to eat for manyfood-poisoned weeks to come. higma AiHonorsChicagoansFraternitiesSing June 13Dave Zimmerman has been elect¬ed President of Iron Mask for thecoming year. Other officers areBud Tozer, Treasurer, and CraigLeman, Secretary.ARM WITH CHARMPoise, loveliness, popularityore yoursi DON'T WAITI Learnto walk, think and expressyourself properly — leom thecorrect way to core for yourskin and hair.ruFF ^advdituiics in■ nEC MUr DISCOVERY"Bena AAoneok offers Ihb FREE lOOKLET and fulldetails of her helpfull course. Moil Coupon NOWI"Arm wiMi Charin’* TODAYIELENA MONEAKC7S NerMi Miehifaii Aveswe CNICAOOt ILL.Please send me your Free Booklet at once and felldetals of your helpful course. ‘NoemCity. .Address.State—\(li'iiC h) ihcLox’iUn)}1 o keep tliattriLiulsIiip,ask liirn tn take\i)ii to the ■ A7kanch Fourteen fraternities will partici¬pate in the thirty-second annual In¬terfraternity Sing Saturday, June 13.The Sing will be held in Hutchinsoncourt, as it has been every year sincethe tradition was started. Hopes forgood weather are high, as it has neveryet rained at any Interfratemity Singat the University. The performancewill start at 8:45.The fraternities taking part willsing in the following order:1. Kappa Alpha Psi2. Pi Lambda Phi3. Delta Upsilon4. Delta Kappa Epsilon5. Zeta Beta Tau6. Kappa Sigma7. Phi Kappa Psi8. Phi Sigma Delta9. Alpha Delta Phi10. Sigma Chi (Forty-fifth Anniver¬sary)11. Phi Gamma Delta (Fortieth An¬niversary)12. Psi Upsilon13. Phi Delta Theta (Forty-fifth An¬niversary)Two cups are awarded; the qualitycup for best singing, and the quantitycup which goes to the fraternity withthe largest number of members pres¬ent. Second oldest college tradition inthe country, exceeded in age only bythe Vassar Daisy Chain, the Singcame nearest to be rained out June10, 1939, when the rain stopped 15minutes before the Sing was schedul¬ed to start and began again as soonas the Sing was over.The University Aides and Marsh¬alls, 20 men and women students se¬lected on the basis of scholarship andleadership in extra-curricular activi¬ties, will be inducted following theSing. Cups and C Blankets will beawarded at this' time. After the sing¬ing of the Alma Mater, many peoplewill adjourn to the Reynolds Clubwhere there will be dancing.As usual, there will be a largealumni turn-out as the Sing is a high-spot of Alumni week which startsTuesday, June 9. RelieveChinaTomorrowA. C. Wang, Chancellor of the Chi¬nese Consulate General, will be thespeaker at a benefit for the UnitedChinese War Relief, tomorrow eve¬ning at 7:30 in Ida Noyes Hall. Hissubject will be “This Fateful Year inWorld History.”Pianists Use and Max Janowskiwill add music to the program. Theystudied together at the Berlin Acade¬my of Music and in 1934 the pair be¬gan teaching in Tokyo at the ImperialAcademy of Music. They have beenin this country three years. Theirprogram will include two piano aswell as solo piecesThere will also be an exhibitionpresented by artists Ernest Dreyfuss,Frank Durban, and Theodore Alesche,who have been exhibiting at the Chi¬cago Woman’s Aid for the past threemonths.Ernest Dreyfuss, a portrait artist,has had several paintings in the ArtInstitute. Frank Durban, who is fromBerlin, is a commercial artist. Theo¬dore Alesche does landscapes andportraits. He is a political refugeefrom Vienna, and spent some time ina French concentration camp.The event is sponsored by RindaCorman, a student at the University.There will be dancing and refresh¬ments. Admission is 55c.The Reverend Gould Wickev willaddress the students and tho facul¬ty in Rockefeller Chapel Sundayon the subject “The Fellowship ofPeace”. Mr. Wickey is the execu¬tive secretaiy of the LutheranBoard*of Education and lives inWashington, D. C.fUSrAURAlIT123 E. OAK ST./ OM' on (f(K')I) t(>oii-.1 rul oilr’s is t!iC- 1 iI Read Swedenborg's"DIVINE LOVEAND WISDOM"lOc in paper ^at University and otherbookstores The Price ofFREE WORLDVICTORYbyHENRY A. WALLACEwith tome comments byRAYMOND CLAPPERMAJOR G. F. ELIOT‘ DR. FRANCIS E. MC MAHONRAYMOND GRAM SWINGDOROTHY THOMPSONDo not miss this book75c at theU. of C. Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. Thirty-six University students andfaculty members have been elected toSigma Xi, national scientific honor¬ary fraternity, Everett Olsen, of theDepartment of Geology, Secretary ofthe Midway chapter, announced to¬day.Eighteen of the thirty-six honoredare from Chicago and suburbs. Thegroup includes members of depart¬ments in both biological-and physicalsciences as well as of the anthropolo¬gy department, in the Division of theSocial Sciences.Faculty ElectedThe faculty members elected to thesociety are Dr. Jules H. Massermanand Hugh T. Carmichael, assistantprofessors, and Dr. Joan Fleming,instructor, all of the Department ofPsychiatry. .The Chicagoans elected are as fol¬lows: Dr. Masserman, Dr. Fleming,Dr. Carmichael, Dr. Robert D. Moore,Robert J. Braidwood, Mrs. Iva O.Schmitt, Benjamin D. Paul, HarveyM. Patt, Judith E. Graham, ArthurLoowy.William P. Long, Paul L. Munson,George W. Beach, Henry Walbrunn,Joan Longini, Robert L. Platzman,and Robert Lad.Out-of-town MembersOut-of-town students and formerstudents honored are: Graham M.Chen, Honolulu, T. H., Robert A.West, Jr., Casper, Wyo., Leo R.Melcher, Joliet, Ill., Frank M. Schna¬bel, Dutton, Mont., Helen V. Karr,New York, N. Y., Barbara Kinyon,Owatonna, Minn., Hollie C. Darling¬ton, Huntington, W. Va., LawrenceM. Rohrbaugh, Shenandoah, la.,Frederick M. Owens, Jr., St. Paul,Minn., Paul V. Hollander, Brooklyn,N. Y., Carter D. Johnston, Lexington,Ky., John J. Schneider, Minneapolis,Minn., Robert S. Wheeler, Woodstock,Ill., Willard D. Pye, Winter Park,Fla., Walter M. Booker, Prairie View,Tex., Charles R. Ensor, Emory uni¬versity, Ga., William E. Grigsby,Maconib, Ill., Arthur W. Adamson,Lafayette, Calif., and Cornelius Groot,Emeryville, Calif.StrawberriesRampantPhi Sigma Delta Fraternity willpresent the fifteenth annual Straw¬berry Festival on Saturday, June 20,from 9:30 to 1.Norm Faulkner and his ColonialClub Orchestra will provide music foroutdoor dancing in the Phi Sigs’ andan adjoining yard. Strawberries andice cream will head the list of refresh¬ments.In the past profits from the Straw¬berry Festival have been used for Stu¬dent Refugee Aid. This year they willbe diverted to some war cause.Tickets, priced at $1.10 per person,may be obtained from any Phi Sig orat the fraternity house.Hutchins, Buchanan,Barron Round Table“Education For Freedom” will bethe subject of the University of Chica¬go Round Table discussion at 1:30next Sunday.Robert Maynard Hutchins, Presi¬dent of the University, StringfellowBarr, President of St. John’s College,Annapolis, Maryland, and Scott Bu¬chanan, Dean of St. John’s College,will be the speakers.The Round Table suggests as pre¬paratory reading: R. M. Hutchins,“Education For Freedom” Harpers,October, '41; J. L. Mursell, “A NewFocus on Schools,” Harpers, October,’41; Joseph J. Schwab, ‘“The Fight ForEducation” Atlantic Monthly, June,’42; R. G. Sproul, “Present Problemsof the Future” Vital Speech, March15, ’42. FRESHMAN NUMERALAWARDSSpring, 1942BASEBALLWalter BayardHarvey CardenDave ComstockJames CostakisTyki CostonJ. CrusinberryRobert GoldenClifford GurneyHarry JerlstromLouis NagyJerry Solomon TRACKJohn BallardHar. BeardsleyPaul BerwangerJerry BurkeBob FrazierHarold FriedmanJames HalversonLowell TozerB. Mayer-OakesAubrey MooreDick MenanIDick RiderMarvin ShapiroJames WengerTENNISStockwell EvertsTed de LoozeArmond LilienBARBARA ORTLUNDGIVE HIM BEAUTYJune 21st—a SACRED day—Smart Daddy's always make it pay!They know their timet to teldom comeThey ute them well, unlett they're dumb!The bett thing any man could getIt a red lip-print on hit . . . forehead?If you've a daddy, he'll be pleated,If he gett nothing more than tqueezed.Your kitt meant more, your hug it dear.You're ture to bring your daddy cheerIf lovely tkin and tcent are yourt.And you'll alwayt get your thare of furt.If natural beauty you do lack.It won't cott much to get the knack.Until the thirteenth day of June,Here'f your chance to grab the moon.Mary Dunhill't here againTo try and help you get your men.She offert you a travel kit.Real cheap . . . and it't a pretty bit.Just $3.50 ... (it has been five)Designed to make your beauty thrive.Six essential beauty aidsTo make us all appealing maids.If you're a beauty tried and true.There still are things you have to do.To keep your freshness clean and sweetA two-dollar powder and cream set isneat.And here's today's tremendous coupAn expert's here to tend to YOU!Mary Conlon, from New Yorkie,Will tell you how you can look snorkie.A buck twenty-five worth of Mary Dun-hill'sWill make your week-ends just like fun-bills.She'll give you free with every buy$1.25 of "Bewitching" to try.These should make you sweet and charm¬ingYour loveliness will be alarming!Coma to the Hub to look them overI promise you you'll be in clover.tHE-IHUbun,/ t HlC*■ iPage Four THE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY. JUNE 5. 1942By ERWIN F. BEYERDramatis PersmueBob Gess Hoo.Freshman Prack TicalSenior Theo. Ree.Graduate Ed. Ukated.Twenty-five Sophomores .Themselves.Scene of Action.A campus lawn in the middle west.In the background slap-happy gar¬goyles grin sardonically from theirperches top somber Gothic Buildings.Enter Bob.(He walks upon the grass with along smooth stride carrying a leatherportfolio. He places the leather port¬folio on the grass and with histhoughts on some deep problem heraises his arms above his head andstretches.)Enter Twenty-five Sophomores.(The Twenty-five Sophomores, readyfor mimicry, stand and gaze uponBob with awe and admiration whilstthey too stretch. Bob, his mind stillon the deep problem, experiences aquickening of the pulse because ofthe slight exertion caused by stretch¬ing. Unconsciously enjoying thestrange sensation of a more rapid cir¬culation, he begins to do some semi-vigorous, amateurish, pseudo-exercisemovements. There is a growing waveof sound as the Twenty-five Soph¬omores whisper in a doleful dyingsigh,) “Behold! he exercises” (Theirbeliefs blasted to nothingness, theyfall dead. The dull thuds of the twen¬ty-five bodies awaken Bob from hisdeep thought. The falling bodies makeBob realize the gravity of the situa¬tion. He stops abruptly and shakeshis head gravely in a sort of “I-must-be-slipping manner and slowly liesdown flat on his back allowing, butcarefully of course, a long sigh toissue forth.)Enter Freshman.(He radiates energy and pep. Hedoes a cartwheel as an outlet for hisexuberance. In a loud snappy tone hesays,) “What a day, what a day. Ahh,a new institution, a new life, a grandopportunity for new experiences. Well,I’ve finished my studying, speakingpurely hypothetically, so nov' for somegood strenuous activity. Relaxationwill be the easier after it.” (he doesa fast piroquette and just avoids step¬ping on Bob) “Oh, pardon me. Ididn’t see you.”Bob—NO; Well, I can see you.Freshman, and I can see that youhaven’t been properly oriented.Freshman—But I must be, becausemy Alumni advisor started the processof orientation when I was a juniorin high school. Say, what the devilare you doing there anyway?Bob. It is perfectly logical—I amlying down.Freshman. Yes? But why?Bob. Because I feel like exercising.When I feel like exercising I lie downuntil the feeling passes away.Freshmen. Say, you have somethingthere. That’s a hell of a lot easierthan exercising isn’t it?Bob. Of course it is. However, Ibelieve in exercise for other people.Freshman. Oh, you do? (Thought¬fully) You know, peopip tell me thatRENEWYOURMAROONSUBFOR THISSUMMER you are a great educator and that youstartled to educate when you werevery young. One story i as it thatwhen in the ciadle you began to teachyour teddy bear the scientific method.Such being the case, I feel that Ireally ought to endeavor to emulateyou. I’ll think the matter over. (Walksout mumbling to himself) Hmmm, ex¬ercise is fine for other people—notbad, not bad at all. Darn easy too.(Enter Senior carrying a book andlooking very preoccupied. He sees Boblying on the grass.)Senior. Hello, Bob.Bob. Hello there, Senior, how areyou?Senior. Quite well except that Ihave a problem.Bob. Let me hear your problem.Senior. Despite four years of noth¬ing except studying, billiards, and thecoffee shop I still feel like exercising.Oh well. (He lies down beside Bob)Say, Bob, I wonder how long it willtake for the feeling to pass away forall time.Bob. Ahhh. You are progressingwell^ Philosophy begins with a won¬derment, a question about something.Enter Graduate. (He has a verypuzzled look on his face and is car¬rying a bundle of notes. He sees Boband Senior and shakes his head grave¬ly)Bob. Hello, Graduate.Senior. Hi, Grad.Grad. (In a sharp tone) Hello.Bob. Graduate, you look perturbed.Why?Grad. Because I have just finishedsome research and it has made me doa lot of serious thinking about a smallbut important part of your philosophy.Frankly, I think that part is all wet.Bob. Well, a barbarian invasion,but go on.Grad. For one thing, as you nowknow, it isn’t just the house nextdoor that’s on fire—ours is on fire too.Although we didn’t want it so, itsburning nevertheless. Also, takingliberty with the analogy, it occurredto me that the ordinary paths of exitout of the burning structure will prob¬ably not be available to us. We mayhave to find a new exit. We may haveto carry baby Deni out of the windowand down the rain spout. And darn it.Bob, you can’t carry the baby downthe rain spout with intellectual in¬vestigation, although intellectual in¬vestigation admittedly must precedethe action. The practical carrying outof the feat of saving baby Dem isgoing to take some common ordinarymuscle.Bob. (With a wry face) MuscleWhat an ugly term. I can see thatyou are bound oy bonds of archaic in¬formation and obsolete techniques.Grad. Just a moment. Let us appealto a great Greek Philosopher’s wordjust as you appeal to various writingsin selling some of your arguments.This philosopher said that it was adisgrace for a man not to see thegreat beauty and strength of whichhis body is capable, and two othergreat philosophers conducted theirintellectual pursuit in gymnasia—theytoo had views favorable to physicaleducation.Bob. Three obscure and ignorantgentlemen no doubt!Grad. No doubt! The first gentlemanwas Socrates and the other two werePlato and Aristotle. In fact, Plato wasa fine athlete whose name meansBREAKFASTLUNCHEONDINNEROr AnytimeYou're always welcome at1004Restaurantl(X)4 E. 55th—ndar EllisQuality Food.. .Reasonable Prices broad shoulders. He said that it is notthe mind we are training, it is not thebody we are training; it is the manand we must not divide him intoparts. We should not fashion onewithout the other, but make themdraw together like two horses har¬nessed to a coach.Bob. (Grins as he mumbles to him¬self) Hmm, like two horses harnessedto a coach, that gives m> an idea.Let’s see. There are eight coaches onthe athletic staff so sixteen horsesought to take care of dragging thewhole athletic staff off the campus. Abit medieval but fitting.Grad. What’s that you say ?•Bob, (Startled for a moment) OH!nothing, except that I was just think¬ing that you must have read an im¬perfect translation.Grad. Sir, there are other greatmen and not all the translations areimperfect. Luther, for instance, saidthere were two most pleasing pas¬times—music and gymnastics. Thefirst of these could drive away careand melancholy and the second couldproduce elasticity of the body andhelp to preserve health.Bob. An old religious radical, butfairly clever.Grad. Well, how about Rabelais’Gargantua, and Rousseau’s Emile—both these men stressed the value ofvigorous exercise in their works. JohnMilton in his Tractate of Educationdivided the day into three parts andmade exercise an important one of thethree. John Locke in “Some ThoughtsConcerning Education” says that theaim of education is first, vigor ofbody, second, virtue in soul, third,knowledge or mental acquisitions.Bob. Have completely forgotten thatpart of their writings—mainly sheernonsense. Besides, they probably knewnothing about physical education.Grad, (to himself) Neither do someother people. (Aloud) I suppose thefact that Immanuel Kant and Pesta-lozzi favored exercise of a vigoroustype makes them producers of thenonsensical too.Bob. Well, I cannot say I’msure about that, but of one thing Iam sure. Exercise is a frightful busi¬ness. It causes perspiration. I playedtennis way way way back ard I know.It is a whimsical eccentricity at best.Now I concede that here my profes-j sional bias may be misleading meagain, but I believe that educationand intellectual investigation are themost important things in the world.Intellectual investigation gives us thepower to attain the ends we set be¬fore us.Grad. So you still think it will getthe baby down the rain spout?Bob. In a sense, yes.Grad. Well, Bob, I agree with you,but don’t you think it is more ad¬mirable by far if a man can be ca¬pable both intellectually and physical¬ly? You have said in the past thattruth is of two kinds—theoretical andpractical. Theoretical truth tells uswhat is the case: practical truth tellsus what should be done. The test oftheoretical truth is conformity toreality. Besides these things you saidthat a statement about the nature ofman is true if it describes man as heactually is. Now I say that a man isnot only a rational being cloisteredhere in the relative safety of thesesomber grey walls as are our profes¬sors and students, but rather a manwho may wander to the reaches of thisearth, a being who is set upon by theless rational of his fellow men in warand in peace. He is also a man whomay want to respond to life’s manyemergencies such as lifting a personout of the wreckage of the train, bus,or automobile in order to save a life,or give succor to the drowning. He isa man whose life may be the richerfor having tried to jump a creek in the forest and missed landing on hisback in the muddy water. I can pic¬ture you there—what a wonderful ex¬perience.Bob. A wonderful experience forwhom? Don’t answer that question.Grad. All right then. Let’s comeclose to home. In the final field testgiven by the P*re-induction MilitaryTraining Course of the Institute ofMilitary Studies, the men were sofatigued and in such poor conditionthat they lay red faced and puffingunder fences they should have beenclimbing, to say nothing of those whohung by their drawers on the variousand sundry forms of vegetation. Thesemen couldn’t maneuver fast enoughto put the results of intellectual in¬vestigation to the best possible use.The military objectives were notreached and it would have taken morethan an idea to loosen their pantsfrom the bushes. The U.S. Naval andArmy authorities have sent out a pleato the colleges and universities to aug¬ment their physical education pro¬gram. Requirements have been madeby Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Michi¬gan, and many others in response tothis plea.Bob. Please don’t mention obscurevocational schools.Grad. To go on, the Naval and Armyauthorities feel that it is a shame thatthe highly educated man is manytimes raped of his officership becauseof poor physical condition. The Uni¬versity has changed from pure re¬search to practical research, why notbe practical about this?Bob. You are beginning to convinceme. However, I don’t care for yourintimation in regard to our not turn¬ing out as an end-product a well-rounded man.Grad. I apologize. I have not beenclear. The program is conducive towell-roundedness in the .end. It ismainly caused by over-consumption ofcalories and lack of sufficient activity.Bob. I see what you mean, but ifI can understand and see the necessityfor vigorous exercise in peace and inw’ar I can also see that compulsoryphysical education is unnecessary. Thestudent can very well be sold on theidea by appeal to the force of intelli¬gent reasoning.Grad. No, it won’t work and the last20 years experience at this institutionhas proven it. There is a far morepowerful force at work than rationalthinking.Bob. And what could that be?Grad. The force has several com¬ponents. These components are cof-feeshepitis, indifference and down¬right sheer laziness. Come now, whydon’t you agree with me and turnover a new leaf.Bob. Sounds strenuous, but I’ll goalong with you on the idea. By theway, would you mind carrying myportfolio? Laves—(Continued from page one)groups, labor groups; by compilinglists of available lecturers on SouthAmerica; by preparing radio scripts;by supplying educational films.In a larger sense, the group aims atstimulating thinking and questioningas to what sort of regional organiza¬tion is desirable in this hemisphere af¬ter the war.Unable to state whether the grouphas yet produced far-reaching effectsin this country. Laves stated that feel¬ing for the U.S. in Hispanic Americais unquestionably improved.DA-•(Continued from page one)plans for the 1942-43 Dramatic As¬sociation are due to the success of“Those That Are Fools”. Before thisshow was given in April, it was ru¬mored that DA would not functionnext year.Officers for next year besides BobMiller are Kenny Axelson, vice-pres¬ident; Bob MacDuffee, productionmanager; Shirlee Smith, businessmanager; Maynard Wishner, pub¬licity manager; Sue Bohnen, chairmanof acting; Marilyn Robb, stage man¬ager; and Janet Peacock, treasurer.iTCHCD PIN ^KNaiSCTSfMM$22?a>$I9^pcNsnoMsmU of C Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSErO» COUIGE STUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough, mlttuivo, ttonographic count—ttartxng January 1, April 1, July 1, Oclobot J.IntomUng BoohUt unt hot, without obligation— writo or phono. No oolieitort omployod.moserbusiness collegeRAUl MOSES, J.D, RH.B.XofuJar Courtot foo Btginnort, oPon to HighSchool Graduatot only. tUirt tint Mondayof tack m^th. Advanotd Courut $iartony Monday ^My and Eooning. Ec^ngCouroot open to mon.1141. Michlson Aro^tOilcngn, Mmmdotph 4S47iL^vwwvww^rt/wwwwwrtaVACATIONIN THESAND DUNESFurnishedModem HomesTREMONT, INDIANA2 4 3 bedrooms, closots, porchos,firopUcet, good transportation.Across Dunes State Park, East ofHighway 49. Inquire Berkely, phoneChesterdon 8284.