Thes Chicago MaroonVol. 3, No 149 Friday, March 3,1944 Price Five CentsCecil Smith Announcest^^ j'* Languagestudents MoveFrom ArmoryComplete Revisions InDepartment Of MusicTeaching of instrumental and vocalmusic on a wide scale as prerequis¬ites to the degree of Master of Artsin the Department of Music and theCECIL SMITH. . on the highest plane . .elimination of electives in the academ¬ic course of study, are two new fea¬tures of the Department of Music’snvised academic program as an¬nounced by Cecil Smith last Tuesday.Designed to produce practical mus¬icians, the academic course in musicwill transform the Master of Arts de¬gree into a symbol of a basic musicaleducation considered necessary to allprofessional musicians whether theyultimately become performers, writ¬ers, teachers or composers.All students will be taught to bepractical musicians. That is, theymust either have or gain the ability1 JO Publicity BoardGuests Invited To'Shamrock Shambles'One hundred and ten guests of theStudent Publicity Board will attendtomorrow evening’s “Shamrock Sham¬bles’’, Social Committee’s third C-Dance of the winter quarter. Theguests are recruits from high schoolsin and around Chicago. They and theirdates will be entertained before thedance at 8:30 in Ida Noyes Libraryby the Student Publicity Board.The C-Dance will be held in Idab^oyes Gymnasium under the manage¬ment of Gloria Robinson. Given inhonor of Saint Patrick’s day, it willbe decorated in Cabaret style. Musicwill be provided by Wally Herme’sorchestra, together with a floor showplanned by the Social Committee. Stu¬dent Publicity Board guests will beadmitted with complimentary tickets. to make music in some form. Theacademic course will parallel the ex¬tra curricular activities of the De¬partment of Music, particularly theventure into the field of concert per¬formance.Said Executive Cecil Smith: “TheDepartment of Music recognizes thenecessity for including training inmusical practice as well as in musicaltheory, history and criticism. Everybrand of music—academic and prac¬tical, curricular and extra-curricular—must be dealt with on the highestplane of excellence. In its programof practical music for students, thebest possible training must be pro¬vided and the broadest possible rangeof opportunities for participation byplayers and singers of all degrees ofcompetence.”As one of the means to the endthat a student have “a healthy mutualrelationship between the experienceof music through scholastic disci¬pline,” the system of preparatory,campus, and chamber orchestras wasI inaugurated last quarter.Gregor PiatigorskyPlays Tonight ForMusic ScholarshipsGregor Piatigorsky, eminent Rus¬sian-born cellist, will play a recitalin Mandel tonight for the benefit ofthe Gregor Piatigorsky ScholarshipFund to aid promising young Amer¬ican composers, under the directionof the Composers’ Seminar of the De¬partment of Music. The Composers’Seminar, under the direction of RemiGassmann, will begin activities in theautumn quarter of the next academicyear. The scholarship fund will pro¬vide tuition assistance for giftedyoung composers enrolled in the Com¬posers’ Seminar. Advanced instructionwill be provided for students whosenative talent and theoretical prepar¬ation demonstrate promise in the artof musical composition.The works to be performed rangefrom Mozart to Martinu, in point oftime. The recital will open with theMozart Sonatina in C Major; theBeethoven Sonata in A Major, Op. 69;Fantasie-Stucke by Shumann; PezzoCapricioso by Tschaikowsky, Op. 62;three movements, Regrets, March, andWaltz, from “Music For Children” byProkofieff; Adagio and Rondo byWeber; a transcription of Chopin^sNocturne in C Sharp Minor; and Var¬iations on a Rossini Theme by therising Czech composer, Martinu. InternationalHouse BecomesNew Army HomeLast Wednesday, March 1, severalgroups of A.S.T.P. language and areastudents under the command of Cap¬tain Walsh and Captain Brewer, weretransferred from their barracks in theArmory at 62nd and Cottage Groveto the University International House.Formerly occupied by the meteorolo¬gy units stationed on campus, thej house was partially vacated by the! graduation of meteorology studentsI last Monday.The new occupants will have littleI change in schedule. Following theI same plan that formerly was used ati the Armory, their life will center en-1tirely around the International House.Besides using it as a barracks andmess hall, they will receive all theirinstruction there.I International House was built in; 1932 as a “place where neighbor-i hoods of the world might share in the' experiment of living together.” It wasj the fourth house of its kind to be; donated by John D. Rockefeller, Jr.Students from countries all over theworld gathered there to make theircontributions to the intellectual and^ social life for almost ten years until,I in the fall of 1943, it was taken overby the Army. ^ \Hutchins Extends NewFaculty Plan: ChangeAcademic Rank StatusSuggestions under consideration onthe question of modifying the systemof academic rank at the Universitywere sent to members of the facultyin a memorandum from PresidentHutchins this week. It should be un¬derstood that no changes in the sys¬tem of rank will have any effect upontenure or salary.For members of the faculty ap¬pointed since July 11, 1941 the tenurearrangements are as follows: in¬structors, not more than four annualappointments; assistant professors,not more than two three-year ap¬pointments; associate and full pro¬fessors, indefinite tenure. These ar¬rangements would not be affected byany change in the system of academictitles.The first suggestion under consid¬eration now is that academic titles beeliminated. Academic personnel wouldbe listed as “Member of the Facultyof the University of Chicago” or“Member of the Department of En¬gineering of the University of Chica¬go.”Those in favor of this proposalstate that distinctions in titles do notnow reflect any distinctions in func¬tion. In view of differing conditionsfound in different departmentsand fields they may not reflect dis¬tinctions in academic attainments. They may not even reflect differencesin age; for in some departments it isnecessary to make more rapid pro¬motions than in others. At the Uni¬versity of Chicago differences in titlesdo not reflect corresponding differ¬ences in salaries.In view of the different conditionsin different fields it is impossible toestablish a uniform standard for agiven title throughout the University.Academic titles cause jealousy anddiscontent in the faculty and hinderthe development of an effective aca¬demic community. They present anextremely difficult administrativeproblem. As indicated above, no stan¬dard applicable to the whole univer¬sity can be established. Men who arenot promoted sometimes suffer undera sense of grievance which damagestheir work. The administration mustchoose between permitting this senseof grievance to persist and loweringthe standard to which it is trying toadhere.Either of the titles mentioned aboveshould be sufficient distinction for anyacademic person. No serious questionneed be raised about the UniversitySenate, since if it is desired to main¬tain it on approximately the presentbasis membership can be limited tothose on indefinite tenure. Salary and(See “Faculty Contract,” page 7)Robert M. HutchinsAccepts PermanentChairmanship Commission Of Inquiry ForStatus Of Free Press StudyRobert M. Hutchins has acceptedthe permanent chairmanship of aCommission of Inquiry to conduct atwo year study into the status of thefreedom of the press in the UnitedStates. Although the University willadminister the funds, the Commissionwill be a body independent of the Uni¬versity.In announcing the formation of theCommission President Hutchins stat¬ed, “The function of the Commissionis to begin an inclusive inquiry intothe nature, function, duties and re¬sponsibilities of the press in America—using the word press in its broadestsense to include not only everythingthat is printed but also the radio, thenewsreel, the documentaiy film. More¬over, the Commission will consider thepress in their wholeness—news, edi¬torial expression, columnists, depart¬ments, features, advertising, etc.—and not news content only.”“The Commission will not be amerely deliberative body,” Mr. Hut¬ chins explained. “We hope the im¬portance of its task will be so appar¬ent that newspaper publishers andeditors will be glad to appear beforeit to give testimony on their exper¬iences in operating a free press. Andwe shall hope to hear not only fromivory tower editors, but also from re¬porters, desk men, research associ-I ates, advertising and circulation di-I rectors—and readers.I “The Commission plans to examineI areas and circumstances under whichI the press in the United States isj succeeding or failing; to discoverwhere free expression is or is notlimited, whether by governmentalcensorship, pressures of readers oradvertisers, the unwisdom of its ownproprietors or the timidity of its man¬agers.”President Hutchins estimated thatthe Commissions’s task in studying,reading, examining, questioning andreporting would consume a period of perhaps two years and that the re¬sult of the Commission’s labors wouldbe a definitive report on the statusof press freedom.“The inquiries of the Commissionare made possible by a grant of fundsfrom Time Inc., publishers of Time,Life, and Fortune,” Mr. Hutchins stat¬ed, emphasizing that Time Inc. wouldhave no connection with the Commis¬sion, which will contain no membersof the working press.Members of the Commission include:John M. Clark, Professor of Econom¬ics at Columbia. University; JohnDickinson, general counsel of thePennsylvania Railroad; Harold D.Lasswell, Library of Congress; Arch¬ibald MacLeish, librarian of Congress;Reinhold Niebuhr, Professor of theUnion Theological Seminary; RobertRedfield, Dean of the Division of So¬cial Sciences at the University of Chi¬cago.Poge TwoSchnabel ConcludesMozart Festival By ^His Superb PlayingSchnabeVs presence with the Chi¬cago Symphony for a second week leftthis reviewer looking for more adjec¬tives to heap upon another phenomen¬al pei^ormance. Anything one mightsay about Schnabel fails to conveythe full force and grandeur of hisperformance on Ihnrsday—week ofthe Mozart Concerto No. 20, D Minor,K. 466. In a vehicle which Mozartdesigned to display his own virtuos¬ity, S^nabe! displayed the same mas¬terful grasp of the work coupled withease of performance which are fastmaking him the legend of this gen¬eration. In the Romanza he producedsuch a clearly enunciated statementof the theme in the bass as to rival<h:e singing power of the 'cello. Whenthe mncerto was over, another aud¬ience, swept away by Schhabel, wasloath to let him go.The symphony. No. 41, (“Jupiter”),K. 651, was in the first three move¬ments the essence of Mozart. Thelast movement, which should havepossessed an airy grace, seemedearth-bound and weary: the beat wasobvious, all too obvious, and the gracepresent in George Szell's performanceat Ravinia this summer was all toosorely. lacking.Also heard on the program were theoverture to the opera “The Clemencyof Titus,”‘K. 621, and the Serenadefor Two Oboes, Two Clarinets, TwoHorns, and Two Bassoons, C Minor,K. 388. The Serenade was rathercharming music and worth hearing,once; but one of the later serenadesmight have been performed withgreater attention from the audience.(Aside to Felix Borowski: Accord¬ing to the last edition of Kochel, Mo¬zart wrote twenty-eight piano concer-toes, not twenty-three as you said inpage 13 of the program notes, all ofwhich were published by Breitkopfand Hartel in 1879-82.) . . . W.W.TERESA DOLANDANCING SCHOOL1208 E. 63rd St. (Near Woodlawn Av.)j Life Member of the ChicagoAssociation of Dancing Mastersj 50c—BE0IHNERS CLASSES-^OcI Sun., Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs.,and Sat. Evenings at 8:30Private lessons $1.50—12 N-l I P.M. dailyLady or Gentleman InstructorsTelephone Hyde Park 3080U.T.1131-1133 E. 55th St.Complete Selection' of Beers andOther BeveragesMIDway 0524Blatz Beer THE CHICAGO MAROONMemorialthe gift of LaVeme No^es in memory ofhis wife, Ida E.'Noyes . .Fronting the Midway Plaisance be- [ trude Dunn Hicks. To the right, asyou enter, is a refectory which is nowbeing used by the Navy, and to theleft is a lounge which contains all thelatest magazines and newspapers. Inback of the lounge is the library witha dedicatory inscription and the Uni¬versity arms over the mantle. Theserooms and those to the left containmany excellent examples of periodfurniture and oriental rugs. Behindthe main hall is a large gymnasium„ , , and to the left is a swimming pool.More dj>me3tac m feehng than rooms and the bowling alleystween Woodlawn and Kimbark Ave¬nues stands Ida Noyes Hall, the giftof La Verne Noyes in memory of hiswife, Ida E. S. Noyes. During her life¬time she was praised for her spirit ofdemocracy and for her genuine sym¬pathy toward the misunderstood andunfortunate. As a memorial to sucha woman, Ida Noyes Hall is dedicatedto the service of the women of theUniversity of Chicago,of the Gothic styled buildings, IdaNoyes gives the effect of a largeTudor house. The architects were are beneath the main floor.On the main landing of the stairwayShepley Rutan and Collige. The build-1 are pictures of Mr. and Mrs. Noyeshas a frontage of 240 feet and spacehas been left on either side for ad¬ditions when and if they are needed.Built in 1914-16, it was dedicated inJune of 1916.On the first floor of the building isa large hall in the center of whichstands a large table given by Ger- painted by Louis Betts. On the secondfloor is a memorial room and variousother rooms which are used for clubmeetings and other social gatherings.The pool tables which are now insome of these rooms belong to theold Reynolds club, which has beentaken over by the army.O.D.P. Follows "Dear BrutusWith Coward's "Young IdeaOn the weekend of March 8, 9, 10,and 11, the Office of Dramatic Pro¬ductions will present Noel Coward'ssophisticated comedy. The YoungIdea. The play will be presented inthe intimate Theatre style newly-in¬itiated into campus dramatics. Mad¬eleine Weiner, who has had parts inprevious ODP productions, will di¬rect the presentation.The first Intimate Theatre play.Good Morning, took place severalweeks ago in Swift Commons. Itshowed the campus that a lack ofactivities. The Young Idea will bepresented in the East Lounge of IdaNoyes Hall and will be done in thesame style as the previous perfor¬mance . . ;with the audience seated on all sides of the stage and the ac¬tion in the middle.The Young Idea is the story of t^oprecocious and worldly-wise teen¬agers who are sent by their motherfrom their sunny villa in Italy to visittheir monied and remarried father inEngland. They dislike the philander¬ing and blase stepmother immediate¬ly, and contrive a plan to split thenewlyweds and whisk their fatherback to Italy with them. The plan issuccessful, and they march triumph¬antly back to their Mediterraneanstage facilities need not prevent a paradise with bewildered papa, onlywell-balanced schedule of dramatic to find that their mother has a newsuitor. The method in which the kidstalk theif way out of this situationmakes for a riotous, diinax that isvery, very typically Noel Coward. FrtAernitms HedgeTwenty-six MembersOf Mid-Year ClassFraternity rushing was terminatedon Friday, February 26, in Ida Noyei.when 26 men signed up at the boardof the Inter-fraternity council be¬tween. the hours of nine and twelve.Rushing this year was characterizedby most of the fraternities carryingon without the use of their bouses.Following is a list of the new pledges:Alpha Delta Phi: George Suther¬land; Beta Theta Pi: Joseph J.Weissman; Phi Gamma Delta: BobLamport, Bob Mitchell, Alvin Salmon,Dan Senhauser, George Schroeder,and Bob Tomquist.Phi Sigma Delta: A1 Frumkin, StanPreiser Joe Solovy, and Melvin Spat;Pi Lambda Phi: Wallace Feurzeig andRichard Shapiro.Psi Upsilon: Le Moine Stitt; SigmaChi: Pat Dillon, Jerry Peel, Tom Peel,George Rieg, Norton Seeber and KenWilson; Zeta Beta Tau: Leon Gor¬don, Leslie Gross, Marvin Oberfelder,Alan Portis and James Schoke.Fifty Former StudentsKilled In Action DuringSecond World ConflictA total of 60 former University ofChicago students have lost their livesin World War II, as compared with67 killed in the first world conflict,the University Alumni Associationrevealed recently.Charlton T. Beck, alumni secretary,announced that there is a possibilitythat the first war figure has alreadybeen equaled. News of the casualtiesare compiled when the Private Ma¬roon, the Alumni group's specialnewspaper sent to 6,000 former stu¬dents in the armed forces, fails toreach the servicemen and women towhom it has been sent. An immediateinvestigation is then held to checkfacts.Airplane accidents have been thecause of most of the wartime casual¬ties among University students. A-among those reported killed in actionwas Third Officer Eleanor CampbellNate, WAC recruiting oflicer, whowas killed with her husband MajorJoseph Nate, in an airplane crashin December, 1942. She was gradu¬ated from the University in 1927.Lieutenant Edward R. Valorz, classof '39, collegiate football and wrest¬ling star, and Lieutenant Robert E.Cassels, class of '39, captain of thebaseball and track teams at the Uni¬versity, are two well-know formerathletes who have been reported lostin action. UseFasdst MethodsThe Nationalists of Argentina areusing fascia methods to further theirnationalistic ambitions. This fact wasagreed upon by the University RoundTable speakers Sunday, February 27.Allen Haden, Latin-American cor¬respondent for the Chicago DailyNewt, J. Martin Klotche, visiting pro-fessor of History at the Universityof Wisconsin, and Jerome Kerwinprofessor of political science at theUniversity of Chicago were the par-ticipants in the discussion of “TheProblem of Argentina.”“The evidence of interference withcivil rights, the abolition of elections,the check on the press, anti-Semiti-cism ... all definitely show that thedictators of Argentina,” Klotche de¬clared, “are following the techniquesof fascism. But it must be rememberedthat this fascism is native to Argen¬tina . . . Therefore the defeat of theAxis will not necesasrily end theFascist menace in Argentina, nor inthe rest of Latin America ...”Professor Kerw’in noted that therehas been a great deal of discussion ofthe role of the Church in Argentina,but that in discussing the influenceof the Church, it is necessary to dis¬tinguish the Church and the church¬men, “Lots of highly placed membersof the hierarchy are Fascist-minded. . . they will follow a governmentwhich guarantees certain things inwhich the Church is particularly in¬terested . . . Generally the parishpriests who have direct contact withthe people are sympathetic to thelower classes.”Correspondent Haden emphasizedthe fact that one of the fundamentaldrives in Argentine nationalism is torid the country of foreign-capitalholdings and seize foreign-held fac¬tories and resources. “This is not asinister movement in itself,” he said,“but it is the unlawful means bywhich it is being accomplished thatare dangerous.” He continued: “Thetime has come to organize a ‘demo¬cratic Internationale' in Washington.Our policy must be more progressive.In recognizing the governments ofLatin America, the U.S. governmenthas to make sure that the new gov¬ernment is guaranteeing civil right.s,that it is popularly supported, andthat it will protect the peace.”The Office of Dramatic ProductionspresentsNOEL COWARD'STHE YOUNG IDEAIda Noyes East Lounge8:30 p.m.Wednesday - Saturday, March 8-11Admission 35c (tax incliided) !'' Tickets available dt Ihformdtiori Desk f f1''Dear Brutus'' AudieiKe GivesPraise To O.D.P. Presentation. ^ ■■■ 'VWhen a group of inexperienced ac¬tors announce that they are going toproduce a vehicle as difficult as DearBmtns, the majority of the audiencearrives all set to be sneering and su¬percilious. Such was the case last Fri¬day night in Mandel Hall when ODPgave their presentation of the Barrieplay. (A character near me cameequipped with a flat board,ja tiny deckof cards and obvious intentions.)After a mediocre first act the cynicsstill didn't know quite what to think.But after the curtain fell on the sec¬ond, looks ,of surprise and pleasureappeared on the faces of the mostcallous, and even my blase neighborhad forgotten his solitaire. DearBrut lift was a good play.Several of the actors in the produc¬tion needed polish, but they did acapable job of preserving the contin¬uity of action in a play where it couldeasily have been lost. The feeling ofsuspense in the first act, the illusionin the second, and the climax of thethird w’ere all kept intact. Almost atthe sacrifice of individual perform¬ances, the play was kept a smoothly-running and well-formed unit.Mrs. Bourrie Davis' performance asAlice Dearth practically reached per¬fection. Her great amount of stagel)resence and subtlety of movementcarried her far above her fellow ac¬tors. Her cringing, miserable beggarin the second act was a professionaljob, although it was rather hard todistinguish just what kind of personshe was portraying in the first. A tri¬lie more shrewdishness in her attitude would have remedied this failing.' ‘ Henry Ruby’s Dearth was excellent.His resonant voice and natural ex¬pression made up for some of his moreforced actions. The biggest flaw ’uRuby's performance was that it waschoppy, subject to fits and starts;it needed sustaining.The “Purdie trio", Jean Cooke asJoanna, Isabelle Kohn as Mabel, andPhil Oxman as Purdie, was a wonder-full example of good showmanship.They worked as a unit always, feed¬ing one another lines and each build¬ing up the other. Charles McKennawas Matey. Resplendent in tails witha becoming streak of grey in his hair,he looked more like Lady Chatterly’slover in the first act than a servant,but his “buttling" manner and fear atthe discovery that he was a pettythief gave him away.Florence Baumruk looked like thedream daughter she portrayed asMargaret and was sweet and unaffect¬ed, though not too world-shaking. Hervoice was a trifle too heavy for achild’s, but she bounded around thestage expertly, considering the spaceavailable. 'Due credit should go to Idell Lowen-stein and a competent productioncrew for creating the effective sets,and to Malkah Tolpin who did thepreliminary sketches. Jere Mickel dida difficult job well by keeping an in¬volved play like Dear Brutus goingwithout a hitch from curtain to cur¬tain.Not orchids, but a big bunch ofLob’s roses to ODP for presenting afine performance . . . B.R.Jascha Heifetz Recital ClimaxIn Chicago's Musical SeasonThe Heifetz recital last Sundaywas a peak in this year's music. Peo¬ple w'ere turned away from the CivicOpera House; yet the rising curtainrevealed a stage filled! with service¬men, guests of the artist.Heifetz, cool and reserved, walkedonto a painstakingly lit platform builtin the orchestra pit. After a beautifulKmdition of the National Anthem, heopened with three Scarlatti Sonatas,transcribed by him from clavier forviolin, retaining much of the primi¬tive, delicate, eighteenth centurycharm of the originals, yet givingthem a technically brilliant qualitythat thoroughly satisfied the demandsof a violin.In Beethoven's A Major Sonata forviolin and piano, one felt particularlythat if Heifetz was playing for any¬one at all, it was for the musicians inthe audience, letting the crowd ofpeople looking, perhaps, for some-tliing more spectacular, catch what itomy. Still, his wonderful, reserved,subtle, musicianly interpretation madeparts of the work—especially a lightfast staccato accompaniment to a pi¬ano theme in the first movement—some of the most,delightful momentsof the afternoon. ,,The climax of the already breathtaking concert was part i of the BachSonata in C major for violin alone.The tone of Heifetz’s violin was strong and rich and d,eep; his ex¬pectedly flawless technique was over¬whelming, especially where he carriedthrough several themes in the Fuguewith perfect smoothness, expression,and phrasing in each. Yet, one feltthat he had a reserve of power farbeyond the requirements of the mostdifficult piece, that he could have ef¬fortlessly repeated the feat.Bruch’s Concerto No. 2 in D minor,which, if it can be done as it was Sun¬day, should certainly be played moreoften, brought out the lovely, flowing,honey-like tones of Heifetz’s Stradi-varius, and again, the excellent mu¬sicianship of his accompanist.Two Caprices by Paganini-Kreisler,in which almost every note of Pagan¬ini could be distinguished from' thoseof Kreisler, added a lilting note tothe concert. An ari’angement of Ros¬sini’s “Figaro" song from The Barberof Seville, with a bow pantomine byMr. Kreisler, showing that despitethe expressionless,' aloofness of hisface, there was some humor in theman, closed the program. *ito H MHeifetz generously gave, five en¬cores, and made a particularly nice(and appreciated) gesture in ,thethird, D^ussy’s Bon Soir, where heturned around and played facing theservicemen. . . I. L. ’ THE CHICAGO MAROON Page Three ^Artist Must Tear Down BarriersBetween People:' Rockwell KentLast’ night in Mandel Hall, Rock¬well Kent, a very elusive artist andauthor, lectured on Art and the Peo¬ple. By elusive we mean that Mr. Kentprobably spent the time scheduled fora MAROON interview by either stew¬ing in a late train',^ fortifying himselfagainst his 8:30 appearance by hittingthe cups in some Loop cocktail lounge,or merely avoiding that plague of thefamous, the reporter.Mr. Kent is a popular illustrator ofvarious recently released volumes ofthe classics. 'In the past few years hehas made illustrations for a completecollection of Shakespeare’s works, acopy of HermanMelville’s MobyDick, an edition ofChaucer’s Canter-b,u r y Tales,Goethe’s Faust,and a volume ofWhitman’s LeaveOf Grass. His abil¬ities both in andout of the field ofart are many andvaried; he is ac¬complished as anarchitect, painter, wood-engraver,lithographer, illustrator, carpenter,and fisherman. (We realize that thelast talent seems a bit out of place,Rockwell KentCarillon IllustratesLiterary Abilities OfAll College StudentsCarillon, the College literary maga¬zine, has at last put out its winterquarter issue. Under the editorship ofJune Myers the magazine is an inter¬esting one, containing, inevitably,some very bad writing, but also somethat is astonishingly good. At presentit is certainly not representative ofthe College, but this Carillon shouldbe an impetus to potential contribu¬tors.Of the short stories, only three showthat deftness of expression and gen¬eral technique that indicates theprofessional writer. Malcah Topin inGreen Tree Buds, a study of adoles¬cent psychology, handles narrativeand description in a ren^arkablythoughtful style. Muddy Water, byJudy Downs, is an honest attempt atthe cross-section type of story; al¬though the continuity is rough, thechoice of words and general effect arepowerful. David Smothers has pro¬duced The White Man in his best Bo¬gart manner. It is a swift-paced,smoothly told, atmospheric tale.The Full Life, by Thelma Peterson,is a good impression of wartime bit¬terness. Thomas Rogers’ That WayMadness Lies and June Bonner’s ForDavid seem immature: both are at¬tempts at that high-school bane, thesurprise ending. As far as I’m con¬cerned, this genre should have endedwith 0. Henry.If you like book reviews, DeaneFons and Connie Allenberg have con¬tributed one apiece; both are a littledull. Rolf Leef is represented by anessay on the Milhaud Composer’s Con-t(See “Carillon,” page six) but still it was listed in Who’s Whoand must be something more than anidle'pastime.')’ ^According to Mr. Kent, there existsa barrier between the artist and thepeople that must be, and will be,^broken down before art takes its trueplace" in the'modern world/He urges''the artist to abandon art as a meansof‘expression for himself'alone, andto turn toward the people 'and inter¬pret subjects in his works that theycan understand and enjoy and benefitfrom. He stresses that art with a pop¬ular | appeal; need ‘ not resemble^ thework of Howard Chandler Christie, orof those , extreme modernists whopaint, strictly according to what hap¬pens to be the fashion at the moment.It is Mr. Kent’s opinion that the artistshould “go to meet the people, andmeeting them, establish contact withthem’^ ,It is 'a common fault with the artisttoday that he lives aloof from the peo¬ple, working in solitude. Of this, Mr.Kent says', “I do know that if theartist wants "to be a factor in thechanges that are going on today he i Ihas got to abandon his isolation andmove to where the changes are takingplace.”< . I i t-'. > ^ , 1 r. ■Concerning the form that art willtake after the artist has establishedcontact with the common man, thelecturer believes that it will be builton realism, or representation, and willresemble the work of the great mas¬ters of the renaissance in that, it willtell a story. “Artists, like the,writersof novels, will depend for interest ontheir stories; and the stories will haveto be different ones from those thatthe surrealists are telling.” >>Until now, the relationship betweenart and the people have been as in¬commensurate as oilj on water, Mr.Kent believes that art should be in-tegrated into the people, known frominfanthood, not merely a superficialand acquired' polish.' As soon as theartist begins to really know the peo¬ple, and the people become acquaintedwith art, “the oil which has been artwill become the oil slick left for amoment on the ocean 'to mark thesinking ship of an old order.”Daily , News Uncovers FacultyAnti-Hutchins .Movement HereIPresident Robert Maynard' Hutch¬ins’ Faculty Plan yesterday) afternoonreached the rank of front page com¬ment in the Chicago Daily News. Inthe first of a series of four articles,chief News editorial writer Harry M.Beardsley examined Hutchins’' plan,surveyed the basic ideas behind them,and reported what seemed to him thegeneral Faculty consensus, of opinion.Under the heading “U. of C. Facultyin uproar over Hutchins’ ideas" hewrote: “some, recalling Huey Long’sseizure of Louisiana State University,profess to see a danger of the Univer¬sity of Chicago coming under absolutecontrol 'of a man whom they regardas no less ambitious than Huey andfar abler and more subtle. This mayseem fantastic, but I am only report¬ing what some Faculty men at Chi¬cago are saying to each other."Beardsley, speaking to a CHICAGOMAROON reporter yesterday, said “Iam trying to cover both sides of thestory. The big issue is naturally Hutchins’ plan, but I do not intend tostop there ... I will examine Hutch¬ins’ general policy, the manner inwhich he, to many eyes, imposes hisown philosophy on the Faculty.”Material for Beardsley’s series wasgathered from one week of researchspent among the Univeristy of Chi¬cago Faculty. “There is a great va¬riety of opinion on the subject,” hesaid, “but I would say that sentimentis strongly against Hutchins’ plan. Ifyou talk to the Administrative officersthe impression may be'given that theplan is well received, but when I wentout into the rank and file of the Fac¬ulty I discovered that the situation isvery mu^h to the contrary.”The second of Beardsely’s series ap-»pears in today’s issue of the News*His article is not the only one which,in past weeks, have referred toHutchins’ lastest actions: both Timemagazine and the Chicago Tribunehave given them extended coverage.Motto Contest RulesMottoes submitted may be an original or a selectcKl quotation which is notcopyrijrhted or generally used by any other person or organization. Ifa quotation is submitted the source of the quotation should be given.There is no limit to the number of entries an individual may submit. Allentries, statements, and ideas therein expressed, become the propertyof THE CHICAGO MAROON, No entries will be returned.Each entry must be accompanied by a brief statement of not more thanfifty (50) words giving the reason or reasons why the contestant believesthe motto submitted is appropriate, which statement will be consideredin 'making the award.Students, faculty, alumni, and the general public alike are eligible tocompete for the' prize awards.The judges' decision will be final. ■, iThis contest is being conducted by THE CHICAGO MAROON and notby The University of Chicago, and the University is in no wise obllgat^to adopt any motto selected by the judges but may acc^t or reject inwhole or in part any motto submitted.Print your name and address on all entries and mail to the ContestEditor, THE CHICAGO MAROON, University of Chic^o, Chicago,Illinois. Entries must be postmarked not later than midnight. May 15,1944, Winners will be announced before the end of the aprjng. quarter.THE CHICAGO MAitOONI P«9g Pour'^ The Chicago Maroon\f- Ofleial •tadent piAlicatien of the Unirenity of Chicaso, pab-liehed erary Friday dnriiiy the academic quarters.bi Published at Lexinyton Hall, University of Chicago, Chicago, II-liaote. Telephone DORchester 7279 or MIDway 0800, Ext. 881.PUBLISHER: Joseph J. Weissman^ EDITOR: David SmothersMANAGING EDITOR: Barbara WinchesterBUSINESS MANAGER: Ward J. Sharbach, Jr.EDITORIAL ASSOCIATES: Alice Ludwig, Bill RobertsBUSINESS ASSOCIATES: Muriel Newman, Alan J.StraussASSISTANTS: Carroll Atwater, Barbara Barke, PhilBriggs, Mae Falk, Marillyn Fletcher, Bamby Golden,Fred Gottesman, Dorothy Granquist, Jim Hoskinson,Dorothy Iker, Harry Kroll, Louis Levit, Nancy Lie-berman, Idell Lowenstein, Lorraine McFadedn, Dan-ia Merrill, Joe Norbury, Don Shields, Cynthia Sib¬ley, Nancy Smith, Gerry Trager, Shirly Vander-walker, William Wambaugh •Faculty FearHarry Beardsley’s front page article in theChicago Daily Neivs last night was the first out¬spoken statement of a feeling that has beengaining momentum on this campus for a longtime. As President Hutchins continues unper-turbedly to extend his own brand of Universitycentralization, a gradual but unescapable con¬sciousness of possible dangers has rooted itselfin the minds of many of the University of Chi¬cago’s Faculty. The President’s plans, they saw,can either be interpreted as standing for whatappears on the surface, or, possibly, the firststeps in a. well planned campaign of admini-strational totalitarianism.Beardsley is known as one of the most relia¬ble newspaper writers in the city of Chicago,and he spoke in clear terms last night. Speakingof Hutchins’ “consecrated community” he wrote:“these terms are susceptible to varying interpre¬tations. They may mean much and they maymean little. Some Faculty members feel thatthey add up to something approximately thepattern Sinclair Lewis had when he wrote ItCan't Happen Here. . . . This may seem fantas¬tic, but I am only repeating what some Facultymen at Chicago are saying to each other andwhat they said to me—men with national andinternational reputations for scholarship.”The Chicago Daily News article reports anundeniable situation. On the face of it, Hutchins’latest dictums are relatively harmless. They aimat nothing more than a revison of the status of\ various members of the Faculty in the Univer-sity. If, however, Beardsley has truly reflectedfe opinon at this University, the roots reach muchf deeper. A situation wherein a great Universitycan be held in the complete control of one manJ or group of men, where the Faculty of that Uni¬versity are but cogs in the giant machine, isalarming, if only a possibility.Yet the idea is not totally fantastic. Hutchinsproposes to do away with Faculty rank, with allprofits made by members of the Faculty outsidethe University. In experimental fields he has al¬ready claimed the right of directing lines of re¬search. Extended, these beginnings might welldevelop into what Beardsley claims the Facultymembers fear.It is not likely that this will occur here. It isto soon, yet, to judge the real direction of Hutch¬ins’ movement. Moreover, the University of Chi¬cago is composed of such manner of men thatwould never suffer any absolute control. This Week On CampusMarch 3, Friday—Noon worship service, Joseph Bond chapel, Ti Hu¬ang, graduate student Department of Sociology.Gregor Piatigorsky, famous violincellist, presentsrecital at Mandel Hall, 8:30 p.m. Proceeds to estab¬lishment of a Department of Music scholarshipfund.Student Forum, Classics 17, 4 p.m., ^‘The Problemof the Jews in Palestine.” Rabbi A. J. Fineberg,Temple Beth-Ell, Hammond, Indiana.' University College public lecture. Art Institute,6:45 p.m.. Sunder Joshi, “Morals and Politics: NeedThey Remain Divorced?”Clinical Pathology conference, 4:30 p.m.. Pathology119, presentation and discussion of recent autopsycases (Jan. 27 to Feb. 4).March 4, Saturday—Calvert Club St. Thomas Day banquet.“Shamrock Shambles,” Student Social Committeeinformal dance, 9 p.m.-12 midnight, Ida Noyes Hall.Wally Hermes’ orchestra.Chicago-Wisconsin basketball game, 8 p.m.. FieldHouse.March 5, Sunday—University Chapel service. Rev. James Gordon Gil-key of the South Congregational church. Spring-field, Mass., brother of Dean Gilkey, 11 a.m.Vesper service, 4:30 p.m.. University Chapel, theLindblom A Cappella choir.Chapel Union discussion meeting. Dean Gilkey’shome, 7:45 p.m., leader W. W. Sweet of the Univer¬sity faculty, “The Role of Christianity in Ameri¬ca.”March 6, Monday—“Drama of Ideas,” Napier Wilt, Professor of Eng¬lish and Dean of Students in the Division of the Hu¬manities,” 8-10 p.m., Social Science 122, eighth inthe series, “The American Popular Theater and ItsAntecedents.”March 7, Tuesday—Noon worship service, Joseph Bond Chapel, RayFreeman Jenney, minister of the Bryn Mawr Com¬munity Church.Y.W.C.A. “Cabaret” supper party, Ida Noyes Hall.March 8, Wednesday—Y.W.C.A. Public Affairs membership, luncheon, 12noon, Ida Noyes Hall.“Peace as a Problem of Psychology,” a CharlesWalgreen Foundation public lecture, ninth in theseries, “The Problem of Peace,” 4:30 p.m.. BreastedHall, Oriental Institute. Speaker, Dr. David Slight.“The First Decade of the Twentieth Century: Nat¬uralism and Symbolism,” George V. Bobrinskoy,Assistant Professor of Sanskrit, eighth in the se¬ries, “Criticism and the Russian Novel since 1840,”8-10 p.m., Social Science 122.March 8, 9, 10, and 11—O.D.P. production, Intimate-Theater style, “TheYoung Idea,” Ida Noyes Hall, 8 p.m. each night.Mass meeting on the British White Paper, 8:15 p.m.,Rosenwald auditorium. Speaker: T. Walter Johnson.Movie: “They Shall Live Again” with Paul Muni.Sponsored by Avukah./March 10, Friday—Noon worship service, Joseph Bond Chapel, JamesH. Nichols, Jr., G. B. Smith Instructor in Divinity.Third Department of Music Chamber Concert, 8p.m., Leon Mandel Hall. Isaac Stern, violinist, andAlexander Zakin, pianist. Mozart, Bach, Debussy,Brahms.March 11, Saturday—“Hood Hop,” First and Second-Year College dance.Temporary Gym, High School, 8-30-11:30 p.m.NOTICES:All persons interested in dramatics for the springquarter are to meet with Frank Grover in Swift 400,Tuesday, March 7, at 3:30 p.m. Those interested butunable to attend the meeting are to call the Dramaticsoffice, 1145, Monday morning. LETTERS TO THE EDITORThis column is open to any stmdeni or faculty member of the Univer.9ity of Chicago. The only limataHen set on letters is that they should be onsubjects of interest and concern to CHICAGO MAROON readere.)To The Editor:That THE CHICAGO MAROONpresents both sides of every question,even an intensely personal one, is evi¬denced by a letter appearing in the is¬sue of February 25. Here, in a re¬markable display of rich prose, MissMarilyn Winograd, a mid-year fresh¬man, vented her spleen on THE CHI¬CAGO MAROON in no uncertainterms. Her grievances in a nutshellwent something like this: I came to aschool with high standards of learn¬ing, I want a school publication whichwill reflect these standards, and I’mnot getting it. I want more storiesabout the students rather than thefaculty, and finally, I want a news¬paper whose editorials don’t condes¬cend to the readers as if they werehigh school students.Surely this indictment is too bitterto be accepted complacently by THECHICAGO MAROON. Let us take alook at the particular issue whicharoused Miss Winograd’s ire. Therewere a total of twenty-nine stories in¬cluded in the paper that week. Ofthese, two were notices of concertson campus; four more of lectures*orspeeches; three were news of organ¬izations or publications exclusively byand for students; two had to do withuniversity buildings (why the well-written illustrated article on HarperLibrary offended Miss Winogradssense of taste, I still don’t know); fivewere sports stories—names of stu¬dents figured prominently here; twowere devoted to the social aspect ofstudents life—this must have beenmusic to Miss Winograd’s ears; fivemust be classed as miscellaneous; andsix have to do with the faculty—twopersonality sketches, two notices ofbooks written by faculty members,a writeup of the death of a formerfaculty member, and the story con¬cerning faculty restrictions.These six stories, actually compris¬ing only twenty per cent of the week’scount. When she calls “Official Stu¬dent Publication” a misnomer, shefails to realize that the word “stu¬dent” here primarily means “by thestudents” rather than “about the stu¬dents;” although obviously the major¬ity of stories do pertain directly tostudents.Apparently Miss Winograd over¬looked the feature page. There wereno less than six signed features inthe February 11 edition, all bristlingwith mention of students and theiractivities, however unimportant. Thenthere was the editorial on the oppo¬site page which urged students totake advantage of the cultural oppor¬tunities so accessible to them. MissWinograd objects to this on thegrounds that such an approach is aninsult to readers past the adolescentstage. But if the students are ne¬glecting these lectures and the like,they certainly need to be prodded outof their stupor. I fail to see howTHE CHICAGO MAROON, by en¬dorsing the cultural events on cam¬pus, is not “reflecting the high stan¬dards of learning” at the Universityof Chicago. I, like Miss Winograd, am a newstudent fresh from high school, but,with the humble assurance that thif!analysis of THE CHICAGO MA¬ROON has been somewhat less cur¬sory than Miss Winograd’s I registermy unqualified approval of THE CHI¬CAGO MAROON and wish it contin¬ued success.Joe NorburyTo The Editor:I do not understand why THE CHI¬CAGO MAROON has felt obliged tosponsor a contest for a new mottofor the University just because Pres¬ident Hutchins has expressed a dis¬like for the present one. Is it notmore than a little presumptions onthe part of President Hutchins towish to discard a motto which ischerished by thousands of alumni, themajority of whom graduated beforehe appeared on the Chicago horizon,or, for that matter, on any horizon?It is agreed that the pioneers whofounded the University in the Nine¬ties were more “rugged and unsoph¬isticated” than the present genera¬tion; it may bo doubted whether insome respects they were more “raw.”Many of them were men of genuineculture who knew exactly what theymeant by the motto which they chosefor the University. Witness WilliamRainey Harper and Paul Shorey.Why all the objection to Lafin? IfLatin is “mumbo-jumbo”, what aboutsome of the so-called modern English?What is there about the lines fromWalt Whitman suggested by Presi¬dent Hutchins that is less “ambigu¬ous” or less “pompous” and “silly”than the present motto? Surely thepresent students of the Universitywho are receiving an education so farsuperior to that of the pre-Hutchinsera are sufficiently well versed inLatin to appreciate the strength andbeauty of the present University mot¬to.One of the chief qualities of Latinwhich has commended it as the lang¬uage par excellence for mottoes is itsconciseness. Note that in Latin onemay say in four words “Crescat Sci-entia Vita Excolatur” what requireseight if you choose to use the render¬ing of President Hutchins, “Letknowledge grow that life may be en¬riched,” or thirteen if you prefer thatemployed in the Fiftieth Anniversarypublicity: “Let knowledge grow frommore to more and thus be human lifeenriched.”After all what would express bet¬ter the “principles and motives uponwhich the institution is founded” thanthe present motto ? Is it not the func¬tion of the University, as of all realuniversities, to increase knowledgeand enrich human life?I propose as the new motto of theUniversity “Crescat Scientia Vita Ex-colatur.” I suggest that the final se¬lection be left to a vote of the alumnito whom, in the last analysis, theUniversity belongs.Charles A. Messner, A.M. '22Feature PageDon Shield*Traveling BazaarThe Mortarboard outdid itself last Saturday nightby throwing their annual formal dinner dance at the OldSalem Room of the Lake Shore Athletic Club.. .The pre¬ponderance of uniformed dates with a sprinkling of thoseof the campus variety made for a convivial evening thatwas started on its way by the "flowing bowl".. .T. Wal¬ter Johnson, MB’s faculty sponsor, gave a cocktail partyfor the seniors before the dinner so a pleasant atmos¬phere was maintained throughout the evening... BudRaker in an unusually expansive mood (and probablyegged on by La Peacock) swiped a bottle of hootch forthe exclusive use of their table.. .Edie Jackson, who hadbeen signing the checks for said table, discovered thatthe eagle-eyed waiter noticed loss of said bottle so she’sbeen practicing explanations for Father when the billcomes at the end of the month... Genny Lorish, display¬ing the more whimsical side of her nature, yanked MikeDarrow’s tie and hid it in one of the dark corners of theroom...Mike’s plaintive wails could be heard even abovethe orchestra; "Has anybody PLEASE seen my tie?’’...Some of the earlier MB’s dropped in later; amongst themost prominent was Mary Lu Price, one time BWOC,and sister of Barbara Price (with a hyphen) Dry denFrom the looks of one shadowy corner Terry Kachel washaving a WONDERFUL time. ..but the only disconcert¬ing thing about the whole affair was the number of per¬fectly peculiar people who kept swishing in for a drinkor two and thon crawled back into the woodwork but atleast they provided entertainment...And since we’re chatting about the Mortarboard acouple of them'Created quite a stir in Field’s College Bu¬reau the other day...Suzie Shy rock and Lou Harveywent up to look at some clothes and sat very casuallySMOKING PIPES!.. .traffic was held up for hours bygawking females straining their necks at the unusualsight...Bazaar needs must print a retraction on lastweek's version of the Foster Party...the Foster corres¬pondent tells me that Gordon Irwin was the judge of thecontest and NOT the winner of the title "Miss Universi¬ty of Chicago’’.. .another ASTP named Royce Breedlovewas the lucky man.. .another added note on that partyis that the same guy was also winner of the hat-makingcontest.. .Poor Louie Levit has trouble whenever hisname appears in print...the first time he ever madeheadlines on the sports page of THE CHICAGO MA¬ROON the head went "Louie Levy wins AAU Champion-.ship”.. .last week the Herald-American ran a picture ofhim over the caption “Louie Levet...” seems that Louis doomed to a misspelled posterity.. .Pat Dekker hasbeen looking forlorn this week probably because of Chilland Dille’s absence from the daily sessions of the W-31Club, that exclusive little gathering of characters you’veseen on Harper’s third floor around the East elevator...Bille’s third try at his Bachelor’s exam has caused himto neglect this very important part of his social life...Club Pledging has already started with its usual joy<ind disappointment.. .Chi Rho has gotten away withthree freshmen Connie Slater, Marilyn Burkhart, andI’at Golden, and a transfer from the U. of Wiscon¬sin named Susan Barbour.. .Pi Delt got Jane Myers andJayni (so help me God that’s the way she spells it) Co-'''en.. .Jayni and Merri ought to be great pals, heh, heh• •. Speaking of Pi Delt I heard that Charlotte DragstedtWas running over to Major Smith’s office in a huff be¬cause some Lieutenant made a few passes at her in thelibrary.. .tsk, tsk...Weddings and pins are still making the UniversityWomen happy... Roslynne Gross is sporting an engage¬ment ring from Bill Weber while her Tau Sig sisterl*earl Mindes flashes a Pi Lam pin from Furlough boyHob Pregler...Mary Trovillion, Quad BWOC makes her^Itar march at the end of the quarter as does Doris Sark• • .which undoubtedly means a happy round of showersHnd stuff for Quad... and Bazaar will close with Dania'lerriirg world-shaking observation of yesterday: Sprigbas cub... Dania saw a Robin... D.S. Fred Gottesman THE CHICAGO MAROONOne's-Self I SingLast week, I discussed the condition of this security does not necesarily meanour educational system, or that part of itwhich is called public and compulsory, andI suggested as a possible remedy for boththe immediate and the over-all situationdirect Federal aid to the schools of thecountry.By this, I do not mean to advocate agreater degree of centralization of govern¬ment, or any particular violation of "state’srights.’’ But, I believe the records sufficient¬ly demonstrate the inadequacy of primaryand secondary school education under thecurrent system. While Federal appropria¬tions can do much to alleviate conditionsin our public schools—bare subsistence sal¬aries for teachers, poor educ.ational equip¬ment, insufficient facilities for teacher¬training, ovrecrowded schools in urbanareas, sub-standard schools in some ruralareas, and qualitative discrimination in eth¬nic areas—the final solution to our educa¬tional deficiencies rests with college leveltraining, with the active assistance of gov¬ernment subsidies to equalize and democrattize educational opportunity.By this time, I think that it is apparentthat education, so far as its real value tothe community is concerned, must consistof more than mere vocational training. Vo¬cational training is only of individual bene¬fit, inasmuch as it prepares the individualto participate successfully in the economiclife of the community and to find necesaryeconomic security. But this is of negativecommunal value only, since failure to pos¬sess economic security makes the individuala communal liability, while possession of communal asset.However, the prepetuation of our demo¬cratic system of government and our demo¬cratic way of life demands more than theability to gain economic security. It re¬quires an enlightened, informed and awarecitizenry, who are capable of exercisingthe reasonable and necesary responsibilitiesof that citizenship. These qualifications canbe attained only through education. Theuniversal desire for a happier and fullerexistence in a better world cannot be satis¬fied by training on that primal vocationalplane alone; it must be achieved by thebroadening of intellectual horizons, which isthe leit-motif of liberal college education.The lessons that need be taught can onlybe taught on a college level, simply becausethe average secondary school pupil lacksthe mental maturity. Therefore, in orderto make the vital college level trainingavailable to the greatest number of people,either the college must be incorporatedwithin the* existing public school systemthrough the assistance of Federal money,or such funds must be placed at the dis¬posal of those individuals who express adesire and demonstrate the proper qualifi¬cations for this advanced education. In anycase, the basic philosophy must be "... Itis the purpose of the College ... to develophabits of thinking which will make the stu¬dent competent to form sound judgmentsconcerning the problems he will face as aman and as a citizen.’’ (From a descriptionof the University of Chicago plan.) J.J.W. Page fiveOutlook"When we talk about freedom we usuallymean freedom from something. Freedom ofthe press is freedom from censorship. Aca¬demic freedom is freedom from presidents,trustees, and the public. Freedom of thoughtis freedom from thinking.. .So too civilliberty, the disappearance of which through¬out the world we watch with anxious eyes,is generally regarded as freedom from thestate. This notion goes back to Hobbes,Locke, and Rousseau. They located the nat¬ural man in a world of anarchy. He had,they said, no political organization, andthey strongly hinted that this was the mostdelightful aspect of his condition. The polit¬ical state, they thought, was a compromise,no less unfortunate because it was neces¬sary. This view has been popular eversince.’’* If we are to take PresidentHutchins at his word, we must then begina new analysis of the now-imposed FacultyContract Plan of the University of Chicago.The same plan, in fact, that was "suggest¬ed” as the practical and workable plan forhigher education in the United States.However, on giving the Faculty Plan thisrequired closer analysis we are still at aloss to find the slightest amount of "... aca¬demic freedom... from presidents, trus¬tees ...” On the other hand a decided strongarm control is in view: a limitation on allfaculty members as to what their off-cam¬pus moments shall materialize into.We are at a loss to acount for the suddenviolent changes in the administration’s j)ol-icy: however, might we suggest they read(or re-read) President Hutchins’ articlebriefly quoted above?*The Free Mind, by Robert M. Hutchins. Deliveredat the New York Herald-Tribune Forum in NewYork, October 25, 1938.Carroll AtioaterWhar Price SanityThe Meteorology graduation of Monday was a lucrative occasion forsome cadets. That old Army custom of passing out a dollar to the first personwho salutes you after you are commissioned was flourishing, and the boys atthe center door were saluting like automatons and raking in the money likethe casino manager at Monte Carlo. A few pathetic souls (the kind that al¬ways arrive at the station just as the train is pulling out) stood salutinghopefully at every passer-by. They were ignored brutally.♦ ♦ ♦The same Meteorology class donated an aquarium to Erwin Budbeyer,its favorite instructor. The aquarium was put on display at InternationalHouse, where a thoughtful person deposited a penny in it. Before the daywas over, the aquarium contained twenty-five dollars in small currency, "fortropical fish,” the donors said.♦ * ♦At the Friday night’s performance of "Dear Brutus” the audience foundit difficult to keep from stamping on the fioor during one of the love scenes.Purdie had just kissed Joanna and left the imprint of his moustache on hercheek. "Joanna,” he said tenderly, "you are as spotless as the driven snow.”* * ♦On the Opera Quiz on the last couple of Metropolitan broadcasts mentionhas been made of an opera that Sergei Prokofieff has written, based on Tol¬stoy’s "War and Peace.” The announcement of the opening, whenever itcomes, may furnish the ambition I’ve long needed to get me all the waythrough the novel.* *One of those conversations which may be perfectly sane in context, butwhich sound so peculiar when overheard in fragments, came my way thisnoon. Two professors walked by, looking very intent and serious, and onesaid to the other, "Well, Christ wasn’t of that frame of mind!”.* )|cElder Olson was telling one of his classes a story that Jimmy Farrellwas planning while he was at the University. The story was about a girlwho thought she was going to have a baby and was imagining what her par¬ents would say. It turned out that the girl had just been kissed for the firsttime, and thought that this was the same as— (here Mr. Olson paused, search¬ing for the right way to put it, while the class laughed appreciatively)—"AsHabeas Corpus”. JSancy SmithBox OfficeAnother ruddy bloody thriller this week...]Peter Lorre gets knifed in the jugular vein or whateverelse the physiologist calls it; Gene Kelly gets kickedwhango in the face with a hob-nail boot; people are shotdown all over the place. This is a prelude toTHE CROSS OF LORRAINE.. .has little cross and littleLorraine, but much sweat, hunger and filth in a Nazimilitary prison. Pierre Aumont, Gene Kelly and RichardWhorf are three fierce French patriots; Joseph Calleiais a Spaniard who was fighting for France and Sir Ced¬ric Hardwicke plays a French Catholic priest of no un¬certain beliefs. His characterization w^as probably thebest in the whole picture. Peter Lorre is of course theNazi official. (I’ve heard of women who go up to PeterLorre in restaurants and slap his face—the danger ofbeing typed).At the onset of the picture France surrenders and ahandful of French prisoners are herded (like cattle, I’mafraid) into a freight car to be shipped back to what theythink will be their native villages, which turns out tobe a German camp; which is truly a third-rate hotel(American plan). The atmosphere is unromantic, thefood terrible, if any, and the proprietors unnecessarilyrude. They escape, fight as French guerillas.YOUNG IDEAS . . . Another of the Richard-Carlson-as-Professor series. Sometimes I don’t understand why theydon’t do bigger and better things for Mr. Carlson. In"Affairs of Martha”, he was an explorer-anthropologist.In "My Heart Belongs to Daddy” (egad! the title) hewas an astro-physicist with a beard. And in this picturehe is an exponent of the playwrights at a small easternuniversity writing a play himself after hours. Revolvingaround Carlson are the major characters of the movie(did I forget to mention his role was hot of magnanimousproportions?)—Mary Astor as the author of a racy bestseller who married Herbert Marshall, a rather stuffy,but charming, chemistry professor.Page ShtRAOB RomblingsGraduation day come and gone—the Orderly Room as usual has allthe busy doors of Rockefeller Chapelwell covered. We understand that Ca¬det Richardson took top honors withsomething in the vacinity of fortysalutes. Things we’ll remember aboutg.”aduation: New lieutenants so ex¬cited about the whole thing that Col¬onel Meyer had to run after themwith their commission papers, Dr.Byers’ wonderful pronunciation of thedifficult names of some of the grad¬uates, that baby’s crying, the fellowscarrying in Isobar, signals mixed andthe organist’s playing the WashingtonPost March six times (count ’em).Onward Christian Soldiers on the par¬ade ground, no raob—no lab—^no noth¬in’, photographers and Mr. Beyer andCo. in the gallery, poor Colonel andall the salutes, no pad to take noteson the address by Dr. Warner, all inall a busy day ... We were marchingalong as nice as could be in forma¬tion the other day when a call camefrom two, then Seniors now its to pullover to the side. Half right, half left,flight halt. Somebody in the backgave a clang, clang, half left, halfright and we were on our way againjust as nice as you please . . . Thisnext is rather complicated so we’dbetter take it slowly. It seems thatBud Ospenson, our cartoonist, has acousin, who is an Ensign in theWAVES stationed in New York City.A very good friend of the cousin,another WAVE stationed in thesame office had often mentionedboyfriend stationed in the SolomonIslands. The Marine in that far offoutpost recognizing the name, recent¬ly sent one of Bud’s cartoons clippedfrom Skylines to the cousin’s friendin New York. The friend toldthe cousin, who told Bud’s sister, whowrote Bud, who mentioned it to us.We had no idea its circulation wasworld wide . . . Sixth floor to Gray inthe midst of setting snares for theexpected Senior Cadet raid: You real¬ize, of course, that we are doing thisonly to provide you with Raob mater¬ial. The chambermaid the morning af¬ter seemed somewhat bewildered, andwe heard her asking the elevator manwhat in hell do the Cadets do with thesheets. We can announce now thatthey were used as blackout curtainsor something like that along withwaste baskets (dusted top and bottom), chairs (rungs well dusted), andvarious and assorted cleaning imple¬ments. The Seniors didn’t come—one must have squealed. The only onesto suffer were the Corporal of theGuard (a Junior) and Squadron Com¬mander Ed Fensholt returning on alate pass. Shucks! . . . We won’t men¬tion the name of this course. We’lllet you guess. Hints: A friend of ourscalls it Circumlocution 104; four piecesof apparatus-—simple pieces of appar¬atus—on which marks of a rather asimple character are to be made orhave already been made, were givenout in lab for it; one of the piecesof apparatus was a stapled-togetherseries of papers; it is closely analag-ous to Dynamic Meteorology—al¬though this may not be obvious atfirst or second thought, by third orfourth thought it ought to be appar¬ent. Does anyone want to ask a ques¬tion? ... We poked our head intoRoom 479 right after .GraduationMonday to view the chaos. We’ll doour best to describe what met oureyes. The floor was paved with maga¬zines, the dresser was filled withclothes, its top was covered withbottles of hair tonic, calamine lotion,iodine, everything, A globe and an ac-cordian were on the desk. On themirror was written, “To Kuhns fromhis fourth floor buddies.” The poorfellow trying to clean up the messseemed almost as amazed and sur¬prised as we did ... We announcewith a great deal of pleasure that Dr.Landsberg has joined the ranks ofthe favored few in receiving the fa¬mous Junior Adaptation of the Wis¬consin oky Rocket cheer of apprecia¬tion and job well done. May we makea suggestion—^perhaps we ought to‘start a plaque and add one name aterm for favorite prof. Well, it wasonly a passing idea! ... Do you knowthat Post Number One on the ThirdShift of Guard Duty has cash value?In our off moments on Saturday nightwe happened to climb up to the Stev¬ens Me2izanine to look over the pressphoto show. Who did we see? Wasit a bird? Was it a plane? No, itwas Isobar. By the way, the danceupstairs turned out to be the “gooddeal” that Johnny Boisclair, Sir,promised.. . . Poor Hanley. It seemsthe instructors gave him a backwardsmap Southern Hemisphere view, in¬side Icoking out; or what have you.Anyw.uy, the West Coast was wherethe head should be, and vice versa.He slaved for well over an hour whilethe instructors, dogs that they are,laughed with fiendish glee. Hats off—the flag is passing by! . . . We stilldon’t believe our eyes, but we sawa girl the other night as part of thestage show at the Chicago who hasMr. Beyer beat all holla when it comesto back bends and hand stands. Weremarked to our associate editor thatit wa3 physically impossible to bendin such places. He agreed. > THfi CHICAGO MAROON^ -ASTP Veteran LooksBack On PleasuresOf University LifeWe of the ASTP, who are about toleave, bequeath the following:To Coach Hermanson: A set ofBuck Sergeant Stripes and completecharge of the Physical Training ofnew Armyj recruits. God rest theirlittle souls; Misprint—God bless theirlittle souls.' To Dr. Pettijohn: An infiniteamount of pass points and the hopesthat he may get someone who can pickthem better than we did.To Dr. Olsen: Geography and Maps.Geography is a hell of a subject, butyour lectures were much better thansome we could mention. (Other Geog¬raphers).To Mr. Blatz: Things of AmazingSimplicity and a thought', you havehelped many a man, not only in math¬ematics.To Dr. Shilling: A book of AmericanColloquial Expressions and a snowshovel for Michael. Payable after theduration.To Mr. Harris: A plug of UnionLeader for his pipe.To Mr. Corral: A tank of Helium.If you ever wish to sing soprano.To Dr. Constantinides: A newly in¬vented gas to spray his “You sleepy,no?” students.Now to drop what little humor wemay have had and hope it was alltaken with a grain of salt, and withsincerity, we say thanks.Words alone are not sufficient toreally express our thanks. Thanks toall the faculty and all our officers forthe help they have given us, in timesof need and doubt. Thanks for rais¬ing the caliber of our mentality, andequipping us with facilities we neverhad before; the ability to think bet¬ter and straighter. We can nevermonetarily repay you.It’s all been swell. Three “weather women” were grad¬uated Monday in Rockefeller Memor¬ial Chapel together with 282 ArmyAir Force cadets and 31^Navy en¬signs, after completing an intensivemeteorological training program oncampus with the men graduates.Three Women Among GraduatesOf Meteorology Class MondayThe feminine meteorologists, Har-riet Rodabush of Urbana, Ill.; IreneGibbons, of Winona, Minn., and Char-lotU Ruas o€ Rock Island Ill., willenter 'war jobs immediately: MissRodebush to the WAVES, for workin a naval air station r Miss Gibbonsto a post as forecaster at the ChicagoMunicipal Airport, and Miss Russ toan instructor’s post on campus in theUniversity’s Institute of Meteorology,where she will instruct air force ca¬dets, WAVES, and Navy officers.Representing 41 states and the Dis¬trict of Columbia, the meteorologistsconstituted the second largest of thesix classes which have been gradu¬ated from the Institute, the only me¬teorological school in the Middle Westand one of five in the United States.Thirty-four of the graduates willbe granted bachelor's degrees fromthe University in the next convocationas a result of their training.Of The Week WriterViews Diversity OfMeteorology StationSight of the Week:Mr. Kappler advancing theatening-ly on two little imps throwingsnowballs at us, all the while ad¬monishing them iui his bull-likevoice.Heroes of the Week:Those few brave souls who tiuth-fully responded, “No,” when Lt.Bushell asked if we were gettinganything out of map typing.Girl of the Week:“Sleepy-eyes,” or Marilyn, the dou¬ble threat sloe-eyed little gal whodispenses laundry and dry cleaningdown in the valet shop.Quote of the Week:Mr. Means — “When forecasting,one should have a good idea ofwhat’s going on.” Well, it helps.Item of the Week:While glancing through our notesin review for the meteorology finalwe ran across this “When El Ninopushes south, fish die and the birdsmigrate—therefore the guano in¬dustry is shot.”Fun of the Week:Working on the C.I.T. maps andforecasting for 72 hours via a Ouijaboard, a coin, and our woman’s in¬tuition.Thought of the Week:No sooner did the seniors leave,then all the Juniors sprouted wings. MORTON’S5487 S. Lake PorkHyde Park's LeadingSteakhouseFamous for Fine SteaksFar Reservations CallPlaza 9088Carillon,,,(Continued from page three)cert: it is intelligent criticism but notlively enough to merit its being inCarillon. Robert Kharasch’s Honour^sVoice: A Monodrama is an ambitious,but only partially successful experi¬ment.Only three people have supplied po¬etry for this issue. June Myers* lyricsare excellent in thought, imagery, andexecution. Four translations by MaryWong display charm and unusualness.“R.N.K.” (Mr. Kharasch, I presume)has added some clever but slight verse.Altogether, Carillon is well worthreading this time. If there is expan¬sion in subject matter and number ofcontributors, we may look forward toa first-class spring issue. . . . C.A. Have a “Coke” = Hallo, Bracie(HELLO, BROTHER)oe.a way to say ^‘Pardner^* to avisitingPoleWhen a Polish flyer says Hallo, Bracie, he greets you as a brother.The American means the same thing when he says Have a “CoAe’Vwhether he offers it away from home or from his icebox at home.Around the world, Coca-Cola stands for the pause that rejresb'esp—/•■•*■ ' . ! 1‘ '■ .i t') *the global high-sign of the kind-hearted. ^ ^VOTTLED UNOEK AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY)ftV i: *)COCA-COLA BOTTLINQ CO., OF CHfCAaO, INC. ^ > O< n “Coke”s Coca-ColaIc’s natural For popular namesto acquire friendly abbtevia-tions. That’s why you heatC<xt.~CoIa called "Cok<^\i. ■) •Three Types Of Ploys AnalyzedBy Dean Wilt At Public LectureSpeaking on, “Drama of Emotionand Drama of Sentiment” in a lecturedelivered Monday night in SocialScience 122, Napier Wilt, Dean ofStudents in the Division of Human¬ities, discussed three categories of re¬cent drama; propaganda plays, prob¬lem plays, and “plays with an idea.”“These are the plays advertised as‘carrying a message’,” Dean Wiltsaid. “Even an honest melodrama ismore excusable, for at least it makesno pretenses.”Explaining the foundation for eachof the three types of plays. DeanWilt pointed out that a propagandaplay sometimes advocates a certaincourse because that course will re¬sult in a happy, desirable life; butmore often emphasizes the evil course THE CHICAGO MAROONto be abolished. In the problem typeof play, a problem is stated, twosides are given, and the audience iscalled upon to decide in favor of oneof the sides. At the root of “dramaswith ideas,” there is an expressionof an idea for which the audienceis asked to give emotional approval.“The temperance movement pro¬duced the greatest number of thistype of play in America,” Dean Wiltdeclared. This point was illustratedby references to such highly success¬ful plays as Uncle Tom's Cabin, TenNights in a Barroom, Thirty Years inthe Life of a Gamester, and the like.Dean Wilt’s talk was the seventhin the series of Monday evening pub¬lic lectures, entitled, ‘The AmericanPopular Theater and its Antecedents.”Beautiful Art Booksand PrintsMODERN AMERICAN PAINTING - Peyton Boswell Jr.Eighty-nine large reproductions in color of fine and significantAmerican Paintings $2.52AMERICAN GLASS - George and Helen McKearinThe most complete book on this subject ever written. A com¬prehensive study $4.06AMERICAN ARTIST AND HIS TIMES - Honore Saint-GaudinSaint-Gaudin traces the course of American Art through thelives and personalities of its artists $2.01INDIAN ART IN THE UNITED STATESBeautiful Indian art from the Prehistoric to the Modern Pueblo $2.54AMERICAN PEWTER - J. B. KerfootOne of the most delightful and informing books ever publishedon pewter $2.54EARLY AMERICAN WOODENWARE - Mary Earle GouldAn enjoyable trip in to the past which also bridges a gap in ourHistory $4.56OLD SILVER ENGLISH-AMERICAN - Seymour WeylerFascinating story and splendid pictures of old silversmiths andtheir art $2.54ART IN AMERICA - Cahill & BarrA complete and brilliant story of American art $1.82THE BOOKSTORE CAN SUPPLY YOU WITH MANYBEAUTIFUL, GAY, AND CHARMING PRINTS BYREPRESENTATIVE AMERICAN ARTISTS.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOK STORE* t 5802 ilGs Areane I • ••(Continued from page one)tenure should be adequate incentivesfor the faculty. The University shouldnot be permitted to evade its respon¬sibility to pay decent salaries by of¬fering rank as a substitute.Arguments on the other side of thisproposal are that it deprives membersof the faculty of something they val¬ue. • It is unnecessary, since the diffi¬culties caused by academic titles arenot serious. It would make an unfor¬tunate distinction between the Uni¬versity of Chicago and other Uni¬versities. It would alter the basis ofgnembership in the University Senate.It would deprive the younger mem¬bers of the faculty of an incentivethey need.Since members of the faculty couldbe rewarded only by increases in sal¬ary, it might be impossible in hardtimes to reward them at all. In goodtimes the University might be re¬quired to make greater expendituresthan are necessary under the presentsystem, for now members of the fac¬ulty are content to take part of theirreward in rank.That the titles of assistant and as¬sociate professor be eliminated, allmembers of the Faculty in theseranks to be promoted to professor,without automatic change in tenure orsalary is the second proposal underconsideration. Supporting statementssay that the distinctions in titles hereproposed correspond to the distictionsin tenure established by the legisla¬tion of July, 1941. The greatest diffi¬culties in regard to rank come at theassociate professor grade. This is agood first step.Opponents to this proposal thinkthat though it proposes a system ofranks corresponding to the system oftenure established for new appointeesafter July, 1941, it does nothing tosolve the problem of rank as it affectsthe large number of instructors andassistant professors appointed beforethat date.It preserves a system or rank andis thus open to the objections listedabove. Whereas the promotion of allassociate professors under the secondproposal above can be justified on theground that rank is substantially ab¬olished, it cannot be justified underthe third proposal, by which rank issubstantially maintained, withoutshowing that all the associate profes¬sors deserve promotion.One who is opposed to academic ti¬tles cannot be in favor of this propos¬al, because the result is trivial.Parsons of Y.M.C.A.Exposes Peace NowGroup At AYD LunchAmerican Youth For Democracyplans to hold its final luncheon meet¬ing for the winter quarter on Thurs¬day, March 9. The meeting will beheld in room D of Ida Noyes at 2;15.Dr. R. B. Parsons, head of the De¬partment of Education at Y.M.C.A.College, will present an, expose of the“Peace Now” movements in thiscountry. A discussion will follow tin¬der his direction. Colgate's Poteat Views'Present War As ConflictOf Greed, GenerositySpeaking last Sunday at the Chapel,the Reverend Edwin McNeill Poteat,president of Colgate Rochester Theo¬logical Seminary, declared that thepresent war is a struggle between thephilosophies of greed and generositywhose contending forces know nothingof national or territorial boundaries.Dr. Poteat has spent many years inthe Orient and was at one time Asso¬ciate Professor of Philosophy at theUniversity of Shanghai. This is histhird visit to the University. Page Seven^ e tf ^ YArea Projects DefinedAs Concrete Solution ToDelinquency For ChapelChapel Union’s meeting last Sun¬day featured a description of areaprojects by Edward Haydon, a studentwho has worked with them for sever¬al years. “The area projects,” he stat¬ed, “originated in an effort to dosomething in a practical way aboutdelinquency.”The project leaders try to avoidthe mistakes (such as treating theslum residents in a patronizing way)which have brought disaster to othersocial agencies.Community” public telephones—some even inoutside booth locations—are serving residents inwar-bom neighborhoods.Many such telephones handle several hundredcalls every month. It’s a way more persons can usethe available facilities, limited now by wartimematerial shortages.The nation-wide resources of the Bell Systemare enlisted in maintaining dependable communi¬cation services—vital in war, essential in peace.War calls keep Long Distance lines busy.. • Thai*s why your call may be delayed.BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEMkPaqe Bghf THE CHICAGO MAROONMaroons Finish SeasonWith Wisconsin BattleTomorrow night at the Fieldhouse,the University of Chicago Basketballsquad will play their last game of theseason against the Badgers of theUniversity of Wisconsin. Last week¬end, the Maroons lost one of theirclosest games of the season to theMinnesota Gophers 49-36. The firsthalf was nip and tuck all the way,with the Maroons coming up from asix to one score in the first few min¬utes to lead seven-six. Led by WillThomas and Gallagher the boys hitregularly and had a fairly safe lead,24-19, with a minute and a half leftin the first half.Minnesota got two lucky field-goalsin those last seconds that brought thescore to 24-23 with the Maroons onlyleading by one small point. The Go¬phers took the floor for the second4 MONTH INTENSIVESecrefarial Course forCOLLEGE STUDENTS and GtTACUATTSA thorough, intensive, secretarialcourse — starting February, July,October. Registration now open.★Regular day and evening sclioclthroughout the year. Catalog.A SCHOOL OF BUSINi^SSPREFERRED BY COLLEGE MEN AND WOMENTHE GitEGG COLLEGiPresident, John Robert Gregg, S.C.D.Director, Paul M. Pair, M.A.6 H. Michigan Ave. Telephone: STAte 1881 Chicago, In. period with revived energy and sweptthe luckless Maroons off their feetwith a fast break and deadly precision. Basketball Carnival At Ida Thursday NightMen, Women To Fight l,M. Cage ChampionshipsThursday evening, at 8 oclock, thepublic (campus in particular) will beinvited to the Intramural BasketballCarnival at Ida Noyes Gym to watchthe intramural champions in bothmen’s and women’s leagues play offtheir respective tournaments in thehottest competition in many seasons.The admission is a quarter, proceedsWill Thomas led the scoring for Chi-' the-World Student Servicecago, Gallagher and DeGraw also tal¬lied. On the whole, the team was dis¬appointed by the score because theyand most of the spectators felt thatthe Minneso! i game was the onlychance for a Big Ten victory left thisseason. “Perhaps they tried too hard,”mused Kyle Anderson, “both Bob Fin¬negan and Fred DeGraw were sicklast week and the game meant anawful lot to all the boys.”The Badgers will probably take ad¬vantage of the opportunity to letcenter Ray Patterson try to improvehis record in the conference individualscoring race. He now is in fifth placebut the Wisconsin fans seem to thinkhe can improve his standing by pilingup huge scores against the Maroons. FundIn the men’s competition, the Tues¬day card will contain the play-offs ofthe runner-ups Maroon vs. Psi Upsi-lon, and Jones Chemistry Five vs. theBillings Boys. The winners of thesegames will meet in the CarnivalThursday. The rivalry is keen withthe Maroons favored slightly.Quadrangler and Mortarboard willmeet in the traditional Club classicwhich usually turns into a screamingW.A.A. Both of these latter teamsGymnasts Levit AndBeyer Take Part InMinnesota Gym MeetTomorrow afternoon the Universityof Minnesota will play host to theNorthwestern Gymnastic Associa¬tion’s championship meet.Louis Levit, University of Chicagolaw student, and his coach, ErwinBeyer, are traveling to Minneapolisto take part in the competition. Levitdefending his side-boise crownISwhich he won in March last year.Beyer, who catches the University ofChicago Gymnastics Team, and in¬structs in ASTP physical education,will be entered as an all-around man.Other schools sending teams to themeet are luwa Pre-flight and theUniversity of Minnesota. The eventsare side-horse, horixontal bar, parallelbars, tumbling, flying rings and freeexercise. After the Minnesota game last Sat¬urday evening, the basketball squadelected a captain. The new captain wasFred DeGraw, freshman forward whoreceived honorable mention in theMid-west all conference basketballteam. Other candidates were DickFurry, guard, and Bob Finnegan, for¬ward. DeGraw has been nicknamed“The Flying Dutchman” because of hisNetherlands ancestry and sense ofhumor. He has been on the highscore list for the Big Ten all seasonin spite of the fact that Chicago hasonly played 7 games in the Big Tenwhile other high scorers have par¬ticipated in 10 or 12. Gradauting fromHirsch High School, DeGraw enteredthe University as a junior in thefour-year-college this fall.“I feel very honored to be electedcaptain of our team,” said DeGraw,“but I also feel that a world of creditshould be given to Kyle Anderson forhis great coaching.”Chicago Trackmen Make BestShowing At Triangular MeetLast Saturday’s indoor track meeton Chicago’s home grounds witnessedthe Maroons in their most outstand¬ing track showing to date. Playinghosts to Lawrence College and NorthCentral College, the Maroons finishedthird in a meet that was noteworthyfor its lack of anything noteworthy.Lawrence College nosed out NorthCentral College by a first place andsomething extra to win the meet. Thescores were Lawrence College 56^/^,North Central College, 50^/^, Chicago24. Chicago’s points were earnedwith several seconds and thirds.Tied for top scoring honors wereRalph Hemmer of North Central Col¬lege and Bill Daub of Lawrence Col¬lege with ten points each. Both boystook two first to outclass any otherindividual performance.Clayton Bromley, who earned Chi¬cago’s sole five points in the Big Ten quadrangular meet here two weeksago was not available for this tri¬angular meet. Bromley topped elevenfeet in the pole vault, beating allother comers.Chicago was aided by two Navymen, however,—Jack Berger, Appren¬tice Seaman in the Medical School,who ran the fastest distance for Chi¬cago in the mile relays; and JamesHosey who tied for second place inthe high jump. Hosey is an Aerologyofficer stationed on campus.Tomorrow Chicago will play host toanother Big Ten quadrangular meetwhen Northwestern Wisconsin, andMinnesota engage the Maroons in theChicago Field House.It is not known whether Navy per¬sonnel will be running with the Chi¬cago thinclads. All the other schoolswill be strengthened by bluejacketson their squads.brawl. The other women’s gam^ fea¬tured at the Carnival is Studemps vs.Elect Fred De GrawNew Captain MaroonBasketball Players have not yet been defeated this year.The two female versus female gamesswill begin promptly at 8 o’clock andthe men will play a half on the fulllength while the girls rest and pow¬der-up for their second half.There will be cokes served on thelanding of Ida and dancing upstairsin the snack bar between the games.All the men and girls are expectedout in full force to coke and dance andwatch their favorite team fight forthe championship. The W.S.S.F. willbe on hand selling candy, popcorn, andother refreshments as well as run¬ ning the affair.Coach Wally Hebert, director ofmen’s intramurals, and Miss Burnswomen’s basketball coach, have beeninstrumental in making the arrange¬ments and will deserve credit if theCarnival is a success. Ruth Greenleeand Beverly Glenn, co-chairmen of theW.S.S.F. committee are looking for-ward to a record attendance andprofitable benefit. The male and fe-male cagers who are scheduled tofight it out Thursday are looking for-ward to a good time as well as toughcompetition.COLLEGENIGHT..EVERY FRIDAYEddie OUverHIS PIANO ANDHIS ORCHESTRAEntertainmenlDorothy Dorben DancersAnn Judson, Jr.The Four SidneysGarron and BennettPhilip KinsmanCourtesy CardsStudent Courtesy Cards may be obtainedat the Maroon office. Admission with card65 cents per person, including tax.MARINE DINING ROOMEDGEWATERBEACH HOTEL5300 BLOCK SHERIDAN ROAD