Robert M. Hutchinsadministrative reforms arenecessary . . .FacultyCrystallizes In New MemorialRequest For Senate ActionWith the Chicago Sun's story yesterday morning on the so-called “Billof Rights” to be submitted to the Board of Trustees, a long discussion ofrumorod conflicts between the University Faculty and President Hutchinshave at last taken concrete form.In short, this “memorial” to be submitted to the Trustees, whichhas been signed by 115 members of the Univefsity Senate consists of this;these men believe that (1) the Univer--sity should not be committed to anyparticular philosophy, (2) that the in¬tegrity of subject matter of the various departments and divisions of theUniversity should be maintained, and(3) that the President should be giventhe right to exercise his own initiative,but that he should also be called onto persuade and convince the Facultyof the soundness of his proposals be¬fore they are put into effect. The Uni¬versity Senate, they think, should begiven a more positive part in the for¬mation of the educational policies ofthe University.Upholders of this platform insistthat it is not an attack on PresidentHutchins. Said Ronald S. Crane, chair¬man of the Department of Englishand one of the sponsors of the memo¬rial, “This is not in any way a per¬sonal attack on President Hutchins.He is a great leader and we want toretain him. Nevertheless, the final de¬cision over educational matters shouldand must rest with the Faculty.”The origins of the current contro¬versy find their roots in events whichtook place nearly a year and a halfago. At that time, in January, 1943,President Hutchins requested theBoard of Trustees for a revision ofhis status in the University. He pro¬posed that he should either be mademerely chairman of the Faculty, withno independent power, or be grantedgreater powers to act on his own ini¬tiative, subject at any time to dismis¬sal by the Faculty.As a result, two committees wereset up to consider Mr. Hutchins' pro¬posals and to determine what organi¬zational changes should be made. Acommittee formed of members of theBoard of Trustees under the chair¬manship of Laird Bell and anothercomposed of Senate members Fay-Cooper Cole, Carey Croneis, PaulHodges, Carl Moore, Ernst Puttkam-mer, Leonard White, and QuincyWright have worked in cooperationsince that time. These two commit¬tees have no relation with the Facultymemorial. At present all that can bedetermined of their place in the con¬troversy is that they have no desiremerely to maintain the status quo. Itis known, however, that they are plan¬ning to present a report on theirprogress thus far to a Senate meetingto be held in the near future.First signs of controversy becameevident in January of this year whenPresident Hutchins proposed to theFaculty that the rank and status ofFaculty members be revised. Almostimmediately various members of theF acuity began to express, albeitanonymously, their disapproval of(See “Hutchins,”'page 3) O.D.P. Drama WeekFeatures Two Plays,Varied ActivitiesDrama Week, presented by the Of¬fice of Dramatic Productions for theadvancement of speech, dramatics, po¬etry and oral interpretation, will be¬gin on Friday, April ^8, with the pro¬duction of Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler inMandel Hall. The mid-week activitieswill comprise a round table discussionon “Education and Drama;” a poetryreading contest; Rostand’s Cyrano deBergerac, as read by Davis Edwards;a tea for visiting actors and actressesin Loop productions; a lecture-re¬cital by Olive Lindsay Wakefield; thefinals in the Florence James AdamsContest; and will be concluded witha presentation of Lynn Riggs’ GreenGrow the Lilacs.Hedda Gabler, one of Ibsen’s mostdifficult and complex dramas, is chief¬ly a character sketch of the dynamicand abnormal Hedda (Mary Dia¬mond). It is her desire to control thelives of her associates, George Tes-'man, the husband (John Dickerson),Judge Brack (Phil Oxman), and EilertLovborg (Bill Roberts) that leads toher inevitable downfall. The outsideinfluences, idealistic Mrs. Elvsted,Tesman’s Aunt Juliana, and Bertha,are to be played by Karen O’Brien,Milada Prochaska, and Jean Cooke,respectively.Green Grow the Lilacs, the parentof the Broadway hit Oklahoma, is afolk play of the Western frontier.The plot revolves around the love af¬fair of Curley MacLain (MaynardWishner) and Laurey (Cynthie Sib¬ley), and their consequent troubles. OppositionTHE CHICAGOMAROONVol 3, No. 27 Z149 Friday, April 21, 1944 Price Five CentsArmy Reclassification Order ToTheaten Medical, TheologyStudents Here With Induction“Man Is Incurably^Religious” - Adams“Man,” said James Luther Adams,speaking at the first Campus Con¬ference meeting last Sunday at the55th street Promontory, “is incurablyreligious.” For this reason, he con¬tinued, it is vitally important thatpeople know of what their beliefs,,both implicit and explicit, consist.Most men are polytheistic. ProfessorAdams explained, having their loyal¬ties divided between such false re¬ligions as a church, creed, race, etc.,which they believe infallible. Theproblem is, “To what can men givetheir loyalty if these things are pseu¬do-religious?”Conflicts of loyalty are intensifiedtoday by the war. If, by seeing theinadequacies of life, men can throwlight on some of these conflicts, theywill have a better chance to becomeintegrated about a real central ralig-ious purpose, instead of kowtowingbefore false gods, concluded Profes¬sor Adams. Department Of EnglishGives Cash Award ForStudent Poetry, ProseThe David Blair McLaughlin Prizefor the best critical essay, and theJohn Billings Fiske Prize in poetry,are now being offered by the EnglishDepartment. Information and detailsmay be obtained at Ingleside Hall,Room 304.The David Blair McLaughlin Prizeof $55, open to all students in thecollege, is awarded for the best crit¬ical essay of between 1500 and 3000words pertaining to Humanities orSocial Science. The John BillingsFiske Prize of $100 is given for poe¬try, with no limitations on length,subject, or form. It is open to all stu¬dents of the University. Deadline forboth contests is May 1.In 1914, Mr. and Mrs. McLaughlininstituted a prize in memory of theirson killed in World War I. The 'Fiskeprize began in 1920, former winnersincluding Sterling North and ElderOlson, Assistant Professor of English. University students already de¬ferred for medical, theological, orcither specialized studies will soonface the danger of reclassification andinduction into the army, according tothe government’s latest SelectiveService Memorandum 115. Immediaterepercussions at the University ofChicago, how'ever, are as yet hard todetermine.According to Chicago local Selec¬tive Service Board Number One, allmen between the ages of 18 to 25whose deferments expire July 1, 1944must apply for re-deferment underDSS form 42 or 42-A Special, theirdeferments to be determined by theirlocal Selective Service Boards.Under this order, acording to Uni¬versity Registrar Ernest C. Miller,reclassification of deferred studentswill have a profound effect, not onlyon those already enrolled in the Uni¬versity, but on future registration.According to the government’s lat¬est order, all pre-medical and pre-the-ological students in the Universitymust be enrolled in medical or the¬ology schools before July 1, 1944. Stu¬dents in such specialized courses asgeology, chemistry, physics, bacteiiol-ogy, astronomy, etc. must have grad¬uated by July 1, 1944. Unless theseconditions are met, a sizeable num¬ber of University men will find them¬selves in danger of induction intothe Armed Services.The number of men who will beaffected immediately by this order isnot, however, very large, accordingto Miller. Although the Registrar’soffice has not yet arrived at a definiteenumeration of tho.ne effected, the realconsequences of the order do not restthere.More important are the repercus¬sions that will be felt in next fall’sregistration. Male registrations, ac¬cording to Miller, have been steadilyfalling ever since the beginning of thewar. Nevertheless, the curve had bythis time more or less leveled off. Thenew reclassification will undoubtedlyresult in a still shaiper drop in reg¬istrations next quarter. Similar re¬ductions, naturally, will ocur in i'.!(See “Selective Service,” page 6)Young Meteorologist InventsRevolutionary Weather ChartHow new three-dimensional stations.- At one inch intervals onveather map will make flying safer,lid in research work, and facilitatemeteorology study for beginners was[iscussed by the map’s originator,Juillerme Wagner, at both a lectureFriday night and an interview Mon-lay. Mr. Wagner, who is a Peruviantudent, holds an assistantship in thenstitute of Meteorology. ;Relating his map discussion to aalk on the general circulation of theitmosphere, Mr. Wagner explainedhat his new -relief map will be ofipecial use to pilots in determiningvind direction and velocity at var-ous altitudes. The map also aids inmaking 24 hour atmospheric move¬ment forecasts.On an outline map of the UnitedStates mounted on a heavy base werenserted brass spikes into points rep-•esenting official weather observation these spikes were mounted arrows ofdifferent colors, each color represent¬ing a different level of altitude, thearrow pointing to indicate wind di¬rection. On the short arrow the scaleis in Beaufort Force, the common unitof measurement used by Meteorolo¬gists. On the longer arrow the velocityis indicated in miles per hour. Asseen from above the map presents apicture of weather conditions at everyaltitude, together with an indicationof how weather is developing in dif¬ferent areas. Because of its greaterversatility the map can be used muchmore efficiently than can the conven¬tional two-dimensional map. The maptook almost 9 months to complete.Guillerme Wagner, who is known as“Bill” to his friends, has studied herealmost two and a half years, and has(See “Meteorology,” page 6)Page Two ■ ' ' - ■ m....—Students To EvaluateChicago College PlanCommittee Appointed ToWork With Faculty GroupIn response to a recommendationby the Policy Committee, a new com¬mittee has been set up to make plansto fulfill the purpose stipulated. Itshead is Dr. Ralph W. Gerard, Pro¬fessor of Physiology. Its over-allproblem of evaluation of the collegeprogram is split into more detailedsubdivisions of the problem, eachtackled by a special subcommittee.One of these, just set up,^is theStudent Committee on Evaluation ofthe College Program. Composed ofstudents, it will duplicate the effortsof a similar committee of facultymembers, headed by Aaron J. Brum¬baugh, Dean of Students. The resultsof both will be assimilated into oneplan of action.The present function of the Stu¬dent Committee is to decide on meansof uncovering student opinion aboutthe many and varied facets of Uni¬versity of Chicago College life, in¬cluding both the curricular and theextra-curricular. Exactly on whattopics the poll of student opinion isto be taken is another of the sub¬jects for decision.When the committee has performedits duty, it will pass out of existence,probably to be succeeded by a faculty-student committee which will makeuse of the information derived fromthe poll. The job ahead is a big on^and no results will be available forprobably a year or more.The exact and final personnel ofthe Student Committee on Evaluationof the College Program has not yetbeen determined. Tentatively the listof students includes Makie Boroff,Ann Bryne, Janet Davison, DorothyDuncan, Fred Gottesman, ArthurHaelig, Daniel Lang, Louis Levit,Robert Meismer, Alice Sheehan, Syl¬via Slade, and Richard Stoughton. Temporarily, Alice Sheehan is actingas chairman of the committee, andJanet Davison is acting as secretary.Representatives of most of the partsof the college are included. Studentson the comniittee come from everylevel of the college, from freshmenthrough seniors in the college to can¬didates for divisional bachelor’s de¬grees.Dr. Ralph W. GerardChairman of FacultyCommitteeWhen the Policy Committee of theUniversity of Chicago turned in itsreport in March of 1942, it recom¬mended that a permanent committeeshould be appointed to evaluate thecollege curriculum and to make an¬nual reports. Not only would thiscommittee give its opinion on the var¬ious phases of college life, but itwould also advise on what and wherechanges should be made. It was feltthat there should be some means ofcriticizing and insuring proper direc¬tion for experimental undertakingsof such moment as the college. Theproposed committee would be an aptmechanism for the task.Morale BuildersPastel SweatersAnd SkirtsRadiant ScarvesRuffled Aprons Dainty BlousesNovelty EarringsFlowered HankiesFragrant ColognesBright Costume JewelryCome In And Look AroundTHE UNIVERSITY OF (HIU60 BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave., Chicago, III. Motto Contest Rules1. Mottoes Bubmiktod may be an original or a selected quotation which is notcopyrighted or generally used by any other person or organisation. Ifa quotation is submitted the source of the quotaUon should be giren.2. There is no limit to the number of entries an individual may submit Allentries, statements, and ideas therein expressedT* become the propertyof THE CHICAGO MAROON. No entries will be retnr..^d.S. 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.4. Students, faculty, alumni, and the general public aliki are eligible tocompete for the prise awards.5. The judges’ desision will be final.6. This contest is being conducted by THE CHICA(30 MAROON and notby The University of Chicago, and the University is in no wLm obligatedto adopt any motto selected by the judges but may accept or reject inwhole or in part anysmotto submitted.7. Print your name and address on all entries and mail to the ContestEditor. THE CHICAGO MAROON, University of Chicago, Chicago.Illinois. Entries most be postmarked not later than midnight. May 16.1944. Winners will be aunounced before the end of the spring quarter.THE CHICAGO MAROONLorentZf SteinbeckFilm Classics ShownTo Campus AudienceTwo diverse scenes of North Amer¬ican life, the one, “The Plow ThatBroke the Plains” by Pare Lorentzdepicting ravages of the dust bowlfrom sun and wind; and the other,John Steinbeck’s “The Forgotten Vil¬lage,” a censored story of Mexicansocial conditions In isolated village,were companion films of the Docu¬mentary Film group, Tuesday even¬ing in Social Science 122.Narrator for the first film, ThomasChalmer, tells the experience ofAmerican farmers who bought to con¬vert 626,000 square miles of arid landinto productive soil. The Mexican vil¬lage scene was banned from publicshowing with the excuse that it de¬graded and depraved morals. How¬ever, authorities blame the ban forreasons that prayer was shown ina passive form rather than an activeinstrument of instruction. As narra¬tor, Burgess Meredith claims thescene to be one steeped in custom,where “the old and the new meet andsometimes clash, but from the clash^a gradual change takes place in thevillage.”Duke Men To Wine, DineFoster Girls April 23The men of Duke House have in¬vited a group of girls from FosterHall to a party to be given the even¬ing of April 23. Duke is taking thelead in what is hoped to be the firstof a series of parties given by themen’s residence halls, in an attem^to create greater unity between thefirst and second two yeari of the Col¬lege.Under the direction of Duke head¬master Richard'^hreiber, the twentygirls who will attend this first partywere chosen from a list of Fostergirls who signed up as free and wil¬ling on that evening.U.S. ContributionsIn Bible Exhibit .Some thirty-five bibles print^ overa period of one hundred and sixty-eight years are now on display in theannual bible exhibit at Swift Hall.The exhibit this year is devoted toAmerican contributions to the bibleboth in printings and revisions.Dating back to Colonial times, theoldest bible on display is the thirdedition of the Christopher Saur bibleprinted in 1776. The unbound pages ofthe edition are said to have been usedby the British soldiers to clean theirguns during the battle of German¬town.Among the current, editions of thebible printed by the University ofChicago Press is a copy of the Rocke-feller-McCormick New Testament.The original was found by ProfessorEmeritus Edgar Goodspeed in a Parisantique shop in 1927. Its last ownerhad been Michael VIII Paleolognis,emperor of the last Byzantine dynas¬ty about 1266. The book, now recog¬nized as one of the most importantmanuscripts evr brought to America,was edited by Dr. Goodspeed, DonaldRiddle, and Harold Willoughby, andreproduced by the “Press” in 1932. STUDENTS IBe Sure to Visit theNEWLY REMODELEDSTINEWAYDRUG STORESouth West Corner - 57th St. and Kenwood Ave.CAFETERIA andFOUNTAIN SERVICEGOOD FOOD--REASONABLE PRICESPage Three . ■ i iChoir Will Perform "Requiem"Twice; Defouw(labriel Faure’s Requiem, originallyscheduled for performance on Sundayafternoon, April 23, at 4:30, will have! g repeat performance on Sunday, Ap¬ril :U), at the same hour. Both per¬formances will be in RockefellerChai)el. Tickets are all gone for theperformance of April, 23; but ticketsLATESTWHODUNITSDean— •Murder A Mile HighFenisong—Jenny Kissed MeFord—All For The Love of a LadyLee—A Fish For MurderOlsen—The Cat Wears A NooseWentworth—The Clock Strikes TwelveRENTAL LIBRARYThe U. of (.Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave., Chicago Conducts Bothmay be had for the repeat perform¬ance on application to the InformationOffice or by mailing a stamped, self-addressed envelope to the UniversityChoir Office, Lexington Hall. Admis¬sion to both performances is free ofcharge.The choir of 86 voices, with ClaireDux, soprano, and James McEnery,baritone, as soloists, will be conduct¬ed by Desir6 Defauw, Musical Direc¬tor of the Chicago Symphony.Hutchins . . .(Continued from page 1)Mr. Hutchins’ proposals and theirfear of future consequences. Theyfeared thaV he might be attemptingto establish absolute control over theUniversity and its faculty.On April 7, these fears took concreteform when, in a series of letters pub¬lished in The Chicago Maroon, sixprofessors asked that Mr. Hutchinsstate more clearly his intentions forfuture action. The new memorial isthe third step in the controversy.Until its presentation before theSenate, the document is intended tobe of an absolutely confidential nature,at least in its details. For this reasonboth the signers and the President’sOffice have refused specific comment. TH£ CHICAGO MAROON -America’s Far EastPolicies Form TopicOf Radio Broadcast.Now is the time for the WesternPowers and China to unite and statethe course of action to be taken inregard to imperialism in the FarEast, the University of ChicagoRound Table speakers declared ontheir April 16 broadcast.Discussing “American Policy . to¬ward the Far Blast” were WalterJudd, Congressman from Minnesota,Thomas A. Bisson of the Institute ofPacific Relations, and Harley F. Mac-Nair, Professor of Far Eastern His¬tory at the University of Chicago.“Fear of alienating the Europeanpowers,” declared Judd, “must notkeep us from positive action ancplans. We must remember that wehave other Allies and that those ofthe East hold the balance for thefuture of the world.”In discussing the problem of StateShintoism in Japan, MacNair declarecthat if we allow this system con¬tinued existence, “these people wilrise again in another twenty-fiveyears, and next time, they will finishthe job.”Bisson maintained that a “Chinawith its own sovereignity has arisen,”and thaT instead of dictating to China,we should help it achieve its ownends.f EARN WHILE TOU LEAKN 'No experience necessary.Wetrain you. Rapidadvancemenc if qualified.I PLEASANT WORKING CONDITIONS40*hour week; Modern office. Congenialassociates and surroundings.We have an immediate opening onour telephone sales staff that can easilyprove to he tAi big **iucky break” forsome intelligent, ambitious young lady*The training received here can provea stepping stone to a big*time adver¬tising career. Earnings to start,$25.00 per week. 4 MONTH INTENSIVESecretarial Course forCOLUGE STUDENTS and GRADUATESA thorough, intensive, secretarialcourse — starting February, July,October. Registration now open.★Regular day and evening schoolthroughout the year. Catalog.A SCHOOL OF BUSINESSPKEFEBRED BY COLLEGE MEN AND WOMENTHE GREGG COLLEGEPresidant, John Robert Gregg, S.C.D.Director, Pool M. Pair, AA.A.t M. Mlchlsan Av$. TsIapliBna: STAts HIT Chtaje. Ih.Subscribe toChicago Maroon U.T.T131-TT33 E.55th St.Complete Selectionof Beers andOther BeveragesMIDway 0524Blatz BeerCOLLEGENIGHTEVERY FRIDAYEddie OUverHIS PIANO ANDHIS ORCHESTRAEnlertainmenlDorothy Dorben Dancers .Ann 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 ROADPag® THE CHICAGO MAROON THE CHICAGO MAROONJohn HarmonOlBeial student publication of the Unirersity of Chicago, published evenr Friday duriny tha academic quarters. Published at Lex*inyton Hall. Unirersity of Chicayo, Cbicayo, Illinois. Telephone DORchester 7279 or MlDway 0800, Ext. ill.EDITOR: Frederick I. Gottesman BUSINESS MANAGER; Alan J. StraussEditorial Associates: Bill Roberts, Bill Erlandson, William Wambaugh Business Associate: Fred SulcerEditorial Assistants: Carroll Atwater, Barbara Barke, Ellen Baum, F'lorence Baumruk, Janice Brogue, Harmon Craig, Roger Englander,Bamby Golden, John Harmon, Dorothy Iker, Harry Kroll, Nancy Lieberman, Shirlee Lowry, Idell Lowenstein, Lorraine McFadden, DaniaMerrill, Muriel Newman, Helen Panaretos, Don Shields, Nancy Smith. «Business Assistants; Marillyn Fletcher, Floyd Landis, Ellen Meyerberg, Lois Silvertrust, George Sutherland, Joan Turnbloom.Draft DefermentsIt was fun while it lasted, but, unfortunately,it didn't last very long. We refer, of course, to theestablishment of 2-A quotas for the Universityof Chicago by the National Roster of Scientificand Specialized Personnel and the current Selec¬tive Service order rescinding this kind of defer¬ment. Some particularly bright mjnd or other inWashington apparently changed his mind in theshort space of two months, and with devastatingeffect on the many draft-eligble men at the Uni¬versity.Though the orignal order setting 2-A quotasleft much to be desired in the way of equitability,it was generally conceded that the plan was atleast a limited attempt to settle an importantmanpower problem. Undoubtedly, there wereother possible solutions available, but the Nation¬al Roster was prefered. However, without ques¬tioning the merits of the plan, it should be evi¬dent that no plan is getting a fair trial withineight weeks. And if it was never intended to givethe plan a longer period of testing, then whybother establishing it in the first place?In some areas of authority in this country,there seems to be an attitude of utter contemptfor the fate of individuals caught up in the websof official red tape. Orders and counter-ordersare issued with the utter abandon of a drill ser¬geant shouting out his right, left, and right¬about commands. The personal hardship workedon many of the erstwhile 2-A students at theUniversity is made increasingly unbearable whenit is known just how inefficient the Army classi¬fication system can be. The late lamented A.S.T.-P. program is proof enough, if proof is needed.Before, during and since the A.S.T.P. experi¬ment, factual statements have been rife regard¬ing the inability of the classification system tocope satisfactorily with the complex problem ofplacing a soldier in that type of Army work forwhich he was best suited, and, at the same time,fill the various military manpower needs. Every¬one has heard stories from his friends in the Ar¬my about medical students being trained as radioexperts and electrical engineers being made mo¬tor mechanics.After a student has overcome his personalproblems of selecting his vocation, financing hiseducation,- and satisfactorily completing hisstudies, he is then forced to read about Congres¬sional jam sessions over the draftability of pre-Pearl Harbor fathers and manufacturers ofwomen's hats.The college student's experience with the Se¬lective Service system has been a long series ofmorale-shattering blunders. Nor has this situa¬tion been the fault of the local draft board. Therecord of events connected with the Enlisted Re¬serve Corps, the A.S.T.P., and now the NationalRoster of Scientific and Specialized Personnelproves that beyond cavil. When one realizes themany difficulties that a student has to contendwith even in normal times, his current plight isworthy of more than sympathy. This Week On CampusFriday, April 21Worship Service, Joseph Bond Chapel. Robert Beaven,President Baptist Missionary Training School, Chicago.12:00 noon.Human Development Seminar, Graduate EducationCommon Room. ^‘Approaches to the Study of the In¬dividual. Psychosocial Approach.” Professors RobertJ. Havighurst and W. Lloyd Warner; Gordon Mac-gregor. United States Office of Indian Affairs; aridWilliam Henry; 3:45 p.m.Fourth and last in a series of Chamber Concerts,Leon Mandel Hall. The Philharmonic String Quartet(John Weicher, Franz Polesny, Walter Hancock, andDudley Powers); Margery Mayer, mezzo-soprano; Er¬nest Liegl, flute; Robert Lindemann, clarinet. Theprogram: Mozart, Quartet for Flute and Strings, DMajor; Schubert, Quartet Movement; Hindemith, DieJunge Magd; Verdi, String Quartet. Ticlrets (82 cents,tax included) are available at the University Infor¬mation Office, 5768 Ellis Avenue. 8:00 p.m.Saturday, April 22Dance Symposium, Ida Noyes Gymnasium, sponsoredby Chicago Dance Council. All day, beginning 9:00 a.m.Baseball Game, Greenwood Field, 60th and Greenwood.Illinois Tech vs. University of Chicago. 4:30 p.m.B.A.A. Dance, Ida Noyes Clubbhouse, 3rd floor. Elev¬enth and twelfth grades. 8:00-12:00 p.m.Sunday, April 23University Religious Service, Rockefeller MemorialChapel. George N. Shuster, President of Hunter Col¬lege, New York City. 11:00 a.m.Radio Broadcast. University Round Table, WMAQ andN.B.C. “Foreign Policy and Political Parties.” JosephBall, United States Senator from Minnesota; HaroldLasswell, Chief, Experimental Division for Study ofWartime Communications, Library of Congress; andProfessor Hans Morganthau. 12:30-1:00 p.m.Carillon Recital, Rockefeller Memorial Chapel. Freder¬ick Marriott, Carilloneur. 4:30 p.m.“Requiem” by Gabriel Faure, Rockefeller MemorialChapel.Monday, April 24Charles R. Walgreen Foundation Lecture, Social Sci¬ence 122. “Woodrow Wilson and the New Freedom.”Professor Emeritus Charles E. Merriam. 3:00 p.m.Labor Rights Society, Rosenwald 27. “Labor and theWar.” Karl Deutsch. 4:30 p.m.Tuesday, April 25Worship Service, Joseph Bond Chapel. Professor JohnA. Wilson. 12:00 noon.Sociology Club, Swift 106. “Education and Morale in a* Union on Strike.” Myrna Siegendorf, Educational Di¬rector of the C.I.O., 3:00 p.m.Public Lecture (Department of Philosophy), SocialScience 122. “The Principles of Scientific Knowledge.”Hans Reichenbach, Department of Philosophy, Univer¬sity of California, Los Angeles. 4:00 p.m.Public Lecture (University College), The Art Insti¬tute of Chicago. “German Philosophy and German Poli¬tics. Hegel: Sovereignty, Morality, and History” Vis¬iting Professor Fritz Marti. 6:46 p.m.Fiction Films, Social Science 122. “Daybreak” withJean Gabin. Admision 36 cents. 7:00 and 8:30 p.m.Wednesday, April 26Charles R. Walgreen Foundation Lecture, Social Sci¬ence 122. “Books and Libraries in Wartime. Books andthe Soldier.” Lt. Col. Ray L. Trautman, Chief, ArmyLibrary Service. 4:30 p.m.Public Lecture (University College), The Art Instituteof Chicago. “Architects of Destiny: Postwar Plans.Spellman and Shenn: The Spiritual Challenge of theCatholic.” Sunder Joshi. 6:45 p.m.Thursday, April 27Radio Broadcast, The Human Adventure, WGN and theMutual Network. 7:30-8:00 p.m. Smedley and GeorgeSmedley Visits A GirW Dorm“My goodness,” said Smedley as heand George got off the elevator, “Ihaven’t seen so many open doorssince we were down on MaxwellStreet. You pick one.” George triedto turn into the first room, but wasstopped by the crowd which swelledout almost into the hall.“Gosh, but it’s crowded in here. Doall you girls live in this one littleroom?” asked Smedley.“Oh, no,” shouted a girl from therear of the crowd. “My room mate andI live here .These other girls are bor¬rowing things.”George Chews WhiskersIt was then they noticed Smedley.One of the girls turned and pushinga king size to the corner of her mouthasked, “0, are you a Communist?”“No. I’m Smedley,” said Smedley.“And this is George.”“Is he a Communist!” she askedpointing to George.“No. He’s a goat,” said Smedley.“Well, with that beard, he looksso much like Trotsky I thought surehe must be a Communist.”With this George began to chewupon his whiskers until he wasstopped by Smedley who then staredvery puzzledly about the room. “Areyou in agricultural school?” he asked“Oh no, they don’t have anythinglike that around here,” said the girl.“Is it because there's mud here in¬stead of sidewalks?” asked Smedley.“No. These are fashionable,” purredthe girl.“Aw,” said Smedley disgusted athis own ignorance. “I thought theywere over-alls.”“There is another reason for wear¬ing them though,” said the girl. “It’sa sympathy for the working classes.”“Oh,” said Smedley. And have youworked in factories where you gotto know the workers?”“Well,” the girl hesitated a little. . . “I did know the grooms in myfather’s stable.”“Well, the smell’s about the sameas in a magnesium plant,” said Smeo-ley.Girls Describe Night LifeGeorge the goat bowed his headsomewhat self cons<nously at thislast so Smedley thought he’d betterturn the conversation. Just then an¬other group (much in the need ofborrowing anything) came bouncingin. Smedley bashfully closed his eyesand listened to them tell what funthey had the previous night. Hethought he understood the word“whoopsed” but he didn’t think ithalf so funny or enjoyable as theysemed to think it was.Then one of the girls spotted somesailors and soldiers coming into thedorm. For a minute Smedley andGeorge felt they were the pivot ona revolving door. When the room fin¬ally spun back to where it was, theywere alone with the one girl wholived there.Smedley Watches Spring Cleaning“My, this is certainly messed up,”said Smedley as he surveyed thebooks, magazines, clothes and shoesscattered all over the room.“What do you mean, messed up?”asked the girl belligerently. “I just finished Spring House Cleaning ”“I’m-sorry,” said Smedley .“Well maybe it does need a slighttidying up,” added the girl recon*sidering.Blit as she began to throw the mag¬azines, books, shoes and clothes fromone side of the rom to other in theprocess of cleaning, Smedley remem¬bered that he and George must havehad another appointment. He excusedhimself and left.“My,” said Smedley to George,“aren’t girls funny?”(Next Weekr Smedley Visits a Hu¬manitarian)Phone Midway 7447We Call and DeliverMAX BROOKFOR YOURSpring CleaningTAILOR and CLEANER1013 East 61st Street6716 Calbfor Gibbf Secretaries• Every year many more Gibbs secretarles are requested than areavailab1e-d716 calLs last year. Col-lefe women with Gibbs tralnl’ixhave the choice of many faacinatliiKJohn.Pour-city placement nervlce.Courses bef^in July 10 and Sept.Aak for illuatmted ciitaloc. AddressCollege Course Dean.J(jBLtkjaJUjt£-^L6AA-.6'CW YORK 17 Pnr% Av*COS TON 1C WMarltwrojii >t.CHICAGO 11 . . 720 N«etK Mioh.ii i Ar*.PAOVIDCNCC • ISSAigell ...VOICESFrom UnoccupiedCHINA"Seven Chinese leaders effectively ex¬plain tha • paradox of China today. . . Tha amazing prograss—cultural,scientific, political and sociologicaltha dasparata naad for food, medicine,ammunition and machinery necessaryto avoid tha mass starvation of a hun¬dred million people in tha midst ofwar. "Abundant evidence that theleaders of modern China are at onceman of action and man of vision."Chicago Sun.BYYueh-lin Chin^. Hsiao-T*ung FetNairChen LmChiao TsaiJ, Heng LiuC. K, Chu andDr. Ching-chOiO WuHARRIS LECTURES. 1943EDITED BYHarley F. MacNair$130The University of Chicago Press jFeature PageDon Skield$Traveling BazaarThe pleasant rumor that the Coffee Shop may be returned to the ci¬vilian students for at least part ofeach day this summer conjures upall sorts of pictures, good, bad, butnone of them indifferent ... It isfondly hoped that enough of thenewer students who aren’t yet impressed with “prestige” will flock to said place to pre¬vent the re-institution of the mighty “front door”clique . . . Since the Shop’s closing the remnants of the“set” (and this is by no means limited to the clubs ancfraternities) have established themselves off and on inU.T. with their hangers-on.. .and in case you hadn’tnoticed some of their actions I’ll take this opportunity topoint out some of the types (without names...I’m surethey won’t be necessary)...THE SOCIAL CLIMBER: Variation #1) This (usual¬ly) female of the species is most frequently found at thetable nearest the side door where she is surrounded bysoldiers... and incidentally where she can watch the ex¬its and the entrances... At the appearance of a campusname (it’s got to be well known or it doesn’t interesther) she swoops out for a five minute chat.. .she doesn’tcare whether the name knows her or not: just so peoplesee her talking... she lives on this sort of recognitionand is almost always a freshman. Her male counterpartis a-pipe-smoking, back-slapping, individual who likes tobe dirty rushed... and is equally odious.THE SOCIAL CLIMBER: Variation #2)...Thischaracter made a big club (even the Big-Four can makemistakes) and has never gotten over it...She speaks tonobody but Mortar Boards, Sigmas, Quads, and Esoter¬ics because in her own small mind they’re the BESTpeople.. .this usually means (to her) that they’re rich,white, and well-born, and can do her some good when sheis tired of school.. .the good being introductions to mar¬riage-minded men of the same class.THE VERY MUCH OF A CLUB GIRL: This is usu¬ally a product of a so-called “little” club and she is veryself-conscious about it...so she sits with her sisters(most of whom she can’t stand) and tells dirty storiesabout all the “big” club girls she’s'ever heard of... shewould like to tell these stories to fraternity men but shecan’t for one of two reasons.. .either 1) because shedoesn’t know any.. .or 2) they won’t listen to her.THE TIRED LIBERALS: They’re not really liberalbut they think they are... It’s usually a male and a fe¬male off in some dark corner looking down their collec"live noses at people having fun...It isn’t good radical¬ism to have capitalistic fun.. .They try to dress withstudied casualness but succeed only in being ludicrous...Even their supposed tolerance is fake because they classanybody who wears a ffaternity or club pin (preferablysomeone they don’t know) as a Fascist snob who isn’tworth saving.. .They’re a sad lot.THE EMBRYONIC BMOC: This sad creature doesn’trealize what an ass he is making of himself.. .he wantsto be a BMOC and thinks he can be one by associatinghimself with some real ones at least in the public mind.. .He proceeds to intiude upon all BMOC conversations(he haunts U.T. with this purpose in mind), and to laughat BMOC jokes.. .but he laughs just a little too loud...Aside from being an insufferable bore he is a sublimeegotist and ends up by transferring to Northwestern.THE CAMPUS POLITICIAN: This species unfortu¬nately is often a real BMOC...He can be found in hisnative habitat (a large crowd) any night at the localPub we are examining.. .His favorite trick is to call oneor two people aside and make with the big talk...hemakes his rounds with a determined look on his face sow¬ing his seeds of intrigue... His stock complaint is thathe gets in the damnedest messes and is too often heldresponsible.. .there’s always one c'ub or another whoisn’t speaking to him because of a particularly slimeytrick he has engineered... If he would keep his big mouthshut, he could lead a fairly normal campus existence; butno, he WILL be a BMOC...This little list is by no means exclusive.. .you knowthese people as well as I do and none of us will have achance if they claim the Coffee Shop... Off with theirheads!.. .D.S. THE CHICAGO MAROON ——.Carroll AtteaterPrice SanityLast Wednesday evening the ArtInstitute opened its new exhibit ofthe prints of Posada, printmaker tothe Mexican people, with a lively re¬ception. The crowds were greaterthan they have ever been before;people stood patiently before the In¬stitute Lions for an hour, except fora Mr. McCormick, who was whiskedthrough on a wheelchair by an effi¬cient wife. The entertainment (or such of it as was visi¬ble) was very Latin-American, hat dances and so forth;an orchestra provided tango music all through the eve¬ning, and we'saw a young Navy officer and his girl tan¬going around on the second-floor underneath one of theEl Grecos.* >ii *And as far as wheelchair efficiency goes, two ancientgentlemen were seen beading down past Bartlett Gym intheir wheelchairs this morning at a death-defying pace.Whatever is this older generation coming to ?♦ ♦ ♦The Norman Corwin program on .Tuesday nights con¬tinues to be the most worthwhile dramatic production onthe air. Corwin combines drama and poetry in the tradi¬tion of William Saroyan and the late Stephen VincentBenet. Usually a narrator tells the general story, withfrequent use of the apostrophe and the perfect passiveparticiple; illustrative incidents come along in which Cor¬win proves his amazing knowledge of human psychology;and the program always has a rich background of orig¬inal music.« * «Mr. Rowland has a new story about a local laureatewho was invited to dinner at Foster Hall. After dinnerhe surprised all the girls present by taking out a manu¬script and obligingly reading some of his poems. Thegirls were helpless; even though (as Mr. Rowland coylysuggested) most of them had homework in French 104,5, and 6 to do, they had to listen. Finally the poet arose,and of his own accord, announced, “I will be glad to cometo dinner again, and when I do, I will bring anothersheaf of asphodel!”Nancy SmithBox OfficeLADY IN THE DARK . . . Lavish isthe word for the “Lady.” She is a three-million dollar baby, impressive in spectac¬ular technicolor, settings, costumes, cast,everything. Ginger Rogers is the lady,Liza Elliott, editor of a smart fashionmagazine, who is neurotic because of hersuppressed desires. She consults a psycho¬analyst (Barry Sullivan), to whom she relates her fas¬cinating, but un-dream-like, nocturnal hallucinations,complete with chorus of hundred, song hits, dance rou¬tines, executed in a misty, nebulous medium. Gingercan’t understand why she doesn’t want to marry Ken-dell Nesbitt (Warner Baxter), her publisher, who finallysucceeds in getting a divorce from his wife, and is freeto marry her.The Danny Kaye interpretation of Russel Paxton (thewierdie photographer) has been toned down considerablyby Mischa Auer for the satisfaction of the Hays Office(that coiling monster which tears the heart out of purewit for the Extremely Shocked Ladies’ League of De¬cency).PHANTOM LADY . . .Paranoiac artists and framed good fellows are noth¬ing new in detective thrillers. Neither is a beautiful butstaunch hearted sweetheart and a treacherous friend.All these things^are present in “Phantom Lady”. A neur¬otic, drug shot trap drummer, a memorable jam sessionscene—marking the first time, incidentally, in modemmotion pictures when jazz has been used intelligentlyand dramatically rather than as backdrop for forty un¬dressed chorus girls—a terrifying strangler who managesconsistently to look like somebody else than FranchotTone—these things are new, and they add up to make“Phantom Lady” the best whodunit since “The MalteseFalcon.”WhatQ ” — Page Rv-Music By Copland, GassmannIn Final Composers" ConcertThe fourth and final concert of theComposers’ Series on Friday last, wasdevoted to the works of contemporaryAmerican composers. Aaron Coplandwas represented by his Piano Sonata(1941) and Music for Movies (1942).The sonata was pleasant music, rem¬iniscent of much else: the openingmolto moderato an echo of Debussy’sidiom; the middle vivace Kad a faintsuspicion of reaching for Spanishrhythms—perhaps Copland has beensouth of the border too much; thefinal andante sostenuto was a move¬ment of vigor. Copland’s playing ofhis own work was meticulous enough;but seemed to this reviewer to lacksufficient penetration to exploit thefull possibilities of the Sonata; therewere moments here and there whengreater vigor seemed demanded by thecomposer’s own indications in themusic.Gassmann.Music Has Pleasant CastThe. Sonata for 'Cello and. Piano(1936) and Three Love Lyrics fromWhitman (1940) represented RemiGassmann of our own Music Depart¬ment. The Sonata was melodic andlyric without much in the way of de¬velopment sections: the opening move¬ment might be likened to the Beetho¬ven 'Cello Sonata, Op. 102, No. 1, inits quiet unwinding. The Three LoveLyrics from Whitman were unfortu¬nate, in that the first and third hadbeen previously utilized by Delius in his Sea Drift: there the works findmore appropriate setting in contextcoupled with greater melodic inven-'tion. The work as a whole possesseda Delian cast which made for enjoy¬able listening.Orchestra Distinguishes ItselfVirgil Thomson was represented byhis Stabat Mater (1931) and'<Sonafada Chiesa (1925) for wind instrumentsand viola. The Stabat Mater, to a textof Max Jacob, is a dramatic monologueof some power: unfortunately, it was^marred by being sung in French.This being the United States and Eng¬lish being the official language, itwould be more conducive to popularsupport of music generally to presentworks in the vernacular. The Sonata •da Chiesa, a work dating from the eraof dissonance, had little to recommendit except the Fugue with its skilledcraftsmanship. The Copland Music forMovies, which closed the program,was skillfully played by the Univer¬sity Chamber Orchestra, under HansLange, as was the accompaniment forthe Stabat Mater and the Lyrics.Janet Fairbanks, soprano, who ap¬peared as soloist in the two vocalnumbers, sang with remarkably gooddiction, but insufficient feeling. Thegesture with which she closed theStabat Mater was more worthy ofTosca at Scarpia’s proposal thanMary at the cross.—W. W.Life Lines BUI RobertsPage Six — ;Maroon Nine DefeatsFort Sheridan, 7-6Tom rrow afternoon, the Univer¬sity of Chicago baseball team willface Illinois Tech in the fourth gameof the season. Last Wednesday, theMaroons broke a 6 to 6 tie in theseventh inning to beat Fort Sheridan7-6 for the first win of the year. Pre¬viously, the Maroons lost a double-header to the Iowa Hawkeyes.■ Chicago won a victory over the sol¬diers primarily through errors. FortSheridan made 8, just at the righttimes, for Chicago Alpha Belt JackMarkward only allowed one hit in thesix innings he was on the mound.However, he walked the first fourSheridan batters, the score at the endof the inning, Sheridan 4, Chicago 0.Tracksters Take SecondIn First Outdoor Meet;Maroon Racqueteers TieTomorrow afternoon, the outdoortrack squad of the University willcompete in its second meet of the sea¬son at Great Lakes, Illinois. In a tri¬angular meet here on the ISth,*^ theMaroons paced North Central Col¬lege to its victory, taking a fairlyclose second. Coach Ned Merriam’ssquad, reinforced Ijy Navy trainees,scored 52 points to North Central’s66. Chicago took six firsts and madea satisfactory all around showing.Morton, the third team in the scoringonly got 4 points.Coach Wally Herbert’s Maroon net-men broke even hi the tennis matcheswith North Central the same after¬noon. Each team took three matches.Chicago has seven Big Ten matchesscheduled, not counting the champion¬ships at Northwestern. The Maroonswill face Minnesota in the first ofthese on April 29th. Later in the game, the Maroonsbegan to hit. Red Dowling knockedout a double and Ed Cooperider sin¬gled twice. With the score tied 6-6at the beginning of the eighth inning,Chicago’s 2nd baseman, Ed Cooper-rider reached first base on an error.After stealing second, then third, hewas able to dash home on anotherSheridan error to break the tie.Meteorology—(Continued from page 1)been a meteorology student for ayear. Being a beginner in technicaltryweather study and a stranger tothe country, he realized the need ofa three dimensional map showing theterrain of the locality as a simplifica¬tion in forecasting.A Peruvian, born in Arequipa, “themost charming city in all Latin Amer¬ica,” Wagner worked in the meteor¬ology division of the Pan-AmericanGrace office in Lima following a simi¬lar job at home after graduation fromhigh school in 1935. Interest in theweather runs in the Wagner familywith Bill’s oldest brother, Carlos, al¬so a meteorology employee of Pan-American Grace at Lima.Selective Service—(Continued from page 1)large colleges throughout the country.In the face of this order, applicantsfor deferments must fill out DSS form42-A Special which will be preparedby the head of the school or divisionconcerned. The application must thenbe approved by the State Director ofthe Selective Service System. At themoment, all deferments of this natureare being handled by the state direc¬tor rather than the national roster. THE CHICASO MAROON -University StudentsTo Appear In DanceEvents TomorrowTomorrow the gymnasium in IdaNoyes Hall will be background forthis year’s Dance Symposium, spon¬sored by the Chicago Dance Council.Miss Katharine Manning, Instructorof Physical Education, is a memberof the executive committee of theDance Council.The day starts with registrationfrom 9:00 to 9:30 in the morning.For an hour following, Marjorie Par¬kin of Northwestern University willdemonstrate and direct modern dancetechniques. At 10:46 Mildred Dicken¬son of Western Springs, Illinois, willlead social dancing. Then at 11:46 willbe an hour of square dancing, underthe direction of Henry Graef, Recrea¬tion Supervisor of the Chicago ParkDistrict.At 2:30, after lunch, the Universityof Chicago High School and Collegedance classes, instructed by MissManning, will present several com¬positions. Tea at 3:30 finishes off theday.Those who come should come pre¬pared to participate in the activities.Non-member admission is $1.76;member admission is $1.26; studentadmission is $1.00; and for a singlesession, only $.60 will be charged.TERESA DOLANDANCING SCHOOL1208 E. 63rd St. (Near Woodlawn Av.)Life Member of the ChicagoAssociation of Dancing Masters50c—BEGINNERS CLASSES—50cSun., Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs.,and Sat. Evenings at 8:30Private lessons $1.50—12 N-l I P.M. daiTyLady or Gentleman InstructorsTaiephona Hyda Park 3080Have a “Coke” = So glad you’re back again...or welcoming a home-coming sailorFighting men look forward to that home-world where friendlinessand hospitality are summed up in the familiar phrase Have a *’'‘(joke'\Be sure and get Coca-Cola for your icebox at home. From Atlantato the Seven Seas, Coca-Cola stands for the pause that refreshes,—has become a global symbol of good will and of good living.ftOTTlEO UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BYCOCA-COLA BOTTLINQ CO., OF CHICAGO, INC. **Coke”= Coca-ColaIt’s natural for popular namesto acquire friendly abbrevia-tiqns. That’s why you hearCoca-Cola called “Coke”. Out Of Print SyllabiAtBargain PricesEnglish Business Social SciencePhysics French ZoologyChemistry Physical Science Biol. ScienceAnd Many OthersTHE UNIVERtllY OF (HKAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave., Chicago, ill.Battle Talk! . . . that is what he handles on this portableswitchboard. Close behind our advancing troops, he holdsthe life lines of men in combat. Through these lines, flowreports from outposts, orders from command posts—help¬ing to win objective after objective on the road to Victory,Home and Peace.As the nation’s largest producer of electronic and com¬munications equipment for war, Western Electric is sup¬plying vast cpiantities of telephone and radio apparatusfor use on land, at sea and in the air. Many college gradu¬ates— both men and women—-are playing important rolesin this vital work.Buy War Bonds regularly—all you can!Western ElectrictN PCACE...SOURCC OF SUPPLY FOR THE BELL SYSTEM.IN WAR...ARSENAL OF COMMUNICATIONS EQUIPMENT.