1rVol. 3, No. 30 Z-149 Friday, May 12, 1944 Price Fire CentsNew OrientationPlan CompletedStudents entering the Universityof Chicago will no longer receive as:sistance from the Feoeracion of Uni¬versity Women or the Mens' Orienta¬tion Committee. Instead, a new Orien¬tation Board, a highly centralized^roup of eleven members, will directand combine the orientation activitiesfor both men and women.Under th'' new system, representa¬tion is extended to the first twoyears of the college. A man andwoman from each of the four yearsand the divisions will form a boardto be elected by the outgoing board.The first group, elected last Friday,differs in one respect from the orig¬inal scheme. Due to the war, thereare eight women and four men in¬stead of the planned five and five.This new Board will undertake tocarry on the four main functions ofits duo-predecessors: the planning ofOrientation Week activities; the ex¬ecution of orientation social activi¬ties; management of the studentcounseling system; and the continua¬tion of certain orientation activitiesafter the first week.“The creation of the new Orienta¬tion Board is due largely to twothings:” stated Dean Norman F. Mac-lean, “the extended University pro¬gram entailing three entries a yearinstead of one, and the increase inthe number of first and second yearCollege students with their own par¬ticular problems.” Norman F. MacleanThe Orientation Board elected lastFriday consists of Mary Augustine,chairman, L e n o r e Callahan, Wal¬ter Goedecke, Enid Harris, SamuelMacGregor, Anne Putnam, MarthaVaughn, Lois Lewllyn, Betsy Wallace,Ernie Rowe, Babette Kaplan, PaulRussell, and Bill Wubben, representa¬tives.A training meeting for counsellorswill be held on May 19, at 3:30 P.M.in. Ida Noyes Theatre. Anyone inter¬ested in becoming a student counsel¬lor for the entering class next fallis urged to attend.Colwell To Take OverFilb/s V-PresidencyPresident Robert Maynard Hutchinsannounced yesterday the appointmentof Dr. Ernest C. Colwell as a vice-president of the University of Chi¬cago. He will assume his duties onJuly 1 when Emery T. Filbey, nowone of the three vice presidents, willretire with an emeritus status.As vice-president. Dr. Colwell willhandle all matters connected with theeducational administration of the Uni¬versity. Despite this added responsi¬bility, he will continue to serve asDean of Faculties, and professor andchairman of the department of theNew Testament.Born in Hallstead, SusquehannaCounty, Pennsylvania in 1901, Dr.Colwell was the son of a Methodistminister. He graduated from EmoryUniversity in 1923, received his B.D.degree from the Candler School ofTheology of Emory University in1927, and his Ph. D. in the New Tes¬tament from the University of Chi¬cago in 1930.He taught English literature andBible at Emory from 1924 to 1928,and following his graduate work, be¬came an assistant professor of theNew Testament at the University ofChicago. Since then, he has attaineddistinction, continuing the traditionof Professor Edgar Goodspeed, under Ernest C. Colwellwhom he studied. Dr. Colwell wasprominent last year in the creationof the Federated Theological Facultywhen the staffs of four Midway theo¬logical schools merged.This is the second vice-presidentialappointment to be made by the Boardof Trustees this year. The first ap¬pointment was made last Februarywhen Wilbur C. Munnecke was namedvice-preisdent in charge of businessand administrative affairs of the Uni¬versity. FletcherNew DerbyDay QueenMarillyn Fletcher came up in theI last lap to cross the finish line winnerof the Social Committee’s HobbyHorse race last Wednesday. MissFletcher will, through her victory, bequeen of the Derby Day dance thisSaturday evening.Close behind her at the tape wasGwendolen Schmidt riding GorgeousGwen. Other contestants lost in therush were Marge Fogarty to showastride Sigma Enigma, Bamby Gold¬en, carrying the colors of The ChicagoMaroon, who romped in a poor sev¬enth.*Doris Arnett riding Amorous Arn¬ett, Florence Baumruck on Cairo Flo,and Marjory Mather, astride Marvel¬ous Mather, failed to place. MardyBay, astride Dark Horse, finished fourlengths behind the pack.Overseeing the contest was AlphaDelt Bob Dille and Phi Gam HarmonEdward BrownOf Cornell U.Joins ChicagoEdward K. Brown, chairman of theDepartment of English at Cornell Uni¬versity, has been appointed Professorof English at the University of Chi¬cago. Former Secretary to the RightHonorable W. L. Mackenzie King,Prime Minister of Canada, Mr. Brownis an authority in nineteenth centuryEnglish, American and Canadian lit¬erature. He will begin his work atthe University during the Summerquarter, his appointment being ef¬fective July 1.Author of six books and more than40 articles, Mr. Brown’s latest book,“On Canadian Poetry,” received theGovernor General’s award as the bestCanadian non-fictional prose writtenin 1943. His other books) include:“Edith Wharton,” Victorian Poetry,”and “Studies of Mathew Arnold.” Re¬cently appearing in Harper’s Maga¬zine was his article, “Mackenzie Kingof Canada.”Mr. Brown holds a B.A. degreefrom the University College, Toronto,and in 1935 received the state doctor¬ate from the University of Parr’s. Oneof the few men other than Frenchcitizens to receive this doctorate, Mr.Brown is also holder of the Frenchdiploma d’etudes superieures grantedin 1927 and the ^ Eleve titulaire deI’Ecole de Hautes Etudes in 1928.After leaving Paris, Mr. Brownserved from 1929 to 1935 at the Uni¬versity of Toronto, then headed theDepartment of English at the Univer¬sity of Manitoba, for two years andin 1937 returned to Toronto Univer¬sity.Smedley VisitsThe Strikers<On Page 5) Hobby Horse Wiimer HappyCraig. Alpha Delts Bill Erlandson,Sandy Sulcer and Dave Smothers andPhi Gam Harry Bobsin served asintermittent jockeys of Terrific Tor¬rence, an unidentified milk horsechartered for the occasion.Photographers from the DailyNews, Times, Tribune, and HeraldAmerican, together with a represen¬tative from Life Magazine were pres-Eight Girls’ ClubsVie In Inter-ClubSing Contest SundaySunday afternoon at one thirty theannual Interclub Sing will be held inIda Noyes Garden. The clubs partici¬pating will be: Sigma, Motorboard,Pi Delta Phi, Wyvem, Chi Rho Sigma,Alpha Epsilon, Alpha Chi Theta, andPhi Delta Upsilon.The Esoterics are participating inthe sing but are not eligible for thecup because they have won the singfor the last three years.The judges will be Fred Marriot,Howard Talley, and Mack Evans. Theywill judge primarily on the total ef¬fect and entertainment valujfe. Thewinning club will be awarded a silvercup.Fraternities Get 7Alpha Delta Phi: Michael M.Darrow.Phi Gamma Delta: Laurence G.Deets, Charles H. Cooley.Sigma Chi: Robert W. Burroughs,Robert Owen ChaseEugene Figliulo, Richard P. Fris-bie. ent.The contestants, led by Miss Fletch¬er, will be mistresses of ceremonies atthe Derby Dance this Saturday eve¬ning, where they will participate inthe floor show. The Derby Day dance,to be held exactly one week afterDerby Day, culminates the SocialCommittee’s series of C dances forthis year. The dance will be givenfrom nine to twelve in Ida Noyes Hall.Queen Fletcher will be escorted byjockey Harry Bobsin.May 15 DeadlineFor Maroon MottoContest AnnouncedThe Chicago Maroon's motto con¬test, in progress since February 11and open to students, faculty, alumniand the general public, is drawing toa close. Since the beginning of thecontest several hundred entries havebeen received from all parts of theUnited States and by V-mail fromoverseas.The board of judges, comprisingthree prominent alumni and threewell-known professors, will select themost appropriate motto from the en¬tries submitted. The judges are Dr.Anton J. Carlson, Professor Emeritusof Physiology, Arthur Baer, presidentof the Alumni Association, ValleeAppel, Dr. Mortimer J. Adler, Mr.Howard Vincent O’Brien, and Dr.Joseph J. Schwab.The contest closes Monday, May 15,and all suggestions must be in thehands of the editors of The ChicagoMaroon by that date.Emily Douglas Speaks AgainstPassive U.S. Post-War AttitudeWe should be the producers as w’ell3 the consumers of the future peace,aid Mrs. Emily Taft Douglas lastuesday evening as she spoke beforele Senior Forum on “Strategy foromorrow.” Mrs. Douglas is the wifef Capt. Paul H. Douglas, U.S.M.C.,ow on active duty in the South Pac-ic. Capt. Douglas, a former Univer¬ity of Chicago Professor, is well re-lembered on campus.According to Mrs. Douglas, who isunning for Congressman-at-Large onhe Illinois Democratic ticket, manyactors have been at work in the past0 keep the United States in a com-laratively secure position. Aside from•ur natural resources and favorablegeographic position, there were alsohree factors little realized and com-)letely taken for granted by us.rhese were: 1) after the fall of Na¬ poleon there had been no great mili¬tary power in Europe, 2) the “sleep¬ing giant” in the Far East was dor¬mant, and 3) the British Navy hasbeen on our side.In speaking of the future, Mrs:Douglas doubted that as things standwe can secure a lasting peace. Shedeclared that we must have concretegoals and plans before this perma¬nent peace can possibly be obtained.The goals are already embodied inthe Atlantic Charter, and with theorganization of the United NationsRelief and Rehabilitation Administra¬tion and the World Monetary Confer¬ence, further steps are beng made inthe right direction. But these aloneare not sufficient, according to Mrs.Douglas. There must be some sort ofworld organization with the United(See “Mrs. Douglas” Page 3)Bugler Carroll g^t& hm up faster withfragrant Sir Walter Raleigh**1131-1133 E. 55th St.Complete Selectionof Beers andOther BeveragesMIDway 0524Blatz Beer Smok«f c» sw«6tiNk^Kied) pf Atiterica BUY WARSTAMPSANDBONOS 'P«g* Two'Time" Jumps Gun OnAipenfelf School StoryMiss Ethyl Aipenfelf, recently pub¬licized by Times magazine for herpart in bringing scientfic study ofanthropology to a group of ChicagOihigh schools, as an experiment, yes¬terday told the Chicago Maroon thatTime had jumped the gun on thestory. Superintendent of Schools Wil-Arthur Nock, WorldFamed Classicist, ToGive Lecture SeriesArthur D. Nock, Frothingham Pro¬fessor of the History of Religion atHarvard University and world-fa¬mous classical philologist will delivera series of three lectures on Hellenis¬tic culture at the University of Chi¬cago in the near future. The lectures,under the joint sponsorship of thjOriental Institute and the Committeeon Social Thought, will be given inBreasted Hall of the Oriental Insti¬tute at 4 p.m. on Wednesday, Thurs¬day, and Friday, May 24, 25, and 26.The subjects of the lectures, in or¬der of their presentation, will be:“Hellenistic Philosophy and, Conceptof Natural Law,” “Hellenistic Mysti¬cism,” and “Hellenistic Sacramental-ism.”While Doctor Nock is known chieflyfor his work in the field of the historyof religion, he is also a noted authorityon classical philology, and on Greek inparticular. He has written , manybooks, including Saint Paul and Con¬version, and has also won renown asa teacher, both abroad and in thiscountry.Thompson Earns RickettsAward For Malaria WorkThe Howard Taylor Ricketts V Prizefor outstanding research on malariahas been awarded to Paul EverettThompson, the award committee ofthe Department of Bacteriology andParisitology and the Department ofPathology announced recently.. .Thompson’s research in i a fieldnever before investigated, resulted inthe discovery of three new species ofmalarial parasites peculiar to Mexi¬can and Florida lizards, and has con¬tributed significantly to knowledge ofthe life cycle of "malaria, reportedthe prize committee. His findings areconsidered especially helpful • in in¬creasing understanding of some cur¬rent problems of malariology^;Thompson, a native, of , Vidalia,Georgia, received his doctor of phil¬osophy degree here last year and hassince been working as Mr. and Mrs.Logan Research Fellowi HeSwilli leaveChicago June 1 to take the positionof assistant professor in Tulane Uni¬versity’s department of tropical di¬seases. liam S. Johnson has not given an of¬ficial go-ahead signal on the project,she said.Meetings will be held tomorrow atwhich Mr. Johnson and Miss Aipen¬felf, Professor Fay-Cooper Cole andother interested parties will discussfurther developments in their plans toput the program into operation.In the meantime, until the proposedventure is given official blessing. MissAipenfelf will continue to lecture onracial anthropology at Universities,Colleges and Civic groups.Tomorrow Miss Aipenfelf is sched¬uled to take part in a discussion of“Prejudiced and the World Chaos” atNorthwestern University. Dr. RobertWeaver, head of the Mayor’s commit¬tee on race, Mr. James McCullough,Mrs. Arthur Heilman, director of theYWCA at Evanston, and Mr. JamesYard, moderator of the round table ofChristians and Jews will also beheard on the program.Marillyn Gail Fletcher sprintedto victory in the Social Commit¬tee’s Hobby Horse race last Wed¬nesday. Miss Fletcher, .a Quad-rangler, will reign as “Queen ofthe Derby Dance” tomorrow night.Here she is seen mounted on herglamorous steed after nosing GwenSchmidt of Phoenix House out offirst place. THE CHICAGO MAROONMarillyn FletcherJumps For Joy—Herald-American photoFour Types Of Art FeaturedIn Good Speed Student ShowThe student art exhibit in Good-speed Hall contains very few exam¬ples of student art, thus few pieces ofany value whatsoever can be foundin it. The display is divided into fourparts; oil, water color, black andwhite, and sculpture. A first prizehas been awarded in each division... The winner in the oil section isa portrait of a girl, head cocked toone side, sensitive and wistful-eyed.The artist, Esther Huffman, has cap¬tured the delicate beauty of the sub¬ject with extremely' light tones andan easy touche Another first prize winner is an oil sketch of a hat-shopdone by Jean Cirage, a dark andimpressionistic work full of heavycontrasts and bold brush strokes.A very freely done and effectivewater color of a town landscape byG. H. Lotta vvon first prize in thatdivision. The winner in the black andwhite section is a quick sketch of anold woman by Betsy Harmon. With afew rough lines Mrs. Harmon hascaught the expression and personal¬ity of the subject, an effect that mostartists try hard and long to achieve,usually without success. —B.R. College And UniversityHouses Make Party PlansThe social function for this week¬end has been announced by the jointentertainment committee of Collegeand University Houses, whose mem¬bers include Ted Block, Dave Bush-nell, Gary Clements, Bob Cullins,Chuck Sanford, and Kirk W’^hitley.This will be an open house todayfrom 3:30 to 6:30. Both houses willbe open, and according to the com¬mittee “everyone will be welcome,even the Faculty.”An eleventh grade picnic will beheld at the 55th Street Promontoryon Friday, May 19, from 6 to 9 p.m. Katharine GibbsOpportunities^ , ‘A college girl with“ training is pro-1 \ a top secreta.position. Booklet“Gibbs Girls at Work”gives pertinent informa-tion about KatharineI Gibbs opportunities.For a copy, addresiCollege Course Dean.I^alharine Qibbsboston"? !! .'.‘.‘.‘.’.‘.‘mPRE-INVENTORY SALEFICTIONCHILDREN'S BOOKSBIOGRAPHIES NON-FICTIONRELIGIOUS BOOKSART BOOKSTempting Price ReductionsThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave., Chicago, III.•'*55?..,....- •.- ■B.x.-.v.-.-.-. . . .Odiciat U, S. Army Photo,;Long range battering rams, these big mobile gunsbombard enemy positions, laying down a creepingbarrage in advance of our infantry and tank attacks.Gun crews keep' in close touch by telephone with'*fire control.” Over quickly laid networks of wiresthe battery command coordinates these heavyartillery units, effectively focusing their combinedfire power.Peacetime telephones doing a wartime job IThat’s also the main assignment now of Bell Tele¬phone Laboratories’ scientists — for this country,with the world’s best telephone service in peace,can give no less to its fighting forces in war.BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEMWar calls keep Long Distance lines busy•. • ThaVs why your call may be delayed*Annette Weiss Wins75 Dollar Prize InPoetry Reading.Afr. O’Hara, who presided over theKloronce James Adams Poetry Read-ii)-' Contest, announced the winnersof that contest to be: Annette Weiss,vho received the first prize of seven¬ty five dollars; and GertrudeSchwartz, who received the secondprize of fifty dollars. The judges ofthe final contest held on May 5, were:Pavis Edwards, Gladys Campbell, andL( on Dickinson.The finals of the Poetry Readingcontest sponsored by the Office ofDramatic Productions have also an¬nounced the winners of their con¬test. The winner of the first prizeof ten dollars was Gertrude Schwartz,Avho read: The Western Star by Step-luiii Vincent Benet and three lyricsby \arious authors. The second prize)f five dollars was won by RobertCarter who read Renasance by EdnaVincent Millet. THE CHICASO MAROONStudent Sub-Committee For CollegeProgram Evaluation Completes OutlineThe Student Sub-committee onEvaluation of the College Programcompleted its outline of study thisweek after a month’s preparation.Composed of students from all classesof the College, the Committee hasbeen working on a questionnaire paral¬lel to an outline recently completed bya similar faculty committee headedby Aaron J. Brumbaugh, Dean ofStudents. Members of the student com¬mittee are Alice Shehan, chairman,Janet Davison, secretary, and AnnBryne, Dorothy Duncan, Fred Gottes-man, Arthur Haelig, Louis Levit, Rob¬ert Meismer, Sylvia Slade, RichardStoughton, members.The entire study was broken downinto six major topics: 1) objectivesof the College, 2) curriculum, 3) fac¬ulty and teaching methods, 4. advisoryand personnel services, 5) living con¬ditions and facilities, and 6) studentlife, freedoms and responsibilites. ItAdler Finds War, Peace NotEnough; Talks Sense InsteadMortimer J. Adler, having complet¬'d How to Think About War andTvacc, has written an article entitled“IIuw to Talk Sense in Company,” forthe June issue of Esquire. As he re¬marks, “The right to talk is a demo-t l atic right. The right to think is be¬yond the reach of any tyrant; but theman who has the right to say what hethinks is a free man.”For making the best use of thisright to talk, Adler gives three rules:ohoose the opportune time for a con¬versation, limit the subject matter tomaterial familiar to all involved, andremember that agreement cannot al¬ways be reached in the case of argu¬ment. Executive CommitteeSet For Med. AnnualDavid Hellyer, Barbara Kujoin, Al¬fred Rider and Allino Marchello wereappointed last week to the executivecommittee in charge of the Univer¬sity of Chicago Medical School’s new¬ly conceived yearbook. Headed byHellyer and assisted by Norman Mc¬Cullough and John Ken ward, the medschool book is the first of its kind forChicago.This book will be sent to all alumniof the Chicago med school since itsbeginning and will incorporate allgrades.What To ReadTREASURY OF AMERICAN FOLKLORE - B. A. BotkinWhile reading this you can look into the very heart of America,and see what ma kes it beat $^.04THE RAZORS EDGE - W. Somerset MaughamThe story of a mart who had achieved somethirtg ail of us want,one way or another $2.79ATLAS OF GLOBAL GEOGRAPHY - Erwin RaiszBeautiful, fascinating and informative are the maps in this"different" atlas $3.55LEFT HAND, RIGHT HAND - Sir Oliver SitwellThe Threads of an unusually talented family are woven togetherto make this delightful book $3.04MR. ROOSEVELT - Compton MackenzieA new light is thrown on a man who is the center of so muchcontroversy $3.80YANKEE FROM OLYMPUS - Catherine Drinker BowenJustice Holmes emerges from these pages as the Great Amer¬ican he was $3.04DOROTHY PARKERThe stories and poems of one of America's foremost and dis¬tinguished woman writers $2.03TRANSIT - Anna SeghersThe epic tale of the flight of Europes "fugitives from tyranny"to the port of Marseille $2.54COME IN AND LOOK THEM OVERTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOK STORE5802 Ellis Avenue was not the intent of this committeeto ascertain specific facts under thesesix topics, but hundreds of questionswere posed so that the desired infor¬mation could be secured by a commit¬tee yet to be named in actually makingthe study of evaluation.One of the most interesting aspectsof this outline is the purpose to whichit will eventually be put. A joint com¬mittee of faculty and students will benamed to make the study itself, andthis will provide the mechanism where¬by a continuous evaluation of the Col¬lege program can be made. No otheruniversity in the country has adopteda similar scheme for constant judg¬ment and recommendation for im¬provement of its college program.Moreover, a further departure is madeby giving students an opportunity tovoice their point of view in such con¬siderations.Two maters have yet to be com¬pleted before the outline of study isready to be turned over to the largerCommittee on Evaluation. A meetingbetween the faculty committee andthe student committee will be heldearly next week so that the paralleloutlines may be co-ordinaed and in¬tegrated; and then a recommendationas to what form the questionnaireshould take must be made by the twosub-committees to the main committee. SpeakersConcurAs one impoverished country canthreaten world economic security, fullpost-war employment is an interna¬tional problem involving internationalcooperation. So declared the RoundTable speakers last Sunday in dis¬cussing “Jobs: A World Problem.”Participating with Neil H. Jacoby,Professor of Fina^nce and Secretary ofthe University of Chicago, were fourdelegates from the International La¬bor Organization Conference in Phil¬adelphia: Jan Masaryk, Czechoslovak¬ian Government-in-Exile; GeorgeTomlinson, Great Britain; AlejandroCarrillo, Mexico; and Carter Good¬rich, United States.The speakers agreed that it ismuch more difficult to maintain good¬paying jobs in a democratic societythan in totalitarian countries. Thewar has proved the -high productivecapacity of the United Nations, andthe challenge wijl be to maintainthis production with as little inter¬ference from the government as pos¬sible.O.D.P. Makes Do With Folksy "Green GrowThe Lilacs" To Finish Spring Drama Week ■M '■ ^ Page Three388 Dollars NettedIn Settlement TagDay Drive At U.ofC.$388.11 was netted from the an¬nual Tag Day of the University ofChicago settlement on May 3 and 4.The members of the womens’ clubssold over 3,000 tags.The Student Settlement Board,which directed the Tag Day,.recentlyelected new members as follows:Mary Alice Reed/ Kathryn Guild, LoisBoerger, Gloria Sandalis, BernhardtDunham, Janet Davison, Dania Mer¬rill and Eugenie Springer. Sara Hullwas elected to replace Carla Petersonas chairman.“Green Grow the Lilacs” is a playthat can enjoy no life as literature.The trick is to lift it out of its pagesand present its uniqueness as itsauthor intended. The cast of Univer¬sity actors and actresses did that jobcommendably last Friday night.“Folksy” dramas have suffered highmortality rates in the theatre; gilt orsqualor, the extremes, are fare thataudiences will ingest with little in¬terest in variation. But “Green Growsthe Lilacs,” while not free from“folksiness” has something muchmore. It has a freshness that springsspontaneously from the people itpictures. Simple, robust, cheerful, andsentimental, its farmers and cow¬hands move pleasantly and entertain¬ingly through this melodrama.For the benefit of those who havebeen living underwater these pastmonths, “Green Grows the Lilacs,”written by Lynn Riggs, is the hardyoak from which the glittering “Ok¬lahoma!” was plucked. This opera¬tion in itself is enough to insure anadded quarter of a century to the lifeof the aged parent. The plot was fat¬tened, certain hints were developedin the transfer, but the heart of thething remained untouched.Maynard Wishner performed as thehero. Curly McClain. As a winningmixture of virility, ingenuousness,and general tunefulness, Wishner dida fine job. Curly McClain spends mostof his on-stage time wooing LaurieWilliams, employing techniques thatHenry Aldrich of the radio abjuredlong ago, but Wishner complied withthese demands convincingly enough.As Laurie, Cynthia Sibley, turned inno less able a performance. With thesoul of a milkmaid, she was an en¬gaging heroine even when matterstook on their most undairylike com-plection. She made such a lovable cab¬bage of Laurie that our hearts wereblack with hatred against the crudemerry-Andrews who persecuted Cur¬ly and her on their wedding night.As the “heavy” and with a moresharply defined role, Alfred Edyveanas Jetter Frye, did the most success¬ful job in the cast. If he sacrificed the morose Jeeter to the violent, men¬acing Jeeter, it was not a flaw in theproduction. The second female leadwas the part of Aunt Eller, playedby Bourie Davis, and she stands ona par with the three already men¬tioned for capability of performance.Aunt Eller dominates the last scene,and was more responsible thanfor its success.—B. P. anyCLASSIFIEDPublic steno—Fast Service. Typing—16c double¬spaced page: 2c carbon. Triangle 7216. Mrs.Marshall. Mrs. DouglasContinued from page one)Nations as its nucleus — a WorldCourt of Justice or International Po¬lice Force. The United States, thespeaker further declared, must notmake the mistake it made after thelast World War and refuse to enterinto such an organization. "The Senior Forum, composed of theSenior Medical Students, is an en¬tirely new organization and is led byDr. David T. Hellyer, President ofthe Senior Class. Its speakers areprimarily those well known and wellversed in world events. Plans are nowbeing made to have a number of rep¬resentatives from the political con¬ventions to be held in Chicago asguests. Open to all who are interested,the lectures are given on the averageof once every two weeks.4 MONTH INTENSIVESecretor/o/ Course forCOllEGE STUDENTS and GRADUAHSA thorough, intensive, secretarialcourse — starting February, July,October. Registration now open.★Regular day and evening schoolthroughout the year. Catalog.A SCHOOL OF BUSINESSPKEFBRRED BY COLLEGE MEN AND WOMENTHE GREGG COLLEGEPresident, John Robert Gregg, S.C.D.Director, Paul M. Pair, M.A.6 N. Michigan Ave. Telephone: STAte 1881 Chicago, hi.“Sure it’s a swell Arrow Tie—but what will the Admiral say?”What does anyone say when he sees an Arrow Tie?He says. “It’s swell!”—For several reasons. Arrowsare good-looking, in smart patterns and neat stripes.Arrows are made well, with a special lining cut onthe bias to resist wrinkles, and to see that theymake perfect knots. Arrows are made of fine fabrics—wear longer. For Army and Navy men as well ascivilians—at your Arrow dealers. $1 and $1.50.ARROWSHIRTS • TIES • HANDKERCHIEFS • UNDERWEAR • SPORT SHIRTS★ BUY WAR BO r D S AND STAMPS ★Pa9* Poor THE CHICAGO MAROOnTHE CHICACO MAROONOlBeia] student publication of the University of Chicago, published every Friday during the academic quarters. Publlahed at Lex¬ington Hall, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois. Telephone DORchester 7279 or MIDway 0800, Ext. S&l.EDITOR: Frederick I. Gottesman BUSINESS MANAGER: Alan J. StraussEditorial Associates: Bill Erlandson, John Harmon, Bill Roberts, William WambaughEditorial Assistants: Carroll Atwater, Barbara Barke, Ellen Baum, Florence Baumruk, Harmon Craig,Dorothy Iker, Harry Kroll, Nancy Lieberman, Shirlee Lowry, Lorraine McFadden, Helen Panaretos, Don Shields, Nancy Smith, rBusiness Assistants: Marilyn Fletcher, Floyd Landis, Lois Silvertrust ■■ -ControversyCurrently, the University is being exposedto a veritable snowstorm of petitions. On theface of it, one would believe that the sum totalof this political agitation on campus betweenvarious factions of the faculty and the presi¬dent’s office bodes well for future change andprogress.Unfortunately for the campus at large, theissues have been beclouded by subterfuge andmisinformation from all sources in a mannerentirely contrary to the gravity of the issuesthemselves. The onus for this regrettable situa¬tion must rest with the various protagonists whoinsist on keeping their proposals “confidentialdocuments” and, at the same time, stimulatingdiscussions of these selfsame matters. Nonethe¬less, if a mere student may be so bold, we shalltry to dispel some of the clouds, and bring lightto these questions which are of such great im¬port to the students, as well as the faculty andadministration of the University.At present, the chief controversy is largelyconfined to a number of senators of the University who wish to curtail some of the powers ofthe President by making it mandatory that theSenate be the prime determining body on all mat¬ters of educational policy. The signers of the“Memorial” petition feel that the President hasdeliberately bypassed the Senate and, in doingso, has exceeded his authority. They also pointto his recent speeches as evidence that he intendsto continue this procedure, but to an even great¬er degree.If the signers of this petition (which waslargely inspired by Mr. Crane of the English De¬partment) were merely members of the conser¬vative “old guard” who have so strenuously andvaliantly opposed everything and anything thatMr. Hutchins has done or attempted to do in hisfifteen years at the University, perhaps the doc¬ument could be dismissed as a mere manifesta¬tion of continued rheumy displeasure. However,many of the Senate signers cannot be so charac¬terized. Since this is so, a greater degree of va¬lidity must be placed upon the issues raised bythe “Memorial.”But there are certain charges that the Pres¬ident’s office may also place against the Senate.The University Senate is largely composed ofTien whose chief interests reside wholely withinthe confines of their particular specializationsand departments. Consequently, their outlookupon the entire University has been sharply lim-■ ited. This condition would naturally disqualifymany of them in the determination of generalUniversity-wide policies.Moreover, there are certain malpracticesprevalent within some of the departments them¬selves, as indicated in the more recent petitioncirculated by Mr. Wind. However, the degree ofseriousness of the issues raised in this petitionmay be suspect for two reasons: 1) interdepart¬mental feuds, except in rare cases, are not a ma¬jor concern of the Senate, the President’s office,and the Board of Trustees; and 2) the petitionmay also be considered as an attempt at obscur¬antism on the part of the few people who insti-’ gated this particular document. Furthermore,it is felt that the issues at stake are too import¬ant to be made targets for this sort of politicalstrategy.However, there is still a further charge thatthe President’s office may still make against theSenate, and, I might add, it is by far the most se¬rious. It would not be sheer rationalization forThis Week On CampusFriday, May 12Worship Service, Joseph Bond Chapel, Professor ErnestJ. Chave, Professor of Religious education, FederatedTheological Faculty. 12:00 noon.Saturday, May 13Darby Day Dance. Ida Noyes, 9 to 12 p.m., Wally HermesOrchestra.Sunday, May 14University Religious Service, Rockefeller Chapel. Rever¬end Joseph F. King, First Congregational Church,Oberlin, Ohio. 11 a.m.Radio Broadcast, University Roundtable, W.M.A.Q.‘‘Hemisphere Development and the Common Man.”Rafael Oreamuno, J. B. Condliffe, and Wm. B. Benton.1.2:30 p.m.Monday, May 15Charles R. Walgreen Foundation Lecture, ‘‘The Old andthe New in the Next New Deal, Postwar.” Charles E.Merriam, Social Science 122—3:00 p.m.Tuesday, May 16Lecture presented by the Department of Economics andthe School of Business, ‘‘Psychology and the Analysisof Business Behavior.” George Katona of the CowlesCommission, Social Science 122, 4:30.Wednesday, May 17Charles R. Walgreen Foundation Lecture, “ContemporaryWar Books,” John T. Frederick, Professor of ModernLetters, Northwestern University. Social Science 122,4:30.Socialist Club. “Bureaucracy In a Socialized Economy.”Rienhard Bendix, Department of Sociology, Rosenwald27.Conferences for Students Completing the Work of theCollege and Entering the Division of the Social Sci¬ences. Science 302, 3:15 p.m.Thursday, May 18Conferences for the Students Completing the Work ofthe College and Entering the Division of the SocialSciences. Speakers: Social Science 302, 3:16 p.m.Mr. Hutchins to justify his past actions on thegrounds that the Senate disqualifies itself fromthe consideration it now demands simply be¬cause it has not been, and is not yet a truly rep¬resentative body of the faculty at large. It shouldbe apparent that if the Senate were really repre¬sentative, there could be no grounds to defendthe President’s disregard of the Senate.The Senate Commitee on Reorganization hasjust completed an interim report to be pre¬sented to the Senate at its next meeting. One ofthe matters contained in the progress report isthe suggestion that the base of the Senate bebroadened by the ex officio inclusion of certainassociate professors and some assistant profes¬sors of five years or more service at the Univer¬sity. I hardly believe that this arbitrary enlarge¬ment of the Senate would be acceptable to theMessrs. Krueger and Schwab and the signers oftheir petition to reorganize the Senate into anelective and representative body.Although the necessity for reforming theSenate by some system of elected proportionalrepresentation is paramount, there exists a greatdanger that the issue will be rejected in the samefashion of a similar proposal presented fouryears ago.Though there is no connection between thismatter and the other two petitions, the senatorsshould realize that this is an issue of prior im¬portance to any demand for satisfaction of im¬mediate and probably temporary grievances. Norshould they be blinded by self-importance to thefact that once the Senate is elective and trulyrepresentative, many of the current difficultieswould dissolve of themselves. At any rate, theSenate’s case against the President’s “dictator¬ship” would be infinitely strengthened, if Mr.Hutchins were to continue to ignore the reform¬ed Senate in the determination of Universityeducational policy. By W. L. Warner, R. J. Havighurstand M. B. Loeb, Harper and Bros.,1944.Dear Maroon:I haven’t read this book honestly,the way we read in blame thaton the war, not on me. Time wascalled for, and time I didn’t have.Here, then, is what a sloppy readingtells me.The publisher’s blurb on this bookis wrong. The book isn’t “a factualstatement of the extent to which our_public school system offers a genuineequality of opportunity” (for what?)“for all children!”Instead it’s an attempt to marry“facts” to moral and political philos¬ophizing. Trouble is, the marriagedoesn’t come off. At best, it’s a mar¬riage of convenience; the contractingparties are chaperoned and forbiddento get to know each other. All thefacts are in one place—Chapters Ithrough X; ail the moral and politicalphilosophy in another—Preface andChapter XLWhat are the book’s facts? Roughlythese;Americans believe that their schoolsprovide children with equality of op¬portunity.They don’t provide anything of thekind.They don’t because America has acomplex and varied class system.This class system introduces similarvariability of opportunity in otherways as effective, more subtle and hid¬den, than by money alone.Some of these ways:1. By the pleasure principle: whatparents admire, Johnny does wellif he can); what parents don’t ad¬mire, Johnny does indifferently,and so on. What parents of oneclass or caste or other subdivisionadmire, another doesn’t, so kids ofdifferent classes are determinedor conditoined to different likes andhabits, including school work.2. By the pleasure principle: Johnny’splaymates are chosen on a classbasis; children of different classesadmire different behaviors; ad¬miration is pleasurable; thereforeJohnny Upper-Upper again devel¬ops likes and habits which are notthe likes and habits of JohnnyLower-Upper.3. By operating on schools and fac¬ulties: “nice” kids are encouragedto take college preparatory workin high school; not-nice kids rare¬ly, unless exceptionally bright.College-prep curricula are fre¬quently better taught than ter¬minal curricula. The best buildingsand equipment for high schools goto the one’s serving the “better-class” neighborhoods (again qual¬ified by “frequently”) and so on.Anyway: there is not equal educa¬tional opportunity in this country. Theschool system operates as a conserva¬tive force to keep most people in theclass from which they spring. Thecapacity for social mobility (rising inthe class structure) is itself doled outwith due regard to class, as far aseducation is a factor in such climbing—and as a factor, it’s far from hay.What is the philosophy? Somethinglike this:Democracy requires the effectivefunctioning of our good brains. De¬mocracy requires us to possess a com¬mon core of moral experience. Schoolsmust indoctrinate pre-professionalswith codes of ethics. Schools mustNOT be instruments for a particularpolitical or economic philosophy.Schools must educate us to enough(See “Review” page 6) LettersTo The Editor:I just received your issue of FridayApril 7, 1944. This issue contains onits first page an article entitled “An¬other Chicago Professor Visits Uni¬versity of Puerto Rico.” With respectto me, this article contains an* erron¬eous statement. In the third para¬graph you say that the various pro¬fessors who have been called to Pu¬erto Rico serve there “in one or bothof two functions. The first is the ac¬tual rearrangement of curriculum inthe undergraduate years and the re¬organization of the University on theChicago Plan. The other is straightteaching. It was in this last positionthat Drs. Borgese and Rheinsteinserved.”As far as I am concerned, thisstatement is wrong. I have been en¬gaged in teaching both in the LawSchool and in the Department of Po¬litical Science. However, I have al¬ways regarded it as my main functionto assist the Chancellor of the Diver¬sity of Puerto Rico in the reorgani¬zation of the Political Science Depart¬ment.Very truly yours.Max RheinsteinUniversity of Puerto RicoOffice of the ChancellorTo The Editor:The Department of Music is veryhappy and proud to acknowledge theorchid so generously awarded by TheMaroon in its editorial columns lastFriday. We are glad that you approveof what we have been trying to do,and I assure you that there will beno let-down in our enthusiasm nextyear. I should like to call to your at¬tention, however, that through someoversight the editorial failed to men¬tion the names of two members ofthe Music Department who have madeparticularly large and distinctive con¬tributions to what you term our “Ren¬aissance.” Remi Gassmann conceivedthe idea of the Composers Concertsin the first place, and has arrangedand administered all of the programsin that concert series. Hans Langecreated and maintained a chamberorchestra of noteworthy technical andmusical distinction, in spite of thedifficulty of upholding the highest ar¬tistic standards in a period whenmany of the most experienced playershave had to leave school. Inasmuch asthe Department of Music, remarkablethough it may seem, functions with afull spirit of cooperation toward theachievement of idealistic ends, thosemembers of the Department who weresingled out for mention in your editor¬ial all agree in feeling badly aboutthe omission of credit to two of theirmost valuable colleagues.In the last analysis, of course, weare all of us—both the mentionedand unmentioned ones — happy thatthe revised and expanded program ofthe Department of Music has founda place in student life, and apprecia¬tive of the generous tribute The Ma¬roon has paid.Sincerely yours,jCecil M. SmithChairman, Dept, of Music(Ed. note: Our apologies to Messrs.Gassman and Lange for our failureto include them in the editorial of May5. The omission was unintentional,and should in no way reflect upon theircontributions to the total achievementof the Department of Music.)Feature Page Carroll Atwater THE CHICAGO MAROONOon Shieldsfraveling BazaarAs all Bazaar writers do at one timeor another, this columnist ended upin the Botany Pond last Wednesday.i^This was the fourth time it’s hap¬pened, so I’m beginning to take it instride. But this time, my last laughis pretty loud. The throwers wereboys from the first two years of theCollege and, as near as I could makeit out, they were offended at lastweek’s remark here concerning “menof seventeen’’... and therein, readers,• — lies the last laugh . . . That littleurb, the one that got me tossed was written by two ofleir own classmates . . . Two kids from the first twojars of the College gave it to me, and I printed it (asley asked me to) word for word ... I offered them adine but they preferred to remain anonymous and»they shall ... So you see the two who were responsi-e for the fancied outrage got away . . . and I guesswas worth the trip to the Pond . . .Comps don’t seem to mean a thing this year at leastfar as the social calendar is concerned ... In formerars the season, except for Blackfriars, and the at-nding house parties, was usually over by the begin-tig of May and sometimes by the middle of April . . .)wever this year’s great fun-loving public pays no at-ition to the mores . . . The final “C’’ dance is sched-jd for Saturday of this week-end (see below for deils) . . . Inter-Club Sing this Sunday . . . College ancliversity Houses plan joint parties for the week-enc) . . . and all this with comps just a few short weeks^ay . . . What Price SanityTo add to the ever-increasing stockof Lady Craigie stories—a facultydaughter we know says that this oneis a pennanent fixture in her home:Lady Craigie arrived at a tea ratherlate, looked around the living-roominquiringly, and remarked to her hos¬tess, “Well, this is a very good-look¬ing house, although I certainly would¬n’t have guessed it from the outside.”The Editor of the MAROON gotthis enlightened piece of mail recently:We hold it to be indisputable: That anyAmerican who does not actively opposemore than the “traditional two terms”for any president,—regardless of anyconceivable circumstance—isAN UNINTELLIGENT AMERICANorAN AMERICAN WITH A SOUL OF MUD—The Jefferson Democrats.We think that Jefferson might consider this as takinghis name in vain. Especially that last phrase. John HarmonSmedley and GeorgeSmedley Visits A Picket LineThe line which followed Robert Frost out of MandelHall the night he lectured, tagged ecstatically along inback of him all the way down 57th street. Someone saidthat if you didn’t know it was Frost they were cheeringyou would have thought it was Sinatra.The Pi Lam party last week-end in honor of theirIOC Maynard Wishner’s triumph in O.D.P.’s “Greenow the Lilacs” was almost headed for disaster before}egan ... A garbled story in The Chicago Maroon lastek called it an open house and it practically amount-to a blanket invitation to the campus . . . luckily theipe vine functioned well and the thundering herd did; descend upon the brothers Pi Lam . . . The cast oflacs” was invited and according to Pete Chudom thege was quite a success . . . The ODPeople (apologies1 the back of my hand to Time) led community sing-and the house became an improvised Barn . . . GuestHonor Wish appeared with his usual June AbramsChudom imported his current one from the UniversityIllinois by name of Rae Tuchman.In sad contrast to this gleesome lot was the Alphat-Z.B.T. Party at the Zeb house . . . the reports I re-^ed from the women in attendance were varied buterally in agreement . . . the variations were only inrees of boredom . . . One of the girls said that it was; too “cute” for words and that she hadn’t seen sucharty since her high-school days ... It came to pass: “Prince of Wales” was actually played while the:er” characters drank beer out of pitchers to the loud►mpaniment of outmoded cliches . . . The men tell a‘rent story . . . Smothers militantly says that thelia Delts had a WONDERFUL time . . . the Z.B.T.’searly since most of their dates were from North-tern and had to be back in Evanston . . .Fred Gottes-and his Mrs. were in attendance, and according to1 he was there to gather material for his case againstfraternities . . . bet he gathered plenty.J.T. was the scene of some wild excitement last Fri-night . . . One of the habitues casually flipped arette in the Men’s John and returned to his table,i realizing that the butt had fallen into an oily-mop . . . within a few minutes the John was billow-with smoke which was seeping throughout the placeDaisy, our favorite barmaid was frantic and the:eep, sure that there was a fire in the basement,d the Fire Dept ... It developed into a delightfulition . . . not only were the Firemen chagrined atng only a smouldering floor mop but hot on theiri came the village police checking proof of ages . . .cigarette throwing character' and his friend had one:-card between them . . . the one who had the cardthe police that he had followed the firemen in tothe excitement . . . the one who had caused thee mess was then left sans card, sans proof, sanssans everything, and even/ually landed in the streetle seat of his dignity ... I think he was extremelyr about it. . . D.S. One of the photographers who covered Wednesday’sHobby Horse Race at the Circle demonstrated what it isto have faith in the youth of America. Dissatisfied withthe pose that his subjects had taken, he said pleadingly,“Come on, kids, just take a position that you thinkwould make a good picture.” We can imagine such hard-/boiled photographers as Margaret Bourke-White sayingthings like that.Nancy SmithBox OfficeLOST ANGEL ... A charmingmovie about a little foundling girlwho was raised as an educational ex¬periment by a group of psychologistswho apparently believed in the Hut¬chins plan. At the age of six she wasacquainted with history, semantics,advanced mathematics, played theharp, spoke Chinese fluently and.» played chess for recreation. MargaretI O’Brien is Alpha, the petite punditwho is interviewed by news reporterJames Craig, says of his paper, “Reactionary, isn’t it?”He tells her of the magic in the world outside; of flyingcarpets and leprechauns. Little Orphan Alpha bargesinto his life, reforms an ex-convict with such simplephilosophies as “That would be un-intelligent . . . “LostAngel” is a lovely,* wistful little picture. (Any resemblance to persons livingor being carried out of MontgomeryWard’s is purely intentional and any¬one who interprets it otherwise, doesso at his own peril.)“George, you would need a new col¬lar today when we intended to go tothe bookstore,” chided Smedley.George the Goat didn’t say any¬thing but stared at the lines of peo¬ple marching up and down in frontof the mail order house.“Goodness,” said Smedley, “a picketline. We can’t cross that. My UncleHarry said never cross an angry wo¬man or a picket line.”“That’s the attitude, fellow,” saida slight fellow who held a pipe be¬tween his teeth.“Oh, you must be a striker,” saidSmedley.“Well, not exactly,” said the slightone. “I’m a picket.”Dept. Of MusicClarifies AimsBill RobertsLife LinesOh, that’s Rollo . . . he’s more fun than a• barrel of monkeys! I had an interview recently withCecil Smith, the chairman of the De¬partment of Music, and one of thethings discussed was the question ofstudent participation in practicalmusic—in addition to the theoreticalside. Mr. Smith said, “The study ofmusic in a university belongs in twoseparate but interdependent contexts.The nature of music as an art re¬quires participation in the actual per¬formance. It is the aim of the Depart¬ment of Music to maintain a properbalance and mutuality between theobjective study of musical subjectmatter and the practical experienceof music as an art.“The academic instruction offeredby the Department of Music is de¬signed to train the student in theory,analysis, criticism, and history. Par¬ticipation in instrumental or vocalperformance is required, and, whenthe talent of the individual studentprovides sufficient warrant, endeavorin the realm of creative compositionis encouraged and assisted, in orderto maintain and increase the student’simmediate perception of the dynamicqualities of the art of music.“Only academic work is includedin the formal schedule of instructionin perparation for the degree of Mas¬ter of Arts. No form of official ac¬knowledgement or transfer credit isgiven for participation in musicalperformance, although the Depart¬ment oi Music requires such par¬ticipation as a part of the career ofevery candidate for the degree ofMaster of Arts. Similarily, no officialacknowledgement or transfer credit isgiven to those students who are en¬couraged to work in the field of com¬position.“In the view of the Department,such particular musical vocations asteaching, composition, research, jour¬nalism, and public performance areall likely to attain importance andvalue only when they are undertakenby thoroughly trained musicians. Thecurriculum of the Department shouldthus be regarded as pre-professionalor cultural, rather than professionalor vocational in scope. Ample oppor¬tunity for practical experience in mu¬sical performance is provided by theorchestras and chamber music groups,by the choir, chorus, and smallergroups. The various groups areformed according to the technical pro¬ficiency and previous musical exper¬ience of the players. The Departmentdoes not provide individual instruc¬tion in voices or instruments. A con¬siderable amount of group coachingof a high level is, however, provided.” “Is thereSmedley.“Decidedly,” said the picket. “Pick¬ets don’t have to be workers. Theycan be students.”“Oh,” said Smedley. “But why don’tyou take a job in the office of theunion?”“We’d never have movies taken ofus there,” said the student picket.Smedley thought he’d better leaveabout this time as he wanted to seethe rest of the strike. Just then heheard the voices of two soldiers sing¬ing “Take it Easy.” He and Georgelooked up to see a member of theboard of trustees of the Universitybeing carried down the stairs.It was the strangest thing eitherSmedley or George had ever* seen.The member of the board of trusteeslooked very calm despite the FragileHandle With Care stamp pastedacross his forehead.“He looks like an Indian, doesn’the, George?” asked Smedley as theynoted his arms folded over his some¬what concave chest. When theyreached the door, the soldiers depos¬ited their charge on one of the finestmail order beds which had been placedthere for that purpose. He then arosesomewhat creakily, brushed himselfoff and hurried toward his black lim¬ousine.Just then six people who all lookedthe same came up to Smedley. Fromthe Phoenixes branded on their fore¬heads, Smedley knew they must beconnected with the University.“How do you do. I’m Proxy,” saidthe first in a voice that was muffledby a mouthful of dollar bills.Smedley thought it was strange toeat such things but George didn’t.Smedley introduced himself andGeorge.When each of the six announcedhis name as Proxy, Smedley’s curious-ity got the better of him.“Why are you all named Proxy?”he asked.“Because we do proxymately whatthe Trustee would wish us to.” an¬swered the six in chorus.“Oh I see,” said Smedley to avoidyoufurther conversation. “Thenagree with the Trustee?”“If we didn’t,” answered the Prox¬ies in chorus, “these dollar bills wouldchoke us.”This was too much for Smedley sohe and George turned to go.“Goodness,” said Smedley, “All thistrouble to get you a collar and thenwe didn’t get one.”(Next Week; Smedley Visits theBookstore)Brandt Believes ArmyCan Save U.S. LiteratureThe armed forces may pull theUnited States from a cultural lag inthe field of literature and reading, de¬clared Joseph A. Brandt, Director ofthe University of Chicago Press, inthe Walgreen Foundation lecture onthe University campus, late Wednes¬day afternoon. Mr. Brandt, who spokeon the subject “War and the BookTrade” was deeply concerned by thefact that the ratio of book readersin America remains nearer the back¬ward nations than the forward ones.Mr. Brandt offered a few hopefulelements which have resulted fromthe war. War workers and servicemenhave been reading more and more,both for entertainment and education.If the armed forces can continue theirreading after the war, the culturallag of the United States will be re¬duced by many years. '-"IPage SbL'“ ** r^THB’.miCASO'iiMARQQW.A,^ —^-- '■ '~" 'j^iiriviii Colorful Wiik Big Ten,?<'^■f’ st weekend, the University of^^^jSicago Maroons dropped anotherT'fliir of ball games 14-3, 17-4. This.^ttWe the Buckeyes of Ohio took theicago squad over the coals, gettinghits off Jack Markward, who pitchedf^ihe first 7 innings of the first game.f^r^.Ed VerSteeg held the Bucks to 1 hitin his innings.What happened the week befure end of the second game. Twelve hitswas the final total off three Chicagopitchers, Stoughton, Munn, and Ver¬Steeg. Cooperrider and Bob Haltnerscoring in the 3rd and Cunninghamand Bromley tallying in the eighthwere the Maroon’s four runs for theafternoon. The Bucks scored 17 runshelped along by Don Grate. Gratepitched first game and then movedto left-field for the second. He battedwith Wisconsin was repeated thisweek. In one inning, the opponents [ out a homer and a double,usually get most of their runs and j First Game:then keep on scoring before Chicago I Ohio Statecan recover, Uncil the seventh inning, | Chicago^^Xhicago and Ohio State were tied up, Second game:! 3-3 and the game looked fairly close.! Ohio State 0 0 0 2 1 0 62 0 0 1 0 0 0Chicago 2 0 1 3 2 3 50 0 2 0 0 0 0 143174Taking advantage of 3 bases onballs, 2 singles and a homer by cen- On the Maroon baseball scoring list,ter-fielder Ranz, Ohio State scored Earl Enerson, rightfielder on the Chi-6 runs. They tallied again in the cago squad stands number one witheighth and knocked out six hits and = .444 average. Out of nine times atrounded home 4 times to make the bat, Enerson hit four times. Secondfinal score 14'2. Ed Cooperrider and baseman Eddie Cooperrider ranksRed Dowling scored two runs forChicago in the first inning on DonNorton’s double.Ohio State hit steadily and scored second. “Coop” has scored six runs onnine hits (22 times at bat) for a.409 average. Don Norton, Marooncatcher is third with .389 averagesteadily from the beginning to the . (7 hits out of 18 times at bat.)I*!- • • •EVERY FRIDAYEddie OliverHIS PIANO ANDHIS ORCHESTRAEnlerlainmenlDorothy 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 ROOMS300 BLOCK SHERIDAN ROAD Pitcher Ed VerSteeg ^ holds downforth place (.312) with Charlie Win¬ter and J’ohn Brewer tied for fifth.(.260) Clayton Bromley and Ed Bro¬ken also placed on the list with .174and *167 respectively.Round UpThis weekend, the baseball squadwill take a rest from the vigorousschedule it has pursued this season,in preparing for games with Minne¬sota here on May 19th and 20th, saidCoach J. Kyle Anderson.Saturday, the track team will faceWisconsin at Madison. Ned Merriam,Maroon track coach, has three newmen making the trip. Jacoues Poirierwill enter the half mile race, RussellLilse will compete in the low hurdles,and Theodore Geiter will heave old“cannonball” in the shot put.MayMayMay 25May 26May 31Revtew . . .(Continued from Page 4)flexibility to expect social change andhelp direct it (but in what direction?)An elite of brains and ability is re¬quired by democracy. Such an elitewill serve society if rewarded by es¬teem and privilege.Reward by esteem and privilegebreeds the demand that the childrenof the privileged and esteemed be giv¬en ditto. They should be given reason¬able assurance of same—i.e. whetherthey deserve it in terms of brains andability or notj more-or-less; to some,or more, extent.BUT the have-nots should havemore than a fighting chance to get; alarge proportion of the good jobsshould go to the have-nots of brainsand ability.In short, let’s give opportunity tosome of the effective members of thelower classes without taking it en¬tirely away from the undeserving inthe upper classes, and NOT go whole Junetrack squad Wifi .^hter the Kdtitakeerelays in an attempit to extend theirunbeaten victory string. The thincladshave met and vanquished Mount Car¬mel, South Shore, Francis Parker andLoyola Academy. Last year they tooka third at Kankaee and this year thecollege-men stand a good chance ofwinning. The only serious competitionto the U High squad is Bloom, Thor¬ton, and Kankaee high.kAnother U High team, the baseballsquad will compete tomorrow againstHarvard in Washington Park. LastMonday, the lads took Wheaton intocamp 11-1 led by John Sharp andJohnny Spencer (a couple of hitsapiece), Bil IMcGonigle, after pitch¬ing a no hitter against Latin last Fri¬day. held the Wheaton Wildcats to 3hits. U High looks like a cinch to beata very weak Harvard team this after¬noon. A win will be their fifth in anunbeaten string.2324hog because if we did, we would vio¬late “sentiments that dominate allmen” (essentially or accidentally?)and get social chaos. Now, if you cansee what I meant by th lack of suc¬cessful marriage, fine and dandy. Ifnot, see me in my non-existent office-hour.Anyway you ought to read the book.J. Schwab COMPREHENSIVE SCHEDULEMay 22 English 1, 2, 3 ,Philosophy 101-102-103Mathematics 101-102*103History 101-102-103Observation-Interpretatibii *IntegrationChemistry 104-106*120;104-105-130French 101-102-103;104-106-106;107-108-109 ‘German 101-102-103; is.104-106-106;107-108-109 ^ tSpanish 101-102-103;104-106-106;107-108-109English 121-122-123 „Physics 105-106-1.07Social Sciences 1, 2, and 3Botany, Zoology, PhysiologyArt ia4-104A-168Geolofi^ 101-102-103 jPhysical Sciences l,f, ahd SBiological Sciences 1, 2,and 3Greek 101-102-103Latin 101-102-103;104-106-106;107-108-109Italian 101-102-103Music 101-102-103Geography 101-102-103Humanities 1, 2, and 3June 1JuneJuneJune Students ^expecting to enter theDivision of the Social Sciences areinvited to a series of conferences con¬cerning the programs of the Divisionand its various Departments. Theconferences will be. held in SocialScience 302, May 16, 17 and 18, be¬ginning at 3:16. P.M.The purpose of the conferences isto assist students in choosing theirfields of specialization and in plan¬ning to meet requirements for ad¬vanced degrees land certificates. Thechairmen or representatives of ti;eDepartments and Committees will bepresent to discuss the programs ofstudy in their respective units and topoint out the nature of the opportun¬ities available to students who spec¬ialize in each field.Students will have an opportunityto ask" questions concerning the prob¬lems they face in planning their workin the Division.The list of the subjects of the con-fereucea is. as follows:Wednesday, May 17: 3:16 to 4:30 P.M.The organization of the Division of the SoeiaiSciences Dean Robert RedfieldThe Department 6f Anthroj^logyProfeMor Fay-Cooper ColeThe Department of EconomicsProfessor Simeon E. IcelandThe Department of Geographyc Prt>fe*sor Charles C. ColbyThursday, May 18: 8::15 td'4:80 P.M.The Departinent of HistoryProfesaor William T. HutchinsonThe Departrnent of Political' Science" Professor Leonard D. WhiteThe Department of PsychologyProfessor Ernest A. KingsburyThe Department ^of SociologyProfessor .William F. OgburnThe Committee on International RelationsProfessor Harley F. MacNairFiiagy^Kar 19’: 8:16 to 4 :80 P.M.Prepayatton for teaching the social sciences* Professor Harold A. AndersonThe Department of Education,Professor Ralph W. TylerThe Committee on Human Development• Professor Ralph W. TylerThe Committee on the Divisional Master's de¬gree Professor Lloyd W. MintsThe Committee on Social ThoughtProfessor John U, NefJune 7June 8June 9 TERESA DOUNDANCING SCHOOL1.208 E. 63rd St. ('Naar 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—I? N-M P.M. dailyLady or Gentleman InitructoriTelephone Hyde Park 3080Have a “Coke^rs Korn Er Bij, Amice!(JOIN US, PAL)...or how to get on mth a Dutch flyerLike the Join us, pal of the Dutch flyers training in the U* S., theHave a **Coke** of the American airman means TriendlineiS peaking.Just as it does in your home when offered from your own icebox.Across the Seven Seas, Coca-Cola stands for the pome that—has become the favorite greeting of the open-hearted.BOTTLEO UNDER AUTHORITY OP THE COCA-COU COMPANY BYCOCA-COLA QOTTLINO CO., OF CHICAGO, INC. Goca*Colal/dnaturat|SfpopulaYnamet> tua^ulra friendly abbceyia-