Newman GroupTo Convene AtCalvert ClubThe executive committee of theNewman Club Federation, nationalunion of Catholic collegiate groups,will hold its annual meeting here onthe 16th and 17th of September. Fath¬er Joseph D. Connerton, Catholicchaplain, has announced that the fa¬cilities of the Calvert Club will beused by the delegates during the Chi¬cago session.Problems common to all clubs, par-ticularly those problems dealing withpostwar adjustment, will be discussedby the executive committee, whichconsists of province chairmen andchaplains. About 30 delegates, includ¬ing the national president, M. Fran¬cis Gaddis, and the national chaplain,the Rev. Michael Mulvoy, C.S.Sp., areexpected.For the duration of the war, thisexecutive session replaces the feder¬ation’s usual national conference. Us¬ually held in Washington, this meet¬ing was changed to Chicago this yearbecause of transportation difficulties.As host for the two-day conference,the Calvert Club is giving the use ofits St. Francis de Sales home at 5735University Avenue. Tours of the Uni¬versity of Chicago campus also havebeen planned for the delegates duringtheir stay.The Calvert Club recently lost itspresident, John Zeigler, to the Navy.He is now receiving boot training*atGreat Lakes Naval Training School.'On the House' at IdoPlanned Saturday“On the House” is the name of thedance which will be held this Satur¬day for the students in the College.Admi.ssion is free.The dance will be held in the clois¬ters and garden of Ida Noyes from9 to 12 P.M. Although the dance issponsored by the Student ActivitiesCommittee of the first and secondyears of the College, students in thethird and fourth years are also in¬vited. Dancers will be able to quenchtheir thirst at a coke bar on the lawn.The Parker-Melling band will supplythe music.This dance is the last event thisquarter to be sponsored by the Stu¬dent Activities Committee. Next fallthe committee will be active again,planning activities for students in thefirst two years of the College. Themembers of the committee are LenoreCallahan, Jim McCarthy, Gloria Tal-liaferro and Charles Parlin.Commonwealth ClubHears Spragg AskThird Party NowHoward Spragg, pastor of theSouth Church (Congregational), andmember of the Executive Board ofthe American Commonwealth Party,addressed a group of students in theSocial Science Auditorium last Mon¬day evening on “New Party Move¬ments—A Historical Survey.”According to Mr. Spragg, a basicoverall program to solve problems,and to genuinely represent all eco¬nomic groups and minorities is neces¬sary; it is to be built from the bot¬tom up, completely independent of oldparties, giving no support whateverto other candidates, and to be builtabout a program of principle ratherthan a powerful personality or indis¬pensable man.He reiterated the CommonwealthClub’s belief that the third partymovement should be launched nowwith a national and international per¬spective. THE CHICAGOMAROONVol. 4, No. 10 21-149 Friday, August 25, 1944 Price Five CentsAnti - VivisectionIn what seems to be collaboration with itscirculation department, The Herald-American,the Chicago Hearstpaper, is currently manufac¬turing a campaign to end the existence of un¬hampered medical research in this city. Forthe past several days, this publication has beendevoting much space and publicity to a seriesabout the imagined horrors of using animals forany kind of scientific experimentation, and other¬wise promoting the efforts of sundry anti-vivi-sectionists to have Ordinance 93-34 revoked bythe City Council. The campaign has finallyreached the heights of emotional hysteria, ob¬fuscation, and plain misinformation. By usingsuch descriptions of biological scientists andtheir work as “most cruer*, “inhumane'^ “cal¬lous”, “sadistic”, “extravagant torture”, etc.,these people hope to prevent medical schools andresearch laboratories from procuring stray andunclaimed animals from the city pound—animalswhich are otherwise killed by the city. Thisrepresents no small threat to the freedom andefficiency of scientific investigation and trainingat this University, as well as other schools andhospitals in this area, and it would be a matterof great consequence to every student and facultymember here. 'To give substance to this anti-vivisection fu¬ror, The Herald'A meHcan is using such tried andtrue tear-jerkingK'devices as “Hardly a day goesby when some dog isn’t pulling a kid out of trou¬ble in a swimming hole or waking up some fam¬ily in a fire. Yet, over the head of every herodog hangs the constant danger of being sentencedto suffer or die in a chamber of horrors.” Or wecan read such descriptions of animal experiment¬ations as “In the name of scientific experimentdogs are . . . whirled around in a special machineuntil they die. They’re subjected to X-ray ex¬periments until they’re literally burned up. Pup¬pies are deprived of sleep by vivisectors who work in shifts walking them up and down thefloor.”One ardent anti-vivisectionist contributed hisbit to the cause by writing in The Herald-Ameri-can “Encouraging callow youth to pry and probeinto live flesh with utter disregard for the suffer¬ing caused and too often to satisfy inner sadisticleanings, bodes ill for their future as kind andsympathetic doctors. It is not a lovely thoughtticed their bedside manners at the side of someto know that many of our future doctors prac-poor tortured beast.”The most devastating arguments of the anti-vivisectionists, however, are the attempts toprove that animal experimentation is “useless.”To this end, the Heartspaper’s chief witness isDr. William Held, “internationally famous Chi¬cago physician”, who says “Champions of vivi¬section claim that every animal is first anesthet¬ized, that animals mutilated during operationsare not allowed to recover... and that discoveriesmade by virtue of vivisection have proved agreat boon to humanity ... If these claims wereanything less than half truths, then I dare saythere would be no need for animal protectionassociations striving to obtain reforms in vivi¬section.”Dr. Held continues, “Concerning the greatstrides in medical progress and the reduction ofdisease and the death rate, H^visectors are wontto wax oratorical. The usual claims would haveone believe that cancer research is greatly ad¬vanced by animal vivisection. Vivisectors callattention to Harvey’s discovery of the circulationof the blood, which they say would have been im¬possible without resort to vivisection. The factis that Harvey made this particular contributionby observations on a healthy huTnan subject(emphasis his). . Dr. Held also charges thatnothing has been achieved by the use of dogs in(Continued on page two)Battle, of the MidwayGeorge HiltonSeven Men’s DormsOpen Fall QuarterFor First 2 YearsDuring the fall quarter, there willbe seven residence halls for men inthe first two years of the Collegewith a capacity of one hundred twen¬ty-five boys. It has also been announc¬ed that the whole unit will be trans¬ferred to Burton and Judson Courtsin January.Of the seven houses, three: ManlyHouse, Phoenix House, and CollegeHouse, will be the centers of first-two-year activity. Manly will be under thedirection of Mr. and Mrs. Yarnell,assisted by Mark Beaubien and GeorgeKrakowka, with Maroon House, underJohn Bennett, taking part in Manlyactivities. Bhoenix House, under Mr.Martin, assisted by Don McBride, willbe the headquarters for activities ofDuke House, under Gordon Dupee.The activities of both UniversityHouse, under Bob Fraser, and Mi-chaelson House, under Hal Holker,will be centered at College House,headed by T. S. Hall, assisted byRichard Kershner.Lieutenant Colonel Melbourn W.Boynton, on leave as instructor ofobstetrics, was killed last Satur¬day in an experimental parachutejump. (Until today I have consideredmy journalistic talents sufficient forthe sketches of the various staff mem¬bers of The Chicago Maroon. Today,however, I have come to a man whosedescription defies my humble abilities.I, therefore, yield this hallowed spotto the eminent John S. Harmon.)—G.H.For some weeks. The Maroon hasprinted a series of communiques sup¬posedly writen by a person who playsBoswell to our noble staff. For atime, I was in favor of the hoax, butI feel this has been allowed to go ontoo lonj Therefore, in the interest oftruth alone, I will bring these factsto light.There was once a person namedGeorge Hilton, but there is no more.This is unfortunate since the childshowed promise of becoming anotherSewell Avery or Henry Ford. At anearly age he could recite the timetables of all the railroad companies inthe U.S. He was frequently called into explain the interlocking directoratesof these groups to simple minded re¬formers in Congress whom he hatedwith a feeling which would become aRockefeller.At three, he began his great bus¬iness dealings by selling stock in hisLionel Train Set, claiming he would use it to haul freight for the ants whodid not appreciate the benefits ofmodern civilization. In this enter¬prise, he was aided by his father whogranted the land in the backyard toGeorgie who then sub-let it to hisplaymates for ant-colonies, lemonadestands and gardens.As I said, there was a person namedHilton, but he is no more.. It is withsincere grief I relate the account ofhis demise. At the height of his pre¬school success, Georgie hit a snag.*He was unable to force the ants topay for the hauling of their freightand thus faced bankruptcy and theloss of his Lionel Electric Train. Onthe 16th of March, 1930, the poorchild lay down on his own trackswhere he was electrocuted and finallyrun over by his Lionel engine. Thecoroner’s verdict was simply “tempor¬ary insanity caused by businessworries.”However, such genius cannot beallowed to die unmarked so his par¬ents and friends have kept his memoryalive. In his name, they pay thetuition at the University of Chicagoand write these communiques for TheMaroon. No, George Hilton is not aperson. He is a holding company.—J. S. H. Free ConcertAt RockefeHerThis TuesdayThe University of Chicago Choirunder the direction of Mack Evans,the University of Chicago SymphonyOrchestra under the baton of GarkeKessler, and Charles Buckley asguest conductor, will present theannual summer concert in RockefellerChapel, Thursday evening, August 31,at eight. Admission is without ticketand without charge; the doors will beopen at 7:30.Major work of the evening will beThe Shepherds of the DelectableMountains by England’s greatest liv¬ing composer, Ralph Vaughan Wil¬liams. Written in 1922, the work—subtitled A Pastoral Episode foundedupon Bunyan*8 ^Pilgrim's Progress'—is in the stream of tradition of thegreat modern English choral workswith Elgar’s Dream of Gerontius andWalton’s Belshazzar's Feast. Soloistswill be Maurine Smith, soprano; Rob¬ert Kessler, tenor; James McEneryand Lee Ross, baritones; and PhilipStafford, bass.The chorus will also sing anAlleluia by the contemporary Amer¬ican composer, Randall Thompson.This will be followed by a work fromthe Jewish liturgy, Ki k'schimcho'{According To Thy Name) by LouisLewandowski, with James McEneryas Cantor. The other choral work.Be glad then, America, is by WilliamBillings. Billings (1746-1800) was anAmerican primitive. Bom of poorparents and apprenticed to a tanner,Billings scribbled music on hides withchalk. Breaking with the- Englishmusical tradition in vogue in his day,he gave an impetus to native Americanmusic.The orchestra will play the overtureto Gluck’s Iphigenia In Aulis; andSibelius’ tone poem. The Swan ofTuonela, Op. 22, No. 3.AYD Desires Unity;Backs Scott Lucas,Mrs. Dougl-as, RowanJoint political action by a broadwin-the-war unity of students and fac¬ulty is advocated by the Universitychapter of the American Youth forDemocracy, to see that such outstand¬ing win-the-war candidates as Sena¬tor Scott Lucas, Mrs. Emily TaftDouglas, and Congressman WilliamRowan are sent to Congress.'Any movement which tends to di¬vert attention from the main issues,whether emanating from Gerald L. K.Smith or Maynard Krueger, has thesame calculated result—defeat of theprogressive, pro-Roosevelt forces thisNovember, according to the announce¬ment given out after a brief confer¬ence with two members* of the Stu¬dent Political Action Committee lastTuesday.The two members, John A. Holsenand Franklin Fried, gave a short re¬capitulation of their activities, whichhave included canvassing the Wood-lawn district for the registration ofvoters, and distribution of soldier ab¬sentee ballot applications.The AYD executive committee,which had requested the presence ofa SPAC representative, consists ofMarvin Miller, chairman; Irene Town¬send, administrative secretary; Vir¬ginia Kougias, member-at-large, andJessie Polacheck, membership direc¬tor. They reaffirmed the importantpart that the youth of America hasat this time. •SPAC response'to the proposal hasbeen to accept the AYD. members asindividuals rather than as a group,and has extended this view towardsall prospective canvassers.'A nti~ Vivisection,,,(Continued from page one)diabetes experiments.I/r. Held’s final dictum on the matter of theuse of experimental animals was “Practice ondogs probably does make a good veterinarian if. that’s the kind of a practitioner you want foryour family. Most people would prefer a physi¬cian who wouldn’t be likely to get his dog loremixed with his knowledge of human anatomyand reactions. The step from animal to humanviviscetion is an easy one to the over-enthusiasticresearcher.” THE CHICAGO MAROONOfficial student publication of the University of Chieaso, published every Friday durins theacademic quarters. Published at Lexinifton Hall, University of Chicago. Chieago. Illinois.Telephone DORchester 7279 or MEDway 0800, Ext. 351.EDITOR: Frederick I. GottesmanBUSINESS MANAGER: Alan J. StraussEditorial Associates: William R. WambaughBusiness Associate: George HiltonEditorial Assistants: Carroll Atwater, Ellen Baum, Frances Carlin, Catherine Elmes, DoloresEngel, Roger Englander, Vicki Grondine, Betsy Harmon, Joe Hart, fkl Hofert, Winslow Hunt,Dorothy Iker, Frank Mangin, Lorraine McFadden, Jeff Miller, Don Shields, Connie Slater,Nancy Smith, Helen Tarlow, Espey Voulis, Mary Wong, Carla Zingarelli.Business Assistants: Nicholas Gordon, Ida Jean SandysThis Week On CampusThere are certain incontrovertible facts, bothscientific and historical, which flatly contradictthese assertions. It is a matter of scientific his¬tory that the causes and control of perniciousanemia by the liver and gastric principle werearrived at as a result of the impetus given byexperiments on dogs; perfection of insulin in thetreatment of diabetes came as a result of inten¬sive animal experimentation; our understandingof the heart, blood, circulation was not achieveduntil William Harvey began observing and exper¬imenting on animals (emphasis mine); animalexperimentation has yielded important resultsin the study of nutritional anemia, digestive andkidney disorder, glandular disturbances, nervousdiseases, control of tuberculosis, scurvy, andpellagra. Animal experimentation has helpedanimals as well as humans in control of anthraxand of harmful parasites such as hookworm.Moreover, animals produce antitoxins for pre-ventidn and control of many diseases. Friday, August 25—Conference on Education in Rural Communities. Room 159, Belfield Hall.9:30 a.m.Ninth Graduate Library School Institute. Library Extension. InternationalHouse.Worship Service. Joseph Bond Chapel. Speaker: Paul Saunders, GraduateStudent, Divinity School. 12 m.-12:20 p.m.Saturday, August 26—Ninth Graduate Library School Institute. Library Extension. InternationalHouse.“On the House.” Ida Noyes Hall. 9-12 p.m. For students in the College.Sunday, August 27—Religious' Service. Rockefeller Memorial Chapel. Speaker: Daniel D. Wil¬liams, Associate Professor of Christian Theology, Federated TheologicalFaculty. “The Religious Faith and Human Hope.” 11 a.m.University of Chicago Round Table. “What Settlement for Germany?”Speakers: Lord Vansittart, former British permanent Under Secretaryof State for Foreign Affairs (speaking from England); George Shuster,President of Hunter College; Hans J. Morgenthau, Visiting Professorof Political Science, University of Chicago. WMAQ and NBC. 12:30-1p.m.Organ Recital. Rockefeller Memorial Chapel. Mary Gwin, St. Luke’s Episco¬pal Church, Evanston. 7-7:30 p.m.One of our most famous “sadistic vivisec-tors,” Dr. Anton J. Carlson, Frank P. HixonDistinguished Service Professor Emeritus ofPhysiology and President of the American As¬sociation for the Advancement of Science, states“Free and intelligent experiments on animals inthe last three hundred years have been the great¬est factor in our present achievements in know¬ledge of the nature of life and control of disease,and are essential for further progress in biologyand medicine.” Carillon Recital. Rockefeller Memorial Chapel. 8-8:30 p.m.Monday, August 28—The Human Adventure: MTwins—A Study of Heredity and Environment.”WGN. 8:30 p.m.Tuesday, August 29—Worship Service. Joseph Bond Chapel. Speaker: John B. Eubanks, Jr., Grad¬uate Student, Humanities. 12 m.-12:20 p.m.Public Lecture: “The Social Theory of Reality: The Social Nature of theUniverse.” Speaker: Charles Hartshorne, Associate Professor of Philos¬ophy. Social Science 122. 4:30 p.m.Carillon Recital. Rockefeller Memorial Chapel. 8-8:30 p.m.In addition. Dr. Carlson, who has been en¬gaged in animal experimentation for over thirtyyears, says “Animal experimentation is humane.An animal in distress usually cannot answer thequestions put to him by the medical investigator.Therefore, in animal experiments involving pain,the same anesthetics are used as in surgical op¬erations on man.”In addition to the factual refutation of theHearstpaper’s medical authority’s arguments,4:here is the matter of Dr. Held, himself. Ac¬cording to the report of the Investigating Com¬mittee of the American Medical Association re¬printed in the A.M.A. Journal of April 27, 1929,D. Held has been receiving free publicity inHearst publications since April 1,1916. On thatdate, an article appeared in The Chicago Examin¬er crediting him with the development of “skindusting” as a substitute for skin grafting. Hesubsequently received publicity concerning hiscures for epilepsy and gassing, his shell-shockserum, his experiments to obtain an “elixir ofyouth” from chimpanzees for purposes of rejuv¬enation, and his claims that aluminum pots andpans were the cause of cancer.At various times, he has paid for advertisingdescribing his serum for epilepsy; his medicine,“lodaheld”, for the cure of infantile paralysis,prostatitis, pericarditis, epidydymitis, ovariantumor, eczema, and the common cold; and his“Hormogene” to be “administered in the male for'gonadal deficiency.”Held is not now a member of any recognizedmedical society, and again from the A.M.A.Journal, “ ... it should not be difficult to evaluatethe probable scientific worth of Dr. Held’s ... op¬inions on the lack of any need for animal ex¬perimentation.” Wednesday, August 30—Public Lecture: “Karl von Clausewitz.” Speaker: 0. J. Matthijs Jolles, As¬sistant Professor of German. Social Science 122. 4:30 p.m.Organ Recital. Rockefeller Memorial Chapel. Abba Leifer, Temple Mizpah.7-7:30 p.m.Carillon Recital. Rockefeller Memorial Chapel. 8-8:30 p.m.Thursday, August 31—Joint Concert. Rockefeller Memorial Chapel. University of Chicago Choir,directed by Mack Evans; University of Chicago Symphony Orchestra,directed by Clarke Kessler; Maurine Smith, Robert Kessler, James Mc-Enery, Lee Ross, Philip Stafford, soloists. Admission free. 8 p.m.William WambaughPreview and ReviewWednesday night in Grant Park, De¬sire Defauw, Musical Director of theChicago Symphony and Adviser inMusic to the University, took theorchestra thru an all-Wagner pro¬gram. The chill temperature extendedto the orchestra’s piaying until afterintermission with the Prelude to Lo¬hengrin. The overture to The FlyingDutchman, Siegfried's Rhine Journeyand Death Music from Twilight ofthe Gods, and Walther's Prize Songand the Overture to The Mastersingersof Nuremberg all fell short of realiza¬tion of the full powers of these works.At times it was not even a goodroutine performance.In the prelude to Lohengrin, Dr.Defauw managed to elicit from theorchestra a warmth and beauty oftone which was not dissipated even bythe night’s strong wind. The delicatestrains of the opening were sparedthe usual assaults by the I. C., andmanaged for a moment to create anillusion which the open air did notspoil. •The Ride of the Valkyries from TheValkyries ground its way along in a rather mechanical presentation andhad only its speed to keep it fromfalling on the ground. The scheduledprogram concluded with the Bacchan-ale and Overture from Tannlvsuserplayed with reversal of the usualorder. The Bacchanale was wellplayed and had a good spirit of revelrytapering off into languor at the end.The Overture was a peculiar mix¬ture of the Paris and Dresden ver¬sions which proved to be neither fleshnor fowl. It, too, was well played;but it lacked the elan of the Bacchan¬ale.First of three encores was the or¬chestral setting of Traume, one of thefive songs dedicated to Mathilde Wes-endonck, and based on a study, forTristan. Here, the orchestra’s tonewas smooth and sleek and in keepingwith its best traditions. Next cameLa Marseillaise because of the newsof the day, played with vigor but ina poor arrangement which caused itto lack the fire of a band version.Finally, Sousa’s Stars and StripeSfwhich may be dismissed with the re¬mark that it was nicely noisy. Don ShieldsTraveling BazaarThe Labor Rights Society, the Stu¬dent Political Action Committee, theCommonwealth Club, and the Ameri¬can Youth for Democracy may be in¬terested in a tale of what actuallyhappened when the student popula¬tion of an important college gainedvoting control of a town legislatureand proceeded to rectify what theyconsidered discriminatory practicesagainst themselvea... Of course, thefollowing occurrence could “neverhappen here” but wouldn’t it be won¬derful if it did ?... And here follows the current versionof the great Dartmouth legal battle which rocked theState of New Hampshire during the lush days of theearly 1920’s:Like most small New England towns, Hanover, NewHampshire was, and I suppose still is, locally governedby the fine old American tradition of the town meeting... At that time the Civic Fathers, being in need ofmore money for the town treasury, began to cast grreedyeyes on the two thousand odd Dartmouth students whospent the greater part of the year in their village...Itwas decided at a later town meeting to cut the resi¬dence period somewhat, thus enabling the Council toplace a tax on the head of every student in the College... As was proved later, the good burghers failed to reck¬on with the political consciousness of their new citizens... When the time for the next regular town meetingrolled around, the mistake was hard to miss since theentire undergraduate body of Dartmouth College hadarrived en masse, ready to legislate with a vengeance...When their presence was questioned it was explainedthat under the town system any tax-payer (i.e. any ofthe students) was eligible to cast his vote on any localmeasure brought before the meeting...To say that thecity fathers were a little sick would be the masterpieceof understatement.Then followed a legal circus which is still being talk¬ed about all over the country.. .With tongues bulgingin cheeks the Dartmouth crowd solemly passed an amaz¬ing series of laws (together with the necessary appro¬priations) which called for, among other things, thebuilding of a Town Hall one foot square and a half amile high; the construction of a pipe line to Montreal,Canada-, ,to permit the piping of liquor to the Dartmouthdormitories (and thus replace the village pump); theconstruction of a six-lane concrete highway to SmithCollege in Northampton, Massachusetts, together witha subway to nearby Colby College, and so on...Han¬over was aghast... Frantic appeals to the New Hamp¬shire Supreme Court by the elders were fruitless.. .Withan obvious twinkle, the high court dismissed the case aspurely a local matter that could be settled by the townmeeting itself, and so it came to be... A mutual repealwas made whereby the undergraduates rescinded theirwhimsical laws on the condition that Dartmouth stu¬dents would never again be the subjects of tax action bythe Hanover assembly... And so ended the most spec¬tacular chapter in American undergraduate humor...Maybe the Labor Rights Society would be interested infinding out how we could accomplish the same thingwith the Chicago City Council.. .Think what fun wecould have with the traction mess!...D.S.Bill Roberts^ U.S.N,R,Life Lines“No, George—for some reason, Schopenhauer justdoesn’t move me!”THE CHICAGO MAROONStudent Art Show At GoodspeedDemonstrates Artists’ ProblemsThere are two major considerationswhich confront every artist: one is,“What do I want to say?”, the otheris, “How can I say it?” To the maturefinished artist, the answer to both isperhaps somewhat instinctive, but tothe amateur they present a real prob¬lem.Fine art is not what the averageman thinks it to be. That is, if hethinks about it at all, he believes aprecise imitation of pictorial imagesis the height of artistic endeavor. Heis pleased if it “looks just like realskin” or “the folds in the cloth areso life-like.” But the intent of realart is something more than that andherein lies the problem in the firstquestion posed before the artist,“What do I want to say?” Some an¬swer this by looking for an interest¬ing relationship among abstractforms; color relationships expressbeauty for others; still more seek aninterpretation of life through emo¬tional expression. The field is practi¬cally limitless for there are as manydifferent things to say about thisworld as there are different artistsviewing it. It is the keenness anddepth of understanding of the artistwhich transposes the chaos of our ex¬istence into beauty and order. It isthat quality which makes a greatpainting; it is the lack of that quali¬ty which makes a technically perfectpainting more empty than a bare can¬vas.The second question, “How can Ido it?” is primarily answered bystudy, observation, and a mastery ofone’s medium. Be it oil or watercolor,it makes little difference so long asthe :;rtist has learned to use his ma¬terial in such a manner as to make aclear statement of his purpose. Oftena really lyrical composition may beruined by the untrained applicationof colors resulting in a mud puddle.Technical perfection can be acquiredfrom others; depth of vision (if it canbe acquired at all) can be acquired on¬ly through experience in living.The current exhibition of two stu¬dents’ work at Goodspeed Hall pro¬vides excellent examples to illustratethese problems. Each student has suc¬cessfully solved one problem and fail¬ed in the other and therefore bothstrike, unknowingly, a most interest¬ing contrast. George Latta has some¬thing to say—he sees in a clump oftrees or an old house a rhythm, a har¬monious play of colors and a certainfeeling peculiar to that subject. Theaudience, in turn, cannot fail to sensethat quality in the object which hadattracted him even though he fallsshort in his ability to put his painton the canvas as he wished. “Portraitof Cynthia” fails to produce the Ren¬oir glow of youth he attempted in theyoung child and “Landscape” containssome rather amateurish greens whichdetract from the dewy effect of anotherwise beautiful countryside. Hiswatercolors, however, show a greatermastery of the medium and Mr. Lat¬ta, himself, offers this comparison byentering “Clump of Trees” which isa water color sketch for his oil of“Landscape.” Here we seem to feelthe artist more at home and this free¬dom and assurance makes “Clump ofTrees” far more successful.George Latta’s shortcoming isJeanne Crage’s forte. Whatever effectshe desires she achieves, but the ob¬server seeks, vainly, to discover thepurpose of that effect. “Grandmother”shows great skill in rendering preci¬sion and delicacy in the pencil medi¬um; the knob at the nape of the neckis suggestive of “grandmother”, theface is drawn, yet one knows imme¬diately that she has never borne chil¬dren, that she never existed, never breathed life. “Station Farewell”starts to be interesting in the colorand formal relationships but leavesone feeling this was a roughly blockedsketch in layout which was nevercompleted. “Summer” is a refined pas¬tel with the light hitting perfect pat¬terns on a girl with a turned-up nose.But this is not summer, this is cuteand it is very “pastel.” In the etch¬ing of “Mrs. Brown and Child”,Jeanne Crage shows her greatest sen¬sitivity and perhaps a promise of theartistic development which may growwith the years. At present, one hesi¬tates to label her work with emptycommercial perfection; perhaps it ismore the student solving each prob¬lem of technique as she comes to itwith her understanding unable, atpresent, to keep pace with the rapidprogress of her dexterity.It is important to see this show atthe Goodspeed gallery, not becauseyou can come and look at pretty paint¬ings, but because you can more fullyappreciate the problems facing theyoung artist, because you can see(more clearly than words can explain)the work and difficulties involved increating a good painting, and, most ofall, because you can see what twoyoung people of our generation aredoing to add their bits of beauty toan age badly tainted with ugliness.—B.N.H.LettersTo the Editor:In a speech on the necessity ofelecting a progressive Congress andSenate, on August 9, Professor Wal¬ter Johnson also .criticized the Com¬munists on the basis of pre-PearlHarbor policies, putting theni in aclass with the Chicago Tribune, theHearst press. Senators Nye, Wheeler,etc. Here is an example of a preva¬lent and dangerous contradiction. Mr.Johnson is part of a movement toelect pro-RooSevelt, win-the-war can¬didates in the November election. Allof us are learning that in order toachieve this goal, the election of aCongress that can guarantee post-warsecurity, we must have unity of allforces willing to work on such a proj¬ect—yet we continue to take potshotsat the very people with whom we hopeto cooperate. The Communists are on¬ly a-case in point. We damn all Re¬publicans, without stopping to recog¬nize that a growing number of themsee the inadequacies of Dewey, andare turning toward Roosevelt. Wescorn countless non-political groupsfor no other reason than that we don’tlike their looks or their religion, orthe color of their nail polish.Unity is something new and unfa¬miliar to us, but we must learn itslesson. Private prejudice is a luxurywe can no longer afford. In the com¬ing days of election campaigning wemust remember—the Communists sup¬port Roosevelt. They too can canvassprecincts. Republicans can be won ov¬er, Catholics, debutantes, welders,professors, farmers, businessmen—allvote. Let us do a job together andelect a pro-Roosevelt Congress!Sincerely,Jessie Polacheck“Human Adventure”Shown at Oriental“The promise of man’s future liesin the past”. Such was the gist of“Human Adventure”, the film shownWednesday evening at the OrientalInstitute, and produced ten years agoas a record of the Institute’s archaeo¬logical expeditions into the Near Nancy SmiihBox OfficeI n Hollywoodlive three distinctgroups of people.They are (a) thosein pictures, (b)those who are try¬ing to get in pic¬tures and (c) byfar the greatestJ majority — thoseM who just happen tobe living there.Of the first group a very small min¬ority are the Bette Davises and GaryCoopers whose names are householdwords. The third leads and bit play¬ers make up the rest of the actingclan. Their names, revealed in thecredit titles at the beginning of everypicture, are promptly forgotten, buttheir faces live on. These unsungbut well-loved heroes deserve a placein a movie column as much as anystar. Like the lord high executioner.I’ve got a little list:Automatically the first face thatprojects itself into the mind’s eye atthe mention of a character actor isDonald Meek. In the years and yearshe has been popping up in the mostunexpected places in pictures,‘he hasrun the gamut from park bench topulpit, not to mention a venture asa crooked art dealer. His name fitslike a limp glove, his meekness beingexceeded only by his piety and sanct¬imoniousness . . . Movie hotels are in¬variably managed by Franklin Pang-born, of the oily voice and mustache.Always nervously trying to calm him¬self at the hidous thought of a roughparty on the fourth floor which isruining his furniture and his reputa¬tion, he has yet to achieve a state ofcomposure ... At the conservativebuzz of a Park Avenue doorbell, thestar of the picture is ushered in byEric Blore, Halliwell Hobbes or Ar¬thur Treacher, who buttle silently andbeautifully, distributing their pro¬found bits of backstairs philosophyfor the benefit of the audience, theiremployers being intrigued by a gameof tag around the parlor and bedroom.. . . The master of all he surveys isthe night-club owner, Eduardo Cian-nelli (or perhaps Sheldon Leonard)both of whom spell murder to roulettelosers and in their spare time doubleas gangsters . . . Sabu has riddenastride every elephant from Baghdadto the Belgian Congo and must begetting quite saddle-weary . . . Syd-ney.Greenstreet and Peter Lorre con¬sistently bump into each other in darkstinking little holes of continentalcities. Will they ever land on Amer¬ican soil? jThere are countless other typeswhich are fully as familiar to ob¬servant cinema fans. One more Imention in passing is the eternal“oberleutnant,” faithfully playing thenervous Prussian officer, although inhis secret heart it makes his teethcurl; hopefully, patiently waiting forthe war to end so he can drop hisaccent and become an All-AmericanBoy.QUICK REVIEW OF THE WEEK:PASSAGE TO MARSEILLE . . .missed the boat at Casablanca.East.The story of the rise of man fromsavagery to civilization was narratedby Dr. Preston. One of the most nota¬ble discoveries was made in Alishar,Turkey. There was found a one hun¬dred foot layer of rock which holdsthe progress of four thousand years,a stone house, product of the StoneAge, at the lowest level, and a Chris¬tian church at the uppermost.—E.V. Our faculty is going to the dogs!(or can this be classed as news?)The other day with, our own eyes wesaw math teacher Schilling biting thedust, literally (his class swears hewas trying to pick up an eraser withhis teeth). And then we have Mr. Ein-arson who one day in his beginningGreek class was questioning the gen¬der of a noun, looked it up in the un¬abridged Greek dictionary, found' aquotation from Aristophanes whichincluded the noun, chuckled slightly—and slapped the dictionary shut. Hewas still laughing about our friendA. at the end of the period^—and hasnever divulged the quotation to hisstudents. AND we have the recurringjoke about the influence of geneticswhen a tenor and an alto marry, etcet¬era, but when a baritone and a mez¬zo marry the best they can produceis a quartet.There are two questions whichshould be answered: has Reuben everfound a fourth for bridge and wheredoes the University get its supply ofthick-brogued Irish maids, of whomDella, formerly of Gates, is still ourfavorite and traditional maid?The University of Chicago has tak¬en Hollywood by storm, or at leasta breeze! Yes, our boy Phi Delt Ken¬ny Cutler has been bit playing bitparts in Monty Woolley and DannyKaye pictures. In “Up in Arms” he’sthe bouncer who gives Kaye a realbum’s rush.We made a sad error in last week’scolumn for which we apologize. Shir¬ley Vanderwalker was not at the Sig¬ma Chi party. We’ll blame it on oneof the leg men.About nine o’clock every evening anostalgic scene is to be seen on Uni-ve.rsity Avenue; it brings back mem¬ories of the pioneer days of our coun¬try: the janitors’ brigade trudgesslowly but doggedly across the cam¬pus, mops held high like rifles. It isbut a small transition from a B&Gcart to a prairie schooner.At any time during the lunch hour,the Ida snack bar presents an inter¬esting picture with George runningaround in guard’s jacket and worktrousers feverishly serving the pret¬tier young ladies at the tables, withMac letting loose with various re¬marks such as “Nope, you know me—I don’t lend nothing to NOBODY.”And there is the petition circulatedamong lunch tables to the councilmenbegging them to keep vivisection aliveover at Billings. Fred Gottesmanshowed up the other day too, compar¬atively disguised in a tie and darkglasses.Billings again makes the headlineswith Jeanne McFadden’s startling dis¬covery that only pre-sterijized softfoods a.re served at the cafeteria. Per¬sons without teeth please note. A fewbrave students are planning, however,to slip a few hard jolls onto one ofthe trays and watch patients’ reac¬tions.Furloughers of the week are SigmaChi John Walton who’s now a radioinstructor at the University of Wis¬consin. Tom Hayes is floating aroundtoo—as well as Tom Mahoney.Haircuts Department: Ham Craigdown in Arkansas gives haircuts for50c, fixes them up with bootblack,and guarantees $1.00 back if theydon’t pass inspection. The true ori¬gin of Joseph Jackson Schwab’s ultrabutch is Woodshole, perennial bi¬ologists’ hangout, where the butch¬er, oops, barber, knows only one styleof haircut: a complete shave. The re¬sults are only too well known. Thecharacters who haunt the first show¬ing of the documentary films reallyought to be told when the mustacherace comes off too. And we have, last and least, John Harmon, a walking“before” ad for the Reynolds Clubbarber shop.Ruth Gibson and Dorothy Smith arereally turning out to be picturehounds. Soon their pictures ought tobe gracing The Maroon office rogues’gallery along with the pictures whichvarious would-be blackmailers tookat a house party at Anne Carus’shouse in Michigan.Mary (or should we say Lai-Ngau)Wong’s birthday party was a mostdecent party. Mary swears that abso¬lutely nothing happened except Luan-na’s chasing Te^ Kaye a.round inhopes of getting back on the Carillonstaff.Seen around town—Betty Cantslerraptly listening to the jokes at theCasino. There’s* another story aboutBetty: i.e., her drive over to Engle¬wood Station which is better not told.Another charming and youthful scenewas the sweet young things (fresh¬men to the uninitiated) playing fol¬low the leader in the College Library.And there’s the lad who kept peering*over Muriel Rickoff’s shoulder at thenotes she was passing in a lecture;he finally apologized—“I’m nearsight¬ed.”And now we have a treat for theavid readers of The Maroon. Sometime ago about the beginning of thequarter, some bored students plantedsome official looking announcementson two of the bulletin boa.rds concern¬ing various non-credit courses to beoffered for the quarter. We herewithreprint some of the courses for whichexams will be held during registrationweek:Sociology 302. The beginning of anintroduction to the. elementary, formsof Etruscan poetry, their universalsignificance, and relation to the pri¬mal sex impulse. Hrs: to be arr. Pre-req: Any 2 of the following: a. Sex101-2-3. b. Etruscan 208, 211. c. Anycourse in the customs of pre-HittiteEtruria.Theology 402. A laboratory ap¬proach to the problems of histologicaldivinity and sundry distilled and dis¬embodied Spirits. Series of introduc¬tory Seances. (Wed. 12 to 1 A.M.)Lab Hrs: to be arr. Prereq: O.I.I. orPh.D. in Divinities with minor in Ge¬netics.History 600. Drinking habitsthroughout history. Analysis of drink¬ing songs as well as testing effects ofvarious beverages. Lab experiencegained at 66th and University Ave¬nues. Prereq: a cordial disposition,Theol. 402, any good reference bookdealing with Alexander the Great, *draft card. ■}^3' ■irTERESA DOUNDANCING SCHOOL ^*3" W-T’1208 L 63rd Sf. (Near Woodlawn Av.)Private lessons $1.50—12 N-l I P.M. dailyLady or Gentleman InstructorsTelephone Hyde Park 3080U.T.1131-1133 E. 55th St.Complete Selectionof Beers andOther BeveragesMIDway 0524Blatz Beer(*•9* Four THE CHICAeO MAROONReviewer Discovers PromiseIn Latest Issue Of “Carillon”Carillon is out this week. In non¬fiction and verse as well as fictionthis issue of the College literary quart¬erly attacks questions as varied as theexistence of infinity and the cause ofa cat’s phobia.Anne Byrne’s “Roswitha and theMillenium” is an interesting and im¬aginative tale set in the Middle Agesand peopled with nuns, knights, andpeasants. On the eve of the thou¬sandth anniversary of the birth ofChrist, united by a common fear, allalike huddle in the chapel in prayer.But with the dawn comes the shatter¬ing of unity, for the crisis is passed.If the author intended a generaliza¬tion to show man’s unity in time ofcrisis and his subsequent separationher intention was good, but thethought muffled in the* telling. None¬theless, it’s a story well worth reading.“Farewell Performance” carries itsreader enthusiastically forward' untilit ends suddenly without warning.Surprise endings are an admirabledevice of fiction, that is, the kind of. surprise ending that causes the reader,after finishing the story, to look backand say to himself, “Yes, it had toend that way. Why didn’t I see thatbefore? All these little indicationsadd up to only this one possibility.”But Thomas Day gives no indicationsand the reader is jolted by the abruptend.How did Kurusu, Japanese peaceenvoy to the U. S., feel just beforePearl Harbor? Theodore Kaye ans¬wers this question in his forceful ill¬ustrative anecdote, “Kurusu.” “GreenEyes” by Ellen Marie Myrberg is apsychological tale of a search for and'discovery of the cause of a phobia.Although melodramatic it containsgood imaginative description.Betty Sue Gottfried uses the“stream of Consciousness” method togood advantage in “Time Enough To¬day.” Although the language becomestoo florid at times, her tender,* some¬times whimsical, sometimes amusingtouch is refreshing.“Crossing the Bar” fails in its at¬tempt to create an atmosphere; aftera forced build-up, the surprise endingis inconsistent and inappropriate.The trick of building dramatically toa high emotional pitch and then, pouf!releasing the works suddenly is a goodtrick if you can do it. But.if youcan’t the reader, instead of being am¬ used at the comic incongruity of build¬up and let-down, is left flat.It was gratifying to find that inthe table of contents, “Verse” headedthe section which had been labelled“Poetry” in Carillon's last issue. Itis more appropriate (if it is true thatverse signifies a lower level of the artthan poetry). Much so-called poetrydepicts the gross fact, rather thangiving us the finer significance of thefact. This is true of “Temptation” byRobert Kharasch. John Harmon’s“Oleana” requires knowledge of thecontiguous circumstances of the poem’ssubject before it can be fully appreci¬ated, but is well worth a second andeven a third reading. “The Lost One”by Lassor Blumenthal has thoughtand it is well put. There is contentin G. G.’s “The Night” and the lasttwo lines are well written.In her article “Against Foul Time”Gladys Campbell, guest faculty writeragrees with Whitman when he says,“To have great poets there must begreat audiences, too.” The audienceof Carillon evidently is not great.Although no great writing is discov¬ered, it is encouraging to note thatthere is promising material in thisissue of Carillon.Pre-Hitler GermanySubject of FinalDocumentary FilmA highly realistic although some¬what disconnected representation ofthe economic problems of the unem¬ployed in pre-Hitler Germany was“Kuhle Wampe”, the concluding doc¬umentary film of the summer series.This German film was a series of in¬cidents drawn together by a looselywoven story, and cleverly distributedbits of irony.The story revolves around severalevents in the lives of the members ofone of these unemployed families.However, better than all else, the nu¬merous ironic remarks and events re¬veal the true situation in Germany.Underlying the whole movie seemedto be the fact that the German unem¬ployment was an inevitable outgrowthof the depression to the United States.During the fall quarter ,the filmswill be shown only once in an evening,so that there will be ample time fordiscussion. —C.S.FAMOUS“DANDY"4-0 TAILOR MADE BLUE-S JheNAVY’SSWEET-HEARTMAILED. INSURED. ALL OVER THE WORLD 3 DAYS AFTER RECEIPT OF ORDERTAILOR MADE NECKERCHIEFINCLUDED WITH EVERY UNIFORM* Blue Black 100% All Wool ** More Satin Lining ** Hand embroidered ** Treated not to shrink or fade *j ^ * Handsomely finished *A j Plenty of extra pockets ** V ’ " * Your name embroidered in *^ * jumper ond trousers *'* Your rote cross stitched *•14-15 o?. SERGE $32.50^4,16-17 ox. SERGE OR WHIPCORD 35.00Tfcl9 ox. SERGE 37 50,17 ox. GABARDINE OR WHIPCORD 42.50(Extra Fine Weave)'“^ MINIMUM DEPOSIT S5-BALANCE C.O.D.Fostal regulations require orders shipped tof. p. O. be paid in full. Due to recently doubledcosts add 51^ for mailing. unvrvBSBlWHttT WHIPSTHIGHRNCCLtG JUV.7r|FAMOUS "DANDY"WHITES^.NECKERCHIEFS. HEAVY.SATIN, TAILOR MADE *71 INCLUDING RATE AND CHOICESanforized ^ ^.„_OF NECKERCHIEF OR WHITE HaT‘Pre Shrunk V ^ ' Deposit J2-Bal. C.O.D.-Except p. P. O.Excellent Fit ’ If over 34 " leg Add 75c for mailing first suit,inseam, add 50c 25c for each additionalr%r; RAINCOATS. GABARDINE.HALF-LINED, WATER REPELLENT ^16.50L.^yi%xxxxx%jaYOUR MONKY RACK CUARANTCC—We ec-eupy 4 buildings—tbe Isrgeit organlxatlon derol-ed exrliixively te eutfltting Rallort. Sec our adsin the Nuvy megailnes. Wt uaceadlttonally guar-stuee our uniressns net t* siirtnk or fade end tont you right or oro'U refund the price.OgadY Naval Tailert Moll ordartDANDY NAVAL TAILORSMANUFACTUMRS39 Sondt St., Brooklyn 1, N. Y.M—f Br—ktfa r«rd • MAM 4-040# Chicago Round TableDiscusses Peace AsWorld Race Problem“It is regrettable that, among thegreat powers, Russia is the only onethat has an intelligent attitude to¬ward its minority groups and the.on¬ly one that has solved the problems ofrace prejudice. Russia has thrown apositive challenge to us in Americato solve our problems of prejudice to¬ward minorities, for our policy towardracial minorities has too long been in¬excusable.” Thus Louis Adamic, prom¬inent author and writer, took hisstand on the University of ChicagoRound Table, Sunday, August 19.Partjicipating with Adamic in theRound Table discussion of “Peace asa World Race Problem,” were RobertRedfield, Professor of Anthropologyand Dean of the Division of SocialSciences; Harley F. MacNair, Profes¬sor of Far Eastern History and Insti¬tutions; and Ernest C. Colwell, Vice-president, all of the University ofChicago. Vice-president Colwell actedas moderator of the discussion.Vice-president Colwell concluded,“It is only as we are able to solvethese problems locally that we will beable to make our maximum contribu¬tion throughout the world.”This Sunday, Lord Vansittart, for¬mer British permanent Under Secre¬tary of State for Foreign Affairs, andadvocate of a harsh peace for Ger¬many, will open the University of Chi¬cago Round Table with a ten minutetalk from England, via shortwave, on“What Settlement for Germany?” Iker Visits University Air ShowUniversity-College WinIn Tennis TournamentA combination team from Collegeand University Houses won the firsttwo year inter-house trophy, the“crutch,” by beating Manly House ina tennis tournament Wednesday eve¬ning. The “crutch” was formerly heldby University House alone, as win¬ner of the softball tournament heldearlier this summer.Results of the tourney are as fol¬lows: Gordon Farquhar (College-Uni¬versity) beat Dick Atkinson (Manly),6-1, 6-1; Sandy Green (College ,Uni¬versity) took Bill Kipnis (Manly),6-0, 6-3; Dick Boone (College-Univer¬sity) defeated Jim Smith (Manly),6-1, 4-6, 6-2; and George Smith andTom Endicott (College-University)lost to Charley Parlin and JimVaughn (Manly) in the doubles, 6-3.Chicago Boosters BeatGardiner Med StudentsWednesday of this week the Chi¬cago Boosters continued their winningstreak by whipping the Gardiner med.students 7-6 in seven innings. McGon-agil pitched and Freeark was behindthe plate for Chicago. Cimmerblattsmashed out two doubles with his us¬ual consistency, while both Freearkand Sears gathered two hits each. Thehitting power demonstrated by KyleAnderson’s boys is encouraging andindicates that when Chicago playsball next summer the Boosters willform the nucleus of an omproved Uni¬versity team.SPIC - N - SPANChef Snowden^8 SpecialtiesBUHERMILK WHEATCAKESFRENCH TOASTFRENCH FRIED SHRIMPOpen 7 a.m.*8 p.m.,except SundayEnjoy Fine Music in Air-Conditioned Comfort By Dorothy Iker“Anyone here know how to ‘burp’?”inquired director-producer ShermanDryer through the control room“mike”. A momentary crisis in StudioTwo ended abruptly as someone inthe group around the WGN micro¬phone produced the desired sound.“Saboru” smacked his lips once moreover an imaginary cup of Japanesewine, the volunteer “burped” as re¬quired in the script and the cast re¬hearsal for “The Human Adventure,”sponsored by the University of Chi¬cago, continued.An hour and a half later, Mr. Dry¬er, still shouting through the controlroom mike, called a midway halt tothe afternoon’s work. “This,” he ex¬plained, “is called a first reading. Wedo it for two reasons; first, to givethe actors the ‘feel’ of the script, andsecond, to time it.” He turned to hissecretary, who, with the aid of a stopwatch and a red pencil, had succeededin dividing the script into fifteen sec¬ond intervals. “How much are we ov¬ertime?” She made rapid calculations.“Seven minutes and fifteen seconds.”Mr. Dryer paled slightly, groaned, andleft the room without further com¬ment.Work on an episode of “The Hu¬man Adventure, the saga of man’ssearch for knowledge” usually beginsfrom one to three weeks before theactual broadcast. The original themefor this broadcast, however, had beensuggested some four months ago by abook written by John Embree of theAnthropology Department and pub¬lished by the University of ChicagoPress in 1939. Instead of followingthe usual procedure of referring theidea to a free lance writer who wouldwork in collaboration with the Uni¬versity’s research department, Mr.Dryer himself wrote the script basedon Professor Embree’s authentic re¬port of life in rural Japan. A weekbefore the broadcast, parts were castand Monday, the actors were feeingthe script for the first time.Six-thirty that evening ^ound ev¬eryone, including the cast, orchestra,technicians, sound man and severalunidentified characters, assembled in SHERMAN DRYERthe WGN. theater studio for ninetyminutes of chaos called a dress re¬hearsal. While the sound men, sur¬rounded by the tools of their trade,which in this case included an emptybeer bottle, a wine glass, a salad fork,and a bundle of papers wrapped in anold rug, played train whistle recordsto find the one which fit the descrip¬tion of “lonesome” and Director Dry¬er made expressive gestures throughthe control room windows, narratorJohn Mallow and tall, English actorJohn Barclay, stood in an unobtrusivecorner and played a word game on theback of their scripts. Mr. Mallow, whochristened the game “Wordo”, washeard arguing that “if you spelledyacht, y-a-c-h-t, why couldn’t youspell hot, h-a-c-h-t?”Ninety minutes of rehearsal withsound effects went quickly, andpromptly at eight o’clock, the audiencefilled the studio. At eight twenty-nine,Mr. Mallow abandoned the hopelesstask of making a word out of EB—T, ‘walked over to the microphone, and“The Human Adventure” was on theair. A tense thirty minutes followedin the control room where three stopwatches timed the program to thesecond and Mr. Dryer swore steadilyin a low monotone while giving cuesin sign language. Eight fifty-nine andthirty seconds—the announcer placeda forefinger on the tip of his nose toindicate perfect timing. Mr. D. drewa finger across his throat to signify“cut” and collapsed in a chair. “TheHuman Adventure” was over.Relax On YourVacation With TheseALBUM OF DESTINY—Jesse StuartA collection of poems that treat of the whole cycle of life inthe world of men and nature $3.04ENVOY UNEXTRAORDINARY—Donald DunhamThis will appeal to all who enjoy meeting human beings differ¬ent from themselves $2.03GERMANY AND EUROPE—Benedetto CroceVincent Sheean says "A Small book with mighty things in it."....$1.27STORIES BY ERSKINE CALDWELLTwenty-four representative stories by oqe of America's favor¬ites : $2.54OASIS—Willard RobertsonA novel to nourish and quicken the Imagination of all who readit $2.54I HATE ACTORS—Ben HechtA rowdy suspenseful story which is both satire and mysterymakes perfect entertainment ,.$2.54THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOK STORE5802 Ellis Avenue, Chicago, III.