Vol. A, No. 43 Z149 Friday, May 11, 1945 Price 5 CentsTHE CHICAGO MAROONRevamping of College Dormitory,Advisory Programs Slated Here‘Mercy, Justice, Sacrifice....PRESIDENT ROBERT M. HUTCHINS ON V-E DAY'We*Musl Sacrifice ForWorld Peace'-HutchinsIn a plea for lasting peace before an overflow throng of nearly2,500 persons at Rockefeller Chapel on V-E Day, Robert M.Hutchins, president of the University, urged that ‘‘mercy andjustice*' dictate Allied policy toward Germany and Japan afterthe war.Expect 600 SundayFor Club SongfestOver 600 persons are expected Sun¬day at the annual Inter Club Sing inwhich nine women’s clubs are partic¬ipating. The Sing will be held onthe Ida Noyes green from 2:30 to4:00, if good weather prevails; other¬wise, it will be in the gymnasium.Sing judges Hans Lange, Remi Gass-mann, and Scott Goldthwaite willaward the cup. His brief, 17*minute address, oneof the most challenging he has yetdelivered on postwar problems, sup¬ported restoration of Germany andJapan; warned that economic regula¬tions will be necessary until the finaldefeat of Japan; and asserted that aworld security program entails sacri¬fices and “paying for it.”Hutchins’ remarks featured a 30-minute all-campus V-E day programand magnetized one of the largestaudiences ever to attend services atthe University cathedral. The entireV-E DAY, P. 3, CoL 1 Paul RobesonFeature ofRallyWidespread campus interest in theUnited Nations conference being heldin San Francisco will focns on agiant all-campus meeting Tuesday,May 15, at 3:30 p.m. in Mandd HalLA group of interested studentshave secured prominent speakers, andthe program will include Paul Robe¬son, now starring in “Othello”, and T.Walter Johnson, professor of Idstory.All pers<Mis on campus may attendthe meeting. Heading the sponsoringgroup are: Jessie Polacheck, AllanRosenblatt, and Mary Alice Reed.Veterans* Council; Young Women’sChristian Association, AmericanYouth for Democracy, EUllel, Inter-Fratemity Council, and THE CHI¬CAGO MAROON have all helped inplanning this meeting.Mary Alice Reed, chairman of pub¬licity, announces that “Because ofthe great nignificance of the con¬ference and because we feel its im¬plications and ramifications will befelt by every student on this campus,we have sensed a necessity for know¬ledge of the issues at stake.” New Plan WUl AffectResidents. Cenunuters$14,000 Given RedCross by Chicago By ALAN J. STRAUSSComplete overhauling of the University dormitory system toinclude the granting of dormitory memberships to all college stu¬dents and merger of the college advisory system with the dormi¬tory program are the two key points of sweeping, though long-range, changes projected for the College residence program,University authorities revealed yesterday.The University contributed $14,567to the national Red Cross drive, ac¬cording to figures released yesterdayby Mrs. Robert Woellner and DeanCharles Gilkey who directed the drive.The total is $3,000 greater than anysum hitherto contributed.Assisting in the drive were MissAlice Campbell of the LaboratorySchools, Mrs. C. Phillip Miller, Mrs.Lester Dragstedt of the Hospitals andBibs Ludgin of the campus Red CrossUnit.UC Settlement "Tag Day’ MappedMay Queen FeteBurton SpotlightLew Diamond and his orchestrafrom the Empire Room of thePalmer House will play for the“May Queen Dance” Saturdaynight, 'i.liis all-campus informaldance, sponsored by the residentsof Burton Court, is slated as theCourt’s biggest social event of theyear.The dance will be held from 8to 12 in the Burton Dining HalLFeature of tlie ev^ng will bethe election of a May Queen fromnominations each of the fiveentries. A trophy will be awardedto the winner.Refreshments will be served, andthere will be admission fee.' By BARBARA BARKEMiss Marguerite J. Sylla, headresident of the University ofChicago Settlement, will meetwith the Student SettlementBoard this afternoon to describethe work of Settlement and toplan for the annual Tag day forthe Settlement's benefit sched¬uled for Wednesday and Thurs¬day of next week.The campus women’s clubs willdistribute the tags, aided for the firsttime by the fraternities.The University of Chicago Settle¬ment, 50 years old this week, is located“back of the yards” at 4630 SouthMcDowell Street, in a neighborhoodof over 20 nationalities. It wasfounded by Mary E. McDowell,“Fighting Mary,” and a group of in-SETTLEMENT, P. 2, CoL 4 Maroon RankedAs All-AmericanThe CHICAGO MAROON hasbeen awarded the 1945 SuperiorAll-America rating by the As¬sociated Collegiate press in com¬petition with other weekly collegenewspapers, it was announced.atMinneapolis yesterday.The judgment was based onissues of the newspaper publishedfrom September to January of thepresent year. Seven other newspapers received the award withthe Maroon in ike 2,500-5,000 en¬rollment class.ACP officials noted that this isthe first time that THE MAROONhas been granted the award. * The proposals are included inmemorandum defining the relation¬ships between the College academicplan and the extra-curricular activi¬ties which has been released exclusively to THE CHICAGO MAROONby Dean of Students Lawrence A.Kimpton.The memorandum, which was draft¬ed by Kimpton in conjunction withLieutenant Colonel Alan L. Chidsey,who is slated to become director ofthe residence program upon his re¬lease from the army, has been approved by President Hutchins andDean of the College Clarence A.Faust.All student activities should besubordinated to the College curri¬culum, but these extra-curricularactivities, arising out of student in¬itiative, should bear a direct relation¬ship to the curriculum, the memoran¬dum assserts.Kimpton emphasized that the plansmust await more dormitory facilitiesand a larger faculty for their ex¬ecution, necessarily a long term pro¬cess. He said that when the plan isin full operation, most of the Collegeactivities will be organized aroundthe dormitory program. Every stu¬dent, whether resident or commuter,will hold membership in one of the houses. ,Each house, under the plan, vrill bdoccupied by between thirty-five andsixty student residents, one residenthead, and one or two resident assist¬ants. In addition there will be be¬tween forty and sixty-five associateNEW PLAN, P. 6, CoL 3Plan Anti-DraftConclave HereWednesdayAn all-campus meeting sponsoredby the Student Political Action Com¬mittee of the Labor Rights society,opposing enactment of postwar mili¬tary training legislation, is scheduledhere Wednesday night at 8 at MandelPresident Hutchins will be thefeature speaker of the anti-conscrip¬tion meeting. The rally will be opento the public and there will be no ad¬mission charge.Following the meeting a resolutionis expected to be passed condemningpasage of the May bill, now beforeCongress, which if passed would re¬quire military training. A petitionis also being circulated among facultymembers condemning the bill.This Is the U. of C. at War ..It’s Marine Major Paul H. Douglasnow, but it was once Prof. Douglas.Dept, of Economics, at the Universityof Chicago. Douglas, well known pro¬fessor here on leave for the duration,is shown roceiving the Bronze StarMedal at a Pacific Base from Maj. Gen. Pedro A. del Valle, command¬ing general of the first Marine Divi¬sion. He was cited by the Marinesfor^ his “devotion to duty and untir¬ing effort on the front lines duringthe Peleliu campaign.”(Official U.S. Marine photo).Complete Text of Hutchins' V-E Day Message On Page 5Page TwoDorm Roundup THE CHICAGO MAROONHutchins Will Be Burton Guest;Adler Outlines Liberal Education Friday, May II, 1945New Magazine PrimedFor Wednesday DebutBy JOHN K. ROBINSONA new campus by-weekly opinion publication, fmst to appearsince the collapse of Counterpoint 18 months ago, will make itsdebut next Wednesday.Bob Bailyn, head of the Inter-En¬try Discussion Committee of BartonCourt, has announced that PresidentRobert M. Hutchins will be an after-dinner speaker in Burton Loungesometime before the end of the quar¬ter.Because of the appeal of thespeaker and the limited seating fac¬ilities, it is probable that attendancewill have to be limited to the menand women of the Dormitory Pro¬gram.* V eEustace Haydon will be the guestof Kelly Hall on Thursday, May 17.Immediately following dinner, hewill speak in the lounge on Compara¬tive Religion. All are cordially inrvited.* *Speaking to a group of Foster-Kelly girls Monday night, MortimerAdler stressed three functions ofliberal education. These included thepreparation for citizenship, educationfor leisure, and the understandingof the development of human culture. The aims of a liberal education, hesaid, are the disciplining of the mindand the acquisition of the tools oflearning.« * «Open house will be held at BlakeHall this Sunday in the lounges, be¬ginning at 6 p.m.; it was not heldlast Sunday, as previously announced.The party will feature refreshmentsand dancing to records, according toBetty Jean Weldon, social chairman.♦ ♦ ♦Last Sunday, at Blake Hall, GuyStout, a student from the Universityof Wisconsin, led a discussion on dis¬crimination and social action. Stoutpresented the history of the Negrorace and the need for measuresagainst racial and social discrim¬ination.CLASSIFIEDFor Sale: Three men’s business suits,size 39; one tuxedo plus shoes, sizeone overcoat; two steamer trunks. Pricedreasonably. Phone Mid. 4106 Saturdaymorning.Lost: Weston light meter tn leathercase near Beecher Hall. Reward. Mrs.Walter T. Whitney, 445 W. Tenth, Clara-mont, Calif. Dance to Climax[nt House Slate*‘Deep Sea Dazzle*’ is the themeof the dance to be given by resi¬dents of International House Sat¬urday evening. The ball will beheld in the Assembly Room of theHouse from 9:30 to 12:30.Wally Hermes and his eight-piece orchestra will furnish musicand formal dress is optional. Ad¬mission will be fiftyncents for res¬idents and seventy-five cents forguests of the house. Tickets willbe available at the door, if theyhave not been purchased in ad¬vance.The “Deep Sea Dazzle” is thelast large all-campus function ofInternational House for this quar¬ter.Robert LovettPlans Visit toCampus May 25English Professor EmeritusTo Teach at Puerto Rico U.By ALBERT FRIEDLANDERRobert Morss Lovett, ex-Govem-ment Secretary of the Virgin Islandsand Professor Emeritus of Englishat the University of Chicago, willbe in Chicago May 25 for an ex¬tended visit.Lovett was Government Secretaryof the Virgin Islands until two yearsago, when Congress cut off the sala¬ry of the office, thus abolishing it.This was the direct result of an“exposition” by the Dies Committeeon his alleged “subversive activities.”Preceding that he was a professor ofEnglish literature at the Universityof Chicago for 45 years, and an as¬sociate editor of the New Republicfor twenty years. Since last yearLovett has been visiting professorat the University of Puerto Rico,where two of his oldest friends, alsoProfessors Emeritus of The Univer¬sity of Chicago are teaching. PercyHolmes Boynton, Professor Emeri¬tus of English, has been there oneyear, and Ferdinand Schevill hastaught there since the fall quarter.Lovett was in the city last falltogether with his family. He expectsto remain here this year until Au¬gust, when he will take Mrs. Lovettback to Puerto Rico. “The purpose of The University ofChicago Critic will be to offer to allmembers of the University a bi¬weekly picture of current opinion andactivity arising on the Quadrangles.It will include both perception of thereal and conception of the imaginary,”said J. William Lenz, Editor-in-Chiefof the forthcoming student opinionpublication at a staff meeting Tues¬day.The magazine will represent thefirst campus-wide movement in thisfield in more than a year. Because ofthe all inclusive interest instigated bya long run view of reviews, literary,and social material, a systematic me¬thod of circulation is being workedout to insure complete coverage ofcampus focal points it was announced.Critic will joint THE CHICAGOMAROON as a recognized Universitypublication. Its go-ahead has beententatively authorized by the Dean ofStudents and the Counsellor to Pub¬lications.Format of Critic will be standar-Settlement..(Continued from page one)terested University members whowished to live close to the problemsof such a neighborhood.In 50 years, the Setlement Househas been highly instrumental inrevolutionizing the neighborhood, inreplacing shanties and squalor withhousing and sanitation and providingplaying fields where once there wasonly a field with overgrown weeds. Ahealth service, playground, library,summer camp, and other services forthe workers of the yards and theirfamilies are maintained.There are 21 residents at the Settle¬ment and 100 volunters. The two-day drive next week is the lone cam¬paign which the Settlement conductson the campus.Splash Party at Ida NoyesRaces, games, and relays withprizes for the winners will be fea¬tured tonight at the all-campus SplashParty to be held in the Ida Noyesswimming pool. Time of the partyis set at 8:00. dized to allow for the news, literal^and social departmental divisionseach of which is to be presented re¬gularly. Price of the magazine willbe 10 cents.Associate Editors Arthur Wiesen-der, John Karl Robinson, and Wil¬liam Sparks are in charge of thedepartments which will handle thethree material divisions of the print¬ed matter. Managing Editor is Ri.chard Dennis. Mortimer J. Ad¬ler, Professor of The Philosophy ofLaw, is advisor. William Washing¬ton has taken the post of Coordinat¬ing Editor, and Tina Noble has beenappointed Business Manager.Critic offices are located in Lexing¬ton 16, phone extension 697. Officehours are 2—5 p.m. daily, and 10—12a.m. Saturday.With the GreeksKimpton GuestOf I-F CouncilDean of Students Lawrence A.Kimpton urged closer relationships be¬tween fraternities and the faculty anda more progressive fraternity intel¬lectual tone “without super-intellectu-alism” at an Interfraternity councilmeeting this week.Kimpton, guest of the council,pointed out that the lack of studentsin the first two years of the divisionsor conventional junior or senior years,handicap fraternities on the Chica¬go campus. He described that div¬isional zone as “no-man’s land.”Kimpton and Jim Halvorsen, presi¬dent of the IF, were later dinnerguests of Phi Gamma Delta at thechapter house.* * •National president of Phi GammaDelta, lA)uis E. Leverone spoke tothe Fijis at their initiation dinnerlast Monday evening as four neo¬phytes joined their ranks. He toldof the functions of the national officeand the Chicago chapter’s relationto it. Upon being questioned laterhe explained the vocational bureauof Phi Gamma Delta which he or¬ganized in 1923. With the slogan“Jobs for Fijis and Fijis for Jobs”,the bureau is now turning its atten¬tion to positions for the dischargedPhi Gams.The new initiates are: Ed Ander¬son, Ken Keldsen, Henry Rudy, andEd Urban. Anderson and Urban arein the third year of the College; Keld¬sen and Ruby, in the fourth. Otherguests at the dinner were MajorGeorge Parker of the chapter andHargrave Long of Chicago.U.T.1131-1133 E. 55th St.Complete Selectionof Beers andOther BeveragesMtDway0524Blatz Beer ^From Twilight to MidnightMarine Dining RoomOffers the Most in Dancing Time,Beautiful Floor Shows, ExcellentDinners in an Elegant AtmosphereEMIL VANDAS^ORCHESTRADOROTHY HILD DANCERSTWO VARIETY ACTSDancing: 7:00 to Midnight, nightly except MondaysShow Time: Tuesday thru Saturday 8:30 & 10:30Sundays: 7:30 and 10:30 P.M.Monday Evenings: Organ musicDinner service as usuaL—and because there is no dancing orfloor show on Monday evenings, there is no cabaret orluxury tax levied.Telephone Longbeach 6000 for reservations.5100 BLOCK SHERIDAN ROAD'40’CHICAGO ENJOY IT TODAY ATCOOIFDAIR. L J COOLEDCOLONIAL RESTAURANT6324 Woodlown Ava.Oafrelons home cooldng hai mad* Nils basuftliil dlnlnq pl««tfamous. Siniad wemaii eeeb prtpar# “food {utt HU mofUrttsad H maU"—4aaly hot rolls, komamado plas, eakas and !«•idarfHliy saasoMd moafSi poultry, ItmIi uottfoyoibItocoMwuidod byr« "Adyoatarot biFriday, May II, 1945 1HE CHICA&O MAROONNew Head Named at Int HouseGeorgia DeanTo Take PostAppointment of Robert M.Strozier as Associate Directorof International House effectivethis Tuesday was announcedthis week by Charles A. Rovet-ta, Int House Director.Strozier, a candidate *for a Ph.D.degree in Romance Languages thisJune is on leave of absence from theUniversity of Georgia where he wasAssociate Dean of Students, Assoc¬iate Professor of Romance Lang¬uages, and Director of the ASTPUnit and the Veterans Division. Hisundergraduate work was done atEmory University in Georgia.As Associate Director of Int HouseStrozier, will be in charge of thehouse program. He will also be inpersonal contact with the foreignstudents in the House.V-E Day,:(Continued from page one)program was under the direction ofan all'Student committee.“We have come now to the real testof our ideals for the sake of whichwe entered the war,” Hutchins toldthe gathering, less than 3 hours afterPresident Truman had informed theworld in an international radiohookup that Germany had surren¬dered unconditionally. “We enteredthe war not to save our skins, but tomake possible a just, a human societywhich should embrace all the peoplesof earth,” he said, and added that “ifthat is what we want, we must nowsacrifice, not only our lives but ourgoods to save millions of our fellow-men from starvation and from themoral and political distintegrationwhich starvation will carry with it.”Hutchins denounced those who sup¬port a policy of vengeance towardGermany. He quoted Edmund Burke,18th century English orator, in de¬claring that “we do not know a methodof drawing up an indictment againsta whole people.”The latter half of the address cen¬tered on the world organization pro-poeals. Hutchins, who prior to thewar opposed American interventionand is now opposed to military con¬scription after the war, said that “we PekingU. President F orecasts18-MonthWar In Licking JapsBy JOAN KOHNThat it will take at least six months to transport fresh troops to Japan,and probably a year after that to defeat Nippon is the opinion of Dr. ChiangMon-lin, president of the National University of Peking and of the ChineseRed Cross who appeared on campus Wednesday to deliver a lecture on“Dictatorhsip and Democracy in China.”In an interview with the CHICAGO MAROON he further said that “theonly way to deal with Japan after the war is to completely demilitarize thecountry.”Concerning the outcome of the San Francisco Conference Dr. Chiang isoptimistic. “We can at least get a basic world organization,” he commented,“and any type or organization is better than none.”Dr. Chiang headed the Chinese delegation to the Institute of PacificRelations Conference, held last month, and will remain in the United Statesfor a few months to study educa. .tional conditions here. *Red Cross Aid HereMiss Eleanor Shanahan, a RedCross worker just returrted from over¬seas duty, will speak to a joint meet¬ing of the women’s clubs on Mondayevening, May 14, at 8:00Miss Shanahan was a club directorfor the Red Cross before going over¬seas, where she served in ScotlandIreland.Furloughed home because of illness.Miss Shanahan has appeared for theSpeakers Bureau in the War FundDrive.must pay” for such an organization.He struck at the four major powerswho have retained veto privileges inthe international council, assertingthat all nations “must be equally sub*ject to the law.”Ed Wood, veteran of this war actedas master of ceremonies and Dean ofthe Chapel Charles Gilkey deliveredthe prayer and the benediction. TheUniversity choir also participated inthe program.The end of the European war camequietly to the University. THE CHI¬CAGO MAROON extra, delivered tothe campus 55 minutes after Trumanhad announced the war’s end, wasthe first formal reaction. Scores oftributes to the extra were received bystaff members of THE MAROONfrom students and administrationmembers.Military units on campus viewed asecret War Department film at MandelHall at 4 a.m. V-E day and severalthousand attended the evening com¬munity services at Rockefeller chapel. Veterans' ParleyBlatedThnrsdayThe Campus Veterans Councilwill meet next Thursday at 7:30at Ida Noyes Library to namethree delegates to a national con¬vention to be held at WashingtonJune 30.Ex-servicemen enrolled at theUniversity are automaticallymembers of the council which nowincludes over 125 members.The council here will join a na¬tional organization which includesother campus veteran groups.Yank Magazine will publish ananalysis of the program carriedout by the council here in afuture issue, according to SymonWygodny, president of the Vets.Yank reporters are on campusthis week to amass material forthe story.Biologists to Hear GerardThe Biology Club will present atalk by Dr. Ralph W. Gerard, Pro¬fessor of Physiology, on the “Biologyof Imagination,” at an open meetingnext week. The meeting will be heldon Monday, at 8:00 p.m., at Patho¬logy 117.Geology Is Lecture SubjectIra H. Gram of the Pure Oil Com¬pany will speak under the auspicesof the Department of Geology andKappa Epsilon Pi Thursday, May 17at 8 p.m. in Rosenwald 34. Cram’sdiscussion of “Applied Geology” willbe open to the public.Miisica Maestro... Have a Coke(MAKE WITH THE MUSIC)...or the cue to making friends tn CubaAt fiesta time the gay little isle of Cuba is a mighty cosmopolitancorner of the globe—where the familiar American greeting Havea Coke is just as happily understood as their own native Salad.From Hanover to Havana, the pause that threshes with friendlyCoca-Cola has become a symbol of the, good-neighbor spirit.•OTTLEO I’NOER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BYcocA^iA lomiNe co.. of :hiua»o. inc 'Coke'-Coca-CoiaYon aaturally haar Coca>ColaIcallad by ita friaadly abbreviation|-Coke*. Both naan tba qpHKty prad>'lict of The CocaCola CoaiHay. RenaissanceExhibit WillOpen TodayThe Renaissance Society of theUniversity will close its activities ofthe quarter with an exhibition of theworks of six Chicago painters andsculptors, which will open with areception for exhibiting artists to¬night at 8 p.m. in Goodspeed Hall.Paintings by Gertrude Abercrom¬bie, Aaron Bohrod, Charles Schicker,and the sculpturing by Laura Slobe,Anna Keeney, and Egon Weiner willbe on exhibit daily except Sundayfrom 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., through June6, and will be open to the public.Round Table BroadcastThe second in a series of threebroadcasts originating from SanFrancisco on the United Nations Con¬ference on International Organizationwill be presented Sunday at 12:30p.m. over NBC on the Universityof Chicago Round Table program. Ninety-three girls have been namedby the Student Orientation Board ascounsellors for the fall quarter.Those named include:Violet Adasunas, Florence Allen, Donna Ar¬chibald, June Arnold, Ann Barber, BarbaraBarke, Ellen Baum, Florence Baumruk, JoaaBeckman, Loia Berger, Brenty Bishop, RitaBlumenthal, June Bonner, Eileen Bowman,Ellen Bransky, Jeanne Brehm, Joan Britton,Anne Byrne, Barbara Cady, Nancy Carpen¬ter, Lita Chiappori, Dorothy Clapp, Jane Col¬ley, Lois Cone.Jane Dahlberg Arlene DeAno, Deborah De-Baun, Denny Denman, Martha Diamond, MaryDuffy, Odette Ewell, Megan Evans, Mattie Fer¬guson, Elizabeth Ferwerda, Jean Fletcher,Eugenia Freund, Barbara Gee, June Gillian..Nema Glassman, Barbara Greene, DorothyGregory, Wanda Grzanka, Louise Harvey, Nan¬cy Heller, Louise Hetzel, Johanna Husslein,Beth Jane, Ruthann Johnson, Marion Keane.Erma Kallen, Nancy Kerr, Dorothy Klein,Jacqueline Kompare, Lucille Konecy, MarionLaing,Lois Lavinia Lawrance, Joan Lundberg,Virginia Mainzer, Nancy Manchee, ElaineManheim, Harriet Martin, Marjory Mather,Marjorie Moffett, Patricia Jane Murphy, FatliArMuskin, Pat McNamara, Muriel Nimer, EileenO’Connor, Florence O’Donnell, Grace Olsen,Inger Olson, Kathleen Overhol^r.Anina paepcke, Barbara Payne, Arden Phil¬lips, Ruth Redman, Lois Robert, RethaRudolff.Gwen Schmidt, Dorothy Sefcik, Mary Se-gram, Tony Speare, Lois Stalling, KathrynStover, Carolyn Swift, Caryl Lee Tyler, Ro¬berta Unger, Frances Vincent, Barbara Weil,Mary Louise Wilbur, Lucille Wing, MaryWithington, Donatta Yates.moving up in a hurry!Every unit ties in by telephone to report on contactbetween companies, and to discuss the next move.That means combat telephone wires must helaid down with every forward push. And com¬munications crews must work continuously repair¬ing the breaks in lines torn by tanks and amphibi¬ans and blasted by artillery and mortars.Our Armed Forces still have urgent need forhuge quantities of communications equipment ofall kinds. That’s why there is a wait for home tele¬phone service.BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM"Service to the Nation in Peace and IFar” ■ iii P*g« Four « 'EditorialGive Us LebensraumThis is a story behind a mountain of factsand figures. It is a story of a dream, not a pipe-smoke fairy tale, but one which represents theUniversity of Chicago in the world of tomorrow.When the College was founded, pompous Uni¬versity administrators the nation over snortedin amazement and disgust. They spoke of *‘fan-tastic blueprints of wild-eyed medievalists”;they cried that the plan would suffocate fromlack of students and public interest. But anentirely different tale has been inked into thehistory of American education, and today, de¬spite the disparagement and denunciation of themisguided and uninformed, the Chicago plan hasbeen established as an overwhelming success.The same foresight which brought the Col¬lege plan into being has now veered into newchannels. The problem of establishment is over.The huge question mark has become one ofgrowth and expansion. While the phenomenallymeteoric rise of yesterday is over, we may con¬fidently anticipate a constant upward swing.University administrators, a cautious lot by na¬ture, need gaze through no rose-tinted spectaclesto predict that within seven or eight years theenrollment in the College will have soared to aceiling of 3,000. Within the next three years,at least 2,500 students are expected to be mov¬ing through the four-year College program. Itis already manifestly evident that there will beno dearth of applicants. In January, the Officeof Admissions rejected fifty applicants with allthe necessary qualifications. Army demobiliza¬tion plans will unquestionably add to the bom¬bardment of admission requests.The problem of a faculty, a troublesome ques¬tion during the war, will also be solved with theend of hostilities. Younger men — those mostsuitable for teaching in the College—^have beenon leave for military service during the pastthree years. They will flock back in steadilyincreasing numbers in the days to come.Neither does the question of classroom facil¬ities present an insurmountable barrier. Recon¬version and the end of the military programs onthe Quadrangles will pave the way for a returnto normal in that department.The crucial limitation, however, and the tre- THE CHtCAGO MARCXDNmendously difficult problem yet to be solved isthat of housing and dormitory facilities. Hous¬ing Bureau statistics tell the story tersely: Uni¬versity housing facilities are already packed tonear saturation. We are literally bulging at theseams. At International House there are severaltimes as many applicants as there are roomsavailable. All other dormitory units on theQuadrangles, including Hitchcock Hall, whichmay be returned to the University by fall, canprovide facilities for no more than 900 students.Additional room is temporarily available throughfraternity houses, which will, however, be re¬turned to their owners with the collapse of Japan.At the current time, 36 per cent of all Col¬lege students, or about 600 matriculants, arehoused by the University. It is crystal clearthat this percentage will continue to mount.As the College plan becomes more widely known,a constantly higher percentage of out-of-townstudents will pour into the University. Threeyears ago it was 28 per cent of all third-yearentrants; last year it was 40 per cent. Theattendance in the first two years is also shootingskyward, and most of these students don't callthe Windy City their own stomping grounds.That's the story statistically. Total housingfacilities excepting International House: 884.Exclude Blake and Gates Halls, which Universitybigwigs confess are inadequate for College pur¬poses. Total: 762. (And note that availablefacilities for the 2200 students not in the College,excluding International House, total the incred¬ibly infinitesimal sum of 122.) ContemplatedCollege enrollment by 1948: 2500. And yet itis evident by the most cursory observationsthat the highest possible enrollment which theCollege could maintain under present conditionscould not exceed 2100, far below the anticipateddemands.The answer is obvious: more dormitory fa¬cilities are needed. If the College is to continueto grow beyond next fall, with its planned enroll¬ment of 2000, if the Chicago plan is to becomethe revolutionary success it can and must be,then it is vital that the appropriate authoritiesact swiftly and without hesitation. It is not toosoon to draft blueprints, to allocate funds.LEBENSRAUM, P. 6, CoL 4CHICAGO MAROONOfBeial stadent pabliemtion of th« Uni*twrsity oi ChieMro pnblislMd •▼•ry Friday dar*lac tb« aeadtmic qnartcra. OAcea at Lazing*ton Hall, University of Chioaco, Chieaco. HLf^sfa|>ho>na: DOKcheater 7S79 or MIDway OSOt,Bet. Ml.Sditor-a Chief Abe KrtsliBttsfaieM Mamager..• .Alan J. StraiaaDepartMental EditorsMawa y^eabel Kin^eryFaatora JBetty StearnsCopy .:..,-...~~....Joao GeannopouloeMakeap .... —..^..^......^Nonaan Maehtl^rts ......—Jack HillCirenlatlen Manages .........Frank LewisEditorial AssUtantsMary Ann Atwood, Barbara Barke, KllcaBaum, Charlotte Block, Flora Bramson. DaveBrodcr, Babette Casper, Jody Downs, DoreenDvorak, Catherine Elmes, Ellen Englar, RoseEnscher, Albert Friedlander, June Gillian,Samuel Golden, Eleanor Guttman, George Hil*ton, Barbara Holdsheim, Jean Hubbard, PatKindahl, Joan Kohn, Lois Lowe, MarshallLowenstein, Muriel MacChesney, Lorraine Me*Fadden, Philip Reilly, John Robinson, GwenSchmidt, Lolly Sharbach, Ward Sharbaeh,Maribelle Smith, Helen Tar low, Mary AnnThomas, Ruth Wachtenheim, Mary Wong,Peggy ^^itfield, Carol Wright, Beverly Toung,Richard Zallys.BnaiRMW AMitUaUFlorence Bauramk, Carol Chism, BarbaraGee, Mary Jane Gould, Connie Slater, LoisSwan, Dorothy Taylor, Donatta Tates. Americans Don’t Know OwnHistory^ Charge Ohio EducatorsColumbus, Ohio, May 10 (ACP).—Do Americans know theirown history? |‘No,'' wrote Henry F. Pringle who fired anothersalvo at American educators on this controversial subject in theJanuary 20 issue of the Saturday Evening Post. And ‘‘No,” re¬affirmed members of the Ohio State University Department of His¬tory who discussed the subject recently at a departmental meeting.It all started in April, 1943, whenthe New York Times published theresults of a history survey conductedamong 7,000 college freshmen in 36colleges and Universities. Bonerspulled by freshmen included attribut¬ing the New Deal to Theodore Roose¬velt, who was identified as a forestranger and a general in World War I.Ohio University’s historical depart¬ment is divided on the subject. Themajority of its members are agreedon three points: the inadequacy ofhistory teaching lies mainly with thehigh schools, the questions asked inthe New York Times survey were notbroad enough in nature, and OhioState’s history requirements are sa¬tisfactory.Dr. Eugene H. Roseboom believesthat “history is the worst taught sub¬ject in high schools with the excep¬tion of English.” Most of the depart¬ment members in this camp agreethat better preparatiom of high achool history teachers is needed; that coa¬ches and domestic science teachersare not qualified history teachers.Dr. Francis P. Weisenburger sug¬gests the necessity for a better ar¬rangement whereby the same ma¬terial will not be duplicated at differ¬ent levels. He believes that “efforts tointerest the student have resultedin the watering down of content. His¬tory can be presented in an interest¬ing and vital way without having todilute it so much.”Dr. Eugene H. Rosenbloom believesthat the universities cannot avoidtheir responsibility by blaming thesecondary schools for inadequatepreparation. “What we need,” he be¬lieves, “is more interpretation of his¬tory and less emphasis on detailedcontent. Detail is important only asit illustrates general principles andunderlying trends which have theirrelevancy today.” Innuendoes Friday, May II, 1945by ArmstrongSTUDENT HEALTH>“ARE YOU SURE HE’S REGISTERED THIS QUARTER?”QuadranglesMiscellany...A Liquid AfternoonA questionnaire distributed among various College studentsasks a question as to whether liquor regulations at the Universityare too lax, too stringent, or between the two extremes. After theGreen Hall open house Sunday we are still undecided as to theanswer. All varieties of liquor were found as well as all stages ofhappiness. (We did hear one coy remark, “I'm the shy type—let's go in the closet...”) Vaguely we were reminded of the daystwo or three years ago when any morning one would see lines ofbottles adorning the windows of Green Hall.Philadelphia StoryThe custom of offering star performers sundry corsages was continuedat the Philly Story last Friday—Bill Flory was presented with a magnificentvegetable corsage. Another anecdote anent the play concerns the large signwhich hung between two trees on the walk between Kent and Cobb. It seemsa strong wind (with the uid of two park benches piled on top of each other,a tall male, and three typical U. of C. women) blew the sign off, completewith ropes, and deposited it across Roberta Unger’s room with the ropestied carefully and securely to radiators, steam pipes, etc.RomancesGeorge Klumpner hung his Beta pin on Inger Olson . . . Our predictionabout Phyllis Rademacher’s wedding in the near future was fulfilled speedily—^she was married Friday . . . Pat O’Kelly is engaged.. Althea Greenwaldhas taken Ed Homer’s pin.. .Proud recipients of rings this week are BeverlyBronstein and Barbara Salvage.. .Tina Noble and Dick Dennis are planningto be married this fall.Day of Celebration?A few weeks ago the Burton 200 entry decided to make a great day of itand have everyone appear in dark glasses a la Sig Johnson. Lately, saidJohnson has taken to wearing his tie tucked neatly in his pocket. The otherday at dinner the whole entry turned up with dark glasses and ties tuckedin pockets. We are waiting raptly for the day they all show up with CorrinaPendlebury. «Attention, Radio ListenersOne of our reliable informers tells us that there is a large bulletin boardin the main reading room of the public library that posts answers to all theradio quizzes each day. If you have a tip that you will be phoned by one ofthe quiz programs, it might be worth your while to peruse the bulletin board,which, incidentally, is a permanent fixture of the library.CongratulationsGo to the U. of C.’s Janet Halliday who is one of fourteen college womenthroughout the country chosen for the Mademoiselle College Board. Wat^for the College Issue this falLFood, Department ofWe note that the pixies are again hard at work at the Commons chang¬ing the specials sign. Thus far there has been nothing quite so original asthe “Swedish Feetballs with 9 Toes with Stable Tops and Stallion Steak.”Beecher Hall and the other dorms had a mild riot the other night when sir¬loin steak was served—^we don’t blame them. Most people are happy whenthey can find a half-dozen weiners for Sunday.Odds and EndsThe pictures of the University which were supposed to appear in Lifethis week will not be published because of VE day and it’s* possiblethey will be postponed indefinitely.. .Some pranksters were having fnn inthe Law Bnilding a few nights ago and earned their just deserts. Jnst asthey turned out all the lights, an irate law student began to chase them—>they tore out of the back door and promptly fell fat on their pretty faces inthe mud.Page FiveFriday, May li, 1945 THE CHICAGO MAROONStudy U. C. Impact On StudentsDefinite proposals for revamp¬ing the College in certain areasare expected to be made by aCommittee for Evaluating theCollege which has conducted aninvestigation during the pastyear in an effort to determinethe University's influence andcontribution to its students, THECHICAGO MAROON learnedyesterday.The faculty committee making thestudy will attempt to follow up thelives of the students after they leavethe College, comparing them with alike number of students similar incharacteristics including intelligence, personality, temperament, and socialbackground, but who have either at¬tended other institutions or droppedout of school. Cooperating in the re¬search are the Chicago public highschools, nearby suburban high schools,and other schools throughout thecountry.Through. extensive examinations,questionnaires, and personal inter¬views throughout several years tocome, of both the control group andthe College students, the committeehopes to see what changes occur inthe individual and the extent to whichthe College may be responsible forthese changes. One of these examinations, to dis¬cover what stages of advancement thesubjects have reached in general edu¬cation and fields of knowledge, wasgiven yesterday.Ralph W. Gerard, Professor ofPhysiology, who is chairman of thecommittee, declares, “Only a limitednumber of students can be in the testat this time. Those who are asked toparticipate are representative of stu¬dent types in the College. And,” headds, “They should make an effort toparticipate, for it will prove valuableboth to the college and to the stu¬dents.”Laud ProgramBy OrcKestraBy DON WEEKSThe Concert of the Chamber Orch¬estra of the University, presented atMandel Hall Wednesday eveningunder the direction of Hans Langeand Clarke Kessler, was a decidedsuccess. The respectable musicianship of the orchestra and Mr. Langecompensated for the occasional lapsesin technical proficiency of the play¬ers. Undeniably this fault is apardonable failing of such non-pro¬fessional organizations.The program was interesting andvaried, and without exception wasgiven a proficient and workmanshipreading by Mr. Lange and the mem¬bers of the orchestra. The programconsisted of Six Dances from **LaRosiere RSpublicaine*’ by Gr^try; TheConcerto in E flat major major forpiano with accompaniment of violinsand violincelli of J. C. Bach; ThreeEquali, for four trombones by Beeth¬oven; Haydn’s **Surpri8e** Symphonyand the Chorale and Fugue by Bach-Abert,The Six Dances were executed withthat vivacity and lightness appro¬priate to this quaint and thinlyharmonized music. The soloist forthe Bach Concerto for piano wasPerryO’Neil. The pianist playedmeticulously and showed a feeling fornuance and nicety of phrasing in hiscadenzaes, but, unfortunately, helacked spirit and drive.The second half of the programCONCERT, P. 6, CoL S Judy DownsServin' It HotBurton Lounge rocked to the Chi¬cago beat last Sunday afternoon asBud Jacobson’s Jungle Kings revivedthe true spirit of the jam session be¬fore a group of enthusiastic listeners.Attendance was disappointing, es¬pecially in view of the really rareand fine jazz produced. However,what the crowd Iqcked in number itmade up for in spirit. Nor was thismissed on the musicians, who ex¬pressed an appreciation for the en¬thusiasm, and also the good tasteexpressed by the audience.Off campus attendance ran high,accounting for representatives fromthe Chicago Sun, Doivn Beat, JazzSession, and Session records. Alsonoteworthy was the appearance ofProfessor William O’Meara of thePhilosophy Department, who re¬mained to the end.The band warmed up on the blues,after which Danny Gerald introducedGeorge Hoefer of Down Beat, 'whoemceed for the afternoon. In trueJam session style (both musiciansand audience were very happy whencoats were shorn and any indica¬tions of the “concert” level wereabandoned) George bantered withthe audience between numbers whilethe musicians conferred about thenext tune.The Jungle Kings’ repertoire wascomposed of such jazz evergreens as:Jazz Me Blues, Black and Blue, Sis¬ter Kate, Ccmfessin*, Nobody*s Sweet¬heart, and Bugle Call Rag,Letters to the EditorDorm Policies In MuddleCharges Blake ResidentAn Open Letter to Mrs. Barbara K. Anthony, Resident Adviser, Women’sResident Halls.dear Mrs. Anthony;This is an appeal on a question which I feel to be important to me andto all University students. It concerns the policy which is pursued regardingthe rights and prerogatives to students at present residing in the residencehalls and those seeking admission into the same. To date, you have not madeany statement upon the standards for eligibility, the standards for womenliving in the dormitories, and the basis for placement in certain halls., Until that time, I and others living under the University housing plancan only hold ourselves responsible for any of my actions. The problem liesin being reprimanded for breaking rules which are very arbitrary and liableto any interpretation. I realize that an unordered life is not classified as“clean living” (in reference to Dean Kimpton’s letter to Women’s residenthalls of last fall), but just what is meant by clean living? I have beenforced, not by choice, to interpret the term as I see fit.Moreover, the assistance of the school psychiatrist, or a person similarlyqualified, would be of immeasurable aid in making any decisions based onpersonal judgment of the character and the emotional stability of any indi¬vidual in question. Furthermore, once a student has been admitted to theUniversity (and this in itself is a highly selective process) is he not entitledto the same privileges of his fellow students? Is he to be refused admissionto certain halls because of a discrepancy in the color of his skin? In view ofthe University’s liberal policy, it appears to be very inconsistent.As a student of the University, I feel it essential that these matters bemade articulate and explicit. I do not want to be part of an institution whichoperates on an undemocratic basis. Whatever your policy is, we should bein a position to see it, and if necessary, act upon it., Vety sincerely yours,Diane Senor, Blake Hall Philadelphia^^ows ThrongsBy MARABELLE SMITHPhillip Barry’s bedtime tale foradults, “The Philadelphia Story” wasO.D.P.’s most enjoyable play of theseason. If there were any doubts asto how a grroup of amateurs wouldbe in this sophisticated saga, theywere mostly dispelled because of theacting of the principlesSeeing the play again, I felt thatBarry’s intention had been to con¬struct a play of character, by show¬ing the humanization of a Philadel¬phia blueblood. In this he was notwholly successful, since the organiz¬ing principle is wit, rather than cha¬racter; the latter being often sacri¬ficed in favor of the former.Merle Sloan as Tracy Lord had adoubly difficult job because she hadquite a predecessor in the person ofKatherifle Hepburn. To say that sheacquitted herself is to state an agree¬able fact. If at first she was moresophisticated than goddesslike, shecompensated for it by her warm,restrained performance in the thirdact, which was her best.Billy Flory as Mike was slick andoverly supercilious, possibly a mis¬conception of the part. And yet, Mr.Flory seems wise in the ways ofcomedy.If his Macaulay Connor did notseem capable of writing two bookswhich were “almost poetry” that isprobably Philip Barry’s fault and notBill Flory’s. I think, tho, a mistakewas made when Sid Levy was notcast as the reporter and Flory asDexter Haven. Levy’s C.K. DexterHaven was passable, but he wouldhave been much better as Mike. He¬len Auerbach’s Dinah was delightful.Her interpretation was not that ofa hoyden, but of a sweet little brat,for which her voice had just theproper degree of squeakiness.I thought Mary Diamond very fineas Liz Imbrie. Unlike some of theothers, she believes in understate¬ment, which still allows her to bevastly amusing.The others in the cast did not fareso well. Jean Cooke as Margaret wasmore the ingenue than the mother.One couldn’t believe that Tracy couldbe even remotely fond of George Kitt-redge as rendered by Robert Brooks.In a moment of high tension, Mr.Brooks puffed up his cheeks severaltimes to denote rage. Not only wasthis inappropriate for George, but italso seems a bit antiquated as a thea¬trical device. Robert Voas had a fewgood moments as S'andy Lord butthere were too many extraneous gri¬maces. Roy Pakensky was funny in acoy fashion as that fanny-pincher,Uncle Willie. Seth Lord as done byAlan Boulton was effective, but toostiff.A word, also, for the set, whichadmirably lent tbe light, space, andair required for the proceedings. Text of PresidentHutchins^ V-EDay AddressThis is a day of thanksgiving and prayer, thanks that we havebeen delivered from the bloodiest war in history, thanks to tho^ebrave men, living and dead, who have been the means of our de¬liverance; and prayer that we may show humility, humanity, in¬telligence, and charity in using the victory they have won for us.It is unnecessary to say that it is our duty to remain firm to the end.And this means something more, and something more difficult, than merelypersisting till the defeat of Japan. All those regulations which have beennecessary to maintain the economy, to supply the troops, and to prevent im¬poverishment will now be doubly irksome. They will be doubly necessary.We can only imagine the devastation that has been wrought in Europe. Forthe first time in modern history whole cities, even whole provinces, haveceased to exist.We come now to the real test of our professed ideals, for the sake ofwhich we claimed to enter the war. We did so, we said, not to save our ownskins, but to make possible a peaceful, just, human society, which shouldembrace all the peoples of the earth. If that is what we want, we must nowsacrifice, not our lives, but our goods to save millions of our fellow-men fromstarvation and from the moral and political disintegration which starvationwill carry with it. There are already some indications that we shall be lesswiling to sacrifice our goods than we have been our lives, or at least the livesof our soldiers and sailors.“Can't Indict Whole PeopleEducated people now come to the test of their education. Every educatedperson knows enough about human nature to know that war is brutalizingand that propaganda should be received with skepticism. In Napoleon’s timeit was generally agreed, but fortunately not by those in power, that theFrench were a guilty race who ought to be exterminated. The slogan “Hangthe Kaiser” seems ridiculous to us now. I venture to predict that the presentexcitement about war criminals will seem ridiculous a few years hence. Atthis juncture we can afford to remember what Edmund Burke said of us: “1do not know the method of drawing up an indictment against a whole people.”We cannot support the thesis that because German leaders acted illegally,therefore they^ should be treated illegally. Two wrongs do not make a right.It is easy to understand why Mussolini was lynched; it is more difficult tosee why Americans should gloat over it. We should remember that one ofthe points which Job urged in his own favor when seeking relief from hisown misfortunes was that he did not rejoice when his enemy fell.We are now on the verge of forgetting history, to say nothing of Ed¬mund Burke and Job, and forgetting common sense as well, for commonsense tells us that if we do not intend to kill off all the Germans and Japanesein the world, and if we do not intend to rule them as slaves by military forcetill the end of time, we must treat them with justice, and, if possible, withmercy. Otherwise we lay here and now the foundations of the next war. Tofeed German citizens one-third of what the American soldier gets, to reduceGermany, in short, to a subsistence level; to make Germany a pastoral coun¬try; to split Germany into little states, so as to base the next war on its in¬evitable desire to unite—all this is unhistorical and senseless enough. Whenwe think of the dreadful poverty which Germany must undergo, even withthe best of treatment, in the years ahead, and when we reflect on the politicalconsequences to us of that poverty, we should see that it is in our own inter¬est to do everything we can to mitigate its effects.Pleads for Justice and MercyThe most distressing aspect of present discussions of the future of Ger¬many and Japan is the glee with which the most inhuman proposals arabrought forward and the evident pleasure with which they arc received byour fellow-citizens. The general maxim of the educated person should bajudge not that ye be not judged.The peace of the world depends upon the restoration of the German andJapanese people. The wildest atrocity stories cannot alter the simple truthsthat all men are human, that no men are beasts, that all men are the childrenof God, that no men are irrevocably damned by God, and that all men are bynature members of the human community. These truths must dictate ourattitude toward and decisions about the German and Japanese people. Themisbehavior of an individual man, resulting from miseducation, misdirection,or stress of circumstances does not permit us to forget that he is a man orto treat him as a brute or to act like brutes ourselves. If we are going tohave one good world, the Germans and the Japanese must somehow be incor¬porated into it. The basis of such incorporation must be justice and mercy.The educated person is under a duty not to forget his education in facingthe issue of world organization. The educated person knows that it is impos¬sible to have world organization without paying for it. He will decide thequestion, not by harboring the hallucination that he can have it without pay¬ing for it, but by asking whether the kind of organization he is likely to getis worth the price he will have to pay. If the organization is likely to pro¬mote war, he will rightly decide that it is worthless, and that he will stay outof it if he can. If the organization is likely to promote peace, he should bowilling to give up something in order to get the organization going. Oncemore, if he will not give up anything and yet insists that he wants peacethrough world organization he is a fool. The law of contradiction tells nsthat you cannot at one and the same time join a world organization and stayout of it. You cannot have all of the advantages of membership in a worldorganization and none of the disadvantages. You cannot have ali the at¬tributes of sovereignty and give up some of them.You cannot have a world organization and decline to have the world or¬ganized. In particular, you cannot have the world organized and insist thatyour country will remain unorganized. You can’t, for example, have an ef-HUTCHINS, P. •, Col 4COMPACTSfjiclcecl for Qfiflo ilt er'sCD.ay surftrtstngThey’re so slim, so good looking, and justthe kind she’ll love to show off when she’spowdering her pretty nose. In mock tortoiseshell, colored plastic, lucite with mirroredtops and floral styles.1.95 to 5.00«CARSON PIRIESCOTT & &0. ICompMt. * firft floor THE CHICAGO MAROON —New Plan..,(Continued from page one)members living off the campus, withan associate nonresident heead. Bothresident and associate will be advisorsin the College and their counsellingwill be, carried on through the dormi¬tory, with the resident advising thedormitory members, and the associateadvising the off-campus students.Both resident and associates will alsobe members of the College facultyand will teach in addition to theiradvisory duties.Pointing to the break between thefirst two and last two years of theCollege, which has been aggrevatedby the existence of separate residenceprograms, the report calls for theequalization of opportunities betweenj the two groups. To implement this,; the special fee now assessed the firstI two year students for the support ofthe residence program will be dis¬continued, and all dormitory activ¬ities will be financed out of generalUniversity funds. In addition, manyof the activities now supported onlyin the first two years will be extendedto the last two years.The report specifically states thatit does no propose any further regi¬mentation or discipline than now inexistence. Participation in all activi¬ties will be strictly voluntary.Concert...((Continued from page five)opened with the Three Eqimli forfour trombones. These are seldomheard. Short pieces in fugueform. The trombone is a difficultinstrument to play in tune in suchcompositions and the players did wellenough. But in spite of their effortsthe three pieces suggested Gen. Boothentering into heaven. Perhaps thebrightest spot of the evening was theHaydn “Surprise” Symphony. Theandante was delivered with authorityand precision. The menuetto withits strong accents of the dance wasexploited to the fullest. Here theorchestra displayed a depth of tonalcolor and sweetness of intonation thatwas surprisingly good.—Don Weeks.BookstoreBrowsingsIf you’ve seen the EncyclopaediaBritannica’s exhibit of contempor¬ary American painting at the ArtInstitute, you’ll be glad to knowCONTEMPORARY AMERICANPAINTING, containing the out¬standing work of 116 Americanartists from the Britannica collec¬tion, has just been published. Thevolume is a lively and interestingreflection of the aspirations andaccomplishments of the AmericanBORDER CITY by HART STIL-WELL is an exciting novel dealingwith an important American prob¬lem—the social conflict of Ameri¬cans and Mexicans on the Texasborder. You’ll find A D RIALOCKE LANGLEY’S A LION ISIN THE STREETS a strong-fi-bered, vital novel of politics in theMaginolia State.Conceived a s entertainment,pure and simple, HOWARDFAST’S PATRICK HENRY ANDTHE FRIGATE’S KEEL containstwelve superb historical stories ofthe American past.The VIKING PORTABLE LI¬BRARY has added two new vol¬umes’ to its list: CARL VANDOREN, selections from his ownworks, and READER’S COMPAN¬ION, a delightful anthology editedby LOUIS KRONENBERGER.EARTH AND HIGH HEAVENis back iiu stock . . . also DEARSIR, a screamingly funny collec¬tion of letters culled from draftboards and government agencies.YANK FROM OLYMPUS isnow available for $1.98.University of ChicagoBookstore5802 Eiiii Avenue * ■■■■■' - — Friday, May II, I945This Week On CampusFRIDAY, MAY 11Religious Service. Joseph Bond Chapel. Service of music by Joseph BondChoir. 12:00 Noon.Public Lecture. Walgreen Foundation. “The Growth of Constitutional Powerin the United States: The Growth of Administrative Justice.” Speaker:Carl Brent Swisher. Social Science 122. 4:30 p.m.Westminister Student Group (Presbyterian) Banquet. Chapel House.7:00 p.m.Public Lecture. “Hindered Molecular Rotation in Polar Liquids.” Speaker: Dr.John Kirkwood, Cornell University. Kent Hall. 8:00 p.m.All-Campus Splash Party. Ida Noyes Swimming Pool. 8:00 p.m.SATURDAY, MAY 12Lying-in Hospital Anniversary Broadcast. WMAQ. 3:00 p.m.May Queen Dance. All-campus; free. Burton Court Dining Hall. 8-12 p.m.Barn Dance. Chapel Union. Ida Noyes Hall. 8:00 p.m.Deep Sea Dazzle Dance. Wally Hermes and his Orchestra. InternationalHouse Assembly. 8:45-11:45 p.m.SUNDAY, MAY 13Religious Service. Rockefeller Memorial Chapel. Speaker: Charles W. Gilkey.11:00 a.m.University of Chicago Round Table. “Great Britain and the United Nations.”WMAQ. 12:30 p.m.Inter-Club Sing. Ida Noyes Hall. 2:30 p.m.Sunday Tea. Home Room of International House. 4:30-6:30 p.m.Blake Hall. Open House. 6 p.mViennese Waltzing. Assembly of International House. 7:00-9:00 p.m.Open House. Calvert Club Center. 8:00 p.m.MONDAY, MAY 14Public Lfecture. “The Novel in England from 1880 to the Present. Experi-njents with Time: Virginia Woolf, Joyce, and Elizabeth Bowen.” Speak¬er: E. K. Brown. Social Science 122. 7:30 p.m.TUESDAY, MAY 15Religious Service. Joseph Bond Chapel. Speaker: Charles Hartshorne, Asso¬ciate Professor of Philosophy, Department of Philosophy, FederatedTheological Faculty. 12:00 Noon.San Francisco Conference Rally. Guest Speaker: Paul Robeson. Mandel Hall.3:30 p.m.Public Lecture Walgreen Foundation. “The Growth of Constitutional Powerin the Ujiited States: The Travail of Liberty.” Speaker: Carl BrentSwisher.Social Science 122. 4:30 p.m.Congregational Student Group. At home of Victor Obehaus, 5549 Weed St.7:30 p.m.Documentary Film. “Brought to Action.” Social Science 122. 8:00 p.m.WEDNESDAY, MAY 16Graduate English Club. Ida Noyes Hall. 7:30 p.m.Public Lecture. “Life and Thought in the Medieval Moslem World: The Hu¬man Ideal.” Speaker: Gustave E. Von Grunebaum. Social Science 122.7:80 pjn.Post-War Discussion. Room A of International House. “The Japanese Mind—an Enigma?” Speaker: Nic lyoya. 8:00 p.m.THURSDAY, MAY 17Public Lecture. “Government and the Economic Order in the United States:Findings and Conclusions.” Speaker: Charles E. Merriam. Social Science122. 3:00 p.m.Record Concert. Home Room of International House. 7:30-9:00 p.m.Veterans Council Meeting. Ida Noyes Library. 7:30 p.m.' 6:15 p.m.Methodist Student League. Speaker: Dr. William Pauck. Chapel House.Hutchins...tfCoatinued from page five)fective world court, if you are going to insist that the co.urt can’t judge yourcountry withoi^its consent. You can’t have an effective world organizationif the organization can act only when it is unanimous. This reduces worldorganization to a delusion and a snare; it looks like world organization; itmlileadi people into thinking that they can rely on the world organization,when actually the world is as disorganized as ever.Sees Need For Equality In New LeagueEqually pernicious is the doctrine that all right Ties with the big powersand that their security and spheres of influence are the primary concern ofthe world. This is the surest foundation for the next war. If justice and laware the cement of society, they are the cement of any world society. We can¬not pretend to have a world society unless all the members of it are equallysubject to law and unless the society is founded on justice, not to our alliesalone, but also to our defeated enemies.An unjust peace and an unjust world organization make the next warinevitable and make it likely that the next war will be unjust. The sense ofinjustice is the best excuse for fighting, and an unjust world organizationcommits the members in advance to fight unjust wars.In the name, then, of those who have fought and died for us, let us prayand let us work that those powers which make men human may prevail overthose which relate them to the beasts. In the hour of victory let us remem¬ber that vengeance is the Lord’s. With full recognition of the dangers andthe difficulties, but with confidence and resolution, let us struggle forwardtoward the ultimate creation of the great community. ^Lebensraum...(Continued from page four)Building should begin at the earliest possible moment.Five months ago, this newspaper addressed an open letterto the Board of Trustees urging prompt action. There has beenno indication from the Board that it has even given the mostcrying needs of the College a single word of consideration. It isto be hoped that they are not blind to the problem. They havecommitted themselves to a successful College. Such a collegehas demanded prompt, clearcut, forthright action in the past.It will demand the same in the future.Queens at Tuesda3'^s meet will beIrene Lyons, Jean Cranston, and Bar¬bara Parks. The trio were namedby the entire track squad.QUADS NIP GREEN HALLIn the only intramural softballgrame of the week in the grirls league,the Quadranglers defeated GreenHall, 16 to 14, last Tuesday. All othergames were cancelled because ofweather conditions.This member of a Senior Class of that year is fashion-perfectfor the occasion. Top-hats were sine-qua-non, and voluminousneckcloths muffled the spotless linen. Co-education was becom¬ing fashionable, toaThat year, I860, civil war was looming on the country’shorizon. College campuses blazed with patriotism. RailwayExpress was ready, at the first summons, to put its services at thenation’s command. Today, America is fighting a world-wide war.So, to help all concerned, please do three simple things withyour 1945 home packages and baggage: Pack them securely—address clearly and adequatdy—avoid abbreviatiog state names.MIY MORENATION-WIDE WAR BONOSRAIL-AIR SERVICE W.L.OOUGLASgSHOE COW.L.OOUGLASfSHOE CO.. BROCKTON 11. MASS.CHICAGO12 SO. DEARBORN ST.Open Monday Evenings*6240 S. Halsted Sf. *1321 Milwauka* Av*.*4002 W. Madison Sf.. Open Thursday and Saturday EveningsSOUTH BEND—*210 S. Michigan St.*LADY DOUGLAS STYLES AT $5.45, $4.45INVEST IN VICTORY — BUY BONDSStrong College Cinder Team ToParticipate In State ContestThe College tr^k team journeys to Kankakee tonight toparticipate in the Illinois State high school qualifying meet.Individual winners of first and sec*ond places, and all competing mem¬bers of the winning team in tonight’smeet will qualify for the state meetto be held next Friday and Saturday.Tonight the Senior boys will meet the 1same Thornton team that they bowedto in a triangular meet earlier in theyear, in addition to Bloom, Argo, Kan¬kakee, Lockport, and other southernCook County schools. The College’shopes rest largely on four men: DaveHall, Captain Bob Collins, ChuckFerris, and Brenton Steams. In to¬night’s 440 Hall will meet some ofthe same runners that pushed himto his best outdoor time of :53.6. Thequality of competition may well pushpole vaulter Churck Ferris up to andpast his indoor mark of 10' 10", andhalf-miler Brenton Stears will bepushed all the way in his favoriteevent. In addition to these, Chicagowill have two men in every event andwill run in the half mile relay.The senior team, minus several ofits outstanding performers who hadcompeted the night before in the Pro¬viso Relays, bowed to Concordia Highlast Saturday morning. Chicago’sprofusion of second and third placescould not make up for the lack ofwinning performances, and in the finalaccounting, Derr’s men were %%points behind.The juniors, on the other hand,easily polished off the Concordia boys,77 to 18. Led by their high-scoringcaptain. Bob Linsicome, who pickedup 38^4 points, the juniors won everyevent except the pole vault and thediscus. Other winners besides Lin¬sicome included Charley Forck in the660 and Dave Brbder in the highjump.Up against strong competition atthe Proviso Relays, the Seniors cameout with Yi of a point garnered byDave Weaver’s tie for fifth place inthe high jump.This Tuesday afternoon at 4:00,Stagg Field will be the scene of theclosing meet of the year. All mem¬bers of the Private School League willcompete in the senior division onlywith Chicago being a strong favoriteto win. Maroons LoseAgain, 12 to 2Mix With Western MichiganOn Midway Diamond TodayChicago faces Western MichiganFriday at 2:30 on the Midway fieldin their ninth baseball venture of thecurrent season. The Maroons metMichigan earlier in the season andwere defeated 13 to 3. Since thatgame, the University has won asingle game in eight starts.Working behind the three hit pitch¬ing of Reuben Stohs, Concordiaavenged its earlier defeat at the handsof the University of Chicago byswamping the Maroons, 12 to 2. Chi¬cago pitchers were nicked for 14 hitswhile the infield maintained a fairlysteady footing and allowed few errors.Concordia got off to an early four-run lead in the fourth inning whileChicago was unable to punch a manacross home plate until the fifth.Both Maroon runs were scored byclever third baseman George Steelewho got on base both times by walks.Steele was then able to work aroundto third by some clever baserunningand he was finally able to score bydint of his running efforts alone.Last Saturday, Chicago dropped itsclosest game of the year to Wheaton,6 to 6. The game went ten inningsand the University infield played oneof the tightest games yet.The line score:Concordia 012 101 025—12 14 3Chicagro 000 010 100— 2 8 5Batteries—Stobs and Bauer; Smith, Hauck,Barker, Knapp and Vauehn.CHEMIST TO SPEAKDr. John G. Kirkwood of CornellUniversity will deliver a lecture on'Hindered Molecular Rotation in Po¬lar Liquids” tonight at 8:00 p.m.The lecture, to be held in Kent Hall, issponsored by the Edward C. Lee Me¬morial Foundation. UC Shares 1stIn 3‘Way MeetThe University track^ team see¬sawed through the Milwaukee andElmhurst three-way meet Saturdayto a first place tie with MilwaukeeState Teachers College. Both v/in-ning teams had 65% points apiece,while Elmhurst came through with32 points.Merriam’s 11 man team was pacedby Dinckleocker, Suits, Russell, andBokman. Lagging by 15 points atthe three-quarter mark, the Maroonsbroke through in a sudden spurt whenCaptain Paul Russell topped both thelow hurdles and the high hurdles;Dinckleocker came out first in thebroad jump, the lOO’s, and the 220’s;and Thad Suits put the javalin 139.5feet into the cinders to win the firstplace also.Coming through with his usualSaturday vigor, John Bokman took inthe first place in the mile and secondin the half mile. Louis Levit Cops4th In NAAU MeetLouis Levit second year Lawstudent in the University andholder of the Central AAU side-horse gymnastic championship,won fourth place in the NationalAAU sidehorse event at New YorkCity last week. Summaries of the Northwesternmeet:SINGLESWhite, Northwestern, beat Glotzer, Chicagro,7-5, 6-0; Tully, Chicago, beat Ryan North¬western, 6-2, 6-1; Shapiro, Chicago, beat Neth-ercott. Northwestern, 6-3, 4-6, 6-1; Roth,Northwestern, beat Greenburg, Chicago, 6-4,6-4; Kasbeer, Northwestern, beat Matthews,Chicago, 6-2, 6-4; Grayston, Chicago, beatChalberg, Northwestern, 6-2, 6-0.DOUBLESGlotzer and Tully, Chicago, beat White andRyan, Northwestern, 9-7, 6-2 ; Nethercott andRoth, Northwestern, beat Shapiro and Green¬burg, Chicago, 6-3, 7-5; Matthews and Grays¬ton, Chicago, beat Kasbeer and Chalberg,Northwestern, 9-7, 6-2,RICHARD SHAPIROFriday. May II, 1945. THE CHICAGO MAROONMAROON NETMEN SURGE Page SevehiTO 6thTeam Is StiU UnbeatenAfter Match With N. U.The University tennis squad kept its recordspotles again this week with dual victories, asmashing triumph over Illinois Tech and asqueeze-win over Northwestern.By virtue of the victories, Chicago boostedits victory string to six straight.Illinois Tech was conquered 6-1, while North¬western fell by the slim margin of one set, 5 to 4,Wednesday on the Wildcat courts. The Maroonsdefeated both teams earlier in the season.Norgren’s men are now aiming for the BigTen .Conference meet to be held at Evanston,May 26, with only one other meet, with IowaState Saturday, scheduled before the season’sclose. Michigan is a strong pre-meet contenderfor the title, with Illinois and Minnesota alsostrong challengers.Tech scored its only point of the matcheswhen Dave Afton, V-12 student, downed PhilGlotzer, 8-6 and 6-3. Harry Tully, Chicago’snumber two man, kept his personal record cleanwith a little trouble against Mike Vogt in threesets, 8-6, 5-7 and 6-1. The University swept thedoubles matches.Northwestern gave the Maroons a lot oftrouble in splitting the singles matches but Nor-gren’s men came back to take two of the threedoubles games to win the meet, 5 to 4. ■'4This week you meet another U, of C. glamorgirl. . . and, this time, it’s the president ofPi Delta Phi . . . Red Cross worker and hospital-entertainer Lois Doris Noakes of College-3See why we say glamor?”What particular academic field are you interested in?”we asked Lois. Her reply . . . "interior decorating.”Our comment . . . she knows more than a little about^'exterior” decorating, too! Proof . . . the dress she choseto have her picture taken in. Pretty? We thought you’d agree.Where to find it? Lois located it in the Young ChicagoShop {Sixth Floor, South, State) at Marshall Field &Company . . . was enchanted with its fabric(butcher rayon!) . . . and with the way itsMaisy embroideryaccented its pastel colors (citron and blue!).We know you’ll love it for sununer ... so why not godown tomorrow and try it on? Comes in sizes 9 to 17 . . .and the best news of all, costs kut]«14.95!Meet the Best Peopte, Every week, on this page,the Chicago Maroon will introduce you to anotherUniversity of Chicago glamor girl ... a winning campuspersonality. And every week you’ll see her in anattractive*costume she’s^^chosen at Marshaii Fteid A Cmmpmm^*