irann arooyOI 5, NO. 19—Z-149 54 YEARS OF Happen periodicalFac#.Ex-THE IINIVERSi: PRICE 5 CENTSGive Up Panama CanalFadiman Tells Atom MeetBruening Speech/First in 8 YearsBy ALBERT FRIEDLANDERSpeaking before a capacity audience in Mandel Hall, Hein¬rich Bruening, ex-chancellor of the German Republic and aprofessor at Harvard, last Tuesday took the occasion of hislecture in the Works of the Mind series, on “The Statesman,”to make his first political speech in eight years.Professor Bruening, in the course of his analysis of states¬manship, drew widely on his own experiences as Germany’schancellor from 1930-1932, revealing much that had heretoforebeen unknown to the general public. He brought out what heconsidered to be essential in the makeup of a statesman, as theability to make sudden decision,• thorough knowledge of import-(itU trends throughout the world,The lecture scheduled fornext Tuesday, April 16, hasbeen postponed because ofthe illness of Professor Mc-IIwain.. The seventh lectureof the <*w'orks of the Mind’*series, therefore, will be on*‘The Administrator” to befi:iven by Chancellor Hutch¬ins at Rockefeller Chapel,April Z3.of the reactions any legislation ofhis would have at home andabroad, the ability to judge people,ttie necessity of having a sensitiveimagination, the ability to exercise patience, and others. This he illus¬trated by bringing in some of theproblems which faced Germanyafter the first World War, and byshowing the factors which influ¬enced the statemen’s decisions.Primarily a WarningBruening’s overtime speech ofone hour and thirty-five minutesmarked the first time in eightyears that the ex-chancellor hadmade any political statement, andrevealed much that up to no./ hadbeen obscured and merely guessedat. It sketched many of the actionsby which, intentionally or unin¬tentionally, the allies had helpedHitler to gain power and rearmGermany, and exploded the myth¬ical ‘wizardry’ of Dr. Hjalmar(Continued on Page 5)News Briefs . ..Intimate Theatre-T. S. Eliot PoetryThe Intimate Theatre program for this afternoon at 4:00 inthe Reynolds Club Theatre will be composed of selections fromthe poetry of T. S. Eliot. The poems, to be read by Helen Auer¬bach, James Holland, Molly Bower, and Marvin Peisner are“Portrait of a Lady,” “Ash Wednesday,’* “Geronition,” “TheBurial of the Dead,” “A Game ofChess,’* and “The LoveJ. Alfred Prufrock.**The Players Guild TheatreWorkshop will present a series ofTennessee Williams* one act playsnext month, as the only majorproduction of the quarter. Theplays will be directed by RobertCarter, Roger Englander, MarvinPeisner, and Players Guild head,Harley Smith. The program willinclude “The Lady of LarkspurLotion,” “Portrait of A Madonna,”“Purification,** and “This Propertyii Condemned.’* Prominent in thecasts are .Helen Auerbach, RobertCarter, Jean Cooke, Honore Singer,Sonia Friedman, Marabell Smith,George Morrison, Marvin Peisner,and James Holland. Song of 50abQrg Gives NamesFor Elements 95, 96Names for the two new elements,95 and 96, which were recentlyadded to the expanding periodictable, were proposed by their dis¬coverer, Dr. Glenn T. Seaborg, thisweek.Speaking before the AmericanChemical Society at Atlantic City,Dr. Seaborg announced the names,americium for element 95 and cur¬ium, for 96. These names will besymbolized by Am and Cm, respec¬tively, the scientist stated.*&ives Lecture onIndian Culture Today“The Essentials of Indian Cul^lure” will be the topic of a publiclecture today by Sir SarvepalliRadhakrishan, Vice-Chancellor oftbe Benares, India, Hindu Uni¬versity, and Spalding Professor atOxford University.Radhakrishan will speak at 4:30P iTi. in the James Henry Breast-Lecture Hall of the Orientalinstitute. The Division of Hurinanities is sponsoring the lecture. Iranian Oil Topic atInter. Relations ClubDavid Karno of the Chicago SunForeign News Staff was the fea¬tured speaker last Monday eveningat the first meeting of the quarterof the International Relations Club.His subject Was “Iran and theCurtain of Oil.”Mortimer Midway, RussHanson*s conception of acampus underdog, will makehis debut in next Friday*8MAROON. This new cartoonfeature will appear , bi¬weekly on page five. Ex'ChancellorHEINRtCH BRUENINGKimpton ProbesU.S. EducationAt Chapel Union“Are our colleges really prepar¬ing students for life? Or are weeducating bookish misfits—squarepegs for round holes?’*These are some of the questionsto be raised by Dean of StudentsLawrence A. Kimpton when heleads a discussion on “The Studentin Society,” sponsored by ChapelUnion Sunday night.Dean Kimpton will probe thestrong and weak points of Ameri¬can collegiate education, includingthose of the University of Chicago.All students are invited to sharein the discussion, to be held inChapel House, 5810 Woodlawn,Sunday evening at 8:00 p.m. Quiz Expert CallsFor World-ThinkingAt Meeting Here“You will be world citizens whether you like it or not,”Clifton Fadiman told an audience which overflowed into theSouth lounge of the Reynolds club last Wednesday evening, indescribing the impact made by the atomic bomb upon worldthinking.Speaking at the forum pi2sented by the University chapterof the American Veterans Committee on “The Crisis of AtomicPolicy,” Fadiman evoked ringing applause with the suggestionthat nations internationalize such strategic areas as the PanamaCanal, the Suez Canal and the Dardanelles, in order to achieveworld government.His address highlighted a meet¬ing attended by one of the largestaudiences the campus has seenin several years. With ProfessorWalter Johnson acting as moder¬ator, and Dr. Francis Friedman,Charles G. Bolte and ProfessorFrancis McMahon completing thebattery of noted speakers, enthu--siasm during the evening indi¬cated hearty approval of the pro¬gram arranged by Ed Wood, pro¬gram director of AVC.' First speaker of th*e’evening wasDr. Friedman, a member of AtomicScientists of America, now at workcm the plutonium project, whostated that even the smallest coun¬tries can make the atom bomb.“Manufacturing expense would notbe prohibitive, contrary to popu¬lar belief,” Friedman stated, indescribing the bomb as a weaponwhich could be made very cheaply.Francis McMahon, Professor ofPhilosophy here and author of “ACatholic Looks at ^the World,”warned of a world crisis withinthree to five years unless we haveworld government now. “Other“Rortd to Serfdom yyHayek to Teach inEconomics 5 WeeksFriederich A. Hayek, author of the contifoversial “The Roadto Serfdom,” which charged that economic planning as inter¬preted today will lead inevitably to fascism, arrived on campusthis week.Dr. Hayek, whose book has been a center of controversysince its publication by the Uni-versity of Chicago Press in Sep¬tember, 1944, will stay at the Uni¬versity for a period of five weeks,after which he will visit StanfordUniversity for the same length oftime. During his stay here, Hayekwill give a series of lectures andhold conferences in the Depart¬ment of Economics. Courses hewill teach during this period are“Positivism in Natural and SocialSciences in the 18th Century” and“Economic Institutions and theState,” already under way.Hayek visited the University lastApril to deliver a series of threelectures on “The Money Supplyand the Flow of Goods.” Whilehere, he participated in a RoundTable discussion of his thesis withProfessors Charles E. Merriam andMaynard Krueger*. FRIEDERICH A. HAYEK nations will be in a position tomake atom bombs,’* he said, “andwe cannot count on the possibilitythat the fear of retaliation willprevent their use.’*Fadiman, last speaker of -theevening, was preceded by CharlesG. Bolte, national chairman of theAmerican Veterans Committee,who rejected the pessimism ex¬pressed by McMahon in the lat¬ter’s address, which held out scanthope for early completion of thew6rld government idea.“There are certain times in his¬tory when it is necessary to dothe impossible,” Bolte said. “Oneof those times is now.”The meeting closed with unani¬mous passage by the audience on avoice vote of a resolution pro¬posed by Russ Austin approvingthe original McMahon bill.Lange's Postin OrchestraIs AbolishedThe Orchestral Association ofthe Chicago Symphony Orchestraannounced Wednesday, April 8that it had abolished the post ofsecond conductor, occupied byHans Lange, University Profes¬sional Lecturer in Music, Directorof Instrumental Music, and Con¬ductor of the University Orches-tr. While no statement could beobtained from the Orchestral As¬sociation, it has been reported byusually well-informed sources thatMr. Lange was dismissed in theinterests of organizational har¬mony.When asked for a statement,Professor Cecil Smith, Chairmanof the Department of Music, said,“Mr. Lange will continue in theposition that he has held here andwill continue to render the sameservice. He will continue to teachand will be able to devote moretime to his University duties.”Mr. Lange, reached at his home,authorized the following state-rfient: “Due to the short noticegiven me of the termination ofmy post, I have no other plansbeyond continuing my work at theUniversity of Chicago.”All students who plan totako Comprthensives at theend of the Spring Quartermust register by Monday inTHE CHICAGO MAROON■.Calendar of EventsNext Week onQuadranglesFriday, April 12READING AND MUSIC SERVICE. Bond Chapel. 12:00-12:45 p.mINTIMATE THEATER PRESENTATION. 4:00 p.m. Reynolds ClubTheater.RADIO BROADCAST. “The Human Adventure” WGN and M.B.S.Network. 7:00-7:30 p.m.SABBATH SERVICE. Hillel House. 7:30 p.m.PANEL DISCUSSION. Oneg Shabat, followed by social hour. 8:15 a.Hillel House.Sunday, April 14UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE. Rev. Charles W. Gilkey, Deanof Chapel. Palm Sunday. 11:00 a.m.ROUND TABLE. WMAQ and NBC Network 12:30 p.m. ‘What is Man¬agement’s Responsibility for the Medical Care of its Employees.OUTING AND OPEN HOUSE. Weenie roast, ping-pong, dancing,games. Hillel House. 6:00 p.m.CHAPEL UNION. Weekly meeting at Chapel House, 5810 Woodlawn.Dean Lawrence A. Kimpton, speaker. Discussion; “The Studentin Society.” 8:00 p.m.Monday, April 15RECORDING CONCERT. Ida Noyes Hall. 4:00 to 5:00 p.m. Tea servedatOPEN HOUSE PARTY. Chapel House recreation room. Bridge, games,dancing. Chapel Union, host. 8:00 p.m.UNIVERSITY CONCERT. Albeneri Trio. Program; MOZART, TrioE Major, Kochel No. 5421 FAURE, Triol SCHUBERT, Trio E FlatMajor. Mandel Hall. 8:30 p.m.Tuesday, April 16CHAPEL TALK. Robert Havighurst. Bond Chapel, 12:00-12:45 p.m.Folk Dancing. International House, 8:00-10:00 p.m.Wednesday, April 17PUBLIC LECTURE. “Natural Endowment and Status.” Charles C.Colby. Room 122, Social Science Research Building. 4:00 p.m.COFFEE HOUR. Hillel House. 4:00 p.m.LECTURE. “The War Department’s Prisoner Re-education Program.”Henry Ehrmann. Rosenwald 2. 5:00 p.m.U. OF C. CHORUS. Reynolds Club. 7:30-9:00 p.m.LECTURE. “Inorganic Chemistry—A Fruitful Tree.” Dr. Don M. Yost.Dent Theater, 8:00 p.m.Thursday, April 18RECORD CONCERT. Hillel House. 8:00 p.m.Fraternity DopeBy JAMES BARNETTAll Fraternities are knee deep in their spring rushing func¬tions. Rushing is defined as going around with a “fine, thanks”and a “why I’d love to” on your lips and a “dig me a grave andlet me die” in your heart. It is that period each quarter wh'enfraternities put their best feet forward to impress likely candi¬dates with the virtues of their own organizations and the vicesof others.Under the new Inter-Fraternity council rules, rushing willcontinue for three weeks, ending officially April 25. Membersare racking their brains thinking up new types of rushingstunts. Among the novel ideas usedthis quarter will be an “AroundThe World Dinner” and a “SouthSeas Luncheon.” Since fraterni¬ties are stronger now than theyhave been since 1941, rushing thisquarter should be interesting andlively.President Of The WeekEach week‘this column will runa short personality sketch of afraternity president. This week’s“President” is Phi Gamma Delta’sArthur Parsons. A third year col¬lege student. Art was recently dis¬charged from the Air Corps, wherehe served as a pilot in CadetTraining. Calling Pennsylvania hishome state. Art expresses a prefer¬ence for Chicago and the TexasRio Grande Valley,’where he wasstationed before receiving his dis¬charge. A UC student before en¬tering the service, he plans to en¬ter the School of Medicine whenhe receives his degree from theCollege. According to Parsons,the Fijis this quarter “will striveto strengthen fraternities on thecampus in order to provide for astronger Inter-Fraternity Councilat the University of Chicago.”Sergei Play ContestWon by Bob McKnightThe 1945 Charles H. Sergeiaward of $1,000 in United Statessavings bonds has been made bythe University to Bob Stuart Mc¬Knight of New York City, for hisplay. The River. Special mentionwas given to Crane Haussamen,also of New York City, for hisplay, The Jasper Stone.To encourage the writing of newAmerican plays, the Charles H.Sergei Prize of $1,000 is offered for the manuscript which in theopinion of 4he judges representsthe best full-length play submitted.The prize, which is administeredby the University, was establishedby Annie Meyers Sergei in mem¬ory of Charles H. Sergei, civicleader and founder of the Dra¬matic Publishing Company.Enrollment Near10,000 MarkHitting its all-time high regis¬tration record, enrollment at theUnivervsity of Chicago reached9,036 at the close of the secondweek of paid registration, ErnestC. Miller, registrar, announced*yesterday.Spring registration topped by521 the largest registration in the54-year history of the Midway in¬stitution. The previous all-timehigh record of 8,515 students oc¬curred in the autumn quarter of1929. Largest Spring enrollmentwas in 1936 when 7,073 studentswere registered.Two thousand five hundred andsixty-nine of the registrants areveterans, enrolled under the GIbill of rights. Nine hundred andnine students of the 9,036 are newmatriculates on the quadranglesand at the university’s downtowndivision. University College.Men on the campus outnumberwomen with 5,426 registered incomparison to the 3,610 women.Greatest percentage gains Inregistration over the Spring termof last year are noted in the schoolof business, with 354.1 percent,school of law, 272.7, UniversityCollie 200.8, and the school ofmedicine, 178.2. Doc: Films toFeaturefRare FictionRare fiction films will highlightthe program of the DocumentaryFilm Group for the spring quarter,and well-known authorities willappear in connection with the doc¬umentary programs.The first of the augmented doc¬umentary programs will be givennext Tuesday at 7:15, featuring atalk on advance-guard films byRobert Longini, of the Institute ofDesign, who will illustrate his re¬marks with five of the most famousexperiments in the translation ofabstract and surrealist techniquesto the screen.On the following Tuesday, April23, “Secret Agent,” Alfred Hitch¬cock’s tale of intrigue and espion¬age, will be shown, with a castfeaturing Peter Lorre and Made¬leine Carroll. April 30 will bring“The Wedding of Palo,” a pictureof life among the Eskimos ofGreenland, accompanied by a brieflecture.“Sous les yeux d’occident,”(“Under Western Eyes”) to beshown twice on May 7, is a filmingof the Joseph Conrad novel ofRussian emigrees in the Paris of1910. “The Spanish Earth,” JorisIvens* masterful record of theSpanish civil war and its politicalsignificance, will be presented May14, together with comments byJohn Murra of the Anthropologystaff.The quarter’s showings will beconcluded on May 21 with “Moth¬er,” Pudovkin’s history - makingfilm of revolutionary terror. Shortsubjects will be shown at eachprogram, including Chaplin’s“Easy Street” and scenes from“Macbeth.” April IHtSpinster's SkipSaturday at IdaTomorrow’s the night and IdaNoyes Hall the place where campusgals will be dragging their men todance at the Spinster’s Skip to themusic of Dick Collins and his Tin¬ker’s Guild orchestra.The music will start at 8:30 andcontinue through 11:30 p.m. Ticketsmay be obtained for 75 cents inMandel corridor of the Ida Noyeslobby at noon or may be purchasedat the door. Albeneri Trio MakesSole Chicago BillingThe Albeneri Trio will make its only Chicago appearance fthe! season on Monday, April 15, at 8:30 p.m., in Mandel HaHfor the tenth program of the campus concert series. The nrgram will consist of Mozart’s Trio in E Major, K. 542 • Faur#>°'Trio. Op. 120; and Schubert’s Trio No. 2 in E Flat On ion*Members of the Albeneri Trio are ’Alexader Schneider, violinist, for- UC Press Releases“Midwest at Noon"The American Midwest is por.trayed in Graham Hutton’s bookwith Pablo Casals. Tickets for the I Midwest At Noon to be releasedconcert are on sale at the Univer- | by the U. of C. Press this Mondavsjty^lntonnation Offic, priced at Hutton, an Englishman, was dL'rector of the Office of British In¬in Chicago for fourmerly second violinist with theBudapest Quartet; Benar Heifetz,violoncellist, former ’cellist of theKolisch Quartet; and Erich ItorKahn, pianist, who loured Europe$1.20.Tw'o Music Lectures ListedThat afternoon, at 4:30, in SocialSciences 122, Asst. Professor V.iHoward Talley will give a free ipublic lecture on “Problems of thePiano Trio.” On Friday, April 26, ]at the same time, in the same jplace, Profes.sor Cecil Smith willspeak on “The Music of DariusMilhaud.”Choir in Traditioal Service {The University Choir will par- |ticipate in the traditional Tenebraeservice in Rockefeller Chapel,Tuesday evening, April 16, at 7:30p.m. Music of the service will in¬clude Palestrina’s Tenebrae factaesunt, Vittoria’s Popule mel, Lotti’sSurely He Hath Borne Our Griefs,Anerio’s Christus factus est. andthe Crucifixus from Bach’s Massin B Minor. James McEnery, bari¬tone, and Denis Cowan, tenor, willbe soloists with the 85-memberChoir. Admission is free and with¬out ticket. formationyears.THE PLAYERS GUILDWORKSHOP THEATREwill present. Four Oiw-Acf Plays•>rTennessee WilliamsMay 1, 2, 3, 4REYNOLDSCLUB THEATRE8:30 P.M. SOe, Tax loci.Tifkttt OH tale at the InformaiumOffite in th, Prett Building, and at ihrbox-offut on the night of performantt.That "eo-wrf glow’h AmertcanBaaufy • • •show it off — in a photograph hy GuthmanHarold QuthmanCamera Portraits1508 HYDE PARK BLVD. ATLANTIC 0604America's ForemostArchitects Co-operatedBOOK OFSMALLHOUSEScosting from $5000 to $15,000PLAN and select your new house from' thisbrand new and exciting volume, prepared bythe experts of the House-of*the-Month-Club. Itpictures and describes fifty-six homes designedby architects famous in the small-house field,and includes many full-color plates, completefloor plans and elevations. Each house complieswith the standards and construction require¬ments of the Federal Housing Administration,e A special section tells you where*to obtain atnominal cost a complete set of plans and speci¬fications for the home you wish to build. $2.50ARCHITEaS WHOSE HOME DESIGNSAPPEAR IN THIS BOOKsHenry 0. Chopmen • Oeorge D. Conner • E. BurtonComing • Randolph Evans • R. A. Gallimoro •W. J. O'Connor •Alhort I. Olson«Royai Barry Wills UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOK STOREUNIVERSITY OP CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 S. ELLIS. CHICAGOFlea^c send me copies of theHouse-of-the-Month BOOK OF SMALL HOUSES,price $2.50.Q Charge □ Payment Enclosed □ Send C.O.D.NameAddressPag# 1April 1*, 1M« THE CHICAGO MAROONSidelights on FootlightsBy BETTY JANE STEARNSMartha Graham, America’s foremost dance dramatist, whogave such a brilliant performance last month at the Civic OperaHouse, will be back again on Sunday afternoon.The New York Times dance critic, John Martin; who hasprobably written more intelligent things about modern dancing,afid Miss Graham in particular,than anybody else says: “MarthaGraham’s dancing differs from thetraditional ballet in much the sameas that of the late IsadoraDuncan. It is less formal, less or¬thodox, less showy, more intenselyexpressive with emphasis on cur¬rent subject matter. Graham ap-uroaches her art with barefoot,Protestant simplicity, thinks of her -..u ncx iKXiisneu,fhoreography in term, of drama elegant group. But you can dorather than pirouettes and entre- sometimes confused by her sym¬bols, as I was, you cannot fail tobe moved. Her tone is varied—ranging from high tragedy to bur¬lesque—and there is always a newMartha Graham awaiting you eachtime the curtain rises. It is amemorable experience to watchMiss Graham and her polished,chats.” Miss Graham says of herown art, “The modern dance issomething far more complicatedthan cavorting about in chiffonrobes expressing joy or despair orspringtime.”Mis.s Graham, a tenth descendantMile, Standuh hw purged her ^ Lecturo Sofiesdancing with pilgrim tenacity, your own analyzing; it’s a goodthing—don’t miss it. The programfor Sunday includes “Herodiade,”“Deaths and Entrances” and“Punch and Judy.” Eugene'RabinowitchLilienthal Proposals onAtomic Policy PraisedColby to Offerfighting first against her parentswho were unwilling to have hertake up dancing as a career, andthen against a stubborn public.Her New York recitals are nowpacked, but In 1926 It was all shecould do to break even on her ex¬penses.Martha Graham’s work is notonly profound and vital drama,but good theatre too. If you are Charles C. Colby, chairman ofthe geography department at thej University, will deliver five lec-I tures on land and men in AmericaI under the Charles R. Walgreen! Foundation for the study ofI American institutions at 4 p.m.I Wednesdays April 17 through May15, in the Social Science building.Red Cross UnitElects OfficersBarbara Earke was chosen to actas chairman for the coming year ofthe University of Chicago RedCross College Unit at a recentmeeting. Other members of theunit operating committee will beAdelyn Russell, secretary; AnnBokman, camp and hospital chair¬man; and Marie Jeanne Martin,fund drive chairman.Donations are still coming in forthe Fund Drive campaign and willbe accepted from anyone whowishes to contribute in Miss Kid-well’s office on the second floor ofIda Noyes Hall. “The proposals of the Lilienthalboard are along the general linesof international cooperation whichthe Atomic Scientists have advo¬cated. They constitute a bold, con¬structive approach, and we are infavor of such an approach,” Dr.Eugene Rabinowitch told theMaroon yesterday. Rabinowitch isa member of the Executive com¬mittee of the Atomic Scientists ofChicago and editor of the Bulletinof Atomic Scientists.“There has been a fight on thesubject of the domestic control ofatomic energy—whether it shouldbe in civilian or military hands,and there is going to be a muchgreater and more important fighton the principle of internationalcontrol. Now comes this sugges¬tion from a high authoritativesource, and we hope it will havewide public support.Hope Official Policy Similar“We hope a constructive plan ofthis type will be adopted as officialAmerican policy. Of course thedetails of the committee’s recom¬ mendations will require carefulconsideration.“The McMahon bill,” Rabino-with continued, “was a good billfrom the point of view of thescientists when first written. Ofcourse we have to reserve finalopinions until the measure is re¬ported out of committee; there isno good way of telling how it isbeing altered while the alterationsare still going on. Of the pro¬posed changes that have leakedout, the Vandenburg amendment,as recently re-written, would prob¬ably be in itself acceptable; butexactly how much power will begiven to the military, will deoendupon other sections of the bi’l aswell, such as military security andso forth.”Rabinowitch then turned to theneed for increased awareness of in mind that this is their problem,and is not going to be solved forthem by the older generation,’*he stated. “The problem is here tostay, for 35 or 40 years at least; itwon’t be solved by a Congressionalbill or a State department decision.Young people should realize thattheir whole future depends uponit.”Believes Solution Possible“I feel a solution can be foundif the peoples of the world realizethat their survival depends on it.The outlook is very bleak if theydo not. And I think that it is verylargely up to the young people,too.”Rabinowitch praised forums onthe subject such as Wednesdaynight’s AVC presentation. “Thereshould be more of these,” he said.“As far as I know this is the first' the acuteness and magnitude of ■ such student-sponsored affair tothe problems raised by the A- I be held on this campus. And afterbomb. “I would like to urge stu- j all, it is eight months since thedents and young people to keep i first atom bomb was dropped.’*Here and There William WambaughThe Critic's CornerDor-A recent survey conducted in the Men’s College of the Universityof Rochester shows that veterans are doing a better job in their studiesthan the non-veterans . . . Vets lake a bow.But then one wonders when another report from the Universityof Texas shows that a large number of veterans are answering NOto the question. “Do you apply Concert presented in Kimball Hall, Wednesday, April 10, at 8:1.5 p. n.othy Lane, harpsichord; Robert Dolejsi, viola d’amore; Emil Ek, flute.13*.. 13^*.***. I-es Folies Francalses (“The Masqueraders”) Couperin, le GrandJoy Jnappy l erry i concerto, D Major, for viola d’amore and harpsichord VivaldiSuite . No. 7, G Minor, for harpsichord HandelSonata, E Minor, for flute and harpsichord BachTrio, D Major, for flute, viola d’amore, and harpsichord TelemannDorothy Lane had an opportu- i ning was the Handel suite. Fromfor subsistence allowance?”, be¬cause they think it means G1 chow.* * •Students at Ohio State believethat the present 1.8 academic re¬quirement level should be raisedto 2-points until conditions becomeless crowded. (Let’s hope the U.of C. doesn’t get any ideas.)* 4t *If you think housing conditionsare critical here, think of the twoIowa State boys who spent thenight in a Denison mortuary. Theowner of the Joint went mad too,listening to the boys sing “I ain’tgot no body.” nity to exhibit her very elegant andrefined harpsichord technique lastWednesday night on the twelfthUniversity College concert. Flaw¬less phrasing and deft registrationprojected Couperin’s masqueradeand Handel’s suite beautifully.Iowa State veterans and theirwives now boast of a co-op com¬missary operated for and by in¬terested persons. It was createdto bypass the high prices and food ^ x l ..shortages which the veterans had tournament to which major East-found in town.* « •The Teachers’ Union at CornellUniversity is discussing “QuotaSystems In Universities.” Currentinterest in the topic is shown bytwo bills in the State Legislature:one to ban racial and religiousdiscrimination in all schools fromkindergarten to college, and oneto establish % state university.« * •Cornell Students are sponsoring is one of the organizations support¬ing the plan.* * 0The University of Chicago Cam¬pus has given the word “onion”a new connotation. If you want j Here was interpretive art at itsto know what it means, ask any best.Phi Delt. The ensembles suffered, unfor¬tunately, from inbalance. The violad’amore is an archaic seven-stringed viol which gave way to themore brilliant-sounding violin inthe seventeenth century. In a smallroom, with a harpsichord playingat lower volume, it can hold itsown. Heard in the concert hallwith a strong-toned modern harp¬sichord, it suffers elipse. Therewere many places in the Vivaldiwhere Miss Lane completelysmothered Mr. Dolejsi.The label “concerto” on the Viv¬aldi is misleading: “concertante”would be a better term. This isnot a work for solo instrument inthe modern sense; but, rather, awork for two instruments on aUC DebatersCompete atWest PointTwo members of the StudentForum, Curtis Crawford andCharles Kahn, will participate inthe West Point invitation tourna¬ment, today and tomorrow at WestPoint. The debate topic for theern universities have also been in¬vited, is “Universal Military Train¬ing.” Bert Wax, president of theForum, will accompany the parti¬cipants as coach.* * *A recent activity of the Forumwas a television broadcast, Tuesdayevening over Station WBKB. JudiePeters, Curtis Crawford, andCharles Kahn discussed the subject“Universal Military Training.”Tomorrow, at 12:30 p.m., theForum will conduct another radio the solemn opening of the Frenchoverture which prefaces the suite,to the stately Passacaglia at itsclose, came playing of the highestorder. With the exception ofMme. Landowska I cannot recallhaving ‘heard such magnificentconception and execution of aharpsichord work. Comparison ofperformance of this work by Lan¬dowska and Lane reminded methat Landowska brought moreflexibility to her .interpretation,doubtless born of long familiarity.I do not doubt, however, that inanother decade Miss Lane’s per¬formance will be considered vir¬tually its peer.-Opus the FirsttoWeo William WambaughI concur, critic Wimbaugh,I With what you have said—I This humming of musici Is heart versus head.I Your hummer knows onlyparity, each developing the musi- 'a program for International Stu- program, on Station WJJD. Billdent Exchange. The basic idea is j Montgomery, Ralph Wood, Richardthat the same number be sent toEurope as received and preferablyfrom the same college. The WSSF Pelz, and Russell Austin will dis¬cuss “The Political and EconomicReadjustment of Veterans.”by Miw SovcntecBTHEOREM: Unruly tuinini** anJLackwuJ kul^a ncaJa’i mean Jaapaii.PROOF: Powtr Miraola’a ourva-eoan.inj vayt. Bi-Jh*et{oncJ ttntok kalittlaabipt, wLtUlaa waiala .,. oontrola with• oaraaa. YnuH wonjar tlial a maali aefanda-li^ enuU ia 80 firm. PowatbliMalt... in juaior yanUaa and gixJIaa.'€V€nT€€nIt. fBVNRATlONIfail ISBELL'SRESTAURANTthree locationsS90 Divarsey Pkwy.940 Rush St.1435 Hyde fork Bird. cal idea, although the germ of themodern display vehicle is herelatent.Mr. Eck’s flute was pallid andalso suffered eclipse by the harp¬sichord. His Bach suffered occa¬sionally from faulty tones anddipt notes, although in general thetone was clean. The fault is notentirely Mr. Eck’s. He came to theBach only fifteen minutes afterplaying an hour’s concert in theChicago Symphony. His breath¬ing was labored and troubled. Awell-written composition involv¬ing a wind instrument alwaysleaves space for breathing; per¬haps Bach had a grudge againstflutists.Most brilliant playing of the eve-* You hava ability, or you wouldn’tba bora in collaga. Now add a Gibbatacrotarial court* to your colleg*background and you’ra all aat fortha pick of tha job-crop. Parsonalplacement aervic* in four citiaa. Forcatalog, Collaga Couraa Dean.KATHARINE GIBBSNEW YORK 17 S30 Park Aw.BOBTON 14 »f Maribarautli 9X.CHICAGO II ....720 N. MUhlaaa Aw.PROViOENCE a .,aimM.I0l M- Of the classical tempo—Eight beats to the bar.So it’s out with the hummer!Yea, off with his head;Good music’s not hummed—It’s whistled instead!A. Nony MousDone this Fifth Day of Aprilin the Year of Our Lord theOne Thousand Nine Hundred andForty-sixth (until Robert M.Hutchins, Potentate of Potentates,Lord High Executioner, Lord ofeight thousand odd white elephants,and Keeper of the Bees of theBonnet, decrees otherwise).Campus Bridge PartyTonight in Ida NoyesThe spring-quarter All-CampusBridge Party, the first big activityheld under the sponsorship of thenewly elected Ida Noyes Councilofficers, will be given this eveningat 7:30 in the lounge and libraryof Ida Noyes Hall.Tickets may be purchased for 25c.ents from members of the Coun¬cil or at the door. There will berefreshments, a door prize andprizes for high-scoring players.VETERANS' WIVESWa aaa plaea yea la aKcallaiitefflaa positioas i* the LooppiH TO rouCeil Jaea MaCaira letea, DaaurberaM7B, 7 Saath Deerbere. »*wn UlfX,Page 4 i»'■ ’^' - i-0‘''-‘- r -p* " W ■^-- ^ /:. THE CHICAGO MAROONGreat is truth, and mighty above all things" • • *Wday, April IZ/JffEsdras, 4,41•V ’ EditorialMemorization SubstitutedFor Reasoning in ExamsOne of the first impressions given to students entering thisschool is that thinking is much more desirable than memoriza¬tion. Thought and logic are continually stressed in practicallyall classes, and yet, each time that examination time rollsaround, there are inevitably numerous questions on the Hu¬manities exams to test the ability of retaining insignificantdetails of a speech or a play. If these types of questions werefew, it would matter little on determining the grade, but withuncanny skill, the board of examiners place the memorizationquestions first and the succeeding answers are based on thosefirst questions. If the student’s ability to retain small incidentsis bad, he will be thrown for a tremendous loss. No amount ofthinking or logical reasoning will place him on the right track.He would be just as well off by quitting and placing his paperin the hands of a proctor.Unreasonable as it may sound, there are many students whofeel that even the instructors would have difficulty in answeringsome of the questions asked on these examinations. Perhaps itwould be wise to test the discrepancies charged to the examsby allowing the instructors themselves to participate. Followingthe last Humanities II quarterly examination, one teacher re¬marked to a complaining student, ‘T wouldn’t worry about it,even I couldn’t do well on an exam like that.”The generally acknowledged trend in education is toward aline of sound reasoning and the formation of logical .conclu¬sions—not toward the manufacturing of human machines that!remember everything. Is it possible that this obsolete method |of learning by memorizing has found its way back into such aschool as the University of Chicago?* « *Traffic Dangers MountingSeveral weeks ago at Indiana University there was a seriousaccident in which a student was critically injured by an auto¬mobile on a campus street. This should serve as a warning topedestrians and motorists at the University of Chicago.Each year at this time, the number of cars on the street in¬creases along with the number of pedestrians who find warmerweather an incentive for more walking. At all hours of the daycars are seen racing through the streets bordering this Univer¬sity, and occasionally, the screeching of brakes and tires testifythat someone came close. Perhaps it does sound juvenile towarn adults to be careful while driving or when crossing thestreet, but nevertheless, traffic accidents continue to exact agreater toll of American lives each year than were lost in WorldWar II. *Both drivors and podostrians somehow feel that the otheris constantly alert and attentive. To eoch individual it isalways somebody else that gets hurt or killed. Don't dependon the other guy! He is human and he forgets to think justos you do. Observe oil safety precoutions while walking orwhile driving—just because it has olwoys been the otherfellow does net meon it con't happen to you/0Il|tra3a marnnuThe University of Chicago294J ACP AlUAmerictnPublished every Friday during the academic year by THE CHICAGOMAROON, an independent student organization of the University of Chicago.Libero Dc Amicis, Acting Editor-in-ChicfWard J. Sharbach Jr., Business ManagerTHE EXECUTIYBNews Editor Joan KohnCopy Editor Antoinette TotinoSports Editor Richard FineVeteran’s Editor Irving Scott EDITORSCirculation Manager James E BarnettExchange Manager Donna K. GleasonGeneral Manager Norman MachtArt Editor Cissy LlebschutzPhotography Editor.. .Edwin SuderowEDITORIAL ASSISTANTST Barbara Barlw, Ellen Baum, Don Bushnell, Babette Casper, Clare DavisoiEckersberg, Catherine Elmes, Rose Encher, Lucien FitzgeraUHartstone, Eleanor Hoyt, Shirley Isaac, Patricia Kirdahl, Tess La Ventis, Sidney Lezak, Norman Macht, Fayette Muiroy, Alan M(1 Kathleen Overholser, Hillard Anne Perry, William Phillips, Ray Poilett, Betty Stearns, Helen Tarlow, Virginia Vlack, William Wambaugh.BUSINESS ASSISTANTS« V. ^^orence Baumruk, Helen Brandenberg, Charlotte Block, Valerie KopeckHerb Leiman, Muriel Thompson. Natalie Waechter, Betty Watson, Gwen WhitIT ; editorial and business OFFICES; The Reynolds Club, 5706 ScChicago 37. Illinois. Telephones MIDway 086o, extern351 (Editorial Office), extension 1576 (Business Office).SUBSCRIPTION RATES: On campus, 50 cents per quarter. By mail,cents per quarter.. ,i:^DVERTISING rates: Quoted on request. Address all communicatito the Business' Manager, The Chicago Maroon.collegUte^ft-eM*^*****^ CoUcflate Tittm (1943 ACP Aii-Anierican) and InU 1 Shades of Sampson !! 11Drat it, Oscar, get that fly off my shoulder!^Quadrangle Cipininn-Charges Administration ofInadequately Meeting YetsQuest EditorialIncident inTennesseeBeing hundreds of miles awayand in no position to properly in¬vestigate, we cannot determinewhat actually happened in thetown of Columbia, Tenn., wherethe recent riot occurred. But wedo know that Mink Slide (theNegro section of Columbia) is awreck of a place now unless muchrepair has been done in the pastthree weeks.Time magazine said the first shotwas fired by a “panicky Negro”at policemen when they cameinto the Negro section to makeinvestigations. The Chicago De¬fender said a riot started aftera white mob gathered as a result ofa white man kicking a Negro wom¬an whose son, just discharged fromthree years service in the Navy,came to her defense.We do know, however, as a resulttwo Negroes died in the riot andthat nine are awaiting hearing on$5,000 bond and according to lawthere is no legal basis for thecharges against them.Last week's papers revealed thatthe old Tennessee clan is now inthe process of reorganization as animmediate result of this disturb¬ance. The NAACP at the sametime is seeking justice for theseNegroes now awaiting trial.Meanwhile, down in Texas, Her¬man Marion Sweat, Negro mailmanof Houston, applied for entrance tothe University of Texas and wasrefused, on the grounds of colorand there is no other school inTexas in which he,can study law.In 1938 the Supreme court hand¬ed down a decision that stateschools must either adniit Negroesor appropriate money for an ac¬credited university for them.Texas’ attorney general happenedto remember this and as an imme¬diate result of this incident. PrairieView State college was changed toPrairie View university and a twomillion-dollar appropriation madefor improvements in general.There is no doubt history re¬peats itself. We surely don’t haveto think far back to rememberwhen the University of Missourirefused Lloyd Gaines admissionas a student, thereby leading to theaforementioned desision handeddown by the Supreme court.Interracial meetings to createbetter understanding betweenraces is a step forward indeed,one which has been made for yearsnow and we certainly think it’sabout time another step was taken.By whom? Oh, there’s the Federalgovernment always standing si¬lently by. N..Incidents in Tennessee and Tex¬as reflect varied patterns of thesame underlying causes, ye old raceprejudice. It is left entirely withthe people if history does repeatitself, since it’s the people whomake it.U. S., Take NoteLittle as we may realize it, abreak that may have given theUnited States the edge in winningthe war in Europe was due to amistake.Germany, in seeking to rule theworld, advocated the suppressionof minorities. It was a member ofa German group who discoveredthe secret of smashing the atom.Had the discoverer been given fullcitizenship rights, no doubt Ger¬many, and not America, wouldcontrol the atomic bomb today.Is it unreasonable to believe thatsomewhere in our own countrythere might exist a Negro who, ifgiven a chance might develop adevice to counteract the atomicbomb? Or that some Jew or Jap¬anese who, by his ability, hasearned a scientific scholarship,yet has it denied him because ofhis racial or religious identity,might do the same.The United States Is a greatmaker of famous phrases, “fiee-•dom and justice for all,” "equal DEAR GOD:Education without representa¬tion. That is what it is. Nevermind the Russians and the inter¬national situation for a moment;the professors are at it again. Andthis time it is not only the profes¬sors but the administration as well,and they are not after YOU; theyare after me.Since the sins of the adminis¬tration seem less grievous, and tobe seated only in miscalculation,I shall tell on them first. Theonly charge I can bring against the,administrators is that they failed!to meet the enormous demand fora University of Chicago educationamong recently discharged vet¬erans. This might have been donein two ways: by expanding thefacilities of the University, or bysharply'restricting admissions.No Blame for Not ExpandingInasmuch as expanding the fac¬ilities of the University would en¬tail capital investment on a largescale to meet a demand which mayprove ephemeral once the backlogof education-hungry young mencreated by four years of war isused up, the administrators canhardly be blamed for not wantingto risk overexpansion. But on theother hand, here is all this guaran¬teed government clamoring to getin. What to do, what to do? I im¬agine many weary seconds havebeen spent deciding this knottyproblem.To be fair, let us say that theUniversity of Chicago opened itsdoors rather wide to greet the re¬turning heroes, and here is wherewe get to the professors. As amaz¬ing numbers of new registrantsswelled classes certainly to double,possibly to triple and in somecases to quadruple their formersizes, weary and baffled profes¬sors sought successively largerclassrooms during the initial weeksof last quarter. This quarter theyhave resorted to the technique of^he purge. In fact, I was purgedfrom a class just last week on thebasis of an “exploratory examin¬ation” the contents of which, Iassure you, had nothing to do withthe printed pre-requisites for thecourse in the time schedule for thisquarter.The Function of the Professor?Is such arbitrary action a validfunction of the professor? Hereprotection under the law,” “free¬dom from fear,” and others simi¬lar. To the critical United StatesI say, America, your front yardis full of rubbish. Must you pileit so high that you can no longerpretend to be a democracy?—^Repripted from Lincoln Clarion,i' at the University of Chicago itmay very well be, for all I know.At many other schools the functionof the professor is to teach, and tograde and return papers. At someschools—notably Chicago, I think—the additional functions of ad¬vising Washington and writingbooks have become customary.Washington seems never to payany attention to this excellentadvice and there are already fartoo many books published eachyear. In the words of a very goodfriend of mine, “It would be bet¬ter to grade and'return papers.^I have another course now, butit is not in my department. Mydepartmental adviser could notfind another course in the depart¬ment for me, largely because sev¬eral men have gone elsewhere andhave not yet been replaced. I feelthat this inability of the depart¬ment to provide courses necessaryto my program for a degreeamounts practically to misrepre¬sentation of goods offered for salethrough the medium of the Uni¬versity catalog, and results inwaste of both my time and mygovernment’s money.Students Need RepresentationI should like now to maintainthat we are all, in effect, enforcedcitizens of an academic commu¬nity and that we should thereforebe represented at certain facultyand administrative meetings, notonly to protect ourselves and ourgovernment’s investment in thoseof us who are under the “G. I.Bill,” but also to help the Uni¬versity solve some of the prob¬lems which face the entire acad¬emic community and threatenmany of us with unfair delay inre-establishing ourselves as usefulcivilians. This representationmight very well come initiallyfrom already organized campusgroups, with ample provision forrepresentatives of the studentbody at large as soon as such rep¬resentatives can be elected at openstudent meetings. I should lik^to ask student representation msome of the affairs of the Univer¬sity not so much as a right burather as a responsibility whicheach student should be anxiousto assume for his own educationand for the entire educationssystem of America.Bless the Chancellor and allthose who do his work, and makeme a Good Little Intellectual.Fred SchantzGraduate, Economics(Continued on Page 5)April 1*. IMtMerle C» Coulter THE CHICAGO MAROONBotany Prof Tells WorkOf Students in ETO“GI students were swell,” remi¬nisced University Professor ofBotany Merle C. Coulter, justback from a one-year leave spentorganizing and instructing at theWar Department’s dual ETO col¬leges for GIs at Shrivenham, Eng¬land and Biarritz, Prance. “About96 or 97 per cent of them werethere for business. They came toclass on time and they paid atten¬tion to what was going on; andtheir attention didn’t seem to wearoff as the hour wore on, either.“I have heard a good deal ofsatisfaction expressed around here,too, about the calibre of the ex-service students, especially in themid-year group that entered inFebruary. I haven’t had a chanceto sample them myself yet, thoughI expect to very shortly. But Iimagine they are the same type wehave at Shrivenham and Biarritz.”Coulter remarked that the year’sexperience in Biarritz and Shriv¬enham had been a fine opportunityto meet “a wonderful bunch ofArmy officers and enlisted men,and to live in intimate contactwith colleagues from colleges allover the country. And there issome wonderful scenery aroundBiarritz,” he added. “It’s anpleasure resort town on the Bay ofBiscay, with the Pyrenees to thesouth.”Beginnings at PentagonBeginnings of the two Army injstitutions date back to conferencesin the Pentagon building May 24-25 last year when some fourteeneducators called together startedthings rolling. Included in thisgroup were John Dale Russell,Dean of Students in the SocialSciences and Professor of Educa¬tion, and Coulter. Of the fourteen,about nine were able to get leavesfrom their institutions, commendedhiring a faculty by invitationfrom some 150 of the nation’s col¬leges and universities. The com¬mittee’s qualifications: aged 42-65(draft-proof), experienced, adapt¬able.Locations for the new institu¬tions were then picked: in Eng¬land, a British Army post complet¬ed in 1937 but already taken overby American troops; in France,some 40 hotels and 90 villas, alarge chunk of Biarritz’s resortfacilities. Operation of the GIcolleges was based on accepteddomestic practice, with similarJudy DownsBoyce Brown, alto-playing poet-philosopher, delivered an “expose”of contemporary jazz to a sym¬pathetic gathering at the MooseClub last Sunday.Chicago’s brilliant altoist haslong been regarded as. a uniquepersonality in the jazz field, butheretofore his extreme introversivenature has deterred him from dis¬playing his fertile intellect to anyexcept a small circle of closefriends.Sunday, however, Boyce took thelecture stand and confidentlylaunched into a critical resume ofthe contemporary jazz picture.Uis comments were richly inter¬spersed with Shakespearian quota¬tions, original sonnets, and apol¬ogies for belligerent opinions ex¬pressed.Boyce could never be called aJazz reactionary. Raised In the“Chicago school,” he neverthelesscannot be categorized in any “oldJazz” group. Modem-minded andbrilliant technician himself, hediscussed the Importance of the staff and curriculum. Courseswere given in eight differentschools: science, liberal arts, finearts, commerce, engineering, agri¬culture, education, and journalism.“Grading startdards,” said Coulter,“while different from the ABCs inuse in most colleges, were fully upto or above that of the averageAmerican college.”Use Chicago ProfsTerms at the colleges were twomonths, with complete studentturn-over between terms. GI’s tookthree courses of their own selec¬tion, with fifty-minute meetingsfive days a week. They found theirprofessors were two-third civilian,one-third military (from lieuten¬ant to lieutenant-colonel). “Thisarrangement worked out fine,though,” Coulter remarked. “Most of the officers didn’t stand on cere¬mony or a lot of formality, al¬though there were a couple ofcolonels who dragged in a littleof what the boys called ‘chicken.’ ”Included in the faculty of thetwo GI camps were four Chicagoprofessors: S. William Halperin,Associate Professor of History;Harold G. Shields, Associate Pro¬fessor of Business Education; Rus¬sell, and Coulter.“I enjoyed the whole year,”Coulter recounted, “and I think itwas a real service to the men.Apart from affording them a breakfrom their regular duties, it pos¬sibly stimulated a good many intheir interest in higher education.The whole project was carried outby the Army very well, all thingsconsidered.”Summer Heat ThreatensAbolition of CulturedCamouflage—the BeardBy Marcia RosenthalLately, the campus has beenplagued with a certain species ofmobile foliage—the beard. Thisbush-like phenomenon has beendetected on numerous paths of theQuadrangles.The variety is well-known. Itdates back to the Peking Man, andflourished during the Middle Ages.With the coming of Gillette, it wasbrought under control somewhat.Nevertheless, a frightening abund¬ance of wooly fringe has reap¬peared.This mammalian fluff is not in¬jurious or contagious. However,for safety’s sake, female studentsare advised to limit contact with itto a minimum of six feet.It can be recognized in the fol¬lowing ways: (1) It is peculiar tothe male homo sapiens. (2) It maybe found on the countenance any¬where between the ears. (3) Incolor it is mostly black, but brownand Titian are not unknown.(4) Its shape is polygonic; occa¬sionally a freak “W” variety ap¬pears. (5) Textures vary amongthe Fuller clothes brush, shreddedwheat, and peach fuzz.What has caused this new out¬break of jaw jungle is still a mat¬ ter of debate. Some think it is aperky exhibition of Army-taughtcamouflage technique. Others re¬fer to the napkin shortage. Thecause as yet being unascertained,no special therapy can be recom¬mended. The best thinkers on thesubject are optimistic. They be¬lieve that this furry forest is theresult of an eccentric and prolificvirus which the summer heat isknown to demolish.In the meantime, the problem isin the hands of the newly-organ¬ized Committee for the Rehabilita¬tion of the American Dimple.Campus Gag-menToast HAROONGambolier, the new campus hu¬mor magazine, hit the stands thisweek with a tongue-in-cheek sa¬lute to THE CHICAGO MAROONthat sent sales of the ten cent pub¬lication soaring.A newcomer among Chicagopublicatioras, the magazine has soldout on each issue to date. Fred¬erick L. Mancourt, a student inthe college, is publisher.advances made by Ellington andthe influence of such men as AlecWilder in contemporary hot music.He did feel, however, that “radiojazz,” the uninspired, overly ar¬ranged music typical of studiobands, was a serious detriment.Even worse was the influence of“stage bar jazz,” the noisy, exhibi-tionalistic style that has evolvedwith the Introduction of the stagebar in the night life scene. (A vet¬eran of months of the Loop’s Pre¬view Lounge, he spoke especiallybitterly of the effects of the re¬volving stage, which it seems isjust as disconcerting for the musi¬cians as the poor bar fly.)* * •Tlie Hot Club of Chicago, fol¬lowing its policy of presenting alltypes of hot music, stars Roy Eld-ridge in its Aprii concert, comingup next Sunday afternoon at theMoose Club (1016 N. Dearborn).Roy will be backed by a moderngroup composed of sidemen fromhis own and Earl Hines* band. UC Settlement WillStage **Pinocchio"A dramatic presentation of thepopular children’s story “Pinoc-chio,” will be given this Saturdayat the University Settlement. Theplay, to be presented by Girl Scouttroop 297, will have two perform¬ances—at 2:00 in the afternoon,and at 7:30 in the evening.Admission to the play is 24 centsfor adults and 12 cents for chil¬dren. The University Settlementis at 4630 McDowell Avenue.Joseph Axelrod, Instructor in theHumanities, describes his teachingtechnique in the April issue ofCollege English.Annual PoetryContest Is April 24Preliminary competion inthe annual Florence JamesAdams poetry-reading con¬test will be held in Swift 201at 4:00 on April 24. Finalswill be held May 1.Open to undergraduates inresidence more than sixquarters, the wntest givesprizes of $50 and $25. Con¬testants must register byApril 22 with Professor FrankH. O’Hara, have their selec¬tions of non-dr^imatic poetryaproved by him. Time limitsare four minutes in the pre¬lims, ten in the finals. Torquemada's HeirOr the Iron grainBy SHIRLEY ISAAC.We live under the shadow of The Machine. From the timea student enters the College (provided he gets by the placementexaminations) through innumerable mid-quarterlies, quarterlies,and comps, this implacable mechanical brain is practically thesole arbiter of his academic destiny.Several times a year, strangelyquiet groups of students shuffleinto Mandel Hall and BartlettGym. Heavily they move into thearena, take their seats on whatseems like an acre of bare, intimi¬dating floor space, and proceed foran hour or two hours, or evensix hours, to make little rectangu¬lar black marks on queer-lookingsheets of paper while a proctormutters quietly to himself: “Write-chernamethenameofyersecshunyer-discushunleader’snameand the dateontheanswersheet A WRIGHT BE¬GIN!” ,When the ordeal is over,the papers are gathered up, rushedover to be fed into the maw of TheMachine, and the results are com¬municated to the palpitating stu¬dent not more than a week or twoafter they are due.A few of these experiences,known as “objective examina¬tions,” proved too much for mycrumbling morale. I resolved tosee for myself what manner ofmedieval iron monster dictated myC’s and D’s.At Home With The MachineThe Machine lives in an innercubicle of Room 449, Graduate Ed¬ucation Building. Dozens of serv¬ants scurry to and fro, feeding itand collecting the egesta. Con¬trary to my expectations. The Ma¬chine is not six feet tall and halfa room broad, replete with clat¬tering arms and weird fixtures. Itis a suave, modern, dove-grey af¬fair, not quite desk height, withits smooth steel surface marredonly by half a dozen knobs and adial. It cannot yet be purchased.An IBM product, it is still in theexperimental stage, and is rentedby institutions. There are onlyabout two others in the city ofChicago.How They Do ItYour quarterly exam, when itarrives at the Board of Examina¬tions, is first hand-checked by astaff of girls to make sure youhaven’t done anything that wouldupset The Machine—make its lit¬tle dial-hand waver, perhaps, orjam the works. They check yourtest for such items as incidentalsmudges, extra markings on aone-answer item, etc., all of whichwould be picked up by the sensi¬tive electric apparatus.Then a master sheet with cor¬rect answers punched out isplaced in a slot. Your paper is in¬serted facing it. The proper knobs are turned; electric current flowsinto tiny copper coils and makescontact, through the punchedholes, with your blackened marks—IF they’re in.the right places!Your test is run through twice.There are two separate machines,one more sensitive than the other.The first one scores; the second onecatches any slight irregularity.Almost Human, B’Gawsh!The Machine is very clever. Itcan score Right, Wrong, Right-minus - Wrong, or Right - plus-Wrong. Scores can be weightedup to three times their value, andseparate sections of a test can beweighted differently.The University of Chicago hasscored tests on The Machine onlysince 1939. Before that, back in1936, an older model was used.“You can’t beat the machine,”my guides assured me in parting.“It’s accurate up to one point intwelve hundred.” I nodded gloom¬ily.“Friends to Students’*Across the hall, in a pleasantlittle room which tbey insist is notan ivory tower. Examiners PaulDiederich and Osmond Palmer dotheir worst.“An examiner is a combinationmessenger boy, depository foritems, and gadfly,” explainedDiederich. “People think Of ex¬aminations as the natural succes-sor'of the Spanish Inquisition, andof us as regular Torquemadas.Actually, the main job of an ex¬aminer is to fight with the staffafter an examination, when theywant to flunk half the students.They always assume the studentknows more than he really does. Sowe have to soothe them down.The examiner is a friend to stu¬dents.”Cynically tucking the tobaccofarther back in my cheek. I askedfor a little personal background.And How They Got That WayPalmer has been a member ofthe Board for two years, andDiederich for five. Both have longexperience in the examinationfield; Palmer with the ArmedForces Institute, and Diederichwith the famous Eight Year Study,the results of which charged manya college’s entrance requirements.The board consists of abouttwelve members, many of whomdouble as advisors in the College,Quadrangle Opinion . , ♦(Continued from Page 4)Discrimination in UTTO THE EDITOR OF THE CHICAGO MAROON:On Sunday, April 7, at midnight, a colored boy accompanied by awhite girl went into the University Tavern (corner of 55th and Univer¬sity). After ordering a drink they were approached by the bartenderwho told them that he was not in the habit of serving mixed couples.He conceded that they could drink their orders but he did not wantthem to come back again. The reason given was that he could not beresponsible for what might happen or what other customers might door say. He did say that they served all Negro couples.During the time this happened there was no trouble. People in thetavern did not know what was going on and surprise had not beenshown by any of the few people in the room. The couple had conducteathemselves in a very dignified manner.We would like to protest this discriminatory practice in the Univer¬sity community and in a place so frequently patronized by students ofthe “liberal” University of Chicago.'THE ANTI-DISCRIMINA’nON COMMITTEEBreuning . ♦ .(Continued from Page 1)Schacht, once finance minister ofGermany and now an accused warcriminal at Nuremberg. Bruen-ing’s statements, viewed in theirentirety, were primarily a warningagainst committing the errors ofthe past anew, and pointed out thedangers of appeasement and toomuch self-security.Give Vets Responsible JobsSome of the ex-chancellor’s sug¬gestions for today’s statesmen in¬ cluded a warning against the pres¬ent policy in Germany, and theproposal that this war’s veteransbe given responsible positions Inthe government, so that the exist¬ing gap between the old and nevygeneration might be bridged. Aftelfthe speech Bruening attended aninformal meeting with facultj)*members of the U. of C., where hocontinued the discussion and elab¬orated some of his ideas.Page 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON AprilIrving ScottC-Ration Qi of Week.,. I May Initiate VeteranInformation CenterCharles G. Bolte, National Chairman of the American Vet¬erans’ Committee, who spoke here last Wednesday at the AVCcampus chapter’s atom forum, was one of the two veteran repre¬sentatives at the conference on world government and atomiccontrol held recently at Rollins College, Florida. The other wasCord Meyer, Jr., also a member ofAVC, who acted as an aid to ex- las, Carl Van Doren, and Univer¬sity of Chicagoans Dr. Harold C.Urey and Dr. S. K. Allison.* * *GI’s still wondering what vet¬erans’ organization to join weregiven a look at.the other side ofAlamein. Several years later, my ; fence recently by John Stelle,regiment occupied the barracksthey had vacated at Winchester,governor Stassen at the San Fran¬cisco conference.Bolte joined the British RoyalRifle Corps in 1941, went to Africawith them, and lost a leg at ElEngland, and during a review byChurchill and Eisenhower prior to ican Legion.The Legion observed Saturday,April 6, as a day on which to focusthe Normandy invasion, ^hurchiil attention on the necessitytold us the history of the Corps, .... . ... ,which began in America in the immediate adoption of urn-17th century • i '^^^al military training as a safe-The ex-prime-minister knew S^^^d of the nation’s future secu-their story weil, for his father had »«otding to a publicity re-,wanted him to join the outfit when . J^^e sent out by the organization she was a young man. “They have , P^biic relations division. It em-fought in many lands,” Churchill j P^asized that America’s only in-said, and then proceeded to reel surance against war lay in her ownoff a list of place-names suggestive atrength,of a.Burton Holmes travelogue, IAnd perhaps it was that oldtradition business that we heard jso much about in the “fighting in- Ifan tree”—which must have been |ladled out to Bolte in particularly Inauseating amounts by so hoary aregiment as the British Royal Rifle ;Corps—which made him tired ofthe whole futile business of war.At any rate, his has been a lustyvoice in favor of world governmentand civilian control of atomic en¬ergy; so vigorous, in fact, that theonly veterans’ organization repre¬sented at the UNO conference atSan Francisco was his AmericanVeterans’ Committee.Purpose of the Rollins Collegeconference was to outline mini¬mum requirements for an interna¬tional order capable of solvingworld problems without atomicbombs, or, as one delegate ex¬pressed it, “even without the useof bows and arrows.”Other members of the conferenceincluded Justice William O. Doug- By Ralph WoodThis weekthe MAROONsalutes JIMHALVORSEN,retiring presi¬dent of Inter-F ra ternityCouncil, who iscredited withformat ion ofthe Alumni IFAssociationwhich was instrumental in return¬ing houses to the fraternities thisquarter.A Chicagoan, Halvorsen attend¬ed University High before enter¬ing the University in 1941. Draftedtwo years later in April 1943, hewent into Navy boot training atFarragut, Idaho and received amedical discharge in March, 1944.Returning to Chicago for hisBachelor’s degree, he was electedsecretary of his fraternity andshortly afterwards to the presi¬dency of IF.Active on the Student Orienta¬tion Board, Halvorsen also playedan important part in the recentrelaxation of IF regulations, whichnow include all fraternities oncampus to its membership. Heexpects to receive his Master’sdegree in Business Administrationnext December.Veterans Warned byAdvisor on ExpensesVet Fund DrivesTo Be ExaminedA Veterans Organization Councilof Illinois has been formed tocombat “fly by night” outfits pur¬porting to speak in the name ofttie veteran, it was announced lastweek.Composed of eight of the majorveterans organizations, the Councilwill investigate fund-raising drivesof all veterans groups. Informationobtained will be available at thecouncil’s offices at 155 No. Clark St.The new organization will alsoattempt to obtain unity among thevarious groups on certain basicissues such as the bonus question.Offer Speeded CourseTo Veterans at UCLAAn accelarated ten-week coursefor veterans only is being given atthe University of California at I^osAngeles, it was stated today in arelease from the L.A. Collegian.The new program was institutedseveral weeks ago for recently dis¬charged veterans to enable themto start school immediately with¬out waiting until next summer orfall. Overbuying Supplies Moy iResult in Bill for Student |Advisor io Veterans Zens L.Smith issued the following state¬ment to the MAROON today inorder to clarify the confusionamong GI’s concerning the pur¬chase of books.At the general meeting for vet¬erans, held April 3, a representa¬tive of the Veterans Administra¬tion re-emphasized the position ofthe VA regarding authorization ofexpenditures for books, suppliesand services under the GI bill.Quoting PL 346 as providingthat the VA may pay for suchequipment which is generally re¬quired for other students in theinstitution, he stated that this isinterpreted to mean only suchbooks as every student in. thecourse is expected to own. It is notto be used as a device for assistingthe veteran to build up a personal' reference library.I Application io Divisionsj The statement is simple, but its: interpretation is not, especially asI it applies to divisional students,j Many divisional and professionalcourses in the university have notrequired “text-book” reading andyet the student is expected to ownI two, three, or more referencebooks chosen from what is fre¬quently a lengthy list.I The situation is complicated bythe fact that no clean-cut decisionon this and related questions canbe exp>ected from the VA until theauditors examine the accounts sev¬eral months, or possibly a year or more, after books and supplieshave been issued. For such itemsas are disallowed by the auditors,the University will be in the po¬sition of having to bill the veteran.Suggestions to StudentAs a working basis, the followingcriteria have been suggested:1. When each student is expect¬ed to own some, but not all, of thebooks on a lengthy reading list,the authorizing instructor and theveteran must use discriminationin making an average selectionfrom the list; the veteran shouldbe expected to buy no more thanthe average non-veteran. Similarconsiderations apply to supplies.2. When a veteran is following agraduate program special to himalone, such as preparing a Master’sor Doctor’s dissertation, the vet¬eran should request, and the in¬structor should authorise, onlythose texts, supplies and servicesfor which a non-veteran studentmight reasonably be expected topay if he were following a similarprogram.Invite Vet Wivesto Join UC DomesThe Chicago chapter of theNational Association of UniversityDames announced last week thatthe first meeting of the Springquarter will be held April 16 atNoyes East Lounge.Wives of student veterans, orveterans of the women’s serviceswho are married students, are in¬vited to join. Membership fee is:mj cents for the quarter. GI Bill BoardBy Ralph Wood' Veterans who filed form1950 for educational bene¬fits under Public Law 346in the Office of Advisor toVeterans on or before March1, and who have not yet re¬ceived a Certificate of Eli¬gibility or a subsistencecheck, should fill out a com¬plaint form in the Advisor’soffice.0 * *Press Relations requeststhose veterans who are will¬ing to do so to fill in thepersonnel cards available inCobb 300.• • •George W. Sconce, VA re¬presentative, is availableeach Tuesday to reply toquestions concerning PL346 or 16. ClassifiedLOST — Gold Illinois watch; reward.David Doblin, 6610 Blackstone. Mid-way 8858.FOR SALE — Brittanica Encyclopedia,32 volumes, cloth bound; excellentcondition, $37.50. Mr, Kaul, 7437 Mer-rill. Butterfield 0950.SEE THIS 8-room gray stone house;wood burning fireplace; income $145per month; completely remodeled andredecorated; stove and elec, refrig,inch; furnished if desired; short dis¬tance from University; reasonablypriced. Call Tri. 4631 for appt. to see.LOST —• Gray “Parker 51” gold cap.Finder contact Jim McGowan, But-terfield 9022 and collect reward.WILL person who took blue Harristweed tcmcoat by mistake from theCommons Thursday noon please returnto Miss Miller, Cobb. 208?U.T.1131-1133 E. SSth St.Complete Selectionof Beers andOther BeveragesHIDway 0524Blafx Beer The newly formed Veteran’s Council announced today thesetting up of Ways and Means committees to inquire into thepossibilities x)f (1) the establishment of a veteran’s informationcenter on campus to act as a central clearing agency for all prob¬lems concerning veteran’s affairs, and (2) alleviation of crowdedconditions in the bookstore and theBursar’s office.Chairman .pro tern John K.Calhoun, a student in .the lawschool, appiointed Miss Susie Thur¬man and James W. Higgins to acommittee whichp will inquire intothe possibilities of procuring per¬sonnel from the Veteran’s Admin¬istration to man the proposed in¬formation Center.Will Examine Bookstore Problem• The committee which will tacklethe problems presented by hour-long waiting periods at the book¬store and the Bursar’s office in¬cludes Dick Modling, Bernard Ko¬gan, William Vassar and ArthurWendel.Other appointments includeThomas Jarrett and Gwin Kolbto the Housing committee and Vir¬ginia Lodin, former army nurseand at present a student in thecollege, to the post of secretaryfor the Council.With over two thousand veter¬ans present on the campus whowill soon be receiving checks ofover $50 per month, an impossible situation is anticipated at theBursar’s office, Calhoun pointedout, in detailing the liaison com¬mittee which will attempt to workout a solution with school author¬ities.(Albert F. Cotton, UniversityBursar, stated that present regu¬lations which require such checksto be okayed before presentationto the cashier, thus complicatingthe situation, will be modified inthe near future.)Meetings of the Veteran’s Coun¬cil, which was organized last weekto promote student-faculty unityare being held temporarily in Cobb300 on Mondays at 3 pm. Theyare open to any student on campuswho wishes to present a complaintor suggestion for action.Signs of the times: The gra.ssgrows green again over the mul¬titude of time-and-foot-worn pathsabout which Building and Groundshave constructed neat chain fen¬ces. Instead, new trails are ap¬pearing on each side of said fences.Laboratory in aBirch ThicketThis thicket of birch trees is one ofthe Bell System’s scientific work¬shops.Here our scientists have strungtelephone wires through the crowdedbranches to learn just how muchtree rubbing and abuse the protct'tivecoverings and insulation on newtypes of wire will stand.Important? With more than hfteeamillion insulated ’’drop wires” con¬necting home and business telephonesto nearby poles, we’ve got to be surothat the wire we use is the very bestthat can be produced.★ ★ ★This is but one small example ofhundreds of experiments and researchprojects carried on constantly by BellLaboratories to make Bell TelephoneService more dependable, more useful,to more people.rriday, ^£5 THE CHICAGO MAROON Pan TBig Ten Season OpensNet Team SeeksWin Number TwoBolstered by the eligibility of big Earl Theimer and with onevictory already under its belt, the Chicago tennis team tangleswith Illinois Institute of Technology tomorrow afternoon onthe varsity courts.IIT comes with only a five-man squad, all of whom are un¬known quantities. Because of its ' —abbreviated squad, only 7 matches,, little trouble in their singlesfive singles and two doubles, will [ matches,be played instead of the usual nine. Theimer ReturnsSwamp North Central Tully and Husum combined toThe Maroon netters swamped ^ win the number one doubles matchNorth Central last Saturday play- ^ for Chicago, while Fine was pair¬ing indoors in the Chicago Field ing with Michaels and Paul Jern-Ifouse. The Naperville squad berg with Shullgassar to give thefailed to win even one of the nine Maroons a clean sweep. FineTimematches, and succeeded in winningonly two of the 26 sets played. With Earl Theimer back atschool after a tour of army serv-Wally Michaels and Eddie ice. Coach Wally Hebert’s squadSchien, playing in the number i promises to be even stronger inthree and five slots respectively,' future matches. Theimer was Chi-were the only Chicago men who | cago’s number one man in 1943had to go to three sets to win.' and has an 18-won, U-lost recordHarry Tully, Howie Husum, Dick in his two years of varsity com-Fine, and Dan Shullgassar had I petition.Coed Contests ... by YlackFor all girls interested in promoting and planning athleticand recreational activities on campus, the W.A.A. supper sched¬uled for Wednesday, April 17 is a must!The supper, to be held at 6 p.m. in the east lounge of IdaNoyes, will serve two purposes: (1) to introduce the W.A.A.,its purpose and its plans, to allwomen on campus, (2) to electofficers for the remainder of thisyear and for next year. Ticketscosting forty cents may be pur¬chased from all house sports repre¬sentatives on in the Physical Edu¬cation offices on the second floorof Ida Noyes.The W.A.A. is an integral part ofthe life of every college woman—be she a bridge-playing social but¬terfly or an eager intellectual;there are few women who don’ttake part at one time or anotherin some W.A.A.-sponsored activity.Bridge tournaments, intra-muraland inter-house sports tourna¬ments, mixed activities such ashayrides, rollerskating parties,square dances—all are W.A.A.sponsored or initiated.Ideas for new activities and sug¬gestions for improvements or com¬plaints about the present scheduleof activities are most effectivelyexpressed through the W.A.A. Come to the W.A.A. suppermake your voice heard! andThe first house swimminf meetpractice has been set for April 16at 4 p.m. April 18 is the date ofthe inter-house swimming meet;four women will swim for eachhouse. The meet, to be held in theIda Noyes pool, will begin at 4 p.m.Spectators are welcome.* * «See you at the W.A.A. supperWednesday!Burton JudsonSchedulesDodd House takes to the dia¬mond against Mathews next Wed¬nesday afternoon at 4 p.m. to of¬ficially open the college housesoftball league. Mead tangles withSalisbury immediately after thefirst game.All games are scheduled forMondays, Wednesdays, and Fri¬days with the season closing May17, one month to the day afterit opened. Any thing Maroon batters lookat in the way of pitching from BigTen opponents will fall in the classof easy pickings after their intra¬squad games of the past few weeks.Former major leaguer Roy Hen-shaw has been working out withthe Chicago nine lately, and CoachKyle Anderson has had him throw¬ing to Maroon hitters. Roy is aformer U. of C. man and starredon the Chicago nine that tied forthe league crown in 1935.« * *With Chicago no longer in thepicture, Big Ten officials got to¬gether last week to draw up the1946-47 basketball schedules. Theycame up with a plan, the “fairness’^of which was repeatedly empha¬sized. A 12-game card, is beingmaintained by all schools, but in¬stead of playing six home-and-home contests, each team will playonly four such affairs and willround out its schedule by meetingthe other four schools only once.« * *Coach Wally Hebert can field atennis squad this year made up en¬tirely of former team members.Moreover, every one of the sixreturning letter-men can boast ofa better than .500 average in inter¬collegiate competition. Best markof all belongs to Harry Tully whoover a two year stretch has wonwell over three-fourths of hismatches.* « *Sixty-four dollar question forthe week is how did Michiganever let Bob Wakefield, brother ofthe Wolverines’ famed Dick, enrollat the University of Illinois insteadof registering at Ann Arbor. Dickwas so good on the diamond in hiscollege days at Michigan that, theDetroit Tigers paid him a cool150,000 merely to sign a conhraetwith them. Boh gives every in¬dication of having inherited hisbrother’s skill, at least with thehat. He has been knocking downfences ever since Spring practicegot under way in Champaign. Diamond SquadFaces BadgersIn Two GamesCHICAGOLevine, 3b.Freeark, 2b.Bailin, c.Johnson, If.Eisenstein, lb.Stitt, cf.Costakis, rf.Melas, ss.Noffsinger, p. By FRED HARTSTONEProbable Starting Line-upsWISCONSINLowe, ss.Thompson, 2b.Boesc, cf.Kasper, If.Cook, 3b.Granitz, 3b.Regan, rf.Murphy, c.Hass or Jaroch, p.“It’s going to be very hot for Wisconsin in Chicago this Fri¬day and Saturday !”^ says Coach Kyle Anderson, “but I can’tguarantee the weather conditions,’’ he added.Coach Anderson was referring, of course, to the forthcomingmeeting between the Maroon and Wisconsin baseball teams thisFriday and Saturday at Washing-,-ton Park (55th and Cottage j lately Chicago tangled with NorthGrove). Hal Noffsinger will go^ Central on Wednesday and wenito the mound for the Maroons inthe opener which will start atthree-thirty. Hal has struck out 14men in thirteen innings while giv¬ing up only four walks.Smith Hurls SaturdayCurt Smith will do the hurlingwhen the second game gets underway at two-thirty on Saturday,same place. Curt effectively scat¬tered five hits last Tuesday to gaina 5-2 decision over Illinois Insti¬tute.Runners-up to Michigan in the1945 Big Ten season, Coach Mans¬field’s Badgers will be “tough tobeat.’’ This prediction is based onthe fact that there are eight re¬turning lettermen plus severalveterans. John Kasper is the starof the Wisconsin team, playingleft field and batting in the clean¬up spot. He led the Big Ten in away on the short end of a 10-2count.Most encouraging aspect of thfMaroon team is the pitching thatCoach Kyle Anderson has beengetting. Though Jerry Solomonwas batted out in the fifth inningagainst North Central, both Smithand Noffsinger have been particu¬larly effective every time theyhave gone to the mound.Refreshmentready...Have a Cokem:>ervtat home lonuD UNoa authobity or thi coca<ou coapant byICoco-Colo lotfling Co. of Chicogo, Ino. Morgan Park toPlay U. of C. HighMorgan Park Military will pro¬vide the opposition for the debutof the U. High baseball squad thisafternoon. Like all home games,the opener will be played onNorth Field at 4 p.m.Any optimism in the J-V campappears to be of the false nature.1942 with an impressive batting! The infield is as uncertain as aaverage of .431. .Chicago Underdogs student at a comp; this is due inpart to third basefhan John Ca-Chicago will enter the Wiscon- ^ sey’s old knee injury, which willsin fray as the definite underdog keep him out of action again thisas a result of its unimpressive one-won, three lost record in pre-con¬ference games. Except in theirlone victory, the Maroons havelooked particularly inept in thefield and at bat.The varsity dropped its firsttwo games to Bradley Tech and toWheaton before downing IllinoisTech last Tuesday, 5-2. Unfortu- year.There are no potential Fellerson the mound staff, not even anup-and-coming Pappy Prim. Thecatching had not appeared atthis writing, although it is ex¬pected to show up at the game.The outfield is promising, if thathelps. In short, the J-V ball teamis not strong this year.Junior-Varsity Track, NetTeams Begin Play TodayThe junior-varsity track and tennis teams open their 1946seasons this afternoon against Morgan Park Military Academy.The cindcrmen will run at 3:45 on the Stagg Field track; the netmatch at 60th and Wobdlawn begins at 4.“Unknown quantity’* is the only way of describing either ofthe U. High teams. The trackmenare not yet in condition and wiUnot be disappointed if there are norecord performances. Of the 50-odd squad members only Broder,Weber, Hall, Johnson knd a fewothers have competed before.The tennis team is even moreunpredictable, The squad has beencut, but the remaining candidates will have to face a few tests be¬fore their ability can be deter¬mined. However, competitionagainst Private School Leagueteams doesn’t begin until April 26,and the conference meet isn’tscheduled until May 18. By thenCoach Bill Murphy will know justhow his team stacks up.THE W 0 * I 0*$ HOST lOIIOREO WATCHWINNER OF 10 World'sFair Grand Prizes,28 Gold Medalsand more honors foilmaccuracy than anyother timepiece*the CHICAGO MAROON Friday/April 12,194gpni a note an your calendar: intimate theatre program^ reynoido cMab theatre, triday atternoow:, april 19 at 4 p.m.urningthe eampnscalendarThe Players Guild presents amost challenging program next Fridayafternoon. So, come... see some of ourmost talented actors and actresseson campus read and act selectedshort dramatic pieces.Ready to donher makeup andcostume for Eugene O’Neill’’’Before Breakfast” is leading lady, RobertaUngur. She stars offstage, too, in a hand>some wool suit. With its free swingingbox jacket, its news in style and comfort.And, the color is irresistably springtime.. ♦bright gay green. Sizes 9 to 15. $35You’ll find it in the Young Chicago Shop—Six^ Floor, South, StateWritten by: Betty StearnsCartoons by: Cissie Liebschutz^ ■ , V 1 -'j -'fy i ' s .. ■ . ■’s\